“What you gonna do when you get out of jail?…” part 47

May 16th, 2020

This is kind of a three-way tip of the hat to:

  • Morlock Publishing, continuing yesterday’s theme.
  • Borepatch and ASM826, because this is related to some things they’ve been posting
  • and RoadRich, because planes. Also, tonight is “12 O’Clock High” night.

“The Story of Willow Run”, from FoMoCo. Willow Run was where Ford built the B-24. They initially were turning out parts that Consolidated and Douglas put together, but that turned out to be troublesome. In October of 1941 Willow Run got permission to build complete planes, and ran the line until May 1945. At peak, the line was turning out a finished bomber every 55 minutes.

Bonus video: unrelated to the above, but related to something earlier in the week. From 1937: “Boulder Dam”, a film from the US Archives about the construction of the dam that later became known as “Hoover Dam”.

“What you gonna do when you get out of jail?…” part 46

May 15th, 2020

It’s Friday. It’s the weekend. I feel like I can run a little long going into the weekend.

This video did come up in my recommendations, but my decision to feature it today was inspired by this tweet from Morlock Publishing:

and this re-tweet from the same:

From 1959, another film from those wonderful folks at Shell Oil: “The Drama of Metal Forming”. Lots and lots of hot metal being worked: this is another one of those things that fascinates me.

Bonus video: from the good folks at the Ford Motor Company (FoMoCo): “Steel on the Rouge”, about making steel at the River Rouge plant.

As best as I can tell, the River Rouge steel mill is still in operation (this video is from 1968): FoMoCo apparently sold off the steel mill part of their business in 1989, and the Rouge mill has changed hands a couple of times. Currently, it seems like it is owned and run by AK Steel Holding.

“What you gonna do when you get out of jail?…” part 45

May 14th, 2020

Priority override Archimedes.

The Thunderbirds did a flyover of Austin and San Antonio yesterday.

I shot this video from our back porch. I wasn’t sure which direction they’d be coming from or what altitude they would be out, so I erred on the side of shooting at a wider angle.

One of the things I feel lucky about in my life: I visited Las Vegas before 9/11. Which means Mike the Musicologist and I were lucky enough to tour the Thunderbirds museum before it was closed off to anyone without a DoD ID. We were also lucky enough to be able to take the Hard Hat Tour of Hoover Dam. I need to dig out my hard hat from storage.

(I still have never actually seen the Thunderbirds at an air show. The Blue Angels, yes, when I was really young.)

Bonus video, just for the heck of it: “Odyssey 1977”, video of the F-18 prototype at the Paris Air Show that year.

Obit watch: May 14, 2020.

May 14th, 2020

Joel Kupperman has passed away at 83.

The name probably doesn’t ring any bells with you unless you are really old:

For a time, during World War II and its aftermath, Joel Kupperman was one of the most famous children in the country, and also one of the most loathed.

More specifically…

From 6 to 16, Joel was a star on “The Quiz Kids,” a thunderously popular radio program that later migrated to television. He captivated Marlene Dietrich and Orson Welles by performing complex math problems, joked with Jack Benny and Bob Hope, charmed Eleanor Roosevelt and Henry Ford. He played himself in a movie (“Chip Off the Old Block,” in 1944), addressed the United Nations and was held up as an exemplar of braininess to a generation of children. (Hence all the loathing.)

“All of us on the program experienced to some degree ‘child star letdown,’ but we remembered the actual experience fondly,” Richard L. Williams, the show’s other math whiz, now a retired diplomat, said in a phone interview. “It was a high for us. But Joel said it destroyed his childhood. When he was 6, I was 11. The program put stress on the smallest kids. They got the most attention and were the least equipped to deal with it.”
He added: “Once the show went on television they kept Joel, because he was so well known, but the general age got lower and lower. I’m guessing that experience was pretty sour for him. No real competition and no real comradeship.”

After he left the show, Mr. Kupperman went to the University of Chicago: a professor there suggested that he leave the country.

Professor Kupperman earned a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Cambridge in England and joined the philosophy department of the University of Connecticut in 1960, remaining there until his retirement in 2010. His scholarly focus was on ethics and aesthetics, and he was an early champion of Asian philosophy at a time when Eastern traditions were considered more akin to religion or mysticism than philosophy.
He drew from a variety of traditions, many of them ancient, which made his work cosmopolitan and original, said David Wong, a professor of philosophy at Duke University.
“The tone of much of Joel’s work is that of a gentle and wise interlocutor who refrains from lecturing to us on what the good life is,” Professor Wong added, “but rather assists us in our individual and collective endeavors to live a good life by articulation of much good advice and well-taken cautions.”

