The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 037, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 13, 1983 Page: 3 of 16
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1
3
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Tuesday, December 13, 1983
THE BAYTOWN SUN
IT MAKES
Are you willing to spend a few hours a
week for a wealth of satisfaction?
Then be a Big Brother or Sister !
Big Brothers & Sisters 428-8470
Health Fair Slated
At Hospital Here
GOOD
CENTS!
say the concept is part of a trend
in medicine toward a “wellness’.’
point of view.
“You start out well and stay
well,” Ms. West explains.
“It’s our Christmas gift to the
community,” Ms. Griffith says.
She added that this year’s event is
also hoped to be a rehearsal for an
even bigger event next year
celebrating Gulf Coast’s 25th an-
niversary.
Other scheduled activities in-
clude:
Exercise demonstrations and
teaching; computer assessment
of your health; instructions and
material for colon cancer screen-
ing tests to take home.
Also, weight and height
analysis; diet teaching; radiology
Information will also be demonstration including viewing
available concerning notarized of x-rays and equipment; surgical
consents for medical treatment of suite set-up and information on
children. Unless a child is in a types of surgeries available on an
life-threatening situation, out-patient basis,
medical personnel cannot treat
him without the consent of his counter drug information and
parents, Gulf Coast Hospital samples; poison control informa-
spokeswoman Iva Lee Griffitff ex- tion; diabetic information and
teaching; information on where a
Healthcare Express — an 18- patient’s money goes, and home
wheeler complete with five “talk- health care,
ing computers, a 15-projector
slide show, a robot and a program
designed especially for children Baytown’s new ambulance all
— will be parked in the Gulf Coast day ; a booth sponsored by Bay
parking lot. Area Women’s Center and a sky-
* Registered nurses Tana West diving demonstration at 1:30 p.m.
and Madeleine Franco, who came
up with the idea of the health fair, available.
ByLISAOCKER
' Gulf Coast Hospital’s first an-
\ nual Community Health Fair
Saturday will feature screenings
and tests for all types of diseases
as well as demonstrations and in-
formational booths—/all free to
the public.
The health fair, to be held from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m., will include
blood sugar drawing and
analysis, blood pressure and
sickle cell anemia screenings and
glaucoma and pulmonary func-
tion testing.
Booths to fingerprint children
will also be set up. Parents will be
the only ones allowed copies of the
fingerprints, which will include a
complete profil§ of’the child as
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Other features will be over-the-
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plains.
REMEMBER
BUY IN
BAYTOWN!
mm
Special attractions include:
Life Flight helicopter at noon;
rcvfing
Refreshments will also be
EDITION
K
Coming Dec. %5th j
91-Year-Old Father
Of Public Relations ’
If it con be found,
it's in Baytown!
A HOME OWNED AND OPERATED BANK
Citi*e"f B«nk
Trust Co.
w
Paptoton ftun
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - will be over 65, that’s a problem.”
Without him, the great Caruso
i ’
It’s a problem he’s chosen to
might not have become the toast tackle for theiast years of his life
of the land. Sigmund Freud’s _ an(j a chance to continue to use
work might not have been the uncanny insights and revolu-
translated for American readers tionary methods that helped him
for another decade. change the face of American
His clients included the famous public opinion in the 20th century,
and powerful: -Presidents
Coolidge, Wilson, Hoover and
Eisenhower; Thomas Edison,
Eleanor Roosevelt and the dancer
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Baytown’s Oldest Largest
Hod FrienlHest
m
His method has never been
complicated. “I never visited
newspapers,” he says. “I created
circumstances.”
(OUAL
HOUSING
UNDO
Nijinsky.
Those he rejected were known
for other reasons: Adolf Hitler, . . ,
Gen. Francisco Franco, and dollar field. But when Bernays ar-
former Nicaraguan dictator rived on the scene before World
AnastasioSomoza. War I, there were only press
At 91, Edward L. Bernays, the agents whose reputations were
“father of public relations,” has sometimes unsavory. Opinion
research was unknown.
During his lifetime, public re-
lations has become a multibillion-
The answer to your
Holiday gift problems
a, a
S.
no intention of slowing down.
. “Very little has been done to Bernays perceived at an early
bridge the generational gap,” age that opinion could be molded.
Bernays says over a glass of A bibliography of books and ar-
burgundy in his book-lined Cam- tides commenting on the cam-
bridge study. “When you consider paigns he engineered fills nearly
that by the year 2040, up to 40 pen- 800 pages, and lists more than
cent of the nation’s population 4,000 separate entries.
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77
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School Lunches
iT
SECONDARY
LUNCH - Po boy or
nachos. Choose two of
the following: french
fries, vegetable soup,
carrots, tossed salad
or relish dish. Sweet
potato pie and bever-
ST. JOSEPH
WEDNESDAY
BAYTOWN
BREAKFAST -
Fruit juice, pan-
cakes, butter, syrup
and milk.
LUNCH - Corn dog
or roast beef, mashed
potatoes, corn, green
peas, tossed salad,
bread, milk and choc-
olate pudding.
Turkey
LUNCH
and dressing, green
beans, sweet potato,
biscuit and milk.
a
o
4
GIVE A CAN OF CASH
FOR CHRISTMAS
WE WILL CAN
YOUR MONEY IN ANY
P
V
V
V
%
4
P
CHANNELVIEW
ELEMENTARY
BREAKFAST -
Sausage pattie,
cream gravy, french
fries, angel biscuit,
honey butter and
milk.
LUNCH-
Honemade pizza,
whole kernel corn,
congealed fruit,
vanilla pudding with
whipped topping,
npilk or juice.
■ ■ ■
4
age.
i
¥
DEERPARK
BREAKFAST -
Fruit juice, cin-
namon rolls and
milk.
4
%
%
£
BARBERS HILL
BREAKFAST -
Sausage, biscuit
juice and milk.
LUNCH
french fries, pinto
beans, tossed salad,
bread, milk and fruit
K
m
0
AMOUNT
4
Turkey
LUNCH
and dressing, mash-
ed potatoes, buttered
broccoli, rolls, pump-
kin pie or ice cream.
Fish,
4
K
(For only 50<)
I
4
bar.
1
II
1984 BABY PAGEANT
7
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Beauty Judging
Gala Coronation
♦
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DO YOUR HOLIDAY
BUYING AT
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Trophies-Ribbons-Awanletl
Register Today!
A
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►4— Produced By:
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Rehabilitation Services
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Inc.
12-WmI., D.c.21
NORTH OFFIC1—*
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YOUR HOME OWNED AND OPERATED BANK
or m-
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Citi*e”d ^*»nk
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housing
IINOW
F.D.I.C.
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Baytown’s Oldest. Largest and Friendliest...
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427.5771
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 037, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 13, 1983, newspaper, December 13, 1983; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1153961/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.