e
RADIO & TV SCHEDULES
Program! by TV stations subject to change without notice
KERG S KORE S KUGN TM HASH ?
TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1960
?.. .Tnm" New'- Skip A Long Daly, Harvey
15 M'nfni'n Newi Bob Kudrle Skip A Long SporU. New.
.A Mujlcman stern, Kudrle Skip A Long Sports, News
Weather. Newa Show, Sporti Skip A Long Headline Newi
.?2 w'Vi T C."l'. S.ev" D' Newl Ed Morgan
SI J World Tonight Floyd Viken New.. SporU Dinner Hour
6.30 Tom Harmon Newa, World Paul Ryman Sports,
: Muslcman Today Show Dinner nr. News
7:00 Backgrnd News News, World Dinner Hour
7.15 Amos n" Andy Floyd Vtken Tomorrow Dinner Hour
7:30 Double PleaaureEmeralds va. News of WorldDlnner Hour
' " Bob Ry Lewtaton Paul Ryman Dinner Hr, Newa
8:00 Muslcman Emeralds va. Paul Ryman Dinner Hour
:" Muslcman Lewlston Show Din. Hour, news
:30 Muslcman Emeralds vs. Paul Ryman Top Pops
b: Muslcman Lewlston Show Top Pops, News
9:00 World of Music Emeralds vs. Paul Ryman Top Pope
9:15 World of Music Lewlston Show Storkllne
9:30 World of Music Emeralds va. HI Fl Top Pops
9:45 World Tonlte Lewlston Club Night Llnca
10:00 Richfield Report Emeralds va. HI Fl Top Pops
10:15 Muslcman Lewlston Club Kite Lines
10:30 Muslcman News, HI Ft Top Popa
10:45 Muslcman Floyd Vlken Club Firelinea
11:00 Muslcman News, Paul Ryman Top Pops
11:15 Muslcman Floyd Viken Show Nite Linet
11:30 Muslcman Capital Paul Ryman Top Pops
11:45 Muslcman Assgn., News Show Mldnlte Patrol
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1960
6:00 World Newa News, Music Sign-on S a.m. Newa Roundup
6:15 Muslcman Farm News Rusa Doran Farm News
6:30 Muslcman, News Bulletin Board Russ Doran News
C:45 Muslcman News. Weather Russ Doran Let's Fish
7:00 Muslcman News, Music Russ Doran Hemingway
7:15 Min'fm'n Newi Music, News Russ Doran Rural Roundup
7:30 Frank Gosa , News, Weather, Newa Sports, Rhythm
7:45 Muslcman News, Financial Rusa Doran Weather Newa
6:00 Muslcman News, Sports Dick Cross Bible Institute
8:15 Muslcman Commentary Dick Cross Hour
8:30 Muslcman News, Dick Cross Musical Express
8:45 Muslcman Roger Carroll Dick Cross News
9:00 Muslcman News, Dick Cross Breakfast Club
9:15 Muslcman Tally Ho Dick Cross Breakfast Club
9:30 Muslcman Show Dick Cross Breakfast Club
9:45 Muslcman News, Musla Fashion Flashes Breakfast Club
10:00 Rt Happiness Cedrio Foster Dick Cross John Holbrook
10:15 2nd Mrs. BurtonRoger Carroll Dick Cross Tello Test
10:30 Dr. Malone News, Muslo Russ Doran Variety Time
10:45 Ma Perkins Fish Facta Russ Doran Variety Time
11:00 News News, Rusa Doran Variety Time
11:15 Cple. Next Door Defense Show Russ Doran News
11:30 Richards, Trent News, Russ Doran Variety Time
11:45 Just Entrtnmnt.Bob Anderson Russ Doran Variety Time
12:00 Min'tem'n News Noon Newa News "30" News Parade
12:15 Muslcman Dial for Dough Newa "30" Farm Front
12:30 Muslcman News, Old Trader Paul Harvey
12:45 Muslcman Bob Anderson Old Trader Weath Rndup
1:00 Newa Newa, Safety Dick Crosa Musical Chalra
1:15 Arthur Godfrey Serenade Dick Cross Music Room
1:30 Arthur Godfrey News Dick Cross Music Room
1:45 Arthur Godfrey Bob Anderson Dick Cross News
2:00 House Party News Dick Crosa Music Room
2:15 House Party Soundoff Club Dick Crosa Music Room
2:30 Garry Moore News, Safety Dick Cross TNT, Music Rm.
