27

HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1936.

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TO-DAY'S RADIO PROGRAMMES

-

BROADCAST BY Z.B.W. ON 355 METRES

1230 to 2.15 p.m.-European pro-

gramme.

12.30 p.m.--A Concert

I p.m.-Local: Time Signal and

Weather Report.

1.03 pm-Songs by Claire Crolza

(Mezzo-Soprano).

1.15 p.m.-Relay; Hong Kong Hotel

Orchestra.

an-

1.30 p.m.-Reuter Press Bulletins. Rugby Press News, Local: Wea- ther forecast, time and nouncements, 1.40 p.m.--Relay: Hong Kong Hotel

Orchestra.

2.15 p.m.-Close down.

4 to 7 pm-Chinese programme. 7 to 11 p.m.-European programme.

7 p.m.-

Military Band Music

Tidworth Tattoo-1934.

L.

BERLIN PROGRAMME

4.55 pm-Call DJQ, DJA, DJB

(German, English). German Folk Song.

p.m.-Chamber Music and Songs

by Max Reger. 3.30 p.m.-News and Economic Res

view in English. 5.45 pm. The German Economie

Situation." Karl Emil Weiss. p.m.-Homeland Evening: "Old

Berlin."

6.15 p.m.-News and Economic Re-

view in German.

7 pm-Concert of Light Music. 8 p.m.--News in English-Sign uf

•DJA.

8.15 p.m-Greetings to our listen-

ers

8.20 p.m.-Concert of Eight Music

(continued).

A POUND A MINUTE

THE ADVANTAGES OF CONCESSIONS

London, May 27. The Postmaster-General

gave some good news yesterday in reply

to a question about radiotelephony. From the first day of July the rates for calls to Canada and the United

THE FREEDOM OF THE SCREEN

SHARP LOOK.OUT RECOMMENDED

London, May 28. There is an increasing interest- in this country in the film that deals with current events at home

States will be reduced. A talk with and abroad. Those who, share it Montreal or New York, for instance, would do well to watch the opern- by day-time will be charged tious of the British Board of Film at the old night rate of twenty- Censors on news reels that report eight, instead of forty, shillings a the widespread interest in the minute; and at any time between cause of peace. The Board's inter- ten o'clock at night and ten o'clock ference with a sequence in the Aila the morning, "Greenwich time.; "March of Time" Blm. to which a and through the whole of Sunday correspondent in the film industry a call to Montreal or New York. calls attention to-day, is not the where the clock is some five hours Arst of its kind. The attempt to behind Greenwich, will coat no stop the showing of the short film more than a pound a minute

"The Peace of Britain" is in recent memory. In the present case cuts THE REDUCTION

have been made in a film dealing. Not ten years

with the work of the League of 1 1927. the day on which the Nations, and with Britain's attitude - radiotelephone service from Lon- to the Italo-Abyssinian war. Por- don to New York was first tlons. recording the demand for the opened to public use, and

the application of stronger sanctions Editor of a certain journal

ex- and

depicting the journey of changed greetings with the pro-

British troopships to the Mediter- v prietor of the "New York Times," ranean have been deleted. p.m.-Woman's Hour: The And

the Correspondent in New Castle of Gehren, as "NSV"-York dictated # message for Recovery Place for the Youth. publication, the cost was not one 9.45 p.m.-"Intermezz!" by Brahms, pound a minute but five. The re-

p.m.-9ign off DJA and DJB

(derm.. Engl.),

$.05 p.m.-Call DJA. DJB. DJN

(Germ. Engl.)

German Folk Song -

Valse des Alouettes (Drigo). Amoretten Tanze (Gung'i). The Bells of St. Malo (Rimamer).10.10 p.m. Greetings to our Listen- Semper Fidelis March Sousa). 7.30 p.m-

From the Studio

ers in India.

9.15 p.m.-News and Economic Re- view in German on DJA, DJB DJN.

A Recital by Elleen Fitzgerald | 9.30

(Violin) and Lilian Quinn (Soprano) accompanied by Lindsay A. Lafford:

PROGRAMME.

