ktymmtt 20 wed., mar. 6, 1957 buiidogs, terrymen ... 10/yonkers ny...movie," john told me,...

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TT KtYmmtt --Hoppe Brings Lumia to Video By STEVEX SCHEUER John Hoppe is the first man to apply Hhe art of color music, or lumia, to television on a practical- basis. I Though John Hoppe has been given credit for inventing the en tire process, this isn't actually the truth, -Ws nieiclv hncf the curios If the above statement means nothing to you, perhaps it will when you're reminded it was John"s pro- cess which made so much of the recent Ernie Kovacs" Saturday night color show memorable. If. however, you're one of the count- less thousands who turned off your TV sets during the tasteless Jerry Lewis show immediately preceding Kovacs. you missed seeing Hoppe's work. Cheer up! You're going to get another chance to see the art |ity to discover the lumia process and then extend its horizons to in- clude television. "The ai+ form lumia, or color music, is described in tests," he told me. "and it excited me. I developed the instruments I now use on television from instruments used in the original lumia process. The first one was an instrument using candles, which was built in 1751. As far back as 1895. there was an instrument which mixed light from an organ keyboard. In 1925. there was a flurry of in- terest "in lumia, and there were many performances of it. It was very pretty, but it was used with- out music and died down." Best on Kovacs Show John's interest in lumia and his inventiveness in adapting it to tel- evision were brought into the spot- light with the Kovacs show, but prior to that he had already ap- peared on over ICO hours of TV, both live and on film. Among lICiuiu JIUIC9IIIUM, i UHM;I»J I-*. I . 20 Wed., Mar. 6, 1957 the shows using the Mobilux Lu- mia process were Omnibus, To- night, and the Hit Parade. The appearance with Kovacs was the best. After the Kovacs show, about 20 agencies contacted John Hoppe to feel him out on doing..-fflmmec cials, and he's now in the swing of that side of the business. His first live commercial was seen on Gunsmoke last Saturday. "I'm excited about this process and I don't think there are many limits on it.'' John said. "This is the art of vision, the way music is the art of sound. 1 think in due time networks will have en- sembles of lumia the way they now have ensembles of musicians." BuiIdogs, terrymen marToniffnt In Sectional Basketball Semis Both Rated of television extended beyond its normally narrow boundaries. On Sunday, the normally spotty Ray Bolger variety program, "Washington Square," will offer a segment called "Henry the Harp." in which Kay will narrate a fairy story to a group of children while John Hoppe's delightful animations and abstractions illustrate it. It's as charming a sequence as TV has had in many a moon. "It will be a complete cartoon movie," John told me, "except that it will be entirely 'live' and it will be done entirely in Mobi- lux.." Wary on Information Mobilux is the name John Hoppe gives to his process (He has a company called Mobilux Lumia.) and he's very wary about giving away too much information about it. "There are no competitors for the live part of our method," he explained, "and I don't want to -encourage • any^until Fm more solidly entrenched. Just ~say~0Tat Mobilux combines light sources, filtering elements, manual, opera- tion and reflections—plus." OUCH—OOOHHH! NEW YORK — The last Madi- son Square Garden vaudeville of grunt-n'-grooners drew an over- flow house. The next one is due Monday when the exhibitions in- clude an Antonino (Barefoot) Roc- ca-Hans (German) Schmidt main event, a Ricki (Ballet) Star-Dick (The Bruiser) Afflis semi, two tag- team matches and other events 'with the names of Stevens, Far- go, Perez, Rodriquez, Von Hess, Murphy, Nichols. Rossi, Graham, Lee, Scott. Heart, Bernard and Skaaland included. TELEVISION Channel i Otiarma-1 4 Channel 5 ... WCBS-rV Channel / WA8C-T> ... WRCA-TV Cli.nn»l 9 ...... WOR-TV WABD Chann.» M WPl> Chann.l 13 WATV WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1957 TODAY 6.NM2)—My Little' Mar«1« t«>—"in A Great Uf«" •51—Studio Party «7)—MicXey Mouna Olub FIGHTS LAST NIGHT —HsL_Xrie_ As£oxisied_PrP5 s MIAMI BEACH, Fla.—ChlccTTF jar. 15214, of Stamford, Conn, out- pointed Jimmy Peters, 150! 2 of Mi- ami, in. LOWELL, Mass. Billy Ryan, 168, of Lowell, outpointed .Milton Epps, 165, of Newark. N. J., 6. •&>—Ted Steel* "ID—Ramir 5:3<M2>—Movie: -Adventures Of Don Juan" (4)—Movie: "MID With A Million" (5)—Captain Video (11)—Clubhouse Oan* (13»—Feature: -'That Brennan Olrl" 6:00-(5)—Oene Autry (7)—Sky Kim '9)—Homer Bell (11)—Popeye The 8»llor 6;30-(I)—Looney Tune* (7)—Passport to Danger (fl>—Crosscurrent ID—Foreign Lectonnalrr S'45-(4)—News 6 f5-<7>—Weather 13)—New* 7:0O-Q)—Ne\r> '4)—Death Valley Days (5)—Mike Wallace^ ('.)—Kukla, Fran. Ollle <9)—Terry Tunea 'ID—News: Weather •13)—Ail-Star Movie "Bricham Young" 7:i5-f2>—News (5)—Top Secret . 7)—News - tin—New* 7:30-CJ)—Giant 8tep (*)—Xavier Cugat Show '5r— Mickey Rooney (7)—Disneyland (9)—Movie: "Rachel And The Stranger" (ID—Rosemary Clooney 7-45-'4)—News 8:00-'2)—Ouy Mitchell 4—Chevalier's Paris (5)—Cavalcade' of Stars (9*—Gang Busters . (ID—Man Behind the 3?.dRe .8.30-14)—Father Kndw: Best i5)—Count of Mont* Crlsto '7)—Navy Log (ID—Badge 714 (135—Hollywood JoniaJtfVPick^OMhe TV Best New Printed Pattern NEW PRINTED PATTERN EASIER-FASTER MORE ACCURATE 900-(2>—The Mtllionair* (4)—TV Theater: (5)—Wanted (7)—Ozzie <te Harriet (9)—O'Henry Plavhou«e (ID—Dr. Chrlstala (13)—Hollywood g : 30-<2)—I've Got A Secret (5)—Movie: "Main Bait" (7)—Theater: •Broken Barrier" O)—star Attraction •.ID—Highway Patrjl (13)—Front Page Detective 10:00-(2)—Theater: "City In Flames" (4)—This Is Your Life (7)—Boxing: (9)—Movie: "Rachel And The Stranger" (ID—Star <fc Story (Today's top shows as previewed by TV Key's staff of experts at screenings and rehearsals In New York and Hollywood.) 