He was extremely reluctant to discuss his time as a Quiz Kid: his family says he’d walk away if anyone brought it up.

He met Karen Ordahl in Cambridge, Mass., after she had earned a master’s degree in history at Harvard University, and they married in 1964, settling down together in Storrs, Conn., near the University of Connecticut campus.
“When we were dating that first summer, if a store clerk heard his name, they would invariably say, ‘I hated you when I was a kid,’” Ms. Kupperman said. “He was really determined to reinvent himself, and by college he was already thinking of himself as a philosopher. He wanted to retreat into the life of the mind, and in many ways he succeeded. He really lived in his head.”
And yet when his wife decided to pursue her Ph.D. in history at the University of Cambridge, Professor Kupperman took a sabbatical for a year followed by another year without pay so that she could do so. In England he cared for Michael and Charlie, then 7 and 4, while she worked toward her doctorate — not typical male behavior for the times, Ms. Kupperman said.

Ms. Kupperman survives him, as do a son and a daughter. His son, Michael Kupperman, is an artist who wrote a graphic novel memoir of his father called All The Answers (affiliate link).

“What you gonna do when you get out of jail?…” part 44

May 13th, 2020

We’re all looking forward to travel again, right? Flying on luxurious airliners, with plenty of legroom, free (and excellent) meals, and just a few short hours to an exotic destination like Hawaii.

(This is also targeted content for great and good FOTB RoadRich and the 1940 Air Terminal Museum, who I haven’t done anything for in a couple of weeks, at least.)

We’ll get there. But first, your coffee break historical bite: “Sentinel in the Sky”, from 1955. A Pan Am promotional film about radar: how it works, and how Pan Am plans to use it in their aircraft.

Bonus video #1, which is a little longer: “Holiday in Hawaii”, from an airline that still exists (for now). This is from sometime in the 1950s: a promotional film for United Airlines, the DC-7, and travel to Hawaii. As the YouTube notes say, this is a relic of a time before jet travel made going to Hawaii fast, easy, and (I guess relatively) affordable.

Bonus video #2: giving equal time to the (now defunct) competition, “Wings to Hawaii”. A video on a similar theme, but this time from Pan Am. You know, the folks with radar?

“What you gonna do when you get out of jail?…” part 43

May 12th, 2020

I don’t really have a theme today. I also don’t have anything that is as short as I’d like. And I’m holding off on military aviation videos for the moment, as Borepatch and ASM826 are ahead of me on that front. Sorry about that. But here are a couple of YouTube recommendations I found interesting.

“Broken Arrow – Response to a Nuclear Weapons Accident”. 1980 DoD training film capturing a “broken arrow” exercise (not an actual incident – at least, that’s what they want you to think).

From 1969, “Tunnel Destruction”. Exactly what it says on the tin: how to destroy enemy tunnels with various tools. Mostly explosives.

“What you gonna do when you get out of jail?…” part 42

May 11th, 2020

Seems like it has been a while since we were on the beat, so let’s go back on patrol.

“Stay Alert, Stay Alive: The Techniques and Mechanics Of Arrest”, a vintage FBI training film from sometime in the 1960s.

“Uniforms and jurisdictions change, but hoodlums…don’t.”

Bonus video: we’ve seen British police from the 1970s. Now, how about…the 1980s?

Obit watch: May 11, 2020.

May 11th, 2020

Jerry Stiller, of the comedy team Stiller and Meara, movies, theater, and a couple of obscure TV shows.

Mr. Stiller’s accomplishments as an actor were considerable. He appeared on Broadway in Terrence McNally’s frantic farce “The Ritz” in 1975 and David Rabe’s dark drama “Hurlyburly” in 1984. Off Broadway, he was in “The Threepenny Opera”; in Central Park, he played Shakespearean clowns for Joseph Papp; onscreen, he was seen as, among other things, a police detective in “The Taking of Pelham One, Two, Three” (1974) and Divine’s husband in John Waters’s “Hairspray” (1988). But he was best known as a comedian.

The comedy partnership of Mr. Stiller and Ms. Meara flourished for more than a decade and found a new outlet when they began doing commercials. But they eventually went their separate ways professionally — although they remained happily married and continued to perform together from time to time. Ms. Meara died in 2015.

