The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 252, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 21, 1957 Page: 6 of 6
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PAQK SIX
THE LtVELLAND DAILY »UN NEWS, Ltvtlland, Taxaa, Wednesday, August 21, 1M7
MUSIAL BANGS TWO HOME RUNS
| Brooklyn Making
Cardinals Win Twice, Bid to Persuade
Keep Alive NL Hopes0odgers,oSla>
By THE ASSOCIATED FRE8S
Stan Musial, who at 36 calls
himself "just a struggling old
man," is showing the kids how
it's done as he goes for a seventh
patting crown while keeping the
St. Louis Cardinals alive in the
National League race.
The Man, who last won the title
in 1952 for a three-year run at the
top, was 5-for-7, including a pair
of home runs, as the Cards swept
a twi-night pair at New York with
4-3 and 3-2 victories over the
Giants.
That burst added six points to
Musial’s average and put him at
.339 while his pursuers sagged.
The Giants' Willie Mays, 26, was
2-for-7 for .327; Pittsburgh’s Dick
Groat, 26, was 0-for-4 for .327;
Milwaukee's Hank Aaron, 23, was
l-for-4 and slipped to .326; and
Cincinnati's Frank Robinson, 21,
was 2-for-ll for .323.
While Aaron’s slump continued,
the defending champ counted an
insurance run with his lone single
as the Braves scored twice in the
ninth to beat Pittsburgh 3-1. That
left Milwaukee six games ahead
of St. Louis.
Third place Brooklyn, seven
games back, took two from the
Cincinnati Redlegs, who have lost
eight in a row. winning 11-5 and
6-5, in 12 innings. Chicago Cubs,
who had won six in a row, split a
pair at Philadelphia, winning 5-2
after a 2-1, 10-inning defeat.
In the American, Bob Keegan
became the first Chicago pitcher
to gain a no-hitter in 20 years,
beating Washington 6-0 after the
Senators had taken the first game
of the twi-nighter 5U. The second
place White Sox are seven games
, , | behind the New York Yankees,
By KEN ADYTA sophs a- chance to mature•early sh(U QUt w for the second timc
The Associated Press and they may be hard to handle. th,s season at Kansas City despite
Come Labor Day, 487 young Center Gene Aldcrton and tackle | Bob Xurley-S two-hitter
men will assemble at the eight j Fred Cole head a fast rugged J The AL bat race saw the leaders
campuses of the Atlantic Coast j line. The well-stocked backfield
Championship, Orange Bowl Bid Seen
Duke is Rated as Top Grid Outfit
In the Atlantic Coast Conference
Fred Hamilton-
North Carolina is counting on
guard Jack Lineberger, ineligible
last year, to spark improved line
play and slick quarterback Dave
Reed to leatj the way to a sur-
Conference and begin three weeks
of ‘"preparation for the football
season.
Observers believe that the 67
candidates e o r r a 1 e d by Duke
Coach Bill Murray will form the
most potent squad and go on to
the championship and a Jan. 1
Orange Bowl berth. Twenty let-! prise or two.
termen are in the group. j Coaches Paul Amen at Make
Last season saw the three-year j Forest and Ben Martin at Virginia
Duke-Maryland domination of the | face their old manpower problem.
ACC snapped bv Ctoguotu- - But jF.ac.h. has, -Only l5 mcn-
the Tigers must rely on a pair of j Virginia lacks second line
rookie quarterbacks this year to | strength and halfbacks who can
lead them in defense of the title'move the ball,
and Joel Wells, their big ground
gainer, has been graduated.
