Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 25

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
25
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

KLX 910 a. THt vim isiieiufi Mitt. in iiiu mi riuiit timet v'ttwu nearing Sunday and tht Saturday night crew in IThe Tribun city room was about VOL CLII OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MAY, 1, 1950 25 NO. 122 ready to call it quit when an anxious woman, called In. THIS PHOTO WON TRIBUNE CAMERAMAN PULITZER PRIZE She waa all aet to chance her clock to' Daylight Saving time.

butane, was confused. If you're going to, save tune, she main- tained, you've got, to turn the Clock back. The.Trlbune wa telling everyone- to set the clock, ahead. The Tribune must be. She was pretty sure of iti MillllHHIM-lfJi)ii i'( il)H "Will ill lilfi'i I I IJ I l.l I in i IMJIM Ml in im .1.

I HI I III I lllll I II 1 fk. After some several minutes 'of argument Came an inspiration. Why donH you call the tele-phone company -and what they're doing with their mechanical time announcer?" she was asked. That seemed to satisfy the eajierand theitrTown quieted down, confident the issue had been settled. Minutes, before, the telephony company had also called The Tribune, oft the same issue.

And had been convinced. 0 0 0 1 Naval reserve men on training ships moored in the Estuary have been watching with sympathy and concern the struggle of University of California crewmen to get into, shape 'ir the big Washington regal et for May 20. Up and (Town the Estuary go the shells, sturdy backs and strong arms ply the oars rhythymically, to the accompaniment of exhortations from Coach Ky Ebright It looks like tough, gruelling work, and it is. So the sailors, eager to-be helpful, have hung out a big sign where the oarsmen can't miss it: "Join Navy Reserve. No ,71 7, i7Tr; 7:: 7 t7.

flowing. We Have Engines." This we seem to have heard before, but it is supposed to have occurred in a church at Orinda. which makes it news The minister looked over his Easter Sundar. congregation, which tilled every seat and over flowed into the aisles and lobby, and expressed his pleasure at the record attendance. "I have net seen many of you brightly, "and I have the feeling that I may not see you ajain for months.

So I would like to take this occasion to wish you a very Merry Christmas I 0 The i San Pablo City Council must have Md a dismal meeting last night. On the agenda was a discussion involving a citizen named Stanley Dim. 77,7 He was scheduled to be followed by an appearance" of another citizen named Charles W. Glum. 0 0 0 Jailed because he refused to sign a traffic citation, one Johm Googoo, who gave his address as 883 57th Street and occupation as "service man" gave Oakland cops a few interesting moments ksifiiday.

,1 1 'f "to nis car iney louna wnaii looked like a spare handle and i i'isir'r 7: t.v.r.,. "vs 'vi. an assortment of gears and other parts of slot machines. person they found two receipt! 77" iV aJ nnOWi7 77 '7 books, with notations of names i 7t rv -v 1 ChicaaotL---- jw i' 7-' S-X i7t7 i77 77'177 7 tr7x 7 "1, 7' i.t! 'Ll of bars in Martinez, Port and Bella Vista, together with a check stub, made Out to Ooogoo for $400 and carrying the firm and Kesseil." Tribune Photographer Wins Pulitzer for Googoo explained nothing and. he was finally released after his WIFE BEATER DENIES INTENT TO COMMIT MURDER Berkeley Holds Check Suspect Alameda and Berkeley police OTHER IMPORTANT PRIZES WON BY TRIBUNE WORKERS The award of the Pulitzer Prize News Picture of Near Collision of Airplanes wife deposited $25 bad on a charge of failing to yield right-of-way for ajjedesirian.

Compensation insurance adjusters are going to wish they MARTINEZ, May 2. Egbert M. today placed holds on a bad never heard of Miss Donna Hon rr 7 t.sw...a phi Bill Crouch Given Top A word for His Air Show Feature mann.i3045 Revwf Uohnson, 24, made a flejectea ap- cnecK nupcei reponeaiy iV Miss Hoffmann mlure to pearance today before Superior) fan- operauons in i are. wu injured in pearance today before Superior ccordw members short lime after his release of this newspaper for achievement during 1949. "Singed," a photo by Staff Photographer John F.

