What ’s In this Issue

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1 A Message from the Trust Chair, James 24 Colin Tooke recounts the celebrations after Paget University the First World War 3 Welcome to Radio Yare from 26 Charities that are here to help you Sheena McBain, Chairman of Hospital Radio 28 As time goes by ... Colin Tooke explains Yare how everything relies on us knowing the 7 Meet Our Team at Hospital Radio Yare correct time 8 Find Out All About Hospital Radio Yare 30 The free wifi service available at James 9 Jay Morris gives us an account of life at Paget University Hospital Hospital Radio Yare 31 Why volunteering is so worthwhile 10 Into the Lion’s Den and a Fishy Tale from 32 Kimble Reynolds recalls his days as a Colin Tooke piano tuner 12 Meet Sheena McBain and Bob Warnes, 35 A Movie Quiz members of The Memory Joggers 36 Can you spot the logo? 15 All about Andrew Harris 37 A healthy lifestyle 16 The Tollhouse ... believed to be one of A puzzle page Britain’s oldest civic buildings by Bob Warnes 38 23 Rachel Fyfe and her essential fundraising 39 The Disney Lyric quiz efforts for Hospital Radio Yare 40 Spot the Ad and quiz answers

Published for Hospital Radio Yare by Hospital Radio Publications 01245 465246 email: [email protected] © Hospital Radio Publications 2019

24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 1 Harfreys Road Harfreys Ind Est Gt Yarmouth Norfolk NR31 0JL Air-con specialist service, repair & re-gas Tail-lift servicing, repair & certification MOT’s class 4, 5 & 7 HGV/PSV MOT test lane All servicing & repairs from cars, light commercials up to large 44 ton HGV’s Digital & Analogue Tachograph centre Steamclean wash bay area, inc low level ramp for pressure washing under side of vehicle Roller Brake testing with printout Open from Monday to Saturday

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2 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible A MESSAGE FROM THE TRUST CHAIR

But what sets Hospital Radio Yare apart from other stations is that the output is designed specifically for one audience – patients at our hospital. We’re very much a team here at the James Paget, committed to providing our patients with the best possible care and support. I consider Hospital Radio Yare to be part of that team. Many thousands of patients have I would like to take this had their stay in our hospital made opportunity to thank the volunteers that little bit easier thanks to the who make such a highly valued broadcasts of the wonderful team of contribution to our hospital by volunteers at Hospital Radio Yare. giving up their time to entertain our For those who are on our wards patients, each and every day. recovering from illness or surgery, radio shows can be a source of Anna Davidson great comfort. Trust Chair

HOW TO CONTACT HOSPITAL RADIO YARE James Paget University Hospital, Lowestoft Road, Gorleston, Great Yarmouth NR31 6LA telephone: 01493 453536 email: [email protected] website: www.hospitalradioyare.com

Registered Charity No. 1076982

24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 3 • Personal Care support - recovering from an operation or illness • Support for coping with a terminal illness • On-going emotional and social support Health Care at home • Respite Care There are many reasons why extra support You or a loved one may need care for any or care services are needed at home. of the following reasons: Whether you, or someone you know, needs a • have become less sure on your feet and little extra encouragement or around-the- require assistance with daily activities or clock care, our team of friendly and caring have become frail due to illness and/or staff are fully qualified to carry out a ageing and need some temporary support. complete range of care services. • have a physical disability, mental health Remaining at home has many benefits: problems or may have learning disabilities. • You can continue enjoying life in a familiar • recovering from an operation or serious environment where friends and family can illness visit at any time • You may be the main carer for family or • Your home carer will be focused 100% on friend and need a break for a week or two. your specific needs We provide help for the elderly as well as for • You have control over the choice and timing people with physical disabilities, learning of your meals and the way they are cooked disabilities, dementia or other health problems. • You decide how the home carer attends to Like to find out more? your needs, from assisting you in going for a To ensure you receive the right care walk, to shopping to household chores to package we arrange to visit you at home attending to your personal care. where your needs will be assessed by a Our care services includes: team of professionals who will co-ordinate • Assistance with daily routine activities: with a duly qualified person at Caring including washing, dressing, meals, Moments to ensure that any home care plan shopping. you choose is adequate for your needs.

4 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible Welcome Hi, I’m Sheena and I’m Chairman of I have been here for around 15 Hospital Radio Yare. We broadcast to years, some of us much longer! We you, the patients, on 1350 KHz and are always looking for new members you can also stream us to your phones to join us. and tablets. Our team of dedicated New this year we are starting a members come from all walks of life junior membership (for those aged 16 and present a wide variety of shows, and over). We want to encourage the playing a wide genre of music. younger generation to educate us Our main stay programme is the older ones on ‘their’ types of music. evening Request Show. You can We are a very friendly bunch, so why choose any song for us to play for not try your hand at being a radio you, and as we have a library of some presenter? 70,000 songs, I’m sure we have Many heartfelt thanks for your something you would like to hear. continued support. Hospital Radio Yare is a registered Get well soon charity and all of our members and presenters are volunteers. Sheena

ON AIR 24 HOURS A DAY, 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR ENTERTAINMENT FIND OUT WHAT’s ON TODAY AT www.facebook.com/hospitalradioyare Listen on 1350 khz MW Radiobox (free App) TuneIn (free App)

24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 5 product that meets the individual special needs of a customer, so we will adapt and build products to your exact requirements. Servicing and testing At East Coast Mobility, servicing, All electrical products need a repairs and adaptations come as regular service. We offer a Platinum standard. service: Buying any mobility product isn’t • free collection about buying an item in a box. A • free courtesy scooter product needs to be exactly suited for • free delivery your needs and it is essential that you • very competitive rates! try it. Repairs People’s needs change We have a full workshop with all So we make adaptations to suit the equipment; be it a puncture, these needs as they change. insurance repair, tyre replacement, Special needs electrical or mechanical fault. Sometimes there is no specific Ask us what we can do for you.