7:30-8:30 (7) Disneyland. "Man In Flight." The last 45 minutes of this show are absolutely superb; Disney at his imaginative,, edu- cational and entertaining best. The history of baloonlng, gliding and power flight are handled In brilliant animation with an amusing, well written commentary. There are some fascinating films of early and unusual attempts at flight In the United .States, some of which are hilarious, and the Wright Brothers, their succesors, and the development of military aviation are given the Class A treatment. Unfortunately, the opening Is marred by a fat bouse commercial for Disney's amusement park, and the flight to the moon ride Is an interesting but inexcusable Intrusion on what otherwise is for TV a work of art. 8:00-9:00 (4) "Maurice Chevalier's Paris." After all, this Is Paris, France, not P a r i s , 111.! So, despite its numerous shortcomings, this tour, guided bj^the most famous boulavardier-of-them all. Is worth a post-dinner peek, thanks to its moments of charm and truth. If you think your landlord is a gossipy pest, you'll feel a little better after meeting a typical Parisian concierge. Otherwise, you'll see "the ugly beauty of the 20th Century, Indistinguishable from Chicago" (Parisian suburbs), and the undeniabje glories of the Place de La Concorde and the leading Paris dress salons. (Color.) 8:30-9:00 (7) Navy Log. "The Star." John Carradine's fans are In foY a treat. He portrays a Naval hero who also happens to be a Shakepearian actor. The story is a quaint one about an elderly actor's persistence in first enlisting in the Navy and then volun- teering to scout in advance of a Sicilian Invasion. Above par for the series. 9:0010:00 (4) "The Duel." An emotional chapter in American his- tory, the rivalry between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr, receives an interesting dramatic treatment. Some of this is talky, but there Is enough detail on backroom power politics to hold your interest. E. G. Marshall is fine as Hamilton, the stubborn patriot, with Dan O'Herlihy the glib, colorful Burr. 10:00-11:00 (7) Golden Gloves Finals. Champion amateur boxers in five major' divisions (lightweight, welterweight, middleweight, light-heavy and heavyweight) square off against -each other. From Chicago. 1(1:00-12:00 (131 All Star Movie. "Brlgham Young." starring Tyrone Underdogs At County Center Semifinals in three of the tour- ney's four divisions are being play- ed today and tonight as the State Section-One basketball champion- ships moved to the County Seat, where they'll remain until all tit- les have been decided. A four-game program is carded for the County Center, jHorace Greeley of Chappaqua, runner-up in the Northern Westchester League, began the festivities at the big arena at 4:30 in a Class B clash with F. D. Roosevelt of Hyde Park. Rye and Dobbs Ferry, both advancing into Class A at their requests, foliow at 6. The double-A semis pit New Ro- chelle against Mamaroneck at 7:30 and White lains against Yonkers at 9. Both Dobbs Ferry, which is gunning for its second tourna- ment victory, and Yonkers High, for its first, are rated under- dogs. Dobbs Ferry has made the leap from Class C to Class A to bid for the Westchester title, but Rye is given a slight edge. Rye is jumping from Class B. Yonkers High, in Dou- NXPro Five, 1957 The Knicks have had it. Outhustled. outmaneuv e r e d and outshot by Syracuse in a 99-92 letdown in Madison Square Garden last night, the New Yorkers are mired in last place in the NBA's Eastern Division, 3 V 3 games behind Syracuse and Philadelphia with only four games remain- ing. Syracuse and Philadelphia eacff have five left. Syracuse has two with the Knicks, Philly one. A garrison finish and all the luck in the world mjght do it for the Knicks, but they are simply not that good a basketball team. Lasf night in the clutch^they were pathetc. ~Tn the Garden twinbill opener, Philadelphia, though again playing without Neil Johnston and his ailing ankle, Dumped Fort Wayne, 114-80, wtih Paul Arizin and "Joe Gra- boski splitting 45 points. This and a 104-102 victory by Visiting St. Louis over Boston enabled the Hawks to move within a half-,game of Ft. Wayne and the Western lead. Three of the four teams in each division make the play- offs, which begin March 16. TJhe . Knicks, two below 500. are better off mathematically than any of the four teams in the Western Division. But they're in the East. And they're out of luck. It was a rotten season. VThe Knicks may lose Willie Naulls and Ron Sobie to the Army. They need help. Will Coa,ch Vince Boryla be back? —CASTgWN DIVISION B-0 I t 0 n Rec Troops (Champion) 43-25. Philadelphia. Syra- cuse 36-31, New York 33-35. WESTERN DIVISION—Ft. Wayne 32-35. St. Louis 32-36, Minneapolis 29-38. Rochester 29-39. Fouled Up REC ROUNDUP There'll be no speedy solution to the Recrea tion basketball second-half situa- tion. On the heels of the four-Jeam snarl developed in the Senior Blue Division Monday night, the Inter- mediate Greens were fouled up last night and the Senior Maroons wound up-st-tll-at least one session away. The Acorns could have been crowned Green champion, but they were dealt their first loss, 31-24, by Shamrocks, at Saunders, as Tom Derine hooped 13 and Den McGean 10 for the winners. Still left on the slate now is a game .between the Acorns (4-4-1) and Knicks (2-3) which could tie the former with Shamrocks (5-1), for- In Baseball A>Change Of Pace Is When You Take Something Off IrishVs.Stepinac IhW.PP.S.A.Ar Quarter-final tilts are to be played at.Mt. St. Michael's in the Brox tonight in the "A" di- vision of the WPSAA tourney. Sacred Heart plays Stepinac at 7 P.M. Iona PreD meets Blessed Scarament at 5:30 P.M. and the defending champ Mounties play NYMA at 8:30. Friday night's semis and Sunday afternoon's third-place consolation and final will be at either Sacred Heart or Stepinac, whichever loses to- night. Power. The great Mormon leader takes his people to a new land of freedom. Leisurely, but well produced historical drama, with line outdoor scenery. 11:15-1:15 (2) Late Show. "Watch on the Rhine," starring Bette Davis, Paul Lukas. Made In 1943. this drama about a betrayed German refugee, still holds up well. Inspired performances and an absorbing screenplay make It a "must" for late-night movie fans. "A Matter Of CouraRe" ' (13)—All-Star Movie: "Brixham Young" 10:30-( 4)—Playhouse: (ID—Mystery Is My Business 10-43-(7)—Sports Pag* ll:00-(2)—News: Weather <4)—News: Weather (5)—NiRhtbear ni—News (ID—Stryker of Scotland Yard ll:10-<2>—Weather & Sports (7)—Night Show: "One Touch Of Venus" ll:ls-(2)—Movie: "Watch On The Rhine" (4)—Tonight: 'America After Dark" (9)—He-Man Theater til)—News (13)—Hollywood 12:C0-(5)—Midnight Movie •"A Man Of Peace" (9)—Lona: John Show (13)—Hollywood TOMORROW 6 50-i2)—Prevues 6:55-(2)—Oive Us ThU Day (4)—Sermonette 7:00-(2)—Good Morning (4)—Today Till 9:30 7'25-'2)—News 7:30-(2)—Good Morning 7:55-<2>—News 8.00-?)