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"Everywhere A Sheik Sheik", Episode No. 35 of The Monkees (prod. #4749, aired on NBC September 25, 1967 and April 8, 1968), was repeated @ noon (EDT) on CBS.
“The Spy Who Came In From The Cool” (prod. #4702) first aired @ 7:30 p.m. (EDT) on NBC as the 5th episode of The Monkees.
Sponsored by Kellogg's, the songs featured were "The Kind Of Girl I Could Love" by Michael Nesmith & Roger Atkins, "All The King's Horses" also by Nesmith, "(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone" by Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart, and "Saturday's Child" by David Gates (instead of "Last Train To Clarksville," written by Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, which was credited).
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“Monkee Versus Machine”, Episode No. 3 of The Monkees (prod. #4700, aired on NBC September 26, 1966 and May 22, 1967), was repeated @ noon (EDT) on CBS, with a new song added: "Listen To The Band," written by Michael Nesmith.
"Art, For Monkee's Sake" (prod. #4744) first aired @ 7:30 p.m. (EDT) on NBC as the 37th episode of The Monkees.
Sponsored by Kellogg's, this episode featured "Randy Scouse Git" written by Micky Dolenz and "Daydream Believer" written by John Stewart. This marked the debut appearance of "Daydream Believer" (billed in "Art, For Monkee's Sake"'s end titles as "Day Dream Believer"), which would become The Monkees' third and final visit to the #1 spot on the charts.
“The Spy Who Came In From The Cool”, Episode No. 5 of The Monkees (prod. #4702, aired on NBC October 10, 1966 and June 19, 1967), was repeated @ 1:00 p.m. (EDT) on ABC, with a new song added: "All Alone In The Dark," written by Steven Soles and Ned Albright.