2:45 Crosby-Clooney Serenade Dick Cross Music R., News
3:00 Muslcman News, Safety Dick Cross Siesta Serenade
3:15 Muslcman Serenade Dick Cross Siesta Serenade
3:30 Muslcman News, Dick Cross Siesta Serenade
3:45 Muslcman Roger Carroll Dick Cross Siesta Serenade
4:00 Muslcman Fulton Lewla Jr BobHouglum Musical Chalra
4:15 Muslcman Bob Kudrle BobHouglum Sunset Ranch
4:30 Muslcman News, BobHouglum Sunset Ranch
4:45 Muslcman Bob Kudrle BobHouglum News
K KFMY K. KEED KOMB g
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NO DOWN PAYMENT
KV AlVTV CHANNEL 13 EUGENE (Cable 2)
TUESDAY, JUNE 21
8:00 Sgt. Preston
5:30 McGraw
6:00 Northwest News
6:19 Huntley-Brinkley
6:30 Shotgun Slade
7:00 TBA
7:30 Eisenhower
8:30 Arthur Murray
9:00 M Squad
9:30 Dennis O'Keefe
10:00 Phil Silvers
10:30 Report
10:45 Jack Paar
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2
8:30 Play Your Hunch
9:00 Price Is Right
9:30 Concentration
10:00 Truth or Conseq.
10:30 It Could Be You
:00 Queen for a Day
:30 Romper Rorm
:00 YonS Dr. Malons
:30 From These Roots
:00 Comedy Playhouse
:30 Adventure Time
:00 Matinee Theatre
45 Life of Riley
.30 Addle Bobklns
:00 Sgt. Preston
HOBBYISTS and PROFESSIONALS prefer POWER TOOLS
of quality PORTER-CABLE and DeWALT radial arm
aws from the store that offers service!
SCHARPF'S 669 High DI 2-1261
KOIN-TV CHANNEL 6 PORTLAND (Cable 6)
TUESDAY, JUNE 21 10:40 Film
5:00 26 Men
5:30 Science Fiction
6:00 Weath. Spts, Newi
6:15 Doug Edwards
6:30 The Californiani
7:00 Elsenhower
7:30 Doble Glllla
8:00 Tightrope
8:30 RedSkelton
9:00 Garry Moore
10:00 Interpol Calling
10:30 City Desk, Newa
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22
7:00 Grant Holcomb
7:15 Capt Kangaroo
8:00 Red Rowe Show
8:30 On the Go
9:00 I Love Lucy
9:30 December Bride
10:00 Love of Life
10:30 Search for Tomor.
10:45 Guiding Light
11:00 Hi Neighbor
11:30 Star Performance
12:00 Panic
12:30 As the World Turns
1:00 KOIN Kitchen
1:30 House Party
2:00 The Millionaire
2:30 Verdict is Yours
3:00 Brighter Day
3:15 Secret Storm
3:30 Edge of Night
4:00 For Better, Worse
4:30 Cartoon Circus
5:00 Roy Rogers
MICROWAVE SIGNALS
Will be in our entire system by June 24th
A BAR TV CABLE CO.
298 West Broadway DI 2-1845
KPTV CHANNEL 12 PORTLAND (Cable 4)
TUESDAY, JUNE 21
S:00 The Three Stooges
5:30 Rocky, His Friends
6:00 Newa Central
6:30 Sugarfoot
7:30 WyattEarp
8:00 Rifleman
8:30 Colt .45
9:00 Theatre
9:30 San Francisco Beat
10:00 Flight
10:30 Sheriff of Cochise
11:00 News and Weather
11:15 Movie 12
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22
7:00 OMSI Presents
7:30 Eye Opener
8:00 Charlie's Cartoons
9:00 Romper Room
9:30 Burns & Alien
10:00 Rosemary Clooney
10:30 The Better Half
11:00
11:30
12:00
12:30
1:00
1:30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00
5:00
Restless Gun
Love That Bob
About Faces
Heart of the City
Day In Court
Gale Storm
Beat the Clock
Who Do You Trust
Amer. Bandstand
High Time
Uncle Charlie
The Three Stooges
EXCLUSIVELY IN
SPRINGFIELD AT
Privat's Jewelers
129 N 6tb Rl 1 7421
Aluminum
WEPCO
Screen
Doors
III
95
Emmy Show
Was Polite
Mish-Mash
Some Interest
But No Drama
By FRED DANZIG
Of the United Press International
NEW YORK (UPI) In om
corner, we had Fred Astaire. In
the other, Arthur Godfrey. Two
great heavyweights.
