Radio and television mirror (Nov 1939-Apr 1940)

Record Details:

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« p ■ Bob wakes baby Cathy up for a minute when he gets home, but they really have fun together in the daytime, after Bob has risen, put on old clothes, and had breakfast about one o'clock. I i \ m t. BftS^rfsB -' 1 1 ■ This is part of the routine too. June wants to go back to sleep; Bob wants to read the paper. (But June usually wins.) PICTURE building a home around a husband who leaves for work at six in the evening and gets home anywhere from 3 A.M. on through the wee hours! What to do about entertaining friends — about going out together — about sitting home and enjoying each other's company? Those were the problems that faced pretty, red-headed June Kuhn when, two years ago, she became the bride of Bob Crosby, whose Camel Caravan dance programs are heard Saturday nights on NBC. That she solved them and succeeded in making a perfect home, a beautiful marriage, and an idyllic love story come true, is a tribute to the common sense of a girl who won't be 21 until her next birthday. Two years ago she was only a slim, lovely undergraduate at Sarah Lawrence College, a smart girls' school in Bronxville, New York — a girl with text-books under her arm, a love of life and swing (Continued on page 51) A* ■ Bob can usually be counted on to accompany June on shopping trips (left) and he is always the one who selects the steaks. ■ Dinner together is one of the big events of' the day. Right afterwards, Bob rushes to his work at the Hotel New Yorker. 27