Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #5

Monday 21 January 1963

Britain’s Biggest Ever Heli-Lift Rescue – 283 Flown From Fylingdales White Hell. Four RAF Whirlwinds flew again and again through an 80 mph gale, which at times whipped up a 50 foot curtain of snow, to rescue the men and women from the missile-spotting base on the Yorkshire moors.

The Electrical Trades Union last night called off their power men’s overtime ban. The unofficial go-slow also ended at midnight. But the electricity generating board warned that power cuts would not end immediately because of a “severe” backlog of work.

In a fantastic series of slips, slides and slithers more than fifty of the Monte Carlo car rally’s 298 competitors dropped out yesterday, beaten by Europe’s worst weather for nearly twenty years. Pat Moss, “the best woman driver in the world” remains in contention, driving a Ford Anglia Super.

Peter Ustinov’s play Photo Finish opens on Broadway on 12 February – the birthday of Abraham Lincoln, who was assassinated in his box while watching a play. Said Peter, “I have arranged that all the boxes in the theatre will be empty that night.”

Men are enthusiastic about such things as low-cut dresses and short skirts before they are married to the woman, but once they are married they feel their wives shouldn’t wear such things. Also, a wife is supposed to look pretty after five babies while men can get a paunch at thirty-five.

Television highlights: Dancing Club – learning the Bossa Nova, World in Action, Spin Along.

Radio highlights: Acker Bilk, Let’s Take a Spin.

Weather: mainly dry and very cold with persistent frost. High winds. Outlook – continuing very cold, some snow showers.

Tuesday 22 January 1963

Work is about to begin at the famous United States rocket base at Cape Canaveral, Florida, preparing Moonport One. From this new base US astronauts will blast-off for the Moon. The date of the first moon landing is not yet certain. It could be 1965, but a better guess is 1967.

Workers at the British Spinners Nylon Company are being offered bonuses to learn foreign languages, starting at £10 for one year rising to £75 for four years’ study.

London Airport yesterday had its first glimpse of the VC 10, the giant four-jets-in-the-tail airliner, which will be in operation with British Overseas Airways early next year.

Pat Moss, Britain’s top woman rally driver, dropped out of the Monte Carlo Rally yesterday because of mechanical trouble. She had been driving a Ford Anglia Super. Last night, more than ninety of the 296 starters were out of the rally.

Television highlights: Bookstand, Play of the Week, Background – on the dole.

Radio highlights: Listen to the Band, Moving to Music.

Weather: dry, sunny, very cold. Outlook – no change. Maximum temperature -3c, 27f.

Wednesday 23 January 1963

A spiteful wife put itching powder in her husband’s bed, emptied the bedroom of furniture, put sand, cement and bricks in the room, threw his washing in the mud, threw his dinner on the lawn and emptied his hot water bottle on the bed. She did this because her husband kept her short of money and was jealous. The judge granted the divorce.

Another strike at the trouble-plagued Ford car factory being built at Halewood, near Liverpool. Fifty-four electricians downed tools in protest over allegations of negligence about the mislaying of an electric drill.

Two raw eggs got British driver Peter Proctor to Monte Carlo yesterday in the final stages of the Monte Carlo rally. Proctor put the eggs in the radiator of his Sunbeam Rapier to seal a leak when the car blew a cylinder-head gasket.

A television college with tutors setting homework for viewers is urged by lecturers at Midland universities. The idea is to attract people who left school at fifteen and still want to learn.

Television highlights: I’m Going to Be…A Weather Forecaster, Bucknell’s House – how to decorate a bathroom, The Sky at Night.

Radio highlights: Come Into the Parlour, Teddy and Pearl.

Taunton rugby players, without a game for five weeks, are helping local farmers to bring in stranded sheep. Rescue tally to date – 300 sheep.

Weather: mainly sunny, very cold. Outlook – similar. Maximum temperature – 3c, 27f.

Thursday 24 January 1963

New Crisis – Gas Goes on Ration. Gas rationing brought new shivers to Britain yesterday. Supplies were cut over a wide area because of rising demand and dwindling coal stocks at the gasworks. On a brighter note, the Piccadilly Circus lights will be switched on again later today.

The TUC has decided to back proposals for Britain’s adoption of a decimal currency system.

Popland Goes British – eight of the top ten discs are British while fifteen of the top twenty are homemade.