Mr. Stiller remained active throughout his 80s. He was typically manic in a series of commercials for Capital One Bank, seen on television and heard on radio in 2012.
That same year, he played a group-therapy patient in the independent film “Excuse Me for Living.” In 2014, he provided the voice for the title character in an unorthodox animated television special, “How Murray Saved Christmas.”

“How Murray Saved Christmas” from “Great But Forgotten“.

There’s a great story at the end of the NYT obit that I won’t spoil here.

“What you gonna do when you get out of jail?…” part 41

May 10th, 2020

Science Sunday!

When last we left the Bell System Science Series, Frank Capra had departed, and the films were being produced “under the personal supervision of Jack L. Warner.” What this actually amounted to was: Owen Crump was producing, and also directed the first three of the four Warner films.

Geoff Alexander and Rick Prelinger have written, “From the perspective of overall cohesion, writing, and set design, Crump’s Bell series films are superior to those of Capra. Crump did not overtly proselytize, relied less on animated characters interacting with Dr. Baxter, and utilized the set design as almost a character in itself, as exemplified by William Kuehl’s sound stage set for Gateways to the Mind, and his madcap carnival-like set for Alphabet Conspiracy.” See the screenshot for one example of Kuehl’s work. Marcel LaFollette has commented that, while the “spiritual tone” of the Capra films wasn’t present the Warner films, “overt appeals to religion also appeared in the four created by Warner Brothers”.

The fifth film in the series, from 1958: “Gateways To the Mind”, about the five senses and how they work. This one was written by Henry F. Greenburg. As Wikipedia notes, the sound stage is kind of trippy. Also, the animation was directed by Chuck Jones.

Film number six, from 1959: “The Alphabet Conspiracy”. “A young girl named Judy is having trouble with her English homework. She has a dream were she means The Mad Hatter and The Jabberwock from Alice In Wonderland.” She joins up with the Mad Hatter in a conspiracy to get rid of the alphabet until “Dr. Linguistics” shows her the error of her ways.

Hans Conried plays the Mad Hatter, and Friz Freleng directed the animation. Leo Salkin and Richard Hobson did the writing.

Next week: Time and DNA. And a special guest appearance from one Dr. Richard P. Feynman.

Noted.

May 9th, 2020

I didn’t want to put this in the main jail feed, but I did want to make note of it: YouTube is telling me that “The Wrecking Crew” documentary is available for free (with ads).

I know that great and good FOTB and highly valued contributor pigpen51 was a fan of this movie, so I figure it’s worth your time to watch.

“What you gonna do when you get out of jail?…” part 40

May 9th, 2020

Today is Saturday, so I feel like I can run a bit long. And there’s been one thing missing from this series to date: trains. I’m sure at least some of my readers are train fans, right?

“On the Track”, a 1940s film made by Carl Dudley for the Association of American Railroads. Mr. Dudley was apparently a fairly well known railroad film maker.

Bonus video #1: from 1952, “Northwest Empire”, a Union Pacific promo film about travel around Oregon and Washington.

Bonus video #2: “At This Moment”, from 1954. Propaganda film about the importance of American railroads.

I have to admit: “Kelly” is kind of cute in that 1950s way. I can see why someone would send her a dozen roses.

Obit watch: May 9, 2020.

May 9th, 2020

Richard Penniman, better known as “Little Richard”.

Little Richard did not invent rock ’n’ roll. Other musicians had already been mining a similar vein by the time he recorded his first hit, “Tutti Frutti” — a raucous song about sex, its lyrics cleaned up but its meaning hard to miss — in a New Orleans recording studio in September 1955. Chuck Berry and Fats Domino had reached the pop Top 10, Bo Diddley had topped the rhythm-and-blues charts, and Elvis Presley had been making records for a year.
But Little Richard, delving deeply into the wellsprings of gospel music and the blues, pounding the piano furiously and screaming as if for his very life, raised the energy level several notches and created something not quite like any music that had been heard before — something new, thrilling and more than a little dangerous. As the rock historian Richie Unterberger put it, “He was crucial in upping the voltage from high-powered R&B into the similar, yet different, guise of rock ’n’ roll.”