Duke, primarily a running team,
lost some important Then for
varying reasons in the off-season,
but still has such strong runners
as fullback Hal McELhaney and
halfback Wray Carlton, Roy Hord,
, , . go hitless. Boston's Ted Williams
includes quarterback Dickie Lewis a( m aftef jng
and halfbacks Howie Dare and1
Lubbock Golfer
New TPGA Head
225-pound guard is a hot choice |
for conference ’ onors. I LUBBOCK t.B Warren Cantrell
South Carolii a. 7-3 last year' of Lubbock w as elected president
including an upset of Duke, may ! last night of the Texas Profession-
be the most dangerous obstacle to i ai Golfers Assn.
the Blue Devils' title hopes. Dade Forrester of Hobbs N.M , he|p from ,he major ,caguo fun(j
Clemson has a good enough line, "as named vice piesident and j _____1 ._______
featuring standout guard John j Frank Baker of
Grdijan, and seasoned backs for tary-.treasurer
in a 5-4 Cleveland victory. Yankee
Mickey Mantle, 0-for-4, is at .381.
Detroit defeated Baltimore 5-1
in the other AL game.
Temple Club Quits
Big State League;
Corpus May Follow
ABILENE ift-The
League tottered today with Tern
pie quitting to drop the member-
ship to four and Corpus Christi
likely to follow.
President Hal Sayles said that
if Corpus Christi folds—and a deci-
sion w'ill be made Monday—the
Class B circuit, organized In 1947,
would fold.
Soc Vratis, Temple owner, noti-
fied Sayles yesterday he was re-
turning the franchise to the
league.
Whether Corpus Christi remains
so the season can be completed
Sept. 11 hinges on a request for
By JOE REICHLER
BROOKLYN Of)—City engineers
have been quietly surveying Eb-
bets Field and the surrounding
area for the past two weeks, an
official of the Brooklyn Dodgers
revealed today.
“It’s possible that the city will
offer to renovate the ball park and
provide the parking facilities we
have been lacking," said the offi-
cial, who asked not to be named.
Brooklyn President Walter
O’Malley has said that the main
reasons he is contemplating
switching his club to Los Angeles
are:
1. Inadequate parking.
2. Antiquated ball park.
O'Malley already has sold Eb-
bets Field, but he still has a year
to go on a three-year lease with
an option for two more years. He
probably would have no trouble
rebuying the park if he was so
inclined.
City officials, scheduled a meet-
ing with O’Malley for the purpose
of persuading him to remain in
Brooklyn. It is expected that the
meeting will take place some time
next week, probably Monday.
The Dodger boss said he had no
idea what sort of presentation the
city officials had in mind. He is
prepared to confront them with
the offer San Francisco made to
lure the Giants to that city. He
intends to compare this offer with
the one he made to the city as a
requisite for keeping the Dodgers
in Brooklyn.
A highly informed baseball
Big State j source said that, should the Dodg-
ers move to Los Angeles, the Cin-
cinnati Redlegs may switch their
franchise to New York in 1959.
Champ, Rademacher Unconcerned
As Sports World Fumes Over Bout
WEST TEXAS
Roundup
SEATTLE an- While the boxing |
world fumed over tomorrow’s
world heavyweight title fight be-
tween pro champ Floyd Patterson
and amateur champ Pete Rade-
macher, the two principals were
"unconcerned.”
Their training ended, both made
this a day of rest.
Patterson loafed at the quiet re-
sort on Star Lake, 20 miles south
of Seattle, where he has been
quartered during his get-ready
program.
Rademacher lolled around the
house at North Bend, Wash.,
where he has lived for the last
two weeks.
Pete yesterday boxed two fast
rounds with his spar mates. Asked
by surprised writers why he had
continued heavy wmrk so long.
Pete replied easily, "I always
have,"
Patterson worked lightly, with
no sparring. The champion will
stay at Star Lake until Thursday
morning, driving to Seattle for the
noon weigh-in. Rademacher plans
to move into the city tonight.
Cus D'Amato, Patterson’s man-
ager, said his titleholder probably
will be at his heaviest for this
fight. The former middleweight
weighed 183Va when he met Tom-
my Jackson last month and
D’Amato expects him to be a few
pounds heavier for Rademacher.
Rademacher, who has no man-
ager and does his own talking, ex-
pects to weigh 210. He was 205
when he earned his crown at Mel-
bourne but he has been as heavy
as 214 in some of his 79 amateur
bouts.
