with Brian Redhead and Peter Hobday
with Libby Purves
Producer Bridget Osborne
Bye Baby Bunting by Carmel Bird.
Read by Alice Arnold. Producer Tessa Kendall
Teach Me, My God and King; Matthew 25, vv
31-40; When I Needed a Neighbour; Help Me, Dear Lord, to Love Thee More Stereo
Six programmes in which Lucie Skeaping visits communities around
Britain and learns to play and sing their music. 2: The Latvians of West Yorkshire
Producer Daniel Snowman. Stereo
with John Howard
Dylan Winter continues his six-week journey on horseback and foot down the English-Welsh border. 3: A dawn discovery - Kate is a mother.
Producer Brian King. Stereo
with Nick Clarke
by the Labour Party
Jenni Murray talks to actress Patricia Hayes. Serial: Distant Cousins (final part)
When Hugh was 5 years old, Auntie Jane came to stay and he really loved her. Then one day Auntie Jane disappeared. Written by Geoffrey Parkinson.
Director Shaun MacLoughlin. Stereo
Neil Philip is editor of A New Treasury of Poetry, a collection of classical verse. Michael Rosen invites him to review modern anthologies. Producer Jill Burridge
The Melbourne Times serves a downtown community where
Greeks, Vietnamese and Okkers rub shoulders with counter-culture greens and opera buffs. In the second of six programmes,
Tony Wilkinson reports on a week that features feminist theatre as well as Crackers Keenan 's tales of Aussie Rules Football.
Producer Julian Hale. Stereo
Brian Sibley with reviews of the week's film releases, a visit to Field Day Theatre for Seamus Heaney 's first play, and songwriter Steve Ashley. Producer Julian May
Stereo
with Valerie Singleton and Hugh Sykes
and Financial Report
Stereo
John Waite investigates. Producer Graham Ellis
• WRITE to: Face the Facts, BBC Broadcasting House, London WIA IAA
The final programme in which Martin Roberts follows some intrepid 'first-timers'.
This week: a group of trekkers in the remote hills of north-east Thailand. Producer Caroline Adams
Presenter Peter Day Editor Stephen Chilcott
Stereo
with Roger White. Stereo
with Alexander MacLeod Stereo
Haroun and the Sea of Stories
In Salman Rushdie 's new novel, dark forces are poised to wipe out a world of stories. So, can the boy Haroun save the day? Zia Mohyeddin reads the first of six episodes. Abridged by Neville Teller Producer Duncan Minshull
Simon Brett has kept a diary since he was 9, and is an avid reader of other people's. In the first of six programmes, he takes a vertical slice out of history to see how other diarists have spent their October 10ths, and adds his own entry for the day. (Stereo)
3: Gus Kahn (R)