—Captain Kangaroo' Cj)_Tinker's Workshop 8:35-15)— Prevues 8'45-(5)—Sandy Becker g i5-(2)_Lrs Paul-Mary Ford, (4)—Movie 9:00-(2i—Stu Erwln (5)—Sandy Becker CI)—Drama ot Life 9:30-C')—Am^s 'n' Andy *•>>—Morning Feature (9)—Safety First 9:55-14)—News I0.00-'2i—Gnrr, Moore f4)—Home <9>—Cartoon Time 10:15-f5>— Tune In Anytime 10.30-2)—Arthur Godfrey (4)—Home (9)—Gene Autry 10:38-U)—Window 10:43-(4)—Home 11:00-4)—The Price Is Right (7)—Ncwscope 11:05-7)—Road of Romance ll-20-(2)-^Strlke It Rich <4)—Truth or Consequences .'7)_Martin Block/ '9)—Cartoon Time 11:45-<S>>—News- Weather 11:J8-'13)—TV Pastor l2-:00-'2)—Valiar,t Lady '41—Tic Tac Dougn (5)—Herb Sheldon (7)—Time For Fur* (9)—Double Exposure "My Dear Secretary" '13>-Wom.in's Work 1215-f?)—Love Of Life 12:30-(2)—Search For Tomorrow (4)—It Could Be YOU (7)—Memory Lane d3)_Western Theater i2:45-(2)—Guiding Light (9)—Luncheon l:C0-(2)—News (4)—Tex and Jinx (Color) <5)—Tune In Anytime '13)—Comedy Corner l:10-'2)—Stand. Be Counti-d 1.30-'2)—World Turns (4)—Club 60 (7)—Afternoon Show "Fighting Tather Dunn" (9)—Double Exposure— "My Dear Secretary" •11)—Understand World (13^—Feature "That Brennan. Girl" 3:00-(2)—Qur Miss Brooki .4>—Richard Willis (ID—Movie Time "Topper Returns" 2:30-(2>—House Party 4)—Tennessee Ernie Ford 2:45-(5)—News-Weather 2:55-(13)—News 3 00-2)—BU Payoff (4)—M-4tir.ee Theater (5)—Llberace (7)—Film Festival "Broken Journey" (9)—Ted Steele (Till 5:00) (13)—Fun Time 3:15-G3)—Irving Field* 3:30-(2)—Bob Crosby (Color) 5)—Baiulah (ID—First Show -^- -3oiwOf ble-A, is facing in White Plains a team that beat' it twice al- ready, decisively (by 20 points) only Friday. The other two games are at White Plains High. Arlington of JPQiighkeepjsle_goes against_Sleepy Hollow in Class A at 7 P.M.,1 and Harrison squares off with Lakeland in a BB" semi at 8:45. The C semis open Friday's four- game card at the County'Center. Arlington and F. D. Roosevelt, playing their first games, are among only three Dutchess Coun- ty Schools left in the tourney. Of four Class C entries from the North, only one—Pine Plains—sur- vived the first round. All Westchester. League champi- ons except those competing in Class C are involved in today's scraps. They include New Rochelle of the WIAA, Harrison of the Lit- tle Three and SWIAC (and runner- up Rye), Dobbs Ferry, co-titlist in the Western Westchester, Sleepy Hollow of the Hudson River Big-3, and New Rochelle and Yonkers as their respective city champions. Ardsley (co-holder in the WWL) and John Jay of the Northern West- chester circuit resume action Fri- day^ ' cing a playoff. In the Maroon, Ragones (5-0) beat Pioneers (2-3), 39-36, with George Sava netting 11 for the winners and Charles Elliott 11 for the losers. Ragones must yet face Dunwoodies (4-1), while Whiz Kids (5-l)are Idle, in a game that may settle matters or may force more action. Last night Whiz Kids messed up Dunwoodies, 56-45, with Bob Gordon netting 24 and Warren De- Brocke 11 for the winners, Angey DeVito 24 and Nunno 10 for the losers. BATT1W AROUND Burlesque Dancer Patty Wig- gin, "The Coed With The Edu- cated Torso," chats with hus- band Don Rudolph, a rookie pitcher in the Chicago White Sox training camp. During the off-season-Don_travels the Burly circuit with his wife, a featured "strip-teaser," helping her with her travel, wardrobe and pub- licity. He admits he takes a bit of ribbing from rival dugouts, is a longshot to make the team this season. His specialty is curves. So's his wife's.—Wire- photo. Strong Down Middle, White Sox Need Punch Monte Crlsto" (13)—Jewish Home 3 55-(9)—News «.G0-i2)— Brighter Day '4)—Qieen For a Day 5)—Wendy Barrle (9)—Ted 6teele 13)—Fun Time 415-(2)—Secret Storm 4:30-.2>—The JCdge of Nlcht (7)—Cartoon Club •13)—Junior Frolics «:45-(4)—Modern Roraan'-w 4 55-t9>—News (ID—News RADIO WFAS WRCA WOR 1230 660 ^710 WABC WCBS WMCA 770 880 570 WMGM I05C WQXR 1560 WINS I0IC VVFAS 123 or 1230 WFAS-FM 103.9 mc \M end FM PROGRAMS broadcait eimultaneouily Monday through Friday. 6:30 A.M. to 12:00 Mid. Saturday* 7:00 A.M. to 12:00 Mid Sundayv, °:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. MEWS SCHEDULE (Monday* through Fridayi only) 6:30 A.M end 6:55 A.M., (Mondays tr-rough Saturdayi) 7:45. 8:55. 9:55. 10:55. 11:55 A . M . i2:45. 1:55. 2:55. 3:55. 4:55. 5:45. 6:55. 7:55. 8:45 9*55. 10:55. 11:55 P.M (Sundays) 9:55, 10:55 A.M.. 12:55. 1:55, 4:55. &:5S P.M. TODAY '' Adelphi Beats Panzer To Win N^IA Playoff JERSEY CITY, N. J. <fl — Adelphia proved it could lick Pan- zer twicp in a season last night !2>~^!:T*J M J^ N " rt M^3^W"the NAIA district 31 play- off in the process, 83-67. It's superior scoring punch and rebounding put the Garden City, N.Y. College in front 43-33 at the half here. Panzer tied the score four timesJn the first five minutes but then began to slip back. TAMPA, Fla.—This may be the year for the Chicago White Sox to make their move out of third place, and it could either be up or down. They have a new man- ager-in Al Lopez, who is a won- derful tutor, but-is in the wrong league, and who didn't improve himself by moving over from Cleveland, but they have too few new faces. They face the challenge of the Yankees, who almost always win, Cleveland, which almost always finishes second, and Detroit, which is on the rise. The Sox have good pitching and a "good defense, strength down the middle and Tiope. On the red-ink side, they lack steady power, they have a dis- s'ention-ridden front office, a South Side of Chicago home which is poverty-stricken and lacks ade- quate parking facilities, a,nd the short end of an attendance feud with the Cubs, r who would Trnir= der them if they ever again had a representative team. Outfielders Minnie Minoso and I^ary Doby had respectable sea- sons a year ago, but they are capable of much better. Minnie hit .316 and had 88 RBI's, Larry • 4532 10-18 1 PRINTED PATTERN Our new Printed Pattern, to brighten your • Summer! Sew these gay fashions now—so won- derful for sun and fun. Carefree T-shirt with convertible neckline, f-lim shorts, favorite pedal push- ers! Printed Pattern 4532: Misses' Sws 10, 12. 14, 16, 18. Size 16 shirt takes 2 li t yards 35-inch fab- ric: shorts, l 1 .* yards. Printed directions on each pat- tern part. Easier,.