Dr Blake Donaldson has arrived in Britain with advice for people who are overweight – walk for thirty minutes without stopping every morning, drink six tumblers of water a day and eat nothing but two lamb chops for 378 consecutive meals. Another doctor responded, “This diet could be dangerous.”

Watch the Beatles, a guitar-based instrumental quartet from Liverpool with a style of their own. Their first British disc, Love Me Do, hit the scene last October. It was a success and only this week made an exit from the charts. Now, here they come with their follow-up, Please Please Me – it should please you.

Television highlights: Perspective – is the day of the amateur over? Just Dennis. Roving Report.

Radio highlights: Railway Round-Up. As Time Goes By.

Weather: dry, very cold, fog patches. Outlook – dry and very cold. Temperature -6c, 21f.

Friday 25 January 1963

Business at the Three Magpies, a pub near London Airport, came to a halt for draught beer drinkers because the beer froze solid in the barrels. In 22 degrees of frost, lemonade and ginger beers also froze in the bottles.

Britain’s jobless total soared to a staggering 814,632 – a leap of nearly a quarter of a million since mid-December. The Big Freeze is partly to blame.

The East German Army yesterday put the Twist on its blacklist on the grounds that it is cheap, uncultured, unmilitary and in bad taste.

FIFA announced yesterday that South Africa’s soccer suspension has been lifted. The voting – 11 to 6. The suspension was imposed by FIFA in 1961 because of racial discrimination in South Africa.

Outright winner of the Monte Carlo Rally, for the second year running, is Swedish ace Eric Carlsson driving a Saab.

Television highlights: Gardening Club with Percy Thrower, Ashes and Diamonds – Polish feature film, True Adventure – Harpooning Giant Whales.

Radio highlights: They Are Foreign We Are English (discussion), Alan Freeman.   

Weather: there will not be a general thaw until the last week of February, said long-range weather forecasters last night. Up until then they expect more snow and frost. 


Available for pre-order, Songbird, my novel set in the winter of 1962-63

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Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #4

Wednesday 16 January 1963

A “TV phone” – a telephone fitted with a viewing screen – has been demonstrated to scientists in Milan, Italy.

The BBC’s “Book of Taboos”, a guide for producers and writers, lists lavatories, effeminacy in men and immorality. However, a BBC spokesman said that the BBC always encouraged producers and writers to use their judgement in matters of good taste.

The condition of Hugh Gaitskell, leader of the Labour Party, is now “giving rise to some anxiety.” Despite intensive treatment over the past week, his condition has deteriorated.

Britain was the only industrialised country to show a rise in unemployment in 1962, figures revealed yesterday. Total number of unemployed – 566,158.

Look out for a new star in Z-Cars, BBC 7.55 tonight. He is Colin Welland, 28, who plays Police Constable Graham. At the end of the month, Welland will become the co-driver of Z-Victor Two with PC Lynch (James Ellis).

Television highlights: Wednesday Magazine, including an interview with the new Earl of Buckinghamshire. Robin Hood. Danger Man.

Radio highlights: Parade of the Pops. Disc Club. 

Soccer: FA Cup Third Round – Barnsley 0 Everton 3. Attendance 30,024. Receipts £77,951.

Weather: sleet or snow. Brighter later. Outlook – continuing cold with more snow. Maximum temperature 1c, 34f.

Thursday 17 January 1963

Hospital bulletin on Labour leader, Hugh Gaitskell. Mr Gaitskell’s condition has deteriorated further. The outlook is very grave unless there is some response to treatment during the next twenty-four hours.

Keeping the bed warm is becoming a risky business, a report revealed today. The report stated that fires caused by electric blankets soared from seventy in 1953 to a staggering 1,022 in 1961. More recently manufactured electric blankets have a higher rate of fire incidence than those made earlier.

A thief stole dozens of odd shoes from a car in Manchester yesterday. There wasn’t a complete pair amongst them. 

Television highlights: Crackerjack, Tales of Mystery, Moment for Melody.

Radio highlights: Twelve O’Clock Spin, Smash Hits.

There are only three female solo singers in the top thirty – Julie Grant, Susan Maughan and Maureen Evans. Tipped for the top in Discland – Brenda Lee, Barbra Streisand, Alma Cogan and Nana Mouskouri. 

Football: Arsenal’s third round FA Cup tie against Oxford United has already been postponed five times. Their fixture programme now states that the game will be played in “January 1963”. With more snow forecast, maybe they should have stated “sometime in 1963”.

