Wilson facing debts pressure
Transcription
Wilson facing debts pressure
Wilson facing debts pressure Mot orists tra pped in 7-feet drifts HUNDREDS of motorists were trapped for hours in snowdri ft s up to seven feet deep when high winds and blizzards blocked roads across eight counties in the North of England yesterday. Last night many drivers were preparing for a second night 's ordeal without food or heat. A lorry driver speaking by telephone from Observer Overseas <3eMif@M?| repor ter for hard Budget challenges expulsion by NORA BELOFF , bur Political Correspondent BRITAIN'S newly returned and much-strengthened Government is now under strong international pressure to slam the brakes on the Br itish economy. R O Y P E R R O T T , chie f reporter of TnH Obskrvi;r . is to challenge the legality of an order expelling him from Rhodesia as a prohibited immigrant. His seven-day notice to leave expires on Wednesday. On the advice of Mr Michael Zan der , a 'ega ' adviser to Amnesty, \>.ho left London for Rhodesia yesterday to assist with the case, he will ask a judge iri Salisbury for an inj unction . Rhodesian law requires ii prohibited immigrant 's order to be made by the Governor. Action taken to protect newspapermen in Rhodesia will be backed by 1 h e International Press Institute. Mr Zander will also a-M- .t Mr Antony Martin , of the The Budget , expected on May 3, w ill almost ce r tainly squeeze consumer spending and take firm measures to check non-essential investment. But Mr Wilson has yet to take the key decisions which will determine how severe the Chancellor 's squeeze will be. In contrast to the impulsive handling by Mr Callaghan and Mr Brown of the 1964 balance of payments crisis, the Prime Minister will play it cool this time. He took the weekend ofi before settling down to. the all-important financial and economic decisions needed to start Britain on the road to paying her debts. suspicion initially directed against the Socialist Government. This was reflected yesterday when a leading member of the international banking community in Washington (a man who played a key role in helping the Government raiie its foreign loans) telephoned an old friend in Lon don to say how delighted he was with the election results and the prospect of Britain having a " strong Government" On the previous occasions when the pound sterling required foreign support Mr Wilson , then in a preMr Wilson 's problem is how 1^ electoral situation, successfully resisreconcile the growing pressure in Uiis ted foreign pressure for domestic direction from Britain 's foreign credi- deflation. tors , with the election promises that The bankers did, however, Insist on Labour would never return to a a promise of a squeeze on wages by " stop-go '" economy. the projected " But he cannot long delay deriding which would early warning system " have compelled unions whether or not to remove the remaining 10 per cent surcharge on impor ts ; to hold up wage claims while they were being examined by the Prices and whether or not control over money movements should be extended and Incomes Board. This caused a furore among the to the slerling a rea . On the firs t point the Government unions. According to one Cabinet Minister , this has now convinced the is expecting heavy pressure next month fro m the six other European foreign creditors themselves that the Free Trade Association countries and system would not be effective. Presthe Brjti sh-led organisation might fall sure will once again be redirected to apart if Britain insisted on keeping more stringent curbs on consumption. the surcharge indefinitely. The collapse of Efta would badly weaken Britain 's bargaining position with the Common Market countries. Some officials say the only way to save Efta is to undertake to remove the surcharge, in any event , nex t November. The law would then be by a Staff Reporter due for renewal. Increased demands for a radical There is a school of thought inside the Government and Downing Street change in the concept of national recommending the replacement of the sa vings in Britain are sure to follow surcharge by import controls—thus the publication of the latest figures eliminating the need for duties by yesterday. Over the 12 months that ended banning imports , over a certain fixed yesterday there was a net decrease in mi nimum, altogether. national savings of £64,861 ,000 compared with a net increase in the previous year of £191,187,000 . Worst hit last year were Savings Certificates (£270.300,000 worth reThis form of control is permitted paid against £113,300,000 bought) under th e General Agreement on and the Post Office Savings Bank Tariffs and Trade rules for countries (£61 1,016,000 r e p a i d a g a i n s t with balance of payments troubles . £573,294.000 put inl. but experts think it would be received Experts say the reason is that by Britain 's trading- partners and national savings are no longer comcreditors with even more displeasure petitive against the higher rate s of than a continuation of the surcharge. interest offered by buildin g societies It would make sense only if it was or the protection against inflation designed as a long-term operation lit offered fay the unit trusts. would require complex machinery There are now certain to be reand increased manpower) and it newed pressures on (he Chancellor of would be a public admission that the Exchequer to change this situaBritain did not yet see her way out tion. Many people in the City beof her present difficulties. lieve the only real answer is some The second factor disturbing the form of State unit trust. Treasury in Britain 's balance of payments problem is the outflow of capital towards the sterling area. Lat est figures show that there is now a surplus (Yi capita] transactions with Efta could be in danger Rhodesians grow u neasy Salisbury , April 2 Bu t n o w that the hope, or illusion , of an easier escape route with th e Tories has been finally dispelled t h e first small ripples of unease abou t the f u t u r e are beginning to meve across the surface. When Mr Wilson comes to size up the situation be will almost certainly consider that some important revisions arc needed in the sanctions. First he will have to do something ahout the supplies from South Africa, which have delayed the effectiveness of sanctions by several months. Everything hangs on Dr Verwoerd's post-election altitude . No one here can guess whether he will shrug off Rhodesia , allow private aid to continue , or even come out in open mppor t fsee Stanley Uys's Johannesburg cubic, page 12]. Mr Wilson may feel that if necessary diplomatic pressure on Dr Verwoerd can get co-operation ; or if not , he may contemplate asking for mandatory sanctions through the United Nations. Bargaining position What then ? It is still premature to say whether and how sanctions are working Even if a tanker does not arrive. Rhodesia probably has about four months ' fuel supplies in hand at present rationing levels . But even if sanctions " work," is there any chance that this will budge the regime ? Perhaps the best Mr Wilson can hope to achieve by the . end of the \ e a r, at the current level of sanction s pressure, is a stronge r bargaining position in which talks with Mr Smith would no:—as almost certainly now —automatically m e a n conceding independence on white Rhodesian terms. Even then one cannot see Mr Smith and his colleagues giving in unless there has been fi marked change of opinion among their white supporters, K this possible? A couple of m o n t h s ago it looked out of the question , and even now most businessmen are strongly anti-Wilsnn simply because it is a corollary of defending their living. But the more frequent grumbles one now hears about the situation from the man in Ihe street at least r:ii-.c it fragment of douht whether, in six months ' time . Mr Smith will still he h o l d i n g t he white elect n rate ii 'ucihi -r a\ N[n>njjl > and capably as he ,i^ n n w . I he w h i t e url kisn class , the farmers fliul she bu ^incismen arc not a n.ituralK cohesive whole. In the G l a r i n g out of the n a t i o n a l c;;ke there h a v e a l w a y s been jealousies between t h e m . The i>nc- pari > State nov.- conveniently hides them ; ti may be different when th e EoinE Eets rou&h . In blinkers The electorate here has always been ko changeable and fickle in its attitudes lo Ms leader s that there is an p;i v ide chance—and no more than thrit —o: j s u r p r i s i n g change of mind in rh L- m o n t h s ahead If the regime wer e not p r n M e h L i\v ;irc of this ihcn I here w o u l d he mi need lo keep tb'e ciec ;oi ,iic in b l i n k e r s by- censoring i.r.Ocsir.i 'Ne l.i ^ L * .irul opini ons out of T'c R h o J c s u n i i c^ s p u n e r v S I [ ¦ , M r W i kn n d o 1 vi i ¦. -c m > i i M ¦ , r V - . ¦. . he. " i . i - -ii2 ri . i d U i n ¦ Miv w h ile nron.ia.md.i « .ir •_ ¦ iv i>nnie t l i .il K- i o d i- .i.ins - [ i l l - ,!