- faster, accu- rate. Send 35 cents In coins for this pattern —add 5 cenls for each pattern for first-class mailing. Send to Anne Aflams, care of Yonkers Herald Statesman, 192 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th Street. New York 11. N. Y. Print -f^Ainly name. addre«4 wHh-*one;- 5.00-WFAS—Tea Time WOR—Bob end Rey WCRS—News WRCA —News 5:05-WCRR—John R. fAUlk WRCA —Al Collin* 530-WFAS—Rand Stand WCBS—News 5-35.WCBS—John R. 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WABC—Dtie To Dawn WRCA-News TOMORROW size and stvle number. immediate DAY & NIGHT RADIO AID BONDED SERVICEMEN Ce^t»n*ntai Cetueity Cw. MUM* PAYMENTS AftSANalO ••' MMMrfiato aennee NIOHT e» CMT Call VOnk*r» S-0015 CASTRO LABORATORIES t l « Htfeburton AtWftv* 6.30-WFA8—Newscast WRCA —Pulse (Till 1005) WCBS—tack Sterling - (Till T:«5) 'W A si;—<i»or»» Skinner (Tin 8 85) 8 35-WFAh—Breaaiast Club 8:55- WPA»— Newscast 7.00-WPAS— BreakYast With Valla WOR—Newi WCPH ..eioye ~7;15-WFA8—8pdTls Special WOR—John Oambhi.t 7 20-WFAS—Breakfast Club reo-WFAS—W»»imrmao 7:45-WFA8—Newccaat WCBS—Newt 800-WFAS—Breeifatt With Valie WOR—Hews WCBS—World Newa t:IS-WCBS—Jack Sterltnt WOR—Dorothy and Dirk 8«5-WFA»—Bulletin Board 8.55-WFAfl—Newsrast ft OO-WFAt*—Breakfast With Valla WOR—Newa WABC—Breakfaat Cluo WCBS—N«w» 05-WCB8—Jim Lowe Show ft 15-WOR—John Oerohlina ft 30-WFAS— Ad Hill tat WCBS—Martha Writnt WOR—The McCanns ft tS-WFAS—W»nt Ads ft &5-WFAS—Newscast 1 OjOP-WFAS—Melodf Tlm• WOR—News WABC—True Story WCBS—Arthur Oodfray 10 05-WRCA—Bandstand •till 12 05 10 15-WOR—Martha Dean* 10.30-WFAS—Moraine Serermrt* WABC—A Oin Marries 10 45-W ABO— Whispering 8tr*eu 10:55-WFAS—News 11:00-WFAS— Listening Olasa WOR—News WARO—Jack Paar 11 05-WOR— News lis-WASC—Bob *bert? Show WOR—Millie Considine 11:30\VFAH—AlDum ol Music WOR—rOween for a 0»y WCBS—Jim Lowe 11*6-WCBS— Howard Millet 11:5ft-WFAS—Newt 12 0O-WFAS—Conrert WRCA—Newa WOR—Ntwe WABC—Newa WCBS—Newa laOS-WRCA—Puis* WOR—Oahrtet Raatta? IM0-WOR—Oaylord Haueer t2:15-WCBS—Backstat* Wife (, WABC—Frank Parrel) WOH—The McCanns 12;30-WRCA—Maw WOR—News WCBS— R»len Trent , 12 35-WFAS—Reminder 12 45-WFAS—Newe WCBS—Our Oal Sunday WOR—Luncheon r^S»*WP*»—M«tie Yon Know WRCA—News WABC—Newa WCBS—Nora Drar* lhft-WRCA—Bill Ooodwtn l:lft-WCBS—Ma Perkins WABC— Maka Op Tour Ulna 1:30-WCBS Dt Melon* WABC—Be* Wain- Andre Bamch WOR—Bona Edition 1:45-WCBS— Road of Ufa l:8»-WFAS—T**w» 2:0O-WFAR—Your Protram WRCA—Newa WCBS—Newa WOR—New* WABC—FT*<I Warm* 305-WCBS— Rla-ht To Hao- • pin*** WOR—#o* Bmlth WUCA—Tru* .268 with 102 RBI's. Nelson Fox hit .296 at second .and Sherman Lollar did good as catchers go with'.261 and 61 runs hammered in. Lollar behind the bat, peppery Fox at second, rookie shortstop whiz Luis Aparicio and Doby in, center give the Sox strength down the middle. The Sox need help in one outfield spot, at first and at third. Lumbering Walt Dropo's eight- homer 1956 was costly and young Ron Jackson will get a chance to wrest first from him. The Sox have come up with no better than A converledl-Qutfielri suh, Bubb Phillips, to try to win third from punchless Sammy Esposito and Fred Hatfield. Jim Rivera, .255, has no strong challengers in the outfield. - The Sox are going to give a long look to first-baseman Rufe Marshall, who drove in 105 runs at Memphis, and twenty-eight- year-old ex-Dodger vet third- baseman Tom Brown, who had a fine slugging season at Nash- ville. These may hang on to bolster the depth, anyway. The Sox are solid only in pinch-hitting, where fat Ron Northey was baseball's best at .354 last season. Billy Pierce, Jack Harshman, Dick Donovan and Jim Wilson won 58 games between them last season. None are young, but lefty Pierce, who won 20, is still tough, Los Angeles city officials and sports writers are camping around the Dodgers' Vero Beach base, taking it for granted the Dodgers will be theirs next year or soon afterwards . . . Des- pite the promise of young An- dre Rogers and Eddie Bressoud, Giants' manager Bill Rigney says Daryl Spencer is his short- stop and the best defensively in baseball—which would be for- getting Cincinnati's great Roy McMillan . . . Rogers never played anything but softball un- til a few years ago. Fred-Haner subtly backed up Jackie Robinson's dissipation charges when he set a $500 fine "to any of-rhts - Braves-whcr-vio— late the curfew . . . The Dodgers now own Los Angeles, and Monte Irvin and Steve Bilko, too, and may grab either as insurance. Monte can still hit some and Steve had a fantastic year in. the weak Pacific Coast League. The best two rookie pitchers in the Majors are supposed to be Milwaukee's Juan Pizzarro and Baltimore's Don Beamon. Beamon blanked the Yanks on four hits last September, won 13 for last place Yakima, was 16-0 for Stockton in 1955 . . . Fireballing Puerto Rican Piz- zarro had 318 strikeouts in 274 innings in the Sally League, had a 23-6 record, a 1.77 ERA and is only eighteen. and Donovan had stomach prob- lems. Dixie Howell, Ellis Kinder and Paul "LaPalme form a fair bullpen. The^pitching^ is _ pretty_good Bob Keegan, Jim McDonald and Gerry Staley are veterans try- ing to hang on. Four rookies, Don R u d 1 o p h, Russ Heman, Bill Fischer and reliever Tom Flan- igan, show promise of goc*h—it~ unspectacular, minor league cam- paigns. - The White Sox had a fine 91-63 mark last season, which left them only two behind Cleveland, a team they beat, 15-7, in the season series, and five behind the Yanks, and tj]ey draw 90 persons mora than a million. They are a fair attraction and drew more than that on the road. If the law of averages catches up to the Yan- kees and if the Sox find a bit mora power, they couM be a contender,' but they can't afford another second-half foldcroo. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT WHAT'S THE TRUTH ABOUT FUEL INJECTION Expensive BUT, once yoa try a new cap with fuel injection, you won't settle fot* anything else. So says the March issue Of the N|W POPULAR SCIENCE Monthly in a fact-filled report, "How Good Is Fuel Injection?" Find out: How fuel injectloft works. Does it save gas? Boost power? Eliminate icing and vapor lock? What dO'es it oost? Also 36 big stories on home-buildiog* cars..workshop know-how. 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WHY GO • Eyes Examined * Glasses Fitted I While You Wait Mon. to Sat. 9 to Fri. to 8:30 OPTICAL PLAN 10 WARBURTON AVE. YOnktri 8-1082 Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: KtYmmtt 20 Wed., Mar. 6, 1957 BuiIdogs, terrymen ... 10/Yonkers NY...movie," John told me, "except that it will be entirely 'live' and it will be done entirely in Mobi lux.." Wary