1. Violin Solo-

Serenata.-Erico Tosell.

2. Songs

14

Hark! Hark! the Lark.

Schubert.

She shall have music,-Mur-

ray

3. Violin Solo-..

Berceuse de Jocelyn.-Godard 4. Songs

In Summer Fields-Brahms. Sunday-Brahms.

5. Violin Solo-

Midnight Bells.-Heuberger.—

Kreisler.

8 p.m.-Local: Time Signal, Wea- ther Report, Stock Quotations and Announcementa.

p.m.--"Artist's Life"-Waltz (Strauss)

8.03

8.10 p.m.-

!!!

From the Studio

A Pianoforte Recital by Caroline

Braga. F.T.C.L.

PROGRAMME

1. Rondo Capriccioso.—Mendels-

sohn, Op. 14.

14

זי

ago, en January

“PERFECTLY RIDICULOUS”

Lord Cecil. who. with other members of the League of Nations

At the Plano: Wolfgang Brugger, ductions have been made possible Union, has seen both the cut and 10 p.m.-News and Economic Re-by the increase in the use of the the uncut versions, describes the view in English on DJN and inservice. Commerce and friend-deletions as "perfectly ridiculous.":

ship alike have snatched at ali op- Dortunities,

Dutch on DJA. DJB.

10.15 p.m.-To-day in Germany.

Sound Pictures, "

10.30

p.m.-"Fidello." Opera by Ludwig van Beethoven. Act II.

The Station Orchestru.

helm.

12 midnight-Close DJA. BJB. DIN

(German, English)

and remarks that "the ways of censors are inscrutable." Inscru- Last year temporary reductions table they are, and "when, as of in radiotelephone rates over the late, they tend to prevent the ex- Empire were introduced as a Sil-pression on the screen of an atti- tude towards life and internation-

ver Jubilee

concession . during

try dangerous too.

Conductor: · W. Richter-Reich-May." The number of calls in-al affairs widely held in this coun-

creased by more than 70 per cent. In the following month the regular

The Board is a private body, but charge for night calls to Canada is understood to consult Govern- and the United States was reduced The Foreign Office can hardly have ment Departments when in doubt. by nearly a third, and the rates been the Inspiration of these cuts. all over the Empire were lowered.

RADIO MANILA

At Christmas came another tem- 5.30 a.m.Breakfast Hour of Newa

porary concession for day and and Music-English and Span-night conversation with the coun- ish Current Events and Vaude- tries of the Empire; it was com ville of the Air, conducted by pletely successful. Experiments in Don Alva, Morning Exercises

the reduction of charges have all by Prof. G.T. Suva, of the In-resulted in the expected increase sular Life Assurance Co.

7 a.m.-Sign On.

9.30 a.m.-Nielson Financial

view and Musical Varieties. 11.15 am-Sign' off,

Re-

for the film is American in origin,

has already been shown in five, thousand picture-houses in the

its original shape elsewhere than in United States, and will be issued in

Britain whatever the Board may say. The excisions are deemed good for the British film-goer. But a Board that acts in concert with a. Government that freely uses the fm for its own propaganda has poor case for deciding what so- Alms that come under its review: cial causes shall be served by the and there dispatched a boy to New and its future activities in this field York. The post was too Common- should be closely watched by those

of use which makes reduction a sound business measure..

About thirty years ago an Am- ferican in London, impatient to 2.30 p.m.-Nielson Financial Re-District Messenger office and then greet his lady love, went into a

view and Musical Varieties. 3.45 pm-8ign Of,

2. Hunting Song-Mendelsson 6 p.m.-Sunset Dance Programme alace; the telegraph too imper- who are concerned about peace.

Op. 19.

3. Lost Happiness-Mendelssohn,

Op. 38.