He feels the use of eight-ounce
gloves, as ruled by the Washing-
ton State Athletic Commission, is
in his favor. Patterson's camp
would have preferred mitts with
two ounces less padding.
Rademacher said he felt no ex-
citement or tenseness.
"This is not like a tournament
where you have two or three
fights a day and have to keep
winning to stay in the running.
I'm ready; I have been ready for
a week. I feel I have nothing to
lose, everything to gain.
"I don’t know if it’s all in my
head or whether I really have the
stuff to win the title.”
There will be no radio or tele-
vision.
Mexico to Open Giant Natural Gas
Export Pipeline Facility Thursday
ANDkF.\VS City mail delivery
for Andrews will begin Sept. 21 ac-
cording to a letter from the re-
gional operations director.
The long-awaited announcement
that the delivery service is to be-
gin, comes on the heels of a sur-
vey by post office inspectors and
a public opinion poll in which 98.5
per cent of those returning ballots
favored the establishment of home
delivery.
All homes and businesses inside
the city limits will receive this
mail service once a day, six days
per week.
MIDLAND — A reUscd Gen
eral Fund budget — ulaahed
approximately $100,000 to con-
form with a proposed 10-rent
decrease in the citj’s $1.60
tax rate — has been com-
pleted and presented to tile
City Council.
MULESHOF — The rates for
county taxes in Bailey county have I
been set at the same rate for 1957 i
as they were for 1956, according
to a resolution adopted by the I
Commissioners Court. The county
tax rate remains at 95 cents per
$100 valuation, and the road dis-j
trict 1-A tax rate remains at 401
cents per $100. The special road!
tax is still 30 cents per $100 subject I
to homestead exemptions.
Buffs Win Two,
Gain Half Game
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Houston gained half a game on
Dallas Tuesday as the Texas
League race featured pitching.
Houston cut the margin between
first and second to eight games.
Tommy Bowers tossed a three-
hitter in sending Dallas to a 2-0
victory over Shreveport. It was his
17th decision and made him the
winningest hurler in the circuit.
Dallas used only six hits.
Houston took a double-header
from Fort Worth 5-2 and 3-1 with
Howie Nunn pitching a three-hitter
in the second game. Ray Dabek’s
three-run homer produced the first
Houston triumph.
Austin beat Tulsa 3-2 in the first
game on Paul Rambone's three-
run homer. Norman Camp twirled
a four-hitter in the nightcap to
bring the Oilers a 6-0 victory.
A t w o - h i t masterpiece was
thrown by Ted Bowsfield. the
Oklahoma City lefty, who beat San
Antonio 3-0 in the second game.
San Antonio won the opener 7-4,
clouting 14 hits.
5-run Rally Gives
Victory to Ardmore
- Ardmore managed to maintain
its precarious l'i game Sooner
State League lead over Paris
Tuesday but it took a five-run ral-
ly in the ninth inning to defeat
Seminole 8-5 and snap the Cards’
three-game losing slump.
Paris edged Ponca City 6-5,
while Shawnee downed Greenville
B> The Associated Pn-Mt
\>l KRK \\ L KAG l K
TIKSDAVS KKSII.TS
Washington 5-0, Chicago 4-6. night
“ni New York o. night
were named:
post: There Frank Howard
counting on two sophs
White and Johnnie MaeGoff. How- Dallas, north;
Lubbock secre.jjf V «
"Both Hamric and I have con-j v,„„ 'V* '7!*' I" Brhind
I t a
Gene Mitehell of
of
Frank White of
all spots but the vital quarterback | FLe regional vice presidents I tacted'VilUatT I^WitL ‘e^rdina-! cZ^'rk
Harvey 'Lubbock, west; Bobby Morris of | the Professional baseball
fund committee
ard says his team will pass much Henderson, east; Jimmy Witcher ah|^ 8fh"‘
of Beaumont, south, and Tom
j-y-jore th’s year. i t5oaumont, south, and
Maryland recovering from Its Lawrence of Corpus Christi, Rio
worst season in 12 years, has 60 j Grande.
