Friday, September 16, 2011

DAYS IN LOS ANGELES

For days I(Argie) had been waiting for C.L. to drive in with his emotionally tried soul and "no money." Finally he arrived to a house filled with American Airlines stewardesses, welcoming his appearance. First thing that I did was take him to dinner and we spent hours talking. He moved his things into our house on Kerwood in Westwood and his life in Los Angeles started with a new set of friends and a supportive family of sisters who were going and coming, flying here and there. Gerry, Barbara, Claire and I made him laugh and he quickly loved the attention that he got from the friends who were my friends in the Church. He played on the Church baseball team and was a real hit.


Claire, Argie, Barbara, and Gerry

Rose Marie Reid, the famous swim-suit designer, was a neighbor and friend of the stewardess family. They occasionally would swim in her pool.”
C.L.


Claire, Argie, Barbara and C.L. are playing in Rose Marie Reid's swimming pool.

There are sometimes small parties in the bungalow and always friends (mostly stewardesses) dropping in – Donna Folkers, for instance, who frequently flies with the girls and spends her spare time modeling for various Los Angeles, San Francisco, and New York stores. Argie's brother, C.L., is like a member of the household. A bona-fide cowboy, he appears in Western roles on television. The girls proudly call him “the actor of the family.” 
Donna Stewardess and Model
C.L. Hoskins Actor
 Argie's Journel:
Bob Cawley sent this letter to Mr. Sadler, American Airlines, Vice President of Customer Service.
Dear Mr. Sadler,
Two weeks ago on this flight my Stewardess was Miss Argie Ella Hoskins. Being my first flight after a near mid-air crash, I was very upset.
Miss Hoskins put me at ease – and with many little efforts (coffee – reading material, etc.) made my trip the finest in twenty years of airline travel.
Miss Hoskins is the finest example of “service with a beautiful smile”. I'll keep flying American.”
Mr. Robert M. Cawley
NBC – TV Sunset and Vine, Hollywood 28, California

After another flight with Bob, I introduced him to my brother. In Hollywood, it was all about contacts.




C. L., Charles Leslie Hoskins

C.L. was in the Vanity Fair publication. He attended acting school at Columbia in Hollywood where Bob Cawley taught. Bob, a director and producer for NBC-TV. He started helping C.L. with his “dream” to get into pictures.
  C.L. didn't have the resources to continue his movie/TV adventure. The long and the short of that story is that after C.L. joined the Army so he could get out of debt and have an income, Four Star Playhouse sent him an invitation for a contract in a series. Too late. I wish I had kept the letter for his history.  As I recall, it was NBC's Gunsmoke  an American radio and television Western drama series.

C. L. Hoskins


  This was a very difficult time in the life of my brother. He was thinking of his daughter and didn't have enough money to help with her. I am told that the  Army provided a way to easy the challenge of "no money."

When he left for the Army, my heart broke as I told him, "Later. Do what you have to do." Love my brother. Again, the tears come so easily. Tears of joy for being a part of life. All of us had fun in the ocean as we played and threw sand at each other. Sands of time. All of us young kids learning about the windows and doors of life and how precious it is with every passing day.

AFTER ANIMAS

Leaving Animas to go to school at New Mexico A. & M. was an experience for C.L. that amounted to being thrown to the winds of the desert. He was now in college with a very different basketball team and academic classes that were a challenge from the way he had studied at Animas High.



1955
" Summer of 1955 After senior and before freshman year in college worked for Gillespie Mine & Mill. Worked in a lead and zinc mine in Badger Canyon between Dunagans and Godferys. Worked five days a week and rodeoed weekends."

1955
"Started college at New Mexico A. & M. with a Victoria Land and Cattle Company scholarship and a basketball scholarship. Lost both of them due to low grades at end of freshman year. . . dummy. Not disciplined.”

"Freshman year at New Mexico A & M was a miserable year."

Note from Gene Shumway: (Dr. Shumway retired from teaching at a university)
"I'm pondering C. L.'s comment, ‘What a dummy.’ During the 30 years that I have interacted with C. L. Hoskins, it has become very clear to me that he has intellectual capacities far above the average range . . . I would guess that they are somewhere in the superior range. From Argie's education and career as a teacher in "special education," Argie has taught me a great deal about brain functioning and cognitive processing. Many brilliant and famous people have also been dyslexic and/or possessed other cognitive challenges. Many of them have never graduated from college or even high school.”
C. L.'s sister Argie, who is quite challenged with sequencing her world,  suffered greatly during her elementary and high school years from her feelings of being ‘dumb.’ Fortunately, she learned about the differences in cognitive processing while she was still in college.”
Small wonder that we have been given the junction to judge not that we be not judged.”

