Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #8

Tuesday 5 February 1963

Fierce new blizzards last night threatened to block all roads to the West Country. They followed a day in which widespread snowfalls, six inches deep, brought fresh chaos to the roads in many areas. Road conditions are described as bad to worse to appalling. 

Four out of five families now own a television set. There are six million private cars, and two million motorbikes and scooters on the roads. More than five million of us go dancing every week in 4,000 dance halls.

Nearly 30,000,000 people take a holiday away from home – 4,000,000 go abroad. The Pony Club now has 60,000 members and 700 branches. Show jumping is drawing increasing crowds at 1,000 annual shows with £100,000 in prize money.

Two out of three teenagers go to the cinema at least once a week. Eighty million records a year are sold, 25% of them classical. Five hundred and forty-eight library authorities provide more than 40,000 libraries with 75,000,000 books.

One family in four lives in a post-war house. One in three married women go out to work. Fewer than 1% of households have a resident servant. Nineteen million people are part-time gardeners.

Since 1951, the population has risen by two and a half million. The ratio of women to men is 107 – 100. For the over seventies the ratio is five to three.

Television highlights: Sing a Sing of Sixpence – the story of music hall. Living Today – Holidays on £50. Bookstand – the world of books.

Radio highlights: Dancing Party. Time For Laughter.

Weather: very cold with snow at times, heavy in places. Outlook – continuing very cold with snow. Maximum temperature 1c, 34f.


Wednesday 6 February 1963

New England football manger Alf Ramsey’s first squad – see below.

An imported English secretary is fast becoming the new status-symbol for American businessmen. A girl’s shorthand and typing are not as important as her accent, reported the Wall Street Journal.

An early thaw in the West Country yesterday changed its mind and became a raging blizzard. Last night, conditions in the area were as bad as ever. Villages are cut off, motorists are stranded, and some people have no bread after sledge teams failed to get through.

James Crossen, 37, phoned a Glasgow hospital to say his wife was going to have a baby. Later, the couple were taken to the hospital – in the same ambulance. For on the way home from the call box, Mr Crossen’s car collided with a lorry. He was treated for head injuries. His wife was taken to the maternity ward.

Two workmen dug up a pair of Stone Age teeth yesterday. The teeth belonged to a mammoth, and were eight inches long. The men were digging a hole for a fuel tank at Guildford telephone exchange, Surrey.

To most people, France is not represented by General de Gaulle, but by Brigitte Bardot. Clothes, wine and perfumes apart, she is France’s biggest export.

Television highlights: Z Cars, My Friend Flicka, International Detective.

Radio highlights: Round Britain Quiz, Meet the Eagles (a pop band, but not the 1970s version).

Weather: very cold with snow. Outlook – a thaw probably spreading to most districts. Maximum temperature 1c, 34f.

Thursday 7 February 1963

Great Thaw Starts – So Do The Floods. As the 43-day grip of ice and snow was breaking, the flood waters were pouring over the roads of Devon, Cornwall and Wales. Torrential rain added to the floods. Many roads are now rivers.

The government is backing more research into the hovercraft – the revolutionary craft that floats on a cushion of air. A five-and-a-half ton model, HD1, will be built soon and tested on Southampton Water.

Four miners were released yesterday after a roof fall had trapped them for several hours 1,800 feet underground at Trelewis, Glamorgan. One man was badly injured. Last night, the body of a fifth man was found by rescue teams.

An entire department store was cleaned out by raiders yesterday. It’s believed that the gang spent four hours sorting through fur coats, underwear, radio sets, clocks and watches at D. B. Evans store in Holloway, London. They packed their loot – estimated value £20,000 – into lorries and drove away unseen. 

The BBC is asking for an increase in the £4-a-year combined tv and radio licence. The BBC say if they have an increase to £5 this year they can get through the 1960s without asking for a £6 licence.

Television highlights: European Figure Skating Championships, Lassie, Discs A-Go-Go.

Radio highlights: Folk Songs. Any Answers?

