Maths: Up to the Mark
9.38 Lifeschool: Politics and You Who Benefits?
One of the main points of contact between the individual and the state is over taxes and benefits - the unemployed, single parents, and the disabled have strong views on this. But is it the role of the state to try and ensure a fairer distribution of wealth?
Film editor AL GELL
Producer ANDY WALKER (R) (e)
10.00 You and Me
Cosmo is not in the mood for cuddles and asks Dibs not to touch her.
Book: Sunita Makes Friends by MAGGIE PAUN
This programme may help adults discuss with children other times when touches are unwelcome.
Presenter HARRY TOWB Director JULIE CALLANAN
Producer NICCI CROWTHER (R) (e) Further material is available from 'Kidscape' (Y). 82 Brook Street. London WIY IYG
10.15 Music Time: The Ceremonial Meal
(R) (e)
10.40 Thinkabout: Shadow Play
Frank, Sally and the children enjoy playing with shadow shapes, but all of a sudden there's a shadow that's a bit scary.
Producer PAT FARRINGTON (R) (e)
11.00 Zig Zag: The 1988 Olympics
The Olympics, with all its faults, remains one of the great world events of today.
SHEELAGH GILBEY and WAYNE LARYEA set the scene for Seoul.
Producer CHRIS Ellis (e)
11.20 Walrus
by CATHY PELLICER 4: In No Time
The Aliens are about to be recalled and they are still having trouble with 'spleeing'.
Producer MORTON SURGUY (R) (ej
11.40 Pages from Ceefax
12.08 History File: British Social History: The Social Effects of War
The Labour Government of 1945 promised to use the lessons of wartime organisation to fight poverty, bad housing and bad health. This film, largely constructed of propaganda films and cinema newsreels of the period, shows how these ideas were expressed, and how the mood of the country changed in the years that followed.
Producer ALAN EREIRA (R) (e)
12.30 Seventeen: The Best Years of our Lives?
What's it like growing up in Britain in 1988? Teddy, Jeanette, Phil and Siobhan - four 'ordinary' young people from Portsmouth, who don't represent anyone but themselves, give their views. Their attitudes to life may strike a chord with young people in some parts of the country but may cause anger in other areas of Britain. Film editor FRAN MCLEAN Producer MIKE DICK (e)
1.00 Subtitle Slot: Zig Zag
A series of programmes from the year's school television output, repeated in subtitled form for hearing-impaired children.
The Saga of Gunnar Goldhair
A Viking drama in two episodes 1: Murder in Coppergate
with BRETT FORREST, WILLIAM ILKLEY, TIMOTHY LYN, REBECCA SOWDEN and PETER STOCKBRIDGE
Designer GWEN EVANS
Producer TOM STANIER (R) (e)
A See-Saw programme with Carol Chell and Don Spencer
Musical director RICHARD BROWN Woodwind MARTIN FRITH
Script associate ROBIN HALDANE Produced by CHRISTINE HEWITT Executive producer
CYNTHIA FELGATE (R)
Over to You
In the last programme in the series, two schools invite you to share their very different projects: from ST OSWALD 'S SCHOOL,
Longton in rural Lancashire, a traffic problem in the village and from BURNBUSH
PRIMARY in urban Bristol, the beginning of a wildlife garden and conservation area. Film editor JOHN BILLINGHAM
Series producer NICHOLAS WHINES Producer JUDY BROOKS (e)
Weather followed by Words and Pictures
Frog and Toad Are Friends
Oily sends a letter to Sudeep and its progress is followed from postbox to delivery. In the story, told by Vicky Ireland. Frog sends
Toad a letter to cheer him up. Producer MOYRA GAMBLETON (R) (e)
Cricket: Second Test
Cornhill Insurance Test Series England v West Indies from Lord's. Fourth day.
TONY LEWIS introduces live coverage of the afternoon's play.
Wimbledon 88
Lawn Tennis Championships Direct from the All England Club, and featuring the first round of the men's singles championship.
HARRY CARPENTER introduces the action on opening day, which in the past has always produced a surprise or two for the seeded players.
* CEEFAX SUBTITLES (RNID) including at
3.00 News and Weather
The Search for the Disappeared
Argentina's military juntas were responsible for torturing and killing over 10,000 people. Today their bones are their only witnesses. By exhuming unmarked graves, forensic scientists are identifying individual victims and finding important evidence to bring those responsible to justice. Many of the 'Children of the Disappeared' have survived because they were illegally taken by military families who may have been involved in their parents' murder. When grandparents eventually trace their grandchildren, the only way they can get them back is to prove their real identity by genetic testing. Narrator Paul Vaughan
Plumbed the depths and exalted the heights of the human spirit
DAILY TELEGRAPH
This compelling documentary gripped you with an icy hand TIMES Written and produced for
WGBH Boston by DAVID DUGAN
Horizon editor ROBIN BRIGHTWELL (R)
Continuing a season of films specially made for television.
Tonight starring
Paul Michael Glaser Linda Kelsey
Behind the walls of Synanon, the famous rehabilitation centre, something is terribly wrong. Rumours of deprivation, assault and the stockpiling of armaments have begun to circulate in the towns nearby, and tension is rising. This factually-based story centres around a crusading newspaperman's dangerous struggle to reveal the true nature of the mysterious cult.
Screenplay by T. s. COOK
Produced by HERBERT HIRSCHMAN Directed by MEL DAMSKI
(First showing on British television)
0 FILMS: page 20
* CEEFAX SUBTITLES
Peter Snow and Donald MacCormick with the day's top stories and the background on events making the news at home and abroad.
With international reports by DAVID SELLS,
CHARLES WHEELER. GAVIN ESLER and JULIAN O'HALLORAN Assignment editors
NIGEL CHAPMAN. NICK GUTHRIE Deputy editor MIKE ROBINSON Editor JOHN MORRISON
Comhill Insurance Test Series England v West Indies from Lord's
RICHIE BENAUD introduces highlights of the fourth day's play.
The Victorian High Church
What's special about a Victorian church? All Saints', Margaret Street. is an architectural tour de force, designed for the Victorian Anglo-Catholics.
Producer NICK LEVINSON (R)