C. L. is bright and gifted in ways that you would know if you knew Mr. Haskins. (My name for Mr. Hoskins, C. L.)

Edna Lawson Hoskins' History:
1955-1956
Argie Ella transferred to New Mexico State University in Las Cruces from New Mexico Western in Silver City to be with her brother in Las Cruces. C.L. graduated from Animas High and started to New Mexico State University. He was on a basketball scholarship and a Kerns Cattle and Land scholarship. One of the joys of their school experience in Las Cruces was the attractive western shirts and dresses I made sister and son out of the same material. They had danced in the kitchen out at the ranch and made up dance steps. With their "look alike" outfits and their "fancy" dance steps, they had fun at the campus dances.”

Argie's Memories:
One of the joys of our school experience in Las Cruces was dancing at western dances with the attractive western shirts and dresses that mother had made for us. Great presents, those memorable gifts to her children with time and energy, were given from her heart. Mother was so proud of her children. She was committed to being a mother. She did her best with what she had in the way of resources, time and energy. Blessed.

From Argie's Journel:
After my freshman year in college at New Mexico Western College, in Silver City, now New Mexico Western University, I transferred to A & M. My year at A & M was very eventful for an Animas girl.  I have some really great memories including yelling my lungs out while Aggie's played basketball. One player was my brother who was on a basketball scholarship.  Memories of western dancing, when during the dances, my brother and I would show off our dance routines learned in the kitchen back at the ranch.  The kids at college thought I was going to the dances with two guys.  My date, it was usually Buz Burris, would dance with other girls while I was showing off  by “kicking up a step” with  my brother C.L.

From Argie Hoskins N.M.A.&M. 1955-1956
C.L. Hoskins standing next to the Coach


From Argie Hoskins N.M.A.&M. 1955-1956
Back Row Left: C.L. Hoskins
 This is were the action happened at A.&M.


From MILTON HALL
 At one time this was the place where the A.&M. dances happened.
That old ballroom floor is the same ballroom floor after 54 years. My feet stepped where our feet had stepped. So exciting!
Argie's Journel:
The excitement of the Sun Carnival days came next!

1955
      C. L. was his sister Argie's escort to the Sun Carnival festival in El Paso, Texas for the Sun Bowl. She represented New Mexico A&M. Yes, a moment in time with her brother. When she was escorted and introduced under the spotlights with the flare of "From the House of Hoskins" and as programed; stopped, turned, hesitated and C.L. looked down at his sister, "I love you little sis."  Never will I forget that tender, magical moment. He really didn't hate me. Sometimes, as kids growing up, one wonders!
      He loved the activities with all the lovely girls that he flirted with as they danced from one event to another.
      This gave Argie the chance to flirt with other boys. Well, the one she really wanted to know, she met later. He was escorting some lovely. I wish Charlie could have met C. L.

C. L. was a good choice because I had several boy friends that I could have asked, but that would have complicated my life. The festivities  were so entertaining for the “kids” from Animas Valley. We had never been to such “uptown” society.  It was comfortable to have my brother with me, with whom I did not need to converse if I didn't want to do that horrible thing called talking. We understood the language of feelings.

From Argie Hoskins N.M.A.&M. 1955-1956

Argie and C.L. Hoskins at Aunt Boo's home in El Paso

As I scanned my Sun Carnival pictures, the tears flowed. No, this did not happen when I was scanning other pictures that had stirred happy, funny memories. The tears jumped from my heart to my head. Why? I was jubilant over having my brother with me and excited for both of us.I had a very handsome man by my side. I knew who he was, but me- -- who was Argie Hoskins?

1956
"At end of that school year, went to work for the Southern Pacific Railroad as a telegrapher clerk [Relief clerk] in El Paso, Hatchita and Douglas. Still rodeoing all weekends. First rodeo was in 1954. Between 1954 and 1964 made around $50,000. $35,000 of this was as a professional.”
"Worked for them [Southern Pacific Railroad] two months while going to three rodeos in a row and won all three and thought I had to be a world champion rodeo rider, so quit the railroad."
C. L. Hoskins       Drawing by Anne Manahan
Anyone know where Anne Manahan is located?
"In the next six rodeos, didn't do very well so went to work for Standard Stations Inc. in August or September 1956. Worked in a small but popular station in Las Cruces.

The next post will be "Days in Los Angeles" and followed by "Army Days."  Not last, but next will be Rodeo with C. L.  I will leave marriages and children until later.