Parliamentary update.
Note: repeats are not indicated.
A Style of One 's Own. A look at the distinctive styles of two young photographers.
An appeal for people imprisoned for their beliefs.
Are They Positive? Does labelling risk groups help stop the spread of Aids?
Sarah comes to visit, but Cosmo won't open the door.
An SFtv production for BBCtv
When the Lights Went Out. Just how many things are powered by electricity?
Moving About. Some help with the principles of Newton's laws of motion.
A chance to air your views on all aspects of schools television.
Talking- Leisure. A look at the languages used in Scotland today.
Featuring farm animals and the letter "f".
(Stereo)
Comparing the story-telling techniques injanni Howker's book The Nature of the Beast, and the Channel 4 film of the book.
To Catch a Creep (part 3) Alex sets out to trace his disloyal pen pal.
How is family life affected when a father goes to prison? Plus, the pressure in schools to follow the latest fashions.
Hot Spots: Roots in the Jungle
A drama highlighting the threat oil prospectors pose to the cultural identity of the Oriente people in the Ecuador rainforest.
Infant Core Curriculum. Four days at a village infants school in Cumbria.
Fun for children.
Cartoon for children.
Water. Sheelagh Gilbey visits Dunwich in Suffolk to discover how a whole town can be washed away by the sea.
Followed by You and Me
I'm a Kind of Mechanised
Tramp. Featuring cyclist Bill Houston , who prefers to explore back roads and goat tracks.
Rural issues from John Craven.
Subtitled (news)
Followed by Westminster Live
Live coverage of Parliament and its select committees.
With lain Macwhirter.
Subtitled (news)
Regional News; Weather
Word game with Paul Coia.
Linda Agran chairs a discussion of social and personal issues. (Repeatedat 11.55pm)
Jeremy Clarkson takes a group of Lamborghinis on the road while Tony Mason endures sub-zero temperatures to report on 24-hour ice racing inChamonix.
First in a -part profile of Richard Feynman , legendary physics superstar.
The cult 1960s series, starring William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy
A derelict spaceship from another age drifts across the path of the USS Enterprise.
Reportage
An estimated quarter of a million people are "missing" at any time - over 100,000 of them young people. But why do they just disappear? The youth current-affairs series investigates. Series producer Jane Knowles Executive producer Tony Moss
In the last quarter-final of Sainsbury's Choir of the Year, Howard Goodall sails the Irish
Sea with a choir from Londonderry and meets Welsh composer
Brian Hughes who writes for St David 's Girls' Choir. And there's a world premiere of a work commissioned by a Birmingham primary-school choir. Director Robert Coles
Producer Christina Macaulay
Fortnightly series of history documentaries.
The Sparks That Lit the Bonfire Tonight's film examines the origins of the Troubles in Northern Ireland and reveals startling new evidence of the Irish government's crucial role in the emergence of the Provisional IRA. With the help of interviews with Irish ex-cabinet ministers and former leading members of the Republican movement, it details Dublin's funding of the IRA, why it favoured its more radical elements, and how the Irish government secretly plotted to invade Northern Ireland in 1970. Peter Taylor reports. Producer Ken Kirby
Editor Laurence Rees
Sometimes You Hear the Bullet
An old friend of Hawkeye's stops by the 4077th to visit.
Concluding the drama serial, adapted by David Nokes and Janet Barron from Samuel Richardson 's classic
18th-century novel, starring
Sean Bean , Saskia Wickham When Lovelace 's aunt arrives, it seems as though Clarissa has at last found a protector.
Producer Kevin Loader Director Robert Bierman
With Peter Snow.
The arts and media magazine.
Life on the Edge; The Price of Cocoa; Abidjan - the Tale of Two Citizens; The Tourist Trade; Oil in the Delta.
(to 4.00)