6.40 Technology: Critical Path
7.05 Maths: Area for Revision
7.30 Geology: Rock Textures 7.55 The Oldham Experience 8.20 Desert Ecology 8.45 IT for You
9.10 Health Visitingand the Family
9.35 A Telescope in Space 10.00 LivingChoices: Supporting
Systems 10.25 Languages for
Learning 10.50 Learningto Care
11.15Hearingthe Call 11.40
A Woman's Hospital? 12.05 Data Modelling - the Wood from the Trees 12.30 Education: Face to Face 12.55 Discovering
16th-century Strasbourg 1.20
Materials in Action: the Future on Display 1.45 Urban Development: the Phoenix Initiative 2.10 Ways with Words 2.35 The End of Empire - the Re-fashioning of Literature
Final episode of this 93-part epic drama from India.
The war is over and Yudhishtira returns to Hastinapur. Bhishma chooses this time to die.
(In Hindi with English subtitles.)
(Repeated tomorrow at 1.00am)
The Orchestration of Power
"The renaissance of the German people isn't possible without the renaissance of German art and culture," said Adolf Hitler. This Omnibus film, which won the 1990 Bafta award for best arts documentary, examines the scale of the collaboration which artists offered the Third
Reich during their 12-year control. Producer Peter Adam
Editor Andrew Snell
Highlights from this afternoon's second-round matches.
Introduced by David Vine. Producer Mike Ward
Editor Rick Waumsley
A Grand Slam Sports production for BBCtv
Second-round highlights.
Moira Stuart with all the latest news reports.
Followed by Weather
Third in a five-part series, first shown in 1976, on the life and work of Rembrandt.
The Success. Amsterdam in the 1630s was dominated by a newly rich merchant class, and for over 20 years Rembrandt was never without a portrait commission from them. Yet during this time of professional success Rembrandt also faced personal tragedy. His record of his wife's terminal illness reveals a different kind of art, "full of the sense of his love of humanity". Producer Colin Clark
A film biography of Jim Callaghan, Labour's last Prime Minister, who speaks frankly for the first time about his personal and political life.
From a very poor background, Callaghan left school at 16 with little formal education, and yet he rose to the highest offices in the land. When he came to Number 10, he was the only man in history ever to have been Chancellor, as well as Home and Foreign Secretary. He tells what it is like to be Prime Minister and gives his advice on how to do the job. When he was at Number 10, Callaghan compared himself to Moses planning to lead the British people into the promised land. Uncle Jim, as he was known, also reveals some unexpected talents.
Presented and produced by Michael Cockerell.
(Stereo)
(Teletext subtitles: page 888)
The topical comedy quiz show, winner of this year's Bafta award for the best light entertainment series, returns to launch a fresh attack on the week's news.
• STEREO
The series that charts the richness of world music returns for a fifth season. Put Me on a VHS. All over the developing world, musicians are starting to make their own videos. While some have budgets of thousands, others are made for sums that probably wouldn't pay for the coffee on a Madonna shoot.
Exploring this phenomenon, tonight's film features 15 original videos.
How do artists like Caetano
Veloso (Brazil), David Rudder (Trinidad), Juan Luis Guerra (Dominican Republic), Dick Lee (Singapore) and Youssou N'Dour (Senegal) match images to the music they make? And how do they feature in the playlists of the rapidly expanding satellite music television channels?
Producer Jenny Cathcart
Series editors Nigel Finch , Anthony Wall • STEREO
• MUSIC AND ARTS: page 11
Further coverage from Sheffield.
Bruce Weber 's intimate, amusing and at times touching portrait of US boxer Andy Minsker and the group of boys he coaches in his Mount Scott boxing club.
This is the photographer's first feature film, an experimental documentary in black and white with colour sequences. Stylishly set to a jazz soundtrack including songs by Chet Baker , John Coltrane and Julie London , the film reveals insights into what Weber calls the "myth of American Macho". 0 FILMS: pages 39 45
Conclusion of today's play.