6 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible Sheena McBain Shane Carson Chairman Vice Chairman

Linda Rumble, Treasurer Andrew Harris Bob Warnes Frank Little

Jim Rumble Kimble Reynolds Martin (Chris) Bennett Russell Bird

Richard Smith Jay Morris Rachel Fyfe Ann Harris

24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 7 and volunteer groups. Whilst you’re there you can request a song and have a great day out and at the same time helping others. If you need a PA. system for your event in the future, why not give us a Shane Carson in Radio Yare’s studio call. Hospital Radio Yare celebrated its Back at the studio, based in the 40th birthday back in 2017 and we James Paget University Hospital, we are still going strong. Wow, that is a have an engineering room which also long time to be . serves as a recording studio for We are one of the most successful advance programming. Our librarian, hospital stations around and apart Russell Bird, spends a lot of time in from our commitment to supplying all here cataloging the many thousands genres of music to hospital patients, of music tracks we have and use on we also operate outside of the our programmes. hospital environment by providing We also have a main output studio public address systems for various which is, so they say, better equipped events and fetes in the area. than some professional stations. For the last three years we have We transmit on 1350AM and over supplied our systems and volunteers the last couple of years our engineer, to Martham Fun Carnival, two days of Shane Carson, has linked us to the fun operating from a forty-foot trailer, World Wide Web! This means we can and a stall for our fundraising team to be heard on smart phones, i-Pads etc, sell goodies and jewellery, hand made by downloading free apps (Radiobox by our fund raiser Rachel Fyfe. or TuneIn Radio), putting us ‘up there Our mascot Yare Bear is always on with the big boys’! the scene to the delight of the younger Everyone at Hospital Radio Yare is a folk too. We will be back there again volunteer and we all love what we do. this year and at Caister again too. Indeed, we pay to do it in the form of Please come and support these local a very modest yearly subscription events which are made possible by a which helps our funds and provides lot of hard work by various charities tea and biccies!

8 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible I have only been a member of Radio Noughties and made it the 90s and Yare for a few years but wanted to Noughties show with music from share my experience with you all. 1990 all the way to 2009. I’ve always wanted to be on the I help with fundraising, from radio so applied to join after meeting collections to events; my favourite is Linda and Shane and decided to give the Martham Carnival, it a go. I love it. I’ve met some great people It started off as training on a and some I now call my friends. I even Tuesday night with Shane, watching present a few request shows on a him do his thing and showing me weekday 8-10pm. which buttons to press, how the I have currently put 90’s and Myriad computer system worked and Noughties on ice and present a three how to play a CD, etc. Then, with hour show called Jay’s Favourites on a supervision, it was my turn. Thursday afternoon 2pm-5pm, playing I was very nervous but once I had all types of music from all years. done it a few times my confidence I’m looking forward to more events started to grow. Eventually I was and even a party dance or two with given a Thursday spot and trained Andrew, as we both have holiday with Andrew, another experienced park experience. presenter, playing songs from my This is the best thing that’s happened favourite decade – the 90s – from the to me and I thank Shane, Linda and Backstreet Boys to the Spice Girls, I Andrew for making it happen, my mate made the show my own. Chris who has supported and believed One day I got the shock of my life; in me from the start, and all the after months of training Linda and presenters and members for making Andrew told me I had qualified as a me feel so welcome. full presenter. I was so excited... my Hospital Radio Yare has great music own show. Wow I thought! You can and great volunteers and if you have listen to me on a Thursday afternoon ever thought of being a radio from 3pm until 5pm when I play 90’s presenter this is the place for you. songs. I have called my show Jay’s Get in touch on our Facebook page 90s. After a while I thought it would or ring us on 01493 453536. be great to expand it, so added the Jay Morris

24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 9 INTO THE LION’S DEN and A FISHY TALE from the Norfolk Broads. At each end of the hall was a large pond, one for crocodiles, alligators (one five feet long) and turtles, the other for seals. Over 300 tons of rock was brought in to decorate the ponds and tanks. New arrivals were often advertised, a porpoise, an octopus and sea anemones among them. Entertainment included an orchestra, The Aquarium in 1877. The stairs at the front lead to the skating ring on the roof The Royal Aquarium in August 1909. The singers, comedy and drama plays and Today animal welfare and the Yarmouth fair in 1860 with new frontage was added after the light entertainment. The entrance fee to conservation is top of the list but this has performing lions and when the lion tamer aquarium was removed. Royal was the aquarium was sixpence (2½p) but not always been so. The Sea Life Centre was attacked by one of the animals, he added to the name and the building unfortunately the attendance figures on Marine Parade, Great Yarmouth, drew his pistol. The trigger caught in the became a theatre in 1883 never reached the hoped for levels and opened in September 1989 and, with its animal’s mane and the pistol went off, a in their natural surroundings and few four years later the aquarium was in the large collection of marine creatures, has bullet hitting a spectator in the eye, for people knew what kinds of fish were to hands of the liquidator. since been one of the main all the year which he received £150 compensation, be found in the seas and oceans of the More theatrical entertainment was round attractions in the town. Although it equivalent to over £17,000 today. world. It was not practical to move provided from 1881 and the Prince of offers people the chance to see fish and Bostock & Wombwell’s Royal Menagerie aquatic creatures around the country, the Wales attended performances on two other marine creatures at close quarters was the best known and largest only answer was a permanent display, an consecutive days but even this could not its main aim, the same as local zoos and menagerie in the country, visiting aquarium, the aquatic counterpart of the boost income and, when no buyer could wildlife gardens, is conservation and Yarmouth several times. The first visit was zoo. Keeping fish in an aquarium had be found, the doors closed for the last education. in 1882 when it set up in the Market Place become a popular hobby following the time on 30 September 1882. In Victorian times, however, for seven days. Subsequent visits occurred Great Exhibition of 1851 and in 1853 the The building was almost rebuilt and conservation was not a consideration as almost every year thereafter. In 1902 the first public aquarium in the world was reopened in July 1883 as a theatre and, wealthy gentlemen went on big game menagerie was said to have over 700 opened in London Zoo, in a building despite the fish having been removed, hunting expeditions to bring back birds, beasts and reptiles on show. appropriately called the Fish House. was now called the Royal Aquarium. trophies to adorn their walls. The rarer Five years later it included lions and Twenty-three years later, in September Today, after many transformations over the animal the more prestige the home the proprietor of the Fish Stall House pub 1876, an Aquarium was opened in Great the subsequent years, it is the Hollywood owner had when showing off his in the Market Place made a wager of Yarmouth. The building consisted of a Cinema but still referred to by many as collection, the fact that the animal was of £10 that he would enter the lion’s den. ‘The Aquarium’. large central hall, a dining room, reading © Colin Tooke 2017 a fast disappearing species did not He remained in the den for three room and reference room. On the flat matter. While skins of tigers and other minutes, thus winning the bet and was roof above the main hall was an open-air animals covered the floor, the heads of presented with a gold medal by the skating rink while in the hall was a stage anything that could be shot adorned the management as a souvenir. Quite a for concerts and other entertainment. walls of most great houses. One of the sizable wager as today this would be the Nine fish tanks were arranged on most prized trophies was a stuffed polar equivalent of £1,200. either side of the hall, varying in size bear, standing guard at the foot of a Conservation and welfare were not top from 17 feet to 55 feet. The smallest tank grand staircase. Rare birds did not priorities for menagerie owners, what held 2,500 gallons of water while the escape the collector as many species was most important was the largest held 26,000 gallons. Salt water were shot to extinction. entertainment value of the animals and for the marine fish was piped directly The only opportunity most people had which could attract the largest crowds from the sea via an underground pipe. A typical late Victorian side-show at the to see wild animals at close quarters and make the largest profit. The fish included a shark, gigantic crabs, Yarmouth fair in the 1890s. Dancing girls was when a travelling menagerie arrived Fish, however, were very different. Few conger eels, seahorses and crayfish as and a ‘barker’ help attract an audience into in town. Manders Menagerie appeared at Victorians had the opportunity to see fish well as specimens of fresh water fish the tent at the rear of the ornate façade