In Arctic Britain…polar bear Sonja has given birth to a cub at Whipsnade Zoo. The cub’s sex is not yet known.

Weather: mainly dry with periods of sunshine. Very cold. Outlook – very cold, frosty, snow showers. Maximum temperature -1c, 30f.

Friday 18 January 1963

Biggest Blackout Yet Hits Britain. Wide areas of East and South-East England were in darkness for three hours. And an Electricity Board spokesman said it could be just as bad today. The causes: the Big Freeze and the electricity works’ “go-slow” over a pay dispute.

Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell was said to be “dangerously ill” last night. Mr Gaitskell went into hospital two weeks ago with pleurisy and inflammation of the heart tissues.

A private in the Welch Regiment told a court-martial that he usually drank thirty-five glasses of beer when he went out for an “all-night session”. The private, John Hughes, was accused of drunkenness, assault and causing damage to a Berlin bar.

The BBC claim that they have 52% of viewers compared to ITV’s 48%. However, ITV claim to have 57% of viewers compared to the BBC’s 43%. The difference is due to the methods of audience measurement.

Thieves had to abandon a whiskey haul worth thousands of pounds in Stepney, London, because they could not start the getaway lorry.

The BBC censored Charlie Drake’s song My Boomerang Won’t Come Back. They removed the words “oh my gawd” from the Housewives’ Choice radio show introduced by “disc jockey” Kenneth Wolstenholme. However, Charlie Drake will be allowed to sing the uncensored version on TV.

Television highlights: Kanal – Polish film with subtitles. Gardening Club. The Verdict is Yours.

Radio highlights: Listen With Mother. Take Your Partners.

Weather: very cold with snow showers. Outlook – cold with more snow. Maximum temperature -2c, 28f.

Saturday 19 January 1963

Mr Hugh Gaitskell (pictured), the 56-year-old Labour Party leader, died last night. Labour spokesman John Harris said, “A light has gone out of our lives. A spokesman for Sir Winston Churchill said, “Sir Winston is grieved and says Mr Gaitskell’s death is a great loss to the nation.”

One in ten homes in London were blacked out last night by power cuts. The gay lights of the West End cut out at rush-hour time bringing big jams as street lamps and traffic signals failed. 

“Stagger Sunday lunchtime or there will be more power cuts”, the Electricity Board warned last night. There may also be some evening cuts today and tomorrow.

More than 200 vehicles were marooned on Stainmore, Westmorland, yesterday, as blizzards virtually isolated Scotland from England. Many of the drivers abandoned their cars and lorries, and spent the night in a moorland cafe. Vehicles were being frozen in their tracks as their fuel systems iced up.

Summer soccer? “Forget it,” was the verdict of League secretary Alan Hardaker yesterday. He added, “Out of all the managers, fans and sports writers screaming for it, not one has been able to come up with a workable idea for how it could be started.” Meanwhile, the wintry weather decimated the fixture list again this weekend.

Top television: Steptoe and Son soared to sixth place while Hancock dropped to number eighteen. Coronation Street remained at number one.

Television highlights: Grandstand, Juke Box Jury, That Was The Week That Was.

Radio highlights: LP Parade, Pops at the Piano.

Weather: still very cold with snow showers. Strong winds, sometimes reaching gale force. Outlook – continuing very cold. Maximum temperature -2c, 28f.

Sunday 20 January 1963

Football Pools Sensation – they may invent the results next week. A panel of experts will predict the results of postponed matches. If more than thirty games are postponed, the experts will announce their results and the pools will not be void.

There were a record number of soccer postponements in Britain yesterday – fifty-four league games, three more than last Saturday’s worst ever.

A Sheffield University professor predicts that in the not-too-dim future there will be robot maids to do the housework.

Latest American gimmick – pets’ doorways made of triangular polythene set in an aluminium or plywood frame. They can be fitted into walls and ordinary doors. Cats and dogs can pass through the panels, which spring back into position to exclude draughts.

Can I borrow £500 from a building society to buy a car and garage? If you are already buying your home your building society might lend you money to build a garage, but certainly not a car.

In the top twenty this week: Like I Do – Maureen Evans, Up on the Roof – Kenny Lynch, Bobby’s Girl – Susan Maughan.