• ¦ i - -.i - .-r -'. -. ' : i i i l inc.i - i \ : r ; t . i i m.ii-.> - H i 'he\ ne i t he r know : o m. - r vo-w . Mi ' c I .- . - ¦ :¦ , I -,L : .. ¦' .. :¦ ¦ 1- s: K- . \ :- . . n ' - »!-.. ¦ g.iilv . ' - O l .^ l d -h . i r . i d i' ' m t h e v - I L i ^c g e n e r a ' s : o r c h . i\ c u r i h i i l c i d e . i w h . i l u s .i i 1 ¦¦ ¦ a.-umm - d ..« , ..*! 2> r r .. n . i s r o r Special trai ns A Board of Trade official with wide experience of international negotiations described the situation this weekend as " a serious emergency, but not one which requires any snap decision." Top officials say action must be taken both in the Budge t and by other means to halt inflation , despite the apparent improvement in the latest balance of payments figures. Johannesburg Financial Mail , who on Friday was refused an extension of his temporary work permit. He is the fourth foreign reporter to be ordered out of Rhodesia this year , and the third in a week. Below is Perrott'5 dispatch cabled from Rhodesia last night. T H E R E T U R N to power of Mi Wilson has not outwardly shaken the Rhodesian public. Like the opinion polls , they expected it. 1.500-f t. Standedge Pass on the A62 in the West Ridin g said : " We are in a hopeless position . It looks like we will be here till Monday. " More than 200 motorists and bus HPassengens were stranded on Friday night at an inn near the pass between OMham and Huddersfield . Passengers in two buses were marooned until dawn. Changes for Savings ? STEPHEN COPLEY sterling area. Under existing rules. Treasury licences are required for exporting capita] and these are already more difficult to get. None the less, anybody can switch funds within the sterling area and once the money is outside Britain the Treasury no longer exercises controls. The only way to stop this leak would be to impose exchange controls which would be widely interpreted as ihe beginning of the end of the slerling zone. The Prime Minister himself attaches political as well as financial importance lo its survival but he has now to make up his mind what price he is willing to 'pay. Mr Wilson now has the advantage of a complete change in the international atmosphere. His orthodox financi al vie*vs and devout defence of >1erliii2 have overcome international Vietna m troo ps join revolt to end Ar my rule Scientist back after 32 years by MARK FRANKLAND IN SEARCH OF H AROLD WILSON Weekend Review Givin g up the Rock 11 U.S. may wan t British 13 troops in Vietna m Neal Ascherso n on 14 the neo-Nazis , . Master , golfer 18 holds ^ourt PETER KAPITZA, the brilliant Soviet physicist who worked with Lord Rutherford in Cambridge's from our Corres pondent : Saigon , April 2 Cavendish Laboratory in the 1920s, is to visit Britain shortly for the first time since Stalin THE POLITICA L and military situation in Vietnam's ordered him to remain in the northern provinces reached a more perilous stage today. Some 3,000' Government troo ps joined in a demonstra tion Soviet Union in 1934. The previous year the Royal in Hue demandi ng the end of military rule. Society's Mond Laboratory bad And Lieutenant-General Nguyen Chanh Thi, who was fired on been specially built for him at , Cambridge so that he could con- March 10, as First Corps Commander, fo r in subordination openly tinue his revolutionary work in4 low declared for the first time that jhe opposed the ruling directory of generals and would refuse any offer of another¦ jobin the Government. temperature physics. -.—.; ' ' ' ¦— Professor Kapitza, who is 71. will The fact that Army iinits cominitaddress the Royal Society, of which ted 'what bordered on-mutiny whUe . he was made both a fellow and a pro- Thi finally identified bMnself .^ith.' fessor as a young man , on his recol- anti-Government feelings' augured lections of Rutherford. He will also for -the. ruling be able to receive in person the more trouble Rutherford Prize and Medal for 1966 awarded by the Institute'-.irf Physics. Capital outflow worries Treasury foreign countries but a deficit with the Cooling oS in pouring rain after the beat of electoral battle, Mr Harold Wilson played golf yesterday at Ellesborough, new Chequers. H ome loan r at es may rise Pugwash meetin gs British memories of Kapitza, who is now Director of the Institute for Physical Problems of the Academy of Sciences of the U.S.S.R., have been clouded ever since the Soviet authorities prevented his return to Britain and shipped his laboratory equipment to Moscow. Kapitza's difficulties with Stalin are believed to have been increased by his reluctance, shared by many Western colleagues, to work on the military application of nuclear energy. Since Stalin's death he has 1 attended the Pugwash meetings of scientists on disarmament problems. Recently Kapitza has spoken strongly of the need to modernise Soviet science. He was also one of the group of intellectuals whp appealed to the Soviet Communist Party's Central Committee last month against any revival of Stalinism. Last man in is a Tor y .' • ¦ generals.A slight victory was won by .them today," however, when LieutenantGeneral Pham Xuan Chieuv SecretaryGeneral of the directory, was permitted to return to Saigon. He had been held in- Hue for 24 hours under what amounted to house arrest. AH told, 5;00p persons -demonstrated in Hue. Besides troops"of the First Division, which is the main strength of the First Corps Command . 1.000 civil servants and l;000 national policemen participated in the1 demonstration. They carried banners and later heard speeches denouncing the Prime Minister and Chief of State andalso the-United States, the latter for supporting the -former. In Danang, Vietnam's second largest city, a general strike paralysed all work while 12,000 persons turned, out to demonstrate against the Govern¦ ' .-. ' '; ment And" in Saigon! armed-riot police were called out asa crowd of students and young people from a Buddhist rally marches' on the radio station with .anti-Government and anuAmerican banners.. . Tynan replies to Capote l^SL ^aaaqels visps t4 wai zone from ANTftONY HOWARD Washington, April 2 THE . first signs qt active Administration concern , over the anti-American outbreak of demonstrations and rioting in the northern provinces of South Vietnam came today with the announcement that a delegation of five Congressmen had cancelled a trip to VieQiam on "the urgent recommendation of the State Department." Mr Bill Moyers, designated as head of a White House mission to Vietnam a fortnight ago, has postponed his own visit ; to South Vietnam indefinitely. In Saigon American officials were reported to be making ' no secret of their anxiety over the fate of the Ky Government. Yesterday .Mr Henry Cabot Lodge, the American Ambassador in Saigon;, declared that the present series of demonstrations, and general disorders demanded the. full attention of VS. officials. ' .' Washington, April 2.—Judge Holt-: £9*CWM) Sties on raiS: strikers The Labour majority "i the -new House of Commons will be 97. The last result in the General Election—Argyll, Scotland—was de- zoff , a. Federal court judge, iQday clared last night. The Conservative ordered the* striking Railway . Fire-: by A U D R E Y POWELL candidate, Mr Michael Noble, was men's Union to pay a. fine of £9,000 Unless, there is some relief for build- returned with a majority reduced by a day and their president £900 a day; ing societies in the Budget , it is in- 1,465 votes. The figures were:— unless"Ihey return ¦"to their jobs bv ~ evitable that loan rates will go up ' nooro tomoirowi M. A. C. Noble (C.) 12.178 within the next few months, a repreHe found the union guilty of conJ. McFadden (L.) 8 486 . sentative of the Building Societies' tempt ofl his orfec last Thursday toi J. J. Mackay (Ub.) 7,512 Association said this weekend. end the strike- which has-.tied at! eigljt; There were too many factors piling major railway companies and^spreadi Majority 3.692 up against any possibilit y of rates economic confusion over a large part! remaining unchanged much longer, of me United States. No change. , in including the problem of operating If his 'fines were not effective ¦ 1964—C. 13,277, L. 8.120 . Lib. ending, the '.threeJay-old strike, he margins and a probable rise in administration costs if the Governments 6,707. Maj. 5,157. would increase them.