10 24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 Visit our website ... www.hospitalradioyare.com 11 James Paget University Hospital. This was very successful and to date they have trained all the dementia team in ‘The Paget’. They also train the apprentices who will be going to work on the Dementia ward. They have had help and support from Comeunity in King Street, Great Yarmouth and have been funded by Norfolk Community Foundations and Great Yarmouth Borough Council to hold Dementia Awareness days and to train members of the public how to use reminiscence techniques both in the The Memory Joggers team are Radio resident who has not reacted to workplace and at home. Yare members Bob Warnes and anything around them suddenly These training sessions have been Sheena McBain who are Reminiscence becoming animated and joining in, very successful receiving excellent Trainers. They have been working in albeit with just a few words, it makes it feedback from the candidates. the reminiscence field for the past 11 all worthwhile.’ As well as NHS staff, they have years. They started by taking Dementia is an illness that touches trained care home staff, Library staff, reminiscence sessions in care homes most of us at some point in our lives Borough Council staff, D.I.A.L. staff, throughout East Anglia which involved and it is hard to know how to deal with various shop staff and members of a lot of travelling. They were however it, what to say, what to do and how to families who have relatives living with really impressed with the way their help the person living with dementia to dementia. ‘product’ was received by both the lead a fuller life. It is possible to do this Their training package teaches residents and management and the using various reminiscence techniques anyone how to ‘work with what is fact that although reminiscence was which can make this life a bit easier for there’ and how to ‘go into the world’ of nothing new, they hadn’t seen it put to both the patient and the carer. someone living with dementia and Cliff Hill, Gorleston, Norfolk NR31 6DH good use before. After a few years on the road, Bob what ‘triggers’ to use to do it. It is a fun Close to the James Paget Hospital ‘We really enjoyed taking these and Sheena decided the travelling was course and is open to anyone to take Beautifully situated overlooking the harbour and sessions and the residents looked becoming too much and they thought beach this luxury hotel is perfect. part, just ring the Memory Joggers on Each of the 37 en-suite bedrooms are beautifully forward to our visits, they became our they could put their talents to training 07549 177537 to learn more about the appointed. friends and we learnt so much from people how to take reminiscence The Cliff Bar is the perfect place to relax. If you are course. peckish you can take advantage of The Cliff’s much them about the way it used to be and sessions; this proved to be the way loved bar menu which offers a great selection of light the things they did when they were forward. snacks & refreshments and also full meals if you’re fancying something a little more. younger. They started off by training staff Our terrace overlooks Gorleston beach and makes a ‘Whilst working in the care home from care homes and holding dementia wonderful vantage point to enjoy the exquisite views situation, we came across several of the surrounding area. aware days. It was at one of these Our function room, recently refurbished, is perfect for all people who were living in secure units events in Norwich they were contacted private functions from weddings to birthday parties. with severe dementia and every now by the NHS and asked if they would do We also hold plenty of public events throughout the year from Tribute Nights, Party Nights, Charity Nights and then we would hit on a subject a workshop at Hellesdon Hospital and and much more! Take a look on our website or that even they could remember. Believe show them exactly what they did. Facebook page to keep up to date on what’s on! me that was like opening up a pot of Around three months later they were Tel: 01493 662179 Web: thecliffhotel.co.uk gold because if you can imagine a asked to train six nurses from the Facebook: Facebook.com/thecliffhotel

12 24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 Visit our website ... www.hospitalradioyare.com 13 Dr John Garden Services was set up in 2017 to provide people across Norfolk and Suffolk with a local, quality gardening and landscaping service they could trust. Having been a university lecturer, Dr John came to Norfolk and began helping homeowners in Norfolk and Suffolk with gardening and landscaping jobs. His personal, reliable and trustworthy service grew so popular that it led to bigger projects and extra staff were taken on board to provide an even better service to customers. So if you are interested in having a professional gardening and landscaping service take a look at your garden, give us a call on 07831 838 832 or 01493 440129 or email [email protected] and we would be happy to give you a free estimate.

14 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible Andrew Harris Hi my name is Andrew Harris and I Show for many years as well and have joined Hospital Radio Yare way back to admit that music is my passion. in 1999. At that time the studio was I have previously worked at the located in an old second hand Vauxhall Holiday Park as part of the portacabin at the Northgate Hospital entertainments team, helping with site, where we lived until our move to sound and lighting and even taken the JPUH in 2012. part in some of the Bluecoat shows. Following completion of my training, I have tried Ballroom and Latin I started out on a Sunday night show dancing, and also volunteered as a and even did it after being at the door host at St. George’s theatre! Yarmouth carnival in the morning and With the Radio Yare team I love to afternoon. be involved with our outside Other shows have followed on broadcasts at events like the Caister various other days and times over the and Martham carnivals... in fact years; I have been presenting the anything that includes meeting Friday afternoon Children’s Request people and music.

