and Weather Forecast
Overture: William Tell (Rossmt)
PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA
Conducted by CARLO MARIA GIULINI
7.16* Romance No. 1, in G major. for violin and orchestra (Beethoven)
DAVID OISTRAKH with the ROYAL PHILHARMONIC Orchestra
Conducted by EUGENE Goossens
7.25' Symphony No. 2, in C minor
(Tchaikovsky)
VIENNA PHILHARMONIC Orchestra
Conducted by LORIN MAAZEL on gramophone records
and Weather Forecast
Overture: Oberon (Weber)
VIENNA PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
Conducted by RUDOLF KEMPE
8.15* Hungarian Fantasia for piano and orchestra (Liszt)
CLAUDIO ARRAU with the PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA
Conducted by EUGENE ORMANDY
8.31* Siegfried Idyll (Wagner)
PHILARMONIA ORCHESTRA
Conducted by GUIDO CANTELLI
8.49* Tanzwalzer (Busoni)
PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA
Conducted by IGOR MARKEVITCH en gramophone records
and Weather Forecast
Byrd and Palestrina CHUOH OF THE
CARMELITE PRIORY, LONDON
Conducted by JOHN McCARTHY
Magnificat primi toni (Palestrina)
9.11* Hymn: Christe, qui lux el et dies (Byrd)
9.16* Mass: Ecce ego Joannes
(Palestrmd) on gramophone records
Josephine Veasey (mezzo-soprano)
Ann Schein (piano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Leader, Hugh Maguire
Conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent
Part of the last Promenade Concert of the 71st season, broadcast on September 11, 1965, from the Royal Albert Hall, London
Three Nocturnes:
E flat major. Op. 9 No. 2
C sharp minor, Op. 27 No. 1 E minor, Op. 72 No.
10.53* Fantaisie-Impromptu in C sharp minor, Op. 66 played by EVELYN Rix (piano)
Last of three programmes given by the four finalists with the BBC SCOTTISH ORCHESTRA
Led by Leonard Friedman
Conducted by STANFORD ROBINSON
Calina Solodchin
John Brown played by John Brown
•
Introduced by MICHAEL DE MORGAN
Directed by Geoff Dobson
Timings may be altered by events
«
12.30 Your Altemoon Forecast direct from the London Weather Centre followed by SPORTS PARADE
Introduced by Liam NOLAN
MOTOR RACING
1.40 The Chichester Cup
A race for Formula III cars
Commentary on the finish
The St. Mary's Trophy
A race for Touring cars
2.5 Commentary on the start
2.20 Commentary on the finish
The Sunday Mirror
International Trophy
A race for Formula II cars
2.55 Commentary on the start
3.30 Progress Report
3.50 Commentary on the finish
The commentators are Robin RICHARDS at the Grandstand and ERIC TOBITT at St. Mary's
From Goodwood
MOTOR CYCLING i
1.48: 2.15: 2.30
3.15: 3.45: 4.45
From Oulto'n Park
See columns 4 and 5 RACING
3.5 The Mildon Stakes
For three-year-olds only over one mile and one furling
3.35 The Northern
Free Handicap Stakes
For three-year-olds only over seven furlongs
Commentary by PETER BROMLEY
From Newcastle
4.55* Racing Results
4.0 ASSOCIATION
FOOTBALL
Commentary during the second half of one of today's English League names by BRIAN MOORE and SIMON SMITH
5.0 SPORTS REPORT
Introduced by LIAM NOLAN
Produced by ANGUS MACKAY
Classified Football Results at S.0 and 5.50
by Clazunov
arranged by Robert Inving who conduct the ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA on a gramophone record
50-80 w.p.m.
Compiled by JOYCE HARBISON
80-100 w.p.m.: Wed., 6.30 p.m.
A booklet Is available
7: Au Pays Basque
Introduced by KATIA ELLIS with the help of Emile Harven
Written and produced by Elsie Ferguson
Repeated on Thursday at 7.4 p.m.
A booklet Is available
The second group of programmes in this series is concerned with the treatment of the young offender in England and Wales
8: Probation Officer
I I can recall a man who committed suicide two days after I'd seen him and as far as I knew I was the only friend and contact that he had apart from the cat. In the end he gassed both himself and the cat.... Well. I can only cope with it by acknowledging my own fallibility. I know I cannot be all things to all men.'
Dr. ALAN LITTLE of the London School of Economics talks to
STAN RATCLIFFE a senior probation officer of the Old Street Probation Service in London
Produced by Richard Hooper
by Michael Innes
A dramatic epilogue to Henry James 's
The Turn of the Screw
Produced by RAYNER HEPPENSTALL
Fourth broadcast
John Ogdon (piano)
Radio Frankfurt
Symphony Orchestra
Conducted by Colin Davis
Recording made available by courtesy of Radio Frankfurt
ALEC MCCOWEN gives the second of three readings from a collection of Biblical stories retold by Leszek Kolakowski in an English version by Nicholas Bethell
King Herod, or the Fall of the Moralists
Leszek Kolakowski , the young Polish philosopher, who teaches at Warsaw University, is being recognised as one of the most significant European thinkers of today. Like Sartre, Kolakowski sometimes expresses his thought in fictional rather than abstract form. The brief retellings of stories from the Bible, collected in his volume The Key to Heaven, highlight ancient problems of conduct in the light of twentieth-century experience.
Part 2: Elgar
Symphony No. 1, in A flat major
MICHAEL REDGRAVE reads Shakespeare's
SONNETS LXXVIII-XC
Introduced by Rayner Heppenstall
This sequence of sonnets includes those concerning a rival poet, taken to be Chapman
Third broadcast