6.5 Music: Harmonic Analysis, 1
6.30 Photochemical Pathways
6.55 Maths: Networks and Matrices
7.20 Desert Ecology
7.45 Steel Castings
10.0 You and Me
A series for 4- and 5-year-olds
Dibs wants to join in on Cosmo's game with JENI BARNETT - but they won't let him. The number 5 is introduced and the song 'Five in a bed'. Book Alex and Roy Film animation MARJUT RIMMINEN
Producer RICHARD CALLANAN
10.15 Music Time. Voices
The children copy the vocal sounds of some South American animals. Producer ELIZABETH BENNETT
10.38 Twentieth-Century History Israel and the Arab States
Palestine in the 1930s and the relationship between the new state of Israel and her Arab neighbours from 1948 to 1973.
Commentary JOHN TIDMARSH
Series editor PAUL MITCHELL
11.0 Zig Zag
Outward Bound - On the Trail
The children of Willowbrook Primary School learn more about the countryside and explore a farm museum.
11.23 Capricorn Game
A programme for children of 7-11 with special needs.
Mr Capricorn, the magician, invents some number games which are played by children and presenters CAROLE HARRISON and DAVID PARFITT
11.38 Pages from Ceefax
2.1 Words and Pictures
I Am Better Than You. It's hard work being the best lizard there is, as Sam finds out when he meets his rival -a lizard called Pete.
Presenter VICKY IRELAND Producer MOYRA GAMBLETON
The Lawn Tennis Championships direct from the All England Club
Featuring the first round of the Men's Singles Championship.
Harry Carpenter introduces the action on the show courts and provides up-to-date news and results from the 18 outside courts.
Commentators Dan Maskell, John Barrett, Gerald Williams, Barry Davies, Mark Cox, Bill Threlfall, Ann Jones and Virginia Wade
TV presentation JOHNNIE WATHERSTON JIM RESIDE, ALASTAIR SCOTT, HUW JONES
Producer MARTIN HOPKINS
Executive producer HAROLD ANDERSON
with subtitles, followed by Weather
In the fourth programme of the series Sarah Brown shows the secrets of cooking perfect brown rice, together with a quick and easy way of transforming it into a refreshing rice salad with herbs. She prepares some light, savoury cornbread muffins which are delicious with soups or cheeses, and a classic Middle Eastern salad, tabbouleh. She also goes behind the scenes at Britain's most famous vegetarian restaurant, Cranks.
Series producer JENNY ROGERS Director PAULA GILDER
Producer JENNY STEVENS
Frank Muir, Susan Hill, Nigel Havers challenge Arthur Marshall, Paul Eddington, Angela Thorne
Referee Robert Robinson
Devised by MARK GOODSON and BILL TODMAN Directed by ALAN J. w. BELL
Produced by PAUL CIANI
A comedy series written by JOHN FORTUNE starring Bernadette Shortt with Dave King , Eileen Kennally and featuring John Gordon Sinclair 1:First Love
1958, and Maureen is carried away on the wings of love.
Designer GRAHAM LOUGH Producer RAY butt
Directed by PETER HAMMOND
A series of documentary films following events over seven weeks in the life of one village in Kenya. 1:The Prophet's Family
The village belongs to Simel, an important Maasai prophet and diviner. He has 13 wives and more than 60 children. In this episode a delegation arrives from another Maasai district bringing 25 cows as a gift to the prophet. He must prophesy for them and send them home with charms to protect their cattle and their women-folk. Meanwhile the younger men of the area are trying to collect goods and money to pay a fine to the prophet for a goat they stole from him. They go to one of the local shops to demand money. Simel himself has been summoned to a meeting by the Government-appointed Chief....
Photography DICK POPE Sound BOB ALCOCK
Film editor DAI VAUGHAN
Director MELISSA LLEWELYN DA VIES
*Subtitles on Ceefax page 270
11.30 Measure for Measure Workshop: 2
JOHN RUSSELL BROWN examines the scene in which Isabella confronts her brother Claudio with the news that he must die.
11.55 Space in the City
Many of the country's financial institutions are based in the City of London. To understand why they choose to stay, a look at Lloyd's and the Bank of England.
12.20 Management and the School: Knottley Fields, 1. 'My door is always open....' At Knottley Fields School pupils and staff learn to be wary.