24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 15 The Tollhouse

The Tollhouse is believed to be one of dealt with you would be ‘hauled up Britain’s oldest civic buildings. It was before the beak’ literally on a piece of built in 1190 for a wealthy merchant rope. who, in 1262, sold it to one Stephen de Courts took place in what is called Stalham who purchased it as a present the Hieghening Chamber which is on for his wife. the first floor. There was a public It was in 1333 that it was first rented gallery and a place for the Jury to sit, out to the borough, and here they and between them the Judge and the collected taxes from both local and crowd, your fate was sealed. If they foreign fishermen, and, would you couldn’t decide if you were innocent or believe, bakers who made bread and guilty, there was a thing called ‘trial by sold it from their window! ordeal’. This entailed heating up a The Barons of the Cinq Ports, who plough shear or some other piece of ruled Great Yarmouth in the early days, metal and ‘inviting’ the poor used to meet here to decide what we unfortunate to pick it up, his hand was could and couldn’t do; even then we then bound up and if three days later it were ruled by southerners! was ‘still a bit red’, it was decreed he The Tollhouse gaol was a place to be was guilty and would be dealt with! If it avoided at all costs. If you were unlucky was a more straight forward case and enough to have been caught they were found guilty, the prisoner committing a crime, you would have was sent through a trap door to the been arrested and put down into the ground floor, which served as the hole on the end of a piece of rope and gaoler’s quarters. It was from here you any food would have followed the had a choice of whether to go and same way. When it was your turn to be spend your sentence in the master

16 24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 debtor’s side, rooms which adjoined the In the 1600s we know the gaoler was gaoler’s quarters, or God forbid, you a franchisee of the Council who sold were put down ‘the hole’. It all privileges. For instance he charged one depended on money and if you didn’t shilling a meal if you were in the rich have any then there was no choice, you quarters, one penny a night to find your were put downstairs but if you had own bed, four pence for whipping a money, you had the choice of a room prisoner, one shilling to brand a above stairs, food supplied by the prisoner and six shillings and eight gaoler, at a cost, and it got better! As pence to hang a prisoner. He was in the Tollhouse had a liquor licence you command. Indeed, if a prisoner was could choose between beer or wine, released by the courts but owed him again supplied by the gaoler, at a cost. money for keep, then the gaoler would Better still, if you required ‘pleasures of not free him or feed him, leaving the the flesh’ he could arrange that as well, prisoner to his own devices. at a cost! After that it then got really silly. If you were prepared to pay out you could hire someone to ‘sit your sentence’, in other words as long as you were in your room between 5 at night and 8 the next morning, you were free to carry on as normal in the day. It has been said that many of the richest families in Great Yarmouth started off by sitting peoples sentences! If you were consigned to the hole, then you went into the underground space some 20 feet long, 12 feet wide If you walk along past the Tollhouse and 16 feet deep, along with around 20 you can see a boarded up window other prisoners, with the only way out which looks as if it emerges from the being by a rope, it was effectively a pavement. It is said that there would be stone box. a hand through the window bars at all Together with your fellow inmates hours begging for money to pay the you ate, drank, slept and went to the gaoler to get out of jail. If you were a toilet all in this very confined space, local, Yarmouth, Gorleston, then with no privacy at all. It was at a later relations would come and bail you out date that cells and quarters for females but if you were a foreigner, Acle or were installed. Until that time men, Martham, or even further, nobody knew women and children over seven, shared you were there so help did not arrive! this hell hole and lived, or not, in the In 1645 the Witchfinder General, filth, which incidentally was cleaned out Matthew Hopkins, came to town to twice a year by a guy called Casement deal with Yarmouth’s witches, who had Carter who charged the Gaol £10 4 been sorted out prior to his arrival. shillings and 6 pence to do so. Just There were seven but one of them think of what he pulled up in his bucket! ‘pleaded her belly’. She was pregnant.

Visit our website ... www. .com 17 18 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible The other six were taken to the riverside, stripped, tied up with rope and were ‘swum’ in the river. If they were dead when they were pulled out, they were decreed to have been innocent but if they survived being ‘swum’ they were guilty as charged and taken to be hanged. In the 1700s, the gaol became more accessible with a wooden ladder and iron bars at one end. Prisoners were transported, at first to America but at a later date to . It was basically a one way ticket. A lady called Sarah Martin, a seamstress from Caister, heard of the terrible conditions in the gaol and came to see if she could help. At first she was denied access by the gaoler but she persevered and finally he gave in and allowed her in. She brought Christianity to the gaol with services on Sundays; she taught the prisoners how to make household items from bones and went out to get materials so the women could make aprons. She would then Richard Bensly take these items and sell them on the electrical contractors ltd market and the money was kept so 24 Queens road, Great Yarmouth, norfolk nr30 3Ht that when the prisoners’ were released they had a little money to go ‘outside Terry Waters with’. When she passed away, instead 01493 858679 of carrying on her good works, the 07702 202687 powers that be installed a treadmill. The cells that are still there today were used for solitary confinements, and the end nearest the road was used as the condemned man’s cell; this is where he would have spent his last few hours before being taken to the gallows – what a sad thought. The Tollhouse closed in 1878 because it was a dirty, filthy place; it was bombed out in 1941. Bob Warnes

Visit our website ... www.hospitalradioyare.com 19 Pleased to support Hospital Radio Yare Very Best Wishes to patients and staff East Norfolk Sixth Form College is the their learning, students can be assured popular choice for 1600 students of success. because of its 36 year reputation for EN Is the top college locally for success. The college consistently progression and the OFSTED ‘Good’ features in the Top 20 of all colleges college for Great Yarmouth and nationally and currently has a 99% A Waveney. The college is also home to Level pass rate, with a fantastic 100% the Norwich City Elite Football in 23 subjects. Programme. Our aim is to be the outstanding We are also the largest provider of choice for 16-19 year olds as they leave STEM subjects outside of Cambridge school and to inspire future generations and our students achieve outstanding of learners. results. EN offers an unrivalled curriculum Whatever your dreams and with over 80 A Level and BTEC subjects ambitions, East Norfolk Sixth Form at Level 3 and Level 2. The curriculum is College is your route to an outstanding constantly evolving, and with some of future. the best teachers around supporting [email protected]

22 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible As part of her own expense and helps with our our stalls at outside events. necessary She also sells direct to anyone who ‘jobs’, wishes to purchase an item or two for fundraising themselves or as presents for others. is a very Pictured below is a small sample of important her jewellery which can also be seen part of on the page. what we If you do; see Rachel running a at a craft radio show, fete station is or some expensive at times and equipment other needs to be replaced on a regular event, you basis, plus the cost of numerous will be licences that are required. amazed at We have a page attached to our the variety Facebook page which is run by our of products Rachel Fyfe. Rachel makes and sells she has. We really appreciate her jewellery and other items such as key efforts on our behalf. rings, bag charms, car hangers, book We have also been lucky enough marks etc, which are of lovely quality over the last couple of years to have and very reasonably priced. Every received some donations from local penny goes to our radio funds. councillors and Masonic groups, and Rachel has, over the years, even we are very grateful to them for their supplied the materials to do this at support.

