The Trite Wilderness by The Rev. Harry Williams
GARARD GREEN reads the second of three excerpts
and Programme News
Make Yourself at Home for listeners from
India and Pakistan
and Programme News
Hymns and sacred music introduced by SANDY MACPHERSON
Singers, MICHAEL RIPPON HAZEL HUNT
CHARLES SMART (organ)
Now I See
The second of four Services during Lent on the theme of Conversion
2: Waking up to life from St. Mary's College of Education, Falls Road, Belfast conducted by FR. ANTHONY McLAVERTY
Preacher, FR. DESMOND WILSON Readings: Ephesians 2; 2 Corinthians 5; Luke 9
Hymns: Be thou my vision; Rejoice earth and heaven (Bu.rtehude); Ave verum (Mozart); Hymn to the Virgin (Britten); 0 King of might and spiendour
Belfast Gaelic Choir directed by Gerald O'Rawe Organist, Robert Leonard
GALE PEDRICK makes a personal selection of items from BBC radio and television
Introduced by JOHN ELLISON
Edited version of last Friday's broadcast
Radio's correspondence programme, which reflects listeners' own views on current topics, presents a special Sunday selection of letters with all the family in mind
Introduced by LESLIE SMITH
Being a biography of bachelor Bliss
The Modest Hero
Last Monday's broadcast
and Programme News
The One O'Clock News leads off this sixty-minute up-to-the-minute report on the world around us
The latest news, the background to the news, and the people in the news: presented by William Hardcastle
Editor, ANDREW BOYLE
A World at One production
visits
East Dean, near Chichester
Members of the Singleton and East Dean Women's Institute put their questions to
FRED LOADS, BILL SOWERBUTTS and ARTHUR BILLlTT
Question-Master,
FRANKLIN ENGELMANN
Produced by Kenneth Ford
The novel by V. Sackville-West adapted for radio by Ronald Gow from his stage play with Rachel Gurney, Olga Lindo, Janet Burnell , Michael Spice.
The terrace at Chevron, May 1910. "The old order changeth, yielding place to new...". But tradition dies hard-as Sebastian, the young twelfth Duke, discovered.
(1st Broadcast on October 17. 1964)
The North York Moors
PETER WHEELER visits the moors, forests, valleys, and coastline of a lovely part of Yorkshire and talks to people who contribute to the pleasure of holiday-makers in the area
Research and script by Bertha Lonsdale
1 Produced by Herbert Smith
From My Postbag:
DAVID GINSBURG , M.P.
Paying for your Child: ELIZABETH MITCHELL talks about situations in which parents sometimes get an unpleasant surprise
Life Assurance: TOM WILMOT on points to watch in a time of inflation
Introduced by ROBIN HOLMES
The Green Island
A special edition dealing with Ireland and the third All-Ireland Conference on Bird Conservation held at New-castle, County Down, February 28-March 2
Does Ireland have anything to offer to the European scientific community? What are the threats to Irish wildlife? What is being done on the conservation front?
Introduced by DAVID CABOT
Produced by Dilys Breese
† FRANKLIN ENGELMANN recently visited
Enfield, Middlesex
Produced by Richard Burwood
Connah's Quay, Flintshire
and Programme News
by ALISTAIR COOKE
A discussion on cinema, books, theatre, broadcasting, and art including:
Isadora: directed by Karel Reisz at the Odeon Cinema, St. Martin's Lane, London
What the Butler Saw, by Joe Orton, at the Queen's Theatre, London
Introduced by HAROLD HOBSON
MARGHANITA LASKI
RICHARD MAYNE , GEORGE MELLY
Produced by Helen Rapp
BBC SCOTTISH
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Leader, Tom Rowlette
Conductor, JAMES
LOUGHRAN Vaughan Williams
Overture: The Wasps
7.12* Symphony No. 5, in D major
The Sir Oswald Stoll Foundation by Lieut-General Sir Brian Horrocks, K.C.B.
Founded in 1916, the Foundation provides residential family flats for disabled ex-servicemen, including Police and Civil Defence, with skilled medical care at hand.
Donations, preferably by crossed P.O. or cheque, to: [address removed]
The Prime Minister
The Rt. Hon.
Harold Wilson , M.P. talks to
LESLIE SMITH
The novel by Charles Reade adapted for radio in thirteen parts by TONY VAN DEN BERGH
6: The Forged Letter
Gerard's evil brothers resort to substitution of a forged letter, and Gerard saves a woman and her child from drowning.
Produced by R. D. SMITH
Introduced by ALAN KEITH with gramophone records of the most popular pieces of music chosen by listeners
Within two weeks of her death Baroness Asquith recorded a programme for BBC-2. Better known perhaps as Lady Violet Bonham Carter , she talked with GEORGE RYLANDS about the poetry and prose that had helped to form her life. Tonight Radio 4 presents a somewhat shortened version of that programme
Produced for television by John Furness
Edited for radio by Patrick Harvey
Lead us not into temptation
1 Corinthians 10, vv. 12-13
Psalm 119, part 8
Deuteronomy 6, vv. 4-7, 10-14, 16-18 St. Matthew 4. vv. 1-11
Lone in the desert (BBC H.B. 343)
Mozart
Duo in B flat major, for violin and viola (K.424)
Adagio in C major, for cor anglais and three instruments (K.Anh.94)
Oboe Quartet in F major (K.370)
LONDON OBOE QUARTET Janet Craxton
(oboe and cor anglais) Perry Hart (violin)
Brian Hawkins (viola) Kenneth Heath (cello)
From the Wigmore Hall, London: broadcast on January 7