PBS HD Primetime

Saturday, November 14th

7 p.m.Lawrence Welk Show
Highlights include "I've Got A Gal In Kalamazoo," "Moon River" and "The Pink Panther" theme.
8 p.m.Keeping Up Appearances
8:30 p.m.Waiting For God
9 p.m.As Time Goes By
Jean decides pay Lionel a surprise visit, but finds him with one Denise on his arm.
9:30 p.m.Monarch Of The Glen
10:30 p.m.Are You Being Served
A transport strike causes the staff to spend the night in Grace Brothers, camping out in tents.
11 p.m.Austin City Limits
The songwriting genius showcases songs from his latest record, "Secret, Profane and Sugarcane."
PBS World Primetime

Saturday, November 14th

7 p.m.History Detectives
A recording of a promo for a soldier musical from World War II may be a piece of forgotten history.
8 p.m.History Detectives
One of the most iconic hot rods is investigated, along with a letter by the creator of Mt. Rushmore.
9 p.m.Scientific American Frontiers
10 p.m.Secrets Of The Dead
11 p.m.History Detectives
A recording of a promo for a soldier musical from World War II may be a piece of forgotten history.
KUAT Create Primetime

Saturday, November 14th

7 p.m.Christina Cooks
Christina makes guilt-free cookies and cupcakes so you don't have to give up the treats you love.
7:30 p.m.Baking With Julia
Martha Stewart bakes a grand and glorious three-tiered wedding cake and creates marzipan fruits.
8 p.m.Baking With Julia
Martha Stewart returns to complete her three-tiered wedding cake with yellow buttercreme icing.
8:30 p.m.Bake Decorate Celebrate!
A Ferris Wheel Cake made up of individual cupcakes and a recipe for "Dirt" Cupcakes are featured.
9 p.m.Baking With Julia
Master teacher Nick Malgieri makes an assortment of fancy cookies, including amaretti and pizelles.
9:30 p.m.America's Test Kitchen From Cook's Illustrated
The team shares guilt-free recipes for low-fat chocolate mousse and low-fat chocolate brownies.
10 p.m.Baking With Julia
The master teacher and chocolatier creates a chocolate genoise raspberry ruffle cake.
10:30 p.m.America's Test Kitchen From Cook's Illustrated
The team reveals the best recipes for triple chocolate cookies and brown sugar cookies.
UA Channel Primetime

Saturday, November 14th

7 p.m.Desert Speaks
7:30 p.m.Parklands Of The Midwest With Dan Kaercher
The Apostle Islands National Lakeshore gives Dan a chance to go island hopping in Lake Superior.
8 p.m.BBC World News This Week
8:30 p.m.Inside Washington
9 p.m.Woodsongs
Peter "Puma" Hedlund from Sweden and Boston's Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers perform.
10 p.m.Austin City Limits
The songwriting genius showcases songs from his latest record, "Secret, Profane and Sugarcane."
V-me Primetime

Saturday, November 14th

7 p.m.Oppenheimer Presenta
Oppenheimer analiza el impacto de la globalización con respecto a nuestro idioma. La Real Academia Española ya está aceptando palabras como "marketing" y "rating" en su diccionario de dudas; el prólogo para su diccionario oficial. Y también está discutiendo la eliminación de los acentos en palabras como "este", "ese", y "solo". Oppenheimer habla sobre esta revolución en el idioma español con el director de La Real Academia Española, el Doctor Víctor García de la Concha y con varios expertos internacionales.
8 p.m.Expose
Después del derrame de petróleo del buque Exxon Valdez en 1989, las autoridades respondieron con nuevas regulaciones de seguridad para los grandes barcos petroleros. Las reformas iban desde exigir que los buques fueran construidos con cascos dobles, para reducir la probabilidad de derrames, hasta limitar las horas de trabajo de la tripulación para así disminuir el número de errores humanos. La industria del transporte de petróleo entró en una era en la cual habría muchas menos probabilidades de accidentes en los buques, o por lo menos así parecía. Sin embargo, en el otoño del 2004, un derrame de cientos de galones de petróleo crudo en Puget Sound, Seattle, hizo que un reportero ganador del Premio Pulitzer que trabajaba en el Seattle Post-Intelligence se embarcara en una investigación sobre el estado de la industria transportadora de petróleo en el noroeste pacífico.
8:30 p.m.What Went Wrong
En esta serie de primera, las convincentes historias que hay detrás de los mayores desastres provocados por el hombre se revelan usando dramáticos documentales. Accidentes aéreos, errores militares, contratiempos inesperados y mal cálculo de los ingenieros, se muestran para que los espectadores examinen exactamente qué fue lo que salió mal.
9 p.m.V-me Noticias
9:02 p.m.Diagnosis X
When you walk into a hospital, you think doctors have all the answers. They don't. Diagnosis X reveals the true stories of doctors following a trail of evidence to save their patients' lives. Every episode features two young, charismatic, REAL doctors, who reveal the high-stakes emotion that surrounds an elusive diagnosis. Our real doctors are surrounded by a compelling cast of recurring actors, and together the physicians and Diagnosis X actors bring each story to life. The team works around the clock to unravel the dramatic - and sometimes shocking - medical diagnosis.
10 p.m.V-me Deportes
10:01 p.m.Warplanes
After their first successful powered flight, the Wright Brothers turned to the U.S. Army, well aware of the potential military value of their airplane. In 1903, with no looming threat of war, the government rejected their $100,000 asking price, but within five years, the entire Western world would embrace the idea of powered flight. World War I ushered in the airplane's first military roles as armies used planes for aerial reconnaissance, and then for artillery spotting. With aviation still in its infancy, aerial combat took longer to develop, but the evolution of fighter tactics was inevitable as planes became more sky-worthy. The results transformed combat from fly-by pot-shots to fast, furious duels. By the end of the war, the airplane had been defined as an "eye in the sky" - a role that remains as vital over the deserts of the Middle East today as it was over the trenches of France in 1914. Every country recognized the potential of the warplane, and the growing necessity to take control of the skies.
KUAT KIDS Primetime

Saturday, November 14th

7 p.m.Arthur
Figureskater Michelle Kwan teaches Francine about good sportsmanship. Arthur likes his babysitter.
7:30 p.m.Martha Speaks
TD passes in the wrong drawing in art class. He and Helen sneak into the school to make a switch.
8 p.m.Curious George
Hundley has strict demands when he stays in George's room. George takes pictures of wild animals.
8:30 p.m.Sid The Science Kid
Sid learns that leaves are food for animals and they make nutrients so flowers and trees can grow!
9 p.m.Super Why!
The superheroes help Duckling accept himself as he is and Pig learns a lesson about getting bigger.
9:30 p.m.Dinosaur Train
The kids meet and a grumpy old dinosaur called a Spinosaurus that doesn't want the kids in his Sea.
10 p.m.Cyberchase
Chaos ensues when Delete is granted nine wishes and the kids use his "Bunny-Copter" invention.
10:30 p.m.Maya & Miguel
Tito decides to act, dress and look just like Miguel because he wants to be as cool as him.
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Support comes from Broadway in Tucson
J.D. Mellberg Financial
Research Corporation for Science Advancement