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They Write, Too TV STARS DOUBLE IN TYPE Not content with frequent visits to your living room, TV performers are now seeking another foothold within your home—via the family bookshelf. In recent months a record number of TV personalities have been shuttling between camera and typewriters. Some are old hands at putting words on paper. Others are novices. Some have had professional help in assembling their nouns and verbs. Others haven’t. Currently on sale are Bob Hope’s autobiography, “Have Tux, Will Trav¬ el;” Groucho Marx’s biography, “Life with Groucho” (to which Groucho contributed 49 needling “writ by hand” footnotes); and Down You Go moderator Bergen Evans’ second sur¬ vey of silly notions, “The Spoor of Spooks and Other Nonsense.” One What's N^y Line? panelist, Fred Allen, is already represented by a memoir of radio days, “Treadmill to Oblivion” and is at work on his auto¬ biography. Another, publisher-col¬ umnist-anthologist Bennett Cerf, has compiled “An Encyclopedia of Mod¬ ern American Humor.” Edward R. Murrow, of See It Now and Person to Person, and TV sales¬ lady Betty Furness have written fore¬ words for new books. Roy Rogers’ wife and co-star, Dale Evans, author of one best-seller, “Angel Unaware,” seems certain of a large audience for her second book, “My Spiritual Diary.” What in the World panelist Carle- ton S. Coon has published a scholarly tome, “The Story of Man;” and Mar¬ tha Raye’s “Goombah,” Rocky Gra- ziano, a slang-studded autobiography, “Somebody Up There Likes Me.” A