—Reiiter. * option scheme is introduced in its The final sta te of the parties is: present form. Labour , 363 ; Conservative and assoThe option scheme could itself exert ciates, 253; Liberals, 12; Republican pressure on the mortgage rate because Labour <N. Ireland), 1. Total votes British novelist C. S. Forester, who it will presumably increase demand cast were : Labour , 13,057 ,941 (47.9 won renown for his Horatio Hnrnfor home loans. The building per cent); Conservative, 11 ,418.433 blower books, died yesterday at societies will have to attract more 141.9) ; Liberal , 2,327 ,533 (8.5) and Fullerton, California. He was 66. money from the public to meet this others 452,689 (1.7). Obituary : Page 3 demand. Pictorial1 war There will be no fo rmal declaration of intent , bu t if the Government is to boost the economy and p u r s u e its intended social engineering a broad u n d e r s t a n d i n g between and Government , management u n i o n s w i l l have to be f o u n d . Tilt: M i n i s i n of Labour u i l l seek :o i n d u c e a s e n s e of n t a u u u i t p u r p o s e he ' w e e n m ; ; n ,tt:^ m c n l , m d m e n will a l s o open t h e ( "> ¦- e rn i i K T U l a l k s s h o r l h lo « i k [ p r o b l e m - » i i h u n i o n s a n d e . i r U . i c :i o u Is l l K 1 '.ill I. k. oI ¦ , 'n I h i - C i c o d e , H e r o n on s h i p :-; '::, ii:ni; a n d ::il- m. > i h- i i; - .1 1 i o n t o m i m !Kc I ' l l l i l t d o A ol t i merriment e \ p a ns i o n Ihe vj n I r e s . ,t. ' t : o n on I ,kU tr.iiniry ¦ ' ¦M b e m j r l e s r e p o r- o n . ou l h e m p l m l i t e t i u e s t i o n ol e q u a l p.i\ .ind ment , Today 's weather Cloudy, wintry showers, sunny periods and dry later. Outlook : Mft der weather preceded by rain spreading to most places. iti , Crying "Yankee go home," a mpb^ in Saigon today seized one Arj erican soldier and beat him. America-n military police Jeeps, nosing through the crowd of Buddhist students rampaging , . through . thestreets to find , -whether other. AmertT, cans had-been, molested, were neither by South Viethelped' nor hindered ¦ namese' police. " '¦ For^.the ; Administration the most alarming aspect of (the- situation in this instant picjbrial wjfr is that every night (this weefc;.tele,v isi6tuscreens across the ination hij(YcV;b. eeii .presenting:vfresh evidenceipphe.degree of South .Vietnaineso /unrtst withv the American military presence. It has all seemed a very far cry from' the claims officiall y advanced that America's sole interest in Vietnam is to defend the freedom of the South Vietnamese people. At the White House there were no visible signs of agitation today, but the President decided to stay in Washington over the weekend rather than accompany his wife to Texas. Privately, officia ls are voicing their fears on the damaging impact that the latest series of incidents must be practices instead of them being sold having on public opinion at home. through negotiated productivity agreements. The Government admits that the successful introduction of such production committees " depends entirely on the spirit behind them." If unCommander Anthony Courtney— employment rises, and this is a strong possibility if deflationary policies are the former Conservative M.P. for introduced, the production commit- Harrow East, who was defeated by tees will be seen as an instrument 378 votes—confirmed yesterday that his wife has filed a petition for commending further redundancies. Continuing its industrial security divorce. The petition , to be heard in the programme, the Government is to consider how occupational pension Divorce Count in London , alleges Mrs Elizabeth Courtney, adulteryrights should be available to an employee who has left his job—what- formerly Lady Trefearne. is at present in the Bahamas. An earlier petition ever the reason. Last month a committee of the by Mrs Courtney was said in Ministry of Labour's National Joint February to have been withdrawn. Advisory Council made this recommendation, but ways have yet to be found to implement it. The GovernEngland won the home interment is to urge the council to decide in th e near future how a transferable nation al soccer championship, beating 4—3 at Hampden Park Scotland pension rights scheme could be yesterday. organised. C. S. Forester dies Fibre ^-^qffrFriiffn mfflM^ Poyester l x ^r Start on reform of industry THE GOVERNMENT is to start work immediately on a long-term p lan for reform in industry and labour relations. 31 During 12 hours of attempts by police and volunteers the road was often closed by fresh snowdrifts as soon as any stretch was cleared. However by midday yesterday more than 200 people had been rescued. Race meetings at York. Bangor-onDee ' and Currtugh in Ireland were cancelled , and 12 Football League matches and six Rugby League games —including all four quarter-final cupties—postponed. Searchers with snowploughs cleared a way to seven people vn two cars trapped as they drove home from a hu nt ball at Castleton , near Whrtby , on Friday. The four men and three woman failed to battle through drifts to an inn where 20 of their companions took shelter. The snow, worst in April for many years, blocked the A6 road at Shap Fell. More tha n 350 soccer fans en route by coach to the EnglandScotland match at Hampden Park spent the nigh t in a cafe at Kendal. Special trains took them—and another 200 coach passengers at Penrith on the other side of the pass —the rest of the way yesterday. In CHassow it was sunny. by DAVID HA WORTH, our Industrial safety in industry are all high on the Government 's list. And one of the Ministry of labour 's first priorities will be to seek ways to replace or rationalise two of industry 's most vexatious pt- systems — incentive bonus schemes piecework rates . It is probable tha "troublele Motor shooting " bodies simile* Industry Joint laibour L o u n c i ] , of which Mr Jack Scamp is c h a i r m a n , w i l l be se : up lo deal p i o m p t t > w i i h indosinal disp utes M r Scamp ' s peacekeeping role has heen considered so successful that it ¦iiii i he u-ed d\ a pr ecedenl for other ind ustrie s , among them shipbuildin g in p a r i i c u l a r . I he C i u v e r n m e n l is .iI-li planni at: to l a c k l e the problem o f labour h o a r d i n g and a pa y -roll lav mav fve .nlrndii ced to m a k e larger industries to shed s u r p l u s skilled labour , which Reporter they have built-up because of the shortage. But this , it is admitted, is a heavyhanded method and the Government will first use all its powers of persuas ion. The Government will also urge industry to st udy ways in which factory production comm ittees could identify and stop every labour and management practice which is fairly judged to h i n d e r productivit y. The Prime M i n i s t e r first nu 'lmed his pla ns for factory production comm tlees " i n d u s t r i a l democracy in practice " -Sast a u t u m n , but the proposal has met difficulties . The plan has so far been m e n t i o n e d only informally to ihe Confederation ol British Inilust n and Ihe TUC , run both sides have str ong reservations about it. A basic d i f f i c u l t y is that the u n i o n s fee! l h a t such commiltees would ask them merely lo give u p restrictive 7%0M&-rf OrQmmf ?.. TERYLENE LAW N Shirtwaister In muted paisley prints of soft blue with a hint of tan , or .milk chocolate with blue. 81 ._. 2 GNS Mrs Courtne y seeks divor ce England win 4—3 I TERYLENE CREPE A simp le style with flattering tieneck and long back zip, in paisley prints of blue on emerald , sage on orange, green on bine, ^g Sizes 36-42. # GNS TERYLENE LAW N A semi-formal dress and jacket , dress with cap sleeves and long back zip. fn muted shadow printsof apple green , blu e, lilac blue , cafe au Joit 'si/ver tf> 1 grey. Sizes 36-42. 3F2 GNS *SEN0 FOR PATTERN CARDS of the actu al materials and ORDER BY POST (post with pocking 2 - extra). DRESSES—First Floor A H ^NiHKB ^P ^H ^B —I MT W h^^ Kv \C^*^ > jBB^^^ fffl BPBBB^^^ BSHH ^^HBBBB ^HB ¦^^ H^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦ (**•¦•* , u K ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^Lr ^ ^" ^ -'^ ¦^ ^K ' *k-w: '^ S^s^^^^^^^ HB^^^HKcJ PLAYS A View From The Bridge : Raf Vallone as Eddie in Arthur Miller 's play about the love of a father for his adopted daughter. With Katherine Blak e, Harvey Spencer. Mon 9.40 i ^^^^^^^^^Mh^f ••"*<» '-0 !^0**^^^^m^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^B^^^^^ fl^^^^ l^^^^^ H^r >^^^ SKgx. * - '* t ^*^H|^H|^ai^^^^^ H^^^^^ |BB9^B^&j ^^^^^^^^^ ^^ *" y ^^^^^^^^ HHHH&K ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H^^^^ n^9^^^^ ^TMnBBiffl ^ir V ^ ' * 'raraii ^Hlflllii laggf, «%.^^^¦Bipv 'sW^ - ' ': Vl Pity About the Abbey :. Repeat of John Betjeman and Stewart Farrer ' s p lay about a planning scheme which involves dispe nsing with Westminster Abbey. Wed 9 BBC-1. Don't litter a Note : Sybil Thorndike a nd Athene Seyler start counterfeiting money for charity in Anton Delmar 's new comedy. Sat 10.15 ITV. Tf^SMBwM ^fW^ imSi^HlSrafidSr ^" features' **^ jf :; - 1 « If every married woman knew what every widow know s ... STILL MORE H U S B A N D S sound WOULD f ace the f uture with M || PEAR L Y G § 5 g^ To ^ ^ -j^ J ^ r ¦** ?