Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

WIRELESS BROADCASTING

TO-DAY'S PROGRAMMES 4YA. Dunedin. — 7 a.m.: Chimes. Breakfast session, fl: Close down. 10: Recordings 10.15 Devotional service. 10.30: Recordings 10.50- A talk to women by "Margaret." Recordings. 12 noon: Lunch music. (Weather foiecast at I p.m.) 2 p.m.: Recordings. 3.30: Sports results Classical music. (Weather and frost forecast at 4.) 4.30 Light music 5- Children's session. 6: Dinner music. 7* Rebroadcast from 2YA of Government and overseas news. 7.10; News and reports. 7.30: Talk by a medical practitioner, "Holiday Health Hints." 8: Chimes. " Special recordings—The Russian Cathedral Choir sings "The Red Sarafan " (Varlamoff), " Starrini Waltz," "Little Night," and 'Under the Duga" (Rubinstein). 8.15: Special recordings—Lew White (organ). Waldo Mayo (violin) and Theodore Cella (harp) play "Black Eyes" (trad.), "Andantmo" (Lemare), "The Flatterer" (Chaminade), and "Angels' Serenade* (Braga). 8.29: Special' recordingsEssie Ackland, contralto, sings " Break, Fairest Dawn" (Handel), "My Creed" (Came), "Reflections" (Lohr), and "Mother's Hands" (Cosgrove). 8.41: Talk by Mr J. T. Paul," World Affairs." 9: Weather repbrt and station notices. 9.5: Recorded serial—" Coronets of England: The Life of Charles 11, the Merry Monarch." 9.31: Recording, Quentin M. Maclean at the organ. 9.34: Recorded feature—" Khyber," a story of the North-west Frontier. 10: Dance programme by Mr Dick Colvin and his music. 11: Close down.

4YO, Dunedin.—s p.m.. Recordings 6 : Close down 7 : After-dinner music 8: "Melodies of the Moment" 815 "The Three Musketeers," a dramatisation of Alexandre Dumas's famous novel. 8.40: Zora Layman, the Century Quartet, and Frank Luther (with orchestra and effects) in the vocal medley "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs." 9: Selections from the works of Edward German, foremost composer of present-day English light opera. 9.55: " Moonlight Meanderings." 10: Comedy and light music. 10.30: Close down. (The above programme consists wholly of recordings.)

3YA, Christchurch.— 7 a.m.. Breakfast session. 9 : Close down. • 10: Recordings. 10.30: Devotional service. 10.45: Recordings. 11: Talk to women by "Margaret. 11.10: Recordings. 12 noon: Lunch music. 2 p.m.: Recordings. 2.30: A.C.E. (Home Science) talk, "Holiday Lists." 3: Classical music. 4: Frost and weather forecast. Light music. 4.30: Sports results. 5 • Children's hour. 6: Dinner music. 7: Rebroadcast from 2YA of Government and overseas news. 7.10 • News and reports. 7.35: Talk by gardening expert, "Summer Difficulties." 8" Chimes. Woolston Brass Band (conductor, Mr R. J. Estall) play.= " Gih Bridge" March (Ord Hume) and " Zauberflote" Overture (Mozart). 8.12: Special recordings—" The Voice of Romance," with Orchestra, in " I Bring You a Song" (various) 8.21: Woolston Band plays Polonaise from "Christmas Night" (Rimsky-Korsakov). Cornet duet by Bandsmen W Stevenson and Vic Aldridge—" Tit Larks' (Ord Hume) 8.30: " Eb and Zeb ' (recordings). 8.39: Woolston Band in "Perpetuum Mobile" (Winter) and "Vale Mater" Hymn (Wright). 8.46: Recordings—Olive Groves, Olive Gil bert, Edgar Elmes. and Patrick Waddington in "Mv Earlier Songs" (Ivor Novello). 8.55: Woolston Band in "Wellington" March (Zehle). 9 1 Weather forecast and station notices 9.5: Talk by Dr A. L. M. Perry "Christmas in the Irish Mists." 9 20: Miss Valmai Moffet Ccello) and Mr Ernest Jenner (piano) nlay Sonata in G minor (Rachmaninoff) 9.43: Recording—John McCormack tenor, with violin obbligato bv Fritz Kreisler 9.48: Special recordings—Trio Sonata No. 6, in G major, for organ, by Johann Sebastian Bach, played by Carl Weinrich on special organ suited for this class of music. 10: "Music. Mirth, and Melody," Including at 10.30 Carson Robison and his Buckaroos (recordings). 11: Close down. 2YA, Wellington.—6.so a.m.: Weather report for aviators (repeated at 10 a.m. and l p.m.) and forecast for Motueka orchardists Breakfast >es slon 9: Close down. 10.10: Devotional service. 10.25: Recordings (Time signal at 10.28.) 10.45 Talk tu women by "Margaret." Recordings. 12 noon: Lunch music. 2 p.m.: Classical hour. 3: A.C.E. (Home Science) talk, " Holiday Lists." Sports results. 3.28: Time signal. Weather report for farmers and irost forecast for Cauter bury and Otago. Recordings. 4;:

