The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 241, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 2, 1963 Page: 3 of 12
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Senes Control 1$
frong Reality
DALLAS (AP)— Research is on
the verge of possessing a "power
more awesome than the harness-
ing of the atom’’—the control of
life itself, the president-elect of
the American Cancer Society said
Tuesday. \
“Man has taken a long step to-
ward the accurate imitation of
life," noted Dr. Wendell G. Scott
of , St. Louis, Mo.
He explained that the step he
referred to was science’s ability
y fnsike (TeAxyPibonuclelc acid
(DBA) artificially and to make it
"biologically active,’’ that is, to
Left to right are the sponsor, Mrs. Ger-
truda Marsh, and students Pat Byrd, Janis
Johnson,
Marsh.
Dwight Denson end Ronald
■
'Cedar Post'Wins Journalism Award
The Cedar Post, school newspa- placed in the highest rank of Tex-
per at Cedar Bayou Junior High, as school newspapers by the In-
reCeived ari award of dtsfin- terstholastic League Press Ctm-
guished merit in journalism for ference sponsored by the Univer-
outstanding quality and fog being sity of Texas._
Leaders Are Named For VBS
To Begin Monday At Coady
Mrs. Ardean Meadows has committee will be Mrs. David
been named principal and Mrs.
Hershel Hart, assistant principal,
for the Vacation Bible School be-
ginning Monday at Coady Baptist leader with Mrs. Bernice Wam-
" Church. ........................ ... .
The school will be held at 8:30
a.m. each day through Frida;
School secretary will be Mrs.
Wodall.
Mrs. H. 0. Sorrells and Mrs.
•Aline Tucker will be nursery
teachers. Working with the three
year old children will be Mrs.
Cecil Kelly, Mrs. Bill Ellis and
Mrs. Paula Shoemake.
Beginning teachers are Mrs.
Pat Biddle, Mrs. Shirley Old,
Mrs. Bobby Gregory, Mrs. Em
gene Hartzog and Mrs. Ralph
Clendennen. Teaching in the Pri-
mary Department will be Mrs.
D. W. Reavis, Mrs. John Cum-
Mrs. H.’Hart, Mrs. Cla;
ty. pastor,
B. “The 1
,Evans, Mrs. George Fannett
and Mrs. Aline Buckalou.
Mrs. Pat Biddle will be song
er as pianist.
The Rev. C. E. Meadows Jr.,
has chosen the subject,
Far Look” as his Sunday
morning topic. Scriptures will be
taken from Psalm 121:1,2. Soloist
will be Mrs. E. Potter accom-
panied by Mrs. Warren.
Training Union will begin at
5:30 p.m.
The pastor will speak on “We
Persuade Men” at the 8:30 p.m.
program. _
Cedar Bayou was one of six
junior high schools in the .state to
receive this award for mimeo-
graphed newspapers.
The school paper at Cedar Bay-
make it reproduce itself.
DBA, the substance that genes
are made of, is the acid found in
the nucleus of cells. It controls
the transmission of all hereditary
traits from parent cells to daugh-
ter cell* at the time of cell divi-
sion, he said.
Dr. Scott said combine those
achievements with the r e c e n t
isolation of the human sperm in
an uninjured state,” and science
awaits onl£ the completion of the
breaking of the genetic code to
possess "control of the evolution
of human races and the end of
AMAHUAC SETS PACE FOR
REFORMS IN JUNIOR HIGH
The junior high school pattern
set in Anahuac is rapidly becom-
ing a nationwide policy.
These other schools, these other
states, didn’t use the Anahuac
Junior High School as a model,
but the Anahuac school system is
proud it adopted the program be-
fore anybody else thought a
it.
Anahuac Junior High was the
first school in this part of the
state to organize on a 6-7-8 grade
basis. That was in 1956.
. Anahuac Junior High has -
strong academic program- now be-
ing advocated by various school
districts, parents’ leagues and oth-
er interested laymen. Each year
Anahuac has eliminated or cur-
tailed activities In junior high that
might interfere with normal devel-
opment of students.
Credit for Anahuac’s pioneering
in this administrative educational
field must go to T. P. White, 50,
superintendent of the Anahuac
genetic diseases."
