24 October, 2014

Radio 4 Listings for 25/10/2014 - 31/10/2014

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SAT SATURDAY 25 OCTOBER 2014 SAT SAT 00:00 Midnight News b04lp5b4 (Listen) SAT The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. SAT Followed by Weather. SAT SAT 00:30 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6sd5 (Listen) SAT Bauhaus: Cradle of the Modern SAT SAT Neil MacGregor focuses on the Bauhaus school of art and SAT design, founded in Weimar in 1919. SAT Our cities and houses today, our furniture and typography, SAT are unthinkable without the functional elegance pioneered by SAT the Bauhaus. SAT SAT Producer Paul Kobrak. SAT SAT 00:48 Shipping Forecast b04lp5b6 (Listen) SAT The latest shipping forecast. SAT SAT 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b04lp5b8 (Listen) SAT BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. BBC Radio 4 resumes SAT at 5.20am. SAT SAT 05:20 Shipping Forecast b04lp5bb (Listen) SAT The latest shipping forecast. SAT SAT 05:30 News Briefing b04lp5bd (Listen) SAT The latest news from BBC Radio 4. SAT SAT 05:43 Prayer for the Day b04lsys4 (Listen) SAT Spiritual reflection to start the day with The Rev Laurence SAT Twaddle. SAT SAT 05:45 iPM b04lp5bg (Listen) SAT The programme that starts with its listeners. SAT SAT 06:00 News and Papers b04lp5bj (Listen) SAT The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers. SAT SAT 06:04 Weather b04lp5bl (Listen) SAT The latest weather forecast. SAT SAT 06:07 Ramblings b04lsr0n (Listen) SAT Series 28, The Dales Way, Part Six SAT SAT Clare Balding enjoys the final leg of The Dales Way in the SAT company of one of the men who designed it, Colin Spearman. SAT Colin, joined by his wife Fleur, explains his intention of SAT linking the industrial SAT conurbations of West Yorkshire with the Lake District. As SAT they walk from Staveley to Bowness, Clare reflects on her SAT experience of the route and how much it has meant to her. SAT Colin , Fleur and Clare celebrate the end of the journey SAT with ice cream and a paddle in Lake Windermere. SAT Producer Lucy Lunt. SAT SAT Credits SAT Presenter: Clare Balding SAT Interviewed Guest: Colin Spearman SAT Producer: Lucy Lunt SAT SAT 06:30 Farming Today b04lp5bn (Listen) SAT Farming Today This Week SAT SAT The latest news about food, farming and the countryside. SAT SAT 06:57 Weather b04lp5bq (Listen) SAT The latest weather forecast. SAT SAT 07:00 Today b04n6q9r (Listen) SAT Morning news and current affairs. Including Yesterday in SAT Parliament, Sports Desk, Thought for the Day and Weather. SAT SAT Today's running order SAT SAT Saturday's running order will appear here SAT SAT 09:00 Saturday Live b04m7bsl (Listen) SAT Tom Hollander SAT SAT Actor Tom Hollander joins Suzy Klein and Jay Rayner. SAT SAT Producer: Alex Lewis SAT Editor: Karen Dalziel. SAT SAT Credits SAT Presenter: Suzy Klein SAT Presenter: Jay Rayner SAT Interviewed Guest: Tom Hollander SAT Producer: Alex Lewis SAT Editor: Karen Dalziel SAT SAT 10:30 In Search of the Holy Tail b04m7bsn (Listen) SAT Broadcaster Marc Riley, rock musician Damon Albarn and film SAT maker Ceri Levy venture outside their usual comfort zone and SAT travel to Mull in search of Sea Eagles and Basking Sharks. SAT SAT During their weekend on the SAT island they do some bird watching, swim with seals and Damon SAT composes a new piece of music which he performs to Marc and SAT Ceri in Fingal's cave on the Isle of Staffa, using the SAT unique echoes of the waves in the cave as accompaniment. SAT During their journey they discuss Gilbert and Sullivan, how SAT to catch a Blue Tit in a snowy garden and the reintroduction SAT of Sea Eagles to the Scottish Islands. SAT As a finale to the weekend, Marc and Damon overcome their SAT fears and venture into the deep waters off Mull to swim with SAT Basking Sharks, some of them over 20 feet in length. SAT Produced by John Leonard SAT A Smooth Operations production for BBC Radio 4. SAT SAT 11:00 Week in Westminster b04lp5bs (Listen) SAT Helen Lewis of The New Statesman looks behind the scenes at SAT Westminster. SAT SAT This week MPs look at themselves and parliament and consider SAT the accountability of both. Should constituents have the SAT power to recall MPs SAT who do not do their job properly, and if so how exactly to SAT do this. Do fixed term parliaments lead to periods of SAT inertia or do they prevent a Prime Minster from timing a SAT general election to his or her advantage? Plus a call for SAT clarity from political parties on how to deal with the SAT budget deficit, and legislating on revenge porn. SAT The editor is Marie Jessel. SAT SAT 11:30 From Our Own Correspondent b04lp5bw (Listen) SAT The Flying River SAT SAT Reporters around the world. Misha Glenny says surely it's a SAT national emergency -- but it's one the candidates in SAT Brazil's election campaign have largely ignored. The civil SAT war drags on in South Sudan - Tristan SAT McConnell visits a town that's changed hands, between SAT government troops and rebels, six times and has left its SAT people shattered. Chris Morris was with the sub-hunters on SAT the Stockholm Archipelago. They didn't find a submarine, but SAT it's clear there are security implications. Who do you call SAT when you see