<f lUmponl if ^ en^e^ope unstated assurance PEARL ASSURANCE Co. Ltd . HIGH HOLBORN ,LONDON WCI Pleaie let ms know without obligation , how I can f iva flntncial protection to my family IMMEDIATELY ancf live for our FUTURE under one i<mpl> iiiuranee policy, Name _ Addre» _ _ OB !g?. <li '. P l _ D.t ,of Birth BBC-1 . 9.0-9.20 For Indian and Pakistan 8.55 News; 9.5, Dr Finlay's CaseViewers , book. 10.30-11.30 Morning Service. ^ ' 5 Rachrnaninov Concertos. 5 (repeat > ; U' 1S 1.30 Gardening ; 130, Farming. ' w ™*!?8 P°"" Weather. 2.20 Look : Peter Scott on how wild life survived winter two years BBC-2 ' . 7.2S News Review for the Deaf. . . de . . „ . . , , . Exporting c 2.45 : Ma in Britain. *7.SS The Dreamin g Eye : Norman 2.SS Association Football : Scotland v. MacKerurie investigates the meanEngland , ing of dreams in four proThis week-wha t » a 3.45 Film : "The Glass Key " (Alan I T ? ¦" drearn Ladd , Veronica La ke). Superb Sofico apartments — for a lifetime in the sun — or just a month ! SMftu K ruraT 5"- 5.30 Serial : " David Copperfield "-U. 5.S5 Puppets : Pin ky and Perky. " 6.10 News : 6.15, Meeting Point ; 6.50, Songs of Praise. • *7.25 Film : " Lucky Jim. " Ian Carmichael as Kingsley Amis's amihero , muddling his way through provincial university. ffiS "^ ' Papers ; 8.SO, Programme News ; 8.55, Weather : 9.0, News ; 9.5, Chapel in th e Valley : 9.30, The Arc hers ; 10.30, Service ; 11.15, Pick of the W eek; 12.10, Critics ; 12.55, Weat her ; 1.0, News ; 1.10 . Any Questions? ; 2.0, Gardeners ' Question Time: 2.30, Pla y : "A Woman Killed with Kindness " ; 4.0, The Lively Arts 4.30, Can I Help You ? ; 4.45, Nature News ; S.15, Djwn Your Way : 5.55, Weather ; 6.0, News ; Radio Newsre el ; 6.4S, Grand Hotel ; 7.30, Letter from America ; 7.45, Act of Worship ; 8.15, Appeal; 8.20, The Inheritance ; 9.0, Your Hundred Best Tunes ; 10.0, News ; 10.10, The Passionate Years : Summer in Switzerland ; 10.50, Epilogue ; 11.0, News ; 11.2, Music at Night. LIGHT (1 ,500 m.; 247 m.).—6.55, First Day of the Week ; 7.0, Weather ; News : Morning Melody ; 8.0, Start the Day Right : 8.S5, Metcast ; 9.0, Children 's Favourites ; 10.0, Join in with Joe : 10.31, Easy Beat : ll<30< People 's Service ; 11.55, Good Listening ; 12.0, Family Sofl co a re Spain 's most prestigious apartment buifders. Every property they let or sell the}1 back with tlieir own reputation. Through Sofico, a fully furnished , equippe d, and mainta ined luxury apartment , gloriously situated on the unrivalled Costa-del-Sol , can easily be within your reac h, for a month or for a lifetime E For example: EL CID A & 5 Apartment blocks situated 300 yards from the sea at Eslepana , comprising 2 and 3 bedroom flaw with bathroom , shower , living/din ing room. Fully equipped kit chen , terra ce, gardens. Prices £2030 to £2212 Estimated completion October 1966 Sofico rents start at £4.0.0. per week In winter and £9.0.0. in summer. Purchase pri ces from £1900 to 110 .000. By leasing your apartment to Sofico you can earn 1,0% return per annum on your investment. .«S»ir. \,,r ZL Ctt> 1 A t Pops : 5.0, Movie-Go-Round ; 6.0, What do you Know? ; 6.30, Sins Something Simple : 7.0, . . . And the WaU Came Tumbling Down : 7.30, News ; 7.35, Start ime : 830, Sunday Half Hour; 9.0, We Beg to Differ ; 9.30, Your Verdict? : 10.0, Records for You : 11.31, Jazz : 2.0, News. MUSIC PROGRAMME (464 m • 194 m.).—8.0, News : 8.4, What' s New? ; 9.0, News ; 9.4, Mozart String Qua rtets : 9.35, Your Concert Choice ; 11.0, Music Maga zine ; 12.0, Smetana : " The Two Widows " ; 1.15, Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra ; 1.40, String Quartets ; Haydn and Schubert ; 2.30, Symphony Concert : Weber , Mendelssohn , Shostakovich ; 3.15-3.35, Interval discussion on presentday artistic situation ; 430, Talking About Music. THIRD. —S.0, Opera : " P arsif al "— Wagner 's sacred festival drama, recorded at Bayreuth ; 6.S5-7.55, Thirties in Britain ; 9,5-9.25, Key to 1 Heaven : 10.45, Afr ica as Idea and Reality : 11.0, News. CANAL & RTVER HOLIDAYS THEATRES ****** ^J ^*^^**^*-* **** * S MAY FAIR <in tlolel). \ .¦« . . „ nB . , l«4^u.\ " CA NA ys j ^f . L Holida YOLRSELK FOR SECRETARIAL THE POSTS Pr.nu pal . Miss G H Wolre. MARLBOROUGH GATE SECRETARIAL COLLEGE 61 Bn.' ^aier Rmid. London. W .I. ^y ?™±°L2 ^ I xpcncn ^-ctl ¦.oa- -l- hn av uir ic-.ni*~\ f ~> ins TMims StiTciary.ship. ^ .\c ^un:anL ->. 1• I *>— • ^~'• tnuineernir , U u iik S :\nly, ManaRcmcni , Ratlin . LJetunnics. Kiiiy C Tnnutcrv Bui 'Jinn dr,d Survey inn ipcciali 'scd m»n-tKamm.iiinn C" mj rsc\ ^h IxkiKj tirnlxd Sr>' .j.il ^ na.-h.np \-.t -hr C r N K R V L CKRT1F1CMF OF I- 1)1 C -\TION \w i , pmspr ,< - ,. ,= I M i U 'r M I I N | i r IU> \ H I > I N ( , i_ - Oi,r " " ' ' . _ ... . I )Y COURSES HOMK-STl ¦ \ . . ' -> ur ,> n .v . Com ^ l-c^ii n i an l-} . ( ... irpam ^r. --c:.irv ^hi n G C 1 \ I ( . .mmfi ^u ! Careers ¦ ¦ it -nr- /•> •. u e - r f . ' .iui lMM -jTia j f fi l l n F career building :.> f s.r c<- r s E-rec *- l -, \ ! l \ M I 1 R I V M I. Ml- . I K| I : . . I . -. r .i: e'-.- :' ~ -r .. \ ' . ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ - j ' . . - ir S) M * 'i II <i| '. . I f a' < . ^ L i M K 1k 1 U ^r H. ... "¦ -4 V ,. ¦ . A :. , . I , <I .. ~^r ¦ I I H \ M \ ( ( I t H S I > \ ¦¦ ' ¦ ¦¦¦ rii-K" . ; ,L !- .-- h r ,.: . - ¦ : t h m^ * ' ^ . r ¦¦" '' v \ ' i\ . '\ u r .. - ' - \ i- .. ¦ !. -. s I. , i v ,., OXFORD EXPERT POSTAL TUITION CoiC l" nI unul Successful I OI [Z ™! ! 4°L A.courtf.n. " ' Seeretaryship } aw CtNSiLn s , London I intvcrsny Deader Insurance ( S C I rij A A. LcveJ« .i Marltcitrirf BaTkinu Manascmcm -y v many valuable rrn»n -cxnm > loutscs in dus:tics 'l suhjc^ is muluJing Lbe new Capital fjains .t Cur norat!on Tax cnurse. Write unlay l PTi^pccius iia.ma c^animaiion or ,' ] Rf lrnfliicrs sirnict (JCM icrJ METROPOLITAN COLLEGE . U ' ' hs J ' E .lurKied I' n m l ^Pe edf iOncl ?LVH\BVr > <'FRg£ * ' lnirod u C tion & l^ss»a Sthi-oi of Spi-cdhaml iO..<) , C o l o n , r n m h rijjie learn to pROGRAM ~7hc :"Ti*VT L ibm sto Com pu i er . Evn b .' S at morn coumes. Proarammcrs aptitude test frcr Wriicuall' phone DJ C O M P l - T t R SFRV1CES LTD *n C'iiy Rd . E.C. I . M O N ' 4NS1 d a i l y 2-7 . ——-—— NEXT ? . .i n ensure ih.i: y.-u " Bt "SUCCESSFLfiT" ~ V\ m p, i!t Srrrcl . VV 1 I H V 14121 \ (th < VKEI-KS ' i^ ' r l i : - i r^ « f t t HOUl \ . -i i - i f . ^ , M |(1 m f f :-,- j 1 ' - m- . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ I.i - . - H :" ;-.! [ft . -m. ¦ I? s. < ¦i I > a \ \ t % " ¦' u [Hi*;al lu.Liuct GF.SERAL CCR PIFICATE 1JF EDI CATION C O 1 A: W Levels all Examinms Boards) LONDON (ND UNIVERSITY DEOREtS DIPLOMAS ! JSAL - S E C R EETXAARMI AI NLA TAND ORDINATK1N ION S N un-kiamin alion Courses OD ,,,n ^fe-. , . SJ, menti on examl [tee , , "3V lrLmi E - Xv• - ih'»" f» 1£?,"- Cv rB ' " L L B «x,r-kr cr-^r w* i r » WOLSEY HA LL , ^. «^ A n n C i n eil Caree r Guidance : "•" i - | "-; ' :. \C-; y "*'"• M \. | ) \ l ¦ ^ I choice the rtahl career Natlcin-widc •trv Tce. free brochure O. CARL ER A N A L Y S I S 4 ~ * /~ < f\T - 7 VT~ 4 TV'/^A^ * sC a COLMAN LY -. " ^™;" TUITION AT HOME WHAT c^u^rw Ur TUl: I H r . S L H U U L ^^ . i" : I -nr., - r kr- ^ .nai ^ - ¦ HMuktirVii -, m m :-,m 8.40. rn -. u u r c w m i L i n i y u c C i i r u p k' t t r sUj Jv i . u i ' s t^ ¦* i' h.-»n ' i v i b n o k ^ "i,n r a U m v t-d u v ?i ^ HKlHi .ill ! i-i .mv m i c . c i -.c'. U K SI M \ i [ ,S i \Lk'UJ iiidHL -v Hankii. fi H ' l i ' V ku f n i " t ( hil I ' iM IIK S rr M f r.'. I ¦ -f ill t i. ¦ ¦f i nrifiil>" I k H 'HI- lim-pi. iiL- (.. C E i n s LlUiTU; V t i f r.1 r v^ l r n i vj m ^ bi.ol. .^ Carfax 5 2. t ..ru-t r ) .1 y. \.\ruc ¦ K \ P 1 | I llhM IIS (Ol . i t CF k F J 1 ,!¦¦.. .1. H. -u ^r ! k .( . '. .¦ ..,:: :¦. . -.j l l .- i l - J- i i i:* " ' A H l- .h:. 1 ! ( : \^ Jl \ ..,r. Secre tarial ¦ S'A l .- njun luNi^ l . , , s,|., a , f College Ouccn Slice:. ( > X r- C > R H P h o n e 487K< Rrj.dcn- *nd day rjcJ en j and BLACK COMEDY Thurj 7 30 and Sal. 2 IS Sc 7 30 : 'T'DCT A XXTHJV » KU.U ATT i"N I : j Jd. stamps for brochure. woi ^ sey hall , oxford iem. ib-w i piuvldcs OLilsiandiTi S( I U J C H S l- ll1 N P ( ' nJ X U - ",U ¦l r^ni ^ O-,icn 'V. ^ ri! Sir«i n ¦ | J j l/ l I h ^.'V- Tiiurs. and Sats. at 6 and s miss j ulie E»plure En sliind s peaceful inland ivaierways this summer ! Our modern fleet of comfortable motor cruisers is based within easy reach of Oxford and Stratford. Send April to 22nd Julv A Spc^lj l CiMir ^c (ISIhwomtn ]¦J^r^^ i> a ^ ailaMc lor with minimum fpeed ^ ol <wl ^ p in in Pitman 's Shorshand . a' MarJhomnith tiaic ici.clanal C'liIIchc . me t m if x . » h i t h pn.ud^ a i:i>ni|irchcnuvc train¦ nit 'it modern office cquipmcnl :inj procedure. eum .