“We’ll be able to take out the
CHRIS SAWDERS, a German student who studied at Robert
L. Lee High School this past year as an American Field
xrss Egjs aafjsft
of the expected advantages of this
research.
And by being able to make
changes within the cell, by using
as tools DBA and its companion
dibonucleic acid (RNA), hopes are
that cancer can be brought under
control', he said:
RNA is the "assembly line” on
which are built proteins vital to
members doing all the writing,
typing and memeographing Stu-
dents who contributed to the pa-
per were Pat Byrd, Sue Atteber-
ry, Janis Johnson, Pat Rogers,
LaJuana Russell, Carol Sue Ei-
land, Cinday Phillips, Sylvia
Crooks, Connie Cole, Gwen Lee,
Martha Gopffarth, Joe Leslie
Treybig, Barry Donnally, Ronald
Service exchange student, and Kirk Franklin, his American
“brother,” both finished in the top five’ per cent of the
graduating class at REL. Chris lived at the home of Kirk’s
parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Franklin during their senior year,
in June he will return to Germany after a tour of the U.S.
tSK S’? wS.
erton, Teresa
ten, Bonnie Weinzel, Diane Wein-
zel, “ * “
Shirley Roark", Johnny McLean,
Judy Troutman, Carolyn E
Debbie Carney, Millie He;
Cindy Gardner, Diane A
Connie Schrader, Jane Ho
and Blaine Donnelly. _____^
Sponsors were Mrs. Lyla Net-
tles, Miss Mattie Feneter
Mrs. Gertrude Marsh. .
Corbett Slips Into
meetmswf the- Dallas County, unit
of the American Cancer Society.
’Kirk And Chris' Quite A
Scholastic Team At REL
Kirk and Chris were quite a student who spent his senior year
scholastic team this past year at
■a*®* si—
BACKGROUND S.
m, Jr Ag
y wi rJ
j / §
By RONNIE WEI
HONG KONG (AP)-This mod- j
ern Oriental city of skyscrapers 1
and squatter shacks is facing a
major crisis for lack of water,
t drqpfjrtft tn H<
be working in
ments.
Leading In the Intermediate
Departments will be Mrs. Ber-
nice Warner, Mrs. O. J. Rogers
and Mrs. W. C. Hollingshead.
Serving Qjn the-- refereshment
Heirporf
BROOKS,
,„ .....- - Mr. and -Mrs.j Chet Brooks of wasn't time to argue the
Pasadena are the parents of a
girl, Laura Lea, bortl at 3 p.m.
last Friday in the Bayshore Hos-
pital in Pasadena. Brooks is a
state representative from Harris
County. Place 12. The family lives
at 1603 Blackburn Dr., Pasadena.
Mrs. Brooks is the former Miss
Faye Lamar, taught at Cloverleaf
in the Galena Park system.
rwm
on “Route 66’’-Glenn Corbett.
He is, of course, cod, clean-
cut, clever and all the other ad-
jectives that describe the hero ot
a television adventure series. And
so he has slid smoothly into toe
beside
seat
Martin
sports car
Milner.
That position was once occu-
pied by George Maharis, who rcut
out from the show amid some
He claimed he was
me producers wondered.
point: the essence of "Route 66"
is that it must keep moving. Cor-
bett was hired.
He eschews any controversy
with his predecessor.
lem with hfaharis,” said the ac-
tor 'Tve| never even met him.
I did get a telegram from him
when I started my first filming
on the show." -
boy who went right from college
dramatics to top roles in Cojum-
“« Di-h,-™ Hto "Crimson Ki-
bia Pictures
mono” and
like
"Mountain
Road,
will be hitting toe road again
soon. This time television’s Ro-
ver Boys Will head for Denver,
Minneapolis, upstate New York
and down the East Coast to Flor-
ida. Almost everywhere, it might
be pointed out, except Route 66.
Everywhere
Threatening?
‘No, no.
ag? now on reducing pills and weight-
It was very friendly, losing nostrums ' • ,
wishing me good luck and all of It'll be a long time before Uncle
that.” .
it"77 Corbett isn’t quite sure how he
Tfin got the job.
t “I’ll have to ask Herb Leonard
about that,” he said, referring to
toe poducer. "I suppose it had
something to do with my being on
'it’c A man’s World ’ ”
‘it’s A man’s World.