candidates, 29 who’won letters.! T<*4 Mcnefee of San Antonio was
Tommy Mont's first year as head' narrlod outstanding home pro of
coach was a nightmare of injuries, ^1c year in Texas,
illness anjl losses to the Army. ] A pro-pro tournament was won
The emergencies gave many! Marrcn Cantrell of Lubbock
--------—-| and Doug Higgins of Fort Worth
with 63. They were one stroke
ahead of Henry Ransom o fBryan
and Bill Oliver of Roswell, N.M.
A pro-am was scheduled today,
with the annual Texas PGA tour-
nament starting tomorrow,
Bill
Talbeitand Shea
Beat Youngsters
BROOKLINE, Mass. 'T
Talbert, Mrs. Midge Buck and
Gardnar Mulloy are proving there
is no substitute for experience in
the National Doubles Tennis tour-
nament.
Talbert, non-piayir.g captain of
the U. -S. Davis Cup team, joined
able the club to finish the sea-
son,” Sayles said.
"We're hopeful that we get this
aid. If not. the league probably
would have to fold."
Hamric was given until next
Monday to decide whether to op-
erate the Corpus Christi team by
himself for the rest of the cam-
paign. The Clippers’ board of trus-
tees set the deadline after they j
resigned Monday.
Sayles said the league expected 1
to get information on the request ■
for aid within three days.
Detroit
for | Baltimore
Cleveland
Kansas City
Washington
77
70
HI
59
5H
57
46
.46
41 .653
4K .593
56 .521
59 .500
Ho .4S3
HU 4~9
73 .3*7
73 3H7
7
15 g.
IK
20
20 l.
31',.
3i'_
WEDNESDAY'S (,\MKS
Washington at Chicago. 1:30 p m.
Baltimore at Detroit, 2 p.m.
Boston at Cleveland. 7 if in
New York at Kansas City. 9 p.m.
NATIONAL LE ACiL'K
Tl hSOAY'M REMLTS
Milwaukee 3. Pittsburgh 1 night
St Louis 4-3. New York 3-2 n’ght
Philadelphia 2-2. Che ago 15, 1st game
MCALLEN W- A Mexican offi-
cial will turn a valve here tomor-
row, opening a 30-inch pipeline to
carry a daily blow of 115,000,000
cubic feet of natural gas from
Mexico to the United States.
It is the first major natur&l gas
import facility to be constructed
along the Texas-Mexico border.
Antonio Bermudez, director gen-
eral- of Petroleos Mexicanos (Pe-
mex), will turn the valve that con-
nects the Pemex facilities with a
44 million dollar pipeline recently
completed by Texas Eastern of
Shreveport, La.
Some 50 government representa-
tives and oil company officials will
be on hand.
The line will transmit gas along
the Texas Gulf Coast to the Vidor
compressor station near Beaur
mont. It also will be used to trans-
port natural gas gathered from
numerous fields in Texas.
The amount of gas can be in-
creased up to 100.000,000 cubic
feet daily as additional reserves
are developed or discovered in
Mexico.
The gAs will come from the Bra-
sil yrevino and Limitas Fields in
northeastern Mexico. It will be
processed at the Pemex plant in
Rcynosa, Mcx., just across the
Lightweight' Champ
To Face Jioey Lopes
CHICAGO 'if) — Lightweight
champion Joe Brown, who has yet j 8-5 and Muskogee topped Lawton
At Vidor, the new pipeline con-, to break into the big money, to-14-3.
nects with Texas Eastern’s 5,9001 night will fight Joey Lopes for a! A three-run homer by Jim Mc-
mile natural ga-s system that ex-i $4,000 television stipend and a j Knight climaxed the Cards’ last
tends through the central- United j percentage of a small gate at Chi-j ditch rally. Getting the victory
States to near New York. | cago Stadium. I was righthander Norman Frye.
