Producers Hugh O'Donnell and Steve Peacock
With Bishop Peter Firth.
With John Humphrys , Sue MacGregor.
7.25, 8.25 Sports News
7.45 Thought for the Day With Angela Tilby. Editor Jon Barton.
LETTERS: Today, PO Box 2299, London W1A 1PY. FAX: [number removed]. E-MAIL: today@bbc.co.uk
* Face behind the Voice: page 131
The last of five programmes in which Jamie Glover reads Richard
Kennedy's classic memoir based on the diary he kept while working for Leonard and Virginia Woolf.
Richard Kennedy is finding that there is more to life than the Hogarth Press, but before he leaves, he takes part in a Bloomsbury cricket match.
Chris Dunkley airs listeners' opinions. Producer Anne Marie Cole
Repeated Sunday 6.15pm
The news of 50 years ago today.
Introduced by Diana Madill. Serial: One by One in the Darkness. Final part. For details see Monday
Presented by Joanna Pinnock.
Producer Edward Odim. Repeated Sunday 8pm. WRITE TO: The Natural History Programme, BBC Bristol BS8 2LR
Mark Whittaker presents reports on consumer and social affairs.
Editor Chris Burns. PHONE: [number removed] to raise issues for investigation
Honey. Continuing his search for the fundamental pleasures of life, Derek Cooper discovers the sticky delights of honey. He meets beekeepers and honey enthusiasts and asks if this ancient sweetener is in danger of disappearing. Producer Paul Kobrak
With Nick Clarke.
Editor Kevin Marsh
Repeated from yesterday 7.05pm
Repeated from Sunday 2.30pm
With Laurie Taylor.
Tim Marlow considers the history of the Cardiff Opera House's lottery bid and talks to Welsh landscape painters about how they capture their own countryside.
Producer Miriam Newman
By Molly McCloskey , read by Jacquie Galbraith. When Julia realises that her husband has stumbled into an affair, she is forced to see him in a fresh light. Producer Anne Simpson
With Chris Lowe.
Editor Kevin Marsh. WRITE TO: PM Letterline, BBC Broadcasting House. London W1A 1AA PHONE: [number removed]
David Stafford presents the weekend leisure and heritage programme.
The Marquess of Bath pays tribute to Stonehenge.
Producer David Prest
A bone of contention for Ruth and David.
Written by Sam Boardman-Jacobs
Director Keri Davies. Editor Vanessa Whitburn
Repeated Monday 1.40pm
ARCHERS ADDICTS FAN CLUB: send sae to
[address removed]
Chris Serle presents his selection of extracts from BBC radio and television over the past seven days. Producer Ronnit Knoble.
Repeated Sunday
3.30pm. PHONE: [number removed]. FAX: [number removed]3. E-MAIL: potw@bbc.co.uk
Jonathan Dimbleby chairs a topical discussion in Walton-on-Thames,
Surrey, with panellists including
Professor Susan Greenfield and Chris Smith , Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport.
Repeated tomorrow 1.10pm
In the last of four programmes, John Florance talks to Greil Marcus ,
Peter Guralnick and June Juanico about Elvis.
Producer Rosie Boulton
Letter from America by Alistair Cooke
American stereotypes on film
15 minutes on BBC Radio 4 FM
Available for over a year
An examination of the stereotypes of American life as portrayed in Hollywood movies, and seen by a global audience.
Repeated Sunday 9.15am
Four Museums and a Masterpiece
Tim Marlow tracks the story of Picasso's Guernica. Born of civil war in 1937, the emblematic canvas suffered years of exile in New York. The saga of the painting's final resting place continues. Repeated from Saturday 7.20pm
Editor Anne Koch
By Muriel Spark. Part 5. For details see Monday
The last of four comic conferences with Griff Rhys Jones and Graeme Garden. Producer Paul B Davies. Rptd tomorrow 6.25pm
With Patrick Hannan and guests. Producer Hilary Green
Six visionaries tell Sheena McDonald what life will be like in the year 2010.
Professor Lynda Gratton envisages ways of competing within the global economy.
By William Faulkner. Part 5. For details see Monday