The latter is toe NBC hour
which -faiBST'MsfifW WftekS this
season despite strong support in
some ^
Wff Reserved in his
praise of the “Route 66” assign-
ment. He doesn’t even mind toe
traveling. '
country,” he enthused. “Our
living conditions are good, and
Bv HAL BOYLE
■NEW YORK (AP)-Things a
columnist might never know if he
didn’t open his mail:
In the quest for slimness, Amer-
icans reduce their bankrolls more
The U.S, Mint hasn’t coined silver
dollars for more than a quarter
century but still has 74 million of
them «i hand.
Wonder if tennis fans know that
Egyptians werp batting balls
across a net 500 years befc
birth of Christ’
sign of monsoon rains that nor-
mally drench this part of the
world at this time of year.
The Royal Observatory has re-
corded three inches of rain the
lasf six months, little more than
an inch the last four months*-the
dryest stretch sinne toe observa-
tory was founded in 1884.
The city’s reservoirs, „ Hong
Kong’s main source of water,
have only 30 days of water left,
Water runs to homes only four
stand for hours every other day
in lines that stretch for blocks,
waiting for precious water from
sidewalk hydrants. }•
The government has ’ warned
that rations > may ‘have- to be- -cut
to four hours every three days or
cut off entirely. , ,
This would force hundreds of
thousands of people — including
residents of plush homes and
apartment buildlngs-to,
for water at-toe publ
hydrants.
tiffuBSSB SSreW “r its
THSCA School Panel
bourg-St. Honore in Paris. Once a
year” its sidewalks anw washed
with perfunjed water.
After the American Revolution,
toe portrait of George Washington
briefly replaced toe king of hearts
broken out over buckets of pre-
cious water. - .
Policemen guard sidewalk hy-
drants and inspectors check
household water meters and have
Gulf, Holiday Inns To
Give Travel Service
HOUSTON - Gulf Oil Oorp. has
Tara
vide a one - package travel serv-
ice to the U.S. motorist.
The agreement calls for Gulf’s
financial assistance in a three-
year program of construction of
toir-r restaurant' ~’service'-station
complexes in the United States.
It also provides for cooperative
use of Gulf credit cards, Holiday
Inns teletype reservations system
and Gulf’s “Toyrgide” service.
at REL living in toe home of
Both Chris and Kirk graduated
a the fop five per tent of toe
lass at REL. Kirk helped Chris
rito his English and in return,
hris helped Kirk wiith his phy-
The only class they shared was
English but they both studied
fined householders found guilty
of extravagance. Water blackmar-
keters have been jailed.
Schools have relaxed standing
requirements for summer' white
uniforms, for lack of Water to
live in floating sampan villages^
MoraSs •fo’FWieks for -five first *# cbngertM mtatflims
. they may stand inline 10 hours
or more for a bucket or two of
water every other day.
Hotels, cafes and restaurants
report a 20 per cent drop in busi
ness.
Kirk was toe third highest
scholar in the class with a 96.13
grade average. Chris was in the
top 29 members of the class.
Chris and Kirk were both on the
school’s tennis team:
Kirk had studied German four
superintendent ot me aiihi
School District for nine years.
White was superintendent of
schools at Lovelady in Houston
County 11 years before he came
ly a third of a century In educa-
tional work.
White is an administrative ed-
ucation major, too. He won ms
Bachelor’s Degree at Stephen F.
Austin College in Nacogdoches in
administrative education. He won
his Master’s Degree in Adminis-
trative Education at Sam Houston
State Teachers College in Hunts-
ville. Now he is working on a
doctorate in administrative educa-
tion at the University of Houston.