Rio Grande from here.
JO innings
Brooklyn 11 6,
Cincinnat
5-3.
2d game
12 nntngs
Won
Lost
Pet. Behind
Milwaukee
7.3
4,i .619 —
St. Iyiuis
H7
51
568 6
Brooklyn
67
33 538 7
Cim inaoi
62 :
>7 .525 12
Philadelphia
HI
5K
.513 121 _*
New York
56
bh
. 459 19
Chicago
Pittsburgh
46
70
397 26
43
74
. 368 2$' _
Victoria Can Claim
Second Half Title
. SI.
’ * . | HKIINKSIIWS (.AM KS
manager, said the main reason Cincinnati at lirnokiyn. le w p.m.
the team folded was because only
six of the 19 remaining games arc j
home affairs. Out of this revenue Ardmore s. semin..ie 5
• .... » | Shawnee S. Greenville .>
Louis at New York. 12:30 pm.
NOON Mt STATE I.EAGIE
Tl KNOWN KKSll.TS
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | 1X1001 two .payrolls.
forces with Gil Shea and trimmed’ If the Big State League does! —-—-— --
tw o of his youthful prize pupils fold Monday Victoria will he sec-! w ,
Sammy Giammalva and Barry i on'd halt ctfampion anyway! ! I GOCnGTS Ot TgCH
MacKay 9-7- 7-5. 4-6, 4-6. 9-7. The Rosebuds are seven games ... . .. . *
Giammalva and MacKay were to 1hc good and can't play more ■ Nl IX UN iVgGK Po^t^
LI. BBOCK .P Three members
of the Texas Tech faculty have
refused to serve on a local oom-
On the same second round pro- lene'sT v^hile^ sVeond place'Beau- ml!'ceI °" l’ni,cd Na,ions Week,
gt-am at l.ongw„od yesterday. mont whipped Corpus Christi 6-1 Thc Lubbock Journal said it was
Mrs But 48. National Women's Chris Nicolosi. the league's win- ln(llca,ed 111 conversations that the
Senior singles champion, an! Mrs. ningest pitcher, made if 19 victo- rocent firins of three professors
Kay McKean. 43. upset England's nef ns ho S(1, Abilene down — for controversial activities was the
third seeded < .mbine of Shirley eight well scattered hits,
and Sheri Arm
the seventh seeded men while Tal- than two games by the anticipated!
her; and Shea just came along for closing time.
the lido. Tuesday they maintained their
seven-game bulge by heating Abi-
he said the club would have to Muskogee s. u»um a
j Paris 6, Ponca City 5
Won Lost Tct Behind
i Ardmore H7 44 Ho4
I Paris 65 45 .591 !’ •
| Muskogee .59 51 536 7
j Shawnee 57 53 .5IK 9>
Greenville 54 53 .5* '5 .11
' Lawton 49 6b ,45o 17
Ponca City 46 H3 .422 2"
Seminole 4*» <»K 37o 25'-
WKHNKKIiAY’N (iAM KS
Ardmore at Seminole
I Greenville at Shawnee
; Lawton at Muskogee
i Paris at Ponca City
BIG STATK I. K I K
Tl K*IIA5 *S RKSI I.TS
| Beaumont 6 Corpus Christi 1
Victoria 8. ABilene 3
Won l ot Pet. Behind
\
t
V
v
A'
V
ITS SNOWING
■SAVINGS!
Bloomer. 22.
strong. 18.
basis for their decision
serve on the committee.
not to
S-
— vf Pc+' F J*jnn**t -
WALLACE
THtATm
TODAY
THURSDAY
"FEAR
STRIKES
OUT"
SPADE
LAST TIMES
TODAY
CTiw mm
» UMVOStl wunutoui Ptctuxll
SST*""
tallies.