-y. »L-ll.<-du.al«l Kirk lur the mL«l rcsponiihlc jnd rt u a tj m i -rcrnanal positions for t-camncp. . tourves start I'Jth Scplemhrr . i'lM> and Iti h lanua n- . I*: for lull delarls and piuspctius ptcasc telephone ut wine lo Lhc MAY 3036. Evnaa. &• JSft F1CENTLY Tern FUNNY ." D. Telegraph. 1 J r *EW. 3878 . Ev8!<. 7.45. Mats: Tues. and FnihS ";na'ii?*§SMiJ " ' A?Sf ^^ Mf ^ 5 »• <-30. LIONEL BARTS Trtnch River Marne. Ftonl H0(^*l S" " ocr bead weekly, Self drlre. TultEun. > f \ Tj 1 TW1> I \JL V ILK. . \ Free SS pa tc colour hra chun:. MAtD- LINE , 91 F«nr» Yacht station, f THE LONGEST RUNNING Children MUSICAL IN HISTORY ! Emberboolc 0Z71. V ' TbRmeu DIRoa. Surrey. JyWV%^^V>w^%^w%^^ under 16 »2-pricc fex Sat evgsl. I THE NATIONAL THEATRE. 1 OLD "cX Tuc5. aad Wed . at 7.30 : •tjBSf #t M >v a ¦MM » * ^» State whether for sales or letting. HIGHER $£%Z*FN THE FRINGE 1966 "° BEYOND thl revised edition is magni- v TLRt - : 'OMANU * ^ ^ »la^\ HIRE A ' MAID 'm ^ w EQLIP *" ^ "^ .. *9.5 ^f g£ ; ^ Tw<j lfth Hour. " Aleksei Arbuzov 's plav set in the fast-changing Russia of 1928 , ' when there still was a bourgeois class—just. Wit b Clifford Evans , Sheila Allen . 10-35 News Summary. 10.40 Late Ni ght Line-Up. * Recommended. BBC SOUND HOME (330 m.).—7.50, Sunday Readtes ; 1.30, Round the Home; 2.0, ing ; 7.55, Weather ; 8.0, News ; 8.10, For Favouri Val Doonican ; 2.30, Benny HU1 ; 3.0, Indian and Pakistan Listeners : 8.40, Semprini Serenade ; 4.0 , Pick of the E D U C A T I O N A L, C O U R S E S .v^i^w^ . a %'.,** »?>;jw f»^f w ;?( p.^ ^ Wm »*X*4/;.t-^ I. sM ;•'(MW~ ^>ir< k?f £W' 5!&»a? s&as kJ3 esaaa fesa^fis-ffS %^ t&m «»! S.aiifc '.o art OF THE " WFI I S " B.UE UNE CRUISERS (Him) LTD.. Bmtrcrd . Brmmsun, Nr. Rugby. Te(: Brounstm 32S J ' XBo, Oft-.ee t , : WAT wiT 7616. ,-r Tel ,^* PAI.ACE. Cer ^*4 7J0 . Wed.. Sat . 2 .30. fUA iL l A IK NA ^TTiUMr G L-KUlalrN 1.000 MILES OF RIVERS AND CANALS lo be MiMnru! . Traditional and luxury cruuera a. modiralc terms. Vacancies all dates, ttiusi. Brochure. Stamps 2 i 3d. CANAL CRUISING CO LTD. to). Stone. Sta ff s. CirTV U T D E 7 /^T> » ric ^ Trric RS ¦ ^V , I v^-Jf b aSs covennB (rum N I N E BASEi the Inland Water- nk Truise; ba '; sta'e ISS.n ", TnT* ,"«' siam w, io C \ N A I . A RIVF.K Dem tl . Su.ke Rd . ?BW A Y . lT^N ^^ATr Scami.Mer Admiral 2< B.Hik-A-B.iiii. Bcllurbel ~ TH AlSES HOLlDA\ S fll-u- Cruisers. Serjeant Musgrave's Dance HIRE CHI 'ISF.RS B L I T C H I I- Y Bucks Ihi:, year er.i,,c .n . Free Brochure trom ' Co Cavan -27.r4 Ber,, Oti,» . ""i Fined In High est Standards. C'hak-I Marine ~Limited . Coney-Berry. Gorin con-1 nam es. < >* r nrdshlrL - . O lT fT W AA TTDW VT l t K WFVS AYS V ^IU IH I Relax ylonii [he picturesque A r^cao-liil Lftr ..ils in the heart nf tile countrv ?.' h henh hiMir * cruisers for hire from Stone ol Sumf anri. 21) reurc l- r.K.- hure free f.om CANM r - I E - S S l ' R f C R i H . Stiiurnorwj n-Si-vcril . Worcs ~ mT.VicT,,' d> K l\ KH S H V N N C r S . B-ic r U J X 1 ^"Ti n,"£S.n^ Kn= r.S.d i" ..'.^ 1: ... i,<ol !:,i S Pfnb ,ni ¦IP .^.ra.ed hn^ture s t a t i n s number ,„¦ ,'- t d ues BRMIIIIIB [Ml V h J i 1 n»t-. i n r i . Sul' .-H _ _ IHWU.S 8, C V N A I . stuisum it..™ \!»nl - l ine fhildrev ^W» ni;i « L_ i rieni ti.lnrd l!-rts April II lo 31 Thpe Vn vcov Inhoririiinrp ' " V ">»£? Uineritwai.e hv Craj villc _ Barker ST MARTINS, fl em 1«J) . l-vcnin ri in 8.0. Ma !- w =d. ai Ml Silt , ai 5..10 and 8.30. ' '{Vl r T "i i A LILY F TlVIlIA A in LIiWl l l Lt. 1INU1A' '" hk>qiicni. mnvinc A oflcn enorm ously runny " S. Tel . ¦¦ A rare Ircal . " D. Tel SAVoi ITem MXKKT EveriToai lit ». O SaT M) and 1.0 Wed Hit Comedy. 1 in ^*J[>RIV\ ("R l_r] < 'KSH *N K " I"' IS S L I M - R B " '".rncs in A l I" RI T FOR A JI U IIH Ft U K /\ UCl i ,I e i u" v i i- n i r r : uii.iH-ni D:i h Sk c l c h . I I V r U V N tJ H t m :w,u) ^ ^ ^^ 1 » l .tnin.. at 7.30 . ? ' .H"fli!V. !X IH Rsl ' .J. '»Y, ,".''^« ', KS1:Y ' ; ' ' S'i r i . . r. n i " |ri , ^, ,\£ "r .] ,. , i >j inril HL fl CBA I l \ \M JI ^ I> A 1UIA L H -^ '. "" l MIT^ Theatre M S ;W1 I t Sr s i ' j p m" H l \ I-" % < ¦ I N \ l. C H l i s ^ N t ; lr. ..r I I \ n t P I . V I B O ^ ' OK THF W I S T I - H II M I I M C , m : l (V M i l ' n r S H r > P ' S S1OC IWORI O h^ Svnsic Itiwn HFK1S Br.H-li t . f.d r M D're. -ir;l bv nxnsncba ~ r r l '< """[_ _ A " M ' ' _ _' ". ' - ¦ " <• _ Mcm« ]_-f, M >K1N<. ( H l ISVS (>N .\ Tti h V m . I I S M I C W M S . Si ll :, l , » i « .j n , -e, ,n M,,i -,,.,1 [ M l n k V l l . l . K . I i «i in ^ M m s Weil 2 < > !,i-ii- !.- .-- .it H f l T F I B O M S and H i m Sals .4. 1- as M < ,<. > SVB1I 1HIIRNi-l -|I I K I n l j n i ! N a .- ieaC RI 1 M R S [ . i t B' vh-jres Ollv f MHLSI RK H A R D I - ,is F ' rcM,. ' Hr- .iok ^s ..rnnimin HR11 RS III S \ f o v n U AL 11 R E l I IS. - , - T-J —r : J I ' l l A I I M K V . O H I J I 1"V\ IS CASS< 1N in " . ;I t>-r r m r,o r r r.- c i i n -r\ * O i i zr , -n n c r l r i L r L i i N C r ^ v sniiii ~\ y~ * , hit nmch.itr. . n. w.mii! iti tomion. swi' ARSENIC A N D OLD LACE * i~* £i xt¥/^ a ikr r i j t »^* t a s~*i^ H^ . ' -^...i^-'ii^b . f '-i.k| {* %'-•$, #* mUt lM'CIS^ < s< -s ^.I c$«oiJ Iui3 ^ isA.'t U> ~' ? *> L' ' k "S % <-< *i the atre records resta urants films ITV : LQNDON 11.0 Matins. 9/25 Film : " Sea of Sand. " Rich ard Attenborough , J ohn Gregson . 12.15 New Industrial ~ Revolution ; Michael Craig in desert war film. '12.35 Les Trois Coups ; 12.55, See it on Sunday ; 1.15, Interval : 10.5 News ; 10.15, Film continued. U.10 Eamonn Andr ews ; Epilogue. 1.25, Plain Man 's Guide to his Si 1-S0> GralDmar °f TEV : OTHER REGIONS (Variatio ns from London) 2.10 News. SOUTHERN. —12.35, Interval ; 12^5, 2.15 Opinion Mak ers : Lord FrancisWillia ms talks to Robert Edwards . £usslan ; 1J *' ...F*™ Prog "^ ; 2.15, ex-Daily Express, now the People. Close Down ; 2.40, Weather ; 3.20, Film : Action in Arabia ",; 4.35, Home 2 45 Internationa ] Soccer Grown ; S.S, Thunderbirds ; 9.25. Film: tin Police W Pn«™ Five. 3.20 ~ •• j ^,. Godfathers. " 3.30 Film: "Yo ung Man of Music " ANGLIA. — 1.50, Weather ; 1.52, fKi r .k -Douglas , Laure n Baca {. Farming; 2.20, " The Girl He Dons Day, Hoagy Carmichae O: Lef t Behind " ; FOrn: 4.10, No Time for Tru mpeter s stormy career. Seigeants ; 5.15, Forest Ranger s - 5.45, 5.30 The Forest Rangers. Izeena ; 9,25, News; 9.35, Amos Burke ; 6.0 News; 6.15, Story time - 6.35 l»-35, Eamonn A n drews . EAY TV-—2;30, Wrestling (3s.) ; 330, About Religion ; 7.5, Be So Kind • Film : " The First Men in the Moon '' 7.10, HSlleluj ah. 7.25 Dangec Mail £6s;}' 6-ls> Film : " Cat Ballou " f6s.); « ^ M2& "5 ^gpgi,^ *-* tod ^V% ; eveii*s TTuATRE^T-Amiffoae, in Sopbodes :;Lamda~ Lpean I'lacc, W.8. 7.45: GhSsu : by IEmii Lima. Garrlck Yard. St Martta's line. 7 3CT ART.—Monotypes and Collates by Jack Yqics Everyman Foyer-Gallery, Hampslead , 4 10-10 Bonnard . Lautrec and the 90's : Lords Cillery. 26 Wellington Road, St. John's Wood N \V 8. 10-7. Nnum Gabo : Tate Gallery MiUbonk . 2-6. . MUSIC.—Alberni Slrins Qiiarlct • Quartet Np. 10 (Shostakovich); Seven Usl Words JHaydn) : Convoy HaH. Red Lion Square. Holborn , 6 30 John Williams (guitar) . Three Dances - Terpsichore " (Practorius) • Three Sonaws (Scarlaiu). Ohaconne (Bach): Caprice No! 24 (Paianlni-WiUuinyi);Various Works by Falla and Albenfz ; Raphael Cartoon Gallery Victoria and Albert Museum* 7^30 - ¦ FILMS . - The Chalk Garden :- Haylcy Mills : Classic, BaSer Street, 4 35. 6.40. 8.50 Yoyo : Pierro.Elalx: Classic. Chelsea. 4.25; 6J5, SAS. Lawrence 01 Arabia : Peter OToole; Classic . Hamnstead, 3 30. 7.05. Love with : the Proper Stranger ; Natalie Wood. Steve McQueen ; Classic. Hotline Hill Gotcj 430.. "G35. 8^5. Lord of the Flics : Classic, .Waterloo Station , 3 05 . 4 35, 6.35, 835. La Bale des Anaes : Jeanne Moreau: Everyman, HamDstead, 4 30. 6 30 , 8.30. Hed Desert : Richard HarrLs. Monica Vttte : Paris Pullman, Drayton Gardens 3.50. 7J0. The Boyers' Plot : Academy Cinema Club, 167 Oxford Street. 3.30. 6.0, 8.30. King find Country : Nau'oaal Film Theatre. 4.0, £ 15 VICTORIA PALACE. Vic 1317. Twice Nlly. 6.15 and S.45. TV's Faslesi Spectacular THE BLACK AND WHITE MINSTREL SHOW Now in 4th Year. Booking until Nov. 196& *iis rfSrinrt -^v ^"SriVlii ^it ¦TfJF£ ^lfiyA WiJ2¥. ^ii»?.! CHASE ME S?li«?? COMRADE Y - A Stom, of LAUGHTER ." Fin. Tune,. WYNDHAM'S. Tem. 3038. Eva. 8 Wed. & SaJ. 6 Sc 8.45. THE "IN " COMEDY HOWS THE WORLD T/t ^ t™ ? » TiirT ^ ^^ TREATING YOU ? " Almost bound to be »•the IQfifi FUNNIEST OF m&6 "-AT Of m""'" 1 PLAY n Exp. P*r. P. TALK OF THE TOWN Din & Dcs 9.30 om Revue ' DANGEROUS CURVES ' & at 11 p.m. MAX BYGRAVES. REG 5051 : :J_i ,— — r^-i,—:—: DK DU AV U II N U^PI IA AL I r PALACE WATFORD. Tom. 7..1II M1CHEAL 1 1 IMTORTANCE OF BEING OSCAR ." SOI°JNn \JF oTMUSIC JVIUOlV* HH. JUUIMJ — Rodacrs & Hammersteln , Lindsay A Crousc. , CTTT7.FNS' TTTPATRir LH lttlXS lUKA lKt Extra Madncc Easter Monday ai 2 .30, b7? . . DI7,' ,.