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Blissful Studebaker Ignorance @ Age 17

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  • Blissful Studebaker Ignorance @ Age 17

    'Finally got a round tuit today (you've heard of round tuits, haven't you? They are what you acquire when you accomplish something you've been meaning to do for some time) and went down to The Indianapolis Central Library and scanned the microfilm roll of the December 1963 editions of The Indianapolis News.

    That newspaper went the way of 'most all evening dailys decades ago. But in 1963, it was the largest-circulation evening newspaper in Indiana, and a major player in the print market here.

    It was the evening product of Indianapolis Newspapers Inc, which also owned and published The Indianapolis Star morning newspaper. The Star is still published as Indianapolis' only daily newspaper, although half of it is/are customized pages from USA Today, since the big Gannett Publishing conglomerate on the east coast now owns The Indianapolis Star...and that's probably the extent to which I should venture into the editorial realities of today's Gannett-directed Indianapolis Star! <GGG>

    Anyway,
    I knew I had a Letter to the Editor published in a December 1963 Indianapolis News, but had forgotten in which issue it had been published. I've been meaning to look it up for some time since I was only 17 years old(!) when I wrote it ...and having it published taught me two distinct "things." Here it is, as published in the December 31, 1963 Indianapolis News:



    The two things I learned as a result of having it published:

    1. You have no control over the heading that will be assigned to your letter by the newspaper's editors. In this case, as can be seen, I did not blame "state officials" for the loss of Studebaker, as the editor's heading claims. Rather, I said Indiana should have been making more of a concerted effort to buy and use Studebaker vehicles, since they were manufactured here.

    2. The "answer" given by Harold Brotherton, I felt, was my formal introduction to BS from a bureaucrat! It is known that Studebaker would/could make a vehicle to almost any specification, given half a chance...or, alternately, the state could have worked with Studebaker to make sure Studebaker could not build a vehicle the state needed before "letting" the contract elsewhere. I suspected at the time that Brotherton's remark was as convenient as anything he could dream up to justify what they were doing anyway...and exactly 50 years later, I still do.

    Now, as to blissful ignorance.

    I, and probably other less-informed people such as myself (at the time), equated Studebaker's employment in Indiana as being a big deal because they built Studebakers in South Bend. In retrospect, I now know that General Motors undoubtedly employed two or three times as many people in Indiana as did Studebaker in 1963, even though they didn't build complete vehicles here. (They do now, of course, building Chevrolet and GMC trucks in Roanoke, A/K/A "Ft. Wayne Assembly.")

    'Truth be known, probably Ford and Chrysler employed as many, if not more, people in Indiana in 1963 as did Studebaker....but, again, given my myopic 17-year-old vision de jour, they didn't build 'em here, dammit!

    I thought I had clipped and saved most items about Studebaker's closing from the newspapers back then, but found a couple items I had missed. I copied them for everyone's edification and comment, if you like. (If they are difficult to read, press ctrl and "+" at the same time on your keyboard and it will enlarge the text):



    To illustrate what likely happened to so many new-for-1959 Studebaker customers when it came time to trade their 1959 Larks, we have this used-car ad from the big Bill Kuhn Chevrolet dealership group:



    OUCH! A 4-year-old Lark traded in on a new Chevrolet, priced at $495...you can be sure the Bill Kuhn group didn't have more than $100 hard money in that poor Lark, if that much!

    (You think that was bad? I didn't copy it, but another used-car ad from big Jerry Alderman Ford had a box of "bargain priced" cars in one corner. Included was, for example, a 1950 Chevrolet for $119.. But the only car in that box priced under $100 was a 1956 Packard 2-door hardtop...for $78! Really; $78 for what must have been a running and driving, 7-year-old 1956 Packard hardtop!)

    Finally, I ran across two items in the December 27, 1963 Indianapolis News that illustrate something, but I'm not sure what it is. You be the judge:

    Those two items, in the same article, discussed the results of The Indianapolis News having polled its Indiana Associated Press writers and its own writers (two different groups), asking them to rank what they thought were the top ten 1963 Indiana news stories (not nationally, so the JFK assassination wasn't mentioned).

    The results are shocking for us in Studebaker-land: Neither poll's results included Studebaker's South Bend closing as a Top Ten 1963 Indiana news story!

    Gad, I would have thought Studebaker's closing would have made one of the polls, if not both of them...but there it was in black and white: Studebaker's South Bend closing was not considered a Top Ten Indiana news story in 1963. Unbelievable.

    So, you may ask, what was more newsworthy in 1963 in Indiana than Studebaker's closing?
    Several things were legitimate, such as the Halloween Night Holiday on Ice State Fairgrounds coliseum explosion that killed circa 77 people and injured scores more. (A leaking propane tank fitting or connection in improperly-stored propane tanks under the concrete seating, to fuel popcorn poppers, had allowed propane to accumulate under the seating structure until something ignited it, blowing huge sections of seats, concrete, and people into the air, onto the arena's ice, at the conclusion of the show. Horrific.)

    On the other end of the scale, from legitimate (the coliseum explosion) to ridiculous, was the Associated Press of Indiana correspondents' selection of the tenth most important 1963 Indiana news item, which was (and I quote verbatim):

    10. Three Indiana University Young Socialists indicted on charges of subversive activity.

    Yep, there you have it; that was more newsworthy than Studebaker's closing in South Bend, at least according to Associated Press writers assigned to Indiana. Ah, the more things change, the more they stay the same, eh?

