Neville Meale at the organ of the Granada, Clapham Junction
and forecast for farmers and shipping
Southern Serenade Orchestra
Directed by Lou Whiteson
Reading, with comment, on the story of Abraham (Genesis 22)
and forecast for farmers and shipping
A gramophone miscellany
and his Band
Records of Bill Johnson
Trevor Watkins (tenor)
From glory to glory advancing (S.P. 496)
New Every Morning (revised) 102
Psalm 34 (Broadcast Psalter)
Acts 9. vv. 32-42
How bright these glorious spirits shine! (A. and M. 438: S.P. 207)
Marcel Gardner and his Serenade Orchestra
Conductor, Mansel Thomas
and forecast for farmers and shipping
Lunchtime scoreboard
Foden's Motor Works Band Conductor, Fred Mortimer
(Leader, Paul Beard )
Conducted by Constant Lambert
and forecast for farmers and shipping
Dr. Stephen Taylor, M.P. , gives his impressions of what he heard and saw in Parliament
featuring
Bernard Braden and Barbara Kelly
Howard Marion-Crawford
Alfred Marks
Daphne Anderson
Marcia Owen
The Men About Town
Peter Yorke and his Concert Orchestra and a visiting celebrity
Script by the Men About Town,
Peter Myers , and Lionel Harris
Production by Roy Speer
by Dodie Smith
Adapted and produced by Martyn C. Webster
'To the family - that dear octopus from whose tentacles we never quite escape nor, in our inmost hearts, ever quite wish to.' So Nicholas Randolph ends his toast on the evening of his parents' golden wedding day. They are all there: Charles and Dora, placid in 'that unhoped serene that men call age,' their four children, Hilda, Margery, Cynthia, and Nicholas, and their four grandchildren. Even a great-grandson shrilly announces his presence now and then from a room upstairs. They are quite ordinary people - just like you and me and the family at The Cedars across the way - and the same things happen to them as have been happening to such people from generation to generation: the old looking back on life, the young in the thick of it, and the very young knowing little about life and caring less. Quite ordinary people: the only difference is that ordinary people become drama when they are touched by a hand of extraordinary skill. (Stephen Williams)
At 9.15