6.40 Students and Revolution
7.5 Television and Politics - America: 4
7.30 Doctors - Too Few or Too Many?
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,076 playable programmes from the BBC
6.40 Students and Revolution
7.5 Television and Politics - America: 4
7.30 Doctors - Too Few or Too Many?
9.41 Merry-go-Round
Digging the Black Seam
10.3 Countdown
Not so Much a Number
,
10.25 Mathshow
A Likely Story
11.0 Scene
The Life of a Social Worker
Other people's problems are the daily concern of a social worker. How do they cope with the frustrations and difficulties of working on problems which are rarely ' solved '? Narrator SEAN BARRETT
Producer ROY THOMPSON
11.30 Music Time: Programme 22
With DONALD GEE
BOB HOSKINS and GAY HAMILTON
PATRICIA HAYES
POLLY JAMES
ROSEMARY LEACH
NORMAN ROSSINGTON
MARTIN SHAW , NIGEL STOCK
Script BARRY TOOK
Weather BILL GILES
BOB LANGLEY, DONNY MACLEOD
DAVID SEYMOUR , MARIAN FOSTER and JAN LEEMiNG with the personalities and talking-points of the day including Grace and Flavour
with MAGGIE HENDERSON and FRED HARRIS
Music by PETER GOSLING and DAVE MOSES Lightpen artist QUENTIN BLAKE
Written and produced by MICHAEL COLE
Executive producer CYNTHIA FELGATE
A series for 4- and 5-year-olds and adults watching with them.
Introduced by Christopher Neil.
2.14 The Electric Company: 12
2.36 Merry-go-Round
An eight-part cartoon series on multiplication. 2: Two Times
2.45 Treffpunkt: Deutschland Schule
Andrea auf dem Schulweg; Elke und Holger als Klassensprecher; Susan in den Arbeitsgruppen.
A film from Yugoslavia.
Julia and Tomo do their best to bring Bajazzo back to form.
(Black and white) (Repeat)
with John Noakes
Peter Purves , Lesley Juddl
Assistant editor JOHN ADCOCK Editor BIDDY BAXTER
Lending a Hand
with Richard Baker ; Weatherman
Reports and features reflecting the life of Britain today.
Presented this week by MICHAEL BARRATT , FRANK BOUGH
DILYS MORGAN , VALERIE SINGLETON and BOB WELLINGS
The Story of Britain's Royal Builders and Collectors in nine films
Told by Huw Wheldon
All his life King Charles I stammered. Only when he reached the scaffold at the end of a gilded but difficult reign did he speak with clarity and eloquence.
'I go' he said 'from a corruptible to an incorruptible crown where no disturbance can be, no disturbance in the world.'
In the words of the supporter of Cromwell 'he nothing common did, nor mean upon that memorable scene.'
Charles I was the greatest patron of the arts to occupy the British throne. With paintings by Titian, Raphael, Caravaggio, and many other masters of the Italian Renaissance Charles I enriched the Royal Collection. As patron of Inigo Jones he encouraged a new architecture two centuries in advance of its time. In Van Dyck he had a painter who reflected the majesty of his court, the tender relationships in his family and the exalted aloofness which helped lead to his execution.
The Queen's Pictures, £15.00 from bookshops from 9 May
with Richard Baker and the BBC's reporters and correspondents around the world Weather
Since he left the White House in disgrace in 1974, Richard Nixon has remained in silent exile in San Clemente, California.
Now, in a series of major interviews with David Frost , Richard Nixon speaks for the first time in public about the achievements, as well as the defeats and humiliations of his time as President.
In the course of four special programmes starting tonight, he will give his version of the Watergate story that brought his downfall, and the charges that he created an 'Imperial Presidency' in which power was abused. Nixon will also talk about the war he inherited, and the peace he made, and his 'final days' in the White House.
The arts in action
Introduced by Humphrey Burton Walle to the Moon Albert Houthuesen is now 74. He has been a painter all his life. He has struggled against misfortune, ill-health and public neglect. He is still painting. This is his story. Narrators
LYNDON BROOK. DOUGLAS WILMER
Executive producer BARRIE GAVIN Director JOHN ARMSTRONG