From St Chad's, Far Headingley, Leeds. Repeated at 12.20am
Eileen Campbell explores the power and significance of the river.
Producers Jane Jeffes and Tamsin Collison
Quentin Seddon meets a farmer who plants trees amid his wheat. Producer Gill Powell
Gerry Northam presents religious news.
8.00 News 8.10 Sunday Papers Producer Phil Pegum
PHONE: (0161) [number removed]
WRITE TO: Sunday. Room 5031, BBC North. PO Box 27, Manchester M60 1SJ E-MAIL: sunday@bbc.co.uk
speaks for the Week's Good Cause about a charity working throughout the world with people who have been forced to leave their homes.
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Repeated from Friday
Friendship with God
Live from the Millmead Centre,
Guildford, Surrey, led by the Rev Peter Nodding. What a Friend We Have in Jesus; Psalm 100; Psalm 24, wl-6; 0 God of Abraham Praise; Shine
Jesus Shine. Organist Peter Mansell. Producer Denis Nowlan
Vincent Hanna reviews the media.
Editor Sarah Eldridge. Rptd Tuesday 11.00pm
Where do Elizabeth Taylor ,
Chelsea Clinton , Burgess Meredith and Arthur Smith drink while they are in New
York? All is revealed in the first of six visits to the world's legendary bars. Producer Sara Jane Hall
With James Cox.
Nigel Colborn , Geoffrey Smith and Bob Flowerdew answer some of the questions posed by gardeners from South Wales. With Eric Robson. Producer Trevor Taylor
Repeated Wednesday 11.30am
By Hugh Walpole , dramatised in four parts by Eric Pringle.
3: The Wild Marriage. It is now 1756 and David is prospering. But Francis roams the fells searching for something he can never find. with Hugh Dickson , Carolyn Jones , loan Meredith, Chris Pavlo and Alison Pettitt
Director David Blount. Repeated Friday 2.00pm
Repeated from Friday
A Separate Place
Frances Cairncross asks what the debate on children's rights tells us about the position of children in society. Repeated from Thursday
The last of four programmes.
Waiting for Walston. Oliver Walston struggles to keep pace with the Irish Republic's fast-changing rural scene. Repeated from Tuesday
Peggy Reynolds celebrates the Greek poet Sappho. Plato called her the tenth Muse, her life has been the stuff of legend and scandal, and her work remains influential today. Producer Sally Marmion
Repeated from Friday
Co-op PLC
Peter Day asks what the Co-operative movement still has to offer. Editor Stephen Chilcott
The last in a four-part serial written by John Peacock. Featuring Dexter Fletcher as Danny.
The Last Gun in the World. Will Joe and Beth find the legendary Citadel, which holds the secret that will save them and all mankind? with Jane Whittenshaw , David Bannerman , Derek Warmsley and Joshua Towb Director Celia De Wolff Repeat
In the fifth of six conversations about the pleasures, pains and perils of the dance world, Lynne Walker talks to the world's fastest tapper, Irish-American dancer Michael Flatley. Producer Gillian Hush Repeat
Repeated from yesterday 4.00pm
Edi Stark asks if gardeners and children can share the same plot. Repeated from Friday
An eight-part environmental series. 6: The Aral Sea. Jeremy Cherfas asks what western help is needed to prevent ecological devastation around the shrinking Aral Sea in Central Asia. Repeated from Wednesday
Including a report on the work carried out at the Institute of Psychiatry's Child Trauma Clinic in London.
Repeated from Tuesday
Repeated from yesterday 9.30am
The fourth in a six-part series looking at the lives of British people who have decided to make their homes in South
America. Clare Hampson heads for the landlocked heart of the continent to find out why Liverpudlian Nick Regan decided to go and live in Paraguay. Producer Sara Jane Hall Repeat
The late evening office of compline from the Lady Chapel of Ely Cathedral. Producer Stephen Shipley
Repeated from 5.50am
By Michael Carney , read by Bill Wallis. Repeated from Tuesday