For Schools
Previously shown in February 1964
(to 9.55)
Hugh Ross Williamson introduces some of the people who lived and worked on Sir Robert Faldrey's manor.
For Schools
Previously shown in June 1962
Repeated on Wednesday at 9.38 a.m.
(to 10.20)
Vera McKechnie turns the pages and shows you how to make paper chains.
You need pieces of plain or coloured paper, scissors, and pencil
BBC film
(to 11.00)
Written and produced by Ronald Smedley.
Colin and Shirley have more adventures in West Wales.
For Schools
Repeated on Friday at 2.5 p.m.
(to 11.25)
Civil engineers cover a very wide range of activities. This programme deals chiefly with bridges and buildings, and the engineers concerned talk about their work.
Presented by Donald Holms.
For Schools
Repeated on Thursday at 11.5 a.m.
(to 11.55)
gydag Owen Edwards.
Topical items introduced by Owen Edwards in Welsh.
(Crystal Palace, Sutton Coldfield, Holme Moss)
For the very young
A film series about the animals who live along the banks of a Canadian river.
Guinea completes his first test flight and the Riverbank Air Mail Service is inaugurated.
Commentary spoken by Johnny Morris.
(to 13.45)
Introduced by Peter West.
Life in the audio-typist pool of a large organisation is very different from that of the office junior in a country solicitor's office.
BBC film for Schools
(Repeated on Friday at 9.35 a.m.)
(to 14.25)
Ley Kenyon, who has worked with Commander Cousteau, explores the seabed in different parts of the Indian Ocean. He discovers the remains of a Greek town that has lain under the Mediterranean for hundreds of years.
Filmed by Ley Kenyon who speaks the commentary.
BBC film for Schools
Repeated on Thursday at 11.35 a.m.
(to 14.50)
Do tall boys have big feet? Has the sale of television sets caused the decline of cinema audiences?
Introduced by Stewart Gartside.
For Schools
Previously shown in February 1964
Repeated on Friday at 10.0 a.m.
(to 15.15)
with Christopher Trace and Valerie Singleton.
A second chance to see the thrilling film series about the adventures of two dare-devil parachutists.
Jim has a tense moment when he performs an operation at secondhand.
News and views from London and the South-East.
Introduced by Richard Baker.
followed by The Weather
A world study of wildlife in danger and of the wild places where it lives.
A film series by Eugen Schuhmacher.
Commentary by Peter Scott.
Man of the forest is the translation of the Malayan words 'orang utan'. There were plenty of these animals until well into this century, but their numbers have been drastically reduced, first by the Dyak hunters and then by the demands of forestry development and of research laboratories and zoos.
Presented by the BBC Natural History Unit
Introduced by Cliff Michelmore with the Tonight team.
Starring Val Doonican
with The N.D.O.
Directed by Bernard Herrmann
and featuring Request Time
From the North
Requests should be sent to Val Doonican, [address removed]
A comedy film series.
Starring Elizabeth Montgomery as Samantha, Dick York as Darrin
and Agnes Moorehead as Endora
A Nice Little Dinner Party
is given by Samantha for Darrin's conventional parents, but with Endora at her most charming, it nearly ends in disaster.
The 10,000 Faces of the World
Introduced by Richard Dimbleby.
with reports on People-Places-Problems from Panorama's regular team of commentators Robin Day and Michael Barratt, Michael Charlton, John Morgan.
An appeal by Field-Marshal The Earl Alexander of Tunis K.G.
Contributions, preferably by crossed cheque or postal order, will be gratefully received [address removed]
A film series starring Raymond Burr as the famous lawyer-investigator created by Erle Stanley Gardner.
The bitter legal dispute between a man and his estranged wife for the custody of their small daughter leads to a situation in which the child becomes the innocent victim of a ruthless intrigue.
Girls... Girls... Girls compete for the 1965 title and the Misty Trophy at the Lyceum Ballroom, London.
Music by Joe Loss and his Orchestra
Master of Ceremonies, Michael Aspel
Organised by Mecca Dancing and arranged by Eric Morley
followed by The Weather
An introduction to chemical change and thermodynamics by Professor George Porter, F.R.S.
First transmission on Sunday