Producer Tim Finney
with James Whitbourn.
with Chris Lowe and John Humphrys.
7.20 Listeners' Letters
7.25, 8.25 Sports News
7.45 Thought for the Day with Fr Oliver McTernan.
8.40 Yesterday in Parliament
Editor Philip Harding
with Cliff Morgan. Producer Joanne Watson
with Ken Bruce. This week Kathy Arnold visits Tarn in south-west France.
Producer Sara Jane Hall
0 WRITE to: [address removed] for factsheet No 17, enclosing sae
FACTLINE: [number removed] TRAVEL: page 14
Ned Sherrin hosts an hour of live interjections from the likes of Victoria
Mather, Mark Steyn and Neil Mullarkey. Stereo
with Andrew Marr.
Producer Dennis Sewell
Finland - an insider's view of the land of tangos and fishermen.
Presenter Esa Saarinen.
Editor Jolyon Monson
with Louise Botting and Vincent Duggleby. Producer Frances Macdonald
(Repeated Monday at 10.00am
Barry Took quizzes
Richard Ingrams and Alan Coren and their guests.
Producer Diane Messias. Stereo
This week's panel: Chantal Cuer, Brenda Dean ,
Harry Patterson and Michael Ivens. From Jersey. Chairman
Jonathan Dimbleby. and at 2.00pm
Any Answers? [number removed]
Call Jonathan Dimbleby with views on the issues raised in Any Questions? Producers Anna Carragher and John Watkins
0 LINES OPEN from 12.30pm
Jacobowsky and the Colonel
The 1940's Broadway hit by Franz Werfel , as adapted by S N Behrman. An aristocratic Polish
Colonel needs help to flee to London through occupied France with secret documents and his young French sweetheart. A resourceful Polish Jew provides it in a series of comical encounters.
Music by Eldad Lidor
Adapted and directed by Eran Baniel. Stereo
British Rail's 10,300 miles of track provide valuable wildlife corridors. Lionel Kelleway , in the company of botanist Paul Knipe and mammalogist Pat Morris , enjoys a first-class ticket to two idyllic spots in Hampshire. Producer John Holmes
Presented by Alun Lewis. Producer Julian Brown
Ferdinand Dennis talks to five people born in the colonies but now living in Britain.
1: Norman Beaton , one of Britain's most popular actors. Life for him started in Guyana.
Stereo
with Bill Wallis and David Tate.
Stereo
Omnibus edition.
Director Tracey Neale. Stereo
with Robert Robinson.
Producer Michael Ember. Stereo
The Mill on the Floss George Eliot 's popular novel adapted in five parts. 2: Home and School
The love Maggie has for her brother Tom has been shattered by his preference for their cousin Lucy.
Accused by her aunt of looking like a gypsy, she has run away from home.
Dramatised by Michelene Wandor Director Philip Martin. Stereo
Nia Centre
Judy Meewezen visits
Moss Side in Manchester, where the local community is breathing new life into British black arts. A former Edwardian playhouse, now owned and managed by local residents, is to become the long-awaited Nia
Centre - addressing the aspirations of regional audiences and providing a platform for the best in Afro-Caribbean visual and performing art.
Producer Adrian Washbourne
Stereo
Presented by Brian Kay.
Producer Sarah Devonald. Stereo
led by the Rev Dr John Sentamu. Stereo
Hwang Ho, the world's muddiest 3,000 mile long river, has been called
China's Sorrow. Farmers and shepherds eke out a living on its banks, and sing simple songs of love, sorrow, loneliness and endurance.
Readers: Frank Grimes and Pik Sen Lim.
Producer John Theocharis Stereo (A Chinese feature originally made by Radio Beijing)
The first of six talks by Charles Arnold-Baker , born Wolfgang Werner von Blumenthal, a Prussian aristocrat, in which he reflects on the English society of which he became such a 'compleat' example. Stereo
with Owen Murray and Viacheslav Semionov , virtuoso performers on the free-bass accordion.
Stereo (Broadcast last Tuesday
What do Bach and Reginald Dixon have in common? And why does Nigel Kennedy put Mars bars into his mouth before he picks up a violin? Tom Miles and Rob Millner present the first of six programmes. With guests Jonathan Cecil , Flaminia Cinque and Professor Jim Tavare.
Producer Harry Thompson. Stereo