Story: A Snowy Day written and illustrated by EZRA JACK KEATS Presenters
CAROL CHELL , FRED HARRIS
The last of five programmes It's personality that counts
ALAN LITTLE discusses the measurement of personality with PROFESSOR H. j. EYSENCK , Professor of Psychology, University of London.
Producer DAVID ALLEN
Book (same title), S5p from bookshops
with Robin Day including today's News Summary. Every Thursday Newsday takes a longer look at one of the issues of the week with the people concerned. Preceded by Weather
by STORM JAMESON
Dramatised in three parts by ALEXANDER BARON Part 2
Colette Hyde , attracted by Stephen's good looks and his knowledge of certain confidential memoirs, takes him as her lover. But two other young women enter Stephen's life offering the choice of social progress or private pleasure.
Cast in order of appearance:
Costume designer KEN MOREY Producer WILLIAM SLATER Director TIMOTHY COMBE
P. J. Kavanagh at Olney
P. J. KAVANAGH visits the house in Olney, Buckinghamshire, where William Cowper composed some of the best-known hymns in the English language. For most of his life,' Kavanagh says, ' he believed that he was literally damned.'
Film cameraman TOM INGLE Film editor JOHN NEEDHAM Director DAVID HEYCOCK
Kingsley Amis on Kipling
by PETER CAMPBELL, ROGER ORDISH
Starring Peter Lambert and Willie Ross
featuring Mary Miller, A.J. Brown, Tony Selby, Dennis Waterman
With FRAN FULLENWIDER, PAMELA MANSON, PATRICK NEWELL, JACK WRIGHT, CATHY COLLINS
A revue featuring two newcomers to television - singer Peter Lambert and sax-player Willie Ross - who both previously thought that Britain ended at Batley!
Film editor RAY MILLICHOPE Lighting ALAN BORNE
Designer LESLEY BREMNESS
Producer DENNIS MAIN WILSON
Pair of jokers: page 5
also featuring The Athenians
Part 1 of a concert recorded earlier this year from the Royal Albert Hall, in London
(Part 2 will be televised next week. Nana Mouskouri and The Athenians appear by arrangement with Robert Paterson)
This week:
South Africa: Two Points of View Eighteen months ago, a two-man team clandestinely shot a film in South Africa and smuggled it to this country. The result, Last Grave at Dimbaza, was labelled a ' spy' film by the South African Embassy; but neverthless it aroused great interest at the National Film Theatre and at Cannes. This year it won the Committed Film Award at Grenoble. Tonight, for the first time in this country, its message reaches a wider audience; and in response to an invitation from Man Alive, the South African Embassy shows a film of its own in reply: Black Man Alive-The Facts. The two films represent remarkably different viewpoints on the conditions for black people in South Africa. In the last few weeks South Africa has felt the threats of expulsion from the UN and a new regime in neighbouring Mozambique. Prime Minister Vorster has promised dramatic changes in the next few months and Dr Kaunda has hailed a recent speech by Mr Vorster as ' the voice of reason for which Africa has been waiting.'
Tonight Man Alive shows both films, and Desmond Wilcox discusses with the film-makers and others concerned with South Africa, just where the truth lies and what hope there is of a better future for black South Africans.
Producer DAVID FILKIN Editor ADAM CLAPHAM
Looking on the white side: page 4
with Pavid Holmes ; Weather