FIRST FLIGHT TO LOS ANGELES, AND THE JOYS OF THAT BIG LEAGUE LIFE San Francisco May 20, 1962 Dear Alice, I suppose you thought I was never going to write and I sure am sorry about that. But things are so hectic right now, what with the club having lost eight in a row and me getting hurt, that I have been more confused than Liz Taylor's ring finger. We were all sitting around the clubhouse the other day after getting beat, just moping and refusing to take any food except for a bowl or two of onion soup. Suddenly Norm Larker got up and slammed the door to his locker. Unfortunately my hand was inside it, as I happened to be looking for some crackers to crunch up. Oooh, boy, that really smarted. Broke two fingers, busted a knuckle and spilled hot onion soup on Norm's silk underdrawers, which he was wearing at the time. You know me, Alice. If I had two guesses on which way an elevator was going I'd guess wrong. Anyway, our goal now is to spend as quiet a week as possible in San Francisco and get back to Houston alive. We have been in a fearful slump, sort of like the one Custer got in at Little Big Horn. But no matter how grim things get I have to agree with Pidge Browne, who slaved for 13 years in the minors. He says it was worth it, to get this one year in the majors. You travel to cities that really swing and you go there first cabin. Like we came out West on a champagne flight and it was the first four-hostess plane I ever saw. Harry Craft, our leader, still has a crick in his neck from watching where the bottles of bubbly went. Along the way the pilot kept pointing out the sights of interest. (I think those guys must go to school to get that gravelly, frog-like quality in their voices.) "This is the captain speaking," he said, interrupting my nap. "We are now flying over the Old Spanish Trail toward San Antonio, once traveled by the explorer Cabeza De Vaca." Later he said: "We are now over El Paso. On your left is the Rio Grande River and on the other side of it, next to the stockyards, you can see the legendary Rosa's Canteena." Alice, I'm going to get my eyes examined. I couldn't even see the Rio Grande. After a while we passed over Tombstone and Dead Man's Gulch and Boothill. But the most electric moment of all came when the captain said: "We are now passing over the bachelor's paradise, Apache Junction, Arizona." You know me, Alice. I get choked up over old matchbook covers. I bawled like a baby. Apache Junction...the scene of my first spring training as a Colt .45. Ah, what memories. The other guys reacted in different ways. Bob Aspromonte and Merritt Ranew, who are both single, booed and hissed. A few cheered. One guy threw his boots out the window and mumbled something that sounded like "Bayless Supermarket" under his breath. Well, we get to Los Angeles and it was a sight to behold. The girls there all have hairdos like Jacqueline Kennedy, and so do quite a few of the boys. I did the town one night with Bill Giles, who is a great guy and also our road secretary. He not only knows all the main roads but a few of the back ones. We decided to conduct a survey comparing the habits and folk music of eastern and western cabarets for the Smithsonian Institute (I am planning to spring it on the Smithsonian as a surprise for Christmas.) We were walking down the street and we passed this club and the music lured us in as if we were hypnotized. Wow! I've seen pretzels that couldn't twist like that. Naturally, we left at the first convenient moment. Later we went to a club called The Encore, where they got a piano player named Frankie Ortega who is so great he can play "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" and you want to dance to it. Frankie told us that he sponsors a team in the Northwest Anaheim Little League and they just expanded to eight teams. Guess who the new clubs are? The Senators and the Colt .45s. Ain't that cute, Alice? I could probably be a winner in the Northwest Anaheim Little League. I haven't pitched in two weeks now, since the Giants beat me in Houston by 15-1..darned umpires. Mr.Richards had to ask the people at the space lab to compute my earned run average. We had a meeting one night and Harry told all us pitchers that from now on when he sends Luman Harris to the mound to take us out he wants us to give him the ball and go. You know, when Dick Farrell or Bob Bruce or Ken Johnson gets pulled they sometimes make a scene, stamping their feet and uttering the most unpleasant remarks. Luman practically has to Indian-wrestle them for the ball. So the other night Farrell gets bombed by the Reds. I mean, they hit six straight shots off him, and two or three were line drives right through the box. So here comes Luman out of the dugout, and as he crosses the foul line Turk walks down to meet him and flips him the ball. He looks up kind of startled, and Turk grins at him and says: "Where you been Luman? I could've got kilt out here." It sort of reminded me of the story Frank Gabler, one of the Colt .45 scouts, tells about Casey Stengel. Gabe pitched for Stengel in the minors once, and 'ol Casey never would go to the mound when he wanted to change pitchers. "He just sat in the dugout and whistled," remembers Gabe, "like I was ole dog Spot." You Know Me, Alice. Lefty