^ tr . T,^7i GlasGow FT^i—>¦2 ¦< i ^n PA ^ " ' ' ¦Tel : 041 SOU 0022. F^ ,Ve . ^" i anj ^oy KinnVar: Kennclh Connor and Arthur Askey Till Saturday. 9th April in Magnificent All Comedy Production MISlltllMrc AII3ALiL.lAnL.tL, RAR17C I1SJ XIII? ll WUUU KAbtJ > I N l H f c WOrt By Bernard Shaw PHOENIX . (Tern 8611). Evcninas at 8.15 p.m. close theatre clpb Saturdays at 5.15 & I.H Mav , Wed . 3.0. ALEC GUINNESS. ANTHONY OUAYLE TCHIN-TCHIN by BUIeidom INCmFlST AT VICHY ll i "ik b, AR^UR Mil LER 94 ^r^f/w^Sr^cSr ?, wim^ PICCADILLY. Cier 4<0, E« . 8. Wed 2.30. Shakespeare . Etojiy 7 30 Sat, 4.0 i 7.™ Sat . 6 & S 45 . Danie l Massey. Mario Thomas. Oiienlna Tuesday !2th April . SERJEANT K Kas2nar J(M n Sierndafe Bennett in MUSGRAVE'S DANCE by John Arden . Directed by Colin George . BAREFOOT IN THE PARK " one of the funniest comedies YVONNE ARNAUD THEATRE. Guildford.. IN TOWN' " E . Standard (Ouildlord '0191 /21. CotnjnencinB Acril mh Gladys Cooper . Wendy Hillcr. Nounton PRINCE OF WALES. Ouenina April 13. Wayne. Mary Peach 1ony Wrisht in THE 7.30 Subs Evhs 8.0. Sals 1 0 and B.O SACRED FLAME. Eves 7 45. Mats. Easter¦ HARHRA STREISAND FUNNY CIBL. Mon. &. Thurs. 2.30 Sat 5 00 & 8 00¦ MICHAEL CRAIG. Tkkeis available at ¦— ' Boj t Office (Whi H6SM and Afleneies . NOTTINGHAM PLAYHOUSE Tel 4567 1 ROYAL COU RT .Sk. 11451 7 .J0 Sa! 3.0. Eviibs. 7 .30 Sat. 3.0 & 8.0 Mnn day Tuesday and Wednesday Mon. and April 12. 20. 21 Inland Waterway Cruising sr- ' !« - -y? - - ;:f\ wtsswr^i W'^ ,mf i"c^J >' hp P % ^ ' Z m ^ SSi a t-<*s] ^t^r ¦> W% tev4 &. bi hfL™.s :»1 "! > -S>~< sfc l^ paperbac ks M Pairons; return year after year to take a holiday with a diflc rcnuc m a ' Latly. ' 2. -4 &. 6 berth self (irive cabin cruisers for hire radiadn s in all dirccUoiw from rural Cheshire S.A .E. lor le.nei. LadMlne Cral M », Nunt^ieh 1. PEAK I'OR ESr AND MACCLESFIELD CANAL S. The Waterway link with the Pennines. N o Restriction Harccaslle Tunnet . Hire Cruisers from CONSTELLATION CRlilsks . Ml Vcr non. Hr . Poynlon . Chen. HIRE A CRUISER on the bcaultlul and exdtina Gra nd Union Canal. 4-10 twnh lully euuipped luxury croft. Brochure 4tt. WYVERN SH IPPING. Leiahton Buzzard. Beds. S S A N UC ™ SH C vs ln L^u'i 's " f Drive CruS F?'" bTochure SsuJF [ W F Snuct? CRUISERS . S,T 'cj, Bar Dublin 2 /^vv^vc? ;ggs ^ift :U 100S) mono only rrusii:. IHQM 24s lid ) . Fiicker r-Symphony No. 2 : Royal Liverpool Philharmonic , conductor Joh n Pritchard. Simpson-—Symphony ¦ No. 1 : London Philha rmonic; conBonn ard, Lautrec and the "905 Old Boys, by William Trevor: Posters advertising bicycles,-cabarets, ductor Sir Adri an Boult. ^ Recorded The British Council auspices , Blow by blow account of battle for magazines ; all for sale, wide ra nge of under presidency of minor public schools pri ces. Lords Galler y, 26 Wellin gton another in excellent HMV 20 series. Old Boys' Association. Amusing and Two accomplish ed English essays in Rd , NW8; 10-7 untii:May : 16. , : symphonic form. (HQM 1010 mono gruesome study in pettiness , rendered Spanish Room : Redecorated in green 24s lid ). occasionally tedious by the stilted ' damask ; with Velazquez 's: "JRokeb y language all the characters speak. Venus ,'' cleaned and refrained and on (Penguin 3s 6d). view after , a year. Also works by • Essays of a Humanist by. Julian G oya , El . Greco , Murillo. National Huxley ; Clear exposition of evoluGallery, 10-6, Sun 2-6 tionary humanism. Comprehensive handling of many subjects from EDINBURGH biology to theology, setti ng forward Eduard o Paolozzi : Sculpture and End and Beginning : Two one-hour what he sees as the inevitabl e future prints by Scottish-born artist. Abstract plays ; 3 developments in human thought. " Whisper into my Good Ear , ' sculpture in aluminium or chromed William Hariley 4 and David Camp- (Pelican 6sJ. steel; silk, screen prints. National by ton's " Little Brother , Little Sister. " Tie Centaur , by John Updike : Three Gallery of Modern Art , Inverleith Hampstead Theatre Club (Membs days do the conflict between a pr ecoHouse, Royal Bota nic Garden. April PRI 39631 ToniEhl only 8. cious student and his well-in tentioned 9-Mav 8. father. The mythical analogy decks EDINBURG H out (he novel wilh a rich sophisticated Portraits of Women : Peggy Ashcrofl bawd rey. Striking psychological with some words on women and some stud y set in typical America n small women 's Wor ds;. Mon Ttio 7.30. Lock town. (Penguin 5s I. Up Your Daughters -. Bernard Miles/ The Seed and the Sower , by La urens Lionel Bart musical , with Jea n Kent. van der Post: Three long siories Felix Felton. Royal Lyceum (FOU examining with grea t sympathy the 4353) Sat for th ree weeks. JAZZ effect of meaningless Jap anese cruelty on an English officer. Trag edy of war Stan Getz—Greatest Hits : Misleadbro ught to life thr ough superb coming title for 12 tracks dating back to mand of language. (Penguin 4s 6d). 1949-50. He's a greater jazzman now Fre nch Short Stories, edited by than then , but even before his style Pamela Lyon : Eight post-war stories , had fully matured , his playing 's including crammed with good things , especially Robb e-Grillet , Marce l Ayme, Ray mond beauty of tone and melodious think- Gay Hussar: Hungaria n, au. Transsmall and lations on facing Quene ing. (Stateside SL 10161 32s). picturesque , with national dolls and rather than literary, pages are literal but national dishes , which are excellent— pa rall el. Agreeable way assiduously CLASSICAL to polish up and don't miss the pate\ Wines not your FTench. (Penguin Parallel Bliss : Music for Strings ; Miracle in chear , but good carafes at 12s. 6d. Texts 5s>. the Gorbals ; Ballet Suite. Phil- Cost about £3 for two. Table d'hote har raonia Orchestra conducted by lunch only, at 10s. 6d. and 12s. 6d. composer. Attractive issue in new Closed Sunday. Lunch 12.30-2.30, HMV 20 Series " reissues of authori- dinner 6.30-10.30. 2 Greek Street . tative recordings " of 20th centurv W.I. (GER 0973). today's tv and sound __ _ traces , in song and verse , Ihe Irish Easte r Rising of 1916 , to the backgro und of newsr eel shots and photographs. Wed 9.40 ITV. Music Master to the Queen of Spain ; New series of illustrated studi es setting music in its historic al context starts with 1 7th century composer , Scarlatti . George Malcolm plays his harpsichord sonatas . Thur 8.50 BBC-2. A Mode rn Passion : Viewpoin t study of Arthur Dooley, Liverpool—and Communist—sculptor w hose Stations of the Cross is striking exampl e of contemporary religious art. Thur 10.50 BBC-1 . Whe n Comedy Was King : Eightyminute line-up of stars of the silent scree n—Chaplin , Buster Keato n, Laurel and Hardy, first seen on BBC-2 Fri 7.30 BBC-1. ¦ Inlcrtel : Canadian film asks what Double Concerto : Christopher relevance God and the Church have Nupen 's film about the prepa ration todav. Fri 10.17 ITV. and rehearsals before Vladimir Ashkenazy 's and Daniel Barenboim 's The Greal Metropolis : Reconstrucperformance of Mozart 's Concerto in tion by Robert Kitts of Victoria n E flat , claimed to be one of the great- London as seen by Henry Mayhevv . est performa nces of recent years. Tue Sat 8.25 BBC-2 (See "V ictorian j unction. ") 8.50 BBC-2. India ! My Indi a : Yavar Abbas gives his impressions of the changes he fou nd in his native India after a lapse of 17 years. Tue 6.30 BBC-1 (four p rogr ammes). The Money Programme : New weekly magazine which will tackle economic journalism in TV terms. The Pagoda Fugue : Experimen tal Producer Terry Hughes says he wants pla y by Eric Rhode , in which time to " air generally the big issues going doesn't exist and the four characters on between bus iness, ind ustry and (play ed by Steph en Murray, Till BenGovernment. " There 'll also be p rofiles nett , Beatrix Lehmann , Denys Hawof leadin g firms. Tue 8.30 BBC-2. thorne) live in a ghostly limbo. Tue Black and White : Film from Cardifi 7.45 Third. about Bob and his wife, both born The Unblest : Henry Reed' s dramatic a nd brought up there. He 's coloured. study of the Italian poet Giacomo Tue 10.50 BBC-1. Leopardi. With Marius Goring, Rebellion at Easter : Programm e Beatrix Lehmann. Wed 8.30 Third. " % " " ' ' ~ fl - A ^ ¦ • I rrv . lN £&%BB ^^ m$B$$r v aPftP '°" *2r t ^s^ ' Jr'Qw' ' 'k ' \ 4 H| l??$-4 Mv .v^^ \%iglf ki:>?-^-^^' ,a xuI F-m-^ ^i^ H ^H wH ^&i^l // &,?rtii^ K>(f ..s x% ¦¦UHH ¦ ¦^B^^ bB IHEH mmm ^^^Bi^B^H ¦ Bi KB Hi ^M // Df ^m ^ ¦^ ^^m ^ ^— m Hi -^ ^ ^ ^g ^^^^^^ ^^m ^^m ^^ ^H^H ^^^^^ ^^m television - " |H HVH ^b *** MEASURE FOR MEASURE Tue . an d April 16 teve ) tends) THE CARETAKER Wed .. Tour , and April 14. 15. 16 unal.). 