A selection of music
Producer DAVID BELLINGER BBC Pebble Mill. Stereo
byJackHywel-Davies including Bells on Sunday from St Paul's Church,
Wednesbury, West Midlands Stereo
goes to Barnby Moor in Yorkshire to take breakfast with Peter and Leslie Scott , who farm goats not for milk but for fibre.
Presented by David Richardson Producer ANN-MARIE CLIFFORD BBC Pebble Mill
with Jill Cochrane and Ted Harrison
Researcher ALISON BOGLE Producer ANDREW GREEN Editor DAVID COOMES
VHF/FM joins at 8.0am including at
8.0 News
8.10 Sunday Papers
talks for the Week's Good Cause. A room of your own is a luxury denied to many women trying to make it on their own in the capital city. Lord Soper talks about an organisation which helps them to find somewhere to stay.
Donations to: The London Council for the Welfare of Women and Girls(LCWWG)[address removed]
9.10 Sunday Papers
from St Mark 's Church, Gabalfa, Cardiff led by THE REV CLIVE LAWS The Father loves you
Readings: Romans 8, w 18-27; John 16, w 23b-33 Hymns (A&MNS):
God of gods (Psalm Praise 6); Praise, my soul, the King of heaven (A&M 192); Dear Lord and Father of mankind (115);
In the peace of Christ (458) Preacher
THE REV ROBERT PATTERSON Organist BRIAN hicks BBC Wales
Omnibus edition
Agricultural story editor ANTHONY PARKIN
Directed by CUVE BRILL Producer LIZ FIGBEY BBC Pebble Mill
Presented by Margaret Howard
A series of seven international phone-in programmes
4: Juan Antonio Samaranch
President of the International Olympic Committee
During the six years he has been President, Mr Samaranch has travelled more than two million miles to promote the Olympic Charter. The next Olympics, scheduled to take place in the South Korean capital of Seoul, have already taken on a political dimension with requests from the North Koreans to stage some of the events.
Sue MacGregor is in the Chair as listeners from home and abroad put their questions to the man in charge of the world's most prestigious and influential sporting event.
Producers JANICE HADLOW for the Woman's Hour unit and NEIL CURRY for the BBC World Service
(A simultaneous broadcast with BBC World Service)
Linesopenfrom 10.0am
Presented by Gordon Clough Editor DEREK LEWIS
visits Lower Hardres and Nackington Gardeners' Society, Kent
by J.R.R. TOLKIEN, adapted in 13 episodes by BRIAN SIBLEY starring and 12: Mount Doom
'This, then, is my counsel,' said Gandalf. 'We have not the Ring. In wisdom or great folly it has been sent away to be destroyed, lest it destroy us. Without it we cannot by force defeat Sauron's force. But we must at all costs keep his Eye from his true peril. We cannot achieve victory by arms, but by arms we can give the Ring-bearer his only chance, frail though it be.' with and Narrator Gerard Murphy with SEAN ARNOLD , JOHN CHURCH
GRAHAM FAULKNER. STEPHEN GARLICK
DAVID MCALISTER. MARTYN READ
JOHN RYE , CHRISTOPHER SCOTT
MICHAEL SPICE and HAYDN WOOD
Music composed and conducted by STEPHEN OLIVER
Singers DAVID JAMES
MATTHEW VINE , OZ CLARKE and the AMBROSIAN SINGERS.
Episode adapted by BRIAN SIBLEY
Directed by JANE MORGAN. Stereo (R)
Presented by Laurie Taylor
The last of five programmes introduced by John Morgan This week:
Wynford Vaughan-Thomas Producer ANNE HOWELLS
Brian Johnston invites you to join him at Lord's, the headquarters of the MCC, where, in the company of some of his cricketing friends, he says goodbye to Down Your Way, the programme that he has presented for the last 15 years. Producer ANTHONY SMITH
0 FEATURE: page 23
with CLIVE ROSLIN
Sheila Minto is 80. On her dining room wall are photographs of the eight Prime Ministers to whom she has been secretary at No 10. In the second of three programmes, she reminisces with Jock Gallagher about 'her' Prime Minister, Winston Churchill.
Producer ANNE-MARIE COLE BBC Pebble Mill
The last of three programmes about man and animals Compiled by SUE UMB
A Robin Redbreast in a Cage Readers ROY KINNEAR
TOM WILKINSON and TESSA WORSLEY Producer JAMES RUNCIE (R)
by H. G. WELLS dramatised in three parts by BARRY CAMPBELL Parti
Presented by Susan Hill
Two programmes in which leading actors, directors and designers discuss the planning and staging of distinctive current productions. 1: Macbeth
The Adrian Noble production starring Jonathan Pryce and Sinead Cusack
Compiled and presented by Linda Cookson
Producer MARSHALL CORWIN A School Radio productton (R) revised (e)
Three programmes in which
Robin Ray introduces a complete recording of a well-known concerto, preceding it with a conversation with the soloist. This week Paul Tortelier plays the Cello Concerto in A minor by Schumann and his own arrangement of Paganini's Variations on a theme of Rossini.
Producer DEREK DRESCHER. Stereo
0 HEAR THIS! page 25
A Look Back to Anger
One is struck by how gestures or statements that one hasn't 't thought out in advance are taken as very deliberate, part of campaign - which is what one would say about the whole supposedangrymovement.
(KINGSLEY AMIS)
Michael Barber recalls the days of the angry young men of the 1950s - those writers who challenged the British way of life and thought, to the glee of the shock-horror press and the rage of their elders. Reader MARTIN jARvis
Producer GORDON HUTCHINGS
God's Translators 3: Miles
Coverdale Coverdale 's English Bible was the first actually to be printed in England. But he is best remembered for his versions of the Psalms.
Presented by Keith Clements Reader BRIAN GEAR
Producer RACHEL CASE BBCBristol
Samaritans, Can I Help You? A two-part programme
1: All We Are is Tea Brewers
One weekend last summer the Samaritans of Pendle branch in Lancashire set about initiating a new group of volunteers into the 'principles and practices' of befriending the lonely, the depressed and the suicidal. Producer JANE WALKER BBC Manchester
followed by an interlude