little green men in the sky? In France, you can SAT phone the government, as Chris Bockman's been finding out. SAT And Bethany Bell has been visiting a lake which is SAT much-loved in Austria and not just because of its unique SAT rose-scented breezes. SAT SAT 12:00 News Summary b04lp5by (Listen) SAT The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. SAT SAT 12:04 Money Box b04lp5c0 (Listen) SAT Energy bill discounts and the pitfalls of equity release SAT SAT Paul Lewis hears from some of the older people who are SAT taking a record amount of money out of the value of their SAT homes. £1 billion was released in the first nine months of SAT the year - almost as much as the SAT total for 2013. But is equity release always a good idea? SAT What does it cost? And what restrictions are there? SAT Banks are imposing tough new rules on politicians ahead of SAT EU laws which will treat with suspicion all banking activity SAT involving public figures. Members of the House of Lords seem SAT to be first in the frame with reports of members' children SAT being refused bank accounts or access to ATMs. SAT British Gas has confirmed to Money Box that it will be SAT paying £55 less warm home discount to its low income SAT pensioners and other customers this winter. The warm home SAT discount is £140 off one winter electricity bill. Last SAT winter, British Gas paid £195 to most eligible households, SAT adding £60 to the standard amount. This winter it will not SAT do so, bringing its discount down to the level paid by other SAT suppliers. So who can get the discount? And what do they SAT have to do? SAT HSBC has been forced to pay compensation to a customer who SAT transferred his pension to the bank but got no ongoing SAT service or advice, even though he was charged for it. The SAT decision opens the possibility of others making a claim. SAT Find out if you can too. SAT SAT 12:30 The News Quiz b04lsy03 (Listen) SAT Series 85, Episode 1 SAT SAT A satirical review of the week's news, chaired by Sandi SAT Toksvig, featuring Sarah Millican, Sara Pascoe and Hugo SAT Rifkind, with regular panellist Jeremy Hardy. SAT SAT Credits SAT Presenter: Sandi Toksvig SAT Panellist: Jeremy Hardy SAT Panellist: Sarah Millican SAT Panellist: Sara Pascoe SAT Panellist: Hugo Rifkind SAT Writer: Jon Hunter SAT Writer: Benjamin Partridge SAT Writer: Gareth Gwynn SAT Writer: Gabby Hutchinson Crouch SAT Writer: Max Davis SAT Writer: Kevin Core SAT Producer: Sam Michell SAT SAT 12:57 Weather b04lp5c4 (Listen) SAT The latest weather forecast. SAT SAT 13:00 News b04lp5c6 (Listen) SAT The latest news from BBC Radio 4. SAT SAT 13:10 Any Questions? b04lsy0t (Listen) SAT Dr Carol Bell, Carwyn Jones AM, Rhun Ap Iorwerth AM, Bernard SAT Jenkin MP SAT SAT Jonathan Dimbleby presents political debate and discussion SAT from Theatr Brycheiniog in Brecon, Powys, with Welsh First SAT Minister Carwyn Jones AM, Energy expert Dr Carol Bell, Chair SAT of the Public Administration SAT Select Committee Bernard Jenkin MP and Plaid Cymru's SAT Economic Spokesman Rhun Ap Iorwerth AM. SAT SAT 14:00 Any Answers? b04lp5c8 (Listen) SAT A chance for Radio 4 listeners to have their say on the SAT issues discussed on Any Questions? SAT SAT 14:30 Saturday Drama b04m7btv (Listen) SAT The Shootist SAT SAT By Glendon Swarthout SAT Adapted by Nick Perry SAT SAT Classic Western starring Brian Cox and Michelle Fairley. The SAT Shootist is John Bernard Books, the last surviving top SAT gunfighter in a vanishing American West. He rides SAT into El Paso in the year 1901, to be told by a doctor that SAT he has a terminal illness. As word spreads that the famous SAT assassin has reached the end, an assortment of vultures SAT gather to feast upon his corpse. Books outwits them all by SAT selecting the where, when, and manner of his death. SAT Director: Sasha Yevtushenko. SAT SAT Credits SAT John Bernard Books: Brian Cox SAT Bond Rodgers: Michelle Fairley SAT Gillom Rodgers: Joe Jameson SAT Marshal Thibido: Craige Els SAT Charles Hostetler: Michael Bertenshaw SAT Shoup: Joe Sims SAT Norton: Ashley Kumar SAT Mrs Woodling: Heather Craney SAT Bartender: Clive Hayward SAT Author: Glendon Swarthout SAT Adaptor: Nick Perry SAT Director: Sasha Yevtushenko SAT SAT 15:30 Chant b04lpzz2 (Listen) SAT In Chant, Richard Coles delves into the 1990's when a SAT recording of Benedictine monks singing became so popular it SAT sold in the millions around the world. If an album of SAT classical music sold anywhere near one SAT million copies at that time, it was considered unusual. For SAT one to sell more than that was unprecedented. Adding further SAT to this phenomenon was the fact that this was unfamiliar SAT music at the time, Gregorian Chant, performed not by SAT celebrity artists who might attract a large following, but SAT by monks from a remote corner of Northern Spain. EMI SAT marketed this album Canto Gregoriano, or Chant as it was SAT named in America, as a unique antidote to stress. SAT Richard Coles with former EMI employees Kick Klimbie and SAT Jane McCann, retrace EMI's marketing tactics in the SAT promotion of Canto Gregoriano. Professor Adrian North will SAT also be providing insights throughout the programme into the SAT psychology of marketing, exploring what drives people to buy SAT