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Show By LYN CONNELLY ; 5N ON RADIO broadcasts of , championship boxing bouts is ' bringing protests from many quarters quart-ers . . . Some newspapers are taking tak-ing up the cudgels against the ban . . . The fight to place microphones . on the floor of Congress is starting ; early this yea"r, but industry circles : expect the ban to remain in effect . . . Tallulah Bankhead may return re-turn this winter with a radio show but it's expected to be for the 90-minute extravaganza produced In previous years ... By the way, line this columnist on the- side of the critics who thought Tallulah was great on TV ... Of course, the writing was weak, but with the volatile star In charge even that seems incidental. Radlp City is carefully watching to see the results of a private memo sent by the big networks to sponsors . . . The note points out that TV commercials are getting longer and longer and that the TV code promises "good taste" in commercials com-mercials . . . Milton Berle facet the battle of his television life this season. PLATTER CHATTER CAPITOL: Marilyn and Wesley Tuttle do a nice job with two unique numbers "Don't Break the Sixth Commandment" and "Our Love Isn't Legal" . . . Bob Eberly comes up with a strange little number entitled en-titled "Back Street -Affair" , . . Flip has "When I Dream" . . . And Nat Cole continues piling up successes suc-cesses with bis latest, "The Ruby and the Pearl." Continuing on Capitol, the Four Knights have a winner in "One Way Kisses" backed by another lament, "Lies' . . . Popular Jane Froman, who always had a good voice but had to be in a near-fatal airplane smash-up to be re-discovered, does a magnificent job, as usual, with "Stay Where You Are" . . . "Laughing" is on the flip side. |