Anahuac organized its junior
high school on the 6-7-8 grade
formula because it wasnecessary
to fit the district’s building fadli-
!»*»L Stt&R rsss BE sr .s ssz
DixIK PTiKin nnJ tftnli nanilitniA/1 « ____iL. — — mnirA ClrVAO Pit. mil nvT in Kl CruTnt AFT thp flltTfl.I-
a-rSS.TS.'TM
’n&SSFSl v
heaper for small districts to buy language arts.. J
the one expensive science and High requires 524
home economics setups required
in high school, than it is to buy the
two needed when there is a ninth
grade in the Junior high school
iFJa if)
____^^1
a number of
school districts
eluding Pasadena _
Branch, have started similar or-
ganizations.
"Most of the recently organized
6-7-8 grade schools are being..
called Intermediate Schools rath-
than junior highs,” Supt. White
added.
“This renaming is wise since
term junior high seems to im*
„ a little high school. The pur-
pose of the junior high school is not
to imitate the high school or at-
tempt to offer the same curricu-
lum and program of toe high
school.
"The purpose of toe junior high
school is to provide a program
of education for pupils of this par-
ticular age and should be con-
cerned with toe responsibility of
helping students make a satisfac- ^
, A
T. P. WHIT E
White added that “there seems
to Anahuac. He started teaching to be a crusade in the making to
when he was 18, npw boasts near- abolish or curtail most of the ex-
tra curricular activities of toe jun-
ior high schools. The belief is that
many of these activities are forc-
ing boys and girls into develop-
mental patterns and behaviorisms
that are beyond what is {(formal
and healthy, and that it is be
being
done to the detriment of scholastic
achievement.
"The program of the Anahuac
Junior High School adheres close-
ly to the teaching of the funda-
mental subjects with a minimum
of interference from extracurricu-
lar activities.
In most cases, Anahuac Junior
High exceeds by far the require-
quired to be spent on the funda-
mental subjects. As an example,
the state requires only 320 hours
to be spent in grades 7 and 8 on
■------ — Anahuac Junior
hours. We re-
quire 360 hours of science, com-
pared with 130 science hours for
state requirements."
Supt. White pointed out that
since Ahahuac’s organization of
the 6-7-8 grade junior high school,
tory transition from the program «
of the elementary to that of thej
high school,” White concluded, m
JONES
FURNITURE CO.
Km tad (M Furniture
MM MARKET
PHONE SH-44M
• Call Today For
Safe, Reliable
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HERRING 0,u6
' '"'tivimtowW
out to the three muring league I
.......Vernon Green
to allow young shrimp to grow to
full size before being taken for
market. „ , „
Texas Game and Fish Cora
mission patrol boats will be in
operation again this year. Com
mercial shrimpers are asked to
observe the shrimp conservation
law and avoid trouble according
to J. R- Singleton, director of
Region 4, Texas Game and Fish
Commission’s La Porte office.
Jerry Lewis, Wife
Expecting A Girl
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Jerry
Lewis and his wife, Patti, are ex-
pecting their sixth child in Jan-
uary. .
"Naturally, we are expecting
alt-1 " t .pwis “hut we’ll bu
girl,” said Lewis, “but we’lf buy
a blue layette too.”
The Lewises have five: sons.
.t
The Sun's Television Log
Lucm
spit
6:00
SATURDAY NIGHT
Death Valley Da a
Guestward Ho
SbrG’Cloc*-Newr
2:30
fll Internaticmal Zone
Q Bold Venture
8:00
8:30
we get to work with some great drew Jackson toe king of spades
| and John Quincy Adams the king
/\l CUAkl BUYS MORE-SELLS MORE
UUnAR AND HAS MORE BARGAINS.
TEXAS LARGEST FOR TWO GENERATIONS,
us m i ymti t* rm m an miwm mtwuu
ALUMINUM WIN00W ,CREENS -c,,t,m M*d'
dimple, MTlH*
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LUMBER ZX*.....
DECKING £ T....
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lib. ft.::;.
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tia-nu
Lin. ft........
FLOOR Till **
Acoustical
CEDAR WST
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asbestos El. H
CEILING KT m
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ROOFING c#.U1\T.......X*
cporni doors, rrur sim
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IDflU Ornamental V 64M
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WINDOW _m*
CipiUe Rebestoe, celers,
Ollsiria jet oats, tauere ..... 1
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1000‘s, Slab er »1*«
Panel. Erse................
