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The Observer from London, Greater London, England • 38

Publication:
The Observeri
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
38
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE OBSERVER REVTEW. 1 JULY 1972 No twins for Heath For Really Discerning Drinkers Really Dry Grin Mf aa mmm BRIEFING TODAY- BBC 1 9.0 9 10.30 11.30 1.25 1.S0 2.0 3.15 5.15 6.5 S.15 6.50 7.25 9.50 10.5 10.35 11.20 .30 Magazine for Viewers from India and Pakistan. Eucharist from the Church of St Mary Magdalene, Knighton. 11.45 Boomph with Becker: Keeping fit with Sue Becker. Farming looks at calving.

Weather for farmers. Made in Britain looks at fire-fighting methods and machines. Wimbledon Harry Carpenter looks back over the first week. Rim Waka Me When It's Over (1960) Comedy, starring Ernie Kovacs, about a group of American GIs posted to a remote Pacific island, which they pfan to turn into a tourist haven until Washington steps in. The Onedln Line (repeat) Other Points of the Compass.

News followed by Weather. All In a Day's Work explores the human factor in jobs. This week Chief Inspector E. Mitchell and Police Sgt Barry Wright. Songs of Praise from West High Parish Ouiroh.

Kilmarnock. Film: 'Wilson' (1944): The life story of Woodrow Wilson, who in 1909 ran for Governor of New Jersey and within four years became President of the United States. News followed by Weather. Solidarity (by Hector Macmillan) topical play about an industrial dispute. Starring James Grant and Robin Bailey.

Omnibus presents Groucho Marx and Frank Mujr in a dignified corrtic set-to. International Golf: United States v. The World. This week Tony Jackfrn (Great Britain) v. Gay Brewer (United States).

MR HEATH is in hot water with the United Towns Organisation, which claims he is supporting a Foreign Office con-Ptjl to sabotage its efforts to twin British and foreign municipalities. LTO, based in Pans, uaniv tres at local level between towns, in the SU countries which it operates, including exchange visits between schoolchildren and trade unionists. It says the British Government restricts twinning to exchange visits between mayors and brass band competitions. Jean Marie Bressand, the founder, says the Foreign Office is waging a war against UTO 'They held up our recognition by the United Nations and I NF. SCO.

They failed to stop us obtaining consultative status, but now Ihey are fighting our request for a 40.0)0 -jrinnal budget which need from SCO 3n order to promote twinning between advanced and dcefopinc countries." I 'TO is a product of (he Bilingual World Association, which was founded in Britain and Trance over 20 years ago. The British Government never liked the venture, arguing that it involved useless expenditure. The oreign Office got annoyed when I TO began twinning Trench and Eastern European towns. Ill-feeling has come to a head following a request to Mr Heath by President Senghor of Senegal, who rs president of UTO. asking him to mslruct the Foreign Office to be more sympathetic and to support L'TO's request for cash from UNESCO.

I TO complains th.it Mr Heath ignored the President's complaints. Peck Prefers to do his campaigning from the BBC-2 9.35 Open University. 12.30 Close down. 1.50 Cricket John Player League Hampshire v. Kent 6.30 Close down.

7.0 News Review followed by Weather. 7.25 World About Us. Wotves The Dearth of a Legend. 8.10 At Your Service presents traditionai and original entertainment adapted from the skills of the 8.55 Music on 2 Darnel Barernboim gives a piano recital of works by Chopin. 9.40 Demolition An old wall comes down.

9.50 The Roads to Freedom (repeat serial) by Jean Paul Sartre, set in Paris in 1938. Starring Michael Bryant and Daniel Massey. 10.35 'This Utile Thing with Me and Spassky Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky in World Chess CbampionshJp from Reykjavik. 11.25 News followed by Weather. 11.30 Up Sunday with Cive James, James Cameron, Kenny Everett.

