Monday at 9.35. Exciting kung fu action in the legend of a boxer. His skills are legendary. And so is his arch enemy, the deadly crab monk. He's always in demand by eager students. Whose complicated affairs of the heart ensure non-stop action in the legend of a boxer. Monday, 9.35, SBS. Oh, the young white-haired boy. Oh, the young white-haired boy. Australia has begun a 100 million dollar offensive against drugs. An offensive which has brought tougher penalties for drug offenders. An offensive which has linked Australia to drug enforcement agencies around the world. An offensive which has reaching into schools and teaching our kids to say no to drugs. An offensive which is reaching into their lives through their music, TV and magazines. An offensive which has led to the creation of jobs and job training. An offensive which is providing help to those who have already fallen victim. Oh, the young white-haired boy. Our kids deserve a better deal. Through the drug offensive, your governments are making sure they get it. Saturday at 7.30, Madhur Jaffrey shows you how to cook her favourite Indian recipes, beginning with Rogan Josh. In fact, in India they say that if a cook can make Rogan Josh well, then he can make anything well. It's a mark of a great chef. Followed by spicy eggplants and Indian bread. Delicious and exotic eating in Madhur Jaffrey's Indian cookery, Saturday at 7.30 SBS. ...extreme to another, from the world's vast desert areas to the polar ice caps. Millions of square miles of the Earth's surface are made up of desert, inhospitable areas which support an amazingly wide variety of life. Then we travel to deserts of another kind, the ice deserts of the Arctic and Antarctic. Lonely, desolate places, yet with a unique beauty all their own. Join Haroun Tazieff for a look at deserts and ice, past, present and future, Sunday at 7.30 on SBS. 3.45 tomorrow morning. The preliminary round of the World Cup Soccer Finals continue. In a direct satellite telecast from Mexico, the USSR clashed with Hungary in the battle between the cream of soccer nations of the world. The World Cup Soccer Finals. 3.45 tomorrow morning, SBS. Winter is coming. To most of us, winter is a change of season. To the poor, winter means endless days and nights of bitter cold despair and freezing misery. A freezing misery for thousands of unfortunate people, men, women and children. To lighten this inevitable misery, the St Vincent de Paul need blankets, desperately. Blankets that you don't need anymore. Blankets that are stored away. Or blankets that you may care to donate. We truly need them to take your warmth to thousands facing a bleak, cold and bitter winter. We implore you to take your gifts of blankets to any St Vincent de Paul center. And they're just about everywhere. Please. Meet Timothy Narko, a Fijian who has broken the mold and become a successful businessman in his own country. I feel that if we are to change, we must come out of the villages and mix up with the other races in Fijia. But changing a society's way of life brings its own problems. Here, Fijians learn to become town people, making the change from self-sufficient villagers to wage earners. Living the sort of life you expect to find not on a Pacific island, but in Glasgow or Hong Kong. The emerging Fijians, next on Pacific People, Friday 5.30, SBS. César is a brash self-made man. Rosalie is his beautiful mistress. Their life together is about to be shattered. I don't know why I love you. Yes, but you love me. I love you. Did you sleep with him? No. Why wouldn't we live together? You're going to stay here! Why didn't you tell me you were pregnant? I was pregnant. What? Yes. You want coffee?