LEFTY AND THE HOUSTON COLTS MEET LAS VEGAS, AND LAS VEGAS LOSES Las Vegas, Nev. March 25, 1963 Dear Alice, Well, I could not stand it any longer so I packed my wash-and-wear seersucker suit and my old 78 record of Nelson Eddy singing "Stout-Hearted Men" and I reported to camp. Mr. Richards convinced me that I was wrong to hold out for more money. He explained to me about the tax laws and capital gains and then he said, "Ask not what the Colt .45s can do for you, Lefty. Ask what you can do for the Colt .45s." Fortunately, he happened to have a contract with him so he pricked my thumb and I signed. We are in Las Vegas today to open a series against the Angels, and it sure feels good to get out of Apache Junction and be someplace where you can rest. It is just one wild time after another at Apache Junction. The other night Chris Zachary and Darrell Brandon and Cliff Davis, and some of the other young rookies, were sitting in the lobby of the hotel and suddenly one of them jumped up and screamed: "If we spend another minute sitting on this couch I'll go buggy. Let's go somewhere...anywhere." So we all walked across the street to the laundromat and washed our dirty clothes. We put a dollar's worth of soap flakes into each machine and, boy, those shirts really came out white. Especially the blue ones. But I sure hope we decide to keep our spring training camp in good ole Apache Junction. There has been talk that we might move to Yuma, and I hope not as I understand that Yuma is the hub of a large center of nothing. On the other hand Apache Junction has grown so that I hardly recognize it. They've built three new filling stations since last year. What a spring this has been, Alice. I report to camp two weeks late and the second night I'm here I come down with desert fever, sometimes known as the Apache Junction plague. I had a headache, sore throat, chapped lips, tired blood and insomnia. I'm a solid month ahead of my 1962 pace. I didn't feel this lousy last year until May. You know me, Alice. I'm not easily impressed, but this Las Vegas beats anything I ever saw. The people here gamble on anything that moves, rolls or blinks, including traffic lights, and they never go to sleep. If they need rest they just faint every half hour. We came out here Saturday morning on a large airplane and we are going back on a smaller one. The casino at the Sands Hotel won five of our bonus kids. You just wouldn't believe it. People come out here for a visit and they walk into one of these gambling joints and they fall into a trance. They don't snap out of it until their last chip is gone, give or take a few minutes. You have to walk past the slot machines to get from the lobby of our hotel to the dining room. Luman Harris says that if you walk very fast and keep your eyes straight ahead you can get there and not lose more than $20. It is a common sight to see beautiful wimmen in mink coats playing nickel slot machines, and when those little lemons and plums and tinker bells start whirring they wouldn't recognize their own husbands, which is probably a good thing. Nancy Giles, the wife of our traveling sec, put a dime in a telephone and got back 50 cents, and a man rushed over and gave her a diamond stickpin that is engraved with the words: "I hit the jackpot at the Sands Hotel." One guy says he lost $90 on the stamp machine, and I don't doubt it. I'll tell you one thing, Alice. The sorriest sound on this earth is the ka-chunk, ka-chunk, ka-chunk of a slot machine that doesn't pay off. It's kind of funny how fresh and full of energy and vinegar all us Colt .45s were when the plane landed. But I noticed that working out for today's game some of the boys ran on their tiptoes. I bumped into one of our pitchers in front of the hotel this morning and, boy, did he look like an emergency case. "Gimme two aspirins," he growled, " and don't slam the lid." I guess the funniest thing of all is what happened to Rusty Staub, our rookie first baseman. It's a true story, but I don't think that hurts it any. Judge Hofheinz, he's the president of the club, is out here and he decided to lay a little party on us at the Copa Room of the Sands. Well, Rusty had put his street shoes in his overnight bag and left it in the lobby with all the other luggage when we checked in. After the game we all picked up our bags, and Carroll Hardy got Rusty's by mistake. So get this, Alice. When Rusty called the desk to find out Carroll's room number they wouldn't give it to him, "because we do not give out the room numbers of our FEMALE guests." Get it? They thought Carroll was a girl. See there, Alice, I told you a man couldn't get into any trouble in Las Vegas. Anyway Rusty finally got his shoes and came to the judge's party, and we had quite a time. The judge sets a nice table, as we say, and I think Don Mc Mahon and Don Nottebart ate their weight in chateaubriand. Jan Murray and Patti Page were the stars of the floor show, and it sure beat any pre-game ceremony I ever saw. Jan Murray introduced us and he mentioned that the New York Mets are his team. He says they finished so far back last season they came in second in the National Football League. You know, we were supposed to spend three nights here but it was cut down to one. Our manager, Harry Craft, sure has a lot of confidence in us. It's just as well though, since we have already suffered one injury. George Brunet pulled a groin muscle carrying all those silver dollars in his pocket. Turk Farrell says he had so little luck gambling, he would have gotten better odds if he had thrown his money into the commode and pulled the crank. But it's not really that bad. The rooms are really elegant, and none of them have television sets so you won't lose any precious time away from those slot machines and card tables. It's really something to write home about to the folks what ain't working. This is truly the land of booze, black jack and beautiful babes. But... You Know Me, Alice. Lefty.