TT KtYmmtt

--Hoppe Brings Lumia to Video By STEVEX SCHEUER

John Hoppe is the first man to apply Hhe art of color music, or lumia, to television on a practical-basis.

I Though John Hoppe has been given credit for inventing the en tire process, this isn't actually the truth, - W s nieiclv hncf the curios

If the above statement means nothing to you, perhaps it will when you're reminded it was John"s pro­cess which made so much of the recent Ernie Kovacs" Saturday night color show memorable. If. however, you're one of the count­less thousands who turned off your TV sets during the tasteless Jerry Lewis show immediately preceding Kovacs. you missed seeing Hoppe's work. Cheer up! You're going to get another chance to see the art

|ity to discover the lumia process and then extend its horizons to in­clude television.

"The ai+ form lumia, or color music, is described in tests," he told me. "and it excited me. I developed the instruments I now use on television from instruments used in the original lumia process. The first one was an instrument using candles, which was built in 1751. As far back as 1895. there

was an instrument which mixed light from an organ keyboard. In 1925. there was a flurry of in­terest "in lumia, and there were many performances of it. It was very pretty, but it was used with­out music and died down."

Best on Kovacs Show John's interest in lumia and his

inventiveness in adapting it to tel­evision were brought into the spot­light with the Kovacs show, but prior to that he had already ap­peared on over ICO hours of TV, both live and on film. Among

l I C i u i u J I U I C 9 I I I U M , i U H M ; I » J I -* . I .

2 0 Wed., Mar. 6, 1957

the shows using the Mobilux Lu­mia process were Omnibus, To­night, and the Hit Parade. The appearance with Kovacs was the best.

After the Kovacs show, about 20 agencies contacted John Hoppe to feel him out on doing..-fflmmec cials, and he's now in the swing of that side of the business. His first live commercial was seen on Gunsmoke last Saturday.

"I 'm excited about this process and I don't think there are many limits on it.'' John said. "This is the art of vision, the way music is the art of sound. 1 think in due time networks will have en­sembles of lumia the way they now have ensembles of musicians."

BuiIdogs, terrymen marToniffnt In Sectional Basketball Semis Both Rated

of television extended beyond its normally narrow boundaries.

On Sunday, the normally spotty R a y Bolger variety program, "Washington Square," will offer a segment called "Henry the Harp." in which Kay will narrate a fairy story to a group of children while John Hoppe's delightful animations and abstractions illustrate it. It's as charming a sequence as TV has had in many a moon.

"It will be a complete cartoon movie," John told me, "except that it will be entirely 'live' and it will be done entirely in Mobi­lux.."

Wary on Information Mobilux is the name John Hoppe

gives to his process (He has a company called Mobilux Lumia.) and he's very wary about giving away too much information about it. "There are no competitors for the live part of our method," he explained, "and I don't want to

-encourage • any^unti l Fm more solidly entrenched. Just ~say~0Tat Mobilux combines light sources, filtering elements, manual, opera­tion and reflections—plus."

OUCH—OOOHHH! NEW YORK — The last Madi­

son Square Garden vaudeville of grunt-n'-grooners drew an over­flow house. The next one is due Monday when the exhibitions in­clude an Antonino (Barefoot) Roc-ca-Hans (German) Schmidt main event, a Ricki (Ballet) Star-Dick (The Bruiser) Afflis semi, two tag-team matches and other events 'with the names of Stevens, Far­go, Perez, Rodriquez, Von Hess, Murphy, Nichols. Rossi, Graham, Lee, Scott. Heart, Bernard and Skaaland included.

TELEVISION Channe l i Otiarma-1 4 Channe l 5

. . . WCBS-rV Channe l / W A 8 C - T >

. . . W R C A - T V C l i . n n » l 9 . . . . . . WOR-TV

W A B D C h a n n . » M W P l > Chann.l 13 WATV

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1957

TODAY

6.NM2)—My Little' Mar«1« t « > — " i n A Great U f « " •51—Studio Party «7)—MicXey Mouna Olub

FIGHTS LAST NIGHT • —HsL_Xrie_ As£oxisied_PrP5 s

MIAMI BEACH, Fla.—ChlccTTF jar. 15214, of Stamford, Conn, out­pointed Jimmy Peters, 150!2 of Mi­ami, in.

LOWELL, Mass. — Billy Ryan, 168, of Lowell, outpointed .Milton Epps, 165, of Newark. N. J., 6.

