BBC Birmingham
7.45 Sunday Programmes Bells and Sunday Reading
JACK BURTON reads from his book Transport of Delight
Presented by DAVID MELLOR Reporter DOUGLAS BROWN Producer LESLIE MITCHELL BBC Manchester
8.50 Programme news
BBC Birmingham
Family Service on United Nations Day, from College Street Baptist Church, Northampton, conducted by the Minister, REV JAMES WALLACE
Hymns (Baptist HB): God is love: his the care (Praise for Today, 27); Thy hand, 0 God, has guided (264); God is working his purpose out (371); Thank you for the world so sweet (754); Let all the world (13). Reading: Isaiah 11, vv 1-11. Organist BRIAN ORLAND BBC Birmingham
BRIAN CANT appeals on behalf of the National Elfrida Rathbone Society, which organises local projects aimed at helping educationally handicapped children and their families, each project tailored to distinctive local needs and conditions. Donations to: Brian Cant. National Elfrida Rathhone Society.[address removed]
A live transmission from the radio studio at Earls Court The London Motor Show
The cars discussed by STUART BLADON, JUDITH JACKSON , BRIAN ROBINS and CLIVE JACOBS
GEORGE YOUNG looks at the other exhibits.
Introduced by Jim Pestrldge Producer JOHN HASLAM at 11.43* the latest traffic report
Countrywide reactions from outside Westminster to current political issues.
Presented from Manchester by Brian Trueman
Producer CHRISTOPHER GRAHAM BBC Manchester Ring [number removed]
Colour Supplement
Presented by Derek Cooper
12.55 Weather, programme news
Presented by Gordon Clough Editor HARRY BROWN
Golden Windows by MICHAEL KITTERMASTER withand
'Do you know a story about a house with golden windows? She could never remember it. That's what the note was about.'
Produced and directed by GRAHAM GAULD
(Kittermaster's The Priest and the President: Wednesday 3.5)
ARTHUR NEGUS and BERNARD PRICE discuss listeners' questions with HUGH SCULLY
Producer PAMELA HOWE BBC Bristol
However Did They Manage Without Us?
What did clothes moths live on before human beings provided clothes? Where did swallows gather for migration before we put up telephone wires? And what sort of houses did house mice live in before they moved in with us? This programme looks at some of these unintentional ways in which human beings have provided a wide range of animals with a new way of life.
Introduced by DEREK JONES. Producer DILYS BREESE. BBC Bristol (Repeated: Wednesday 9.5 am)
' Cars don't automatically stop for you.' DAVID MUMFORD , a mobility officer, gives some guidelines on making the best use of a short white cane. Introduced by DAVID SCOTT BLACKBALL Producer THENA HESHEL
BRIAN JOHNSTON recently visited Oakham in Leicestershire. Producer CAROLE STONE. BBC Bristol (Repeated: Tuesday 11.5 am)
5.55 Weather, programme news
Current, controversial ideas are put on trial before Dick Taverne. QC, and an audience of jurors in Broadcasting House
Proposition: The jury system should now be abolished
Proposer C. H. Rolph , ex-police Chief Inspector
Opposer Anthony Lincoln , QC, Recorder of the Crown Court (Full details see Thurs 11.5 am)
A choice of operatic highlights. The singer Nigel Douglas takes a light-hearted look at some of the predicaments of operatic lovers in and out of marriage. 4: Operatic Elopers
Producer ALAN HAYDOCK
traces the religious dimension in books and music.
Presenter Gerald Priestland Producer MONICA FURLONG
conducted by WILLI BOSKOVSKY
Nicolal Overture: The Merry Wives of Windsor
Ziehrer Fächerpolonaise
Johann Strauss , arr Godowsky Paraphrase: Wine, Women and Song
SHURA CHERKASSKY (piano)
Johann Strauss Persian March; Waltz: The Blue Danube
Krelsler Liebesfreud; Caprice Viennois
ITZHAK PERLMAN (violin) SAMUEL SANDERS (piano)
Juhann Strauss , arr Sandauer Orpheus Quadrille
Lehar Waltz: Gold and Silver gramophone records
by J. B. PRIESTLEY adapted in nine parts by ANTONY KEAREY
Commodore Tribe, who has lived abroad for years, is of the opinion that Britain in 1951 has lost momentum and agrees with the Government that what is needed is a Festival. Added to which, he is out of a job and Laura is about to lose hers at the offices of Butfoss and Sons, Estate Agents and Valuers. Part 2
Produced and directed by TREVOR HILL.
BBC Manchester
(For cast see Tuesday 3.5 pm)
2: Supercool
Presented by Peter Evans
The disappearance of electrical resistance, a strange property shown by certain metals when exposed to temperatures approaching absolute zero, opens up new and exciting technologies - a working model of the sun trapped in a container with invisible walls: a high-speed train that floats along without touching the track; an ocean-going ship that starts and stops as quickly as an electric train; more efficient generation and distribution of electricity. These could all be products of a phenomenon called superconductivity. We have the knowledge to achieve such advances, but will the economic climate allow them to develop?
Producer MICHAEL BRIGHT.
Devised and narrated by a. COLIN DAVIS. Music BBC SINGERS
preceded by Weather