A dikdook is an amazing thing. Read all about dikdooks and other up-to-date spells and love-potions in tomorrow’s Women’s Mirror, 6d.

Television highlights: Twizzle, Rejoice and Sing, The Avengers.

Radio highlights: Easy Beat, Time for Old Time.

Weather: very cold with biting East winds. More snow. Heavy frost.

Available for pre-order, Songbird, my novel set in the winter of 1962-63

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For Authors

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Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #3

Friday 11 January 1963

Police are hunting a gang of thieves who broke into a former jail, blew a safe and escaped with £1,200 of prison officers’ wages. One police theory is that an old lag helped to plan the raid.

The men’s beauty business has never really got off the ground in Britain. This is why: most men don’t like scents and colognes because it’s just not natural for men to play about with their masculine odour. Eighty percent of men’s scents and colognes are bought by women for men at Christmastime.

Nine percent of the babies born in Birmingham in 1961 were illegitimate, a rise of 2% on 1960.

Television highlights: Choice – consumer programme. Dr Kildare. BBC 1 – 10.50 pm News, Weather, Closedown.

Radio highlights: Smooth ‘n’ Swinging, Go Man Go.

Chalk-up “Summer Holiday” as yet another success in the remarkable story of young Harry Webb who as Cliff Richard has become Britain’s standout challenger to Elvis Presley.

Soccer is heading for another Saturday “whiteout” with only five games still on, at Swindon, West Bromwich, Barnsley, Brighton and Bristol Rovers. 

Weather: very cold with scattered snow showers and sunny periods. Outlook – remaining cold with severe frost and snow. 0c, 32f.

Saturday 12 January 1963

The lights of Britain dimmed last night as voltage cuts hit the entire country. The cuts are due to a work-to-rule by power station workers over pay. The workers want an extra 3d an hour, but electricity chiefs are resisting.

Today is the worst Saturday for soccer since the Football League began seventy-five years ago. Only five of forty-six scheduled matches have a chance of going ahead. For the third Saturday running the football pools have been cancelled. Most horse racing meetings and rugby matches have also been called off. Snowed-up and struggling clubs were offered a £500 loan by the Football Association.

Fresh Food. Prices are still high – potatoes 6d a lb, leeks 1s 3d, swedes 8d, parsnips 10d, mushrooms 1s 3d a quarter.

TV viewers awards: Best Actor – Elvis Presley. Best Actress – Hayley Mills. Best Film – The Young Ones.

Top television shows this week: 1. Coronation Street 2. Hancock 3. Take Your Pick.

Television highlights: Stereophony – no pictures, sound only, Juke Box Jury with Sian Phillips, Pete Murray and Una Stubbs, The Rag Trade.

Radio highlights: Dancing, From Our Own Correspondent.

Weather: snow, continuous frost, colder. Maximum temperature -4c, 25f.

Sunday 13 January 1963

A ten-foot iceberg floated in the Thames near Greenwich yesterday – the eighteenth day of the Big Freeze. Along the French Channel coast the sea froze to depths up to two feet. Coldest spot in Britain – Ross-on-Wye -17c, 2f. All roads in all fifty-three counties were affected by hard-packed snow, or fresh snow and ice.

Electric scissors will be on sale soon. You simply press a button and guide them – £4 15s. Dehydrated hamburgers are now on sale in America. For fast meals simply cook in water and they fatten out. 

The semi-detached mums of Britain’s new young middle class in private housing estates tend to feel lonely, insecure and maybe guilty, so says Miss Sonia Preece, a Health Visitor, in Nursing Times. By contrast, her counterparts in council flats are more easy-going and relaxed. 

New demands for the raising of the school leaving age from fifteen to sixteen will be made when parliament returns next week. This would help to ease the problem of the “Leanagers” – the youngsters who cannot find jobs, but will not stay on at school.

Pat Moss, “The Greatest Woman Driver in the World” reckons that a breaking reaction time of 0.16 of a second is ideal. Any slower, and you are day-dreaming. Any faster, and you are mind-reading.

Sylvia Lamond’s beauty advice: feet – have a wardrobe of shoes of varying heel heights. Change frequently each day from elegant stilettos into medium heels, flatties and slippers. Spray ‘Foot Fresh’, 7s 9d, through your stockings.

Television highlights: Billy Cotton Band Show with Acker Bilk and the Springfields. The Avengers. Football – Ipswich Town Reserves v Nottingham Forest Reserves.