Weather: Rain, milder than of late. Outlook – rain, bright spells. Maximum temperature 4c, 39f.

Friday 8 February 1963

Troops, helicopters and army “Ducks” stood by on a flood alert in the West Country last night as rivers, swollen by the thaw, rose bank high. Many rivers in Devon are expected to burst their banks today. In Carmarthen, Wales, fields are under water.

Britain’s longest running television series, Emergency Ward Ten, makes its 574th appearance on ITV tonight. The series began in 1957, and prides itself on being realistic. The only item faked is the blood. “We use gravy,” an ATV official said last night. “We find that it flows at just the right speed.”

“Concerned” from Sussex writes, “My husband refuses to have a TV because he reckons that the children would waste their time watching tripe.” Jane Adams’ reply, “To deprive your children of television is to shut them off from a source of education, and a slice of life.”

“Donald” writes, “On our date, I behaved like a gentleman and did not kiss my girlfriend goodnight. She has behaved indifferently towards me ever since.” Jane Adams’ reply, “Clearly, this girl expected you to kiss her goodnight, and behave like a gentleman.”

Television highlights: Let’s Imagine – Flying Saucers. Dr Kildare. Bicycle Thieves – Italian Feature Film.

Radio highlights: German for Beginners. Play: The American Dream.

The average height of men in Britain is 5’ 71/2”.

Cardiff City’s Third Round FA Cup tie against Charlton Athletic has been postponed for the eighth time.

Weather: steady thaw. Rain at times. Outlook – similar. Maximum temperature 4c, 39f.

Saturday 9 February 1963

Soccer’s snowed-up 1962/63 season might run into June. So far, over 300 games have been postponed. Cricket is sure to protest, but it looks as if there will now be a major battle between the sports. Also, some football and cricket clubs share the same ground, so that issue also needs to be addressed.

The Scottish Football League is considering switching its season to run from March to November. The English Football League has already rejected a similar plan.

Due to snow, ice and floods only eleven football matches will be played this weekend. The Pools Panel will sit for the third week running, chaired by Group-Captain Douglas Bader. 

Traffic was held up at London’s Marble Arch yesterday when a lorry overturned and scattered thousands of whiskey bottles over the road. But not a drop was spilled – the bottles were empty.

The vegetable situation is still grim with greens very poor. Old potatoes are 6d a lb, sprouts are 10d, leeks 1s 6d, old carrots 1s, swedes 8d and mushrooms 1s 6d a quarter.

Top three TV this week: The Prime Minister’s Broadcast, Coronation Street, Steptoe and Son.

Television highlights: Grandstand, including the Pools Panel results. The Rag Trade. Ghost Squad.

Radio highlights: Twenty Questions. Top Discs.

Weather: fog patches, rain. Outlook – similar. Maximum temperature 5c, 41f.

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

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Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #7

Thursday 31 January 1963

A mystery pong had hundreds of people sniffing around Mayfair yesterday. Police diverted traffic while gas men investigated. The pong lasted four hours. A Gas Board spokesman said, “There is no proof that it was a gas leek.”

Two bandits posing as policemen hijacked a mail van yesterday. The gang got away with £20,250, but only £250 of it – in fifty registered packets – is “ready” money. Police believe that the bandits’ helmets were hired from a stage props firm.

Disc sales are going “boom, boom, boom”. In the first eleven months of 1962 sales totalled more than £15,000,000. The complete 1961 figures were just over £16,000,000. December’s 1962 figures, always a high month, are expected to set a new summit. One reason for the increase in sales is that Britain is now producing a better type of pop. LP sales are rising too. So are sales of classical records. But pop is the thing that is really keeping the business ticking.

Record charts: number one – Diamonds by Jet Harris and Tony Meehan. New entries – at number sixteen, A Taste of Honey by Acker Bilk, and at number twenty-one, Please Please Me by the Beatles.

The “Lit-Up Lodger”, that’s what we call the television in our house.

Television highlights: Tales of Mystery, Crackerjack, Winifred Atwell Show.

