6.40 Measuring Fracture Toughness
7.5 The Roaring Silence
7.30 Modelling a Chemical Reaction
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,381 playable programmes from the BBC
6.40 Measuring Fracture Toughness
7.5 The Roaring Silence
7.30 Modelling a Chemical Reaction
The aim of this magazine programme for Asian women is to provide advice and information on matters of interest to them.
Producer ASHOK RAMPAL
Directed by KRISHAN GOULD BBC Birmingham
Write to Gharbar, Asian Unit, BBC, Pebble Mill Road. Birmingham B5 7QQ, with your comments and suggestions.
Four races from the second day of the meeting.
2.15 The Sefton Maiden Fillies' Stakes (7f 122yds)
2.45 The Philip Comes Nickel Alloys Stakes (Qualifier. 5f)
3.20 The Ladbroke Chester Cup (Handicap. 2m 2f 97yds)
The main event of the three days, which is run over two circuits of the course, worth over £12,500 to the winner
3.50 The Cheshire Oaks (1m 4f 65yds)
Introduced by JULIAN WILSON
Commentators PETER O'SULLEVAN JIMMY LINDLEY and JOHN HANMER
Television presentation KEITH PHILLIPS
4.50 Michelangelo: The Last Judgment
5.15 Feedback
5.40 Language Development
6.5 Colour
6.30 Mendelssohn's Dream
Does your local football club need a new ground? Would you like it built next door to you? The people of Oxford face a massive planning development involving a new Oxford United stadium, sports facilities, superstore and hotel complex. Many people think this is a good thing; others, who live near the site, disagree and ask: Why Build it Here?
This is the first of six studio programmes in which members of the public take the opportunity to give a local issue a national airing. Presented by David Freeman of BBC Radio Oxford
Made by the COMMUNITY PROGRAMMEUNIT
including sub-titles for the hard-of-hearing, followed by Weather
A review of the week's television Presented by Ludovic Kennedy who discusses
The Clive James Paris Fashion Show (LWT), the Playhouse production of WILLIAM DOUGLAS HOME'S You're All Right-How Am I? and ROBIN DAY'S Question Time.
Among those taking part are
Drusilla Beyfus, associate editor of Vogue magazine and Dr Anthony Clare of the Institute of Psychology.
Director TONY TYLEY
Producer JOHN ARCHER
The third of seven Chronicle films ' Omm Seti means mother of Seti. This is how Dorothy Eady describes herself to the tourists who visit her at the temple of the great Pharaoh Seti the First at
Abydos. Born in London in 1904 she fell down stairs at the age of three and was taken for dead. She recovered, but in a strange new metamorphosis. From that moment on, she was increasingly convinced that she had led an earlier existence as a Priestess in ancient Egypt. Omm Seti tells the story of how she became obsessed with the famous temple in the shadow of which she now lives, and with its builder King Seti. Many people, scholars and touristy visit this old English lady, and the beauties and mysteries of the temple and its surrounding area are revealed through expert and loving eyes.
Narrated by ERIK DE MAUNY
Film cameraman DAVID SOUTH Film editor PETER EVANS Producer JULIA CAVE
Series editor BRUCE NORMAN
A series of comedy films starring with and Jack's Back
-becomes a pain in the neck to Rhoda.
Written by DEBORAH LESCHIN Directed by NANCY WALKER
A serial in six parts by JACK PULMAN , starring
1:Germany, 1939. At the outbreak of war Schulz is released from Spandau jail where he has served a sentence for fraud. His aim is to sit out the war in a safe and anonymous job far from hostilities: instead he is mistakenly recruited into SS Counter Espionage, with hair-raising consequences.
Music CARL DAVIS
Studio lighting ALAN HENDERSON Designer SPENCER CHAPMAN Producer
PHILIP HINCHCLIFFE Director
ROBERT CHETWYN
A series of six programmes in which Sir Hugh Casson, architect and President of the Royal Academy, shows viewers some of the places that delight him.
This is a museum unlike any other: it was once the private house of Sir Merton and Lady Russell-Cotes who, great travellers and fanatical collectors of the curious, filled their home with art of their choice and the things they had collected on their journeys abroad.
A prominent citizen of Bournemouth (he served as Lord Mayor for a time), Russell-Cotes urged the authorities to bring the railway direct from London and this brought great prosperity to the town. As a result of his personal interests and energy, Bournemouth, one of the most famous and respectable resorts on the south coast, has a unique, prized museum and art gallery.
"I first discovered this place on a wet Sunday afternoon about 20 years ago, and I thought it was an absolute knockout."