A magazine for viewers from Pakistan and India
Presented and produced by Saleem Shahed
(From Birmingham)
An invitation to speak French
With Max Bellancourt, Jacques Faber, Jacqueline Holtz, Michele Lebray, Georges Montant
A beginners' course in German
Introduced by Leslie Banks
With Dorothea Neukirchen, Werner Umberg, Willy Bowman, Paul Hansard, Martin Lyder, George Mikell, Suzanne Roquette, Jorg Sorensen, Marianne Walla
from the Parish Church, Westbury-on-Trym, Bristol
Celebrant The Vicar, The Rev. Kenneth Clark
David Vine introduces 10 programmes for people who want to improve their swimming
With Ray Cayless of the ASA
From the Loughborough College of Education.
A certain concept of the German people was a powerful weapon for Hitler in his rise to power. What was it?
Introduced by John Tidmarsh
Retailers and experts exchange views on the problems of preparing for D-day.
Introduced by Harold Webb
Introduced by Henry Fell
Despite a large government grant millions of acres of farmland in the UK still need draining.
David Richardson investigates how farmers can tackle this problem.
(from Birmingham)
A new project: where the teacher doesn't teach.
Exams: do they work? Also some hints on how to pass them.
Russell Braddon, Australian journalist, author, and broadcaster talks to Michael Dean about his childhood in Australia, his detention in Changi Gaol and his post-war life in England.
Starring Max Bygraves, Barbara Murray
with Kathleen Harrison, Colin Petersen, Dana Wilson
A Child Welfare Officer uses rather unconventional methods to give three of her charges a new opportunity in life.
Customers and connoisseurs explore the world of antiques with Max Robertson
Customers Juno Alexander, Jeremy Irons
(from Bristol)
Cliff Morgan meets young people from all over Great Britain who have unusual and exciting ways of spending their leisure time.
Five-year-old Gershon Cohen of Cardiff insists on showing his stamp collection before agreeing to play his violin. Dorothy Barrett and Stuart Barrett, 10-year-old twins from Alton, Hampshire, revive the ancient craft of making corn dollies, while 16-year-old Peter Spence of Whitley Bay attempts to tie us all in knots.
(from Cardiff)
Leslie Brown is one of the most adventurous naturalists in the world, pursuing his quarry with binoculars and notebook, by land, water and air. We find him in search of lonely eagles in Scotland, millions of flamingos among the soda lakes of Tanzania, redwinged starlings behind Kenya waterfalls, and pelicans in Ethiopia.
Written and directed by Jeffery Boswall
(From Bristol)
with ventriloquist Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop and Charley Horse
(Bert Hayes is appearing at the Winter Gardens, Margate)
What is there to read in the developing countries? Is it what is needed? Are the Churches helping in the right way? Raymond Nicholls and James Sutton discuss their work with some overseas visitors who are concerned with the communications media.
Chairman Basil Moss
Introduced by Charles Richards
from Southwell Minster, Nottinghamshire
Introduced by Peter West
with combined choirs of the town
Whitsunday Story told by Tom Fleming
Praise to the Holiest (Richmond)
Come down, O love (Down Ampney)
If ye love me (Tallis)
Thou whose almighty word (Moscow)
My song is love (Love Unknown)
Guide me, O thou great Redeemer (Cwm Rhondda)
Their sound is gone out (Messiah: Handel)
When God of old (Winchester Old)
Jesu, lover of my soul (Hollingside)
Now thank we all (Nun danket)
Blessing by the Vice-Provost, The Rev Canon E. Eric Roberts
appeals on behalf of the Royal National Institute for the Deaf
The RNID shows concern for deaf people from the cradle to the grave.
Donations, preferably by crossed PO or cheque, to: [address removed]
by Michael Chapman
Created by Francis Durbridge
Starring Francis Matthews as Paul
with Ros Drinkwater as Steve
Paul moves from Amsterdam to Bruges in his search for the Arezzo Apollo figurine which has been stolen from him. The death of Genevieve Duclos leads him closer to those responsible and deeper into the dangerous world of organised international crime.
by Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
Starring Andrew Cruickshank, Beryl Reid, Jeremy Brett, Jennie Linden, T.P. McKenna and John Alderton
A glittering "fancy-dress" comedy that bubbles over with the wit and humour of Richard Sheridan, and characters like Mrs Malaprop and Sir Anthony Absolute, "the very pineapple of perfection".
(Jeremy Brett is a National Theatre player)
(Beryl Reid on Mrs Malaprop: page 9)
(Colour)
with Richard Baker and Weather
This is the last of three films about Hollywood: it begins with Samuel Goldwyn's "The Best Years of Our Lives" and ends with some of the films of 1970, made by a new generation which welcomes controversy and reflects the confusions of a Permissive Society. The old "dream world" has been thrown away, and the traditional "star system" has gone with it. Hollywood faces an uncertain future.
with her guests Peter Sarstedt and Blue Mink