A NIchoK Worth of .T.
Comment On This and TKat
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS
United Press Feature Writer
Washington (U.PJ The Miss
America people are getting
mart. They have appointed a
rrTt former Miss
Am erica to
some sort of
job.
This young
lady would be
B e b e Shopp.
She was and
is a dolly. And
now she is
with portfolio
Biraui Nicboii as New Eng
land director for the Miss A
business.
She ought to do a good job be
cause she knows and has all the
angles.
First time I ever saw this love
ly blonde from right outside
Minneapolis she was fresh off
the farm and had displayed a
rare musical talent. The kid
could play the vibraharp, which
is next of kin to the xylophone,
which has to be hammered prop
erly if you want the right music
to come out.
Won Beauty Contest
Bebe could hammer all right,
as witness the fact that she
wound up Miss America in 1948.
All of which brings us up to
the very present and one Nor
man Reed, who handles the an
nual contest for Miss Washing
ton. Norman toils for radio station
WWDC. His long-standing rule
is that the contestants can nev
er, ever be embellished with any
phony padding like er, ah . .
falsies.
That's the rule in the big time
at Atlantic City, too. But Nor
man is fussing over something
that the makers of bathing suits
are offering to lady bathers ev
erywhere built-in falsies. And
he wonders if the new padding
might not get into the Atlantic
City beauty pageant.
I can tell him he need never
fret.
Right therein the dressing room
at Convention hall sits a regis
tered nurse. Her job is to see to
it that each contestant puts into
a bathing suit only that with
which nature endowed her.
A Perfect 36
But getting back to Bebe. She
embarrassed the pageant com
mittee and her father when she
got to France, as part of her tour
as Miss America, and sounded
off on "falsies."
Lovely Bebe, herself a perfect
36, had told reporters over there,
in effect, that she had never
heard of the things. And what
were they?
People were shocked. The vi
braharp almost went out of busi
ness and Bebe came home, but
not before she sounded off on
the same subject a few more
times.
Bebe. still lovely, now is 26
years old. She is Mrs. Bayard D.
Warming, of Arlintgon, Mass.
I missed Bebe last year. She
sent a wire saying that she was
busy having a baby.
Tuesday, May 22, 1958
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FIVE
Around Hollywood
By ALINE MOSBY
United Press Correspondent
Hollywood (U.R) One thing
missing from the movies are
those sweet, innocent heroines
with long hair
and soulful
eyes instead
of so many
sexy Marilyn
Monroes.
The lady
who made that
statement to
day looked out
of soulful eyes
Aline Mosby he r s e 1 f and
patted hair that once was red
and long. Now- it's chic, short
and ' graying. And Mae Marsh,
that wistful ingenue of such
great films as "Birth of a Na
tion" and "Intolerance," is now
bit player in modern movies.
Today's actresses, she thinks,
are either pixieish like Leslie
Caron, sexy like M. Monroe or
sophisticated like Grace Kelly.
Miss Saint Mentioned
She says the only star in Hol
lywood today who is like Miss
Marsh and Lillian and Dorothy
Gish in their heyday, the early
1900s, is Eva Marie Saint.
"Possibly there aren't parts
written like that any more, but
the actresses aren't like that, ei
ther. Isn't it funny how they all
try to be like Marilyn Monroe?"
she smiled as we sat in her near
by Hermosa Beach home.
"I think there will be a re
turn to the innocent-heroine
type. But it will take a long time
to get back from this sexy busi
ness. Eva Marie Saint really is
the first of that type since Janet
Gaynor."
Too many Marilyns hve hurt
young girls of America, she
added.
Innocent Type Needed
"It would help the children a
great deal if the sweet innocent
type would return," she said.
"It's pathetic today how they
all get bosom conscious, even
my 12-year-old granddaughter.
Young people think sex appeal
is all they need td attract a
man."
When Miss Marsh was a big
star, her director, D. W. Grif
fith, "wouldn't let us be sophis
ticated."
"We were told to be reserved,
ladylike, kind, gentle and polite
and never to raise our voices,"
she said.
Miss Marsh still is married to
her first husband who was a
publicist for one of her films.
They have three children and six
grandchildren.
Measles Postpones
Korea Orphans' Trip
Tokyo (U.R) Sixteen tiny
Korean orphans were quaran
tined today for measles, delaying
a journey to their new parents
in Hawaii and America for at
least three weeks.
Two physicians diagnosed that
a little girl, who lay listlessly in
her crib at a downtown Tokyo
hotel, had measles and that pos
sibly two other children also
were coming down with the dis
ease. One of the children quaran
tined was bright-eyed Lee En Ai,
3V4, who was adopted by Holly
wood cowboy movie star Roy
Rogers and his wife, Dale Evans.
The children were born to
Korean mothers and GI fathers
who abandoned them.
They arrived in Tokyo from
Seoul Monday and were sched
uled to leave tonight for home.
Dr. Robert Pierce, President
of the adoption sponsoring World
Vision Organization, is looking
for a hospital to house his small
charges Until they can leave
Japan.
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Nominations for State Legislature Listed
OLD CROW DISTILLERY CO., DIV. OF NATIONAL DiST. PROD. COR?, FRANKFORT, KY.
" Portland U.R) The follow
ing candidates for the state
Legislature were nominated in
Friday's primary election:
Senate:
4th District Sen. Paul Ged
des (R), Roseburg; Dan Dimick
(D), Roseburg.
6th C. D. Cameron (R),
Grants Pass.