•&>— Ted Steel* "ID—Ramir

5:3<M2>—Movie: -Adventures Of Don Juan"

(4)—Movie: " M I D With A Million"

(5)—Captain Video (11)—Clubhouse Oan* (13»—Feature: -'That

Brennan Olrl" 6:00-(5)—Oene Autry

(7)—Sky K i m '9)—Homer Bell (11)—Popeye The 8»llor

6;30-(I)—Looney Tune* (7)—Passport to

Danger (fl>—Crosscurrent • ID—Foreign

Lectonnalrr S'45-(4)—News 6 f5-<7>—Weather

• 13)—New* 7:0O-Q)—Ne\r>

'4)—Death Valley Days (5)—Mike Wallace^ ('.)—Kukla, Fran. Ollle <9)—Terry Tunea ' ID—News: Weather •13)—Ail-Star Movie

"Bricham Young" 7:i5-f2>—News

(5)—Top Secret . • 7)—News -t i n — N e w *

7:30-CJ)— Giant 8tep (*)—Xavier Cugat Show '5r— Mickey Rooney (7)—Disneyland (9)—Movie:

"Rachel And The Stranger"

(ID—Rosemary Clooney 7-45-'4)—News 8:00-'2)—Ouy Mitchell

4—Chevalier's Paris (5)—Cavalcade' of

Stars (9*—Gang Busters

. ( ID—Man Behind the 3?.dRe •

.8.30-14)—Father Kndw: Best i5)—Count of Mont*

Crlsto '7)—Navy Log (ID—Badge 714 (135—Hollywood

JoniaJtfVPick^OMhe TV Best

New Printed Pattern

NEW PRINTED PATTERN EASIER-FASTER MORE ACCURATE

900-(2>—The Mtllionair* (4)—TV Theater: (5)—Wanted (7)—Ozzie <te Harriet (9)—O'Henry

Plavhou«e (ID—Dr. Chrlstala (13)—Hollywood

g:30-<2)—I've Got A Secret (5)—Movie:

"Main Bait" (7)—Theater:

•Broken Barrier" O ) — s t a r Attraction

•.ID—Highway Patrjl (13)—Front Page

Detective 10:00-(2)—Theater:

"City In Flames" (4)—This Is Your Life (7)—Boxing: (9)—Movie: "Rachel

And The Stranger" ( I D — S t a r <fc Story

(Today's top shows as previewed by TV Key's staff of experts at screenings and rehearsals In New York and Hollywood.) 7:30-8:30 (7) Disneyland. "Man In Flight." The last 45 minutes of

this show are absolutely superb; Disney at his imaginative,, edu­cational and entertaining best. The history of baloonlng, gliding and power flight are handled In brilliant animation with an amusing, well written commentary. There are some fascinating films of early and unusual attempts at flight In the United .States, some of which are hilarious, and the Wright Brothers, their succesors, and the development of military aviation are given the Class A treatment. Unfortunately, the opening Is marred by a fat bouse commercial for Disney's amusement park, and the flight to the moon ride Is an interesting but inexcusable Intrusion on what otherwise is for TV a work of art.

8:00-9:00 (4) "Maurice Chevalier's Paris ." After all, this Is Paris, France, not Paris, 111.! So, despite its numerous shortcomings,

— this tour, guided bj^the most famous boulavardier-of-them all. Is worth a post-dinner peek, thanks to its moments of charm and truth. If you think your landlord is a gossipy pest, you'll feel a little better after meeting a typical Parisian concierge. Otherwise, you'll see "the ugly beauty of the 20th Century, Indistinguishable from Chicago" (Parisian suburbs), and • the undeniabje glories of the Place de La Concorde and the leading Paris dress salons. (Color.)

8:30-9:00 (7) Navy Log. "The Star." John Carradine's fans are In foY a treat. He portrays a Naval hero who also happens to be a Shakepearian actor. The story is a quaint one about an elderly actor's persistence in first enlisting in the Navy and then volun­teering to scout in advance of a Sicilian Invasion. Above par for the series.

9:0010:00 (4) "The Duel." An emotional chapter in American his­tory, the rivalry between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr, receives an interesting dramatic treatment. Some of this is talky, but there Is enough detail on backroom power politics to hold your interest. E. G. Marshall is fine as Hamilton, the stubborn patriot, with Dan O'Herlihy the glib, colorful Burr.

10:00-11:00 (7) Golden Gloves Finals. Champion amateur boxers in five major' divisions (lightweight, welterweight, middleweight, light-heavy and heavyweight) square off against -each other. From Chicago.

1(1:00-12:00 (131 All Star Movie. "Brlgham Young." starring Tyrone

Underdogs At County Center

Semifinals in three of the tour­ney's four divisions are being play­ed today and tonight as the State Section-One basketball champion­ships moved to the County Seat, where they'll remain until all tit­les have been decided.

A four-game program is carded for the County Center, jHorace Greeley of Chappaqua, runner-up in the N o r t h e r n Westchester League, began the festivities at the big arena at 4:30 in a Class B clash with F . D. Roosevelt of Hyde Park. Rye and Dobbs Ferry, both advancing into Class A at their requests, foliow at 6.

The double-A semis pit New Ro­chelle against Mamaroneck at 7:30 and White lains against Yonkers at 9.

Both Dobbs Ferry , which is gunning for its second tourna­ment victory, and Yonkers High, for its first, are rated under­dogs. Dobbs Fer ry has made the leap from Class C to Class A to bid for the Westchester title, but Rye is given a slight edge. Rye is jumping from Class B. Yonkers High, in Dou-

NXPro Five, 1957 The Knicks have had it.

Outhustled. outmaneuv e r e d and outshot by Syracuse in a 99-92 letdown in Madison Square Garden last night, the New Yorkers are mired in last place in the NBA's Eastern Division, 3V3 g a m e s behind Syracuse a n d Philadelphia with only four games remain­ing.

Syracuse and Philadelphia eacff have five left. Syracuse has two with t h e Knicks, Philly one. A garrison finish and all the luck in the world mjght do it for the Knicks, but they are simply not that good a basketball team. Lasf night in the clutch^they were pathetc. ~Tn the Garden twinbill

opener, Philadelphia, though again >» playing without Neil Johnston and his ailing ankle, Dumped For t Wayne, 114-80,

wtih Paul Arizin and "Joe Gra-boski splitting 45 points. This and a 104-102 victory by Visiting St. Louis over Boston enabled the Hawks to move within a half-,game of Ft . Wayne and the Western lead.

Three of the four teams in each division make the play­offs, which begin March 16. TJhe . Knicks, two below 500. are bet ter off mathematically than any of the four teams in the Western Division. But they're in the East. And they're out of luck. I t was a rotten season. VThe Knicks may lose Willie Naulls and Ron Sobie to the Army. They need help. Will Coa,ch Vince Boryla be back?

—CASTgWN DIVISION B-0 I t 0 n

Rec Troops

(Champion) 43-25. Philadelphia. Syra­cuse 36-31, New York 33-35.

WESTERN DIVISION—Ft . Wayne 32-35. St. Louis 32-36, Minneapolis 29-38. Rochester 29-39.

Fouled Up REC ROUNDUP — There'll be

no speedy solution to the Recrea tion basketball • second-half situa­tion. On the heels of the four-Jeam snarl developed in the Senior Blue Division Monday night, the Inter­mediate Greens were fouled up last night and the Senior Maroons wound up-st-tll-at least one session away.