Radio highlights: Naturalist, Juke Box.

Weather: fog patches, then clearer spells. Very cold.

Monday 14 January 1963

Put off Monday wash day until later in the week, said a spokesman for the Electricity Board. The appeal followed a day of power cuts due to the Big Freeze and the power workers’ go-slow. Complete blackouts may be more widespread at morning and evening peak periods.

It was so cold in Ice-Box Britain yesterday that even the sea froze. At Herne Bay, Kent, a mile-long sheet of ice stretched 100 yards out from the beach. At Torquay, Devon, waves froze as they crashed on to the promenade. The RAC said ice or snow was affecting every mile of Britain’s roads. Nearly 100,000 miles of roads have disappeared under the snow.

Shirley Bassey has a problem – what to wear when she sings for President Kennedy. She’s debating between a pale-blue slinky gown, a champagne dress with a long train, and a yellow dress with a fishtail back. “I might buy a new one in New York and wear that,” Shirley said.

Eight weeks into its run, That Was The Week That Was is still receiving complaints. Anglican Canon John Duffield suggested that people should, “Storm the BBC and make them drop this horrible programme.”

Television highlights: Come Dancing, Their Kind of Music, Panorama.

Radio highlights: Hit Parade, Folk Songs of New Zealand.

International Rugby Union: France 6 Scotland 11. Groundsmen set fire to the pitch two hours before kickoff. They sprinkled petrol over the straw then ignited it until the pitch became a giant smoking crepe suzette. 

Weather: below freezing in most areas. Outlook – little change. Maximum temperature -1c, 31f.

Tuesday 15 January 1963

The famous lights of Piccadilly Circus and other West End bright spots went out last night for the first time since the war. The lights were switched off voluntarily in response to Sunday’s appeal by the electricity board to relieve pressure on supplies during the freeze-up and the power men’s go-slow. 

A High Court judge, Mr Justice Winn, said that people have a greater chance of meeting a better type of partner waltzing or doing the slow foxtrot than by doing the twist. However, dance maestro Victor Silvester said, “Socially, the twist is an ideal dance. In fact, if a person doesn’t dance the twist, he is a real square.”

The Flying Scotsman moved out of London’s King’s Cross station yesterday for its last official run. However, the Flying Scotsman service between King’s Cross, London and Edinburgh will continue to run – pulled by diesel locomotives.

From 1 March, manual workers in Britain will be able to have their wages paid by cheque, if they wish.

A recent theory suggests that the person who posed for the Mona Lisa was a man.

Television highlights: International Concert Hall, Father of the Bride, Song Album.

Radio highlights: Pop Inn, Woman’s Hour.

Weather: temperatures above freezing point. Outlook – less cold, but frost at night. Maximum temperature 3c, 37f.

Coming soon, Songbird, my novel set in the winter of 1962-63

https://books2read.com/u/bMqNPG

For Authors

#1 for value with 565,000 readers, The Fussy Librarian has helped my books to reach #1 on over thirty occasions.

A special offer from my publisher and the Fussy Librarian. https://authors.thefussylibrarian.com/?ref=goylake

Don’t forget to use the code goylake20 to claim your discount 🙂

Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #2

Sunday 6 January 1963

We may have coloured roads one day. A reflecting surface, which can be coloured, has been developed in America. The road surface shows up with the same brightness at night as during the day.

National Savings were up 13% on 1961 at £247,000,000. But they fell well short of the 1960 record of £343,400,000.

Dr Adenauer, the West German Chancellor, was 87 yesterday.

The top-selling hat of the season, say the milliners, is the bowler, in soft felts and furs. Women can add a spray of feathers for the “Wicked Lady” look.

The Light and Home Service of the BBC have forty-seven disc programmes this week – that’s 1,937 minutes of records and the essential chat before and after. However, columnist Bernard McElwaine is not happy. “The gramophone record is the most irritating invention since the telephone and the dentist’s drill,” he said.

DIY advice. If you have a door that sticks or won’t stay closed, just tighten the hinge screws. This is often sufficient. When an outside door sticks, it might be necessary to plane the edge or the bottom. But don’t do this in damp weather.

My young daughter was given a large dolls’ house for Christmas. After peering in every room, looking for the people, she asked, “Well, where are they all – watching television?”

Television highlights: Land of Song, Rejoice and Sing, Motor Cycle Scrambling.