    Obviously, what was supposed to be a 15-minute search for one Letter to the Editor turned into two hours of enjoyably reading and reflecting from the December, 1963 editions of The Indianapolis News. ('Good thing I accidentally put too much time on the parking meter; we needed it!) BP
    Last edited by BobPalma; 01-04-2014, 11:31 AM. Reason: spelling

  • #2
    Thanks Bob and glad to see you Back!!
    Jamie McLeod
    Hope Mills, NC

    1963 Lark "Ugly Betty"
    1958 Commander "Christine"
    1964 Wagonaire "Louise"
    1955 Commander Sedan
    1964 Champ
    1960 Lark

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    • #3
      1956 Hudson Hollywood for $295. Sounds interesting. Thanks Bob
      sigpic1957 Packard Clipper Country Sedan

      "There's nothing stronger than the heart of a volunteer"
      Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle
      "I have a great memory for forgetting things" Number 1 son, Lee Chan

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      • #4
        Wow, Bob. Why didn't the press care? It doesn't make sense to me.

        Bob Bruner

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        • #5
          Cool, thanks for posting.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by 57pack View Post
            1956 Hudson Hollywood for $295. Sounds interesting. Thanks Bob
            Yeah, and a V8 with automatic to boot...in 1956, it could have been AMC's new 250 V8 after circa March 5, backed with a dependable Hydramatic; the car advertised for $295 wasn't necessarily a 352 Packard V8 with Ultramatic. (But it probably was; I see where they only made 229 1956 Hudson Hornet Special Hollywoods.)

            Incidentally, that $295 Hudson had been advertised at $495 in a similar ad a few weeks earlier. Like that 1959 Lark, they surely had no money in the Hudson; anything they got for it was simply more profit on the original deal. BP

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            • #7
              Originally posted by rbruner View Post
              Wow, Bob. Why didn't the press care? It doesn't make sense to me. Bob Bruner
              Yes, Bob; it kind of 'splains to us what small potatos Studebaker was at the end. A sad reality. BP

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              • #8
                i wonder if the Indianapolis newspaper editors placed most of the "Top 10" news stories for its major circulation area - central Indiana. (?)...

                great to see you back online!!!
                Kerry. SDC Member #A012596W. ENCSDC member.

                '51 Champion Business Coupe - (Tom's Car). Purchased 11/2012.

                '40 Champion. sold 10/11. '63 Avanti R-1384. sold 12/10.

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                • #9
                  Keep em coming Bob, love the history lessons............

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                  • #10
                    Bob...nice to see you posting...the natural balance of the forum has been restored...kinda like finding my rightful seat at my local pub waiting for me when I enter the premises. (kinky logic I know, but I think you get my drift)lol cheers, junior.
                    sigpic
                    1954 C5 Hamilton car.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by BobPalma View Post
                      'Finally got a round tuit today (you've heard of round tuits, haven't you? They are what you acquire when you accomplish something you've been meaning to do for some time)
                      When I was in the Navy I used to have a boss who would carry a bunch of round wooden tokens in his pocket with 'TUIT' spelled out on one side. He loved handing those out when somebody would talk about "getting a round tuit". Thanks for the post per usual Bob!
                      sigpic
                      1961 Flamingo Studebaker Hawk

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                      • #12
                        "BS from a bureaucrat" - have to laugh at that one.
                        One nice slight on hand (ie facts) on the total state vehicles,
                        Of the 252 Studebakers purchased by the state for the year 1963 I'd be curious to know the TOTAL vehicle inventory for the State and the percentage that were Studebakers. (the 252 bought and currently in service)

                        Mr. Brotherton could have easily left out that (hypothetical) 1000 vehicles in the State system were other makes.
                        However if that was true that information would have given credence to your letters claim.

                        Thanks for sharing your trip to the library. It would be curious to see other city's papers mention (if any) of Studebakers closing.
                        61 Lark

                        sigpic

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                        • #13
                          Kevin (Post #12): 'Glad you enjoyed the post.

                          The Indianapolis News and The Indianapolis Star tended to report the same thing, since they were simply morning and evening publications from the same company...but they were somewhat autonomous, too, kind of like, say, Pontiac and Oldsmobile, even though both are (oops, were!) products of General Motors.

                          There was one competitor at the time, The Indianapolis Times. It was a smaller, "also-ran" evening newspaper owned by Scripps-Howard, but it ceased publication in late 1965. You're right; it would be interesting to scan the December 1963 editions of The Indianapolis Times.

                          Wife-unit and I had a nice time yesterday at the "downtown" library, followed by a good lunch at a famous local downtown Indianapolis delicatessen, Shapiro's. We commented on what a pleasant adventure it was, so maybe we'll go scan The Indianapolis Times' December 1963 editions some time...but right now, the March 2014 Turning Wheels' Co-Operator beckons.

                          (The Associated Press reports about Studebaker would have been the same in most newspapers, but maybe The Times had a unique Studebaker story or two from their local writers.) BP

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                          • #14
                            MHO

                            The news media is/has always been in control of what news they deem fitting for printing so as to incite the public and they also seemingly/innocently downplay goings on that are largely of significance.<<<<<< Mind control. Out of sight, out of mind. Oh yeah. cheers jimmijim
                            Last edited by jimmijim8; 01-04-2014, 06:26 AM.
                            sigpicAnything worth doing deserves your best shot. Do it right the first time. When you're done you will know it. { I'm just the guy who thinks he knows everything, my buddy is the guy who knows everything.} cheers jimmijim*****SDC***** member

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by starliner62 View Post
                              Thanks Bob and glad to see you Back!!
                              Yes, the Force is strong in this one...

                              Glad to see him as well, and eating at Shapiros denotes a person of supreme culinary tastes...

                              And it can never be said enough, but thank you for what you do for Studebaker (and the old car hobby in general) - you started much earlier than many of us...

                              Now back to listening to the Everly Brothers on the Tube.

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