With Archimandrite Ephrem
Lash, Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.
With Anna Hill. Producer Sarah Hughes
( from 8. 00)
With John Humphrys and Edward Stourton.
6.25 and 7.25 Sports News
6.45 Yesterday in Parliament
7.48 Thought for the Day With Rabbi Lionel Blue.
8.25 Sports News
8.32 Yesterday in Parliament
2nd Group A v 3rd Group B
The seventh game of the nine that will decide the semi-finalists is at Centurion Park.
Producer Peter Baxter . *Approximate time
Eighty-year-old Len Williams goes on a nostalgic journey and relives the time when he was part of a secret unit that used falcons to intercept German carrier pigeons during World War Two. Producer Sian Price
Written by Jan Etherington and Gavin Petne. It seems all of Carol's problems are solved - her husband is back, her children are getting on and, best of all, her interfering mother-in-law is getting married. But will the bride make it to the church on time? Producer Elizabeth Freestone
With Liz Barclay and John Waite. Editor Andrew Smith PHONE: [number removed] Email: youandyours@bbc.co.uk
With NiCk Clarke. Editor Peter Rippon
Roger Bolton airs listeners' views on what they ve heard On BBC Radio. Producer Margaret Budy Write to: Feedback, POBox 2100, London W1A 1QT PHONE: [number removed] Fax [number removed] EMAIL: feedback@bbc.co.uk. Repeated on Sunday at 8pm
Repeatedfrom yesterday at7pm
David Threlfall stars as the murder-solving priest in a new series of six dramas. Tempus Fugit by Martin Meenan. Mrs Reid leads Paolo and his broken watch to a house of clocks where love, revenge and jealousy make a mockery of time Director Mark Lambert
Clare Balding joins a group of "ladies who lunch" who, every Monday morning, explore new walking routes in Scotland.
By Thomas Steinbeck. 5: The Dark Watcher On a bluff above the road overlooking the Pacific, mounted on his black horse, waits Professor Gill's private nightmare. Read by William Hope. For details see Monday
Actor and director David Tse explores the lives of the "BBC -the British-born Chinese.
5: Speaking Up. The Chinese have traditionally been seen as the silent minority in Britain but, increasingly, the second generation is coming togetherto speak OUt against racism and injustice. Fordetails see Monday
Hooligans, drug dealers and even convicted killers have won compensation in the courts for injustices they claimed to have suffered. Marcel Berlins asks if the law is becoming too concerned with the criminal while neglecting the victim. Producer Simon Coates
Jenni Murray and guests discuss how current media trends affect modern life. This week, the topic is 80 years of religious broadcasting at the BBC and its relevance to today's society. Producer Cecile Wright
With Carolyn Quinn and Eddie Mair.
A tongue-in-cheek review of the week's news chaired by Simon Hoggart from the Everyman Theatre, Cheltenham, with Alan Coren , Jeremy Hardy , Phil Hammond and Marcus Brigstocke. Producer Simon Nicholls Repeated on Saturday at 12.30pm
Jack's unsure about "Daphne's".
Written by Caroline Harrington Director Julie Beckett Editor Vanessa Whitburn
ARCHERS ADDICTS FAN CLUB: send an SAE to [address removed]
John Wilson with the cultural news and views. Producer Aasiya Lodhi
By Emma Donoghue. Five comic dramas about the different types of relationships we have with animals. 5: Metamorphosis. Nine-year-old Felicity desperately wants a horse and will do anything to get her own way.
For details see Monday Repeated from 10.45am
Jonathan Dimbleby chairs the discussion as an audience at Gloucester Cathedral puts questions on issues of the week to a panel of prominent public figures and politics.
Producer Anne Peacock Repeated on Saturday at 1.15pm
By Laurence Allan. When Rob attempts the most challenging cycle ride of his life he loses sight of his ideals, thanks to the pressures of a TV crew covering the race. Can television ever let the truth get in the way of a good story?
Director Alison Hindell
With Robin Lustig.
Editor PrueKeely EMAIL: world.tonight@bbc.co.uk
Terry Wale reads the spoof mountaineering memoir by WE Bowman. 5: "Would the mountain ever be climbed, I wondered. And as I looked I had the answer. For details see Monday
6: Recovery. Robert McCrum. literary editor of The Observer, poet and musician Martin Newell and writer Laura Thompson join Matthew Parris to write and talk about their experiences of recovery. Producer Jane Greenwood
Part 5. Repeated from 9.45am