Radio highlights: Melody on Strings, Richard Attenborough.

Football: FA Cup Third Round – only three games out of thirty-two played because of the snow: Preston 1 Sunderland 4, Plymouth 1 West Bromwich Albion 5, Tranmere 2 Chelsea 2.

Weather: very cold, snow, frost.

Monday 7 January 1963

Over a thousand trapped and starving animals were rescued from the snow yesterday. More than 100 people took part in the rescue on Dartmoor, Devon. And a new hazard – potholes. The Big Freeze has cracked many roads. A very slow thaw is expected to continue. But there may be more snow tomorrow.

Dozens of families in Hornchurch, Essex only get a two-and-a-half-inch picture. This has been going on for two years and it’s driving the locals crazy. There is insufficient voltage to power their television sets.

Hoover announced that the cost of their Hoovermatic combined washing-machine and spin-dryer was being cut by £6 6s to £82 19s.

Television highlights: University Challenge – Nottingham v Swansea. Discs-A-Go-Go. Leave it to Beaver.

Radio highlights: Folk Songs. A Book at Bedtime.

Two television sketches that drew scores of protest are to go on long-playing record today. The sketches are from That Was The Week That Was. They include an Army officer issuing instructions to his men by mixing Bible quotations with battle orders. And a woman telling his boyfriend that his fly buttons are undone.

Football: So far, 135 matches need to be rearranged. And the League are budgeting for at least one more bad weekend before the end of the season. An extension to the season is planned, but this will not affect the FA Cup Final.

Weather: continuing cold with frost. Outlook – similar.

Tuesday 8 January 1963

Because of the snow, only Sunderland and West Bromwich Albion cleared the FA Cup Third Round hurdle. Nevertheless, the Fourth Round draw went ahead as scheduled.

Safety belts will be compulsory in all cars in France, possibly next year. All the belts must be tested by the French Works Ministry and carry its seal of approval.

A thief stole skis, value £10, from outside the back door of Miss Phyllis Iles’ home in Ashstead, Surrey.

Girdles and bras of man-made elastic will sell at more realistic prices this year. One advantage of this elastic is that it gives light-weight control. Another advantage is that it wears longer.

In furniture, 1963 will bring an ever-increasing swing to the Scandinavian Look, with its stark lines and unpolished woods. Teak will be the mainstay of the Scandinavian Look, and varnished finishes are out.

In the kitchen, non-stick pans will become more popular, now that their special finishes have been perfected.

Eighty-year-old Christopher Stone, the first-ever BBC disc jockey, slipped and cut his face on an icy footpath in Eton, Bucks, high street yesterday.

Television highlights: Bookstand, Tonight with Cliff Michelmore, Treasure Hunt.

Radio highlights: Family Favourites, Big Ben Banjo Band.

Weather: snow showers, very cold. 0c, 32f.

Wednesday 9 January 1963

The threat of power station strikes is still on. If the strikes go ahead, many regions can expect blackouts.

Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell’s condition was improving, the Middlesex Hospital said last night. His four doctors said that he had a more restful day. Mr Gaitskell is suffering from pleurisy and pericarditis.

The bosom is about to make a comeback. designer Marc Bohan of Dior said, “The accent on the bust will be the strongest impact of my line.” The new look will also feature deep necklines and more emphasis on the legs, although hemlines will remain the same – just below the knee. Lipsticks will be bright red and the top fashion colour will be white.

To meet the need for television dinners, furniture manufacturers will be making supper tables 20 inches high. Coffee tables are usually 16 to 18 inches high.

Television highlights: Les Comediens-Mimes de Paris, Look – wildlife series, Cubism and After – modern art.

Radio highlights: Come into the Parlour, The Big ‘O’ Show.

Football: 145 out of 211 fixtures have now been postponed. Sunderland are the only club who have not experienced a postponement.

Weather: scattered snow showers. Outlook – very cold with further snow at times. Maximum temperature 1c, 34f.

Thursday 10 January 1963

The first transatlantic telecast by Relay – the telecommunications satellite that is four-times stronger than Telstar – was a success yesterday. Mr Martin Pulling, the BBC’s assistant director of engineering, predicted around-the-world live TV via satellites within the next five years.

