with Marjorie Lofthouse. Producer Jane Ward. Stereo
led by Stephen Oliver including
Bells on Sunday from All Saints, Hursley, Hampshire. Stereo
7.00am News
Cows, clotted cream and cheese are on the menu when Henrietta Green joins Mike Horrell for a Cornish breakfast.
Producer Carol Trewin
with Debbie Thrower and Andrew Green.
Editors David Coomes and Beverley McAinsh including at
8.00am News
speaks for the Week's Good Cause on behalf of SEQUAL, an organisation which offers practical help to profoundly disabled adults and children.
0 DONATIONS to: SEQUAL.
[address removed]Credit cards: [number removed]
by Alistair Cooke.
Family Worship for Palm Sunday from Knowle
Parish Church, Solihull, West Midlands, led by the Rev Andrew Dow.
Assistant curate: the Rev Jeremy Sykes.
Hymns (Mission Praise): Make Way, Make Way
(491); Ride On, Ride On in Majesty (547); There Is a Redeemer (590);
Hosanna, Hosanna (682); From Heaven You Came
(361); All Glory, Laud and Honour (289).
Anthem: On the Way to Jerusalem (Maunder). Readings: Matthew 21, w 1-14 (NIV); Philippians 2,w3-ll(GNB). Director of Music Derek Sheldon.
Omnibus edition.
Director Niall Fraser
with Anne Spackman. Producer Jane Beresford
with Margaret Howard. Stereo
with Nick Clarke. Editor Roger Mosey
This week Clay Jones digs into the postbag, and calls on Dr Stefan Buczacki , Fred Downham and Sue Phillips to solve gardening problems sent in by listeners. Producer Diana Stenson
* WRITE on postcards only to:
Gardeners Question Time. BBC. PO Box 27. Manchester M60 1SJ * CEEFAX: page 637
• FACTLINE: [number removed]89
The Way South
Lynn Farleigh stars as Jo, imprisoned for 14 years and now on hunger strike, in Jacqueline Holborough 's powerful play about trust and the nature of freedom.
Prisoners played by John Bull , Paul Downing ,
Ben Onwukwe and Dale Rapley. Director Marilyn Imne. Stereo (First broadcast on Radio 3)
Laurie Taylor and guests review the programmes and discuss the politics of UK radio.
Producer Nick Ware. Stereo
From Clogs to Clogs?
In the first of a three-part series, Peter Hennessy examines the deeper, historical causes of Britain's economic under-performance.
Carol Ann Duffy pays another visit to the St Andrew 's Poetry Festival. Producer Alec Reid. Stereo
This week Putney to
Mortlake the hard way! Oarsman, coach and now BBC commentator
Dan Topolski previews the 137th Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race. Producer Jill Marshall
The owl is known as a wise old bird but, in the last of four programmes, Roger Worsley finds it is also a bird of ill omen.
Producer Pam Redman
The last of four views of different occupations, as seen from the BBC
Sound Archives.
Parsons, Priests and Rabbis The trials and tribulations of a religious vocation. Producer Mark Savage Stereo
Something from Nothing A focus on Britain's unsung heroes - Asian immigrants who fought their way to business success. Plus details of the Business Survivor of the Year competition.
Presented by Peter Day.
Susan Hill discusses her new novel Air and A ngels; plus a look at a selection of dictionaries - for Scrabble players, and on the origins of words and phrases.
Presented by Nigel Forde.
Listeners report on a variety of issues with the help of Susan Marling and the Punters team.
A compilation of stories from Colette's
Music-Hall Sidelights. A glimpse backstage reveals pirouetting ballerinas, a moving sea of silk and feather fans, and a child who doesn't want to grow up.
Read by Eleanor Bron. Translated by Helen Beauclerk Abridged by Davena Briggs
Producer Tracey Neale. Stereo
Why do our voices change with age, and how do football clubs get their funny nicknames?
Dilly Barlow finds out.
The struggle to save
Europe's rarest goose; and will Przewalski's horse once again gallop free across the plains of Mongolia?
Presented by Fergus Keeling and Jessica Holm.
Lavalas
The second of two programmes in which
Andy Kershaw returns to Haiti in time for a general election, already postponed once by terrible violence, and witnesses the troubled country's passage to democracy.
Stereo
Presented by Peter Hill. Producer Peter Robins
Composer Francis Grier reflects on seven stories of women in the Bible, illustrated by the sixth section of his Miriam
String Quartet.
6: Mary Magdalene
Producer Shirley Scott. Stereo