Sports results Recordings 5: Children's session! 6: Dinner music. 7: Government and overseas news. 7.10 (approx.): News and .reports. 7.20: Recorded talk by Mr S. Good (deputydirector of British Standards Institute). "Your Money or Your Life" (2). (Time signal at 7.28.) 7.40: Talk, by Mrs A. D. Houston, "A Plea lor Animal Pets at Christmas." 8: Chimes. Special recordings—Two Movements from Quintet, in A major (Mozart) played by the Lener String Quartet and Charles Draper (clarinet). .8.16 ■ Recording—Elizabeth Schumann, soprano. 8.20: Mr Leslie Souncss, pianist, plays Sonata' in G .minor (Mozart). 8.40: " Christmas In. the Lighthouse "—an interview with Mr R. B. Cooper. 9: Weather report and station notices 9.5: "A Day in the Life of an Infantry Soldier*—a continuity programme by Majors Three, illustrated by field calls, their origins and meanings (special recordings). 10: Dance programme. (Time signals at 10.28.) 11: Close down. IYA, Auckland.— 7 ajn.: Breakfast session. 9: Close down. 10: Devotional service, conducted by Major Hildreth. 10.15: Recordings. U: A talk to women by 'Margaret." 11.10: Recordings. 12 noon: Lunch music. 2 p.m.: Recordings. 2.30: Classical music. 3.15: Sports results. 3.30: A.C.E. (Home Science) talk, "Holiday Lists." 3.45: Light music. (Weather report for farmers at 4). 4.30: Sports results. 5: Children's session. 6: Dinner music. 7: Rebroadcast from 2YA of Government tnd overseas news. 7.10 (approx.): News and reports. 7.40: Talk by Mr G. W. C. Drake (Vocational Guidance officer), "Youth Looks Forward." 8: Recorded serial—Episode 7 of "The Exploits of the Black Moth.*' 8.32: Recorded feature—" The Oldtime The-Ayter ": " The Gamekeeper's Daughter" or "Virtue Triumphant." 8:45: Recorded serial—Episode 5 of "John Halifax, Gentleman," presented by George Edwards and company. 9: Weather report and station notices. 9.5: Talk by Miss Nelle Scanlan. "A Contrast in Christmases: New Zealand and England." 9.20: The Studio Orchestra (conductor, Mr Harold Baxter) plays " By the Blue Hawaiian Waters" (Ketelbey). 9.25: Miss Julie Werry, New Zealand soprano, sings "Blow, Blow. Thou Winter Wind." (Quilter), "When I Go Home" (Towner), "A Night Idyll" (Loughborough), "Chinese Flower" (Hood Bowers), and "Refuge" (Mary Brett) ('cello obbligato by Miss Lalla Hemus in each number excepting the first). 9.40: The Studio Orchestra in "Viennese Memories" (Hill). 9.50: Recording—song by John McCormack, tenor. 9.53: The Studio Orchestra in " Tesoro Mio" (Becucci). 10: Miscellaneous recordings. 11: Close down. , SHORT-WAVE STATION Empire Transmission No. 1, Daventry (for New Zealand and Australia).— 8 p.m (N.Z summer time): Bis Ben. "Music in Everyday Life" (s)—talk by Herbert Howells. 8.15: Music-hall programme. 9.15: Violin recital by Nancy Phillips. 9.30: Part songs by the Avalon Quartet. 9.50: The news and announcements. 10.15: Close down.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19381219.2.9

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 23686, 19 December 1938, Page 2

Word Count
1,064

WIRELESS BROADCASTING Otago Daily Times, Issue 23686, 19 December 1938, Page 2

WIRELESS BROADCASTING Otago Daily Times, Issue 23686, 19 December 1938, Page 2