Starting with 6.30-6.55 Business Breakfast
Business and financial news.
Followed at 7.00 by the morning news programme. Headlines: news summaries every quarter hour. Business news: 7.12, 7.40, 8.12,8.40.
Sport: 7.23, 7.50, 8.23, 8.50.
Weather, regional and traffic 6.55,7.25,7.55,8.25,8.55.
Robert Kilroy-Silk leads a topical studio debate. A Kilroy production for BBCtv
Rosamund Grant and Chris Baxter serve up Caribbean rolled chicken with sweet potatoes and chestnuts. Recipe on Ceefax page 615
With Philippa Forrester.
The Why Bird Stop.
A Felgate production for BBCtv 0 PLAYDAYS MAGAZINE: 45p on sale Wednesday.
Animation.
Hugh Scully discovers some high quality, enduring antique furniture in the Antiques Roadshow archives.
and Regional News; Weather
With Mike Smith and Kate Copstick. Family quiz. * STEREO
Including Phillip Hodson 's phone-in on [number removed]. Including at
12.00 News and Regional News; Weather
Live entertainment magazine.
Followed by Weather
• STEREO
* TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888
Quiz hosted by Henry Kelly. A Reg Grundy production for BBCtv
The Perfect Alibi. Why is Jill behaving so strangely?
Repairing old cabinets.
Boy Meets Girl (Part 1). David and a pretty student get off on the wrong foot.
(Part 2, Boy Loses Girl, next Monday)
With Andi Peters.
Penny Crayon
Animation. (Repeat)
Picture book stories told by Brian Glover , Josie Lawrence and Mike McShane.
●STEREO
Cartoon.
Seventh of a 12-part science fiction comedy thriller. Zoe wants to be the Gala Princess.
Written by Pip and Jane Baker ●STEREO
Cartoon adventures.
* TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888
With Juliet Morris.
With Yvette Fielding,
John Leslie and Diane-Louise Jordan. ●STEREO
●TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888
Madge and Harold get an unexpected visitor.
(Stereo)
(Teletext subtitles: page 888)
With Peter Sissons and Moira Stuart.
Weather John Kettley
Presented by Guy Michelmore and Louise Batchelor with sport from Michael Wale. Editor Guy Pelham
Entertainment with Terry Wogan and his guests. Producer Natalie Elsey
Executive producer Peter Estall ● STEREO
Every week on British roads, dozens of people are killed and hundreds seriously injured because of the way cars are designed. Watchdog has discovered car manufacturers are pouring millions of pounds into producing cars which they must know are more dangerous than they could or should be. This special edition of the programme is devoted to the search for safer vehicles and more protection for drivers and passengers on Britain's roads. With Lynn Faulds Wood and John Stapleton. Editor Sarah Caplin
0 SUGGESTIONS: ring [number removed]or write to Watchdog. BBC White City. 201 Wood Lane , London W 12 7TS.
Noel Edmonds hosts the second semi-final in the competition to find 1991's telly addicts.
Fourth in a six-part series revealing our lives from the animals' point of view.
A look at the part other creatures play in the mysterious world of human belief. Bushmen trance dance in the company of animals and Aborigines use bees to find honey. In Bali's holiest cave, worshippers appear as pulsing sound images to its native bats. On the misty Ganges turtles wait for a macabre meal, and in the market a holy cow becomes an aggressive shopper. Eighty thousand of Thailand's storks crowd a temple sanctuary and, fed by monks, huge catfish make the water boil. In Italy snakes sway from the top of a saint's statue and in America rattlesnakes, with their infrared sight, see haunting thermal auras of people interpreting the Bible literally and "taking up serpents" to reinforce their faith. Through animals' bizarre sensory worlds Lifesense reveals how changing human belief has affected other life.
Narrated by Andrew Sachs. Producer John Downer
(Stereo)
(Teletext subtitles: page 888)
BBC Book: £15.95, from booksellers.
BBC Wildlife Magazine: December issue includes features on man's perception of the pig, and wildlife cameramen's encounters with parasites. Plus a chance to win a place on an Earthwatch conservation project in Vietnam. From newsagents, £1.75.
Nature: page 10
With John Humphrys. Regional News
Weather John Kettley
0 TELETEXT SUBTITLES (news): page 888
Has the Thatcherite housing agenda led to a housing crisis, with family homes being repossessed because of over-extended mortgages and too little money going into public housing? In the month when the housing charity
Shelter is 25 years old, Nisha Pillai examines the housing crisis in Britain.
Editor Mark Thompson
An innovative American musical drama, set in the Los Angeles police department, created by Steven Bochco. No Noose Is Good Noose
Kendrick organises a public relations stunt to appease his accusers, but even Ossie admits to regarding his boss as a racist. LaRusso's trial reaches its climax.
●STEREO
Ruth Mott re-creates the lost world of Victorian cooking. Supper. As dinner got later, supper became little more than a snack. It usually consisted of cold meats, pickles and jellies, although supper balls were more elaborate. Ruth Mott makes raspberry jelly, pickled nasturtium seeds, and a salmagundi salad, a medley topped with anchovies.
Presented by Peter Thoday. Producer Keith Sheather
● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888
● BBC BOOK: £9.99, from booksellers
Jobs and training series. ●STEREO