The Acorns could have been crowned Green champion, but they were dealt their first loss, 31-24, by Shamrocks, at Saunders, as Tom Derine hooped 13 and Den McGean 10 for the winners. Still left on the slate now is a game .between the Acorns (4-4-1) and Knicks (2-3) which could tie the former with Shamrocks (5-1), for-

In Baseball A>Change Of Pace Is When You Take Something Off

IrishVs.Stepinac IhW.PP.S.A.Ar

Quarter-final tilts are to be played a t .Mt . St. Michael's in the Brox tonight in the "A" di­vision of the WPSAA tourney. Sacred Heart plays Stepinac at 7 P.M. Iona PreD meets Blessed Scarament at 5:30 P.M. and the defending champ Mounties play NYMA at 8:30. Friday night's semis and Sunday afternoon's third-place consolation and final will be at either Sacred Heart or Stepinac, whichever loses to­night.

Power. The great Mormon leader takes his people to a new land of freedom. Leisurely, but well produced historical drama, with line outdoor scenery.

11:15-1:15 (2) Late Show. "Watch on the Rhine," starring Bette Davis, Paul Lukas. Made In 1943. this drama about a betrayed German refugee, still holds up well. Inspired performances and an absorbing screenplay make It a "must" for late-night movie fans.

"A Matter Of CouraRe"

' (13)—All-Star Movie: "Brixham Young"

10:30-( 4)—Playhouse: (ID—Mystery Is My

Business 10-43-(7)—Sports Pag* l l :00-(2)—News: Weather

<4)—News: Weather

(5)—NiRhtbear n i — N e w s (ID—Stryker of

Scotland Yard ll:10-<2>—Weather & Sports

(7)—Night Show: "One Touch Of Venus"

l l : l s - (2 )—Movie : "Watch On The

Rhine" (4)—Tonight: 'America

After Dark" (9)—He-Man Theater t i l ) — N e w s (13)—Hollywood

12:C0-(5)—Midnight Movie •"A Man Of Peace"

(9)—Lona: John Show (13)—Hollywood

TOMORROW 6 50-i2)—Prevues 6:55-(2)—Oive Us ThU Day

(4)—Sermonette 7:00-(2)—Good Morning

(4)—Today Till 9:30 7'25-'2)—News 7:30-(2)—Good Morning 7:55-<2>—News 8.00-?)—Captain Kangaroo'

Cj)_Tinker's Workshop 8:35-15)— Prevues 8'45-(5)—Sandy Becker g i 5 - ( 2 ) _ L r s Paul-Mary Ford,

(4)—Movie 9:00-(2i—Stu Erwln

(5)—Sandy Becker CI)—Drama ot Life

9:30-C')—Am^s 'n' Andy *•>>—Morning Feature (9)—Safety First

9:55-14)—News I0.00-'2i— Gnrr, Moore

f4)—Home <9>—Cartoon Time

10:15-f5>— Tune In Anytime 10.30-2)—Arthur Godfrey

(4)—Home (9)—Gene Autry

10:38-U)—Window 10:43-(4)—Home 11:00-4)—The Price Is Right

(7)—Ncwscope 11:05-7)—Road of Romance l l -20-(2)-^Strlke It Rich

<4)— Truth or Consequences

. '7)_Martin Block/ '9)—Cartoon Time

11:45-<S>>—News- Weather

11:J8-'13)—TV Pastor l2-:00-'2)—Valiar,t Lady

'41—Tic Tac Dougn (5)—Herb Sheldon (7)—Time For Fur* (9)—Double Exposure

"My Dear Secretary" '13>-Wom.in's Work

1215-f?)—Love Of Life 12:30-(2)—Search For

Tomorrow (4)—It Could Be YOU (7)—Memory Lane d 3 ) _ W e s t e r n Theater

i2:45-(2)—Guiding Light (9)—Luncheon

l:C0-(2)—News (4)—Tex and Jinx

(Color) <5)—Tune In Anytime '13)—Comedy Corner

l:10-'2)—Stand. Be Counti-d 1.30-'2)—World Turns

(4)—Club 60 (7)—Afternoon Show

"Fighting Tather Dunn" •

(9)—Double Exposure— "My Dear Secretary"

•11)—Understand World (13^—Feature

"That Brennan. Girl" 3:00-(2)—Qur Miss Brooki

.4>—Richard Willis (ID—Movie Time

"Topper Returns"

2:30-(2>—House Party 4)—Tennessee Ernie

Ford 2:45-(5)—News-Weather 2:55-(13)—News 3 0 0 - 2 ) — B U Payoff

(4)—M-4tir.ee Theater

(5)—Llberace (7)—Film Festival

"Broken Journey" (9)—Ted Steele

(Till 5:00) (13)—Fun Time

3:15-G3)—Irving Field* 3:30-(2)—Bob Crosby (Color)

• 5 )—Baiu lah ( ID—Firs t Show

- ^ - - 3 o i w O f

ble-A, is facing in White Plains a team tha t beat ' it twice al­ready, decisively (by 20 points) only Friday.

The other two games are at White Plains High. Arlington of JPQiighkeepjsle_goes against_Sleepy Hollow in Class A at 7 P.M.,1 and Harrison squares off with Lakeland in a BB" semi at 8:45. The C semis open Friday's four-game card at the County'Center.

Arlington and F. D. Roosevelt, playing their first games, are among only three Dutchess Coun­ty Schools left in the tourney. Of four Class C entries from the North, only one—Pine Plains—sur­vived the first round.

All Westchester. League champi­ons except those competing in Class C are involved in today's scraps. They include New Rochelle of the WIAA, Harrison of the Lit­tle Three and SWIAC (and runner-up Rye), Dobbs Ferry, co-titlist in the Western Westchester, Sleepy Hollow of the Hudson River Big-3, and New Rochelle and Yonkers as their respective city champions.

Ardsley (co-holder in the WWL) and John Jay of the Northern West­chester circuit resume action Fri­day^ '

cing a playoff. In the Maroon, Ragones (5-0)

beat Pioneers (2-3), 39-36, with George Sava netting 11 for the winners and Charles Elliott 11 for the losers. Ragones must yet face Dunwoodies (4-1), while Whiz Kids (5-l)are Idle, in a game that may settle matters or may force more action.

Last night Whiz Kids messed up Dunwoodies, 56-45, with Bob Gordon netting 24 and Warren De-Brocke 11 for the winners, Angey DeVito 24 and Nunno 10 for the losers.

BATT1W AROUND

Burlesque Dancer Patty Wig-gin, "The Coed With The Edu­cated Torso," chats with hus­band Don Rudolph, a rookie pitcher in the Chicago White Sox training camp. During the off-season-Don_travels the Burly circuit with his wife, a featured

"strip-teaser," helping her with her travel, wardrobe and pub­licity. He admits he takes a bit of ribbing from rival dugouts, is a longshot to make the team this season. His specialty is curves. So's his wife's.—Wire-photo.