certain things, and how music can impact upon us physically SAT and emotionally. Richard Coles also takes a trip to the Isle SAT of Wight, where Gregorian Chant is still an important aspect SAT of life at both St Cecilia's Abbey and Quarr Abbey, and SAT questions whether such music is still capable of having any SAT meaning or impact upon our lives in the twenty-first SAT century. SAT SAT 16:00 Woman's Hour b04m7d1c (Listen) SAT Weekend Woman's Hour: Breast cancer pioneer; Northern Soul SAT SAT Professor Craig Jordan is one of the world's pre-eminent SAT experts in breast cancer research and treatment. We hear how SAT he first started his career and how his research into SAT Tamoxifen has saved many women's SAT lives. SAT India Knight gives us her blueprint to approaching SAT middle-age with ease. SAT The late 1960s in the north of England saw the birth of SAT Northern Soul, an American inspired dance movement which SAT helped define a generation. We hear about a new film SAT celebrating the movement. SAT Alison Light tells us of some of the characters she SAT discovered when she began delving in her family history and SAT the surprising parallels to lives today and all our family SAT histories. SAT A Swedish woman born without a womb has successfully giving SAT birth to a healthy baby boy. So how can women in the UK be SAT helped by womb transplants? We hear from one woman born SAT without a womb hoping to benefit and the man leading the SAT UK's research team. SAT The football journalist Amy Lawrence tells us about her new SAT book which looks at what made Arsenal's team for their SAT unbeaten season in 2003-2004 so special. SAT And we have music from the Queen of southern soul Candi SAT Staton. SAT Highlights from the Woman's Hour week. Presented by Jane SAT Garvey. SAT Producer: Rabeka Nurmahomed SAT Editor: Jane Thurlow. SAT SAT Breast Cancer Pioneer for Tamoxifen SAT SAT Professor Craig Jordan is one of the world’s pre-eminent SAT experts in breast cancer research and treatment. His SAT ground-breaking research into SAT Tamoxifen SAT has saved many women's lives. Craig has devoted his career SAT to understanding the drug – its benefits, pitfalls and other SAT applications. He's back at Leeds University to give a talk SAT on the 25th Oct for the SAT Alumni Annual Lecture SAT entitled: “Leeds' role in breast cancer breakthrough - the SAT Tamoxifen tale”. SAT SAT India Knight SAT SAT ‘In Your Prime-Older, Wiser, Happier’ is part guide, part SAT memoir, part manual. Its author India Knight joins Jenni to SAT talk about her blueprint to approaching middle-age. SAT SAT Northern Soul SAT SAT The late 1960’s in the north of England saw the birth of SAT Northern Soul, an American inspired dance movement which SAT gained a passionate youth following, and helped to define a SAT generation. In Elaine Constantine’s film ‘Northern Soul’, SAT the intensity of this underground movement is portrayed by SAT following the story of two young friends trying to make a SAT name for themselves as Northern Soul DJ’s. This is Elaine’s SAT directorial debut, and it charts a place and time that made SAT an indelible mark on her teenage years in Lancashire. Jane SAT Garvey will be talking to Elaine and to Northern Soul dance SAT instructor Sharon Sullivan, about the film and why the SAT movement still speaks to audiences today. SAT SAT Common People SAT SAT When SAT Alison Light SAT set out to write a book about her family history and SAT investigate the untold stories of ordinary folk, she found SAT paupers, publicans, skilled workers and an itinerant people SAT who travelled to work in servitude or industry. This story SAT of her people draws surprising parallels to lives today and SAT to all our family histories. Alison joins Jane Garvey on SAT Woman’s Hour to talk about our fascination with the past and SAT how it relates to the present. SAT SAT Womb transplants SAT SAT After a Swedish woman born without a womb gave birth to a SAT healthy baby boy, we hear about how women in this country SAT could soon be helped by the medical breakthrough. How does SAT the procedure work and what are the risks? Jenni speaks to SAT Richard Smith, who leads the SAT UK Uterine Transplant SAT research team, and to Sophie Lewis, who was born without a SAT womb and hopes to benefit from his work. SAT SAT Amy Lawrence SAT SAT Amy Lawrence is a football journalist. She tells us what SAT it’s been like reporting on the glorious game for the last SAT 20 years and about her new book Invincible which looks at SAT what made Arsenal’s team for their unbeaten season in SAT 2003-2004 so special. SAT SAT Candi Staton SAT SAT The Queen of southern soul Candi Staton talks to Jenni about SAT her 50 year career in the music industry. Since gospel SAT singing in the 1950’s, she has become famous for pop hits SAT such as 'You’ve Got the Love' and 'Young Hearts Run Free'. SAT Her honest lyrics describe her often rocky home life and she SAT explains how making music has been the therapy (and the SAT love) she needed to see her through. Her new album ' Life SAT Happens' is available now. SAT SAT Credits SAT Presenter: Jane Garvey SAT Interviewed Guest: Craig Jordan SAT Interviewed Guest: India Knight SAT Interviewed Guest: Alison Light SAT Interviewed Guest: Amy Lawrence