Radio highlights: Pops at the Piano, Dresden in the 1920s.

Weather: cloudy with snow showers. Frost. Outlook – similar. Maximum temperature 0c, 32f.

Friday 1 February 1963

A big row between Canada and America blew up last night. “Canada will not be pushed around,” the Canadian premier Mr John Diefenbaker told parliament in Ottawa. The argument is over criticism of Canada’s defences.

Scenes from a club in Amsterdam where men dance with men, and women dance with women, will be shown on BBC television, on Panorama. However, the men will not be shown dancing together. A BBC spokesman said, “The subject will be treated as a serious topic for discussion.”

New houses built in Britain last year totalled 305,428. This is 9,366 more than were finished the year before.

Britain is drinking more wine and beer. And although we are smoking less we are spending more on tobacco. There was a drop in Pools betting, and during the year Customs caught 1,813 smugglers and seized watches worth £184,000.

A man who gave a policeman a V for victory sign was cleared of making an indecent gesture at court yesterday. The case was dismissed because under by-laws a V-sign must cause annoyance before it becomes indecent, and the policeman was not annoyed.

Television highlights: Captain Pugwash. Mantovani. French Feature Film – Hiroshima Mon Amour. 

Radio highlights: Eat No Meat – investigation into vegetarianism. Topical Tunes.

Taunton Rugby Club, whose players have not played for six weeks because of the Big Freeze, will play on the sands at Weston-Super-Mare. 

Weather: cloudy. Outlook – less cold. Maximum temperature 1c, 35f.

Saturday 2 February 1963

Britain’s On Ice Again. Back in the ice-box goes Britain. The brief thaw will be replaced by more freezing weather and snow. Some areas, including south Wales, have seen their heaviest snowfall since the Arctic weather began. One bright spot – with more coal at the power stations, power cuts are unlikely.

The deep-freeze that has refrigerated Britain’s outdoor sport has so far cost about £200,000,000. To date, 49 horse-racing meetings have been called off, more than 300 football games postponed, while some rugby teams haven’t played for six weeks.

The vegetable situation is still grim. Greens are very frosted and prices are very high. For a good-sized cauliflower you will have to pay up to 3s 6d. Some cabbages are reasonably priced at 9d, sprouts at 1s 2d per lb.

Chocolates and chocolate biscuits made by Cadbury’s will cost more from Monday. A 1/2lb box of Milk Tray will cost 3s 8d – 2d extra – while Turkish Delight will go up 2d to 2s 8d.

Three rounds of the FA Cup will have to be played in twelve days instead of the usual six weeks. Because of the Big Freeze, nineteen Third Round ties are still undecided. Managers are not happy about the fixture congestion. And the latest plan does not take into account the possibility of replays.

Television highlights: Bugs Bunny. Juke Box Jury with Sean Connery and Diana Dors. That Was The Week That Was. 

Radio highlights: Saturday Club. Recent Releases.

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

Sunday 3 February 1963

A prelude to the Profumo Affair. What’s going on here? 🤔 See below ⬇️

Speed limits for several classes of vehicles will be raised from next Saturday. Goods vehicles will be able to go up to 40mph instead of 30mph, but they will still have to keep to 30 mph in built-up areas.

Scientists are working on sunglasses that darken in bright sunlight and automatically lighten again when the sun goes in. They coat the glasses with a light-sensitive dye, which might also be used to coat shop windows from the sun’s glare.

The smallest transistor radio in the world, 1 1/2 inches square and 1/2 inch deep, has been developed by Standard Ruby. It costs £21, runs on seven transistors, and has a plug-in earphone.

Plumbers will soon be able to clear blocked sinks in seconds with a pressure gun that blows blockages clear. The gun can be recharged with a bicycle pump.

Television highlights: Indoor Soccer, Living With Animals, Maverick.

Radio highlights: Billy Cotton, Jukebox.

Only four English football league games were played this weekend. All matches in Division One and Division Two were postponed. Results: Division Three – Brighton 0 Halifax 1, Swindon 1 Crystal Palace 0. Division Four – Oldham 5 Rochdale 1, Torquay 2 Hartlepool 0.

