More "Hawkins" (umpteenth ADS-L try)

Bapopik at AOL.COM Bapopik at AOL.COM
Sun Feb 20 10:23:27 UTC 2005


ADS-L is broken. Here's a re-post of something I tried to send half a day
ago.
Barry Popik
(Leaving town for a week. Just what I want on vacation--piles and piles of
formerly un-sent ADS-L e-mails.)
...

...
(GOOGLE)
NYPL, The New Yorker Records
Killed 1951 A REPORTER  AT LARGE 14 "Nobody Home." Run 3/21/46 15 "Making
Buckle
and Tongue Meet."  Run 8/24/46 16 "Hawkins is Inside." Run 11/30/46 17 "Not a
...
www.nypl.org/research/chss/ spe/rbk/faids/NYhtml/nybox602.htm - 96k -
Supplemental Result - Cached - Similar pages

1407     ROUECHE, Berton
ANNALS OF MEDICINE
1             "The Case of the Eleven Blue Men." Run 6/5/48
2     "The Fog."  Run 9/30/50
3            "A Pinch of Dust."  Run  6/23/51
4            "Birds of a  Feather."  Run 4/18/53
5           "Lost."  Run 6/19/54
6         "One of the Lucky Ones."  Run 2/26/55
7            "Ten Feet Tall."  Run  9/10/55
8            "The  Incurable Wound."  Run 4/6/57
9         "Labyrinthitis."  Run 4/5/58
PROFILES
10           Frank E. Denison.  Run 1/15/49
11     Everett Joshua Edwards.  Run 9/24/49
12            Louis Haft.  Run  5/23/53
13            William  Fanning Halsey.  Killed 1951
A  REPORTER AT LARGE
14             "Nobody Home."  Run 3/21/46
15     "Making Buckle and Tongue Meet." Run  8/24/46
16            "Hawkins is  Inside."  Run 11/30/46


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--

Subj:   "Hawkins" in Tamony papers; Big Apple Club (1934)
Date:     2/19/2005 7:40:36 PM Eastern Standard Time
From:    Bapopik
To:    ADS-L at listserv.uga.edu



OT  MISC.

TRAVEL: I will be in the Dominican Republic from February 20-27  with my
sister. She goes there for treatments for her autistic son. Normally,  I'd wish
that my plane would crash, but my sister is actually worth more alive  than dead.

BIG APPLE-WORLD'S SECOND HOME: I wrote another letter to the  New Orleans
Times-Picayune about the Big Apple's origin there, and I asked them  to honor the
black stablehands (during Black History Month). I guess it wasn't  good
enough to be published (again)...I wrote a letter to the New York Times  about the
"World's Second Home." I said that "Big Apple" originally meant the  pinnacle
is sports. That wasn't published, either, although I received an e-mail  from
Ellis Hennican ("Why Apple?" his story went) that I should send it to
Newsday...I inexplicably got thousands of hits on my web site yesterday for  "World's
Most Famous Arena." The entry is so old that it has "Welcome  Republicans!"
on it, from July  2004.

--------------------------------------------------------------
BIG  APPLE CLUB

7 July 1934, New York Amsterdam News, pg. 9, col. 1:
"This  Hectic Harlem" by Roi Ottley
(...)
The Big Apple has arrived and is worth  your time.


This is the earliest I have for the Big Apple Club (135th  Street and 7th
Avenue/Adam Clayton Powell Junior Boulevard).

I had read  the Amsterdam News for this period about fifteen years ago, but I
went through  the newspaper again briefly today. Roi Ottley called Harlem the
"Coal Bin" (not  in HDAS?). He also used terms like "Cornflakes Boulevard"
(not in HDAS?). I'm  looking for "Hawkins" somewhere in  1934.

--------------------------------------------------------------
HAWKINS  IN TAMONY PAPERS

Gerald Cohen helped to pay for this (I thought he would  get a discount?) and
it arrived today. Here goes:


Here are the  photocpies of the term "Hawkins" found in the Peter Tamony
Collection (C3939). I  did not photocopy any of the "Hawk" clipping because the
majority of those  referred to either the bird, military equipment, or to the
Vietnam War with the  term "hawks and doves". The charge for photocopying was
credited to Gerald  Cohen's account.

