A magazine for viewers from India and Pakistan, including discussions, review of recent news, music and stories from the communities.
Presented and produced by Mahendra Kaul
(from Birmingham)
from Holy Trinity Church, Waringstown, Co Down
Conducted by the Rector, The Rev Dermot Jameson
Hymns (ICH):
New every morning is the love (7)
We thank thee, O our Father (635)
In the name of Jesus (373)
Angel voices, ever singing (474)
Psalm 118, vv 19-29
Lessons:
I Kings 10, vv 1-9
St. Luke 12, vv 16-31
John Cherrington looks at four different systems of management designed to cope with the individual problems which arise as dairy herds get larger.
(From Birmingham)
Weather for farmers
(Colour)
from Edinburgh
Introduced by Frank Bough
The highlights of the Games so far, and a look ahead to some of the outstanding events which will take place during the next six days of competition.
These include the boxing, starting with the Quarter-finals on Monday and Tuesday, the Semi-finals on Wednesday and the finals on Friday. The cycling is mainly on Monday and Tuesday. Swimming, wrestling and weightlifting build up during the week and there's the Marathon on Thursday. The finals and closing ceremony, including the message from the Queen are next Saturday.
Feature films selected for the occasion - at home with the family - this week starring Spencer Tracy, Cedric Hardwicke with Nancy Kelly, Walter Brennan, Charles Coburn
The legendary story of Henry Stanley's expedition into darkest Africa to find the explorer David Livingstone.
Spencer Tracy plays the part of Stanley and Sir Cedric Hardwicke plays Dr Livingstone. The film was directed by Henry King, and the location scenes in Africa were supervised by the wife of the famous explorer/film maker, Martin Johnson.
(Philip Jenkinson writes on page 9)
Life at Large looks at Ghosts at the end of the Earth
Lemurs are animals unique to Madagascar. They have been isolated on this vast island off the south-east coast of Africa for 20 million years. Shy, gentle, and in some cases beautiful creatures, they have in time been hunted by the Malagasy people as food and feared as reincarnations of the dead.
This film was made during an Oxford University Expedition to carry out field studies, and is a detailed look at one of Man's most fascinating relatives.
(From Bristol)
(First shown on BBC2)
with ventriloquist Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop, Charley Horse, Quanty
(Bert Hayes is appearing at the Winter Gardens, Margate)
In Belfast, especially in July, it can be hard to remember that Protestants and Catholics are fellow-Christians. This church-going city is not short of the Christian virtues; as individuals Belfast people are generous, friendly, and neighbourly. If religion divides them, cannot Christianity do more to bring them together?
from the Parish Church, Westbury-on-Trym, Bristol
Introduced by Peter West
with combined local church and school choirs
Lord, enthroned in heavenly splendour (St Helen)
O love, how deep, how broad, how high! (Eisenach)
Blest are the pure in heart (Franconia)
There is a green hill (arr Graham Crew)
Through the night of doubt and sorrow (Marching)
Just as I am (Saffron Walden)
The head that once was crowned with thorns (St Magnus)
In our day of thanksgiving (St Catherine's Court)
O worship the King (Hanover)
Ride on! ride on in majesty! (arr Graham Crew)
O thou who earnest from above (Here-ford)
Eternal Monarch, King most high (Gonfalon Royal)
appeals on behalf of The National Trust
In this 75th anniversary year, the Trust is more than ever concerned to conserve the finest coastlands, country, historic buildings and gardens in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
Donations, preferably by crossed PO or cheque, to: [address removed].
by David Roberts
Created by Francis Durbridge
Starring Francis Matthews as Paul
with Ros Drinkwater as Steve
Temple, cleverly framed for murder on a visit to Munich, has a life and death race against time to prove his innocence.
Starring Vivien Leigh and Kenneth More
with Eric Portman, Emlyn Williams
Kenneth More re-creates the role which brought him stardom on the London stage - as Freddie Page, the attractive but feckless ex-RAF pilot created by playwright Terence Rattigan. Vivien Leigh gives one of her finest performances as Hester, a married woman trapped as much by weakness as love in an affair which, as the film opens, seems to have run its ill-starred course.
The last in this series of Kenneth More films, The Deep Blue Sea gained a Best Actor Award at the Venice Film Festival for his portrayal of Freddie Page.
It was Vivien Leigh's first film after her Oscar-winning performance in A Streetcar Named Desire
(Philip Jenkinson writes on page 9)
with Richard Baker and Weather
On 19 July 1843 the SS Great Britain, Brunel's famous iron ship, was launched at Bristol by Prince Albert. Exactly 127 years later, the world's first propeller-driven Atlantic liner is due to return to her birthplace at the Jeffries dock in Bristol after the world's longest salvage operation. Magnus Magnusson introduces the first live broadcast from this historic ship, together with film, specially shot by Chronicle, of her dramatic rescue and her last 7,000-mile voyage from a lonely cove in the Falkland Islands.
An invitation to step into the humorous and imaginative world of James Thurber
A series based on a selection of his famous stories and cartoons starring William Windom as John Monroe, Joan Hotchkis as his wife Ellen, Lisa Gerritsen as his daughter Lydia
This week: The Ghost and Mr Monroe
Taken all round it's enough to make anyone feet haunted. What does it matter which hippopotamus is talking anyway. Just let your mind alone.