With Dr Pauline Webb.
With John Humphrys and Sue MacGregor.
7.25,8.25 Sports News
7.45 Thought for the Day With Anne Atkins.
Editor Roger Mosey. LETTERS: Today. PO Box 2299. London W1A 1PY. FAX: (0171) [number removed]. E-MAIL: today@bbc.co.uk
For details see Monday
With novelist Julian Barnes.
Producer Olivia Selip. man Repeat
Chris Dunkley tackles another sheaf of listeners' letters.
Producer Alison Vemon Smith. Repeated
Sunday at 6.15pm. WRITE TO: Feedback. PO Box 2100. London W1A 1QT. FAX: (0171) [number removed]. E-MAIL: feedback@bbc.co.uk
A look back at the news of 2 August
1946. The nation prepares for a long, lazy bank holiday weekend. For details see Monday
Introduced by Sheila McLennon.
Serial: The Last Time I Saw Jane (10) For details see Monday
Joanna Pinnock explores life between the tides on a British beach.
Producer Sarah Blunt. Repeated Sunday at
8.00pm WRITE TO: The Natural History Programme. BBC Bristol BS8 2LR
Presented by Chris Choi.
Editor Huw Marks. PHONE: to raise issues for investigation (0171) [number removed]
In the second of four programmes about natural history and cooking,
Lionel Kelleway hunts down prized delicacies for a high tea of dressed crab and lobster and laver cakes.
Producer Mary Colwell. Revised repeat Monday at 7 20pm. WRITE TO: Natural History Radio. Bristol, BS8 2LR
With Sheena McDonald. Editor Kevin Marsh
Repeated from yesterday 7.05pm
Dr Thome
Repeated from Sunday 2.30pm
With Russell Davies and guests.
Tim Marlow reads a fictional account of the life of artist Henri Matisse during the Second World War. Producer Nicki Paxman
By Yukio Mishima. The birth of an illegitimate child byToshiko's au-pair triggers a disturbing vision of the future. Read by Elizabeth Bell. Producer Paul Dodgson
With Chris Lowe and Charlie Lee-Potter .
Editor Margaret Budy. WRITE TO: PM
Letterline, BBC Broadcasting House, London W1A 1AA. PHONE: (0171) [number removed]
This week, Sir Roy Strong visits a secret Victorian garden. Producer Annie Malcolm
Repeated Sunday at 9.00pm
A star arrives at Lower Loxley.
Written by Graham Harvey. Director Peter Leslie Wild. Editor Vanessa Whitburn
Repeated Monday at 1.40pm
Chris Serle presents extracts from BBC radio and television.
Producer Maud Hand. Repeated Sunday at
3.30pm. PHONE: (0171) [number removed](24 hours) FAX: (0171) [number removed]E-MAIL: potw@bbc.co.uk
Sue Cameron cross-examines some of Britain's key institutions to see how well they serve us. 2: Banks.
Producer Ann-Marie Evans
Repeated tomorrow at 1.10pm
Four programmes unravelling the rules and habits by which different households survive.
1: Home Alone. The freedom of single occupants.
Producer Tessa Watt Repeat
Letter from America by Alistair Cooke
The welfare and healthcare reform debate
15 minutes on BBC Radio 4 FM
Available for over a year
The presidential race, US welfare and healthcare reform and the prurience and pressure surrounding the TWA flight 800 crash investigation.
By Alistair Cooke.
Repeated Sunday at 9.15am
Repeated from Saturday 7.20pm
With Robin Lustig. Editor Anne Koch
By Lee Langley. Part 5.
For details see Monday Repeat
By award-winning comedy writer, John Morton. A chance to tune in to radio's first quality newspaper. With
Chris Langham , Rebecca Front, Alexander Armstrong , Simon Greenall ,
Ben Miller , Siriol Jenkins and Susie Blake. Producer Paul Schlesinger
Repeated tomorrow at 6.25pm
With guest presenter Bill Tidy. Producer Brian King.
Five leading thinkers present radiophonic essays on original ideas. 1: Over the Sea to Sky. "White horses on the sea" - a metaphor that is more than mere description - leads
Nigel Lewis into our past, where to be literal is to be very mad indeed.
Senes producer Matt Thompson
By Donna Tartt. Part 5. For details see Monday