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24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 23 WAR’S OVER ... LET’S CELEBRATE trade cart procession. Prizes were marched past the Market Place awarded for decorated motor cars, and at 4pm they were decorated trade carts, motor or horse entertained to tea at their lorries, motor bicycles with sidecars respective schools. Each school and perambulators, mail carts, etc. followed the tea with concerts, The procession route started on races and other forms of Marine Parade and, proceeded by two entertainment. In the evening a police constables on horseback, dinner was arranged for travelled via Kings Road, South Quay This advert for the hotel shows the elegant then into Friars Lane and King Street. discharged, demobilised and dining room. Goode’s was a leading venue It then went down Regent Street to serving members on leave from for social occasions in the town for many Hall Quay and along North Quay to HM Forces and Boy Scouts with years war service. Fullers Hill. After passing along the Marine Parade, the Town Hall and in Although the First World War had Due to the large number of diners west side of the Market Place and into Gorleston, the Pavilion Theatre. At ended in November 1918, it was not there had to be eight separate venues, Regent Road, the procession returned each venue entertainment was until the following year the country all serving the same menu which to its starting point. The Salvation provided by concert parties and had time to organise any celebrations. consisted of roast and boiled beef, Army band and the Boy Scouts band pierrots from the Britannia and The Prime Minister at the time, David roast lamb, ham, potatoes, salad, provided musical accompaniment and Wellington Piers and the Gorleston Lloyd George, declared a Bank Holiday pickles, fruit pies, custard and cheese. all the soldiers who had been to the Pavilion and variety acts from the for 19 July 1919, a day that would be Liquid refreshment was given by the previous evening’s diner also took Hippodrome. Some were given tickets called Peace Day. breweries of Lacons and Stewart & part. for the Empire cinema and the Regent Celebrations were organised by local Patteson and two wine merchants, In the evening at 10.15pm, there theatre. The mayor and mayoress paid authorities across the country and in Diver & Son and Mr S Allen. was a fireworks display on the beach London 15,000 troops, led by a visit to each venue during the opposite Trafalgar Road and a large victorious Allied commanders, took evening. bonfire on Gorleston Cliffs. What was part in a victory parade. King George On the following day, Saturday, described as a line of fire lighting up V issued a message to wounded there was a grand procession with the the beach consisted of another eight soldiers, sending greetings to those entries judged on the Beaconsfield bonfires stretching from Gorleston who could not take part in the Recreation Ground at 2pm. It was Cliffs to Sandown Road in north celebrations and wishing them good described as a Grand Decorated, Yarmouth. cheer. Historical and Emblematical car and © Colin Tooke 2019. In Great Yarmouth a 43-strong Peace Celebration Committee was formed, with the mayor, Alderman Harbord, as chairman. It was decided Goode’s Hotel on Marine Parade, one of the the town should celebrate over two venues for the Peace Celebration dinner on days, 18 and 19 July. 18 July 1919 On the Friday school children took The venues were Goode’s Dining part in a parade to the parish church Rooms on Marine Parade, the Drill Hall where there was a commemorative in Artillery Square, the Savoy Hotel in service. After the service the children Regent Road, Hill’s Restaurant in King were reviewed by the mayor as they Street, the Arcade Restaurant on

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26 24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 Visit our website ... www.hospitalradioyare.com 27 As Time Goes By In use at the same time were sand Quay, at the corner of Row 142, in 1583. clocks, also known as hour glasses, first Ten years later a clock was placed on the Almost recorded in Europe in the eighth century. Dutch Chapel, a building later to become everything we By the fourteenth century these were the Town House, on South Quay. do relies on being used aboard ships and in private From the mid-eighteenth century clocks knowing the homes. Sermon glasses, another name for with large dials, sometimes five feet correct time. an hour glass, were fixed to church pulpits across, began to appear in inns and From catching a to give the preacher an indication when taverns. Known as Tavern Clocks or bus, an his sermon had overrun. An example of Parliament Clocks, these were provided appointment at one of these can be seen today in the for the benefit of the many people who did the dentist or church of St Edmund at South Burlingham. not have a timepiece of their own. In 1797 watching a From the middle of the fifteenth century an Act of Parliament levied a tax on all favourite TV the more accurate sundial was replacing clocks, even those in private houses. The programme, we the scratch dials. An early sundial still taverns and pubs were often the only need to know exists in the town, on St George’s, built in location for obtaining the correct time, the time. To 1714. In 1826, there were four public tavern owners happy to pay the tax as the achieve this we sundials in the town, one on the Dutch clocks drew in customers. In the inns A Tavern or Parliament have personal Chapel on South Quay, now demolished, along coaching routes, these clocks were clock, found in coaching watches or one on the south porch of St Nicholas essential for timing the coaches. As inns and sometimes pubs mobile devices Church and two on St George’s Chapel, industrialisation increased it became more or rely on household or public clocks. one of which was restored in 2010, now essential for people to know the accurate This is, however, a recent way of life. the only public sundial in the town. time. The introduction of the railways in For hundreds of years the time of day was However, on days when the sun didn’t the nineteenth century, brought shine, telling the time could be difficult. standardised time throughout the whole determined by observing the movements The Guinness Clock, originally made for the country for the first time. Until then time of the sun, the moon and the stars or Mechanical timekeeping developed in Festival of Britain in 1951, later toured differed in different towns and cities. simply by night and day. The only person the thirteenth century, principally used in seaside towns. One was at Great Yarmouth in a community who needed more monastic institutions and churches as a One of the earliest forms of a public for the 1955 to 1960 summer seasons accurate divisions of the day was the replacement for the earlier weather time signal was the time ball. Initially priest, to enable him to summon his dependant devices. The complex pattern installed at major ports, a time ball time ball was erected on the battlements worshippers with reasonable regularity. of religious services at that time required consisted of a large wooden or metal ball of Norwich Castle, used to announce From Saxon times this had been done careful and accurate regulation. Some which dropped at 1pm each day to enable Greenwich Time every day at 10am. with scratch dials, sometimes called mass cathedrals had a mechanical clock, ships to set their chronometers. The first In 1807 the first clock was placed on the dials or time dials. These consisted of a including Norwich, by 1290. one was erected at Portsmouth in 1829 tower of the parish church and in 1876 a circle incised on a south wall of a religious The oldest surviving church clock is in and one which still exists today was striking clock with four faces placed on the building with lines, up to 24, radiating Salisbury cathedral, first recorded in 1386, erected on the Greenwich Observatory, tower of St Peter’s church. Public clocks from a central hole. A short stick or metal although only the mechanism has London in 1833. They were not, however, now became more popular and the spike placed in the hole allowed the sun to survived. restricted to seaports as in 1853 the introduction of the electric clock in the cast a shadow along one of the lines and Clocks remained rare, expensive and Norwich Chronicle announced that a time 1890s allowed smaller timepieces to be from 608AD the Pope ordered that such a unreliable until the sixteenth century when ball, connected by electric telegraph with provided on shops and other buildings. dial be set up on all churches. Many of more reliable timepieces began to be Greenwich Observatory, was to be placed Household clocks and personal these scratch dials survive, one local imported from . The early clocks in the Market Place, because of inaccurate timepieces were, however, still example is on the south wall of St Mary’s were weight driven but in the seventeenth public clocks. unaffordable for many people and the at Burgh St Peter, at the side of the century the pendulum was introduced, In 1858 a similar time ball was public clock was essential until the mid- priest’s door. How did the priest determine greatly improving the accuracy of proposed for Great Yarmouth, to be twentieth century. Today there are few his times during periods of prolonged bad mechanical clocks. Probably the earliest erected on the new Sailors Home, due to public clocks left and many which do still weather? Probably by calculated public clock in Great Yarmouth was that open in 1860, but for unknown reasons it exist do not work or are unreliable. guesswork. set up in the tower of a house on South was never installed. In August 1900 a © Colin Tooke 2019