He was at the height of his fame when he left the United States in late September 1957 to begin a tour in Australia. As he told the story, he was exhausted, under intense pressure from the Internal Revenue Service and furious at the low royalty rate he was receiving from Specialty. Without anyone to advise him, he had signed a contract that gave him half a cent for every record he sold. “Tutti Frutti” had sold half a million copies but had netted him only $25,000.
One night in early October, before 40,000 fans at an outdoor arena in Sydney, he had an epiphany.
“That night Russia sent off that very first Sputnik,” he told Mr. White, referring to the first satellite sent into space. “It looked as though the big ball of fire came directly over the stadium about two or three hundred feet above our heads. It shook my mind. It really shook my mind. I got up from the piano and said, ‘This is it. I am through. I am leaving show business to go back to God.’”
He had one last Top 10 hit: “Good Golly Miss Molly,” recorded in 1956 but not released until early 1958. By then, he had left rock ’n’ roll behind.
He became a traveling evangelist. He entered Oakwood College (now Oakwood University) in Huntsville, Ala., a Seventh-day Adventist school, to study for the ministry. He cut his hair, got married and began recording gospel music.

By his own account, alcohol and cocaine began to sap his soul (“I lost my reasoning,” he would later say), and in 1977, he once again turned from rock ’n’ roll to God. He became a Bible salesman, began recording religious songs again and, for the second time, disappeared from the spotlight.
He did not stay away forever. The publication of his biography in 1984 signaled his return to the public eye, and he began performing again.

By the time he stopped performing, Little Richard was in both the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (he was inducted in the Hall’s first year) and the Songwriters Hall of Fame and the recipient of lifetime achievement awards from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences and the Rhythm and Blues Foundation. “Tutti Frutti” was added to the Library of Congress’s National Recording Registry in 2010.

The NYT obit for Roy Horn wasn’t up when I was writing last night, but it is now.

Historical note. Parental guidance suggested.

May 9th, 2020

Forty years ago today, at about 3:40 in the afternoon Pacific time, five losers tried to hold up the Security Pacific Bank branch in Norco, California.

The five guys involved in the robbery were pretty much a loose collection of friends and relatives. There were two sets of brothers involved. The ostensible leader of the group had converted to a form of fundamentalist Christianity in the 70s, and had also become obsessed with a lot of the global catastrophe thinking going on at the time (Jupiter Effect, earthquakes, etc.) The main purpose of the robbery was to get funds so they could build and stock a compound. When the s–t hit the fan, they planned to retreat there with their families and ride out the apocalypse.

It didn’t go as planned. The robbers had planned to set off a large explosion as a diversion, but that failed, and the robbery was pretty much blown right away. Riverside County Sheriff’s Department responded, with the first officer on scene within seconds. The five robbers had managed to accumulate what even I would call a truly impressive stash of guns, ammo, and improvised explosive devices, and a firefight broke out between the RCSD and the five robbers. The responding deputies were outgunned, but continued to engage.

The robbers tried to flee in their (stolen) getaway van, but a lucky shot from one of the RCSD officers killed their getaway driver and the van crashed. The remaining four robbers hijacked a work truck from a passing driver (still shooting it out with RCSD) and fled.

(“The four remaining robbers then exited the vehicle and fired over 200 rounds at [RCSD Deputy Glyn] Bolasky, putting 47 bullet holes in his cruiser. Bolasky was hit five times; in the face, upper left shoulder, both forearms and the left elbow.”)

The robbery team then proceeded to lead law enforcement (RCSD, the California Highway Patrol, and the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department) on a merry chase of approximately 25 miles (possibly 35 miles: sources differ) through the Inland Empire, into the San Gabriel Mountains, and up a dirt road. They were firing at the officers and throwing IEDs the whole way: according to Wikipedia, 33 police cars and a helicopter were damaged by gunfire.

Once they got into the mountains, the robbery team repeatedly pulled ahead on the dirt road, then stopped in an attempt to ambush the responding officers. At the time, the radio systems they used did not inter-operate: officers from one department, who could communicate with their department’s helicopter, were relaying messages on the one available “mutual aid” frequency to the other departments warning of ambushes.

The robbery team was finally stopped by a washed out area of the dirt road, exited the truck and ambushed the officers chasing them. Deputy James Evans of the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department was shot and killed. Two deputies behind Evans (D. J. McCarty and James McPheron of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department) brought into play the SBCSD’s only rifle: a stolen M-16 that had been dumped from a moving car, recovered by the department, and kept when the military said “We don’t want it back”. Supposedly, it didn’t look like much, but it fired.

