With signing and subtitles.
A bird is in distress.
The team fights to clear its name.
Shown yesterday at 5.10pm on BBC1.
Parliamentary news.
A farmer's love of steam. (Rpt)
(Note: repeats are not indicated.)
9.05 Seeing Through Science: Damming the Rivers of Fire
(ages 11-14)
9.30 Lernexpress: Ich uber Mich
(ages 13-16)
9.45 Over the Moon with Mr Boom: When? - Days and Months
(ages 5-7)
Peggy and Sarah explore a Japanese garden. (Stereo)
10.25 Storytime: Jenny's Bear
(ages 4-5) (Stereo)
10.45 The Experimenter: Changes in Materials
(ages 7-9)
11.05 Space Ark: Changes in Material
(ages 7-11)
11.15 Health e 3: Sex Education
(ages 9-11) (Stereo)
11.35 Landmarks: Portrait of Europe - Southern Spain
(ages 9-12) (Stereo)
12.00 Pathways of Belief: Christianity - Creation
(ages 7-9)
12.15 Clementine: Croissant et Chocolat
(ages 14-16)
A look at the Christian view of creation, including the concept of God as the creator and designer of the earth. Show more
Business news. (Stereo)
1.00 Lifeschool: K Is for Kill
(ages 14+) (Stereo)
1.25 Technology Starters
(ages 9-12)
1.40 Numbertime: Shapes - Circles
(ages 4-5)
Animation. (Rpt)
Ruff is encouraged to do his washing. (Rpt)
Talk show. Hosted by Andrew Neil.
(For details see Tuesday) (Stereo)
(Subtitled)
Regional News and Weather
Followed by Westminster with Nick Ross
Live coverage of the day's business in Parliament.
(Stereo) (Subtitled)
(Subtitled)
Regional News and Weather
Nostalgia quiz. (Stereo)
Cookery game show. (Stereo)
An edition dedicated to children who have written to Oprah.
(Stereo) (Subtitled)
Portraits of people who, in later life, still work for a living.
Hilda Ford MBE is in her 90s and sells car accessories.
A look at the 17th-century plague village in Derbyshire.
(The next programme, about Grewelthorpe, is tomorrow at 5.55pm)
A deadly struggle for control of the space station pits Kira against Sisko.
(Stereo) (Subtitled)
Diana moves to London when she and Tom have problems living together.
(Rpt) (Stereo)
Third of a six-part series about people ousted from positions of power.
When he was given the job of Brighton Health Trust Chairman, John Spiers was determined to lead an assault on what he saw as practices in need of reform. But his methods did not meet with approval from all the staff of doctors. Undercover investigations, bitter arguments and press warfare followed. John Spiers describes the struggle for improved patients' rights and the tale of his final undoing.
(Stereo) (Subtitled)
Jeremy Clarkson looks at different cultures through the cars people drive.
"The hills are alive to the sound of silence" in the country which, according to Jeremy Clarkson, "has declared war on the motor car". For Clarkson, however, a few cars built in a twee lakeside town by an Italian expatriate go some way to redeeming the country's shortcomings.
(Top Gear Motorsport is tomorrow at 8.00pm)
Series looking at the role of forensic science in the fight against crime.
Tonight, two cases - one American, one British - that illustrate difficulties in ascertaining if people who kill are responsible for their actions.
Does science have the ability to sort out the mad from the bad?
Greg Proops's comic yet practical series on plants focuses on the cactus.
Mandy gets the chance of a job in Bermuda.
Followed by Video Nation Shorts
With Kirsty Wark.
Subjects discussed by Mark Lawson and guests Germaine Greer, Ian Hislop and Professor John Carey include Our Friends in the North, the BBC2 Monday night drama series.
11.55 Weatherview
Political chat show.
Open University
12.30 A New Museum at South Kensington
(Rpt)
1.00 King Cotton's Palace
(Rpt)
1.30 Global Firms, Shrinking Worlds
FETV Short Cuts
2.00 Customer Care
BBC Focus
4.00 Italia 2000
(Rpt)
4.30 DOH Special: The Patient's Charter and You
(With signing and subtitles)
5.00 Health and Safety at Work
Business and Work
6.00 Sid's Heroes: Stena Sealink
(Rpt)
6.30 Sid's Heroes: Hotpoint Refrigeration