For Schools
Previously shown in June 1963
(to 10.00)
Presented by Douglas Quadling.
For Schools
Repeated on Wednesday at 9.40 a.m.
(to 10.22)
Vera McKechnie turns the pages and shows you how to make paper flowers. You need coloured paper, scissors, and brown paper
BBC film
(to 11.00)
Written and produced by Ronald Smedley.
Colin and Shirley try their hand at sailing a dinghy.
With George Gibbs
For Schools
Repeated on Friday at 2.5 p.m.
(to 11.25)
The fourth day's play at Lord's.
The first day of play features the First Round of the Men's Singles.
See also BBC-2
(to 14.00)
with Geoffrey Wheeler
You don't have to know how to ride before going pony trekking. Geoffrey Wheeler sees what happens to girls on their first days at a Pony Trekking Centre in the Black Mountains.
For Schools
Repeated on Tuesday at 11.5 a.m.
(to 14.25)
For Schools
Repeated on Thursday at 11.35 a.m.
(to 14.47)
A programme about the parabola.
Presented by Alan Tammadge.
For Schools
Repeated on Friday at 10.2 a.m.
The first day's play.
and
Cricket: England v. Australia: Second Test Match
Further visits to Lord's.
Christopher Trace and Valerie Singleton introduce a magazine programme for younger viewers.
A film from Germany.
Boatswain is a dog who lives on a tug. During a spell ashore he becomes marooned on the ice.
Commentary by Peter Hawkins.
News and views from London and the South-East.
Introduced by Richard Baker.
Followed by The Weather
The closing overs of the day.
The final transmission of the day, including highlights of the first round of the Men's Singles and a summary of the day's results.
A team of professional bird-watchers studies the home-life of the black-headed gull.
Commentary by Hugh Falkus.
With Dr. Niko Tinbergen, F.R.S. Hans Kruuk, Ian Patterson, Robert Mash, Mike Norton-Griffiths
Produced by Manuscript Film
A BBC-tv Natural History Unit presentation
From the West
See facing page
A film series of comedy-thrillers starring Glynis Johns as a writer of mystery stories with a flair for making her own perilous predicaments and Keith Andes as her long-suffering husband.
This One Will Kill You ...and that's no joke!
The Window on the World
Introduced by Richard Dimbleby with reports on People - Places - Problems in the news from Panorama's regular team of commentators Robin Day and Michael Barratt, Michael Charlton, Roderick MacFarquhar, John Morgan.
Rupert Davies as Maigret introduces:
Jasper Shrig played by Patrick Troughton in Jeffery Farnol's "The Loring Mystery"
Adapted by Max Marquis.
Bow Street Runner Jasper Shrig uncovers a dark mystery of high passion and hidden identity which brings death to a hell-fire Regency squire.
See page 24
with Robert Robinson
A quick look at criticism and comments from viewers.
Letters for inclusion in these programmes should be addressed to Points of View, [address removed]
On the second leg of their journey round the world Eric and Susan Hiscock sail among the most beautiful islands in the Pacific. After spending a green Christmas on a do-it-yourself farm in New Zealand, they begin their final 15,000 miles in Wanderer III and find strange companions - dope smugglers in the Red Sea.
First shown on January 11, 1963