Dave wi.-kersham notched his Little League Series
fifteenth pitching decision as he C_
hurled Beaumont to victory over ^Cmi-tinolS Postponed
WILLIAMSPORT. Pa. -.Pi The
schedule for the three-day 11th an-
nual Little League baseball world
series was revised today because
of colds suffered by several mem-
bers of one team.
SACRAMENTO. Calif. <fi Three Managers and roaches of the
teen-agers-all with national junior I four 10«1<,nal dinners agreed to
titles in the showcase today held | pos,pono unUl Thursday one somi-
the limelight in the third round of I ^’na' Same, between Escanaba,
Amateur Mi,’h- and l-a Mosa. Calif. It had
slumping Corpus Christi.
Teen-agers Holding
Tourney Limelight
been scheduled today.
, the National Women's
i golf championship.
Jurlv filler. 16. coo! even in the' 1,1 v revision leaves me second
; 100-degree heat on the Del Paso! scm,flnal bo,'vo°n Monterrey,
i Country Club course, met Joanne ! Moxlco anfi Bridgeport, Conn , the
i Gunderson. 18, of Seattle who ! on v "amo on luday's schedule.
! matched par 38-36-71 on the 6 368 A Li"10 Loa-uo spokesman said
yard layout. Judv. from Old Hick- ''thre0 ,jr four'' of 'he California
lory, Tenn.. is tie junior champ arrivod W|,h r,,lds and 1h0
j Joanne held the title last year |oo;io10s and managers decided on
The 1955 National Junior queen Ph'’ Pos,Pon°ment to give them a
Victoria
31
13 .705
Beaumont 22
18 .350 7
Corpus Christi 21
20 ' .512 K:.
Abilene
17
27 . 3K6 14-
Temple
15
23 3 49 l.V.
Wl JlNKsnWs G\MKN
f’orpjs Christi at Beaumont
Victoria
a* Abilene
NO! TIIWKnTKRN 1.t:\Gt K
Tl K'DAY S BKnI KTS
Ballinger
9 Carlsbad
4
Hobbs K
Lamesa o <■
second game pos*
j> >ned.
light failure
\\ on
1 nst Tet. Behind
Hobbs
62
47 .569
Ballinger
62
49 .359 1
Carlsbad
57
47 5 48 21 z
Lamesa
41
68 .376 21
WKIINKaIMY’S g.wi kn
Carlsbad
at Ballinger
Lame’s a
at Hobbs
TK.\ \N Kl
\Gt K
Tl KNOWN IU SILTS
Houston
5-3. Fort Worth 2-1
Dallas 2.
Shreveport 0
Austin 3-0 Tulsa 2 6
Carole Joe Kabler of Roscburg.
Ore., was one-under-par in swamp-
ing Sue Einkbeiner of To led o,8
and 7. Carole's third round oppo-
nent was Mrs. John Cann of Fair-
fax. Calif.
Another Toleilo girl, Barbara
M'Tntire, low amateur the past
two years in the Women's Open,
also had a one-under-par round in
dropping Jiine Nelson of ItKlianap-
olis 5 and *4
Rice Stor Gets Post
HOLTON ip Kosse Johnson.
All-AB)erica\ lullbai k at Rice in
1953. has been named head roach
of Mount Carmel High
here.
chance to play in the series.
Hobbs Nips Lamesa,
Keeps Status Quo
San Antonio 7-0.
Oklahoma
City
13
Mon
Lost
ret.
Behind
Dallas
HK
13
.677
Houston
Kl
32
.♦>09
S
Austin
66
67
196
23
San Antonio
64
67
. 1K9
24'7
Tuisa
63
68
.481
25’ •
Fort \v..r’h
6'»
72
. 455
29
Oklahoma City
56
73
431
TV
Shrevcjiort
4K
81
364
43
WKDNKMIW'N GAM KS
Houston Rt Fort Worth
Shreveport at Dallas
.^Austin at Tulsa
San Antonio at Oklahoma CUy <2
Fire, Blast Rip Plant
BROWNSVILLE <*) A flash fire
and explosion ripped a unit of the
American Oil Co, synthetic gaso-
line plant early today, killing one
man and burning two others.