18 22 10 SAINT JOAN Fri ., Sal., and April II 13 Ifl 21 _______ _ _ CINE MAS WHO 'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF I . ACADEMY CINEMA ONE (GER 29UI ) . JeanLuc Godaid s ALPHAVILLE tAI & THE PIER |A) Proas i 15. 5 30. 8.15. ACADEMY CINEMA TWO (GER 511*) Federico Fcll.nr * Greal colour film J ULIET OF THE SPIRITS (XI. Prom. 4 M . 1.50 ACADEMY CLUB (CER 8BI")J. Ur.1.1 Apr. 14. E-senslcin - i THE BOY\RS' PLOT. ARTS. Tern 3334 . Mars ol Fonlcyn in Tlic Royal BaUet. Man. tn ,m 7 f t ASTORIA. Charins X Rd Ger 5185 The (;reat Race iV). ScpuraK: perls IDday 4 .0. 8 0. Weekdays ai 2 Id. 8 1) Alt bookable. RERKELEY. Mus BI50 A . Varda ^ L« Bnnheur tX). J More au in Jutes, and Jim f\>. C\M EO MOL'I.IN. Ol Windmill St CNris ' Oirh ¦' Girls !' Liuoiou> . ¦Iclid.ui ^ . »ill •send ynu delirio us THE N A K E D WOKI D OF 114RRISON M A R K S (A > ( I.o-iHn). *l«i S-n-ational ' brealhrak nit • W OMKN OF the »ori i> txi Colo' From 2 1 ? CAMEO rOI.I ti» Til >ll Mm* nl R0M1 Hirsch tCt>mcdic Iranca ' .el 11 'he IniciI .n ,l Weel. nai.onal rv.me.l -.- Mil NO QUESTIONS OIN C t T l l D n t V ti '\ Yr-a «.I| a a r r a in ii . t aiiith *t 11, Iot c 11 m ^t e each ^Hsil Pro^ u^ , *, 8 :n MOTOR RACING 1 Tunbridge Wells Motor Club Sprint. Brands Hatch , nr Fantfmham. Kent, t p.m. approx. TABLE tENNIS r ¦Kent/ Championships. Crystal Palace National Recreation Centre. 9.30 a.m. . LONDON CHURCH SERVICES St Pmft-H C. 8. 11.30: Con. Fred Hood : 10:30: Choral Evemotw, BIshOD J. W. C. Wand . 3.13 : Bishop of Cariboo, 6 30. WestminsterAblie>.— H C , 8, 11 30 . Choral Evensong, Rev. Max Warren, 3.0 : Rev. Michael E. Marshall, 6.30. St MorHn-to-the-FIelds^-H.C;. 8.0: Family Communion. 9.45; Vicar. 11.15. 6.30. St Colomba's, Pont Street.—Rev. Dr J. Eraser Mcduskey, 11; Ketf. D. Hugh Davidson . 6.30. Westminster Cathedra]. —L.M., 6, 7, 8. 9. 12. 5.30, 7 pj n. ; H.M,, 40.30: Vespers and Benediction. 3JO. 7. Oratatr,; London. S.W.7. —L.M.. 6.15, 7. 8, 9.M0. 12.15. 4.30; 7; H.M.. 11; Vespers and Benediction^ 330. Bloonriban1 Ctnlral Bnpdst Charcb — Dr Howard . Williams, 11 and « 30. Central Hull, Westminster.—Dr M.- Barncct . 11 and 6.30. City Temple, Holbom Viaduct. Rev SDr 'A. Leccard GrilBth, 11 and 6.30 Society -of FriendB, Meeting House. 52 St Martin's Lane. —I I. Ninth Church or Cluist. SclenUn. Marrfwm Street. S.W.I.—11 and 7. KlnEsna; Hall (Mothodisu, W.C.2.—The Rev Lord Soper. 10 (H.C.). 11 and 6.30. Easex Hal] 4Unl unan). Strond.-i—Rev A. Adcock. 6.30. CAMEO ROYAL Whi 6915 London most 1 THE 's PROfund s-ensatfcnal prosrntnme UND OF pEATH JS"!^ ™ 5f WEET ^° caaipo victoria vie eses " cary oram RELEASES Doctor in Clover (A) : Possibly a little worse than the earlier ones , but mixture 's pretty much as before , if you like it. With Leslie Philli ps as the doctor , James Robertson Justice and Joan Sims. Selected Odeons aud Gaumonts (Details TRA 5471 10.309.30, Sun 2.30-9.30). The Great St Trinian 's Train Robbery (U) : More typical British humour, but funnier , with Dora Bryan , Frankie Howerd . ABC (GER 9234 M on-Sat 11-8). North London this week. South next , ahead The War Game (X) : Peter Walkins 's documentar y, showing what nuclear war , could mean. National Film Theatre 1 (Members WAT 3232) April 13-May 4. Royal Court : Tenth anniversary "celebrations ; new production of ejaftvilIei T- Parker 's '^The ¥«ysey thheritaric& '* and Arnold ' : Wesker's " TJ iei^Qwn arid Golden City." Also m Tepertpry, Joh n Arden 's " Serjeant Musgra ye's Dance." Royal Courl (SLO/17451 April 11. per Rosenkavalicr : New producti on by Luchi no -Visconti , conducted by Geor g Solti. Royal Opera House (COV 1066) Apri l 21. Dribuffet : Retros pectiv e (1942-1965) of French painter , sculptor and constructivist , cultivator of " L'Art brut. " Tate, April 23-May 30. Dr Zhivtt go : Latest David Lean epic, from Pasternak' s novel. Royal charity premiere in aid of English-Speaking 1 . Llriiotu Empire (GER 1234) April 26. Othello : For those who Th still can't get eatre producinV fllm .^ f National tion- with Olivier. Premiere in aid of Toynoee Hall appeal. Odeon, Leicester Square (WHI 6111) May 2 (thereafter at Odeon , Haymarket ). Hamburg State Opera : Return visit ' ¦na BMBaHHBBBMt lMBBHIBMI Ly^^ Mffi DSWM gMJ gmlfMllBllt ^M H.* Mi"lWl|IC|MBM3r|l J tf| '^^^^^^^^ J ^^ UAS UUS^J ^^^^^^^^ f for six per fo rm a nee s uith Strain s' ^ " Die Fra u Ohne Schatten ," "Cosi Fan Tulte " and " Lulu. " Sadler 's Wells (TT£R 1 672) May 2. Seligman Collection of Orient al Arl : From China . Central Asia,- ICorea-1 500 B.C. to 18 th century. Arts Council , 4 St James 's Square , SWI , May 7-Ju ne 7. Offe nbach Operetta Season : New pro d uction of " Bluebeard " by Gillia n Lynne and " Orp heus in the Underworld ." - La Vie Paris ienne. " Sadler 's Wells (TER 1672) May 13June 11 . booking opens Mon. Song of the Earth : Kenneth Macmillan 's newest ballet lo Mahler 's music , with Ma rcia Hay dec Royal Opera House (COV 1066) Mav 15 festiv als Glyndebournc : hive pr oduction 1.; Purcell' s " Did o and Aeneas " tin Britten 's realisatio n) and " Ravel' s " L'He ur c Espagnol e " cond ucted by John Pritchar u : Michael Redgrave ' s prod uction of Mass enet 's " Werther . " GUnther Renn e ns produces and choreog raphs Handel' s " Jephtha. " and revival of " Die Zaubrrflote. " Details and tick ets from Glyndebournc Festival Opera House (Ringmer 234) May 29-July 31. York : New produ ction of 600-yearold York Cycle of Mystery Plays , by E. Martin Browne ; wagon prod uction of "Noah' s Flood " (i .n the streets) ; choral work s in the Minster; first performances by Alexander Goehr . Wilfred Mellers, Har rison Birtwistle anil a Coffee Hous e for ca baret , jazz, poetry, pop. Deta ils and tickets Festival Booking Office , I Museum Street , York (56641 ) J u ne 10July 3. Beaulieu : Firs t World r-ulk Festival , at Palace House, home of Lord and Lady Montagu , in aid of National Society for Mentally Handicapped Children. Tickets from 5 . Bulst rode St reet . W.I (HUN 4985). Jul y 15-16. Edinburgh : Musical emphasis thi s year on Schumann , Berg and Russian composers , with visits from ihe Moscow Radio Orchestra and ihe Wurttemberg State Opera from Stunga n : in drama on the Greeks with t he Piraikon Theatron from Athens , a Scottish adaptation of Aristophanes. "' The Burdies ," and Pop Theatre ' s " The Trojan Women ." plus ihe Polish Mi me Theatre and a new pla s 1 for children , Nicholas Stuart Gray 's " The Wrong Side of ihe Moon " : Geo rges Rouaull at ihe Royal Scottish Academy. Full details and tickets fro m Festival Society, 11 Cambridge Street , Edinbur gh 1. Aue 2t-Sept 10. music Neville Cardus : Lect ure on Mahler s last three symphonies. Institute of Contemporary Arts , 17 Dover Street , W.I , Tue 7.30. Alan Rawsthorne : First pe rformapco of Concerto for Cello and Orchestra. New Philharmonia Orchestra . Christopher Bunting soloist , conducted by Sir Malcolm Sar gent. Festival Hall (W AT 3191 ) Wed 8. Ja zz Concert : New Traverse regime kick off with Jean Hart , backed by R ichard Rodney Bennett (piano ), J onathan Lynn on drums , John Mitchell (bass). Jeannetta Cochra ne Theatre , Holborn (CHA 7040) Tue 12.30. St John Passion : Bach with soloists April Cantelo , Helen Watts , Gerard English , and Viola Tunnard (harpsichord ). Ambr osian singers and Royal Philharmonic. Odeon Swiss Cottage (PRI 3424) Tue 8. Reviews pages 24, 25. From GALLERY 26 Thurloe Slreo S. w " MEDICI . 5(h-23rd April Painting by John . Mcnnie luid Embroidery by bKpeih VI Kemp. Datfy 9 a.m.-5.30 p. m . i/at <>-\ .;7_ *_«, ^n W^ o, . :. Cl . R n M C 1: Tf E GRASS ^gen^V^^R^X&l^M^esli'e fs GREE pfEIl |Af t " 4 30 * -ALWIN GALLERY. Opposite C'aridst's. comptele and other graphic work FLORSAJN—Pairuings. WHITEAR—Reliefs. ENCE MARTIN—palntines of Ireland and CARLTON. Wb , 371 l.Td .lama. Kenneth ' KRIKHAAR—SoUpture. Apr 4 10 29. Mexico . Until April 9lo. DaUy 10-6. Sal 10-1 . WUUams CARRY ONwud COWBOY <A) Pnts and is. s n from i.s. 3.25,^.50 ' ' NEW ART CENTR *M So™: Street . S.U I . ' on ol ihe D^siGN ^ 'Je ^otu CA^NO ^ERAMA UJ -^TO ¦MJ M . ¦VlflO ^A^4 F H 7:50.. Weekdeys at ^2.30 ind 7.45. Sals , al 2.0; j.20. 8.40 anil 11.55 p.m. Bookable. BAKER cinemas, Ha yley wel. ss36. classic St. Mills, Deborah Kerr . The life and Influence of Jtotcr Fry (1886-1934) ? *r-Jr?TS ^iii r ' ofip "s5nvv ' H ARTST COUNCIL GALLtRY, 4 Si. James 1J ; iSji-'i 5St a?wi3 « ? ?iV T?»Apr ™ .' mii?fr?s Wed, 13 Dally 10-6. Sals. lo-l . .. Opemjii Sauare, SV/.t. ,T1U Aprllsl«.,Mon. Wed. Fri. Sat. ro-o: Tues Tours. 10-8. Adm. 21-. AXIOM 'GALLERY , 79 pulce St., Grosvenor ¦ one I)^>' <!*<» Z«Chalk Garden , o, 435, 6.40. 8.50. , MICHAELi; "'PaintlnsS 5?V ,V(f - ,- doses Apnli^Oth." ^ '. c?IEJLSE dxJ Acrrc */?& Ia ,hJ5 C5'!?ses Prizc " 'COWlONW WLTH ^rNSTITUT& ^o .-. winner, YOYO* D. 4.25, 6.35, 8.45. maa exhibitions MELVOt DAY (New Zca-. NOTi BUI. Natalie Wood. Loyc Wilh lbe Prop er SUncEer. x 4.30, 6.35, 8.45. HAMPSIEAD. 