ITV: London Weekend 10.30 All Our Yesterdays Barbara Castle on women '9 rights. 11.0 500th Anniversary Thanksgiving Service from York Minster. 12.5 Farmhouse Kitchen on bottling and drying of fruit. 12.30 Something to Sing About: Songs of love and marriage. 12.55 Out of Town with Jack Hargreaves.

1.15 Stingray. 1.45 University Challenae with Bamber Gascotane. 2.15 Sportsworld '72: Royal Henley Regatta; Golf highlights of Scottish Open Cycling 3.15 Jason King 3tarnng Hater wyngaroe. t.iu v-aiweaao. 4.40 Golden Shot with Norman Vaugfian, Vince Hill, Dana.

5.35 Follyfoot by Freocis Stevens The Innocents. 6.5 News. 6.15 Saints AHve olcture of St Bede in song and mime. JANE flUlf.s screen. Oddballs ON THE first safe day of summer our man bought himself a buttonhole and went along to Wimbledon to study form.

It was very hot and very full of school parties. West Wickham tennis club, girl guides, Germans, ice-cream vendors and Richard Burton, all carrying rented cushions, lollipops, pork pies, sandwiches, ice-cream cornets and plastic beakers. No. Daphne, do the honours you bought the lollies last time Two women with impromptu sunhats made from the Daily 1 elegraph approached the en trance to the Centre Court. Here we are, said one, peering at the notice, iouth-bast Hall, all odd numbers, entrance.

stairway to the left. Got the tickets? Off we Our man jostled his way to the scoreboard, where enthusiasts scrutinised the figures like strike bound Waterloo commuters. My said a small, freckled boy in a red blazer, half hidden by an airlines bag, Miss Even's lost her 'Playing too much from the baseline again," observed his chum. No he's no, the Romanian, said a voice. He's from Our man left the refreshment tent Who d'you want to win, Harry Harry doesn mind.

said Harry wite, do you Harry? and joined a blazer and wicker group lunching alfresco beside a herbaceous border. Well, not really a bit of a knock-up with Dennis on Saturdays, maybe, but I'm more of an eighteen-hole man I say, that girl on Number 4 had all the Mmm, pity about her Up in the Press stand our man ran into an old photographer friend called Monty. 'How's it going, Monty? said our man. Terrific, they've all got frilly knickers this said Monty. Some of the tennis players have them, he added.

Look, I got a bit held up. Can you fill me in on the first four sets? said a breathless media blade. Pendennis 6.35 There Go I on attttudes to 7.0 Stars on Sunday with Harry Burr. 7.25 Doctor In Charae Comedv 7.55 Film: 'The Furies' (1950) a weafthy cattle rancher Barbara Stanwyck) fairs rn gether later in the United States after Breuer had a short spell in Britain as a refugee from Hitler at the department of architecture at Harvard University. Breuer's best known work is probably the UNESCO building in Paris, or Flaine.

the village he created on a mountain peak in Savoy, France. But his most personal contribution to life is perhaps the tubular steel chair. At lunch during the week he said gently: '1 had to invent it. I needed a chair like that and there wasn't one. 'That was in the mid-1920s.

The French Government, not noticeably keen on foreign talent, has brought him in on the vast Aquitaine scheme, the project in south-western France which will eventually provide second-home accommodation for 400,000 people trying to solve the world's next great problem, long foreseen by Breuer extended leisure time. We asked what he thought of the mess London had got itself into architecturally, but he said he didn't care tc comment on other architects. Why hadn't they had the same difficulties in Paris? Breuer, with that marvellous gift for taking every question seriously that is often characteristic of genius, said the French had tried to avoid ruining their city by forbidding any work at all. But you cannot control by merely forbidding. Life is not always nice, or always beautiful, but it is always ANDRE REV IN was telling us a story about the lime he wrote film music for MOM.

fie and some glossy Hollywood types were in the studio when Lassie, The Wonder Dog, paid a courtesy call and with great ritual proffered its paw presumably to be kissed) to everyone in order of rank except Previn. He said he'd never felt so snubbed in his life. Never said someone consolingly. it probably wasn't Lassie at all just an extra with a wig of tier ratner Ditterest Police Five presented bv Shaw Taylor. 10.0 News.