R. W. Rankin of Brownsville
was killed. Dale Shrek and R. R.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Moneus were reported in fair con-
Thc status quo w as maintained! dition at a hospital.
ir> tlie Southwestern League Tucs-1 Plant Manager Larry Smith said
day when both leaders won. ; cause of the fire was not detcr-
I.ending Hobbs beat Lamesa 8*0 mined.
<»n Jim Waldrip's one-hitter but
they couldn't play the second game Amarillo's JCs Plan
ol a double-header when the lights r , , ,, r _,
w an out. Sports Hall ot Fame
Second place Ballinger clubbed AMARILLO 1T1 - The Panhandle
Carlsbad 9-4 j will have its own Sports Hall of
Waldrip gave up a bloop double Fame. The Amarillo Junior Cham-
Schoul to Hank O Neal in the second in-1 her of Commerce is sponsoring it.
i ninj It v j; fair Uy an inch 1 wit!i at Ica-t one pci .on to be
Hopes of Success
In Inter-America
Meeting Dashed
BUENOS AIRES '.P The Inter-
American E con.omim ...Conference
moved today into the solid work
of arguing concrete proposals for
hemisphere cooperation.
But, a week after the meeting
opened, hopes that it would result
in some resounding success were
all but dashes!.
Half a dozen of the 20 chief
delegates had left or were prepar-
ing to leave Buenos Aires .They
will be replaced by alternate dele-
gates as working committees take
over to debate some 30'bills pre-
sented by last midnight. .
The first top delegate to leave j
was U. S.. Treasury Secretary
Robert B. Anderson. His depart-
ure yesterday was a day earlier j
than scheduled and brought from 1
Argentine newspapers such com-,
ment as "astonishing." But the j
conference chairman, Argentine
Finance Minister Adalberto Krieg-
er Vascna, told reporters it had
been known in advance that some
delegation chiefs were leaving
after only a short stay.
Most of the sessions thus fat-
have been devoted to meetings
which served mainly as sound-
boards for speeches by delegation
heads. Most of the speakers criti-
cized L'.S. economic policy in
Latin America.
Canary, Gray Colors
For Men Next Spring
ASHEVILLE. N. C itfi It's ca-
nary and gray for men next
spring.
That's what the Men's Apparel
Clubs decided at its 15th annual
convention here yesterday'.
The organization of manufactur-
ers’ salesmen and sales repre-
i sentativos adopted a motion to
; promote the canary and gray col-
or combination for spring wear.
Leo Koppman of Dallas, Tex.,
said the basic color theme w ill
be introduced at all 28 MAC 1957
fall shows. He said it will appear
in everything the man wears.
Koppman said the campaign al-
| ready is under way in Texas,
I where the idea originated about
six months ago.
named annually to the rolls.
Iluald bun New* want ada pay '
at your PLYMOUTH dealer's!
^ iS ^ S
—- jfs Plymouth’s greatest year-
and“Operation Snowball” is your greatest
chance to save on the one car.
that will still be new next snowfall!
Right now is saving weather at
your Plymouth dealer’s! Plymouth
sales are storming ahead at a record
rate . . . snowballing to an all-time
high. Your dealer is in a position to
give you an avalanche of savings on
the new Plymouth of your choice.
The more Plymouths he sells, the
more cash you can save.
You’ll really go for the ‘‘below-
zero” prices your Plymouth dealer
is featuring during his spectacular
30-day “Operation Snowball.” And
you'll like the .very liberal allowance
he can give you for your present
car. So don’t miss out on the big sav-
ings-pick out i/our 3-years-ahead
Plymouth today.
••I
!/
Look ahead...buy ahead...buy a
and own more of the future right now!
For your TV entertainment, Plymouth presents "Climax!" See TV section for time and station.
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Brewer, Orlin. The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 252, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 21, 1957, newspaper, August 21, 1957; Levelland, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1130113/m1/6/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting South Plains College.