And in the center, I had the
radio. I didn't want to miss the
doings at the Polo Grounds
where Ingeniar Johansson and
Floyd Patterson, two other heavy
weights, were dishing out some
awards.
Would Emmy make us forget
Oscar? Would Ingo put Floyd
away again? Would Raymond
Burr beat Robert Stack? Or Lo-
retta Young beat Jane Wyatt? To
each question, the answer is no.
OSCAR WAS NATURAL
NBC-TV's 90-minute special, in
which 22 Emmy awards were dis
persed came across as a relaxed,
friendly, polite mish-mash that
held interest if not drama. By
giving us the sounds of the vic
tors and not the candid, instan
taneous sights of them, the
Emmy show failed to match the
Oscar telecast in naturalness and
impact.
The Emmy special also tripped
itself up a few times while trying
some electronic footwork between
West and East Coast and the
commercial cut-away.
However, the show crowned a
new champ in the field of com
edy. This took place while Pat
terson was flattening Ingo, be
tween a handful of awards to
The Untouchables," which Ingo
wasn't Monday night, and one to
The Fabulous Fifties, or, for
Patterson, "the fabulous fifth."
FAST FUNNY ROUNDS
I refer to Bob Newhart, who
came through two fast, hilarious
rounds of Monday night's show.
Newhart made his network debut
last Tuesday on "The Garry
Moore Show" and was superb as
an auto driving instructor stuck
with a nutty lady driver. Monday
night, he scored again as a sub
marine skipper addressing the
crew after a two-year underwater
cruise and as a TV director try
ing to bring Soviet Premier
Khrushchev's Washington arrival
to the network screen.
His stuff is refreshing and
funny.
Thera was another big mo
ment. It was Mahalia Jackson s
singing of "My Country Tis of
Thee," which soared out as Pat
terson, on ABC radio, was dob
bering Ingo during the third
round.
In accepting the Emmy for
Laurence Olivier "outstanding
single performance by an actor,
Charlton "Ben Hur" Heston gave
use a speech that was more 1m
passioned than his own Oscar ac-
ceotance speech on April 4. uo
viously, Charlton is improving all
the time.
CHARM IS OOZEY
As co-hosts, Astaire and God
frey oozed charm and fnendii
ness. but I thought Astaire was
being ill-used when he had to turn
the crank of a machine to turn
uo the winning names. Inciden
tally, Astaire's announcement of
the fight's outcome seemed to
confuse the audience in the thea
ter. We've finally found his weak-
ss he's no sportscaster.
All in all. it was a great night
for Bob Newhart, "The Untouch
ables," Huckleberry Hound and
of course, Floyd Patterson.
The Channel -Swim: "Omnibus,"
the award-winning experimental
TV series, will return to the tube
next fall as a Sunday afternoon
attraction on NBC-TV. Alistair
Cooke returns as host of the hour
lone programs, which are pro
duced by Robert Saudek Associ
ates.
OTHELLO BY HANDS
A sien-lanBuage production of
"Othello" will be presented on
NBC-TV Sunday, July 3. Students
of Gallaudet College, the school
for the deaf in Washington, D.C.
will be the cast.
CBS-TV's "Person to Person'
visits Actors Robert Ryan and
Hugh O'Brian on Friday, July 1.
Jerry Lewis visits NBC-TV's
"Play Your Hunch" on the same
night.
Tom Bosley, who portrays the
late Fiorello La Guardia in the
hit Broadway musical, "Fiorel
lo!" will portray a murder sus
pect in "A Case of Radiant
Wine," the opening episoae oi
CBS-TV's "Diagnosis Unknown
on Tuesday, July S.
and
up
S&H GREEN STAMPS
RUSSELL'S MATERIALS
JSS5 franklin Blvd. PA (-7611
KGW-TV CHANNEL 8 PORTLAND (Cable 2)
TUESDAY, JUNE 21
4-30 Pioneer Club
8:30 White Hunter
4:00 News Beat
8:15 Huntley-Brinkley
6:30 Laramie
7:30 NBC News Special
8:30 Arthur Murray
9:00 M Squad .
9:30 U.S. Marshal
10:00 Johnny Midnight
10-30 N'ltrht Beat
11:00 Talea of the Vikings
11-30 Jack Paar
1:00 Night Final
1:09 Prayer and Hymn
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22
8:45 Prayer and Hymn
8:55 Town Country
7:00 Today
7:25 Telescope
7:30 Today
8:00 Telescope
9:00 The Price is Right
9:30 Concentration
10:00 Truth or Conseq.
