10.0-10.20 Merry-Go-Round: Voyage of Discovery
Introduced by Richard Carpenter
(Repeated on Thursday)
11.0-11.20 Discovering Science: What is Life?
Introduced by Peter Kelly
(Repeated on Tuesday)
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,786 playable programmes from the BBC
10.0-10.20 Merry-Go-Round: Voyage of Discovery
Introduced by Richard Carpenter
(Repeated on Thursday)
11.0-11.20 Discovering Science: What is Life?
Introduced by Peter Kelly
(Repeated on Tuesday)
Songs of Praise from Gorffwysfa, Llanberis
(First shown on BBC Wales)
(Crystal Palace, Wenvoe West, Holme Moss, Sutton Coldfield)
(to 13.25)
For the very young
Pippin and Tog meet the hens.
Bert Foord
(to 13.53)
2.5 Exploring Your World: The First Years
Introduced by Harry Armstrong
(Repeated on Wednesday)
2.30 Going to Work: First Day at Work
Introduced by Peter West
Interviews, induction courses, training and settling in... Maria works in a shop, Mark in a factory, Jill in an office-this film re-creates what happened to them when they first started work.
(Repeated on Tuesday)
2.55-3.15 Television Club: Throwing a Party
Introduced by James Lloyd
(Repeated on Friday)
with pictures by Bernard Blatch
with Joe Melia
Do you know whether anyone has ever stolen the Crown Jewels? If you watch this week you can hear about a man who nearly succeeded. The stories are all about London-and they're all true
with Valerie Singleton, John Noakes, Peter Purves
See columns 1 and 2
The swashbuckling adventures of the daring chevalier Francois de Recci.
A film serial in twelve parts
Francois and Guillot are taken prisoner by bandits and meet the beautiful Isabelle and her father, the Due de Sospel.
English version written and told by Eric Thompson.
Bert Foord
David Hemmings introduces film releases, films on television, film-makers, film stars, film-goers
A new Safari
starring Marshall Thompson as Dr. Marsh Tracy, Cheryl Miller as Paula Tracy and Ross Hagen as Bart Jason
with Hedley Mattingly, Hari Rhodes
and Erin Moran as Jenny Jones
aided and abetted by Clarence and Judy
The pride of lions goes before a fall!
by Michael Dines
Starring James Ellis, John Slater and Derek Waring
with Paul Angelis, Douglas Fielding and Bernard Holley
Officially, a police informant does not exist... information is obtained from the birds. So when a snout stands in danger of reprisal, who is to protect him?
For cast list see page 23
by John Lloyd
[Starring] David Baxter, Richard Davies, Nerys Hughes and Jessie Evans
Reg and Stan, trying to beat the boredom of reporting dull local events for a small Welsh newspaper, invent exciting stories and sell them to Fleet Street. Life becomes more exciting than they had planned.
People, places, and problems that matter most to Britain and the world
Introduced by Robin Day with Panorama reporters Michael Charlton, David Dimbleby, Richard Kershaw, Robert MacNeil, James Mossman, Julian Pettifer
with John Edmunds
followed by The Weather
by David Fisher
[Starring] Ray Barrett, Philip Latham, Jayne Sofiano
Guest stars, Glyn Owen, Charles Tingwell, David Healy
Papuan headhunters are not a common danger to Mogul. But this week they are only one of the hazards which Peter Thornton has to face. Why does the Australian District Commissioner try to stop him going to see Dr. Liebling? And what is Dr. Liebling doing there anyway? It takes a terrifying experience to clear up the mystery.
This episode re-unites for the first time the three stars of Emergency - Ward 10: Ray Barrett, Glyn Owen, and Charles Tingwell. Also starring is David Healy, an American who recently played the role of Falstaff for the Royal Shakespeare Company. It is the first television production in this country by Australian director Ken Hannam, who recently lived and worked in Papua.
Another look at the world through the eyes of David Frost
with Ronnie Barker, John Cleese, Ronnie Corbett, Sheila Steafel and Julie Felix
What matters in the news and out of it with Kenneth Allsop and Michael Barratt,
Robert McKenzie, Vincent Kane
with on-the-spot reports by Fyfe Robertson, David Lomax, Philip Tibenham, Denis Tuohy, Linda Blandford
Is it unlucky to see the new moon through glass? The moon has always been thought to have a powerful influence on the earth, causing not only tides but also good luck, bad luck, and even lunacy, according to its phases.
Patrick Moore discusses with Henry Brinton, Bert Foord, weatherman and Dr. J. T. Hutchinson, a psychiatrist the scientific truths and popular superstitions about the moon's effects on the earth.
Written by Helena Valenti
Twenty lessons for beginners in Spanish
With Jacinta Castillejo, Mari Carmen Nevado, Julio Pena and Carlos Riera
(Repeated next Saturday at 9.30 a.m.)
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