SAT Interviewed Guest: Candi Staton SAT Producer: Rabeka Nurmahomed SAT Editor: Jane Thurlow SAT SAT 17:00 PM b04lp5cb (Listen) SAT Full coverage of the day's news. SAT SAT 17:30 The Bottom Line b04lstkr (Listen) SAT Flash Sales SAT SAT Flash sale companies are growing fast. Evan Davis and guests SAT discuss how this new retail sector is changing the way we SAT shop. How does the business model work? Just how low can the SAT prices go? And are these SAT internet discounters a help or a hindrance for luxury SAT brands? SAT Guests : SAT Victoria Walton, co-founder Sportpursuit SAT Jamie Jackson, executive vice-chairman MySale Group SAT Ilan Benhaim, co-founder Vente-Privee SAT Producer : Rosamund Jones. SAT SAT 17:54 Shipping Forecast b04lp5cd (Listen) SAT The latest shipping forecast. SAT SAT 17:57 Weather b04lp5cg (Listen) SAT The latest weather forecast. SAT SAT 18:00 Six O'Clock News b04lp5cj (Listen) SAT The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. SAT SAT 18:15 Loose Ends b04m9z8r (Listen) SAT Gareth Thomas, Neil Pearson, Miranda Sawyer, Amma Asante, SAT John Moloney, Old Crow Medicine Show, My Brightest Diamond SAT SAT Actor Neil Pearson co-produces 5 episodes of comedy classic SAT Hancock's Half Hour; all-time Rugby hero Gareth Thomas tells SAT the story through his memoirs of how he came out as SAT gay...comedian John Moloney talks to SAT Miranda Sawyer about this year's stellar line-up for the SAT annual ADCAF charity event and film writer and director Amma SAT Asante talks to Clive about her international hit film SAT 'Belle'. With music from Old Crow Medicine Show and My SAT Brightest Diamond. SAT Producer: Sukey Firth. SAT SAT Neil Pearson SAT SAT Amma Asante SAT SAT Gareth Thomas SAT SAT John Moloney SAT SAT Old Crow Medicine Show SAT SAT My Brightest Diamond SAT My Brightest Diamond is performing at Village Underground, SAT London on Tuesday 28th, Brudenell Social Club, Leeds on SAT Wednesday 29th, Oran Mor, Glasgow on Thursday 30th and The SAT Workmans Club, Dublin on Friday 31st October. SAT SAT 19:00 Profile b04lp5cl (Listen) SAT Sir Andrew Green SAT SAT Migration Watch UK's founder Sir Andrew Green is to become a SAT member of the House of Lords. Presenter Jo Fidgen talks to SAT Sir Andrew's old friends and colleagues in an attempt to SAT find out what motivated this SAT former ambassador to Syria and Saudi Arabia become one of SAT the UK's most influential voices on immigration. SAT Producer: Laura Gray. SAT SAT 19:15 Saturday Review b04lp5cn (Listen) SAT Grayson Perry, Brad Pitt in Fury, Dance Umbrella: Harlem SAT Dream, Per Petterson I Refuse, The Missing SAT SAT Grayson Perry's new exhibition at London's National Portrait SAT Gallery is called "Who Are You". Through pots and paintings, SAT a hijab and tapestry it explores the nature of identity. SAT Brad Pitt's latest film SAT Fury follows a tank crew towards the end of WW2, when a SAT rooky soldier joins the grizzled old conflict-hardened team SAT in the hell of war. SAT London's Young Vic Theatre plays host to Dance Umbrella SAT 2014. We'll be reviewing Harlem Dream - a work by young SAT British choreographer Ivan Blackstock in which The Harlem SAT Renaissance collides with hip hop. SAT Norwegian writer Per Petterson's 2003 novel Out Stealing SAT Horses won critical acclaim. His newest 'I Refuse' has been SAT hailed as a masterpiece in Norway - what will our panel make SAT of the newly published English translation? SAT And every parent's nightmare - a child disappears on a SAT family holiday - is the plot of BBC1's new drama The SAT Missing, which stars James Nesbitt. SAT Tom Sutcliffe's guests are Blake Morrison, Natalie Haynes SAT and Judith Mackrell. The producer is Oliver Jones. SAT SAT A Harlem Dream SAT A Harlem Dream SAT is at the Young Vic in London until 1 November 2014. Main SAT Image: The company of A Harlem Dream. Photo by Chris Nash. SAT SAT I Refuse SAT SAT Fury SAT SAT The Missing SAT The Missing SAT begins on Tuesday 28 October, 9pm, BBC One. SAT SAT Grayson Perry: Who Are You? SAT Grayson Perry: Who Are You? SAT is on display until 15 March 2015. SAT SAT Credits SAT Presenter: Tom Sutcliffe SAT Interviewed Guest: Blake Morrison SAT Interviewed Guest: Natalie Haynes SAT Interviewed Guest: Judith Mackrell SAT Producer: Oliver Jones SAT SAT 20:00 Archive on 4 b04m9z8t (Listen) SAT Cerys Goes Under Milk Wood SAT SAT Cerys Matthews unlocks an archive of rare interviews, made SAT by her uncle Colin Edwards, with Dylan Thomas's closest SAT friends and family. The recordings date from the early SAT 1960s, a decade after the poet's death, SAT when his reputation was becoming clouded by scandal. SAT Cerys believed the recordings lost or destroyed. In fact, SAT over a hundred hours of interviews were bequeathed to the SAT National Library of Wales by her uncle's widow and some of SAT them are broadcast here for the first time. SAT This personal journey into the archive is both a celebration SAT of the life of Dylan Thomas and a glimpse into the life of SAT her uncle - 'an eccentric, radical journalist and SAT film-maker'. Here Cerys goes Under Milk Wood - into the SAT communities in which Dylan Thomas lived. SAT We hear Dylan's mother, Florence, describe how the SAT eight-year-old Dylan would write poems about