(Previously televised on Wednesday and Thursday)
This film on Knowsley Hall, the home of the Earl of Derby, is the last in the series. It shows the great house, built through the centuries from early Tudor to late Victorian times, on the site of the ancient manor of Knowsley in spreading parkland six miles outside Liverpool.
(Previously televised on May 21)
A film reminder of the Festival of Britain which opened in May 1951 on London's South Bank. Produced for The Observer by the late Dr. Richard Massingham as a permanent record of the exhibition's features and architecture.
(to 16.15)
London Town
Richard Dimbleby introduces a new series of programmes specially adapted for children.
Science can be Fun
A programme showing some intriguing experiments from one of the most famous laboratories in the world, the National Physical Laboratory at Teddington-on-Thames.
(to 17.45)
A fortnightly magazine programme for the under-twenty-ones.
Your Host Benny Lee assisted by Jean Aubrey and members of the Club.
Guests
Tony Brent, Valentine Dyall, Peter Glover, Denise Hurst, David Croft.
Modern music by the Teleclub All-Stars under the direction of Steve Race.
Freddy Clayton (trumpet), Vic Ash (clarinet), Don Rendell (tenor), Harry Klein (baritone), Martin Slavin (vibraphone), Joe Muddel (bass), Bill Eyden (drums) and Steve Race (piano)
In the last twenty years doctors and scientists have developed electronic machines to probe the secrets of the human brain.
How do these machines work? What information can they give about human thought and personality? What light can they-throw on the mysteries of sleep and memory? What is a 'brain-print'?
These and other questions are discussed by Dr. Grey Walter, a world-famous figure in this work, when television cameras visit his laboratories to watch experiments in progress.
From the Burden Neurological Institute, Bristol.
with Ken Dryden and Len Argent.
Personalities who make the news face questions from the people who write the news.
Guest, Professor P. M. S. Blackett F.R.S., Nobel Prizewinner for Physics, 1948
See 'Television Diary' on page 15
(sound only)