Los Angeles Sentinel - February 20, 1969 - Juanita Blocker
1 2019-03-12T23:57:03+00:00 Stanford University Press af84c3e11fe030c51c61bbd190fa82a3a1a12824 1 1 Los Angeles Sentinel - February 20, 1969 - Juanita Blocker plain published 2019-03-12T23:57:03+00:00 AnonymousThis page is referenced by:
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February - Archived Posts
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Click on date to view post:February 1, 1980: Atlanta Daily World on Carter G. Woodson and articles from 1926-27 on first “Negro History Week.”February 2, 1936: Atlanta Daily World and black press editorial cartoons on Ethiopian anti-colonial battle against Italy.February 3, 1948: Atlanta Daily World on efforts to block black voting rights on anniversary of passage of 15th Amendment.February 4, 1956: Pittsburgh Courier on Montgomery Bus Boycott, in honor of Rosa Parks’ birthday.February 5, 1977: New York Amsterdam News, “Roots Captivates Millions of T-Viewers.”February 6, 1982: Cleveland Call & Post advertisement for Wilber Black, the (Jheri) “Kurl King” and Black’s Pride Hair Care Center.February 7, 1944: Los Angeles Tribune ad for “Sweet ’n’ Hot” revue featuring Dorothy Dandridge.February 7, 1948: Cleveland Call and Post editorial cartoon on segregation of University of Oklahoma Law School and Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher.February 8, 1964: New York Amsterdam News covers NYC school boycott, the largest civil rights protest in U.S. history.February 9, 1935: Selection of articles from Norfolk Journal and Guide on anti-lynching work, Negro History Week, Imitation of Life, and Paul Laurence Dunbar.February 10, 1959: Philadelphia Tribune reports on voter registration efforts in the city.February 11, 1928: Valentine’s Day wishes from the Chicago Defender Junior.February 12, 1949: “Grow Old With Me” short story in Baltimore Afro-American.February 13, 1960: Greensboro sit-in protests in Norfolk Journal and Guide and Cleveland Call and Post.February 14, 1946: Los Angeles Sentinel on fire in Fontana that killed O’Day, Helen, Barry, and Carol Ann Short.February 15, 1975: Pittsburgh Courier editor-in-chief Hazel Garland on professional opportunities for retired black athletes and lack of black television news anchors.February 16, 1965: Chicago Defender on the death of Nat King Cole.February 17, 1979: Ad for The Warriors in New York Amsterdam News, and article by Amsterdam News intern Nelson George.February 18, 1944: Atlanta Daily World on Harry Alpin, the first African-American reporter to cover a White House press conference.February 19, 1910: Clubwoman Ida Cummings in the Baltimore Afro-American.February 20, 1969: “Bowling Around L.A” by Los Angeles Sentinel columnist Juanita Blocker.February 21, 1970: Black journalists’ statement of support for the New York Times’ Earl Caldwell and his right to protect confidential sources in the Black Panther Party.February 22, 1965: The black press on the murder of Malcolm X.February 23, 1957: Philadelphia Tribune on Thomas Edison (formerly Northeast) High School and how board moved school to create segregated facility.February 24, 1934: Carter G. Woodson in Pittsburgh Courier on “Forgotten Negroes.”February 25, 1939: Blanche Thompson, Irvin C. Miller, and “Brown Skin Models” revue in Norfolk Journal and Guide.February 26, 1949: Baltimore Afro-American on Satchel Paige and other black major league baseball players heading to spring training.February 27, 1937: New York Amsterdam News on Dr. Anna Cooper Johnson’s new dental office in Harlem.February 28, 1978: Philadelphia Tribune on MOVE conflict with Philadelphia authorities eight years before bombing.February 29, 1956: Chicago Defender on Leap Year tradition of single women courting bachelors.
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February 20, 1969
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On February 20, 1969, the Los Angeles Sentinel featured “Bowling Around L.A.,” a regular column by Juanita Blocker. Blocker was an avid bowler who started writing for the Sentinel in 1961 and wrote the newspaper’s bowling column for over two decades . In 1976, for example, Blocker and other bowlers held a “Strike for Sickle Cell” tournament and fundraiser.