Old Man of the Air ONE OF the original Old Men of the Ajr was London last week. It wasn't Captain Whittle, but Dr Henri Coanda, the Romanian who flew the first let plane. At 86 he was back here to visit aircraft factories. It was in 1910. at the Paris Air Show, that a biplane wobbled off the ground spouting Ore from Iwo noJes.

The pilot and deMgner w.ss Henri Coanda. Since then he has patented ocr 250 inventions, including the first twin-engined aircraft the world and the bottomless oil tanker, and discovered the 'Coanda a basic element in modern fluid dvnamics. He We'll 10.15 Play Madly In Love Courtship problems for shy young poet end girl Tneno (Madeline snmrn) wrm compulsion to uoay. 11.15 Eleven Plus: New maaazine programme with Russell Harty 12.0 Music In the Round: Humphrey Burton on musta of tie future 12.25 Behind the Scenes Actress Not colour. ITV: Variations All in a Day's Work First of a new series esamininK the problems people have to cope with evetj day at work.

Today the police face a group of questioners chaired by Magnus Magnusson. Unfortunately, a. king police about their duties sens a doomed exercise (as David Frost recently demonstrated), and here, once agatn, their blanket denial of anything remotely naughtv only increases suspicions. 16.15 BBC-1). Groucho Man and Frank Mnlr in Dignified Comic Set-to Apt title as the funniest man in England meets the octogenarian survivor of the brothers Marx, who's st II sharp and full of wise cracks, deadpan and disarming about his life and work, his attitudes to money, marriag and writing.

(10.35 BBC-1). This Little Thine with Me and Spassky' Devotees of chess should not mtss this profile of the American genius Bobby Fischer, a difficult man who appears to live in a world of his own. Probably Grand Masters have to, but it's a world that excludes non-chess players, nd they may well feel a bit tired in the midst of such strenuous intellectual antics. (10.35 BBC-2). MONDAY Panorama Profile of Michael Foot.

cameras on his trail from his Ebbw Vale constituency to a miners' gala in Edinburgh, the of bis Hampstead home. Talks about his battles with Gait-skeil, his alliance with Bevan, and gives his views on the last Labour Government, the Common Market and his present position. Cross-man, Mayhew and Levin join in. (8 BBC-1). World Action Dust up at Northfleot a town in Kent where the housewives are up in arms about pollution from Europe's largest cement works.

f8 iTV). The Ways We Move Horizon on the miracle of mobility, ttvose individual muscle contraction we take for granted. (9.20 BBC-2). TUESDAY The Happiest Days of Your Life (1950) Ah, how it takes you back Margaret Rutherford in one of her best-loveti roles headmistress. Miss Whitchurch sparkishty Supported by Alastair Sim as Wetherby Pond and Joyce Grenfeil's Miss Gossage.

(7.40 BBC-1). -Follow the Yellow Brick Road Sextet play by Dennis Potter, with Denholm Elliott as a telly-ad. actor going round the bend. (9.20 BBC-2). WEDNESDAY The Biggest Crap Game in the World A first-rate look at the film industry's biggest super-store the Canoes Festival where about 33 many dollars are exchanged, as frames exposed.

Nowadays everybody (including a measly dribble of stars) is at Cannes to buy and sell, and Man Alive manages perfectly to peel off enough of the gloss and expose the mechanics without losing the aura. (8.10 BBC-2). Shelley Dn the 1 50th anniversary of his de.ith, Shelley is portrayed by Roberi Powell in a contemporary dress film which traces his life from Oxford to his death off the Italian coast. A highly individual treatment, combined with the poet's rather unfortunate personality defects, makes heavy demands on the viewer, who will probably find it tiresome or enlightened depending on whether he prefers attention paid to period detail or intellectual and emotional quandaries. (9.20 BBC-2).

