Starring Victor Mature, Piper Laurie, William Bendix, Vincent Price
One of the screen's most exciting manhunts, staged against the spectacular background of one of America's loveliest reserves, the Glacier National Park.
(Colour)
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Starring Victor Mature, Piper Laurie, William Bendix, Vincent Price
One of the screen's most exciting manhunts, staged against the spectacular background of one of America's loveliest reserves, the Glacier National Park.
(Colour)
A review of the political week
David Holmes recalls the highlights in the Houses of Parliament and reports on the part played by government in the lives of us all.
(Colour)
(Colour)
with Percy Thrower
At his home in Shropshire Percy Thrower shows how to grow: Hydrangea; Fuchsia fulgens; Canna Lily; Dracaena; Philodendron; Davallia canariensis (Hare's-Foot Fern); Platycerium (Stag's Horn Fern)
(from BBC Midlands)
(Colour)
Introduced by Cliff Morgan
Before today's critical match and its bearing on the Triple Crown, this was the International table:
All over Britain, small groups of determined enthusiasts are restoring engines, mapping disused lead mines, locating donkey-wheels, recording craftsmen from dying industries. The Industrial Revolution began here in Britain and reshaped the face of the Earth, but its origins are fast disappearing. What will posterity judge to be the most worthwhile things to preserve and record?
Tonight Chronicle, aided by a panel of distinguished judges, awards a prize of £250 to the group whose work in this field over the past year is judged to be the best.
Introduced by Magnus Magnusson
(Colour)
Heather Beckers, Marie Betts, Ann Chapman, Catherine Collins, Jackie Dalton, Denise Fone, Lynda Herbert, Jane Herbert, Carolyn Heywood, Linda Jolliff, Lesley Judd, Kay Korda, Linda Lawrence, Sandy Penson, Wei Wei Wong, Bobby Bannerman, Iain Burton, Chris Cooper, Roger Finch, Richard Gough, Paul Guess, Harry Higham, Roger Howlett, Nigel Lythgoe, Colin Pilditch, Jeremy Robinson, Brian Rogers, Donald Torr, Kenneth Warwick, Trevor Willis
Starring Georgia Brown and Sacha Distel, Neville Dickie
Alyn Ainsworth and his Orchestra
(Colour)
with Robert Erskine
The intensity of African sculpture reflects the daunting purpose that it serves.
(Colour)
The weekly arts magazine presented by James Mossman
Human Faces is the title of a film made in Czechoslovakia by a young Englishman, Leslie Blair, and a group of Czechs who must remain anonymous. Over black-and-white scenes of everyday life, Czech voices tell of anguish, courage, and surviving hope in the year after the Russian invasion. Human Faces takes no liberties with normal documentary conventions yet proves again that, given conviction and imagination, the documentary can rightly claim to be a work of art.
Japanese Art: In the week that Expo 70 opens in Tokyo, Review looks at a rare collection of Japanese prints, scrolls, and paintings covering the last 500 years. The work, emphasising the special qualities of brushwork and design of Japanese artists, comes from the well-known collection built up by the late Ralph Harari.
(Colour)
by Derek Hoddinott
Geoffrey works in a small, gloomy office at the Ministry where no one comes to see him and where the phone doesn't ring. Arriving one day he finds waiting for him a pretty young girl called Sheila. She is his new secretary, and life suddenly takes a new turn.
(Colour)
(Colour)
The world of pop in view
Introduced by Tommy Vance featuring Faces, Toe Fat with the best of the rest in pop
(Colour)
Starring Tony Curtis, George Nader with Julie Adams, Sal Mineo
A policeman befriends a juvenile delinquent, but 20 years later he begins to regret his generosity.
Tony Curtis plays the juvenile delinquent who becomes a hardened criminal in this realistic story shot on location in Boston.