KELL SAADE 07.00 Eurouudised - 10.00 Kultuuriuudised - 10.20 Kes seal on... - ... 10.45 Tänane saatekava - 11.00 20.sajandi klassikud. "Lolita"- . "" 13.30 Maailma kultuuririkkused. San Souci. Potsdami aiad ja paleed - . "-. " 13.45 Sündinud lendama. Alexander Belyayev - . 14.30 Viies mõõduvõtt - 15.00 Vassili Shukshin. "Vanja, kuidas sa siin oled?" - . ", ?" 15.30 Kultuuriuudised - 16.30 Lastele. 11-osa "Vargus vanglas" . 11- . " " 16.55 Lastele. 5-osa "Inimene ja lõvid" . " ". 5- 17.50 Entsüklopeedia. "John Galsworthy"- . " " 19.05 Peaosas... "Juliana Makarova" - " ..." 19.30 Kultuuriuudised - 19.50 80 aastat Zhores Alferovit. Elulugu - 80 . 21.25 Saared
Mid- and late Soviet children's books by Eduard Uspensky, Yuri Entin, Viktor Dragunsky bear no signs of propaganda. In the 1970s many of these books, as well as stories by foreign children's writers, were adapted into animation. Soviet Science fiction, inspired by scientistic revolution, industrialisation, and the country's space pioneering, was flourishing, albeit in the limits allowed by censors. Early science fiction authors, such as Alexander Belyayev, Grigory Adamov, Vladimir Obruchev, Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy, stuck to hard science fiction and regarded H. G. Wells and Jules Verne as examples to follow. Two notable exclusions from this trend were Yevgeny Zamyatin, author of dystopian novel We, and Mikhail Bulgakov, who, while using science fiction instrumentary in Heart of a Dog, The Fatal Eggs and Ivan Vasilyevich, was interested in social satire rather than scientistic progress. The two have had problems with publishing their books