Stereo
with Chris Lowe and Sue MacGregor
Chris Dunkley airs your letters and comments on BBC programmes and policy.
Producer John Watkins
• WRITE to: Feedback, BBC, Broadcasting House, London W1A 1AA
BBC correspondents at home and abroad report on one of the main
British or foreign topics in this week's news. Producers Carole Lacey and Howard Rogers
Footprints in the Sand by Bess Ross. Read by Anne-Louise Ross. Producer Pam Wardell
Beloved, Let Us Love
(Song 46, BBC HB 373); Psalm 103, vv 1-12 (Broadcast psalter);
Luke 10, vv 25-37; Lord Christ, Who on Thy
Heart (Gonfalon Royal, BBC HB 380). With the BBC Singers. Stereo
Six programmes in which Madhur Jaffrey examines how the food and cookery of different cultures and civilisations have developed over 6,000 years.
3: Food, trade and empire. Producer Jenny Lo. Stereo
In the fourth of seven programmes
Libby Purves takes a look at the seven deadly sins.
Producer Christine Morgan. Stereo
with Margaret Collins Editor Ken Vass
How much do we know about the effects of food on our health?
With Derek Cooper. Producer Marie Helly
with Nick Clarke
from Birmingham with Anne Brown. Serial: An Awfully Big Adventure (8)
Music: Waiton's The First Shoot
The Forsyte Chronicles Stereo
The astonishing story behind 120 years of Post Office cat employment. Presented by Beryl Reid.
Producer Rosemary Watts. Stereo
Natalie Wheen reports on the latest work of the architect Norman Foster , and Sean Street treads the newly opened network of paths, 'Poet's Way'.
Producer Julian May. Stereo
with Jenny Bond and Wendy Austin
and Financial Report
Written by Brendan Martin
with Margaret Howard Producer Julian Hale. Stereo
The panel includes:
Sir John Harvey Jones ; Joan Lestor , MP,
Opposition Spokeswoman on Children; and Douglas Mason ,
Domestic Policy Adviser, Adam Smith Institute.
From Harrogate. Chairman
Jonathan Dimbleby. Producer Anna Carragher
with Marcel Berlins Producer Gareth Butler
Letter from America by Alistair Cooke
Intervention in the Gulf and no new taxes
15 minutes on BBC Radio 4 FM
Available for over a year
President Bush's difficulty in finalising proposals for the national budget, and garnering support for the American presence in the Gulf.
Last May, Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet said goodbye from the stage as the company danced at the Wells for the last time under its famous name. On Tuesday, the Birmingham Royal Ballet opens its first season at the Hippodrome. Jann Parry watched the transition to the company's smart new home.
Producer Gwyn Richards
by Alistair Cooke
with Richard Kershaw Stereo
Jonathan Son of Jeremiah (final part)
with Bill Wallis ,
David Tate , Sally Grace and Royce Mills.
Producer Sarah Smith. Stereo
with Heather Payton