28 24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 Visit our website ... www.hospitalradioyare.com 29 A guest wi-fi service is now operating Accessing Free Wi-Fi across the James Paget University Hospital. The service went live late last year and First go to the 1 settings menu on allows patients, visitors and staff to access your device and free wi-fi in areas of the hospital including select Wi-Fi. Then select wards, waiting areas and restaurants. NHS Wi-Fi. Then complete the registration Its introduction is aimed at improving by filling in your email patient experience at our Trust by allowing address, first name and last name and then tick people attending our hospital to continue the box at the bottom of with their digital lives – communicating with the page, if you agree to friends and family, accessing entertainment accept the terms and conditions and abide by and working remotely. the Trust’s ‘Acceptable The new service can also help clinicians Use’ policy who can use mobile devices at the bedside to show patients information about their treatment. Director of Transformation, Andrew Your device will 2 Palmer, said ‘People expect wi-fi to be connect to NHS available and we have met that expectation Wi-Fi. by introducing a free service which will allow our patients to keep in touch with families and friends, stay up-to date with the news and stream entertainment while they visit or stay in our hospital.’ Accessing the service is simple and opposite is a step-by-step guide to help you. Our IT team has overseen an upgrade of After your network 3 the hospital's wireless infrastructure, which access is means that Guest Wi-Fi traffic is completely enabled, you will see the screen below – separate from corporate traffic – so it does and you are then free to not affect the speed of the hospital's clinical start browsing. systems. Users will have to re-register after 24 hours, for security The introduction of Guest Wi-Fi at our purposes.The service is Trust is part of a national roll out, which will being managed by an external company, Block see all secondary care organisations Solutions, who have their offering the service by the end of 2018. own 24/7 helpdesk VOLUNTEERING IS SO WORTHWHILE Since I joined our lovely band of volunteers back in 2010, I have had the chance to meet some fantastic people. Some can only volunteer for a short period of time but others have become part of the furniture and the backbone of our station. It has also become apparent that a lot of us do other things on a voluntary basis as well. For instance, for the last three years Kimble For myself, I enjoy music and my Reynolds has organized the Bands of couple of hours behind the desk is my Hope and Glory at the Sparrows Nest chill time. Compared to my day at the in Lowestoft, raising funds for Memory Club, which is full on but Hospital Radio Yare and the East great. We have a morning of Coast Hospice. Andrew Harris entertainment, a hot two course meal volunteers at St. George’s Theatre; and more entertainment after, plus, of Sheena and Bob are involved with course, tea, coffee and biscuits. Some Memory Joggers and you can read all of the members have dementia, others about their work elsewhere in the are less mobile and the rest could magazine. Jim and myself, Linda probably run faster than me! Everyone Rumble, also volunteer at St. joins in and we have made some Andrew’s Memory Club held at the fantastic friends there. Chapter House. No one should ever feel lost and Volunteers are hard to come by and lonely while there are so many you have to enjoy what you do but it organisations out there just waiting for is so very worthwhile. you to join. Why not try it for yourself? Radio Yare have an age range of 16 to 85 for those who would like to join If you are interested in joining us and an annual membership charge Radio Yare that doesn’t break the bank! If you please give us a call on think you could spare the time we 01493 453536 would love you to join us.