THURSDAY The Silent Enemy (19S8) Good, suspenseful underwater stuff written and reeled by William Fair-child with Laurence Harvey i looking younj, and raffish) as Frogman 'Bister Crabbe out to scuttle the Italian fleet. Glamour supplied by Dawn Addams a touch of by John Clements. (6.55 This Week The Quiet American. Profile of George McGovern, which charts his rise and talks to the man himself and his showbiz supporters (9.30 ITV). KamerabV-haft (1931) The last of the three World Cinema tributes to Pabst -vhy do fhey have to go out so latt: Another technically remarkable film, this time a plea for international peace based on an actual mining disaster, with a newly discovered 'unhappy ending replacing the upbeat finale, which was tagged on for commercial reasons.

(11 BBC-2). FRIDAY Tom Sfoppard Doesnt Know Wholly endearing, and heartening, One Pair of Eyes from tho playwright, who finds himself relentlessly pursued for all manner of public opinions and that tbe characteristic position I find myself in is one of cautious agreement with two incompatible points' of view." Inventive, amusing format and behind it a searching intelligence in the maze that, we're told, leads to (9.25 BBC-2). The FrigWeners: New 13 -part series nurtured under Peter Wilde-blood's ing. No cops and robbers, but ordinary people threatened by extraordinary situations. Begins with a strongly sinister eest led by Tom Bell, Warren Clarke and Kennotff J.

Warren. (10.40 ITV). SATURDAY The Fabulous Dorseya (1947) Rather mute film bioexaphy of bandleader brothers Tommy and Jimmy, although the music, of course, is line. (3 BBC-2). The Oesmavra Limited.

1972. Published by Tne Observes LiMiim. Proprietors, at 160 Queen Victoria Street. London ECA 4DA. England, and printed for tbe Propr eton by Times Newspapers Limited, London EOP JDH, England.

Reftstcred a newspaper at tbe Pom Ofnc Seoond-clau pootaea paid at New Vora, NY. 1 ANQLJA. 1 2.5. Mualo In th Round; 12.55, Farmhouse Kitchen: 1.20. University Challenge; 1 .50.

Weather; 1.55, Farming; 2.30, FUm Irm tor Trouble (Peflffy Mount, David Kossoff); 4.10, Dr Simon Locke; 7.55, Film 80,000 Sjs-pects (Claire Bloom. Richard Johnson); 11.15. The Saint; 12.10, Reflection ATV MIDLANDS. 11. 0T As London; 12.5, Music in the Round; 12.55, Farmhouse Kltcrien; 1.22, InlervaJ; 140, Tomorrow's Horoscope; 1.45.

AH Our Yesterdays; 2.15. As London; 3.15, Film Stronoroom (Derren Nesbltt, CoNn Gordon); 4.40, As London until 7.55. Film: 'Harlow' (Carroll Baker); 10.0. As London until 11.15. Spyforce.

CHANNEL. 12.5, Music fn the Round; 12.30. Close down: 1.5S, Weather 2.0, Avengers; 2.55. Film men Riohi (Bernard Lee. Ray Mliland): 4.35, Dale your Gregory worked in many countries, and has co-operated with the British aircraft industry- since its infancy, but finally returned to his native Romania in 1970.

Today he is a Minuter, wrho spends the day at the Cabinet Ollice and the evenings in his laboratory. His British contacts helped to push through the deal by which the Romanians recently bought a fleet of BAC 1-11 airliners, and started to produce the Islander light aircraft in Romania. Mysteriously. Romanians have alwrays had a genius for powered flight, and have provided the orld with talent in this direction as Hungarians. have presided it with nuclear physicists.