Fiction and Fact. Fiction: “He awoke to find her still asleep beside him, her shining dark hair tousled…her skin soft and gently flushed…a little smile curving her mouth. He leaned over and kissed her and she opened her eyes in renewed wonderment of their love.” Fact: “He awoke to find her still asleep beside him, her dark hair screwed into rollers and tied up in a net…her skin still sploshed with last night’s beauty cream…her mouth wide open. He leaned over and dug her in the ribs and she unglued her eyes and said, ‘S’your turn to make the tea’.”

A father of eight who fell “terribly in love” married his mistress, thus committing bigamy. He was jailed for six months after a hearing at the Old Bailey.

Fights over the blankets, open and closed windows, and where to place the hot-water bottle – couples are being advised to think carefully before taking the marital plunge.

Television highlights: Criss Cross Quiz, Hancock, Amateur Boxing – Scotland v England.

Radio highlights: Have a Go! Railway Roundup.

In the Top Thirty this week: Guitar Man – Duane Eddy, He’s a Rebel – The Crystals, Globetrotter – The Tornados.

Weather: very cold, snow showers. Outlook – no change. 0c, 32f.

Coming soon, Songbird, my novel set in the winter of 1962-63

https://books2read.com/u/bMqNPG

For Authors

#1 for value with 565,000 readers, The Fussy Librarian has helped my books to reach #1 on over thirty occasions.

A special offer from my publisher and the Fussy Librarian. https://authors.thefussylibrarian.com/?ref=goylake

Don’t forget to use the code goylake20 to claim your discount 🙂

Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #1

Tuesday 1 January 1963

Welcome to 1963! The Daily Mirror’s Man of the Year – John Fitzgerald Kennedy.

The Helicopter Heroes of the White Death battled through raging blizzards on mercy missions yesterday. An airlift rescued seventy coach passengers stranded at a Dorset cafe. They rescued twenty elderly people and dropped fodder for thousands of trapped animals.

Thousands of milk bottles are buried under the snow leading to a milk bottle shortage and crisis. Roads and railways are blocked, and villages in the West Country are running out of food.

Hide your braces, Britain’s middle-aged men were told yesterday, and Britain will regain the respect of the world. Mr M K Reid, secretary of the Clothing Manufacturers’ Association, advised older men to ask their teenaged sons for hints on how to build up a wardrobe.

Television sets, radios, gramophones, discs, and cosmetics are about 2s in the pound cheaper this morning because of a cut in purchase tax. Television sets £64 down to £58, radios £15 down to £13 10s, long-player discs at £2 will drop by 4s, cosmetics – 6d off a 5s 6d lipstick and 2s off a 19s 6d bottle of perfume.

Television highlights: International Ski-Jumping from Bavaria, New Year’s Day Concert from Vienna, The 625 Show – talent show featuring The Belltones, The Sunrays, The Honeys and The Eagles.

Radio highlights: Chubby Checker Time, Mystery Playhouse.

Soccer: George Eastham, Arsenal’s £47,500 inside-forward said, “Wage freedom must stay if players are to have incentives to play at the top, even if it means creating a Super League.”

Weather: snow or sleet, strong winds reaching gale force. Outlook – very cold with frost and snow. Maximum temperature 2c, 36f.

Wednesday 2 January 1963

Worst For 82 Years. More Snow To Come. That was the grim picture in southern Britain last night as fresh blizzards swept in from the sea. “The snowfall on Boxing Day will be child’s play compared with this,” said a spokesman from the Meteorological Office.

Dozens of West Country villages cut-off by 20ft snowdrifts face new peril from the approaching blizzards. Roads are blocked and train services will be slashed today. Thousands of factory workers are idle, and there is a threat to the milk supply because of a milk bottle shortage.

The BBC last night claimed a sweeping victory over ITV for its Christmas Day television audiences. BBC statisticians estimate that Billy Smart’s Circus attracted an audience of 20,600,000 – the biggest of the day. The Queen was seen by 20,100,000 on the BBC and 5,400,000 on ITV. Another 9,000,000 heard her speech on sound radio.

Along with woolly tights, furry hats, woolly bloomers, Wellington boots, sleighs, sleds and toboggans, Britain’s shops are running out of woolly vests.

Television highlights: I’m Going To Be…careers advice. West End – variety show. Holidays 1963.

Radio highlights: Teen and Twenty Disc Club, Test Match Cricket from Melbourne.

