HOMESIDE PICTORIAL
THE CHINA MAIL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 1957.
LOUIS and the Longhair. Trumpeter Louis Arm strong looks politely ecstatic as Norman Del Mar, conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, tries to squeeze out of the famous horn. Mrs Armstrong's satchel-mouthed son was rehearsing with Mr Del Mar for a feeless one-night stand at London's Royal Festival Hall, the proceeds of which were to go to Hungarian relief. (Express)
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IN a room of a public house in Newmarket, 200 youngsters have found a new pastime. They call it Jazz With the Parson. He is their curate the Rev. Charles Cowley, 28 year former member of the Cambridge University Jazz Club. In a cafe one day he found 20 youths sitting round a juke box. "I suggested they mould do some thing constructive, if they wanted jazz, in- stead of aimlessly put- ting pennies in a slot. I offered them a, room." The offer was accepted, and soon it was illeg with young people listen ing to the curate talk of jazz. Mr Cowley shown singing at mlerophone, with some very solid backing. (Ex- press)
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SHEIK Khalifa Alkhalifa, "21-year-old son of the oll rich ruler of Bahrein he gets £3,000,000 a year from dil revenues-is pictured in his London.flat with his tutor, Mr Robert Harrap. A graduate of Oxford and the Army Intelligence Corps, Mr Harrap was chosen from over 40 applicants to teach the Sheik English for a few hours daily. (Express)
IRISH Army v. Irish Republican Army. These Eire troops are pictured in action against a house full of suspects of the Illegal IRA organisation four miles inside the Eire border near Monaghan. The men- 13 in all-were arrested. (Express)
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BRITAIN'S first Hungarian refugee baby. Vech, 19, pictured with her 61b 10oz baby Paula, born in a Sussex hospital, She and her husband, 27-year-old Jons, fted from their home just outside Budapest, and when they reached the Austrian border had to hide for two days, their only nourishment n bottle of wine given them by a peasant, (Express)
THE Pantomime season under way in London. Beryt: Stevens as Dick Whittington, George Formby as Idle Jack, and Jeanne Craig play- ing The Cat, photo- graphed on the stage of the Palace Theatre.
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BELOW: Laurence Harvey as he appears in the male lend in Wycherley's 17th cen- tury comedy, "The Country Wife," which has been revived in London. The play deals with an amorous charac- ter who makes out he has been doctored in order to get on better terms with the wives of his friends. (Express)
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SCHOOLBOY footballer Tony Wardley has been dropped from the Coplestone Road School Ipswich) because his teacher objects to his "Tony Curtis" hair style. Fourteen-year-old Tony, left, back; has been told he will not be picked again until he has "a "proper" haircut. He still plays, however, for the Ali-Ipswich schoola side. (Express)
AB-policemen watch, a postman In Fleet Street, London heart of Britain's national, newspa
world's clears a pillar box after it had been reported that the Irish Republican Army had placed
Cambridge by jy
A TV transmitting unit being removed from a Bristol Syca more helicopter after an airborne television transmission test at Pye radlo firm Present range is
about five. miles, but it is planned develop more of simi-
NANCY
HAD DREAMY THAT YOU KNOCKED OUTWE
SPIKE
OH OH--
DREAMS WALWAYS
TURN OUT: "JUST THE
OPPOSITE
I'M GOING HOME, BUT
FAST
THE Christmas scene in London's Trafalgar Square after the 67ft Christmas tree a gift from the city of Oslo was switched on by Norway's Ambas sador, Mr Per Preben Prebensen. (Express)
By Ernie Bushmiller
ROWNTREES
SMARTIES
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