D-Day Mailer Gave Knox the Edge in Assembly Race
- Share via
It’s a long way from the cliffs of Normandy to the hills of West Hollywood, Beverly Hills and Westwood, but Wally Knox managed to bridge the gap in a last-minute mailing to bolster his successful race for the Democratic nomination in the 42nd Assembly District.
“When I vote Tuesday, I will dedicate my ballot to those, living and dead, who fought in that noble cause,” he wrote on an oversize postcard featuring a black-and-white photograph of American troops after their landing on the French coast 50 years ago.
Citing his father’s war record as a member of a U.S. Army division in France and Germany, Knox urged residents to vote and modestly mentioned his own military qualifications as “U.S. Army 1967-1971.”
According to his campaign manager, Evelyn Jerome, the younger Knox served as an enlisted man in Army Intelligence, based in Germany and Vietnam.
*
JUNK MAIL: One Beverly Hills woman found a way to avoid handling the blizzard of political mail that arrived in the days before the election.
Atop a chair next to her mailbox, the woman placed a trash can, said Jeff Crain, an aide to Mark Slavkin, a candidate for the state assembly. On the trash can was a sign.
It said: “Please deposit political mail here.”
*
MORE MAIL: Complaints about political mailings even became part of a West Hollywood City Council debate over trash hauling.
As city officials discussed trash collection in a meeting Monday, resident Derek Meik rose with a fistful of political mailers.
Of the 17 campaign pieces Meik said he had just received, 10 came from Mayor Abbe Land and Councilman Paul Koretz, both running for a state Assembly seat. Amid the talk of improving the city’s recycling efforts, Meik said, none of the campaign mailers came on recycled paper.
*
FOR A SONG: An eclectic collection of more than 100 household items from Barbra Streisand’s three Malibu homes will be up for auction during a giant garage sale of sorts being held this weekend by the A.N. Abell Auction Co.
A French decanter, waffle irons, a toaster, jugs, cups, saucers, rugs, sofas and chairs are among the items to be offered today at the Abell auction house in Commerce.
More to Read
Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter
Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond. In your inbox twice per week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.