Producers Richard Sanders and John Harvey
with Canon
Barney Milligan.
with Sue MacGregor and Chris Lowe.
Details as yesterday plus:
7.45 Thought for the Day with Jonathan Fryer.
2: "I drove into a little town which I shall call Dullard, lest the people recognise themselves and take me to court..." Stereo
Dr Anthony Clare talks to the barrister John Taylor about life before and after his failure to become the first black Tory MP. (Tomorrow: Alice Thomas Ellis )
2: Carry on Goering
Episode 39.
The first of two programmes recalling the many joys of Just A Minute over 25 years. Introduced by Nicholas Parsons.
Producer Sarah Smith. Stereo
2: Walking the Aisles with Albert Gubay .
The man who invented
Kwiksave with the idea that shoppers should have cheap groceries.
(Third programme tomorrow)
2: The Orient Express is trapped in a snowdrift and in a compartment a man lies murdered. Stereo
3: Julian Barnes and Liz Calder.
She published Metroland and Flaubert's Parrot, but when Liz moved to Bloomsbury Press, Julian decided not to go with her.
Six years in radio's history. 5: 1962
with James Naughtie.
Stereo
Noel Coward 's farce of the spirit world, set in the living-room of the Condomines' house in Kent.
(Stereo)
2: Enter Stage Right a Magician
Post-war Britain was in need of a tonic: it administered the 1945 general election and the Festival of Britain but was still peaky when laughter could suddenly be heard - the Goons had arrived. (Third programme tomorrow)
2: The Glaziers
With two sons, Mick and Val thought their family was complete. Then, one night, they discovered nine-year-old Fay in the back of their car. Fay, it seemed, wanted to join their family....
Producer Chris Paling. Stereo
The Pott Street Pig by Louise Lear.
When Jackie Slater found he'd won a pig in a raffle, naturally everybody thought it would be a dead one. But it wasn't.
Read by Rebecca Wright. Producer Gillian Hush
with Valerie Singleton and Frank Partridge.
Classic bonhomie from On the Hour's chattering sports presenter
Alan Partridge and his guests. With thanks to his researchers Steve Coogan , Patrick Marber , Rebecca Front, Doon MacKichan and David Schneider.
Producer Armando Iannucci. Stereo
Will everything be ticketyboo? Stereo
Robert Robinson ad libs with a group of barristers. Producer Nadine Grieve
Stereo
In the second of four programmes, singer
Adelaide Hall tells June
Knox-Mawer about when she was appearing at the Cotton Club in Harlem.
2: Boom and Bust on the Last Frontier
It has always been possible to "get rich quick" above the Arctic Circle. However, rapid economic exploitation has sometimes ruined the northern environment for those who live there. Presented by Daniel Snowman. (Final programme tomorrow)
The Sound of Surprise A jazz quartet selects the sheet music of one of five well-known songs at random. Kaleidoscope eavesdrops as they arrange, rehearse and record a version of the song they've picked.
Producer John Goudie. Stereo
Economic Policy in Crisis (1)
In a matter of hours,
Britain's membership of the ERM moved from the cornerstone of economic policy to a piece of economic history. Martin Webber asks if Black
Wednesday could have been avoided. Stereo
with Robin Lustig. Stereo
The Doctor's Family
2: An Unconcealable Secret Stereo
On Stage
This new series features poetry readings round the country. Today Andrew McAllister introduces the "Liverpool Poets" - Roger McGough , Adrian Henri and Brian Patten - with guitarist
Andy Roberts at the BBC Poetry Festival in Bristol. Producer Susan Roberts. Stereo
Anthony Hyde retells the story of Sodom and Gomorrah.
The second selection.