with Frank Bough and Sue Cook
News on the hour and half hour
Weather with Francis Wilson at 6.55, 7.25, 7.55, 8.25, 8.55 Nationwide news, weather and travel at 6.57, 7.27, 7.57 and 8.27
Sports news and features with David Icke and Bob Wilson at 7.20, 7.45 and 8.20 The morning papers reviewed by a guest at 8.37 With today - The Top 20: Mike Smith at 7.32 with a look at the new chart
Ask Alison: Alison Mitchell presents her weekly money advice and takes your calls on [number removed]And Jobs 85: job schemes and employment prospects around Britain
lain Lauchlan makes all sorts of sounds and noises then follows the Caterpillar Trail with Stuart Bradley
As many schools are on half-term, an opportunity for older children to watch Samina Mir discussing school meals and nutrition with Sudarshan Abrol and Madbury Mehta. For your entertainment an enchanting Punjabi heer by Pushpa Hans and a melodious Bangla folk song from Lucy Rahman.
An Asian Unit presentation BBCPebbleMill
with Frances Coverdale and Chris Lowe
Weather News BILL GILES
1.27 Regional News
(London and SE: Financial Report and News Headlines with subtitles)
A See-Saw programme
Told by Ray Brooks
1.45 Pages from Ceefax
3.53 Regional News
with Floella Benjamin Robin Stevens
Peter Gosling and Will Hill Snappers , gnashers, Grinders, bashers,
Pearlies of the world unite All together in one bite!
You must know you can't eat a golden egg, but wait 'til you see what the children of South Aston Play Centre give Floella and Darren to eat!
And Fribble has quite a job keeping Jaws from eating everything in sight!
Musical director PETER GOSUNG Executive producer CYNTHIA FELGATE
Producer CHRISTINE HEWITT
by ELISABETH BERESFORD Told by Bernard Cribbins Music by MIKE BATT
Animated by BARRY LEITH
Directed by IVOR WOOD
A cartoon series about the biscuit-sized dogs that defend the treasure of Biskitt Island from the wicked King Max.
Josephine Buchan presents the last in the series that gives you the opportunity to comment on BBCtv.
Under discussion this week: Seaview and Take Two
Prizes are given for the best-written television criticism, and for younger viewers a prize for a drawing or painting of their favourite television personality.
All this together with your letters and requests to see again clips from your most popular programmes. Producer PHILIP CHILVERS
Write to Take Two, BBCtv Centre, London W12 8QT.
with Nicholas Witchell and Philip Hayton present the latest pictures, stories and events of the day followed by Weather News
A piquant preamble from Terry live at the Terryvision Theatre on picturesque Shepherd's Bush Green.
from Brussels Introduced by Jimmy Hill
Liverpool v Juventus
Live coverage of the match which possibly the whole of Europe wants to see.
Liverpool are the holders of the trophy and are trying to win it for the fifth time.
Juventus, who have already beaten Liverpool this season in the Supercup, boast in MICHEL PLATINI one of the most accomplished footballers in the world. Commentator BARRY DAVIES with BOBBY CHARLTON Television presentation: BELGIAN TV SERVICE
Producer ROGER MOODY Editor JOHN ROWUNSON •FEATURE: page 3
with Julia Somerville Weather News
The day is dawning, so they say, when your personal domestic robot will trundle to fulfil your merest whim. It is already possible to program one to make you a cup of coffee. But what if you then decided you'd like a biscuit too - chocolate of course? Jane Lapotaire wanted a biscuit; but the robot didn't want to know. Q.E.D. explores what would be involved in designing a robot that could see, recognise, aim at reach for, hold and hand her this biscuit - and also discovers on the way quite a lot about what people can do.
Terry stays up past his bedtime to wait for the result from Brussels.
Ever condemned to be the butt of crude humour, or clad in the garb of awful euphemisms, at last the lavatory comes out of the closet. This documentary film reveals everything you ever wanted to know about them - where and how they are made, who invented them, and how the primitive privy was elevated to an art form. In a pilgrimage through Britain's loveliest lavatories, Lucinda Lambton celebrates the water closet, at long last paying a debt of gratitude to Britain's plumbing pioneers and sanitary magnificoes. Through her eyes the humble symbol of relief to the discomfited becomes an object of beauty.