7 Academy Awards ) Peter O'Toole. Alec Guinness. Lnwrence or Arabia. a. Programmes : -3.30, 7.05.' NOW I COLISEUM CINERAMA. Tem 3161. HOLIDAY IN SPAIN <U). In Colour. Today at 4J0 ; i 7.30, Wkdys. 2.30 4 8.0. -- land) and AhTWAR SHEMZA (Pakistan) Until ntn Apri l. Wk dys. 10-5.30 Suns. 2.30-6 ; GALLERIES. COURTaULD ^i INSTTTUTE • Woburn 'Sauu e; : -WCl . The Courtauld Collection: of Impre ssionist and . Post- Iropredslonisi Pamunss- the Lee Collection ofOW Maslcrb . tire Roscr Fry Collection. Exhibition of NEWLY ACQUIRED DRAWINCS IN THE WITT COLLECTION. cCS 'Sr t RUSSIAN ADvllSlSSlE * '" Adtnkj lon free 10-5 (Siins 2-5). Jean . COLUMBIA ..Res 5414 . Laurence Harve y. CRANE KALMAN GALLERY, ITS BrompSimmons, Honor Blackmail , Michael Craig In .- ton Road London , S.W.3. KNI 7566. First Pro sramrncs - London' exhibition of Paintings-by ROBERT' LIFE j fr the Top (J,. todpy 3.30. 5.50. 8.20 Doors open at 3.0. nASH 1^'9 2: °[ rS " Y,Orl<,, From Apl. 7 BORN FREE flO Tech. rl !l r f ' < Htf! '2? i 2 - ^ i/£hL,I| i, Pi CONTTNENTALE :—Mus ^!9l CLIMATES . «»ffSi /fr ^i,'vmS ^' " K h^JiJ ^lv? Si A^niM?v\vS OF LOVE tA) Wild Strawberries (Al. >W ' f°' • i^tv -iftSf h S^r/o? DOMINION. ToU . Ct Rd. Mus 2176 2709. and con*>">*"& ^i V-O. Julie Aadrews, Cbn<ncpber Pluromcr in dSjW imcdbSf SlrUCUQDS uQIJJr M Rod.ej s & Hamjn erstcin's THE SOUND OF cnvir ¦ enrrrrv nr pnnTaitT MUSIC (U) In Todd-AO A. Col Sep Pcrfs. PAINTERSl?rFTOERATION OF BRIT^ ARTISTS GALLERIES. 6i2 Suffolk Street. Pall MaJI Easr .s w '1 DAILY ONG' SATS) direoied by Tony Ricnardson. Pr ess loday : I0V5..Admtoion 2s. Please note -new addreK: 23 Church Ttct.. Ev¥R5YS^ °Hamp,e,d .525 Recent Sue- FURNEAtJX GALLERY. SprlDB Exbn. inc. Edward WlmbledoD.10 ' 1 Bishop, Donald Blake, Rowland Wider, S83": !k 1^ ^ 88 ^ ANGES ^ "(A)y "Si AP?U E ^ John Ub!. (Inc. Sats). 10.0-5 30 S5 ! X T t4«w ^i /,.P AS W' GIMPEL FILS. 50 South Mquhon Street . Lon_ RY^*N,^El? Amb , M^SWr ™p cpv WhO wtan GALA ^OWX l H ««. M"Ddn s >W Alan B< alt 00^^ 1 ' S. S !f ^ D ft»A E~£ .?S' .^" ^ 1724 EJizabctb Spe '. ci GOLBERS GREEN IONIC CRABOWSKI C»llery. 84 Sloane Av e.. S.W .3. Hamaon R« Taylor Richard Burton ; , F ANGOR . Punl tnas. Dally 10-6. KEN 1868. 7 CLEOPATRA (A) Sun. 6.35. Wk. 3.5. 0 V N8Jr , S,AfoVf,RY - 2St3B DaVi SiINT. FI£M TH. Bay 2345. Truffaut 's Jules and C ? ? ? W.I DAVID BURLIUK retrosnecuvc Enribn . ^ Jim (XI. The Silence (X). . 1911-66 of the Russian FuIunsl pocl and LE1C. SQ. TH. Morecambc &. Wise in That unul April 7. Daily 10-6. paintet , 5.55 , . 8.20. Proas 3.30 RMera Touch (U) HAMILTON GALLERIES. MICHAEL LOMTKJN PAV. Ger . 2982. Scan Conncry as ' KENNY—Sculplure Umil April 2.1, 10-6 : p . in James Bond in THUNDERBAIX I K). _ , &o SI c. oeorgc Henrffe si S.rrc. IV-1. reel, W vv . I.I Sals. Proir* Today at 1 0. 5.50 and 8.-10. METROPOLE. Ttmse MoRilieeot Men In Thetr Flvtnn Machines (II) in Todd-A O A Weekdays Technicolor Today 4.30 8 11 2.30. fi 0 Bookable. Vic 02118 1500. 4673. ODEON. Hnynvirkel. Whi 27JH The Knack IX) Inna La Donee (X) Separate performances 'odw * weekdays at 2 0. JO \ll bookable O'HANA GALLERY. 13 Carlos Place, w 1. Paintlnir! by WILLIAM HALLE. OMF.LL GALLEBIFS. New seleoUons of fine MODERN I9TH CILNTtJRY and «>nie EAWJER MASTER?iTreiiistlc " ricer:! BURY STREET. ST. JAMES'S. S.W .I . n.TrcQcnv a ctxTDiufAiu cpniMr uvui SHIPMA ~^ '^ nU^S0?, ^ , G L. tX,5l" E"' ?Dea f, w "'PPL^ oS, ^ ^i JnHS? 'Prt ^ !P -f c r. 1 tl " 3 ;^ o ?k Mbc ' P ^ 1?,?,; St.. o, w ig tO. '' ' W .I'i . t??i MayfaEr, ' }S,i? marie PICCADILLY GALLERY, 16a Cork St .. W t . MAY 2875. PHILIP TURNER Sculsui.s Lln "r 16 -h April . 10-6; Sat 10-1. PORTAL GALLERY. FRANZ DECKWITZ of Amsterdam . New Trompc I'Oeil and lamaTv pai minjw. 16a . Gr atton St.. Bond Si., w 1. HYD 0706 ROBERT FR.ASER GALLERY. 6» Duke SlraI W.I. WORKS IN PROGRESS—Blake. - Grosvenor Square ,Boshier . Caullield. Hamilton. Self. etc. Dally 10-6. Sats. III. ,f-i I. . 17 KING STREET Rui apER T pRESTON . . i .L#T^c*o rr *! tn4 t t— r > tj *i* CcnJAM ES S. S.W.I, v v hofj 1794. i.-in 'he Nethcrland,. «"» S***** PairtinK ROLAND, BROWSE a DELBANCO. I" . Cork Sireet . W .I. PETER BEHAN. Recent Palmlnn. English Palniins, IMO-IW. B"*: 10-5.30. Unul Apr. 7. ROWAN GALLERY, 25a Lowndes St.. S W .I. BEL 3490. Paintints by Michael Thorpe until 28 April. Dafly 10-6. Sats. 10-1. SOUTH LONDON ART GALLERY, Carobcr• well. Peckham Road. S.E.5. A retrospeelive Until cxhlbilioo of works by Francis Rose. 23^ April (Gallery dosed Tuesday. 5th Apr,r > Weekdays 10-* Sunday 3-6 Free The ™ SouSSSrk CoOecd of Ori ginal Print , may bc SQCtl on Mondays-Fridays between 10 » m. and 5 D.m . Saiurdays by appc-inlmem natallnm dra» m a i ' m rOaBO ES. dra»*n n •: «m«lniclloiK NALM construCUons paintln Mnn WVd rt " V, STri-Y. v Tif^ 5 ApnI. \v A^<n. eu .^t ri -t.il . .Lbtt , - ^ . ^. 1 111 15 m oA^ . c . . . ^ MOP :. ^ . tt G '^tS^ -^SuvTk v tv ?^ov^fuUrc *!£ "WZ ™J*riL«S IB00-I8W LI FE A N D LANDSCAPE. U nlil 8 April Daily 10-5.30. H N V ihiiycr orks 17 Dover St.. W .I . DUHUFFET DRAWJX ILlnnell , ^""Jt ihh °' ;Watts . Tennan,. . HerriM. lt.be INGS. Till Apr 30. 10-6. Salv 10-1 Adm 2/6. >t Inmes s . S W , ; CKC- 35 ,^"7 S< KAPLAN GALLERV. 6 Duke Sireei. St. ^° whl l741 Sats Io ^ -''"-*• James's. S.W.I . An exhibition of painlinH by GUSTAVE LO1SEAU 1865-1935. Daily TOOTHS. Paintnus by H. ELLiprT-BLAK! O^N^if ^ ^S^S.^tf. '^,?! Openins April 5th . Daily 1 10-6 00 >,»:, 10-6 Sats 10-1 KASMIN Ltd. lIS Nc * Bond St.. W.I. MAY °.30- l .00. 31 Rruton Sireei . W . I . Tr ansfers io the Columbia on April 7. 2S21 Wkdys 10-5.30. Sat. 10-1. ALBERT TRAFFORD GALLERY. 119 Mount St^ee ; . , STADLER . reccnl pntts. TtU Apr 23 W .I. PAINTINGS OF EGYPT by M A R G O r 30 Bruton Street, W .I LEJ^EVRK GALLERY, VF.ILLON Opening ncxi Tuesday Importont film of ii.t year."—Gua-dtBn. CONTEMPORARY PAINTINGS ON !¦• Plus Tteni Oair's hilarious comedy. All The GALLERIES. UPPER GROSVENOR VI EW Daily 10-5. SaB. 10-1. Cold In the World (U) with Bourvil . IIPPFH OROSVENOR IV I ".wo Rosennary STREET PLAZA. Michael Caine Li ALFIE (Cert XI. LEONARD KOETSER GALLERY. U Duke Grimb e". l.u Bra ^ ^ Today proas 3.00. 5.30. 8.00 . Wfcdys I .OD . Street, Si. James's. WHI 9348. Sprini Ex[wh Aprl t. Mon Fri toi. Sal. 1(1-1. hib(tion of Fine Old Master Painting : u,A n n ,KrTftN n l l F D l F i i ? rnrv \< 120 5 50, 8.20. Late show Sat 11.30 p.m. OER 81*1 . PK1NCE CHARLES. Lelc. Sq 's T^lir^o^'ild'^W^Io-^B'cn. ^^^^A^t^X.^O^ D.'.no'i HOLY DACHSHlfND A WIMNIE t.oSTIi THE POOH (U). Sun 2.00. 6 40. t .W. ' ™Z- l £!%„£ "* "" ' " PO> ' m ?" mm - w^lm! "cALU«V : Robe , *, h ,. RIALTO. Ger 34SS lames Cfiburn. OUR - w» : lMin'in«-i and dramn«s IMI-hdr. M \ N FLINT (A) Col. Prei lotlay 11. 5.35, MCROF1 RTS & TUNNARD Gallery. 11 C ur. Apr.l n«»day«-Sanit <i.y» 11 -I. 8.10. WkdyH. from 12.40. S. w 1 flUO i s i l TEN -fit tut Anr 16 U""1 '" : t><-l>>"eu Monfays and Is in 11 M>' 1 'r l>or- MA7on RITZ. Ger 1734. David Niven. franwi ERIF.5, 77 DIIKI1 S T R E F I DDEN G A L I ^"" . '-<lube : Aldsaie East lent in WHERE THE SPIES ARK (Al. mcl A'lm free • GROSVENOR SQL^RE. W l VASO U t / . Prngs - Icflay V1D 5 40 . S 10. DEL RIO MON TO FR1D l l>- n SA I WII.LIWl W A R E OALLtRV. 160 l ulh.nn Hoi W104. ROY M TV CINFB*M(. K' suav tO-t OPEN TODAY SltN'ltAY Lfuf, ^2oS March :~ ih Rnad. S S^ 10 "Iff FRO MY F \'H I IDV tlfl. Today al ! I 5 A ART GALLERY. St.' S H I L^ ^n ril 1 3 t h exhibition nF old nainlines A p r i l MA N S A R D 7 ill Wc»krt«y« at 2. 45 ,V 8 0 Bootable. p.miings Unul A p r i l to "^h-\la> ? th ;tn enh bnn^n *il n;"nnntts h . SINGH— rct.ent 1 "-n ' F" en -e '' «' P-rkit.« (1 L Jii nltnes and Sherman Hoenich Heal' * l^fi roiicnham Tourr Road . 1 undnn STIIDIO ONF Frankir Howerd Dora Bnjn "» ™t7^ U^'^ n C.in.e*N ^ su " ,' MARL BOROUGH H N E ART LTD.. - .„., fi rea rpal ¦ Si Tpinian s Th*> r i n i a i l'» e « " • '" ' Bo-.d S. W I H O M A G r TO K O K ( . S r H K \ p s :m,n ",m,,l -i .\r>r lO- " Sa t KM • hiiK ..rncolo,,,. 1 ar».,n,s lOllft.Mliio Train Robbery (U) ,. »,¦!-:v,v,ER-s. 21, I t i n n e d S!reei \ \. : I >,c M a « ' . I lu.( m J u d i i . s ilesisns r ,i, ^. ; j , n « il . ,l w Djsncj . ClclJ. The i m u l v c s IIIH IHI I I I I I E.C I ( i R nt.J 16 April Dally ll>. c S\i I l l - l \n ni < h ;rs,li HI I H *!«,, D l l l"u R n * viwii r.revbound (m Colour ? «(l . ^ 25. 811 1 M AI RYBOROUGH NEW L O N D O N C A 1 I vir f terrinV.n i -nh WARNF.R. GF-.R -J - : 1 Fuilv Lii.cn<crt Rat Medu er rnn e an tru i ni^g i i.n \ n n .> In '\ RJ ^^ Vi^h£?~-.< S^ ICA , K, X All S ep perls Wkdvs 2 'p ~ ^5 b k b l e Laic thow S a m 11 J ^ p m. ,cais I J E R \ , I " 18 O ld Bond Si . W I R I C H A R D L I N — new p u i t i i n i K and relicl- t W L B i R l — recenl *or k 1 .11 2(1 Ant l "- 5 . Sit m - i ; — ¦—-- ---C O N T I N U E D ON P A G E 26 - - - -