the kitchen SAT sink. Dylan's school friend Charles Fisher recalls how he SAT 'collected words like rare butterflies'. Dylan's daughter, SAT Aeronwy , reflects on his daily rituals and drinking habits. SAT One of his closest friends Bert Trick, a Marxist grocer from SAT Swansea, describes Dylan's profane sense of humour. And we SAT hear from theatre director Philip Burton and poet Robert SAT Lowell about meetings with Dylan towards the end of his SAT life. SAT 'Listening to these tapes I started to understand the SAT strange contradictions at the heart of Dylan Thomas. The SAT boozer with the self-discipline to write verse, the child SAT with a visionary voice, the buffoon who took life so SAT seriously,' says Cerys. SAT Some of Cerys's favourite Dylan Thomas poems and writings SAT are set to music in the programme. Jeff Towns, Terry Jones, SAT Andrew Lycett, Gwen Watkins and David Thomas also SAT contribute. SAT Produced by Sarah Cuddon SAT A Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4. SAT SAT 21:00 Classic Serial b04lpd9w (Listen) SAT For Whom the Bell Tolls, Episode 2 SAT SAT By Ernest Hemingway SAT Adapted by Ed Hime SAT SAT Part 2 SAT SAT High in the pine forests of the Spanish Sierra, Robert SAT Jordan, a young American volunteer, camps with a band of SAT guerrillas as they prepare to blow up a vital bridge as SAT part of a Republican offensive during the Spanish Civil War. SAT In the camp Robert Jordan has forged loyalties, made a SAT dangerous enemy and fallen in love. He also has reason to SAT fear that the enemy are aware of the offensive. But as the SAT appointed hour approaches, it may be too late and he must SAT face the inevitable. SAT Director: Sasha Yevtushenko. SAT SAT Credits SAT Narrator: Colin Stinton SAT Robert Jordan: Patrick Kennedy SAT Pablo: Ralph Ineson SAT Pilar: Melanie Kilburn SAT Maria: Leah Brotherhead SAT Anselmo: Michael Bertenshaw SAT Agustin: Paul Heath SAT Rafael: Shaun Mason SAT El Sordo: Ian Conningham SAT Primitivo: David Acton SAT Andres: Arthur Hughes SAT Fernando: Monty d'Inverno SAT Adaptor: Ed Hime SAT Author: Ernest Hemingway SAT Director: Sasha Yevtushenko SAT SAT 22:00 News and Weather b04lp5cq (Listen) SAT The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4, SAT followed by weather. SAT SAT 22:15 Moral Maze b04lsmhx (Listen) SAT Ched Evans SAT SAT The case of the footballer and convicted rapist Ched Evans SAT is a morality tale for our times. Evans, who played for SAT Wales and Sheffield United, was jailed for 5 and a half SAT years after being found guilty of SAT raping a woman who was so drunk she couldn't give her SAT consent. Clayton McDonald, then a Port Vale defender, who SAT was also involved, was cleared of the same charge. Evans has SAT always maintained his innocence and has not apologised to SAT the victim. He's now been released on licence and there are SAT calls for him to return to his footballing career. An online SAT petition with 150,000 signatures says Sheffield United SAT should not take him back. The story may read like a tawdry SAT tabloid expose, but it actually goes to the heart of the SAT kind of society we want and the kind of people we want to SAT be. Should a convicted rapist who's served his time and SAT maintains his innocence be entitled to get his job back? SAT Does the need for forgiveness and rehabilitation trump the SAT need for continuing disgrace and the need to make an example SAT of someone who for many should be a role model? Does the SAT fact of being a high profile figure put you in a different SAT moral category that deserves extra punished? Or does that SAT send out a message that even though you've served your time SAT you still may not be allowed the chance to rebuild your life SAT and reintegrate in to society. SAT Panellists: Michael Portillo, Melanie Phillips, Claire Fox, SAT Giles Fraser SAT Witnesses: Charlotte Webster, David Walsh, Dr Clare SAT Carlisle, Dr Nina Burrowes SAT Produced by Phil Pegum. SAT SAT 23:00 Counterpoint b04lpxx5 (Listen) SAT Series 28, Episode 5 SAT SAT (5/13) SAT The fifth heat of the 2014 series sees competitors from SAT Leeds, Leek in Staffordshire and Ulverston in Cumbria facing SAT Russell Davies' wide-ranging music questions. The programme SAT comes from Media City SAT in Salford. SAT Orchestral music, chamber music, opera, church music, jazz, SAT folk, stage and film musicals, classic rock and sixty years SAT of pop hits are all fair game - with the contestants having SAT no idea where the next question will take them. There are SAT plenty of musical extracts to suit every taste, with full SAT details of the music played available on the programmes' SAT webpages. SAT The winner will go through to the series semi-finals later SAT in the year. SAT Producer: Paul Bajoria. SAT SAT Today's competitors SAT SAT BILL CAWLEY, a supermarket worker, author and local SAT historian from Leek in Staffordshire; SAT SAT DIANE HALLAGAN, an accountant from Leeds; SAT SAT DAVID THOMPSON, a solicitor from Ulverston. SAT SAT 23:30 Poetry Please b04lpdb0 (Listen) SAT Birmingham Literature Festival SAT SAT Roger McGough presents an as-it-happens request edition on SAT stage at the Birmingham Literature Festival as audience SAT members pick their favourite poems. Will it be Not Waving SAT