Produced and presented by Mahendra Kaul
from Birmingham: repeated on Wednesday at 1.0 pm (not N Ireland)
From St Peter's Roman Catholic Church, Edinburgh
Concelebrated by Fr Walter Glancy, Fr Henry Reid and Fr Charles Barclay
Introduced by Fr William Anderson
BBC Scotland
How important is it to know yourself when choosing a career - and what makes for job satisfaction?
(Repeated on Tuesday at 12.5 pm and Friday at 11.0 am - not Scottish)
David Richardson investigates the use of urea and other compounds as constituents of animal feeds.
(from Birmingham)
Weather for Farmers
Weather
For nearly 200 years, Admiralty charts have guided the world's shipping fleets. Now they are opening up the rich resources of the sea.
Introduced by Ron Pickering
with Alan Pascoe and Ann Wilson
[Repeat]
Starring Andrew Duggan as Murdoch Lancer, James Stacy as Johnny, Wayne Maunder as Scott, Elizabeth Baur as Teresa
Guest stars Paul Brinegar, Bill Mumy, Bert Freed
A young orphaned boy is determined to avenge his father's murder. To help him, Johnny Lancer reverts to his old life as Johnny Madrid - outlaw and gunman.
with Anthony Smith
Tokyo is only 50 miles away from the sacred Mount Fuji, central attraction for millions of visitors.
(From Bristol; first shown on BBC2)
The Royal Air Force were yesterday at home to 500,000 people at airfields throughout Britain. BBC outside broadcast cameras were at Abingdon in Berkshire to cover a spectacular flying display commemorating the anniversary of the most famous air battle of the Second World War.
Scheduled to take part: The Red Arrows (RAF Aerobatic Team); The Falcons (RAF Free-fall Parachute Team); The Blue Eagles (Army Helicopter Display Team); and many other exciting aeroplanes both old and new.
(Colour)
by John Brason
'Something coming out of the cold black empty dark to shatter the warmth and comfort of our nice cosy Moonbase.' Is there something alive in Mare Frigoris?
by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Translated by Nicholas Bethell and David Burg
A Play of the Month presentation
Starring David Leland as Nemov, Gabrielle Lloyd as Lyuba
Set in a Soviet labour camp in 1945, this play tells the story of Nemov, a trusting and naive army officer who has been sent to the camp from the front on charges of anti-Soviet agitation, and Lyuba, a girl prisoner who is driven to evade the struggle for survival by sleeping around with the camp officials and well-fixed prisoners.
The story of their love affair is set against the background of self-seeking squabbles and the fight for survival of other groups of internees.
The play was recorded in Norfolk.
Solzhenitsyn, the writer out In the cold: pages 66-71
with Peter Woods
Weather
"Very often parents flatter me by writing: "Should my child - aged three months and who now bounces in rhythm - become a professional musician?" I always want to reply: "For God's sake wait! First try to get him to love music and then worry if he's going to make any money out of it!"
Andre Previn, in a previous Omnibus: Who Needs a Conductor?, talked about the history and theory of conducting. Tonight's programme demonstrates the practical aspects of the job - the attention to detail, phrasing and ensemble - as he rehearses the Leicestershire Schools Orchestra in
Glinka Ruslan and Ludmilla
Rachmaninov Symphonic Dance (No 1)
Beethoven Symphony No 7 (finale)
and talks about the rewards and hazards of music-making - amateur and professional.
(Conductor in the sticks: page 4)
(Colour)
William F. Buckley Jr publisher, editor, and America's foremost right-wing commentator faces Dee Wells, journalist; Louis Heren, Deputy Editor, The Times; Anthony Howard, Editor, New Statesman who reverse the firing line by questioning William F. Buckley on his own views and attitudes.
A BBC/SECA co-production
(Colour)