From St Bartholomew the Great,
Smithfield, London. Repeated at 12.20am
Eileen Campbell considers the relevance of harvest time in the modem world. With
Laurie Rosenberg and Manley Hopkins. Producer Jane Jeffes
Pig muck and Hollywood glitz come together in the middle of Wales. Producer Joanna Toye
Trevor Barnes presents religious news.
8.00 News 8.10 Sunday Papers PHONE: (0161) [number removed]. WRITE TO: Sunday, Room 5031, BBC North, PO Box 27, Manchester
E-MAIL: sunday@bbc.co.uk
speaks for the Week's Good Cause about a charity that works to reduce crime by promoting alternatives to prison. DONATIONS TO: Prison Reform Trust, [address removed]
CREDIT CARDS: (0181) [number removed]
Repeated from Friday
A harvest celebration from South Aston United Reformed Church, Brimingham, led by the Rev John Campbell. We Plough the Fields;
Como te Canterei, Senhor?; 0 que Vale e o Amor; Let All Creation Sing. Director of music Maggie Hamilton. Producer Stephen Shipley
With Vincent Hanna. Editor Leslie Robinson
Repeated Tuesday at 11.00pm
John Walsh on the use of the vernacular in books, bibles and bestsellers.
Producer Erin Riley. Repeated Tuesday 2.00pm
With James Cox at the Labour Party Conference in Blackpool.
Nigel Colborn , Pippa Greenwood and Anne Swithinbank answer questions by Friends of Leicester University Botanic Gardens. Eric Robson is in the chair. Producer Trevor Taylor
Repeated Wednesday at 11.30am * Gardening: page 42
By Charles Dickens.
Dramatised in six parts by Michael Bakewell.
"Mr Dombey was resolved to show his wife that he was supreme. There must be no will but his".
(Repeated Friday at 2.00pm)
With Meera Syal. Repeated from Friday
Marcus Chown presents the last of a four-part series that asks tough questions about the methods and applications of science. 4: Reputations Producer Richard Aedy
Repeated Wednesday 7.45pm
Dermot Morgan returns to his home city of Dublin after a year's exile in Surrey. Repeated from Tuesday
Gareth Owen introduces a programme on the subject of virtue. Poems read by Frances Barber and Paul McGann. Producer Sara Davies
Four encounters with life in Northern
Ireland and beyond by Gerry Anderson. 3: Accordions and Chicken Wire Repeated from Friday
The Alchemists. Peter Day investigates biotechnology - the new science that makes big profits, and multimillionaires. Producer Collin Wilde
From The Chronicles ofNarnia by CS Lewis. 3: The giants of Harfang turn out to be not as amiable as the Green Lady had promised. with Aden Gillett , Sephen Thorne ,
Anne Beach. Keith Drinkel , Joyce James and Jane Whittenshaw. Music Peter Howell. Dramatised by Brian Sibley. Director John Taylor
Spuds. Taken from Tim Robinson 's survey of the isle of Aran, Stones of Aran. Read by Hugh Ross. Producer Eoin O'Callaghan
With Peter Tinniswood. Producer Brian King
The last of the series in which John Gribbin explores scientific conundrums. 5: The Comet's TaleReadings by Crawford Logan. Repeated from Wednesday
Presented by Professor Anthony Clare. Repeated from Tuesday
Repeated from yesterday 9.30am
British writer Caryl Phillips presents a series of five interviews in which he explores key moments in African
American history. 3: The McCarthy Years
. Journalist Paul RobesonJr talks about the link between racism in the US and Joe McCarthy 's almost obsessive desire to expose communism. Producer Tony Phillips Repeat
Strange Vagabond of God
The poetic legacy of John Bradburne , shot and killed in 1979 in Zimbabwe where he had worked with lepers for ten years. Presented by Bernard Jackson. Producer Norman Winter
Repeated from 5.50am
By Colin Greenland. Reader Kerry Shale. Repeated from Monday