Rubber Sail $4M
lenfy caters...............A
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teed 1 tide....
INSULATION STn.
PAHELHI6 “■ *■
SHEETRDCK KS,S
V'vl" >' FIM Studs
L *6 Mens Uses, U.
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Side ...
COMMODE SftmW
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W Relnlerclnz Bars—Id', la.......
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^BATHSEIumtot
rriT tub., mi atilt
IRI so-ib., rm ante
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AU PRICES F.OJ. HOUSTON.
We Oellver I* Tear Am.
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THE
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2600 CANAL
CA 5-555T
HOUSTON - UH» MU - SJU Sdtardw 7;Jd-l:bU
Changes Announced
AUSTIN (AP)-A-change of in-
structors and announcement of
basketball and football panels at
the Texas Coaching School Aug. u _
short time, too,' Thomas Jeferson, (^xas^fllT&^^CMdhS 9:00
replaced the *nng ol.dubs, ^n" Association announced that Mike
Campbell would replace T Jones
on the instruction list. Jones re-
signed from the University of
Texas coaching staff to enter pri-
vate business. Campbell also is
on the Texas staff.
The panels will be held Aug. 9
with Fred Taylor of Ohio State,
Neal Baisi of West Virginia Tech
Savage Sports
Jackie Gleason
3:00 ©.^ture fw a .Sunday
Afternoon
The Defender*
iteDWtlhny ^
I Joey Bishop
Saturday Movie
i Lawrence Welk
Have Gun Will Travel
VUICIHWII , !
B Bat Masterson
B The Deputy. ... 1
4:00 O McKeever and the Col..
© Major-
Trailmaster
Bullwinkle
of diaiaondsM^H^^H^H
Our quotable notables: “What is
my loftiest ambition? I’ve always
wanted to throw an egg into an
electric fan”-01iver Herford.
Experts say American paper
currency is the easiest to counter-
feit, French banknotes toe hard-
est. •
In Kentucky, a lawmaker once
introduced a bill making it illegal
lor tobacco auctioneers to speak
indistinctly.
Studies have shown that to be
psychologically ready for a job
you should see that it is worth do-
ing, be reasonably confident you
Fight of the Week
Sport* Cavalcade
Saturday Night News
5:30
10:10 l
News Wrap-Up
Academy Award Theater
G;E. College Bowl
Cadet Don .
Captain Kangaroo
Newr
Today- ——-----
Say When
Amos A Andy
Calendar *
Twentieth Century.
| Sportsman
r B it erf the Post
Magic Roan
Science In Action
10:15 |
11:30 j
12:00 I
INeai DBXSl Ul VYt'»i viifiuua *.wi, U.W
Gerald Myers of Lubbock Mon-!i2;l5
amV Tirrimv Littleton (rfMO-OT
can do it, and want to do it now.
“Pilgrim’s Progress,” *»“ «»■
gious classic that became an all-
time best-seller, was written by
John Bunyan while in prison.
Adolf Hitler also was in jail what
he wrote “Mein Kampf.”
Two Unbeaten Teams
“iji Left In JC Baseball
KWBA
PROGRAM LOG
1M0 ON YOUR DIAL
aunday
Mdrnbif
*:S show
!;S
l:K BIBLE TR
1:30 CENTRAL
9:00 RADIO Bl
9:30 BOB DELC
ASSEMBLY
BLE/CLASS
BOB DELCOURE
WINGS OF HEAUN
11:00 MEMORIAL BAPTIST
ILOO NOON NEWS ROUNDUP
Sunday Afternoon
12:11 BOB DELCOURE
12:45' WALLISVILLE CHURCH
1:00 BILLY GRAHAM
1:3S PENTECOSTAL
2:01 WHAT'S THE ISSUE
2:35 TY CONNOR
4:00 KEMARENA
KEMARENA
4:35 REPORTERS ROUNDUP
1:00 TRINITY TABERNACLE
ERS R
TABE
40R
OF I
NNOR
6:35 TY CONNOR
6:45 WORLD OF JOHN GRIFFJN
WIN
TY
WOR
7:05 TY CONNOR
7:11 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
1:05 “TYXONNOR
9:6- THE NAVY SWINGS
9:20 TY CONNOR
N:0S Sion Off .