but Drowning or The Way through the SAT Woods, The Listeners or Timothy Winters, The Sunne Rising or SAT Snake? The readers are Eleanor Tremain and Peter Marinker. SAT Producer: Tim Dee. SAT SAT This Week's Poems SAT SAT Timothy Winters SAT SAT by Charles Causley SAT SAT SAT SAT Remember SAT SAT by Christina Rossetti SAT SAT SAT SAT Adlestrop SAT SAT by Edward Thomas SAT SAT SAT SAT Not Adlestrop SAT SAT By Dannie Abse SAT SAT SAT SAT The Listeners SAT SAT by Walter de la Mare SAT SAT SAT SAT To His Coy Mistress SAT SAT By Andrew Marvell SAT SAT SAT SAT Ithaka SAT SAT By C.P Cavafy SAT SAT translated from the Greek by Edmund SAT SAT Keeley & Philip Sherrard SAT SAT SAT SAT Tarantella SAT SAT By Hilaire Belloc SAT SAT SAT SAT When You are Old SAT SAT by WB Yeats SAT SAT SAT SAT Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening SAT SAT by Robert Frost SAT SAT SAT SAT Everything taken from Poetry Please – The Nation’s Best SAT Loved Poems, published by Faber apart from ‘Not Adlestrop’ SAT by Dannie Abse, taken from ‘Purple Coat, White Coat: SAT Collected Poems’, published by Hutchinson SAT SAT SAT SAT Credits SAT Presenter: Roger McGough SAT Reader: Eleanor Tremain SAT Reader: Peter Marinker SAT Producer: Tim Dee SAT SAT SUN SUNDAY 26 OCTOBER 2014 SUN SUN 00:00 Midnight News b04mb0s1 (Listen) SUN The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. SUN Followed by Weather. SUN SUN 00:30 Brazilian Bonanza b03cv47m (Listen) SUN Valdir Peres, Juanito and Poloskei SUN SUN Valdir Peres, Juanito and Poloskei is by Antonio Prata. On a SUN suburban street in 1980s Brazil, status and wealth are SUN measured by the size and sophistication of the toys received SUN on birthdays and at Christmas. SUN Antonio Prata has published nine books, including Douglas SUN (2001), Adulterado (2009) and most recently, Meio SUN intelectual, meio de esquerda (2010). He also writes for SUN television and contributes a literary column to the SUN newspaper Folha de S.Paulo. SUN Daniel Hahn is a writer, editor and translator. He is the SUN recipient of the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. He is SUN currently national programme director of the British Centre SUN for Literary Translation. SUN Read by Julian Rhind-Tutt. SUN Translated by Daniel Hahn. SUN Abridged by Miranda Davies. SUN Produced by Elizabeth Allard. SUN SUN Credits SUN Reader: Julian Rhind-Tutt SUN Producer: Elizabeth Allard SUN Abridger: Miranda Davies SUN Author: Antonio Prata SUN SUN 00:48 Shipping Forecast b04mb0s3 (Listen) SUN The latest shipping forecast. SUN SUN 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b04mb0s5 (Listen) SUN BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. BBC Radio 4 resumes SUN at 5.20am. SUN SUN 05:20 Shipping Forecast b04mb0s7 (Listen) SUN The latest shipping forecast. SUN SUN 05:30 News Briefing b04mb0s9 (Listen) SUN The latest news from BBC Radio 4. SUN SUN 05:43 Bells on Sunday b04mb2r3 (Listen) SUN The bells of St. Bartholomew the Great, Smithfield in SUN London. SUN SUN 05:45 Profile b04lp5cl (Listen) SUN [Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Saturday] SUN SUN 06:00 News Headlines b04mb0sf (Listen) SUN The latest national and international news. SUN SUN 06:05 Something Understood b04mh74v (Listen) SUN The Fragile Contract SUN SUN For the playwright Polly Stenham, the theatre has always SUN provided a laboratory in which to examine and hopefully SUN understand the human condition. SUN SUN In a programme called The Fragile Contract, in reference to SUN the SUN relationship between audience and performance, Polly SUN reflects on our need for art and talks to the musician SUN Florence Welch. She also draws on the writings of Tennessee SUN Williams and John Zerzan, with music by Leonard Cohen among SUN others. SUN Produced by Hana Walker-Brown SUN A Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4. SUN SUN Readings SUN SUN Title: Blue Bird SUN Author: Charles Bukowski SUN Synopsis: An alternate personality hidden in the depths of SUN the speaker’s life, referred to as the bluebird. SUN SUN SUN SUN Title: How to Speak Poetry SUN Author: Leonard Cohen SUN Synopsis: Leonard Cohen's instruction manual of sorts on how SUN to speak poetry SUN SUN SUN SUN Title: A Streetcar Named Desire SUN Author: Tennessee Williams SUN Synopsis: Blanche DuBois’s poise is part of a persona she SUN presents to shield others (but most of all herself) from her SUN reality SUN SUN SUN SUN Title: The Case Against Art SUN Author: John Zerzan SUN Synopsis: Art is always about "something hidden." But does SUN it help us connect with that hidden something? SUN SUN SUN SUN 06:35 The Living World b04mh74x (Listen) SUN Nightjars SUN SUN Chris Sperring is in Somerset during the last days of summer SUN to find a bird that is one of the first to leave before the SUN autumn. As the light fades a strange whirring sound fills SUN the air and silent masters of flight hawk for moths and SUN other airborne insects. SUN SUN Nightjar (Caprimulgus europaeus) SUN SUN The webpage image featured here is courtesy of Mike Richards SUN (rspb-images.com). SUN SUN © Mike Richards / rspb-images.com SUN SUN Ian Parsons SUN SUN Ian spent twenty years working as a ranger for the Forestry SUN Commission and it was during that time that he