7th James B. Bedingfield
fR), Coos Bay; R. F. Chapman
(D), Coos Bay.
10th John D. Hare, ffO, Hills
boro; Karl Doern (D), Beaverton.
15th Sen. Warren McMinn
imee (R), Tillamook; Andrew J.
Naterlin (D), Newport.
16th Sen. John Hounsell (R),
Hood River; Ben Musa (D), The
Dalles.
17th N. A. Miksche (R),
Prineville; Boyd R. Otrhulse (D),
Madras.
18th Edward A. Geary (R),
Klamath Falls; Sen. Harry Boi
vin (D), Klamath Falls.
20th Sen. Charles W. Bing
ner (R), La Grande; Dwight H.
Hopkins, (D), Imbler.
21st Anthony Yturri (R), On
tario; Alice Uken (D), Vale.
Houses:
1st Rep. Orval Eaton (R),
Astoria; W. H. Holmstrom (D),
Gearhart.
2nd Rep. Robert R. Klemson
(D), St. Helens.
3rd Rep. Harry C. Elliott (R),
Tillamook; Joseph W. Donaldson
(D), Cloverdale.
4th Rep. Leon Davis (R),
Hillsboro and John D. Mosser,
(R), Portland; Clyde H. Sanders
CD), Sherwood, and James R;
Shick, (D).
5th Rep. George Layman (R),
Newberg.
6th Rep. Arthur P. Ireland
(R), Forest Grove.
8th Rep. H. H. Chindgren
(R), Molalla, Ken Goodall (R),
Oswego and Paul W. Houston
(R), Oregon City; Rep. Richard
E. Groener CD), Milwaukie, Jua
nita N. Orr (D), Lake Grove,
and Tom Monaghan (D), Mil
waukie. 9th Marjorie Kauffman "(R),
Waldport; Rep. Thomas R. Mc
Clellan (D), Neotsu.
10th Rep. Joe Rogers (D), In
dependence. 11th Rep. Wayne R. Giesy
(R), Monroe; P. M. deLaubenfels
(D), Corvallis.
12th Rep. William W. Chad
wick (R), Salem, Rep. Eddie Ah
rens (R), Turner, Rep. Robert
L. Elfstrom (R), Salem and Win
ton J. Hunt (R), Woodburn; Guy
Jonas (D), Salem.
13th Rep. Ed R. Cardwell
fR), Sweet Home and Rep. Jess
Savage (R), Albany; Roy Fitz
water (D), and William Goold
(D), both Lebanon.
14th Rep. Edwin E. Cone (R),
Eugene, Rep. Earl H. Hill (R),
Cushman, Rep. V. Edwind John
son (R), Eugene; Rep. Ernest E.
Schrenk (R), Creswell and Rep.
Loran L. Stewart (R), Cottage
Grove; Mrs. Florence Cook (D),
Eugene, Richard Eymann ' (D),
Mohawk, Keith D. Skelton (D),
Eugene and Glen M. Stadler CD),
Eugene.
15th Rep. John P. Amacher
(R), Winchester and Curtis T.
Beecher (R), Winston; Al Flegel
(D), and W. O. Kelsay (D), both
Roseburg.
16th William T. McLean (R),
Iran May Break Off
Diplomatic Relations
- Teheran, Iran (U.R) Egypt's
propaganda campaign against
Iran may force Iran to break off
diplomatic relations between the
two Moslem countries, according
to a high Iranian government of
ficial. The official, who asked not to
be identified, told United Press
that the diplomatic explosion
might come if Cairo Radio con
tinues its "anti-Iranian" broadcasts.
HARRIMAN CONVALESCING
New York (U.R) Gov. Aver
ell Harriman was reported in
"excellent" condition at Colum
bia Presbyterian hospital Mon
day following s minor prostate
gland operation. The surgery
was performed Monday by Dr.
George F. Cahill who -said the
operation was completely suc
cessful. The gland was not. re
moved. Harriman was expected
to be in the hospital about 10
days.
Coos Bay; Clarence Barton CD)',
Coquille.
17th Samuel A. Hall (R),
Brookings; Carl Back CD), Sixes.
18th Fayette I. ' Bristol (R),
Grants Pass; Clifford J. Driscoll
(D), Grants Pass.
19th Rep. E. A. Littrell (R)
and Rep. E. H. Mann (R), both
Medford; Robert A. Beyer (D)
and Robert B. Duncan CD), both
Medford.
20th Rep. George Annalla
(D), Hood River.
21st Joseph D. Kelly CR), The
Dalles; Rep. Katherine Musa (D),
The Dalles.
22nd Rep. Charles A. Tom
(R), Rufus.
23rd Rep. Irvin Mann (R),
Adams and Ralph Saylor (R),
Echo; Rep. R. E. Goad (D) and
W. B. Temple (D), both Pendle
ton. 24th H. R. Weatherford (R),
Enterprise: Rep. Harry L. Wells
(D), La Grande.
25th Joseph D. Bottero (R),
Prineville; Ben Evick CD),
Madras.
26th Roger Loennig (R),
Haines; Rep. Robert J. Stewart
(D), Keating.
27th Rep. Harvey H. DeAr
mond (R), Bend; Ole W. Grubb
(D), Bend.
28th Orville W. Corbett (R),
Burns, Verne L. Cady (D), Burns.
29th Rep. Emil A. Stunz (DJ
Nyssa.
30th Josephine Kittredge (R)
and Paul O. Landry (R), both
Klamath Falls; John L. Kerbow
(D), Klamath Falls.
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