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Presented by Frank Bough and Selina Scott, with regular news, sport and weather
Jazz pianist and guitarist, Doctor John, teams up with Chris Barber in a musical celebration marking the 25th anniversary of the Marquee Club of London
A See-Saw programme for the very young
God spede the plow....
... and send us ale corn enow' reads the inscription on the surviving fragment of the medieval plough screen at Cawston Church in Norfolk. St Agnes was the patron saint of the local plough guild and now lends her name to the church. This week Donald Sinden looks at how the parish church brought together the religious life and working life of ordinary folk. Cawston Church was built in the final period of Gothic architecture - the perpendicular, when the craft of the master carpenter reached a peak - and its woodwork is among the most spectacular in the country
Contributors
Presenter: Donald Sinden
Film cameraman: Eugene Carr
Film editor: Peter Orton
Producer: Dick Foster
Home movies of the 20s and 30s presented by John Julius Norwich (repeat)
From St Helier Parish Church, Jersey (shown Sunday)
Shown earlier on BBC2
Presented by Roy Castle and Norris McWhirter
with Paul McDowell
Isla St Clair sings The Squire, a series of songs about the English countryside of the 1800s
Episode three of the drama about a North Sea ferry company. Matt Taylor finds a stowaway on board the ship and, touched by the old man's story, he makes plans to help him. Starring Larry Lamb as Matt Taylor, and Richard Marner as the stowaway, Stefan Krystalski
Continuing the re-run portrait of Cliff Richard, superstar, this second film or the four looks at the effect of the singer's Christianity on his lifestyle and musical output
More new challenges for the intrepid adventurers competing to complete the resourcefulness course: coping with capture, making a time bomb, and cracking a code
Francis Matthews and Geraldine McEwan star as the couple who've run away from home leaving their awful kids to fend for themselves, in Richard Waring's sitcom for battered parents
by David Creggan. A comedy about a couple who want their adult, successful, offspring to fly the nest. Starring Gwen Watford and Patrick Troughton. A BBC Birmingham production directed by Gareth Davies
How does an out-of-work teenager fill in the empty days? Paul Watson's film, shot in Bolton, is a bleak and uncompromising portrait of bored, apathetic, angry young people with nothing to do