Shown yesterday at 4.35pm on BBC1. (Stereo)
With signing.
Yesterday in Parliament
Today, vodka penne. Rpt Stereo ..
Featuringan inventor..................
(Note: repeats are not indicated)
9.00 Square One TV: Measurement (ages 9-11)
9.20 Mathsphere Special: Area and Volume (ages 12-16)
9.40 You and Me: Punjabi/English: Presents (ages 3-5)
9.45 Come Outside: Stones (ages 4-5)
Designed for pupils who find Maths difficult across the age range. Looks at the cylindrical shape of an airliner and at the plans for the South Terminal at Gatwick.
10.25 Ghostwriter: Who is Max Mouse?: Episode 2 (ages 10-12)
10.55 Watch: Festivals and Celebrations (ages 6-7)
11.10 Health e: Breathing (ages 7-11)
(Stereo)
11.30 Landmarks: Portrait of Britain: Stoke - an Industrial City (ages 9-12)
11.50 Mad about Music: Scales (ages 11-14)
12.10 Short Circuit: Message in a Bottle (ages 14-16)
Looking at the way scales are used as a basis for a wide variety of music including Japanese Shakuhachi flute music, Flamenco, Pipe music & Indian Sitar music.
1.00 Lifeschool: L is for Love (ages 14+)
(Stereo)
1.25 History File: The Era of the Second World War (ages 11-14)
1.45 Storytime: Stanley in the Dark (ages 4-5)
(Rpt)
Celebrating the lives of people over 50.
Magazine made by disabled people, with news and features. Subtitled .........
(Subtitled (news))
Followed by Westminster with Nick Ross
Live from Parliament.
Regional News; Weather
Quiz with Martyn Lewis.
Preparing luncheon. Rpt
More drama from the wards in Sheffield.
Word game with Paul Coia.
All-Americans. 6 November, 1962: Sam's latest leap finds him a star high-school quarterback desperate to prevent his best friend and team-mate from throwing a vital football game.
The third programme in the series on extreme sports features "free divers" Francisco Ferreras and Umberto Pelizzari , who are in trainingfora world record dive to 400 metres without breathing apparatus.
Producer Tony Rayner
Another chance to see the first series of the comedy about the inhabitants of the Bayview Retirement Village.
When the management discover that Diana is suffering from a dormant illness.
(Rpt) (Subtitled)
Fourth of a six-part series which looks at how technology has moulded the modern city.
Lights, Lines and Heavy Fines. Every day a tide of cars and lorries chokes
Britain's cities. Behind the chaos lies a master-plan which struggles to keep the metropolis on the move.
Robin Das , a London cabbie, cruises through the streets and the centuries exploring the age-old battle between the city and its traffic. His journey begins with the origin of traffic lights, takes a rat-run through the American grid plan, and collects Jim Landles , the man in charge of traffic for London.
Director/Producer Bryn Higgins
Fourth of a six-part series in which Jeremy Clarkson tours the world looking at other motoring cultures.
Iceland. With a population of little more than a quarter of a million, Iceland has no traffic jams on its few proper roads. But its people spend thousands on snowmobiles and on transforming vans into four-wheel-drive vehicles.
DirectorDennisJarvis Stereo .................
Miracle Man. Scully shows Muldera videotape of a Miracle Ministry meeting in which a sick woman expects to be cured by a healer's touch.
Fourth of a six-part documentary series that takes an inside look at the selection process for different jobs.
Four candidates are interviewed for the post of project manager in charge of restoration work to London's Royal Albert Hall.
See today's choices.
(Stereo) (Subtitled)
Followed by:
In the National Trust
The Bear's Hut, Killerton House, Devon.
With Peter Snow.
Mark Lawson and regulars Tony Parsons , Tom Paulin and Allison Pearson discuss the week in the arts. stereo .......
11.55 Weatherview
Political review with Andrew Neil.
Preceded by The Midnight News
4.00 5.00 Royal Institution Discourse DrAkira Tonomura discusses electron waves.
5.30-6.00am RCN Nursing Update Unit 27: Depression - liftingthecloud.94008