Market trends, news, weather
(Wednesday's "Ten to Eight")
and programme News
Radio's breakfast-time magazine Introduced by JOHN TIDMARSH
Reflections taken from the book
Daily Readings from W. E. Sangster
and Programme News
Revised second edition
Introductory music for Assembly
Tuesday's broadcast
A medical magazine introduced by JOAN YORKE and including:
On the Shelf: some advice from Dr. RICHARD LANGDALE on keeping medicines
Specialist in the Studio: a dermatologist answers listeners' questions on hair and scalp problems
Produced by Thena Heshel
by RACHEL PERCIVAL
Tuesday's broadcast
New Every Morning, page 50
Father, in whom we live (BBC
H.B. 166)
Canticle 2
Acts 5, vv. 27-42
Spread, 0 spread (BBC H.B. 182)
Introduced by DAVID GELL
2: 1759-1949
The history of Canada in song from the Battle of the Plains of Abraham to the inclusion of Newfoundland in the Confederation.
Produced by Helen Fry
Follow-up: John Huw Davies leads in practice of activities begun in the Music Workshop
Written and produced by William Murphy
The Open Prairie
Introduced by JOHN CAMBURN Script by Douglas Coombes
Produced by Jenyth Worsley
Written by Brian Gear Starting Points series
by MALCOLM BILLINGS
Geography
says That's Life illustrated by opinions and comments from the BBC Sound Archives
Guests:
PAT AND DAVID JACOBS
Written by Robert Turley
Produced by Sheila Anderson
Brian Rix is in ' Let Sleeping Wives Lie ' at the Garrick Theatre, London
by John Galsworthy adapted for broadcasting in forty-eight parts by MURIEL LEVY 47: Forgive and Forget
Tuesday's broadcast
and Programme News
The News and Voices and Topics in and behind the headlines
Introduced by WILLIAM HARDCASTLE
Wednesday evening's broadcast
for children under five
† Story: ' An Unusual Day for
Tippy ' by Jean English
by PHILIPPA PEARCE adapted by Moira Doolan 1: Chiquitito
Living Language series
The cuckoo comes in April,
Sings a song in Man,
In the middle of June another tune, And then he flies away
Follow-up
Written and produced by William Murphy
A rare collection of instruments from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century: discussed by MADEAU STEWART and illustrated with recordings from the BBC Sound Archives 6: Late harpsichords (i)
Produced by Leslie Perowne
You in Your Small Corner by Eileen Corderoy with Lynn Carson , Dorothy Lane John Hollis
When the spinster sister decides to get married the family is much concerned about who is to took after mum, though mum is not so worried.
Produced by R. D. SMITH
Wednesday's broadcast (Radio 2)
for the Feast of Corpus Christi from St. Paul's Roman Catholic College of Education, Newbold Revel, Rugby
Introduced by FR. JOHN STAPLETON
Celebrant.
FR MARTIN WOOD , INST. CH.
Preacher,
FR. PASCHAL, o.F.M.Cap.
Readings: 1 Corinthians 11, 23-29;
St. John 6. 56-59
Kyrie, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei
(Mass of St. Paul: Watkins)
Hymns: My God, and is thy table spread (A. and M. Rev. 396); 0 King of might and splendour (P.L. 12); Praise to the holiest (P.L. 151)
Motet: 0 taste and see
(Vaughan Williams)
Organist, JOHN J. F. WATKINS
Choirmaster,
CLIFFORD MATTHEWS
A family magazine introduced by KEN SYKORA and including:
On my Way to the Theatre: KEITH MICHELL , who is appearing as Don Quixote and Cervantes in Man of La Mancha at the Piccadilly Theatre, London, visits the studio to talk about himself and his work
† Go West, Young Man (ii):
GEORGE SHEPHERD continues his conversation with Jack Single ton about life on the homestead in Saskatchewan sixty years ago and his museum of Western Development
Baby in the House: Ivy RUSSELL believes with J. M. Barrie that ' a house isn'a home without ababyinit'
Drop us a line: your news, views, and memories
Lost Splendour
The autobiography of Prince Felix Youssoupoff 1887-1967 translated by Ann Green and Nicolas Katkoff abridged by Donald Bancroft in eight episodes
Read by GEORGE MERRITT
6: The Murder Plot
and Programme News
Tonight's evening paper of the air
Live reports from the region's news studios and from Scotland Yard-Sportsdesk-' Good evening' with FRED STREETER —Stop Press Column
Introduced by COLIN HAMILTON
A play in five parts by Francis Durbridge with Simon Lack
Part 5
Produced by MARTYN C. WEBSTER
Broadcast on Oct. 16. 1967 (Radio 2)
BBC Scottish
Symphony Orchestra
Leader, Tom Rowlette
Conducted by Graham Treacher
A series of programmes about non-conformers who by precept and example helped to change the society in which they lived
The War Resisters
A study of Clifford Allen (1889-1939) written and narrated by C. R. HEWITT with Carleton Hobbs as Clifford Allen
Lord Allen of Hurtwood was for twenty-five years a leading figure in the intellectual opposition to war. He suffered grievously as a result. Before he died his convictions had so changed that he could say: ' In my judgment the use of collective force to restrain ar. aggressor by judicial process should not be called war.'
Others taking part: Betty Hardy Christopher Bidmead
David Brierley , Wilfrid Carter
Brian Haines , Denys Hawthorne Anthony Jackson , Haydn Jones Rolf Lefebvre. Denis McCarthy Peter Pratt. John Pullen
Peter Williams , Geoffrey Wincott and John Wyse
Produced by JOE BURROUGHS
Current events explored through the personalities of people who make them by GEORGE SCOTT
The News
Background to the News
People in the News followed by LISTENING POST
JOHN ANTHONY introduces letters from today's postbag
A City of Bells by ELIZABETH GOUDGE
Read by GEORGE HAGAN
Ninth of fifteen instalments
FREDERICK RIDDLE (viola) ERIC HARRISON (piano)
Listen on Radio 4's special late-night hook-up to the declarations of today's trend-setting by-elections
The BBC's Political Correspondent HARDIMAN SCOTT takes the chair and is joined in the studio by ANTHONY KING , political analyst, and MICHAEL SHIELDS of National Opinion Polls.