[PW] trying to find a poem in California Eagle

Franco, Adrienne AFranco at iona.edu
Thu Jan 3 14:37:33 PST 2008


The Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research has
issues of the California Eagle on microfilm -- not sure if they have an
index, but you may wish to contact them.  The home page of the library
is: http://www.socallib.org/ 
Phone nos., staff names, e-mail addresses, etc. may be found at:
http://www.socallib.org/about/staff.html 

Note also statement on page at 
http://www.socallib.org/bass/research/eagle/articles/index.html 
"If you are interested in seeing more articles from the Eagle, microfilm
of many of the issues is available at the Library."

Adrienne Franco / Iona College / New Rochelle, NY 10801

-----Original Message-----
From: project-wombat-bounces at lists.project-wombat.org
[mailto:project-wombat-bounces at lists.project-wombat.org] On Behalf Of
Dennis Lien
Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2008 5:25 PM
To: list at project-wombat.org
Subject: Re: [PW] trying to find a poem in California Eagle

At 03:45 PM 1/3/2008, you wrote:
>Joyce wrote:
> >
> > Dear Project Wombat,
> >
> > I just found out about your services, and I thank you for any
insights
> > into the following source. I am an editor with a strict deadline,
and
>the
> > author of an article cannot provide more than the following source
>from
> > the now defunct California Eagle.
> >
> > Kinloch, John. "Poem of Love and War and Death and Marv's Sweet
Shop,"
> > California Eagle.
> >
> > This reference would date from the mid twentieth century.
> >
>
>A Google Books Search provides a little more information, but not much:
>
>
>The Great Black Way: L.A. in the 1940s and the Lost African-American
>Renaissance by R. J. Smith - History - 2006 - 320 pages
>
>Page 69
>In "A Pome of Love and War and Death and Marv's Sweet Shop," Kinloch
>assumed the voice of an aviation worker: You are. A young snot. Who
>don't know. ...
>
>
>
>Kerry

I looked at our copy of R.J. Smith's book to see he gave a date anywhere
for the poem (or "pome" as the title indeed has it), but he did not.
However, from context within the chapter in which it's quoted it's
apparently from the 1942-1944/5 period, while aircraft factories in
Los Angeles were running 24/7 shifts to keep up with war requirements
and were hiring African American among others to work them, even
though grudgingly.

According to:

http://rockcriticsarchives.com/interviews/rjsmith/rjsmith.html


the author is "a senior editor on LOS ANGELES MAGAZINE."  Possibly
if he could be contacted he might have a date of publication for
Kinloch's piece.


For what it's worth...


Dennis Lien / U of Minnesota Libraries // d-lien at umn.edu 


_______________________________________________
Project Wombat
list at project-wombat.org
http://www.project-wombat.org/


More information about the Project-Wombat mailing list