from St Giles', Cripplegate.
Mark Tully looks at an ancient human tradition - the practice of hospitality. With music, poetry and conversation. A Unique Broadcasting production
Oliver Walston unearths a tale of romance from Sir Julian and Lady Rose. Producer Tim Coleman
Religious news with Colin Morris.
8.00 News 8.10 Sunday Papers Producer Phil Pegum
WRITE TO: Sunday, Room 5038, BBC North. PO Box 27. Manchester. PHONE: (0161) [number removed]
speaks for the Week's Good Cause about a charity which is piloting a scheme to tackle the specific housing problems faced by people with Aids.
DONATIONS TO: Friends of St Pancras Housing. [address removed]. CREDIT CARDS: (0181) [number removed]
Repeated from Friday
from St George 's Parish Church,
Beckenham, with the Rt Rev Michael Nazir-Ali , Bishop of Rochester. Led by the Rev Derek Carpenter. Tell out my soul (Woodlands); Responses
(Ayleward); Amos 8, w 1-7; James 2, w 1-9, 12-17; Te Deum and Jubilate (Stanford); Praise thou the Lord (Statham); Thou art the way (St James); Lights abode (Regent
Square). Director of Music Nigel Groome. Organist Robert Cooper.
Omnibus edition.
Media news with Joanna Coles. Repeated Tuesday at 11.00pm
Too Much Noise. Fergal Keane presents the second of six programmes of off-beat travel and unusual experience. This week, Andy Kershaw meets a preacher on a Harley at Daytona and Robert Sandier reports on the gods of Times Square. Producer Noah Richler
with James Cox.
Pippa Greenwood , Anne Swithinbank and Nigel Colbom answer queries for local horticultural societies in Gloucestershire. Chairman Eric Robson. A Taylor Made production. Rptd Wed 11.30am
by Wilkie Collins. Dramatised insixepisodes by Ray Jenkins.
5: August, 1847. Will Magdalen marry her cousin Noel, whom she loathes, in order to try and regain her inheritance?
With Susan Sheridan , Elizabeth Mansfield. John Moffatt. Christopher Good, Joe Dunlop and Jo Kendall. Music by Peter Brewis and played by Maurice Cambridge. Director Janet Whitaker Rpt
Repeated from Friday
Keith Joseph : Ideologist of the Right. In the last of the series, Anthony Howard considers the man credited as Lady Thatcher's intellectual mentor. Repeated from Thursday
Wartime pillboxes, prefabs and drill halls now have peacetime roles and a Dorset village occupied by British troops remains frozen in time. Leslie Thomas explores an architectural legacy. Repeated from Tuesday
Gareth Owen introduces poets Wendy Cope and U A Fanthorpe at the BBC Poetry Festival.
Producer Sally Marmion
Repeated from Friday
The Tender Trap. Britain's charities are being forced to become more businesslike. New skills are needed to win public sector contracts against bids from private businesses. But the competition may set charities on the road to financial disaster. A Ted Harrison production
A five-part dramatisation of Rudyard Kipling 's adventures of Mowgli. 4: The Wild Dogs
With Robert Glenister and Peter Marinker Dramatised by Michelene Wandor Director Chris Wallis Rpt
Last in the series of readings presenting Britain through the eyes of visitors.
Heaven on Wheels by Firdaus Kanga. Read by Lyndam Gregory. Producer Pam Fraser Solomon
Repeated from yesterday 4.00pm
BBC Foreign Affairs Editor John Simpson presents the series featuring people forced into exile during political upheaval. 2: The Rt Rev Bishop Hassan and Margaret Dehqani-Tafti.Riots overtake Iran as the Shah is forced out by Ayatollah Khomeini. For the Anglican bishop, sweeping Islamic fundamentalism brings tragedy. Producer Marc Jobst
Mark Whittaker takes a look at cost benefit analysis. Repeated from Wednesday
To celebrate the 100th anniversary of the National Trust, Hannah Gordon ,
Martin Best and Martin Jenkins appear at the new Radio Theatre, in a richly diverse recital of prose, poetry and music devoted to gardens and seasons of the year.
Producer David Hitchinson
In Search of Stillness. Colin Semper checks out the world of DIY religion. Producer Amanda Hancox