24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 31 IN TUNE would then show you her dead budgie, was ‘divine intervention’ and he would and the piano had to be perfect. I was which she kept on a newspaper on the have to marry her... which he did! told on a regular basis throughout the stairs. Another Danish tradition? Tove passed away. Her piano, the work, ‘Ve vill now vash our handtz.’ One day, whilst sitting on a bench in Hornung & Moller, now resides in my Tove had a hand washing fixation! Station Square in Lowestoft, a man sat piano showroom. It is for sale, it has When I had finally finished, Tove next to her. He was on a coach trip great provenance as they say on the mounted a very low piano stool, her from Kings Lynn. He had looked after Antiques Roadshow. It is very special, nose a hairs’ breadth from the piano his parents for a number of years but and perhaps if you bought it Beethoven keys. She began to hammer them as if they had died and it was his first trip vud come in to you ven you played. trying to catch a mouse with both away from home. Tove announced it Kimble Reynolds hands. She shouted above the din, ‘Ven I play Beethoven he come in to me’. At In 1978 I was a self-employed piano this point she fell off the stool! tuner and one of my first clients was a A few days later she phoned to say ‘I lady who resembled a sack of potatoes. vil not be payink you’, she’d had a The painting above her piano showed massive argument with her sister, who the lady herself naked when she was had gone straight back to Demark and much younger, which only managed to she knew I would feel guilty as I would create the impression of a smaller sack be taking her rent money. of potatoes. On another occasion Tove phoned Tove Larsen, her professional name, excitedly to ask if I could tune the piano even though she had never been a in St. Peter’s Church in Lowestoft, and professional; Mrs Bell in reality. Tove did I know of anybody who could make had befriended an English man in her a dress as ‘I vant to look like a fairy.’ Denmark at the end of the war. He (The mother of one of her pupils actually had returned to and by all made the dress for her). On the night of accounts she had followed him and the concert, Tove proudly mounted the tracked him down, even though he piano stool with her vest only showing thought he was safe hiding in slightly under the fairy dress, her tiara Lowestoft! held on with a piece of elastic. She On my first visit, standing outside the adjusted herself on the piano stool to large imposing front door, I heard the her favoured position. As she paused to patter of Danish feet rushing down the play her first refrain, Tove’s hooped skirt stairs. Tove flung open the door and to flew up at the back above her head to my amazement the ‘sack of potatoes’ reveal her very lacy drawers followed by was wearing a short lime green the exasperation of the audience as negligee. She huffed ‘come in kvickly, I they tried to control their laughter! need to be tuned to concert pitsch.’ I Tove unfortunately lost her husband shuffled quickly away muttering that I and on one of my visits I saw what she must have come on the wrong day. had prepared for his evening meal, so Tove was soon on the phone his demise was of no surprise to me. demanding another appointment, her She recovered fairly quickly and would sister, who was a brilliant pianist, was show photographs of him as he lay in to make a special visit from Denmark his coffin. A Danish tradition? She

32 24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 Visit our website ... www.hospitalradioyare.com 33 received more than 425,000 calls. So the simple idea is having a transformational effect on the lives of thousands of older people and a huge and unmet need has been revealed. There is no other helpline for older people in the UK, available 24/7, free It’s true to say that if you make something and confidential and offering information, simple enough for everyone to use, then friendship and advice, linking older people to they will. local groups and services and supporting Esther Rantzen’s vision to create a those who are suffering abuse and neglect. ‘ChildLine for older people’ is a simple Dorothy is 84. Her husband Eric died after concept – a free 24 hour helpline, available 58 years of happy marriage. With no every day and night of the year, where you children and her only surviving brother living can ask about services in your area, talk in abroad, Dorothy has no family around her. confidence, get some friendly advice or quite She’s led a long and fascinating life but has simply have a chat. And for people who no one to talk to. would appreciate a regular call from the Sometimes when loneliness hits, she will same person every week there are now ‘have a little weep. It’s a feeling of being more than 1200 volunteer Silver Line abandoned’ she says. ‘The hardest thing is Friends who share the belief that a simple eating alone and the flat, dead nights... connection with another human being can there’s nothing worse than trying to eat a be life-changing. As one caller told his Silver meal on your own in my opinion. It seems to Line friend ‘when I get off the phone, I feel bring it home to you.’ like I belong to the human race’. Dorothy contacted the Silver Line and More than half of all 75 year olds in the now speaks regularly to a volunteer Silver UK live alone and one in ten suffers intense Line Friend. ‘It’s lovely. I so look forward to loneliness but is reluctant to ask for help. In her call. I love talking to people. I’m a poll conducted by ComRes for The Silver interested in people’. Line, 9 out of 10 older people told Dorothy feels her life has taken a new researchers that ‘a chat on the phone’ is the direction since discovering The Silver Line. most helpful solution when they feel lonely She is enjoying spreading the word about but 1 in 4 older people say they rarely have our service and is taking a computer class anyone to chat to. Some older people go for and is determined to learn computer skills, several days without talking to another so she can become more connected. human being. Dame Esther Rantzen is the Founder and The incidence of loneliness and isolation President of The Silver Line Helpline. among older people is not just shocking • £5 pays for a call with an older person because it makes them so unhappy, it has a who may not have spoken to another hugely detrimental effect on their health, human being all week increasing the risk of heart disease and • £50 pays to recruit and train a volunteer causing depression. Figures from the Silver Line Friend Department of Health indicate it is as • £100 pays for an older person to be dangerous as obesity or smoking 15 befriended for one year cigarettes a day. Socially isolated and lonely If you would like further information adults are also more likely to undergo early please go to The Silver Line website: admission into residential care or hospital. www.thesilverline.org.uk or ring the helpline The Silver Line has been operating as a on 0800 4 70 80 90 (from a mobile call national service for over a year and has 0300 4 70 80 90)

34 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible 10. Who stars as title character Aquaman in the December 2018 film based on the DC Comics character of the same name? (a) Jason Momoa; (b) Henry Cavill; (c) Matt Damon. 11. Which British actress plays Mary Poppins in Mary Poppins Returns? 12. Which 2018 comedy sees high school drop out Teddy Walker, played by Kevin Hart, attempt to achieve his General Equivalency Diploma? 1. Which actor, perhaps best known 13. True or false? Creed II, the eighth for playing Clark Kent, teamed up with instalment of the Rocky franchise, sees Tom Cruise in 2018's Mission Adonis Creed take on Viktor Drago, the Impossible: Fallout? son of Ivan Drago? 2. Jason Statham plays rescuer Jonas 14. T'Challa of the fictional African Taylor in which 2018 sci-fi film? nation Wakanda is better known as 3. True or false? Dwayne 'The Rock' which Marvel super hero who hit the Johnson appeared in the 2018 sequel big screens in early 2018? to 1995's Jumanji? 15. Which American actor plays Scott 4. Which former US Office star Lang in 'Ant-Man and the Wasp'? (a) directed 'A Quiet Place' in 2018? (a) Paul Rudd; (b) Michael Douglas;, (c) Steve Carell; ( b) John Krasinski; (c) Bradley Cooper. Jenna Fischer. 16. 'Solo' is the latest release from 5. Bradley Cooper plays Jackson Maine which famous movie franchise? in which 2018 musical film? 17. In Avengers: Infinity War, the team 6. Which US dark comedy sees Jason join forces with which other superhero Bateman and Rachel McAdams' family group in an attempt to defeat Thanos? members kidnapped by burglars? 18. What is the name of the 2018 7. Tom Hardy plays investigative thriller that sees Liam Neeson play a journalist Eddie Brock in which Marvel former police officer caught up in Comics superhero film released in criminality on his journey home from October 2018? work? 8. Which 2018 film directed by Jon M 19. Alicia Vikander plays which lead Chu is based on a novel by Kevin character in the Tomb Raider movie? Kwan and features a majority Asian 20. What is the name of the virtual American cast? reality world in Ready Player One? (a) 9. Which 2018 horror film is a spin-off Blur; (b) Oasis; (c) Verve. from 2016's The Conjuring 2? answers page 40