Hermann Oberth. another Romanian, worked with Coanda to produce detailed rocket and space-station designs in the twenties. The trajectories of the Apollo flights to the moon are based on the mathematics of Ci H. Botezatu. It was Constant-inescu.

who died in Briton a few years ago, who pioneered the machine-gun synchronised to fire through lurning propeller-blades. And recent discoveries have brought to light in Romania a sensational episode in the prehistory of flight. In the Carpathian mountains a series of large primitive rockets ha turned up which were apparently made in the eighteenth century, and powered bv gunpowder or liquid naphtha. They seem to be in three stages. Some Romanian scientists think that the top stage was to hit Constantinople, the middle stage to bombard European Turkey, and the bottom stage to strike at Turkish troops on the Danube.

buy levels alw.it vuur Oulet hntrv a J-or Oidct Km ry (apes A and Ifivis, nr cquivdient, including English i''or Direct hr.trv (atrps K'Vi'n 20 anri 2H j-1 hhi'r an peirtiis; qualification. VWNS You 1 1 be a lot app ier. Royal Naval Hutpolnt tl40 Budccl lnclc.il 140 240V 2 Dwor Eltcrrolm TF 90 McKenrle Btomatic 132. SO 64.05 1941 2H.50 141 i 57.00 EHh.95 (1121 58. R5 (80i IQEC Electrical design Centre.

OOUU Harrison 6lbion. Nford LondojiSW20 DM7! 5354 YOUR PEN CAN PAY FOR YOUR HOLIDAY itowiwaicwBi Sticking your Peck out ASKED Gregory Peck, who was in London for the premiere of the lilni The Trial of the CatonsviHe Nine' at the National Film Theatre, how he had first become involved with the anti-Vietnam The dim, which Peck produced and partly financed, is based on the trial of the Berrigan brothers, the two American priests who burnt draft cards with home-made napalm four years ago and received prison sentences. Philip Berrigan is still in prison. Peck said that he had no intention of trotting out his liberal credentials, but way back in the forties he had campaigned for the Committee for a More Democratic Fur-Eastern Policy, which, if heeded, would have prevented the Vietnam involvement from the start. Peck's son.

a student at Georgetown University, has been ai rested three times for anti-war protest and civil disobedience. Peck major says he doesn't favour middle-aged (but impeccably preserved, we thought) movie actors carrying placards (' there's a certain cosmetic tie-up which I can't go along with and prefers to do his campaigning from the screen. He first became interested in the Berrigans after seeing the stage version of the Catonsville written by Daniel Berrigan. and negotiated the film rights while Berrigan was still in prison. Finding a film studio was a problem with such a controversial theme most film companies avoided it like the plague.

The actors are largely unknown Peck could have played Philip Berrigan, but thought a weU-known face would 'detract from the So far the film has had good notices but pretty bad box office attendance in America. Peck has had a few letters from super patriots, telling him it's a lot of Red propaganda. Making Shaw A STOP-PRESS announcement in the latest Shavian the magazine of the George Bernard Shaw Society says that nobody need now orry about the source of any Shaw quotation because a concordance to his plays and prefaces has been compiled by F. Dean Bevan. of Kansas.

Full details will appear in our next Bui who could wait In fact, the work, which runs to 10 volumes, 7,000 pages and some 700,000 entries covering GBS's 55 plays and prefaces, was published in America in January. It costs S275 a set, so you've got to be keen on Shaw. Shavophile Bevan is 34 Professor of English at Baker University. Kansas. His main assistant was the Professor of Electrical Engineering, a computer expert called Robert Hara-lick.

Shaw's two million words are the largest text ever put on computer cards: it took Bevan two years to think how to do it and three years to complete the job. He is now mulling over a Dr Johnson concordance. A word with the chairman MARCEL BREUER. one of the few really great architects working today, flashed through London last week, his first visit here for 20 years. He was on his way to Luxembourg in his capacity as judge in the competi tion lor Ihe Common Market Bank which is to be built there Born in Hungary in ll)02.

Rrcuer firsi worked w-ith VYnlrer (iropius, "he pionter of modern i lecture and founder oi H.i us. the school at Weim.tr in Wermanv wh.eh re armed services. prospects tor me Tour de Prance. oovertv and hunaer over 100 years Secombe. Petula Clark, Raymond series starring Robin Nedwell.