10:30 It Could Be You
11:00 Queen For a Day
11:30 Loretta Young
12:00 Wunda Wunda
12:30 From These Roots
1:00 Thin Man
1:30 Yancy Derringer
2:00 Dough Re Ml
2:10 Play Your Hunch
3:00 Matinee
4:30 Pioneer Club
Airline Pilots Ending
10-Day Wildcat Strike
MIAMI, Fla. OPI Eastern Air,
Lines pilots returned to work in
large numbers Tuesday, yielding
to pressure from the courts and
their union to end a crippling,
ten-day wildcat strike.
An EAL spokesman said it ap
peared that 35 to 40 flights would
take off Tuesday from Miami,
where the strike was born, and
the system will be back to nor
mal schedules by Wednesday.
A National Airlines strike set
for Tuesday night was averted
when the union agreed to resume
contract negotiations with man
agement with a federal mediator
sitting in.
SICK REPORTS
A wave of sick reports by pilots
continued to hamper operations
of Pan American World Airways.
Eastern said 35 of its Miami
STRUCK LEASING fiHrlS
fore rear period. Lw H
U-iJ lUSiTl :wirm . . . 11U Wet 7tk AM. eat
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1461 ,(. Ilk At.
Institute Enrolls
Junction City Girl
Lucy Montgomery, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. David S. Montgom
ery, of 1130 Nyssa St., Junction
City, is enrolled in the 1960 ses
sion of the Junior Engineers and
Scientists Summer Institute at
Linfield College, McMianville.
Miss Montgomery is o of M
high school girls from sevei west
ern states attending thf two-week
science institute.
Scientists of tomorrow, a Port
land non profit corporation, initi
ated the science program at Lin
field five years ago.
The two-week session is a pro
gram of orientation on careers,
npportunties and course require
ments 131 science and engineering.
WHAT TO DO WITH IT Modernists want the Senate-War-Navy
Building, which stands next to the White
House in Washington, torn down because it is an ugly
pile of granite. Antiquarians want it preserved as a good
example of 19th century architecture. Its many-columned
entrance is shown above. It houses the Budget Bureau,
the National Security Council, Office of Defense Mobil
ization and General Services Administration. When told
it was fireproof, Gen. Ulysses Grant remarked, "That
is a pity."
pilots telephoned for flight or-
Stevenson
Petitions Out
Petitions urging the nomina
tion of Adlal Stevenson for Presi
dent at the Democratic conven-
tion are being circulated in the
Springfield area this week.
Ann Vrooman, of the bpring-
field Volunteers for Stevenson
Committee, said that the petitions
are to be presented to the Oregon
delegates to the convention only
if no nominee has been selected
on the first two ballots.
Many of the workers who are
carrying petitions are supporters
of Sen. John Kennedy of Massa
chusetts. "They like Stevenson.
too, and want to support him in
the event that Senator Kennedy
cannot get the nomination, Mrs
Vrooman said.
We hope everyone under
stands that these signatures will
be used only on the third ballot
ing," she continued.
Petitions may be signed or
taken out at McElhaney's shoe
store, which is next door to the
Springfield Post office.
Among those who will have pe
titions or who will work at the
shoe store Saturdays will be Mrs.
Eva Mae Bowerly, Mrs. Virginia
Kidd, Mrs. Grace P. Emery, Mrs.
Vera Hansen, Mrs. Marguerite
Freeman, Sam Fried, Leonard
Duncan and Mrs. Vrooman.
Radio, TV Highlights
Channels 8, 13 Offer
Special on Ike's Trip
Network television coverage of bats. The dance contest partici-
President Eisenhower's Far East
trip continues Tuesday with an
hour-long special, starting at 7:30
p.m. on Channels 13 and 8. This
show features a trans-Pacific dis
cussion between correspondents
in Tokyo, Washington and New
York. Cecil Brown, Ray Scherer
and a Japanese newsman will be
heard from Tokyo. Frank McGee
and Chct Huntley from New
York, and Frank Bourgholtzer
and Robert McCormick from
Washington.