McBride, won Une of ffuty by. a Judge Hugh H. Donovan to enter JThere duM of innocent and inno-citement in the Government Service Credits Union office at cent by reason of insamty to the iaOT Harrison Street, where Miss I charge of assault with a deadly Hofiiriann is employed. Other! weapon with intent to murder. rUwr un on chairs, desks.

Johnson is accused of the San Quentinl Arrested yesterday at Sunnyvale was Woodrow Kenneth DeBerry, 36, who, according to Alameda Inspectors William Tul- Bill Crouch, Tribune staff photographer, today was the of the Pulitzer Prize- Winning Photo VVct Entered in Contest Without Knowledge Local reporting: Meyer Berger 1 of the New York Times.for hi1 story covering Howard Unruh' mass killing spree in Camden, J. -4-ii National reporting: Edwin Guthman, of the- Seattle, Times for Jus stories clearing Professor Melvin Rader 7 of the University of Washingtoa of "Communist charges. first prize the 11th annual news photo contest of Editor and, journalism's hishest loh and Robert Allen, was re and bookcases" skirts-raised, and "pistol-whipping" his and bookcases, skirts raised, leased from San Quentin PP trd jour- Announcement el the selection old sister-in-law. Mrs. Loree December 14.

namea piciure oi the month- Jones, who was pregnant at the oy xne Associaiea voices also. A mouse had trapped itself in the In the same month, the ins pec- of Crouch for the award in news photography was made in New York yesterday by President Dwiffht D. Eisenhower of Colum- Press and "picture of the week' time of the alleged beating last February 15 at her mother'. by Life Magazine. As might be expected, male McBride's print also was among Universit.

The aVard in- Street, Alameda, a worthless the best-of-show in the seventh I eludes $500 in cash. International reporting: dr employee were enjoying thejnome, azu ttunungron Avenue, view and it remained for Miss Richmond. Hoffmann to demonstrate thatj Morose and ashamed, Johnson not all girls are afraid of mice, sobbed tfut an admission of the annual "News Pictures of thej The Tribune staff member won check for $250 for silverware which she had advertised for sale. Year" competition sponsored, bytthfepyeted. prize for his photo muna Stevens of the Christian Science Monitor foT series entitled "This Russia Uncea- rT the KmvrlnnMli Rrittnnin nrt In fact, she seems to have a I oeaung pouce, ou saiu ne owy graph, "Whoosh," which showr a Authorities at Sunnyvale said the University of Missouri School remembered striking one blow, friendly feeling for the rodents.

sored" small plane just missing a bomber during the Oakland Air Show of Journalism. A picture of the same accident At request of his attorney, Lewis E. Lercara and one concurrence of Deputy Dist Atty. Mortimer Veale, Judge Donovan set July 25 as date for triaL A i '7" -7 -n7. -v --r 4.

Anyway, ahe picked up the mouse, put him in a paper bag, and took him downstairs to 13th and Harrison -where she freed You woil4-tfiink that the last falt- The picture previously had been judged the best spot news picture of 1949 in the metropolis tan division of the California Associated Press Photo Contest, and was among the best-of-show pic editorial writinp Carl 1C Saunders, editor of the Jackaont Mich, Citizen Patriot Cartoon: James T. Berryman ot the Washington, DC, Star. tor a cartoon entitled "All- Set For a Super Secret Hearing in Wash ton." Music: "The Consul," an open by Tribune Cameraman Russ Reed won first prize tn thi National Press Photographers' contest, first jn the, National Graflex contest's "presl division, and third lq the California- Associated Press photo contest, Staff Writer Paul Lewis, was awarded $150 prize by the Dis mouse might have appreciated; T.fa yrAti i her effort to liberate him, but he UKC DCill LCliCU 111 either didnl like theJnid-town ture -in the seventh annual "News Pictures of the Year com- they found pawn shop tickets in DeBetry's home there, and the Alameda officers planned to make a check of San Francisco shops today in an effort to find the silver. Berkeley" police said DeBerry wrote three bad check therej the first, on December ,11, They totaled 1 $59.40, the i investigators Oakland officer! said they did not plan to place hold on the suspect, 'but would turn over information to the district attorney if he were brought here for prosecution The suspect is believed, to have cashed about $300 worth of bad checks- en. Cast Oakland merchants, according to police.