(At one point, responding law enforcement officers pulled over and commandeered a lever-action rifle from a target shooter who was walking along the road. This particular area was in common use as an informal range, and the robbery team had practiced shooting there. Unfortunately, the lever-action rifle the deputies commandeered was a .22.)

When SBCSD started firing back on full-auto, the robbery team decided it was time to make like the trees and get out of there. They fled into the forest. Three of them surrendered or were captured the following day. The fourth one was tracked down by a law enforcement team, was shot multiple times when he refused to surrender, and apparently killed himself with a shot to the chest from his .38.

There was, of course, a trial. From the account I’ve read, it may have been the closest thing to a courtroom circus California ever saw before OJ. The trial lasted 14 months: at the end of it, the three surviving bank robbers were sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole. All three remain in the California penal system today.

The definitive, and (to the best of my knowledge, only) account of this story is Peter Houlahan’s Norco ’80: The True Story of the Most Spectacular Bank Robbery in American History. I’m embarrassed to admit: I’d never heard of the Norco robbery until I saw a reference to Houlahan’s book somewhere. I was in high school at the time, and I thought I was fairly aware of current events and the world around me. So finding out there was a major bank robbery and shootout in California that wasn’t North Hollywood and that I’d never heard of kind of blew my mind.

I have mixed feelings about the book, though. The early chapters about the background of the robbery team and especially the leader kind of bugged me. Houlahan seemed to be kind of condescending about the more mainstream aspects of the leader’s Christian beliefs. And he didn’t answer the one question I have: where did these five losers, who were either under-employed on unemployed, get the money to accumulate all those guns and ammo? (He doesn’t say anything about them stealing weapons: all of their purchases were apparently legit over the counter sales at gun shops. Stealing guns: bad. Bank robbery: A-OK?)

Once he settles down and actually gets into the robbery, though, Houlahan’s book became much more interesting to me. I think he did an excellent job of profiling many of the law enforcement people involved, especially several members of the RCSD and their struggles (both before and after the robbery). Andy Delgado’s story is especially compelling to me. I think he was also pretty strong on the lack of preparation by RCSD and the other agencies involved for an event like this. The departments were still armed with mostly revolvers and shotguns, and almost no rifles (officially). They also did a sorry job of managing PTSD for the responding officers. Several of them (including Glyn Bolasky) left law enforcement afterwards. (Deputy Bolasky recovered from his injuries, and, after leaving law enforcement, joined the Air Force and became a Lieutenant Colonel.)

Houlahan’s also pretty good about the trial, which I haven’t gone into a lot of detail about. I’ll refer you to his book if you want that part of the story. And, to his credit, he tried really hard to be precise about firearms and firearms terminology. There are a couple of places where he slipped up (repeated references to the robbers having a “.357 rifle” in their intended getaway car: I’m pretty sure he meant “.375 H&H”).

Wikipedia page on the Norco shootout, which also doesn’t go into a lot of detail about the trial.

Someone has posted a documentary/training film, apparently made by the Irvine Police Department in 1982, on YouTube. (Officer Rolf Parkes, who is credited in the first video, was with RCSD at the time and was injured in the shootout.) It is longish (close to an hour) but broken up into three chunks for your viewing pleasure, and well worth watching. (The transfer quality is also better than some of those vintage Motorola videos.)

Part 1:

Part 2:

Part 3:

(Houlahan’s book was nominated for a best fact crime Edgar this year, but lost to The Less People Know About Us: A Mystery of Betrayal, Family Secrets, and Stolen Identity by Axton Betz-Hamilton. And, yes, those are affiliate links, and if you buy the books through this site, I do get a kickback.)

Obit watch: May 8, 2020.

May 8th, 2020

Hattip to my brother: Roy Horn of Siegfried and Roy (he was the one who got bit by the tiger) has passed away at 75.

According to reports, he died of COVID-19 related complications.

“What you gonna do when you get out of jail?…” part 39

May 8th, 2020

The past is another country.

From 1943: “Kill Or Be Killed”, a short film explaining in no uncertain terms that there are no rules of sportsmanship on the battlefield.

Bonus video #1: “Don’t Kill Your Friends”, also from 1943. I’m pulling this one out because…well…you’ll see less than 30 seconds in.

“…he’s not so much a name, as a state of mind.” Truer words were never spoken, about both the movie character and his namesake.

Bonus video #2: “Shoot To Kill”. This is actually a British Army training film, about the proper use (and effective ranges) of various issue weapons, including the Bren gun and anti-tank rifles.