Other Tuesday television high
lights:
7 p.m., Eisenhower (6) A
half-hour review of on-the-scene
Key Previews
Much of the material for the
Register-Guard's television high
lights is now being provided by
"TV Key Previews," a service
of the McClure Newspaper Syn
dicate. Top television shows arc
previewed by TV Key's Now
York and Hollywood staff mem
bers who attend rehearsals, watch
screenings and analyze scripts.
Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregoa
Tuesday, June 21, 1960 5B
No CHARGE
IF WE CANT riri) AT
FIX YOUR HOME
Healy Radio & TV Service
Back of Citizens Bank 01 1-4524
AU work Guaranteed M Oaya
ders Monday night. The line said
the break "sounds very encour
aging
Eastern's flights out of Miami
dwindled from a normal 55 daily
to none when pilots struck at
midnight June 10 in a protest
against federal flight check in
spectors' sitting in third-pilot
seats. Two to seven flights took
off from Miami in the past three
days. A federal judge ordered
all pilots back to work, but East
ern's dispatchers couldn't reach
most of the fliers to give them
assignments
The Air Line Pilots Assn.
(ALPA), which said it had not
sanctioned the walkout, ordered
pilots back to Eastern cockpits
Monday saying "anarchy is not
the answer" to the pilots' trou
bles. A U.S. Appeals Court Judge
in New Orleans turned the ALPA
down on a request to stay a Mi
ami back-to-work injunction,
FLIGHTS LEAVE
The first flights left for Bos
ton, New York, Washington
Newark, Cleveland, Detroit, In
dianapolis and Chicago.
ALPA officials in Miami dis
cussed the possibility of a Pan
American strike but announced
no action. Some overseas flights
of Pan Am were canceled in the
rising tide of sick reports from
nilots who also object to federal
inspectors riding in third-pilot
seats. A federal judge in Chicago
ordered the fliers back to duty.
National and the ALPA have
been at odds over pay, working
conditions, and retirement bene
fits. No issue has been made of
inspector-seating.
coverage of the President's trip.
to the Far East, with comments
by CBS correspondents along the
way.
8 p.m., Rifleman (12) Blood
Brothers." Good episodo. Lucas
and Mark find a wounded man on
the road and bring him to North
Forks for treatment. When three
weird-looking vigilantes from an
other community come after the
patient, Lucas is forced to inter
pret the meaning of justice. Pro
duction and acting, and even the
writing, are out of the top drawer.
(Repeat)
8:30 p.m.. Red Skclton (6)
Red's fear is quite humorous, as
he plays a quivering witness to
a gangland murder hiding out
from the killers. Audrey Totter
guests as Red's wife, and writer
Dave O'Brien plays one of the
hoods in this take-off (kind of)
on the gangster shows. (Repeat)
8:35 p.m., Dance Party (13, 8)
. Shades of Milton Berle! Kath-
ry Murray dances with the Waz-
zan Troupe of nine Turkish acro-
pants consist of three sets of
couples, all of whom are appear
ing in current Broadway shows.
(Color).
9 p.m., Garry Moore (6)
The regulars are at it again in a
sketch called "Life Belt," with
guest Johnny Carson pushing his
way in as the villain of the piece.
Patsy Palmer tries out her pretty
vocal cords on "My Heart Be
longs to Daddy."
9 p.m., One Step Beyond (12)
Lee Bergers and Rebecca
Welles star in "The Storm." A
panting, half-finished when a
young artist did seven years be
fore, is mysteriously completed.
10:40 p.m., Movie (6) "My
Little Chicadee,'.' with W. C.
r 'elds and Mae West. The Ficlds-
Wi: combo was one of the fun
niest on record and this film
proves it. There's some sort of
silly Western plot, but forget
that and listen to Fields' asides.
(1940
10:45 p.m., Jack Paar (13)
Jack welcomes Charley Weaver,
Jerry Lewis, Shan Lewis and
singer Judy Lynn to the show.
(11:30 p.m. on Channel 8.)
11:15 p.m., Movie (12) "The
Country Husband," with Frank
Lovejoy, Barbara Hale and Feli
cia Farr. An advertising execu
tive, finding that his marriage has
become routine, falls in love with
an 18-year-old girl. (No rating
available.)
Key to movie ratings:
Excellent
Good""
Fair'
Poor
Radio
Tuesday radio highlights include:
9 p.m., A World of Music
(KERG) Kodaly: Hary Janos
Suite. Prokofiev: Lieutenant Kije
Suite. (Mitropoulos, Philharmon
ic-Symphony Orchestra of New
york.)