petitiott sponsored jeintly by the Encyclopedia Britannic and the University of Missouri School of Cigars Stores Dice games can be played in San Francisco cigar atom again, but only for merchandise. Police Chief Michael Mitchell abled American Veterans as an "extraordinary award for achieve traffic or he had been happy in the wastebasket Anyway, he bit Miss Hoffmann twice. the office force compiled the insurance claim report, with selected items as follows: Q--What was employee doing when accident occurred? 71 A Catching mouse. Journalism. oy- bin-CarlQ Menorb.

History: "Art and Life iff4 America," a book by" O. Biography: "John Quincy Adams and the foundations of ftsa American Foreign Policy" by Samuel Fkgg Bemis-, I Poetrv: "Anm Allen" Xne award was based on a series of stories written late Crouch, who is 34, Is native last year to heln raise more thanLrf rvnn ritv rin tt trA $25,000 for the Veterans HospiUUUjjpaper work in 1935, when eased his crackdown so far as "Twenty-six and "Selection" are concerned after a rigid anti-dice Christmas How did accident happen? gam ban ordered several weeks Gwendolyn Brooks. i A Injured person discovered' jo. he became a wirephoto station operator for the Associated Press in Denver; In 193? he was transferred to Seattle and in 1941 took over operation of the wire- The -Pulitzer awards, officially. PuHim Prix wteaaf K3 aloS photogra- Mitchell 1 moved against the known as the Pulitzer Prize la mouse in wastebasket la attempting to remove same was at LIVEftMORE N.A.S.

REUNION SLATED JW0 aWOI fKMf WSKB WW BUM CSTSWUlOVnO. -) 4 Journalism and Letters, were- games then after receiving complaints that servicemen were tacked by same. Tribune photo. established by the late Joseph photo station in The Tribune's editorial offices. What machine, tool, or ub-being victimized.

stance wu most -closely con Cries of anguish arose from He hat been a Tribune photog The cameraman surmised in exposing the presence Pulitzer publisher of the New York World- and the St Louis Post Dispatch, in a bequest to Tormer personnel' oi Livermore Naval Air Station will- gather for cigar store operators a a result of Illinois newsmen on state pay the picture had been submitted Recruits for Petrol Begin Basic Training SACRAMENTO, May 1-11 Twenty-five new California high-' way patrolmen' win start basic training at the patrol academy her tomorrow, Commissioner a "get-together" banquet at Don's rolls. i Columbia by Associated Press headquarters in New, York. In Dublin tomorrow at 8 p.m. They are awarded annually by nected the AMous. What do you recommend 'for this type of accident? sl A Trap, with cheese.

-THEKNAVJL According to Mel it rapher sine1 1944, except for a year of wartime duty with the Marine 77, Newv 6f, the' Pulitzer kward' came as surprise to Crouch; who had entered the winning photograph Jn tha competiUon, Gold medals worth $500 were So Mitchell ordered the ban withdrawn, in part, warning cigar atorr operators caught making illegal cash payoffs would fact low of their plnbaU licenses. the trustees of the recommendation ef Ca charge of arrangements, over 100 awarded to: the Chicago Daily i Other winner of 4th Pulitzer awards included: Fiction: "The Way by A. Guthrie Jr. Dramas "outh Pacific Clifford Peterson ex-countey club hands are ex- Newt and 4h St Louis Post Dis board of the ColunLli 7 today. pec ted to swap "ae stories" patch tot "zneritortouv pubbje -Hi 1 i I i 1.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Oakland Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
2,392,182
Years Available:
1874-2016