Weather: more snow. Very cold. Heavy frost.

Monday 4 February 1963

No female on television, with the possible exception of That Was The Week That Was’ Millicent Martin, has shattered the conventional image of her sex as devastatingly as tawny-haired Honor Blackman. As Cathy Gale in The Avengers, Miss Blackman is creating a new role model for women.

A vicar writes: “I would much rather the young people of my church visit a pub, spend time over a drink and a sandwich, than visit a cafe. Trouble begins in cafes when Teddy boys and girls sit for hours over a cup of coffee, having nothing more interesting to do. I’m quite willing to go to a pub, but you won’t get me in one of those sleazy cafes.”

Married life is not a piece of cake. Some basic advice for a happy marriage – be independent of both sets of in-laws; a young father must realise that his wife’s yearning for a job does not mean that she is fed up with her marriage or her home; some escape, even if it’s only a visit to the local library, is vital for a wife’s happiness.

Television highlights: Blue Peter. What’s My Line? World in Action.

The BBC received forty-seven complaints about their satirical programme That Was The Week That Was. However, 113 people rang up to say that they liked it.

Radio highlights: Housewives’ Choice. Woman’s Hour.

Happiest soccer club in the country – Ivanhoe of the Derby Welfare League. They beat West Hallam 4 – 1 in a cup tie after three months and seven attempts to resolve the contest.

Weather: very cold with snow. Frost at night. Outlook – little change. Maximum temperature 1c, 34f.

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 #6

Saturday 26 January 1963

The Freeze Latest – Weekend temperatures will not go much over freezing point and there will be severe frost at night. The slight thaw in the north is not spreading south yet. The outlook remains bleak.

All over Britain the near-Arctic conditions continued to play havoc yesterday. At Preston, Lancashire householders were rationed to a gallon of water per head from water carts, which toured the streets. Many areas were affected by power cuts and at Cambridge University, for the first time, girls were given permission to wear slacks under their academic gowns.

Growers have been tackling the frozen earth with crowbars and pneumatic drills to get fresh vegetables to the market. Prices are out of this world and you have to look carefully for unfrosted greens.

Agony Aunt: Question – I want my girlfriend to have a truth-drug test so that I can check on her past life. She is willing to undergo such a test. Where can it be carried out? Jane Adams’ reply – My advice to your girlfriend is to drop you like a hot brick.

Agony Aunt: Question – I have not yet had the courage to tell my future fiancée that I wear a wig. Are most women revolted at the thought of living with a man who wears a wig? Jane Adams’ reply – A woman in love with a man will not give a fig for his wig. Tell your girlfriend the truth at the first opportunity.

Television highlights: Juke Box Jury with Jane Asher, Pete Murray and Anna Neagle. Saturday Sportstime including the Pools Panel results. Chess Masterpieces.

Radio highlights: Desert Island Discs. Hit Parade.

Weather: still very cold. Outlook – little change. Maximum temperature -1c, 30f.

Sunday 27 January 1963

At least 50,000 people want to murder the president of the United States. President John F. Kennedy receives 1,500 obscene or threatening letters every month. America’s security men are full of wonder at the lack of “artillery” around Britain’s Queen, and that a possible assassination attempt is not taken more seriously.

Pat Moss, “the best female driver in the world”, offers some advice to motorists combating the Big Freeze: Frozen door locks – heat the key with a match or cigarette lighter. Iced windows – use a de-icing spray, a plastic scraper or a cloth dipped in anti-freeze. Wheel spin – if you can’t pull away on the ice, try making your own chains from rope, and fix them to the driving wheels. Also, sprinkle some sand or scrape some dirt from the underside of your wings and spread that under the wheels.

A restaurant in London’s West End has employed an artist to write and draw rude messages on the men’s lavatory walls…to save customers the trouble.

Mount a big mirror on the wall of a tiny hall and it will double the apparent size. Place it so that it catches the light from a window and it will also provide free illumination.