Meaty, well-acted Western about (Walter Huston) wtiose daughter love wrtn tne son twenaeii ooreyj Corn! Atkins talks to Guy Thomas. with Danton; 7.55, Flm The Stripper (Joanne Woodward, Richard Beymer; 9.30. Cinema; 11.15. Jason KJftg. GRANADA.

11.0. A London; 12-0. interval: 12.5, Music Jn ihe Round; 12.30. As London; 12.50, Farmhouse Kitchen; I 20. AM Our Yesterdays; 1 .50.

Mad Movlej; 2.15, As London: 3.15, Film No Tfme for Tars (Anna eagle, Anthony Quay la); 4.40. As London until 7,55, Film The Boys (Robert MorJey, Richard Todd) 10.0, Aa London until II 30, Man from UNCLE. SOUTHERN. 12.0, Weather; 1 2.5. Music in trie Round; 12.55, Farming; 1.25, Out of Town; 1.45.

Stingray: 3.15, Film The Fat Man" (Ju4le London, Rock Hudson; 4.35, News; 7.55, Film The Hunchback ot Notre Dame (Charles Laughton, Maureen O'Hara); 11.15, Songs for Your Delight: 11.45, Short Story. d'Este; 3.55 Elgar Conducts: 5.0, What to make of Vietnam; 5.25, Mahler; 6.40. Quartet Style Between the Wars; 7-20. Neapolitan Songa; 7,45, Play Downpour B.0, ChopFn; 9.40, A Life In the Theetre Sir Tyrone Guthrie; 10.40. Friedrtch Wllhelm Rust; 10.50.

Tavemei; 11.30, News; Weather. RADIO 4 (Home) 320m 7.50, Sunday Reading; 7.55, Wearther; Preview; 8.0. News; S.10, Papers; 3.20, For Asian Mslaners; 8.50, Programme News: 8.55. Weather; 9.0, News; 9.5, Papers; 9.15, Letter from America; 9.30, The Archers; 10.30. Methodist ServFce from Bristol; 11.10.

Appeal; 11.15. Motoring; 1 1.45, Grass Roots; 12.15. Whatever You Think; 12.55 Weather; Preview; 1.0. World True Weekend; 2.0, Gardeners' Question Time; 2.30, Price ot Freedom; 3.30, Roy Hitdd's Vintage Music HalT; 4.30. Living World; 5.0, In Touch; 5.15, Iown Your Way; 5.55.

Weather; Preview: 6.0, News; G.15, Double-Dealers; 7.0, Marty a Slip; 7.3P, Questions of Belief; 8.0. Music to Remember; 9.0. Sylvia's Lovers; 9.58. Weather: News; 10.10, Jack de Mamo wHh MFrlsm KarHn. Alfred Marks; 10.50.

Epilogue; 10.59. Weather; News. aBSBV al mr -aaw Vam CIOJ 1 IPJ 7iVJ 12.16-2. Johnny Hasritaworth, Stan Qrelg, Ritchie Bryant Jazz. The Hoop and Toy.

Thurloe Place, SW7. Max Collie Rhythm Acea New Orleans Jazz. Tratel-gar. Kings Road. Chelsea.

12-2 end Flanagans, corner of Putney High SI Upper Richmond Road. Cam. den Chamber Orcheatra Bach Handel. Shaw Theatre. 100 Euston Rd.

NW1. 7.30. OPEN AIR EVENTS Ladles National Angling Championship. ob urn Abbey hafces, Bedfordshire. 9.30-4.30.

GLC Experiment Dry-ski slope tor beginners and experts opens. Crystal Pa face Sports Centre nr Crystal Palace Station. 11-2. Clubmans Car Races: Brands Hatch. Fawkfiam, nr Daroford Kent.

2.30. Sailing Ranelagh Club. Putney. 4.45. Wraysbury Lake Club nr Survwmeads Station.

10.30. Polo Windsor Great Park. 3. Cowdoay Park. Mddhuret.

3. Ham House Grounoe. Petersham. Surrey. 3-15.

THEATRICAL EVENTS Today and Tomorrow caoaret. May Fair Theatre. W1. 6.15 and 8.45. Poetry Fsathral Judl Dench.