10 p.m., Symnhmy (KFMY
FM) Chopin: :;ccrto No. 1 in
E. Minor. Ruu istein, pianist;
Wallenstein, Los Angeles Philhar
monic Orchestra.)
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k Payments Arranged
Search Crew-
Finds Plane
RENO, Nev. (UPI) Searchers
returned Tuesday to a remote
mountain area some 15 miles
west of here to recover the bodies
of four persons killed in a small
plane crash last Dec. 30.
Sheriff's deputies tentatively
identified the victims as Mr. and
Mrs, Larry H. Gardner and a
Mr. and Mrs. Forrester, all of
Seattle. The bodies were too de
composed for positive Identifica
tion at the site of the wreckage.
The plane left Seattle for Las
Vegas on Dec. 30. It was last
seen at Oroville where the party
refueled. A severe blizzard in the
Reno area apparently caused the
plane to crash straight into the
mountainside, sheriff's deputies
said.
The posse reached the wreck
age Monday after it was spotted
by a sheep herder.
Milk Hauler
Strike Looms
SALEM (fll A possible strike
by Teamsters employed by mid-
Willamette Valley milk distribu
tors loomed Tuesday after nego
tiations between the distributors
and Teamsters deadlocked Mon
day.
Spokesmen said the union and
the distributors were 3 'A cents
aDart after the session conducted
by U.S. Conciliator LcRoy Smith
of Portland. The negotiations, in
volving some 185 workers, began
April 16.
Portland labor consultant Dan
Hay, representing management,
said the distributors had offered
11 cents as an hourly across-the-board
increase.
Ward Graham, Teamster Local
324 secretary, said the union was
seeking 14 cents an hour to
get them on a level with Eugene
and Portland." The hourly wage
now is $2.58 an hour.
Graham said the Teamsters,
comprising nearly all the help in
nine plants, said tne union mem
bers previously had voted strike
approval. After Monday's meeting
he said: "Anything can happen
now."
Plants involved include four in
Salem and others in Albany, Cor
vallis, Lebanon, McMinnville and
Toledo.
KOAC-TV
Channel 7
TUESDAY
6:00 Briefing Session Panel.
6:30 What'a New Children.
7:00 To Be Announced.
7:30 Higher Education In the USSR.
8:00 4-H Club Highlights from 4-H
Summer School at Oregon State
College.
8:30 Two Centuries of Symphony
"Tonality and Modulation."
Prelate Appointed
VATICAN CITY (UPI) Pope
John XXIIL has appointed Amen
can -born Msgr. Martin John
O'Confior as head of the press
and exhibitions secretariat for
the forthcoming Ecumenical Con
gress, it was announced Monday
Msgr. O'Connor presently is head
of the pontifical commission for
radio, television and the cinema.
Former FCC Member
Dies in Washington
WASHINGTON OH Frieda B
Hcnnock, 55, a talented beauty
who earned success in a man's
world as a New"York lawyer and
first and only woman ever ap
pointed to the Federal Communi
cations commission, e aiea Mon
day.
She had bccn'.n critical condi
tion after brain surgery Thurs
day.
Her term on the FCC I expired
in 1955. The following fear, she
married William H. Simons,
Washington real estate man
Since leaving the FCC she has
practiced aw In Washington.
They' Rode,
Says Barbara
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (Ur 1)
Vegetarian Dr. Barbara Moore
headed for the state Capitol at
Columbus Tuesday, vowing that
if her two countrymen who pre
ceded her in their walk across
the United States try to claim a
record she will take them to
court.
As she set out on her walk
early Tuesday, she was 41 miles
west of Columbus and was travel
ing about three or four miles an
hour. She wanted to make Colum
bus Monday night but stopped at
5:45 p.m. to rest for the night.
She told newsmen that tagged
along beside her that if British
Air Force Sgts. Merwyn Evans,
33, and Patrick Maloney, 34, tried
to claim a trans-continental rec
ord "I will subpena them."
The 56-year-old woman said
that she had talked to people
that claimed they had seen the
two sergeants riding.
"They lust had a good hitch
hiking holiday across America,"
she said. The two sergeants hiked
from San Francisco to New York
in 66 days, 4 hours and 17 min
utes.
HICKEY-FREEMAN CLOTHES
treat ,
McDonald Theater Bldg.
Springfield
MOTORS
Bulck Opel
Rl 7-9305
7tb A A sta.
The Register-Guard Presents
"A World of Music"
9.05 to 9:45 P.M.
TONIGHT,
TUESDAY!
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