Ken Beaumont and his Sextet
and forecast for farmers and shipping
A gramophone miscellany
' What are we waiting for?'
Talks bv the Bishop of Birmingham the Rt. Rev. J. L. Wilson
4-Peace in our Hearts?
and forecast for farmers and shipping
Australia v. England: last day
Summary by John Arlott , of the London Evening News
From Sydney Cricket Ground
by a doctor
The Westminster Quartet:
Sidney Horwood (counter-tenor)
Harry Barnes (tenor)
William Brown (baritone)
Kenneth Tudor (bass)
John Wolfe (oboe)
Josephine Lee (piano)
Talk by Winnifred Kydd
The speaker recalls childhood holidays on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, where the Micmac and Iroquois tribes roamed long ago and many of the local characters were of mixed French and Indian blood.
HAYDN
Gramophone records of movements from his Theresa Mass
Hark the glad sound, the Saviour comes (BBC Hymn Book 490)
New Every Morning, page 4 Psalm 96 (Broadcast Psalter)
Isaiah 63, vv. 7-17
Come, thou long-expected Jesus (BBC
Hymn Book 30)
Sidney Davey and his Players
and his Orchestra with Barry Kent and Rita Williams
Ludwig Koch discusses with his friend Maxwell Knight some of the varieties of animal expression that he has recorded
4-Animals with Hooves
Produced by Tony Soper
front the ' Pickwick Papers '
V.C. Clinton-Baddeley reads the fourth of a series of five readings from Charles Dickens
Crawford White , cricket correspondent of the News Chronicle, sums up the day's play at Sydney
Sandy Macpherson at the BBC theatre organ
from a canteen at
Barton, Eccles with Charlie Chester
Carole Carr , Ken Dodd
The Jimmy Leach Organolian Quartet
Fred Harries at the piano
Presented by Geoffrey Wheeler
Shipping and general weather forecasts. followed by a detailed forecast for South-East England
(Leader, Reginald Stead )
Conductor, John Hopkins
by Peter Warlock
Tyrley Tyrlow ; Adam lay ybounden; The frost bound wood; The first mercy; Bethlehem Down; Noël sung by Rene Soames (tenor) with Clifton Helliwell (piano)
by P. G. Wodehouse
Adapted as a radio play by Felix Felton and Susan Ashman
Produced by John Gibson
Shipping and general weather forecasts, followed by a detailed forecast for South-East England
Talk by John Williams
Assistant Secretary of the Department of Inter-Church Aid and Service to Refugees of the British Council of Churches
Since the end of the second world war millions of people have been moving about Europe and many of them are still waiting to be settled in camps. The work of the World Council of Churches among these refugees has been considerable. Great Britain has played an honourable part, both in the relief and in the settlement of these people. John Williams has recently returned from a tour of these camps and in this talk he assesses the work that the churches are doing among the refugees.
by Alistair Cooke
Written by and including
Bob Monkhouse and Denis Goodwin with David Nixon
Irene Handl , Pat Coombs
Bob Sharpies and his Music
Produced by Leslie Bridgmont
late weather forecast for land areas