Mlchaal Williams and Martin Best. Ben Jonson readings. Shakespeare Institute. Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire. 8.

Low Moan Spectacular extravaganza based on Ehe life and times of Ihe British Hero. Oval House, 54 Ken-n-lngton Oval, S11, 8. WALKS Literary and Historic London meal Holborn tube. 2.30. Saints In the Fields a walk that Is different meet Trafalgar Sq.

tube (under clock. 3. Around Dock lo Execution Dock meet Tower Hifl tube. 3. SPOfl Roman Londuthjm meet Tower HIM tube.

3. In a Monastery Garden Westminster meet Westminster tube. 3. Mr Dickens's City meet St Paul's lube. 3.

Chelsea Oh) Scarlet ft Green Flngera meet Chelsea Town Hall, KingB Road. 3. The Great Fire of London meet Monument. Yqu may have just completed two years staving av-ay at your A Levels. Or else you may have spirit some time in.

commerce wondering whether they were really worth working ior. But we think vou should be rewarded for them. And even though you could get up to when you are commissioned, it's not just money we're talking about. As a WRNS officer we'll give vou responsibility and expect you to use the qualifications you've worked for. You could be a rleet analyst, an administrative or a secretarial officer, to name but a lew ot the branches open to you.

In return we'll give vou a fascinating and varied life with excellent pay and holidays and most important of all, we'll never take vou tor granted. I'd like to know more "Direct Entry schemes for becoming a WKNS Officer. Piease send me -our booklet. Name Addr The best Bordeaux wines are called Premier Crus. A quarter of all Premier Crus is handled by one negociant In Bordeaux, Premier Crus is the title given to first growth wines.

Distinguished wines handled only by-distinguished negociants, or shippers. Which makes Delor a very distinguished negociant indeed handle a quarter of all Premier Crus wines in Bordeaux. It is then, only natural that when Delor wines appear in this country, the name Grants of St James's appears on the label too. Medoc, St.Emilion, Margaux, St.JuIien, Graves Superieur, Sauternes and Barsac are but a few examples of the excellent Delor wines Send ll.ttl UrtiLCr Dorothy Talma. Wc Service ipKTA-ti OJd Admiralty Building, Lnnri PERSONAL appear on Page 31.

RADIO 1 (Pop), 247m. 6.55, As Radio B.3. Barry AllcHs; 9.2. JtrrHor Ctioice; 10.0, Noal Edmonds; 12.0, As Radio 2.0, Jimmy Saville; 3.0, Spafc-Easy; 4.0. Pick of the Pope; 5.0, the Beatles Story; 5.56.

Top Twenty; 7.0, Ed Stewart with Sunday Soort; 7.30. As Radio 2 until 2.2 a.m. RADIO 4 (Light), 1,600 and VHF. 8.55 First Day at the Week: 7.0, News; Weather; 7.3, Barry AJfd4a; B.3. Reg-toa1d Dixon; 8.32.

With Heart and Voice; 9.2. As Radio 10.2, Melodies for You; 11.30. Method! Service from Manchester; 12.2. Family Favourites; 2.2. Ken Dodd; 2 30.

Clilharoe Kid; 3.2. Mitchell Minstrel Show; 4.2, Cricket Scoreboard; 4.3, Folk on Sunday; 5.0, As Radio 7.3, Sing Something SimpFe; 7.30 Grand Hotel; S.30, Sunday Half-Hour; 9.2. Your 100 Best Tunea; 10.2, Sweet 'n' Swfng; 11.2, Jazznolea; 12.0. News; 12.5, Jazz Club; 1.2. Night REde; 2-0.

News; Weather. RADIO 3 (Music) 464. 194 m. 0 0. News, Weather; B.5.

