12.15 EEC: Decision-Making
12.40 Use Your Head: 6: Creative Mind Patterns
A series of ten programmes to help those who are studying at home or about to embark on a course of study. Book (same title), £1.30, from bookshops
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 278,127 playable programmes from the BBC
12.15 EEC: Decision-Making
12.40 Use Your Head: 6: Creative Mind Patterns
A series of ten programmes to help those who are studying at home or about to embark on a course of study. Book (same title), £1.30, from bookshops
The Commercial Union Masters Final from Stockholm
DAN MASKELL and JACK KRAMER are at the Kungliga Tennis Hallen in Stockholm to commentate on the whole of this afternoon's final.
Today's winner will be the Champion of Champions. In addition to the Grand Prix prize money he has accumulated this year he will receive nearly £20,000 for this match.
Producer RICHARD TILLING
A SVERIGE-RADIO Presentation
with Peter Woods
Editor BILL NORTHWOOD
This week a new film by Heinz Sielmann who calls it
The Return of the Gone Ones
' Who's afraid of the big bad wolf?'...
Certainly our ancestors who saw them as a threat and a nuisance to their livestock. They had a similar distrust of wildcats, lynx and bears, too.
In the last few hundred years, as industrial and agricultural development have swallowed up Europe's forest and marsh, other animals - such as beavers and otters -have joined the ranks of the ' nuisance ' animal. Squeezed out of their habitat, trapped and shot, they have become rarer and rarer -some to the point of extinction. Now attitudes are changing and, to many, wildlife has a new meaning. Already beavers are being bred and reintroduced into the wild. HEINZ SIELMANN believes we can go further. He sees lynx as a natural regulator of an increasing deer population; and he hopes that one day even wolves will roam the forests of Europe again. Introduced by HEINZ SIELMANN Narrated by ANTHONY SMITH
Series editors ANTHONY ISAACS and CHRISTOPHER PARSONS. BBC Bristol
Five of the young soloists who were seen in last week's film about Making a Name give a concert in the studio. Their ages range from 16 to 26.
Introduced by KENNETH VAN BARTHOLD
Ronan Magill plays part of Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No 3
Gillian Thoday: first movement of 2nd Sonata for cello and piano by Martinu Martin Hughes : last movement of Chopin's Piano Concerto No 1
Christopher Osborn: No 2 from Schubert's Three Klavierstucke (Op posth)
Marius May: Tchaikovsky's Rococo Variations for Cello and Orchestra London Philharmonic Orchestra (leader RODNEY FRIEND)
Conducted by Robin Stapleton
Producer DAVID BUCKTON
Weather
with David Frost
Tonight from Chequers-the Prime Minister, Rt Hon Harold Wilson , OBE, FRS, mp, reviews with DAVID FROST some of the most thought-provoking contributions made to the series by both speakers and audience during the past 12 weeks, and gives his own interpretation of the present state and future prospects of We British.
Director BRIAN ROBINS
Producer JOHN C. MILLER Editor DONALD BAVER STOCK BRC Manchester
(We British returns on 4 January 1976)
William Friedkin's film continues this season of Movie Pacemakers featuring the work of some of the influential directors of the contemporary international cinema. Tonight starring Robert Shaw, Patrick Magee, Dandy Nichols, Sydney Tafler
Stanley, a down-at-heel pianist, is the only guest at Meg and Petey Bowles's seaside boarding house. Then two mysterious visitors, Goldberg and McCann arrive. Immediately, Stanley feels his security threatened.
The film version of Harold Pinter's first full-length play.
Screenplay by HAROLD PINTER based on his own play
Director WILLIAM FRIEDKIN. Films: page 11
Gwen Watford reads A Considerable Speck
(Microscopic) by ROBERT FROST