6.40 Limits to Modelling
7.5 History of Mathematics
7.30 Television Technology
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 278,064 playable programmes from the BBC
6.40 Limits to Modelling
7.5 History of Mathematics
7.30 Television Technology
Weather BILL GILES
Today's story:
Zuella Sue: The Lost Monkey Written by ANNA STANDON
Illustrated by EDWARD STANDON Presenters
SARAH LONG , JOHNNY BALL
by Bob Block
Efficiency is required in the Rentaghost Office. The arrival of a ghost efficiency expert causes more chaos than ever!
(Repeat)
Kenneth Kendall ; Weatherman
Presenting the British scene to the people of-Britain.
Reports and features co-ordinated this week by FRANK BOUGH with DILYS MORGAN , VALERIE SINGLETON and BOB WELLINGS
The last of six safaris in the concrete jungle by ALAN PLATER and Fresh Fields and Slightly Used Pastures
When society is in chaos and confusion, and the machinery of civilisation grinds to a halt, what should decent, upstanding, middlemen like George and Stanley do? That's right. They don't really know, either.
Music by SIDNEY SAGER
Script editor MICHAEL WEARING Designer IAN ASHURST Producer DAVID ROSE
Director IAN MACNAUGHTON BBC Birmingham
with Kenneth Kendall ; Weather
featuring tonight the most prestigious event for women riders
The Queen Elizabeth II Cup
(Holder: MARION MOULD with Elizabeth Ann ) and the classic of the week for the men
The King George V Gold Cup
(Holder: MICHAEL SAYWELL with Chainbridge)
Introduced by DAVID VINE
Commentators DORIAN WILLIAMS and`RAYMOND BROOKS-WARD
Producers FRED VINER and DAVID KENNING
A serial in six parts by SHELAGH DELANEY
Ten years of a marriage from wedding night to the present time. 6: The Present - The End of SpringJack and Lu's marriage has been concerned with timeless things like money, food and sex - so can it survive through thick and thin, and ten years? starring
Designer DICK COLES
Producer bill SELLARS Director
PETER HAMMOND
BBC Manchester
The New Infra-red Telescope
This month an important new British telescope has been completed. It is destined to be set up in Hawaii, and it is not an ordinary telescope; it is designed to study infra-red radiation from space, which cannot be seen directly but which is all-important in modern science.
Professor Vincent Reddish , Astronomer Royal for Scotland, describes the Hawaiian telescope, and Patrick Moore talks to Professor James Ring about its likely role in infra-red astronomy.
Producer PATRICIA WOOD
Sky at Night 5, 14.00, from booksfiops