9.42 Watch!: Slugs and Snails
10.0 Maths Workshop: Stage 2: Guess what?
10.25-10.45 Television Club: Smile Please
11.0 Merry-go-Round: Let's Open the Box: 1
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,366 playable programmes from the BBC
9.42 Watch!: Slugs and Snails
10.0 Maths Workshop: Stage 2: Guess what?
10.25-10.45 Television Club: Smile Please
11.0 Merry-go-Round: Let's Open the Box: 1
With Bob Langley
and Weatherman Jack Scott
(Colour)
Book 12p: see page 66
With a chain of cinemas and a new multi-camera system, the Laurie Marsh Group is developing both ends of the film industry. What is their idea of leisure, and their interest in filming "Not Now, Darling"?
(Colour)
A tour around an incredible miniature stately home, built for a young girl who was grown up by the time it was completed!
Introduced by Hugh Scully
(From Bristol; first shown on BBC2)
Presented by Joan Bakewell
Book 45p: see page 66
(Colour)
Hugh Scully visits five stately homes in the South West - one of them now no more than a ruin - in a programme which looks at a legacy in danger of being lost.
(BBC South West)
Story: "The Line Who Caught the Bumps" by Judy Whitfield
(Shown at 11.0 am on BBC2)
(Colour)
by Helen Cresswell
with Hannah Gordon
(Colour)
with John Noakes, Peter Purves, Lesley Judd
A film series based on the story of the famous castaway.
A storm casts Robinson on to a desert island. He spends his solitude in remembering his youthful escapades in York.
with Richard Baker; Weather
bringing you news and views in your region tonight
(including Regional Weather)
Presented by Michael Barratt, Frank Bough and Bob Wellings
(Regional details as Monday)
Starring Charlie Chaplin
Charlie's heroic attempts to reach his bedroom after a night on the town, show that even home does not always offer security.
Written and directed by Charles Chaplin
with Kenneth Kendall and Peter Woods; Weather
by Hugh Whitemore
Starring John Gielgud, Lewis Fiander
In answer to an advertisement, John Beste goes to Cornwall. The locked gate is disturbing, the dogs are alarming, but the Rectory and his prospective employer are quite outside his experience.
How much do we know about the millions of strange and fascinating animals that had already vanished from the Earth before the coming of Man?
Most of the spectacular dinosaur skeletons familiar to us today were unearthed in a frenzy of scientific effort in the last years of the 19th century.
Introduced by Dr Alan Charig, Curator of Fossil Amphibians, Reptiles and Birds at the British Museum (Natural History), London.
(except London): Closedown