Wednesday 26 June 1963
Cricket: The Second Test at Lord’s yesterday, on its fifth and final day, achieved the incredible, the nigh impossible. With nerves already on edge, the game boiled to a mighty crescendo. England needed 234 runs for victory. Came the last over with eight runs the margin. Hall to Shackleton. A scrambled single off the second ball – seven wanted for victory.
Allen, a single to leg. Six wanted. Shackleton swipes, misses, starts late for the bye. The ball is hurled to Worrell who whips off the bails. Shackleton run out for four. Enter Colin Cowdrey with his broken arm in plaster. A word to Allen – play safe; I can’t face a ball. Allen jabs at the penultimate delivery. Still six runs to win for England, one wicket to win for the West Indies.
Worrell tells Hall – don’t bowl a no-ball. Hall tears in and puts his heart and soul into the delivery. Allen defends. A draw. A glorious draw. Overcome with excitement, the crowd invades the field. The result was a draw, but the game of cricket was the winner.
A court heard yesterday that toffee bars were used to dope racehorses. One of the doped horses, St Paddy, ran at Ascot. The intention was to slow the horse down, but he won by twenty lengths. Giving evidence, “Michael” said, The dope must have been a goer, not a stopper.” The case continues.
The prices of almost all “pop” records are to go up from Monday. EMI have put up their “single” prices by 5d to 6s 8d. Extended-play records will jump by 8d to 10s 9d. “Pop” long-play discs will go up by 1s 1d to £1 12s. EMI said the increases are due to rising costs. The Pye company is not increasing prices at the moment.
London Transport is now short of 3,000 bus drivers and conductors, despite a 10s wage rise in March. Currently, there are 27,000 busmen in Greater London.
Television highlights: President Kennedy in Europe – four programmes, four hours. Men of Our Time – Mahatma Gandhi. Glamour ‘63.
Radio highlights: Scandinavian Dances. Postal Bingo Show.
Weather: sunny intervals and showers. Outlook – similar. 18c, 64f.
Thursday 27 June 1963
Charles Houghton, the head porter who was coshed when bandits stole £250,000 worth of gold bullion from a London warehouse four weeks ago, has been sacked. Mr Houghton, his wife and two daughters must also leave their flat above the warehouse. They must be out by tomorrow.
Wives who work should think twice about accepting promotion because the additional responsibility makes them irritable. Dr Amy Cohen said, “Over-conscientious women at work take their business worries home with them – and take their home worries to work.”
There’s been a five percent drop in cigarette smoking. Britons now consume 3,000,000 lbs of tobacco a year. This is the first significant drop since 1950. However, cigar and pipe smoking has increased.
After the thrill-packed Lord’s Test Match, a West Indian cricket supporter appeared in court in north London, accused of being drunk and disorderly. The magistrate, Mr Frank Milton told him, “You had reason to celebrate. There has not been a Test Match like this in a hundred years, so you are discharged.”
Is Elvis on the slide? His new disc, Devil in Disguise, will either confirm or deny it. Highest new entry this week – number nineteen, Da Doo Ron Ron by the Crystals.
Television highlights: Don’t Say a Word – gameshow with Michael Medwin and Maxine Audley. Alfred Hitchcock Hour with Robert Redford. News, weather and road-works report.
Radio highlights: Listeners Answer Back. Swinging UK.
Weather: sunny intervals and showers. Outlook – similar. 19c, 66f.
Friday 28 June 1963
Nearly one-third of all households in Britain had the use of a car in 1961. And seven in 100 had the use of two or more cars. The average mileage over one week was 135 miles according to a survey conducted by the Ministry of Transport.
The Conservatives have pledged that the channel ITA 2 will be on the air by 1966. The BBC’s second channel is due on air in April next year, in the London area, and will probably extend to the Midlands by the following year.
The typhoid outbreak has spread to St Thomas’ Hospital, Waterloo. Further cases were also confirmed in the North East and Norwich.
Twenty women in Rome’s telephone exchange fainted yesterday when temperatures climbed into the mid-90s.
Englishmen in their holiday togs are an embarrassment. They should realise that baggy flannels went out with silent films, and tweed jackets and braces are not a sight for the beaches. Undone shirt buttons revealing string vests are also off-putting, and don’t get me started on knotted handkerchiefs worn on sun-sensitive heads.
The New Musical Express’ half-yearly poll places Cliff Richard at number one followed by the Beatles, the Shadows, Gerry and the Pacemakers and the Springfields. Elvis Presley has dropped from number one to sixteenth place.
Stirling Moss, one of the greatest motor racing drivers of all time, failed his motor scooter driving test yesterday. He said, “I am not so much disappointed as frustrated.”
