6.40 Maths: the Location Problem
7.05 Equivalence Relations 7.30 Geology: Britain before Man 7.55 The Amish: a Family Legacy 8.20 Food from the Rain Forest 8.45 A Strategy for Benefits 9. 10 Social Problems and Social Welfare 9.35
The Primary Health Care Team
10.00 Images: Seeingwith Sound
10.25 In the Primordial Soup
10.50 Race, Education and Society 11.15 Danger, Children at Play 11.40 GrowingApart at the Margins 12.05 Data Models and Databases 12.30 Education:
Open Skies, Grass Roots 12.55 Culture and Belief in Europe
1450-16001.20 The Religious
Quest 1.45 Mental Handicap: No Problem's Too Big 2. 10 Biology: Mental Illness 2.35 Changing the Mould
Is your home one of the 14-and-a-half million in Britain with a garden? In this Royal Society for the Protection of Birds film, wildlife expert Tony Soper visits two gardens, one made 20 years ago and one newly planted, to see which trees, shrubs and plants provide the best cover and natural food for wildlife.
Patriotic wartime action adventure, featuring many of the cast of Casablanca, and starring Humphrey Bogart Michele Morgan
Ajournalist investigating a Free French air force squadron that is based in Britain, discovers their leader is a convict who has escaped from Devil's Island.
Director Michael Curtiz
0 FILMS: pages 33-39
An Agatha Christie
Miss Marple murder mystery, starring
Margaret Rutherford Robert Morley
When a wealthy recluse is frightened to death, Miss
Marple suspects murder. But her report to the police falls on deaf ears, and she is forced to start the investigation herself.
Director Geroge Pollock ● FILMS: pages 33-39
Highlights from last week's editions of The Late Show.
• STEREO
With Moira Stuart.
Followed by Weather
Live from London's Royal Albert Hall.
Dame Kiri Te Kanawa makes a rare appearance at the Proms to sing two romantic arias by Massenet, and octogenarian Russian pianist Tatyana Nikolaeva, making her Proms debut this season, plays Shostakovich's sparkling Piano Concerto No 2.
The bicentenary of Rossini's birth is celebrated with the overture to his best known opera, The Barber of Seville, and with Soirees musicales, a suite of some of his most beguiling music orchestrated by Benjamin Britten. Andrew Davis conducts the BBC Symphony Orchestra.
The exuberant second half starts at 9.00pm on BBC1.
(Stereo and simultaneous broadcast with Radio)
Music and Arts: page 10
(NB As the Prom is being relayed live, subsequent programmes may be delayed)
From Flushing Meadow, New York.
Women's Singles Final
In 1991, World No 1
Monica Seles beat Martina Navratilova in straight sets to win the US
Open and claim her third Grand Slam title of the season. The one to elude her was
Wimbledon, which was won by Germany's Steffi Graf. Twelve months on, history appears to be repeating itself. Seles has already secured this season's
Australian and French crowns, but Graf has retained her
Wimbeldon title at Seles's expense. With the big two in the women's game having won 16 of the last 19 Grand Slam tournaments, they will be the favourites to contest the last major final of the year. Hoping to upset the odds will be 1990 US Open champion
Gabriela Sabatini , last year's runner-up Martina Navratilova , and the newly crowned Olympic champion Jennifer Capriati.
Plus action from the first of the men's singles semi-finals.
Commentary by John Barrett , Virginia Wade, Mark Cox and David Mercer.
Introduced by Barry Davies. fSecondmen's semi-final coverage. tomorrow 12noon. Sunday Grandstand) W SPORT: page 12
Roger Vadim 's sci-fi fantasy starring
Jane Fonda
A beautiful young astronaut uses the power of love to fight the forces of evil in the 41 st century. Her immediate mission is to find a brilliant
Earth scientist who has disappeared with his secret weapon, the Positronic Ray.
• BARRY NORMAN : page 32