A programme for children at home.
(Also on BBC-1 and BBC Wales)
(to 11.25)
Second day's play at The Oval.
(On BBC-1 and BBC Wales from 6.5 p.m.)
(to 18.05)
Written and introduced by Professor Bell Wiley.
By the 1850s a gulf had opened between the States of the North and those of the South. Americans were living in two different worlds.
(First shown on BBC-1)
by John Brunner.
Dramatised by Leon Griffiths.
A second showing of strange stories from the world of science fiction.
Starring Ronald Lewis
Obsession and reality become inextricably bound up in the mind of a doctor who receives a strange visitor, whose identity cannot be explained.
(Repeat)
Written by Richard Hough and Michael Frostick.
Four weekly Wheelbase programmes looking back over eighty years of international motoring.
Lord Montagu of Beaulieu and Rudi Uhlenhaut, Mercedes chief engineer, recall the rivalry between Rolls-Royce and Daimler Benz, and W. F. Bradley, Percy Kidner, George Lanchester, and St. John Nixon describe making and driving the world's first cars, and give an eye-witness account of the Gordon Bennett road races, the 1,000 miles trial of 1900, and the opening of Brooklands.
Next Friday: Part 2 - Any colour you like as long as it's black (1918-1930)
See page 47
Tales from the last frontier of the great American West.
Starring James Drury as The Virginian
Trampas acts very suspiciously when a tough and ruthless bounty hunter arrives in town and starts asking a lot of questions about his past.
(Repeat)
followed by The Weather
Reflection of the week's television with the Line-Up Team and Friday night's guests.