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Panorama
Panorama

Season 35

January 12, 1987

37 Episodes

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Episodes

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E1

The President's Star Warriors

January 12, 1987

President Reagan dreams of Star Wars as a perfect defence against nuclear attack. But will his Strategic Defence Initiative be a shield to protect America, as he hopes, or a sword with which to defeat the Soviet Union in nuclear war?

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E2

Citizen Murdoch

January 19, 1987

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E3

Living with AIDS

January 26, 1987

AIDS is now a world-wide disease, from its heartland in Africa the virus has spread across the globe. Panorama reports from three continents on how medical science is facing up to the disease.

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E4

Stockton - Never Had It So Good

February 9, 1987

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E5

The Kinnock Alternative

February 16, 1987

As the political parties gear up for the forthcoming General Election, what alternative vision does Labour offer for Britain after 8 years of Thatcher rule? The Leader of the Opposition, The Rt Hon Neil Kinnock , MP, is interviewed.

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E6

The Private Wars of Colonel North

February 23, 1987

Michael Cockerell reports on the key role of Colonel Oliver North, US Deputy National Security Adviser, in the Iran-Contra arms scandal.

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E7

The Alliance Alternative

March 2, 1987

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E8

Your Child - Unfit for Life

March 9, 1987

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E9

Austin Rover - Breakthrough or Breakdown?

March 16, 1987

Labour rescued it by nationalisation. The Conservatives cannot wait to privatise it. What is the truth about Austin Rover's future?

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E10

Northern Ireland: The Troubled Peace

March 23, 1987

With no end to the violence in sight, Panorama looks at how people have tried to come to terms with their suffering in two of the most afflicted Protestant and Catholic communities and hears about their hopes and their fears.

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E11

Brent Schools - Hard Left Rules

March 30, 1987

Ever since a head teacher was suspended on suspicion of having made a racist remark, the London Borough of Brent has been a major political football. The teacher - Maureen McGoldrick - had a proven anti-racist record.

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E12

Chernobyl - 'Nobody Thought it Could Happen'

April 6, 1987

Tonight Panorama premieres a Soviet television documentary called Warning that reveals how ordinary Russian people dealt with the aftermath of the world's biggest nuclear accident.

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E13

Front Line Blues: Policing the Cities

April 13, 1987

Britain's inner-city police forces are faced with a crisis. The top priority is no longer fighting crime but stopping public disorder. As the police spend more time on standby to combat civil disturbance, crime is rising unchecked.

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E14

Scientology: The Road to Total Freedom?

April 27, 1987

John Sweeney investigates the Church of Scientology, endorsed by some major Hollywood celebrities, but which continues to face the criticism that it is less of a religion and more of a cult.

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E15

AIDS - The Fight for Control

May 11, 1987

Panorama reports from three cities on the AIDS frontline, Sao Paulo in Brazil, Munich in Germany and Minneapolis in America; and examines contrasting ways of dealing with AIDS sufferers.

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E16

Gorbachev and the Defence of Europe

May 18, 1987

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E17

The Party Leaders: David Owen and David Steel

May 26, 1987

With the election campaign now in full swing. Sir Robin Day talks live in the studio to the leaders of the Liberal/SDP Alliance. The Rt Hon Dr David Owen and The Rt Hon David Steel.

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E18

The Party Leaders: Neil Kinnock

June 1, 1987

With ten days to go before polling, Sir Robin Day talks live in the studio to the Leader of the Labour Party, The Rt Hon Neil Kinnock, about the issues of the campaign.

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E19

The Party Leaders: Margaret Thatcher

June 8, 1987

As the Election Campaign draws to a close. Sir Robin Day talks to the Prime Minister, The Rt Hon Margaret Thatcher , about her bid for a third term at No 10 and about the pledges made in the Conservative manifesto.

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E20

Episode 20

June 15, 1987

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E21

Sailing Too Close to Disaster

June 22, 1987

On 6 March the Herald of Free Enterprise capsized suddenly just outside Zeebrugge and 188 people lost their lives. Tonight Fred Emery investigates why nothing was done to make ferries less vulnerable.

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E22

Fair Play for Britain's Blacks

July 6, 1987

For years now it's been illegal to refuse someone a job just because they're black. Yet, says the Policy Studies Institute, at least a third of employers do just that. The brutal fact is that, despite the law, discrimination persists.

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E23

Not in My Backyard

July 13, 1987

Waste disposal in Britain is worth £5 billion a year and, in the US, it's said to be the fastest legal way to make a fortune. As environmentalists demand tighter controls, there's a worldwide crisis: no one wants waste in their back yard.

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E24

Britain's Amateur Justice System: A Jail Lottery?

July 20, 1987

What are your chances of ending up in jail if you are found guilty of committing a petty crime? It depends where you do it. In some parts of the country, you are 4 times more likely to be sentenced to prison by magistrates than in others.

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E25

Dying to Win - Drugs in Sport

September 21, 1987

It's not just cheating; it can kill and it's big business. A former British track star is in America facing charges of dealing in counterfeit steroids and there's a multi-million-pound black market in Britain too.

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E26

Must Labour Lose?

September 28, 1987

The Labour Party begins its annual conference in Brighton today in sombre mood. After three general election defeats in succession, Labour's level of support has slumped to the position it was in more than 50 years ago.

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E27

Inner Cities - We Want Them Too

October 5, 1987

Tomorrow, on the first day of its conference in Blackpool, the Conservative Party debates a resolution that welcomes the government's commitment and success in the inner cities.

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E28

Alcohol: More Harm Than Heroin

October 12, 1987

Everyone knows the horror of illegal drugs like heroin. Yet alcohol is killing far more people. Today people drink twice as much as they did 30 years ago, and start drinking very young.

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E29

Arms Control - Checking on Cheating

October 19, 1987

Tom Mangold explains how verification has become the litmus test of superpower relations, and how it has been politically manipulated by each side.

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E30

Poll Tax - What Price on Your Head?

October 26, 1987

Every man and woman in Great Britain faces having to pay a local government tax: a flat charge per head, varying from council to council. The Government calls it the Community Charge; others, the Poll Tax.

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E31

A Class Revolution

November 2, 1987

Education is the next priority in Margaret Thatcher 's cultural revolution. State education is poised for its most radical change since the war. There will be more emphasis on 'the three R's.

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E32

Adrift in Space

November 9, 1987

What future has Britain in space? Is the Government about to surrender Britain's toehold in the space technology of the next century or is it rightly suspicious that it might not be getting value for money from space research?

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E33

Harming or Helping? - The New Abortion Bill

November 16, 1987

David Alton's bill to reform the abortion law is now before Parliament. The real battle is about to begin. Over the next two months, MPs must decide for themselves on this highly charged moral and medical debate.

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E34

The Storm Beyond the Crash

November 23, 1987

What will be the fallout from the Great Crash in the stock markets this autumn? Does it signal a historic decline in America's status as economic superpower? How vulnerable is Britain to the consequences?

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E35

The Uncertain Summit

November 30, 1987

American president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev are both in political trouble at home and need to do a deal. Next Monday in Washington, they hold a third historic meeting and it should be their most successful.

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E36

Debt: How Deep Are You in?

December 7, 1987

As the Christmas spending spree reaches its frenzied peak, Richard Lindley reports on a borrowing boom that's left the average British household burdened with a mountain of debt as high as 80 per cent of its income.

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E37

The Troubled Madonna of the Philippines

December 14, 1987

21 months ago, Cory Aquino was swept to victory on a wave of 'People Power', a modern day Madonna who had delivered the Philippines from the excesses of the Marcos dictatorship. Today, President Aquino is struggling for her survival.