The California branch of the United Stated Bowling Congress profiled Juanita Blocker after she passed away in 2015. Among the highlights included below are: Juanita Blocker’s family migrated from Houston to Los Angeles in 1921 when she was three years old; Blocker was a multisport athlete who played for the California Eaglettes, a softball team sponsored by the California Eagle, an African-American newspaper; she was the first black member of the Professional Women’s Bowling Association; and she averaged over 185 per game.
“Juanita Blocker ‘A Trailblazer’ Passes Away at 96” by Phyl Knoll
In her early years, Juanita showed evidence of a born athlete. By the time she graduated from Jefferson High School in 1936, Juanita had been a member of the Track, Basketball, Softball, Volleyball and the Tennis teams. Besides being an athlete Juanita showed her talent as a student leader and subsequently, was the first black student to be elected to the Jefferson High School Student Government. Juanita attended (LACC) Los Angeles City College, played and coached Basketball and graduated in 1942 with a degree in Physical Education and Recreation and was immediately hired by the Los Angeles County Department of Parks & Recreation as one of their Leaders. Volleyball was one of the sports Juanita played and coached at the parks and, of course, in those days the nets were held by portable Volley Ball Standards. After suffering an injury from a fallen standard, Juanita invented a safety device to secure the standards, for which she received a monetary award. Those devices were then installed in all Los Angeles County playgrounds and centers. Besides coaching sports, Juanita possessed a talent in art projects and writing. Under her close eye and tutoring her students would many times, come away with First Place Blue Ribbons from the Los Angeles County Fair in Pomona for their artwork and poetic writings.
The sport of bowling came into the picture in the 1940’s when while attending LACC, Juanita would often go into what was then, Vogue Bowl at 49th & Central, and spectate the bowlers. It wasn’t long before she was convinced “I can do that” and thus the beginning of Juanita’s bowling career, and, first encounter with a sports headliner. During one of her practice sessions, a huge black gentleman stepped up and offered to coach her. Lo and behold, it was none other than Joe “The Brown Bomber” Lewis, the heavyweight boxer. Lewis who owned an east coast bowling alley (as they were called then), hung out at Vogue Bowl with a close friend Ernest Whitman, a professional singer and movie actor. Juanita loved “this game” and proved to be one of the few black women to average 185 and better. The Parent Senate of the (TNBA) The National Bowling Association was formed in 1939 and Juanita joined the organization in hopes to use her bowling talents to open some doors for the TNBA. Unfortunately, until well into the 1950’s the black bowling athlete received little recognition and no opportunity to take their sport to a professional level.
Although Juanita pursued her game of bowling, she remained involved in other sports, because if you were good, you made the team. She was recruited to a women’s professional basketball team sponsored by the popular “Dad’s Rootbeer.” Their team traveled up and down the coast of California and as far away as Phoenix, Arizona, competing against women military teams. As far as Juanita knew, they were the only black female team in this travel league. Juanita recalled the excitement when with the influence of singer Nat King Cole and Charlotte Bass, owner of the California Eagle Newspaper (later known as the Los Angeles Sentinel), their team received an invitation to play the pre-game show to the famous Harlem Globe Trotters at the Los Angeles Olympic Stadium.
When basketball season was over, Juanita spent more time on her bowling game but was also playing shortstop and second base for the California Eaglettes, a Los Angeles Parks & Recreation Women’s Softball Team. They were sponsored by the California Eagle Newspaper and Nat King Cole. Juanita held a batting average of 275-285 and was largely feared by her opponents for her “steal-and-slide” techniques. Juanita utilized her talent for the game and coached other players. One particular player she coached was none other than Richard Williams, father of the well-known professional Tennis Stars, Venus and Selena Williams, of Compton, California. Unfortunately, all that vigorous activity took its toll and she was later in life reminded every day by the pain she endured in both her ankles.