4. Le petit are blanc (Little

White Donkey)-Ibert

5. Rococo Palmgren 8.30 p.m.

A Relay from Daventry

8.30 p.m.--News Bulletin and An- nouncements (Copyright by Reuter),

8.50 p.m.-The Lightweight "T.T. Race. A running commentary by four commentators on the Lightweight International Au- to-Cycle Tourist Trophy Ruce.

from the Isle of Man. At the Grand Stand, Graham Walker and Victor Smythe, At Creg- ba-ba, George A. Allen. At the Hairpin Bend James Tovey. 9.15 p.m.-

Variety Items

Instrumental-Kohala March.--

Frank Ferera

and.... John Paalubl. Vocal Duets-Let's Lay our heaas together ("ll Darling"),

I'd do the most extraordinary

things

Darling"").

Frances Day" and Arthur Riscoe,

Instrumental--Waltz Medley.-

Harry Chapman (Harp) and his Music Lovers.

Vocal-In the Middle of a Kiss-

Connie Boswell

Organ

Request

Solos-Dixon Medley-Reginald Dixon..

9.40 p.m.-

A

From the Stadlo

Recital by Edgar Warner (Tenor) accompanied by Lind- say A. Lafford..

"Five'. Song of the Hebrides" as collected. edited, translated. and arranged for voice and pianoforte by Marjory Ken- nedy-Fraser and Kenneth Macleod.

PROGRAMME

1. An Eriskay Love Lilt.

2. In. Hebrid Seas.

3. A Fairy's Love Song.

4. A Hebridean Pirate's Sea-

Reivers Song.

5. Kishmul's Galley.

10. p.m. Big Ben Izom Daventry.

Dance Music.

11 pm-Close, down.

by the Lyrte Orchestra,

6.20 p.m.-Spanish Informational

6.35 p.m.-English

Period.

Period

Informational

6.55 pm-Stock quotations, through the courtesy of Swan, Culbert. son and Pritz

sonal. To-day such a one would about freedom of expression in the almost certainly be content to book Alm, and about the practical value a call at twenty-eight shillings of the news reels that we see. a minute if twenty shillings seem-.)

ed unworthy and talk to her --

and hear her very voice. And it rates gives a first-rate opportunity would seem to him almost a mat- for pressing him to reduce certain 7 p.m.-La Insular Cigar and Ciga-ter of course. We have grown used ather charges in his Department. rette Factory presents "Aires to the marvel. In 1902 the dawn Major Tryon needs no telling whien Filipinos," with Juan Silos, Jr., of radiotelegraphy awoke little is the most desired, and the most and his String Ensemble. public curiosity. Since then inven- likely, according to his own experl- tion, has raced, ahead so far that ence, to result in the increase of we take the yet more marvellous business which means a larger pro-

Guest Artist: Lulu Zamora and Gloria Apostol.

7.20 p.m.-"Rincon Español" fea- radiotelephony for granted, and fit on the lower scale than on the

turing Ramon Estella.

are complacently awaiting radio-higher. "television. And

7.35 p.m.-Symphonic Interlude. 7.45 pm-tzalde y Cla presents

Dalisay Aldapa, soprano.

8 p-To be announced, 8.15 p.m.-"Apo on the Air" spon- sored by the Cebu Portland Cement Company.

any reflections

that may occur, as we ring off after

iway?

an easy chat with Ontario or Cape- “It may be cruel to tell you, but town. Wellington or Bombay. are

at the party last night your sister not likely to ask the capital promised, to become my wife. Will point-our determination to get you forgive me for taking her these liberties as cheap as ever we can. His Majesty's Foat-Master- General is the last man in the world likely to be under any llu- sion about gratitude and content- Wille: "Pa, what is a stump- his ment. Every concession raises speaker?TM

8.30 p.m.-Basque Presentation, 8.45 pm-8tock Quetapops and

Local Market Reports.

9, p.m.-N.E.P.A. Programme. 9.30 p.m.-Tirso Cruz and

Manila Hotel Orchestra.

F

10 pm-Sign Of..

"Forgive you? Why, man. that's what the party was for."

-

clamour for more; and, his promis- Pa: "A politician who pours ba ed reduction of the radiotelephone hana oil un troubled voters."

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BRANDY

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