Strong Down Middle, White Sox Need Punch

Monte Crlsto" (13)—Jewish Home

3 55-(9)—News «.G0-i2)— Brighter Day

'4 )—Qieen For a Day • 5)—Wendy Barrle (9)—Ted 6teele 13)—Fun Time

415- (2)—Secret Storm

4:30-.2>— The JCdge of Nlcht

(7)—Cartoon Club •13)—Junior Frolics

«:45-(4)—Modern Roraan'-w 4 55-t9>—News

( ID—News

RADIO WFAS WRCA WOR

1230 660

^710

WABC WCBS WMCA

770 880 570

W M G M I05C WQXR 1560 WINS I0IC

VVFAS 123 or 1230 WFAS-FM 103.9 mc \ M end FM PROGRAMS broadcait eimultaneouily Monday through Friday. 6:30 A.M. to 12:00 Mid . Saturday*

7:00 A.M. to 12:00 Mid Sundayv, °:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.

MEWS SCHEDULE (Monday* through Fridayi only) 6:30 A.M end 6:55 A.M., (Mondays tr-rough Saturdayi) 7:45. 8:55. 9:55. 10:55. 11:55 A . M . i2:45. 1:55. 2:55. 3:55. 4:55. 5:45. 6:55. 7:55. 8:45 9*55. 10:55. 11:55 P.M (Sundays) 9:55, 10:55 A.M.. 12:55. 1:55, 4:55. &:5S P.M.

TODAY ''

Adelphi Beats Panzer To Win N^IA Playoff

JERSEY C I T Y , N. J. <fl — Adelphia proved it could lick Pan­zer twicp in a season last night

! 2 > ~ ^ ! : T * J M J ^ N " r t M ^ 3 ^ W " t h e NAIA district 31 play­off in the process, 83-67.

It 's superior scoring punch and rebounding put the Garden City, N.Y. College in front 43-33 at the half here. Panzer tied the score four timesJn the first five minutes but then began to slip back.

TAMPA, Fla.—This may be the year for the Chicago White Sox to make their move out of third place, and it could either be up or down. They have a new man­ager-in Al Lopez, who is a won­derful tutor, but-is in the wrong league, and who didn't improve himself by moving over from Cleveland, but they have too few new faces.

They face the challenge of the Yankees, who almost always win, Cleveland, which almost always finishes second, and Detroit, which is on the rise. The Sox have good pitching and a "good defense, strength down the middle and Tiope.

On the red-ink side, they lack steady power, they have a dis-s'ention-ridden front office, a South Side of Chicago home which is poverty-stricken and lacks ade­quate parking facilities, a,nd the short end of an attendance feud with the Cubs, r who would Trnir= der them if they ever again had a representative team.

Outfielders Minnie Minoso and I^ary Doby had respectable sea­sons a year ago, but they are capable of much better. Minnie hit .316 and had 88 RBI's, Larry

• 4532 10-18 1 PRINTED PATTERN

Our new Printed Pattern, to brighten your • Summer! Sew these gay fashions now—so won­derful for sun and fun. Carefree T-shirt with convertible neckline, f-lim shorts, favorite pedal push-ers!

Printed Pattern 4532: Misses' S w s 10, 12. 14, 16, 18. Size 16 shirt takes 2lit yards 35-inch fab­ric: shorts, l1.* yards.

Printed directions on each pat­tern part. Easier,.- faster, accu­rate.

Send 35 cents In coins for this pattern —add 5 cenls for each pattern for first-class mailing.

Send to Anne Aflams, care of Yonkers Herald Statesman, 192 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th Street. New York 11. N. Y. Print

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.268 with 102 RBI's. Nelson Fox hit .296 at second .and Sherman Lollar did good as catchers go with'.261 and 61 runs hammered in.

Lollar behind the bat, peppery Fox at second, rookie shortstop whiz Luis Aparicio and Doby in, center give the Sox strength down the middle. The Sox need help in one outfield spot, at first and at third.

Lumbering Walt Dropo's eight-homer 1956 was costly and young Ron Jackson will get a chance to wrest first from him. The Sox have come up with no better than A converledl-Qutfielri suh, Bubb Phillips, to try to win third from punchless Sammy Esposito and Fred Hatfield. Jim Rivera, .255, has no strong challengers in the outfield. - The Sox are going to give a long look to first-baseman Rufe Marshall, who drove in 105 runs at Memphis, and twenty-eight-year-old ex-Dodger vet third-baseman Tom Brown, who had a fine slugging season at Nash­ville. These may hang on to bolster the depth, anyway. The Sox are solid only in pinch-hitting, where fat Ron Northey was baseball's best at .354 last season.

Billy Pierce, Jack Harshman, Dick Donovan and Jim Wilson won 58 games between them last season. None are young, but lefty Pierce, who won 20, is still tough,

Los Angeles city officials and sports writers are camping around the Dodgers' Vero Beach base, taking it for granted the Dodgers will be theirs next year or soon afterwards . . . Des­pite the promise of young An­dre Rogers and Eddie Bressoud, Giants' manager Bill Rigney says Daryl Spencer is his short­stop and the best defensively in baseball—which would be for­getting Cincinnati's great Roy McMillan . . . Rogers never played anything but softball un­til a few years ago.

F r e d - H a n e r subtly backed up Jackie Robinson's dissipation charges when he set a $500 fine "to any of-rhts -Braves-whcr-vio— late the curfew . . . The Dodgers now own Los Angeles, and Monte Irvin and Steve Bilko, too, and may grab either as insurance. Monte can still hit some and Steve had a fantastic year in. the weak Pacific Coast League.

The best two rookie pitchers in the Majors are supposed to be Milwaukee's Juan Pizzarro and Baltimore's Don Beamon. Beamon blanked the Yanks on four hits last September, won 13 for last place Yakima, was 16-0 for Stockton in 1955 . . . Fireballing Puerto Rican Piz­zarro had 318 strikeouts in 274 innings in the Sally League, had a 23-6 record, a 1.77 ERA and is only eighteen.

and Donovan had stomach prob­lems. Dixie Howell, Ellis Kinder and Paul "LaPalme form a fair bullpen.

The^pitching^ is _ pretty_good Bob Keegan, Jim McDonald and Gerry Staley are veterans try­ing to hang on. Four rookies, Don R u d 1 o p h, Russ Heman, Bill Fischer and reliever Tom Flan-igan, show promise of goc*h—it~ unspectacular, minor league cam­paigns. -

The White Sox had a fine 91-63 mark last season, which left them only two behind Cleveland, a team they beat, 15-7, in the season series, and five behind the Yanks, and tj]ey draw 90 persons mora than a million. They are a fair attraction and drew more than that on the road. If the law of averages catches up to the Yan­kees and if the Sox find a bit mora power, they couM be a contender,' but they can't afford another second-half foldcroo.

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