Mary Beth Brown
Manuscript Specialist
Western  Historical Manuscript Collection
BroMary at umsystem.edu


CARD ONE:
JIVE TALK (Regular column).
MISTER HAWKINS--The wind,  wintertime, cold weather, ice, snow.
RHYTHM AND BLUES (Onyx Publishing Co.,  Derby, Conn.).
December 1954: Vol. 1, No. 15, p. 20/1.


CARD  TWO:
Down the Spillway. John O'Ren
Baltimore Sun, Dec. 21, p. 14 and Dec.  27, p. 8, 1934;
Jan. 5, p. 10, Jan. 8, p. 10, Jan. 9, p. 10 and Jan. 12, pg.  10, 1935.

A series of comments and letters regarding the use in Maryland  and Virginia
of the expression _Hawkins is outside_ or _Hawkins is coming_,  meaning the
chill weather is coming.

American Speech, Bibliographical  Department, October, 1935, X, 3, 224/1.


CARD  THREE:
HAWKINS.
HAWKINS...Cold weather.
Jive and Slang of Students in  Negro Colleges.
Marcus H. Boulware, Hampton Institute, Virginia, January,  1947.


CARD FOUR:
HAWKINS.
"Hawkins is inside  tonight."
Compare--SNOW BLIND.


CARD  FIVE:
"HAWKINS IS INSIDE TONIGHT."
This expression is used by night club  musicians to indicate that things are
not going well, and got its start, so it  is said, with a drummer called
Hawkins. Hawkins was such a bad performer that  his fellow bandsmen took to
explaining away all their misfortunes by saying  "Hawkins is inside tonight."

What is the truth of this story.  B.  T.
May 30, 1947
AMERICAN NOTES AND QUERIES, April, 1947, VII, No. 1, p.  10/1.


LETTER

American Notes & Queries,
7 West  44th Street,
New York City 18, New York.

Gentlemen:

Relative to  HAWKINS IS INSIDE TONIGHT (VII, no. 1, p. 10/1):

THe following, from the  BIBLIOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN SPEECH, X, No. 3, p. 224/1,
October, 1935, may offer  come clue to the background of the above phrase:

Down the Spillway. John  O'Ren. (Apparently a column.)

Baltimore _Sun_, Dec. 21, p. 14 and Dec.  27, p. 8, 1934; Jan. 5, p. 10, Jan.
8, p. 10, Jan. 9, p. 10, and Jan. 12, P. 10,  1935.

A series of comments and letters regarding the use in Maryland and  Virginia
of the expression _Hawkins is outside_ or _Hawkins is coming_ meaning  the
chill weather is coming.


Chilly weather being the antithesis of a  "hot time," and extension of this
phrase would not be a great mental  effort.

The uninviting coldness and chill of an empty room is the source  of an
analagous expression among owners and employees of restaurants and night  clubs.
This is "snow-blindness," which such people are said to get from gazing
morosely at white-capped tables uninhabitated by hilarous, paying  guests.

Very truly yours

ANSWERS, Volume VII, page 26/1. Above  printed.


(JSTOR)
Brief Notices
American Speech > Vol. 10,  No. 3 (Oct., 1935), pp. 222-231
Pg. 224:
O'Ren, John. Down the Spillway.  Baltimore _Sun_, Dec. 21, p. 14 and Dec. 27,
p. 8, 1934; Jan. 5, p. 10, Jan. 8,  p. 10, Jan. 9, p. 10, and Jan. 12, p. 10,
1935)
A series of comments and  letters regarding the use in Maryland and Virginia
of the expression _Hawkins is  outside_ or _Hawkins is coming_, meaning that
chill weather is  coming.


(THOUGHTS: The Tamony papers really didn't provide us with  anything we don't
already have from our own AMERICAN SPEECH. I'll check out the  Baltimore Sun
articles and type them up here when I return. It'll make a nice  COMMENTS ON
ETYMOLOGY article...So it appears that "Windy City" comes from  Cincinnati and
"the Hawk" comes from Virginia! I might hop a Greyhound down  there and check
it out...I'll check the digitized AFRO-AMERICAN (Baltimore)  again. The
Baltimore Sun will be digitized by ProQuest some time in the next  five
years...Finally, this will all make the Chicago Tribune in about 2013, and  I will get no
credit, and I will be plagiarized by the Chicago Historical  Society and the
University of Chicago Press--ed.)



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