Football: Birmingham are using a pitch-clearing machine in the hope that their Third Round FA Cup tie with Bury can proceed. The machine’s makers claim that in ten minutes it can clear an area of the pitch that would take twenty-five men four hours.

Weather: more snow in most places. Very cold with strong winds reaching gale force. Outlook – very cold, more snow.

Thursday 3 January 1963

It’s Grim! There’s still no sign of a thaw in shivering Britain. The icy grip will continue until the weekend, at least. Meanwhile, housewives face a food crisis as the Big Freeze hits supplies sending prices soaring. Vegetables are expected to double in price, and the weekend joint may be dearer too.

Cabbage is almost the only green vegetable in the shops. Spouts and cauliflowers have been hit by the snow and those that are available have doubled in price. Potatoes are expected to go up 1d to 5d a Ib.

Britain is having a boom in babies – and that’s official. The number of babies born in Britain has soared from 675,000 a year in the mid-fifties to 842,000 in 1962. Earlier marriages is one explanation for the boom.

Television highlights: Tubby Hayes Plays Standards, Moment for Melody, Gay Cavalier.

Radio highlights: Music While You Work, Use Your Italian.

The Tornados have now sold over 2,000,000 copies of their disc Telstar, and netted royalties of £20,000.

Cliff Richard starts the new year at number one with The Next Time/Bachelor Boy. Seven of the top ten are British artists. The top thirty includes the Beatles at number twenty-one with Love Me Do and the Springfields at number thirty with Island of Dreams.

Weather: more snow in most areas. Very cold. Strong winds. Outlook – similar.

Friday 4 January 1963

Telstar, the American TV satellite in space, is back in business again after a six -week “radiation sickness”. In the four months it sped around Earth, Telstar handled forty-seven Transatlantic telecasts – five of them in colour – and hundreds of phone calls.

Agony Aunt: Johnny writes, “My dad is about my size and for years he has borrowed my shirts, socks, ties and sports jackets. Now, he wants to borrow my best suede shoes. Your advice please.” Jane Adams’ reply, “Put a lock on your wardrobe and the key in your pocket.”

More problems: “I have proposed to my girlfriend 117 times in the past three years and I’m still waiting for a ‘yes’.” Jane’s reply, “Stop proposing for a while and then she may begin to get worried.”

Food: apart from English beef, which is very scarce and expensive, meat supplies are fairly good. Prices – leg of pork, 3s 6d, leg of lamb 3s 10d, chops 4s 6d, sirloin 5s 8d, stewing steak, 4s.

Television highlights: The Woodentops, Richard the Lionheart, Television Playhouse.

Radio highlights: The Night Sky, The Bands Play On.

Football: Alf Ramsey is England’s new manger. He will leave Ipswich Town and take over at the FA on May 1st.

A European conference will be held on the use of drugs in sport. It follows a lap of the Tour de France race, which ended with many cyclists too ill from the effects of “pep pills” to continue.

Temperatures should rise above freezing point today for the first time since Boxing Day. Meanwhile, in Oxfordshire nine-tenths of the roads are unusable, and Gatwick Airport is at a standstill.

Weather: snow, sleet or rain. Outlook – more snow. Maximum temperature 3c, 37f.

Saturday 5 January 1963

He’s amazing! Fabulous! The golden boy of British show business – Cliff Richard. He is Britain’s most popular star, in films and on discs. Now, he’s TV’s singer of the year, topping the Mirror readers’ national awards poll.

Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell returned to hospital yesterday. He was confined to hospital in mid-December. The exact nature of his condition has not been revealed.

There is now one betting shop for every 3,846 people in Britain. Top of the list: London, Cardiff, Warrington, Wigan, and York. Bottom of the list: Plymouth, Exeter and Lincoln.

A total of 21,356 East Germans asked for political asylum in West Berlin in 1962.

Television highlights: The Rag Trade, Weightlifting, Ghost Squad.

Most popular TV programmes this week: 1. Coronation Street 2. Take Your Pick 3. Emergency Ward 10.

Radio highlights: Saturday Club, Twenty Questions.

Today’s football pools have been cancelled, for the second week running. In all, twenty-seven third-round FA Cup ties have been postponed – an all-time record. All major Rugby Union and Rugby League games are off too.

Weather: cold but above freezing. Outlook – uncertain. Maximum temperature 2c, 35f.

Coming soon, Songbird, my novel set in the winter of 1962-63

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