Showcase: .0, News; Weather; 9.5. Schubert; 10,0, Concert Choice: 11.0, Music Magazine: 12.0. Concert Beethoven; 2.20. Pariaina (5 it a 1 3 -4 1 lO EXHIBITIONS Toy for Toy Libraries In aid of National Society lor Mentally Handicapped Children. 91 Newman Street, Wl.

2-6. Slltiouatle. National Portrait Qallery. WC2. 2-6 The Cat In Art Eflypt lo Erte.

Wobum Abbey. Bedfordshire. 11-7. The Australian AboriglnM Malay Shadow Puppala The Muaeum of Mart-Kind, Burlington Gardens. W1.

2.30-fl. Ceramics Contemporary studio pottery. Victoria and Albert Museum. 2.30-6. Recent Paintings by 24 artists.

Leoni JonleMgh Holrnefieid, Wonersh, Guildford, Surrey. 3-6. Open-air sculpture by Bernard Schottlander. GuinnaBS Brewery Meadow opposite Park Royal tube station. AH dev.

GARDENS Bedfordshire Wrest Park. Sllsoe. Essex Wickham Hall Wickham Bishops, nr Wltriam. 2.30-8. Hampshire Apple-Shaw Manor, Andover.

2-7. Tartar ey House. Tengley. rtr Andover. 2-7.

The Ford, Fair Wind and Greywell Manor. Greywell. 2. 30-6. 30.

Hertfordshire Tudor Manor and Kingfisher Nurseries, Beyford. 2.30-6. Pegsdon Barns. Pegs-don, nr Hrtohln. 2.30-6.30.

Kent The Old Rectory, Fhjckinge. Ashtord. 2-6. Mlohelmersh Court. Romsey.

2-6. Laver-etoke House, Whitchurch. 2-a. Metropolitan Cannon Halt. Cannon Place.

Hempstead. 2-7. Heriots, The Common. Stanmore. 2-7.

Suffolk The Dower House, Little Beatings, VYoodbridge. 2.30-6.30. The Mil! House. Melton. Woodbridge.

2.30-7. Tudor House Semer. Ipswich. 2-30-7. Sussex Park, Brlghlling.

nr Robertsbrldge 2-6. Lampool, Falrwarp. 3m oi Uck-field. 2-6. Wiltshire Chlsenbury Prior) East Chlsenbury, Enford, Pewsey.

2-6. MUSIC Midsummer Madness Michael Bentme meets the RPO for musical relaxation.1 Royal Albert Hall. 7.30. Philomuslca of London Schuben. Bach, Handei, Mozart.

Royal Academy, Burlington House, Piccadilly. Wl. 7.30 Wall) Fewkes, Bruce Turner, John Chilton Mainstream Jazz children allowed). New MerliJra Cave. Margery Streel.

WC. rr in the Grants of St.james's selection. This said, we can only ask vou Ot 1 f7 to take our word, but to follow the time-honoured method of assessing any DISCOUNT and DELIVERY LONDON'S LEADING DISCOUNT HOUSE SUMMER July Ist-July 31st II Bordeaux negociant. And conduct a tasting. QrxmtA ofStJameys Total Frl 40.1 dtxir 124.50 Hfcli KPS 13.0 I prlrhl Frerrr CSV.

50 INfli I indr 15-11 ChrM Kr-ter trflSfl 1 Inrtp 12. Vreer iir.2. Vleclmln. H- nil Cf.tf '7S KPS i 1 IS. '155' PRICES 5H0WW tH BRACKETS SHE iPPHOIIMME SUBGESltD RflllL PRICES GROSS CiPKITIES QUOTED RING WRITE OR CALL FOR IVIUSTRATED PRICE LIST Sttioo Buildings Coomb Lnt, S.W.IO 01-94 9737 Pin I -UtU 15 Approach Sd.

KNOW-HOW BRINGS YOU WRITING SUCCESS I MRU F'H tr- IIM I aaf' iiiin'iatfiir PUB CRAWL Pown Down by the S'rgn. ii.he 7 3D 1 ie 1 men e.i me.

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About The Observer Archive

Pages Available:
296,826
Years Available:
1791-2003