South San Antoni oappearing in
basketball. In football it will be
all toe instructors from the school
plus high school all-star coaches.
Weather
Saturday Night Sports
Weird
Big Movie
Fear
Midnight Zone
SignOff
Sign Off
6:00
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (AP)
Wilmington,. N.C., 1962 runner-
,up and current favorite, and Col-
lege of Southern Utah were the
only unbeaten teams in toe Na-
tional Junior College Baseball
Tournament today.
They play tonight in the high-
light erf today’s round in toe two-
game loss elimination tourna-
ment. - - '
Wilmington turned back host
Mesa College of Grand Junction
9-7 and CSU disposed of Long
Island again of Farmingdale,
N.Y., 6-1 in Friday’s play.
Manatee, of Bradenton, Fla.,
eliminated Bacone ot Muskogee,
Ofela., 3-1 and Thornton of Har-
vey, 111., ousted Panola of Carth-
age, Tex., 3-2, ' ' ~
TRY SUN
7:55
7:58 |
8:00
8:15
8:25
8:30
9:00 I
9:30 I
9:45 i
10:00 i
CLASSIFIED
SUNDAY MORNING
June l ; :
Sign On
Sign„0h • -*
The Pulpit
The Christophers
Industry On Parade
Sunday Hymn
This Week in Galveston
Television USA
First Methodist Church
Living Word
The Answer
i^amo Unto My Feet
This Is the Life
Look Up and Live
David and Goliath
Magic Land of
Aliakazam
St. Lukes Methodist
Camera Three
Frontier of Faith
Early Bird Theatre
Washington Report '
South Main Baptist _
Church
Your Area Churches
Faculty Viewpoint
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:00 © Best of Groucho
You Ask for it
Houston Home Stow ■
Gulf Coast Jamboree
MGM Theatre
Life of Riley
U.S. Marines
Direction ’63
Issues and Answers1
The Joy of Living With
Fragrance
Cirtus Country
Big Picture -
Movietime
10:30 l
11:001
6:101
6:25'
6:301
■m
7:30 |
8:00
8:30 i
9:00 l
9:30 i
10:00 '
10:10
10:15 1
11:301
10::30
10:40
11:00
2:00
12:30
’12:45
12:40
12:301
1:001
1:301
•1:45
2:00
SUNDAY NIGHT
Six O’clock News
Lassie
Ensign’O’Toole
Houston Headline
Weather
The Jetsons
’Dennis The Menace
Walt Disney
Ed Sullivan
Sunday Night Movie
Car 54 Where Are You
The Real McCoy*
Bonanza
G. E. True Theater
Voice of Firestone
Candid Camera
DuPont Show of
The Week
What’s My Line
Detective*
Sunday Final r ■ - ■
Eric searfeid. New*
Sunday New*
Sports
Weather
Kiplinger’a Changing
Time* . “
Ideas In Focus
Theatre 13 "
The Late Show
MGM Theater
Late Show
Sign Off
New* Final
Evening Hymn
Sign Off
NBC Few*
I I Love Lucy
i Play Your Hunch
Deceffiber Bride .
People Are Funny
The McCoys
Price Is Right
10:30 © Dr. Hudson’s
Secret Journal
0 Pete and Glady*
Concentration
Love of Life
Your First Impression
General Hospital
Reasoner News
Search for Tomorrow
Truth or Consequences
Seven Keys
Guiding Light
News Reports
1..3
, -
A word
to the wivet
from Lucy-
11:00
-
11:25
11:30
11:45
11:55
LUOTE Wall ftiint
Lucille Ball, star of the popular TV “Lucy Show,” recently bad
the interiors of her homes in Beverly Hills and Palm Spring*
painted with “Lucite” Wall Paint , ’
Lucy knows painting with *Ludte” really means less bother-
MONDAY AFTERNOON
12:00 j
12:151
12:30 1
1:00)
1:25 i
1:30
1:56 i
2:00|
6:25
6:29
6:30
6:55
7:00
MONDAY MORNING
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 241, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 2, 1963, newspaper, June 2, 1963; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1044462/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.