From St Mary the Virgin,
Fordingbridge, Hampshire.
Peter Hobday explores the tortured relationship between virtue and vice. Producer Beverley McAinsh. Rptd at 11.30pm
Anna Hill talks turkey with Wiltshire farmers Jacqueline and John Longley. Producer Gabi Fisher
Roger Bolton presents religious news. Producer Rachel Hawkes
WRITE TO: Sunday, Room 5063, BBC North, PO Box 27, Manchester. M60 1SJ E-MAIL: sunday@bbc.co.uk
Terry Waite speaks on behalf of a charity which sets up projects to enable prisoners learn skills that help charities and community organisations.
DONATIONS: inside Out Trust, [address removed]
CREDIT CARDS: Freephone [number removed] Repeated tomorrow llpm
A service for the opening in Zimbabwe of the 50th Anniversary Assembly of the World Council of Churches.
Repeated from Friday
Eddie Mair presents conversation about the big stories of the week. Editor Kevin Marsh
Rory MacLean takes to the road in search of tales of travel. This week, explorer John Harrison offers his recipe for survival in the Amazon. Producers Mary Price and Lucy Willmore
The legendary antidote to panel games returns with a show from Glasgow's Pavilion theatre.
Humphrey Lyttelton is in the chair, Colin Sell on piano. Repeated from Monday
With James Cox.
The South of England takes on Northern Ireland.
Repeated from Monday
Nigel Colborn , Bob Flowerdew and Anne Swithinbank answer questions posed by members and friends of the Ravenshead Garden Society,
Nottingham. With chairman Eric Robson. Producer Trevor Taylor. Rptd Wednesday 3pm
Jeremy Jessel walks from Steventon to Micheldever, Hampshire, with forestry expert Professor Julian Evans and asks how the woodlands have changed. Producer Lucy Lunt. See Ordnance Survey Leisure Map 144. For a factsheet, send a SAE to [address removed]or E-MAIL: ramblings@bbc.co.uk
By Charles Dickens , dramatised in five parts by John Dryden. 2: Strange things begin to occur when a law writer is found dead from an opium overdose. with Robert Portal, Rob Jarvis , Daisy Beaumont , Michael Atwell , Danny Worters ,
Berwick Kaler , Greg Hicks , Brendon O'Hea , Eamon Boland , Roger Frost , Ellie Haddington, Dell
Synnot and Hugh Terry. Director John Dryden Repeated Saturday 9pm
Frank Delaney reviews a new collection of 'poems to be heard". Producer Sara Davies
Marina Warner traces the history of the relationship between humans and pigs. Repeated from Tuesday
Chris Dunkley with listeners' letters. Repeated from Friday
With Michael Rosen.
Producer Bob Carter. PHONE: [number removed] FAX: [number removed]. E-MAIL: potw@bbc.co.uk WEB SITE: www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/potw
Shula plays the name game. Repeated tomorrow 2pm
* Soap and flannel, page 12; Dr Mark Porter , page 51
Laurie Taylor and guests explore the art of self-improvement. Producer Chris Wilson
In the final episode of Christopher Lee 's political thriller, the relationship between the Home Secretary, the Prime Minister's press secretary and the man murdered on Brighton beach is made clear.
Repeated from Thursday
With Marcel Berlins. Repeated from Thursday
The first programme in a series following community police officers at work in West Yorkshire. This week, a teenager is found living in a coal bunker. Producer Susan Mitchell Repeat
Europe's Pink Carpet. Across Europe, the Centre Left is riding high. But does it have policies for a world facing financial crisis? With David Walker.
Repeated from Monday
The political headlines of the next week, live from Westminster.
Including 10.45 Byzantium Revisited. Observers of the political scene compare notes with a Byzantine counterpart of one thousand years ago. 3:
Ronald Allison , ex-press secretary to the Queen, meets court historian Michael Psellus. Editor John Evans
With Robert Robinson. Repeated from Thursday
Repeated from 6-05am
The radio feature and modern sculpture are brought together. Producer Ed Hall
By Damiene Sheehan , read by Amanda Root. A mother takes her daughter to meet an unlikely relative in this ghost story set in Canada. Producer Melanie Harris