got to know SUN the Nightjar. They are a bird that he has worked closely SUN with over many years, from leading guided walks to see them SUN and giving talks about them to finding nests for ringing SUN purposes or for television filming. Nowadays Ian runs a SUN bird watching tour company in Extremadura, Spain where SUN red-necked nightjars, a slightly different species to the SUN one in Britain lives, but is still just as fascinating. SUN When Ian is not leading birding tours he’s writing magazine SUN articles and books on birds and other wildlife. SUN SUN Andy Harris SUN SUN Download for free SUN SUN 06:57 Weather b04mb0sh (Listen) SUN The latest weather forecast. SUN SUN 07:00 News and Papers b04mb0sk (Listen) SUN The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers. SUN SUN 07:10 Sunday b04mh74z (Listen) SUN Sunday morning religious news and current affairs programme. SUN SUN 07:55 Radio 4 Appeal b04mgxtl (Listen) SUN Action Against Hunger SUN SUN Mel Giedroyc presents The Radio 4 Appeal for Action Against SUN Hunger, an international humanitarian organisation committed SUN to ending child hunger, with life-saving programmes in over SUN 45 countries, helping nine SUN million people each year. SUN Registered Charity No 1047501 SUN To Give: SUN - Freephone 0800 404 8144 SUN - Freepost BBC Radio 4 Appeal, mark the back of the envelope SUN ' Action Against Hunger'. SUN SUN Action Against Hunger SUN SUN Action Against Hunger is an international humanitarian SUN organisation committed SUN to ending child malnutrition. The fight against this SUN condition is one that we SUN can win: malnutrition is both treatable and preventable and SUN efforts are underway, on an international SUN level, to end child hunger in our generation. SUN With 30 years of SUN expertise in emergency situations of conflict, natural SUN disaster and chronic SUN food insecurity, Action Against Hunger runs life-saving SUN programmes in more than SUN 45 countries, including Syria, South Sudan, Iraq and the SUN Central African SUN Republic. Last year alone, we supported more than nine SUN million SUN people. SUN Listen to Mel’s appeal for Action Against Hunger to find out SUN why toddler Peter SUN and his mum Mary are smiling again in West Pokot, Kenya. SUN Peter and Mary Image copyright by: S Hauenstein Swan for SUN Action Against Hunger SUN SUN Supporting the conflict-affected SUN SUN Many people fleeing conflict walk for days seeking safety, SUN without access to food or clean water. Often, they arrive SUN at camps severely SUN malnourished. Since conflict erupted in South Sudan in SUN December 2013, more than SUN 1.4 million people have been displaced and more than SUN 400,000, many of them SUN women and children, have fled to neighbouring countries, SUN such as Ethiopia, in SUN search of safety. In these emergency situations, our teams SUN provide life-saving SUN therapeutic treatment, as well as psychological support, SUN and food, water, SUN sanitation and hygiene assistance, in a bid to reduce SUN suffering and save lives. SUN Leitchor refugee camp in Ethiopia: Image Copyright Agnes SUN Varraine-Leca for Action Against Hunger SUN SUN Providing life-saving support SUN SUN In the Sahel, widespread poverty, food insecurity and SUN conflict has led to alarming childhood malnutrition rates SUN in some areas. Bintu SUN Niare, 2, from Balako, Mali, weighed just five kilos when SUN her mother brought SUN her to an Action Against Hunger-supported health centre. We SUN administered SUN life-saving treatment and gave Bintu’s mum vital SUN nutritional advice to help SUN ensure her children grow up healthy. Meanwhile, our food SUN security, water and SUN sanitation programmes, along with ongoing support to public SUN health systems, attempt SUN to address some of the root causes of this hunger. SUN Bintu Niare in Mali: Image Copyright by Alicia Garcia for SUN Action Against Hunger SUN SUN SUN Empowering communities SUN SUN When Typhoon Haiyan struck the Philippines almost a year SUN ago, SUN 19-year-old Roselyn Omeres SUN (pictured, SUN centre), SUN her 11 siblings, and ill mother, survived, but their home, SUN land and SUN livelihood means were destroyed. With their home now SUN rebuilt, Roselyn is using an SUN Action Against Hunger monthly cash grant to fulfil her SUN dream of opening a small SUN shop. Such cash-based interventions form part of our SUN long-term strategy to help SUN disaster-affected communities become self-sufficient again. SUN Roselyn Omeres in the Philippines: Image Copyright D. Burgui SUN for Action Against Hunger SUN SUN 07:57 Weather b04mb0sm (Listen) SUN The latest weather forecast. SUN SUN 08:00 News and Papers b04mb0sp (Listen) SUN The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers. SUN SUN 08:10 Sunday Worship b04mh751 (Listen) SUN Hope in the Darkness SUN SUN The Revd Dr Simon Jones, Chaplain of Merton College Oxford, SUN and the Revd Professor Alister McGrath explore the life and SUN spirituality of J R R Tolkien, one of Merton's most famous SUN dons, in the light of his SUN experience in the First World War. With Merton College Choir SUN directed by Benjamin Nicholas and accompanied by Charlie SUN Warren and Peter Shepherd. Producer: Stephen Shipley. SUN SUN 08:48 A Point of View b04lsy13 (Listen) SUN