Television highlights: Pinky and Perky, The Saint, The Avengers.

Radio highlights: Tune a Minute, Top Twenty.

Soccer: the Pools Panel sat for the first time yesterday and invented 38 results. There will be no jackpot. For 24 points (eight score draws) on your coupon, you are likely to receive £3,750.

Weather: dry with some sunshine. Temperature 4c, 40f, the highest London temperature since 22 December 1962.

Monday 28 January 1963

It’s official – Britain’s women investors now outnumber the men, by 1,104,000 to 982,000. And they have a bigger stake on the Stock Exchange. The reasons – more women go out to work than ever before. Also, women live longer (five years on average) so, many of them inherit their husband’s savings.

Women are wild about the new smooth heroes, including Sean Connery, who is booked to play James Bond for seven years, and Simon (the Saint) Templar, John Steed of The Avengers, and Mike Strait from Man of the World, who share a tv audience of 30,000,000 each week.

A 16lb 5oz baby boy was born yesterday to Mrs Desmond Lyttle of Kempsey, New South Wales.

A daring team of thieves collected more than £40,000 worth of art treasures on the weekend in a raid on one of Britain’s showpiece stately homes – Buxted Park, Sussex. Detectives believe that the raiders were art experts, and that they could find some of the art treasures “too hot to handle”.

Television highlights: Panorama – America’s Playboy clubs. World in Action. Moment for Melody.

Radio highlights: The Archeologist. Calling the Tune.

Weather: cold with fog patches. Outlook – little change. Maximum temperature 3c, 37f.

Tuesday 29 January 1963

Two Killed in Soho Gun Fight. “Tony the Greek” shot in his club. The shooting happened in an upstairs room of the softly-lit club. It is believed there was a quarrel over several women. Detectives are questioning several people at the club.

“How does Britain stay at the top? Should we become the fifty-first state of the USA? The physical distance is formidable and the psychological objections are worse. No, we are Europeans. We live in Europe. Britain’s destiny lies as a leading partner in the largest association of the most intelligent, most skilled, most cultured people the world has ever seen grouped together.” – Woodrow Wyatt, MP.

France will be the first country in the world to operate a rocket mail service. They will shoot mail from the Riviera to Corsica, a distance of fifty miles. The rocket will be controlled by radio and have an undercarriage for landing on a runway.

Football: because of the Big Freeze, the season will be extended by three weeks. The fixtures will be played on Saturday evenings, to avoid clashing with the cricket.

Television Highlights: The World of Jacqueline Kennedy, No Hiding Place, Song Album.

Radio Highlights: People of the Railways, Topical Tunes.

Weather: mainly dry. Some frost and fog. Maximum temperature 3c, 37f.

Wednesday 30 January 1963

General de Gaulle has finally sabotaged Britain’s efforts to join the Common Market. Five of the six countries in the European Community – Belgium, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg and West Germany – supported Britain’s entry, but de Gaulle said, non! De Gaulle can momentarily prevent progress, but he will not prevent the eventual triumph.

Scotland Yard detectives probing the double shooting in Soho are looking for gangsters behind a “guns for sale” racket. One theory is that “Big Tony” Mella, aka “Tony the Greek”, and his manager Alfred Melvin shot each other in an argument over money.

Enough explosives to crack a hundred safes were stolen yesterday from an army depot. The haul – 35lbs of plastic explosives, 65 detonators and 40ft of safety fuse – were in the armoury at the Green Jackets depot, Winchester, Hampshire.

ITV may get a second channel, but only in the main population areas such as London, the Midlands and the North. Currently, there are not enough advertisements to support two ITV channels throughout the country.

Television highlights: I’m Going to Be…a Musician, careers advice. The Flowerpot Men. Tonight in Person, music with the Limeliters and Nana Mouskouri.

Radio highlights: Jazz. Postal Bingo.

Weather: rain or sleet turning to snow. Colder. Outlook – very cold, day temperatures near freezing.

Available for pre-order, 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

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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

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 #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

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