Television highlights: Wimbledon. Robin Hood. Dad, You’re a Square.
Radio highlights: Play – The Mating Season. Continental Melodies.
Weather: showers or rain. Outlook – probably dry. 18c, 64f.
Saturday 29 June 1963
Scientists are trying to talk with dolphins. The scientists claim that the dolphins can say the words “no”, “okay” and “food”. If we learn to talk with dolphins then the scientists believe it will be easier to communicate with any creatures we might find on other planets.
Giving evidence at the Stephen Ward trial, Mandy Rice-Davies told the court that Ward said they ought to get married sometime. She also said that at Ward’s suggestion she entertained gentlemen and, by accident, she broke a two-way mirror that looked into a bedroom from the lounge.
Exclusively for Women: Win an Hillman Imp de Lux. Six new super mini-cars, taxed and insured for a year, to be won. In Balmoral grey this super car could be yours. Details on Monday.
Tennis: this year’s Wimbledon has been the dullest for years. The seeding committee botched their job and seeded the wrong players; the matches, bar the odd exception, have been one-sided, and now the weather has intervened bringing rain, which has descended like a plague on the Championships.
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Television highlights: Juke Box Jury featuring John Lennon. The Winifred Atwell Show. Lucky Stars Summer Spin with the Beatles.
Radio highlights: It’s Latin. Motoring and the Motorist.
Weather: sunshine and showers. Outlook – probably little change. 16c, 61f.
Sunday 30 June 1963
In the Stephen Ward trial, Mandy Rice-Davies told the court that she had “relations” with Lord Astor. Mr James Burge, defending Ward, said to Miss Rice-Davies, “Do you know that Lord Astor has made a statement to the police saying that these allegations of yours are absolutely untrue.” The crowd erupted with laughter when Miss Rice-Davies replied quickly, “Well, he would, wouldn’t he?”
Lord Hailsham angrily lashed out yesterday at the people, who he said, were filling London with “the most extraordinary rumours” associated with the Profumo scandal. London, he said, “Has been filled with the filthiest rumours, seemingly systematically spread, affecting all manner of persons”. He added, “I am neither the man without a head (this was a reference to the Duchess of Argyll divorce), the man in the iron mask, the man who apparently goes about clad only in a Masonic apron, or a visitor to unnamed orgies.”
Housewives who want to aid Britain’s tragic thalidomide babies can now do so by collecting Green Shield Stamps. The Green Shield Stamp Trading Company will give £10,000 in cash in exchange for 15,000 full books of stamps. The stamps are available from a growing number of shops with one stamp given for every sixpence spent.
Music: the sick disc season is here. Following the American trend, the British charts might soon be invaded by songs about brides stranded at the alter because their fiancés have been killed in an accident. Tin Pan Alley has discovered that ghoulish death is a big money-maker.
Television highlights: Coronation of Pope Paul VI. The French Grand Prix from Rheims. Lorna Doone – serial with Jane Merrow as Lorna.
Radio highlights: Music Magazine. The Countryside in June.
Weather: cloudy with heavy rain and thunderstorms.
Monday 1 July 1963
A new do-it-yourself wine craze is sweeping Britain. The are now 164 wine-making clubs. Members are making wine from bananas, primroses, broad beans, marrows, spinach and rose petals. Wine-making sets are selling at 35s.
A female tennis player is being linked with a “black market” ticket racket at Wimbledon. “Miss X” is believed to be the key player in a five-strong syndicate. Players get free books of six tickets. It’s alleged that “Miss X” has bought twenty books at £10 a book, then sold them on to spivs who, at a higher price, sell them to spectators.
London’s most with-it pub is the Thomas a Beckett in the Old Kent Road. There, people like Stanley Baker and Richard Burton drink side by side with taxi drivers and dockers. However, the “Knees Up Mother Brown” days are over. Landlord Tommy Gibbons has installed a swinging band and a juke box which, for a shilling a time, also shows appropriate films.
Handwoven tweed ties with fringed ends are the top neckwear for German men.
Cut Your Own Hair. Penn’s Easytrim is easier and quicker than clippers. It cuts as it combs. For use with either hand. Suitable for gents and ladies. Send 7s 6d to Penn Ltd, Finchley, London.
Personal advertisement: Ursula – I know what has happened. I wish to help you. Write to your old address, Gordon.
Television highlights: Destiny 63 – play about neo-Nazis. The Choice is Yours – popular melodies. What’s New? Inventions and ideas.
Radio highlights: Housewives’ Choice. Top of the Morning.
Weather: showers and bright spells. Outlook – little change. 18c, 64f.
Anticipated pattern of future blog posts: Marian and Robin – every six days, 1963 newspaper digests – every six days.
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