Juanita played Tennis as well. She was third-seeded to the then well known, Pauline (Bobbie) Betz, a Wimbledon Champion. In fact, Juanita held the honor of being the only player who then could beat Betz. Ironically, Juanita was coached by none other than…. Pauline’s mother, Stella Betz!
Prior to 1950, (ABC) the American Bowling Congress, and the (WIBC) Women’s International Bowling Congress Rules banned non-caucasians from bowling in their events, but that did not discourage Juanita from becoming a bowler of note. She knew the game well and wanted to become a Certified Bowling Instructor. While working as the Manager for Studio Bowling Academy, Los Angeles, (since closed) owner Victor Bernath sent her to Instructor’s School where she was tutored by the best: National Hall of Famer Buddy Bomar, Bill Bunetta and California’s own, Helen Duval. It wasn’t long after that Georgia Veach, Founder and President of the (PWBA) Professional Women’s Bowling Association accepted Juanita’s application for membership. She had the honor of being the first black woman member of the PWBA on the west coast during the 1950’s and 1970’s. Juanita applied for sponsorship from AMF, but they were not sending black bowlers on tour, so armed with a 189 average and the sponsorship of PWBA members, Donna Zimmerman and Merle Matthew (since deceased), Juanita put her busy schedule on hold and hit the “pro trail” as a member of the Greater Los Angeles Women’s Traveling League. The schedule required visiting 28 different centers per season, which at that time, was no easy task. Bill Stennis, owner of the well-known Golden Bird Restaurant chain, sponsored their team and Juanita proudly recalled bowling with teammate Georgia Veach and crossing lanes with the famous bowling pro Marion Ladewig. While traveling to tournaments across the United States Juanita endured anxieties and indignities most of us cannot even imagine. Times when she could not practice bowling until after midnight until all “other” bowlers were through. She was unable to eat at the bowling alley café counter where the “other” bowlers were seated. Juanita was blessed with an innate understanding of the times and the importance of which it took to break barriers. And, she did. Juanita set numerous records. Over 300–400 trophies, medals, plaques, certificates, ribbons, and more. The first 720 series she shot at Hollywood Legion Lanes, (since closed) and held top honors with WIBC for some time.
Following her pro tours, Juanita devoted herself to all other facets of the bowling game. She was the resident Certified Instructor from 1971 to 1981 at Southwest Bowl at Western and Imperial, (which has since closed). Many of her students were from Southwest College across the street, several who were of foreign cultures and had little athletic ability. Although there was a language barrier, Juanita made her actions speak for her and helped pave the way for those youth to be able to enjoy the game anywhere. Juanita was instrumental in convincing the Los Angeles Board of Education to give grade credits to high school and college students who attended her classes.
In 1961 Juanita joined the Los Angeles “600” Bowling Club and was eventually elected to their Board of Directors. In 1962 she was elected to the Board of Directors of the Los Angeles Women’s Bowling Association (LAWBA). Although Juanita was a “natural” in any sport she engaged in, she also possessed a wonderful talent for writing about sports. She was handsomely rewarded in many areas. In 1963 she was given her own sports column which appeared weekly in the Los Angeles Sentinel Newspaper for over 35 years. In all that time, she remained the devoted publicist to her Los Angeles organizations and the TNBA. It was during this same era that Los Angeles Supervisor Kenneth Hahn, (since deceased), presented Juanita with a “Writ of Commendation” for the poems and odes she composed about the newly dedicated Olympic Style Swimming Stadium at Will Rogers Park. It was this same year, while still managing Studio Bowling Academy that the Annual Press Conference and the Los Angeles Sentinel voted Juanita as the “Woman of the Year in Sports.” In 1987, when she retired from the Parks and Recreation, she received “Special Recognition” from Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and Councilman Gilbert Lindsay, for all the dedication she had shown to bringing out the talents of the children she had coached in sports and tutored in art projects. In 1988, she was the first black member inducted into the LAWBA Hall of Fame and was made a Member Emeritus. In 1999, Juanita was elected to the Southern California Bowling Writers Hall of Fame. In 2004, she received the “Distinguished Service Award” from the United States Bowling Congress (USBC), California Association.