24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 35 36 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible Butternut Squash Risotto Serves 4 Ingredients Whatever your age, fitness level or body 4 rashers back bacon, trimmed of fat shape, it’s never too soon or too late to start and chopped into pieces thinking about living healthily. You can take 1 tablespoon vegetable oil a step towards healthy living by making a 1 large onion finely chopped few basic changes to your daily life. 1 small butternut squash, peeled and Walk more chopped into bite sized pieces Take the stairs instead of the lift; use your 300g risotto rice (Arborio) lunch hour to have a half-hour walk; walk 1 litre good vegetable or chicken stock instead of driving short distances. pepper to season Exercise Cook the bacon and butternut squash Walking short distances instead of driving in a large non stick frying pan with the oil them and taking the stairs instead of the for 10 minutes lift are just two ways of building exercise Add the onion and continue to cook for into your daily life. about 5 minutes. The squash and onion Eat better should both have softened Try to eat more fruit and veg and less fat, Stir in the rice, then add the hot stock, salt and sugar. Ensure you eat a good stir again and bring to a simmer amount of starchy foods (rice, bread, Cook for 15-20 minutes, stirring pasta and potatoes) and some protein- regularly to make sure the rice does not rich foods like meat, fish, eggs and pulses. stick. When almost all the stock has been Cut salt absorbed and the rice is tender the dish is ready. Season and serve. Most of us are eating far too much salt through bought soups, sauces, biscuits, cereals and ready meals. The Eatwell Plate We only need six grams of salt a day – a Use the Eatwell Plate to help you get the teaspoonful. balance right. It shows how much of what Drink more water you eat should come from each food group. Our bodies need six to eight glasses or two litres of water every day to ensure everything is in good working order. Diet and nutrition What you eat is important. Your diet can affect how well you feel. If you eat the right foods, you can protect yourself and decrease your chances of getting ill – from minor ailments to more serious illnesses. In the UK, we eat an average of three portions of fruit and veg per day, we really need to have five daily portions.

24 Hour Request Line 01493 453536 37 Hidden in the cockpit of this airliner are 20 objects. How many can you find? Bowl, eyeglasses, bat, ice cream cone, bell, pencil, light bulb, door knob, bow tie, toothbrush, comb, screwdriver, diamond ring, fishing rod, scissors, key, toothpaste, golf club, torch, coffee cup. Answers page 40.

Can you sort out the three missing pieces of this jigsaw puzzle?

Answers page 40

38 Please support the advertisers ... without their kind support this publication would not have been possible From the lyrics, can you match it with the song and can you also name the Disney film the song comes from?

1. ‘... Like a bolt out of the blue’ 6. ‘As Dreamers do’ is from which song? (a) When You Wish Upon a Star (a) A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes (b) Wishes (b) When You Wish Upon a Star (c) Once Upon a Dream (c) Wishes (d) The Gospel Truth d) Under The Sea 7. ‘Where would we walk...’ 2. ‘You wake with the morning (a) Part of Your World sunlight...’ (b) Kiss the girl (a) When You Wish Upon a Star? (c) Friend Like Me (b) Someday My Prince Will Come (d) Fantasmic’ (c) Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes (d) Part of Your World 8. ‘Brushing up and looking down...’ 3. ‘to be happy forever I know...’ (a) A Whole New World (a) Cinderella, Cinderella (b) I Just Can't Wait To Be King (b) Kiss The Girl (c) I'll Make a Man Out Of You (c) In Harmony (d) The Second Star to the Right (d) Someday My Prince Will Come 9. ‘Shines in the night for you...’ 4. ‘hold your breath it gets better’ (a) When You Wish Upon a Star (a) A Star is Born (b) I'll Make a Man Out Of You (b) A Whole New World (c) The Second Star to the Right (c) Wishes (d) A Whole New World (d) Be Our Guest 10. Complete the lyric ‘How High 5. ‘Rising in the east’ Would the ______grow’? (a) Small World (a) Tree (b) Beauty and the Beast (b) Single Mole (c) Wishes (c) Sycamore (d) Part of Your World (d) Mountain answers p40 SPOT THE AD Below are parts of various advertisements that appear somewhere in this magazine. Can you find them and name the advertiser?

ANSWERS: Movie Quiz: 1. Henry Cavill; 2. The Meg; 3. True; 4. (b) John Krasinski; 5. A Star is Born; 6. Game Night; 7. Venom; 8. Crazy Rich Asians; 9. The Nun; 10. (a) Jason Momoa; 11. Emily Blunt; 12. Night School; 13. True; 14. Black Panther; 15. (a) Paul Rudd; 16. Star Wars; 17. Guardian of the Galaxy; 18. The Commuter; 19. Lara Croft; 20. (b) Oasis. Can You Spot the Logo? Cadburys; Coca Cola; Disney; Ebay; Lego; Pizza Hut; Subway; Pepsi; Argos; Tesco; tic tac; Yahoo; Esso; Aldi; Oracle; Google; Canon. Disney Quiz: 1. When You Wish Upon a Star (Pinocchio); 2. A Dream is a Wish your Heart Makes (Cinderella); 3. Some Day my Prince will Come (Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs); 4. A Whole New World (Aladdin); 5. Beauty and the Beast (Beauty and the Beast); 6.When You Wish Upon a Star (Pinocchio); 7. Part of Your World (Little Mermaid); 8. I Just Can’t Wait to be King (The Lion King); 9. The Second Star to the Right (Peter Pan); 10. Sycamore (Pochantas).

Radio Yare is grateful for contributions from all authors of articles. However, neither the Hospital nor the Hospital Radio can accept responsibility for the veracity of the advertisement or articles which appear in this magazine. The publisher has endeavoured to ensure that all information and artwork inside this magazine is correct at the time of going to press. © Hospital Radio Publications 2019

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