A Lesson from Love Locks SUN SUN Adam Gopnik draws a poignant lesson on the nature of true SUN love from the eyesore of love locks in Paris. "Love should SUN never be symbolised by a shackle. Love - real love, good SUN love, love to grow on rather than be trapped in - is a lock SUN to which the key is always available." SUN SUN Producer: Sheila Cook. SUN SUN Credits SUN Presenter: Adam Gopnik SUN Producer: Sheila Cook SUN SUN 08:58 Tweet of the Day b04hkygm (Listen) SUN Red-Billed Quelea SUN SUN Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship SUN with them, from around the world. SUN SUN Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the World's most numerous SUN bird; red billed quelea. Red-billed queleas are the most SUN numerous birds in the world and as part of the weaverbird SUN family sound and look like small neat sparrows. Their SUN ability to adapt to local conditions and travel for food SUN allows large populations of fast-breeding queleas to build SUN up. The statistics are mind-boggling. Some flocks of SUN red-billed quelea can comprise millions of birds which may SUN take hours to fly past. There are probably between one and a SUN half and ten billion birds in Africa. They breed in vast SUN colonies; one colony in Nigeria covered one hundred and ten SUN hectares and contained thirty one million nests. SUN SUN Red-billed quelea (Quelea quelea) SUN SUN Webpage image courtesy of Jabruson / naturepl.com. SUN N SUN PL Ref 01038186 SUN © Jabruson / naturepl.com SUN SUN Recording of red-billed quelea by Linda R Macaulay / Ref: ML SUN 100298 SUN SUN This programme contains a wildtrack SUN recording of the red-billed quelea SUN kindly provided by The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab SUN of Ornithology; recorded by Linda R Macaulay on 13 Jan 1996, SUN in Awash National Park, Ethiopia. SUN SUN 09:00 Broadcasting House b04mb0sr (Listen) SUN Sunday morning magazine programme with news and conversation SUN about the big stories of the week. SUN SUN 10:00 The Archers Omnibus b04mh753 (Listen) SUN Jill is concerned about Elizabeth, and Roy goes a step too SUN far. SUN SUN Credits SUN Writer: Tim Stimpson SUN Director: Kim Greengrass SUN Editor: Sean O'Connor SUN Jill Archer: Patricia Greene SUN David Archer: Timothy Bentinck SUN Ruth Archer: Felicity Finch SUN Brian Aldridge: Charles Collingwood SUN Jennifer Aldridge: Angela Piper SUN Susan Carter: Charlotte Martin SUN Joe Grundy: Edward Kelsey SUN Eddie Grundy: Trevor Harrison SUN Clarrie Grundy: Heather Bell SUN Will Grundy: Philip Molloy SUN Ed Grundy: Barry Farrimond SUN Jazzer McCready: Ryan Kelly SUN Elizabeth Pargetter: Alison Dowling SUN Caroline Sterling: Sara Coward SUN Roy Tucker: Ian Pepperell SUN Peggy Woolley: June Spencer SUN Carol Tregorran: Eleanor Bron SUN SUN 11:15 Desert Island Discs b04mh755 (Listen) SUN Roger Graef SUN SUN Kirsty Young's guest is filmmaker and criminologist, Roger SUN Graef. SUN SUN Pioneering in his chosen subjects and style, for the past SUN fifty years he has shone a spotlight on hitherto hidden SUN areas of society and influenced SUN the entire genre of modern day documentary making. His films SUN on key institutions like the Police have not just helped SUN change attitudes but policy too. SUN A New Yorker and Harvard graduate, he first came to Britain SUN to study Shakespeare: his London debut as a theatre director SUN was a Tennessee Williams' play. He soon realised that the SUN drama and storylines of real life were where his heart and SUN talents lay. SUN He says, "What I want on my gravestone is 'Here Lies Roger SUN Graef - he made a difference ...' and people are telling me SUN that I have. But I don't think about it because there's so SUN much left to do." SUN Producer: Cathy Drysdale. SUN SUN Credits SUN Presenter: Kirsty Young SUN Interviewed Guest: Roger Graef SUN Producer: Cathy Drysdale SUN SUN 12:00 News Summary b04mb0st (Listen) SUN The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. SUN SUN 12:04 The Museum of Curiosity b04lpxxf (Listen) SUN Series 7, Episode 3 SUN SUN Professor of Ignorance John Lloyd and curator Phill Jupitus SUN discuss some new curiosities. SUN SUN Credits SUN Presenter: John Lloyd SUN Presenter: Phill Jupitus SUN SUN 12:32 Food Programme b04mh757 (Listen) SUN Women in the Kitchen SUN SUN Sheila Dillon looks at the state of play for female chefs in SUN the professional kitchen. She talks to Alice Waters, Sally SUN Clarke and Margot Henderson, among others. In light of SUN comments from some well known male SUN chefs, most recently Tom Kerridge, Sheila asks if the SUN kitchen as a working environment has really changed that SUN much over the last few decades and whether prejudice and a SUN macho culture deters up and coming talent. SUN Producer: Sarah Langan. SUN SUN Credits SUN Presenter: Sheila Dillon SUN Interviewed Guest: Alice Waters SUN Interviewed Guest: Sally Clarke SUN Interviewed Guest: Margot Henderson SUN Producer: Sarah Langan SUN SUN 12:57 Weather b04mb0sw (Listen) SUN The latest weather forecast. SUN SUN 13:00 The World This Weekend b04mh759 (Listen) SUN Global news and analysis; presented by Mark Mardell. SUN SUN 13:30 In Search of the Real Searchers b04mh75d (Listen) SUN In 1956 John Ford's film The Searchers offered a vivid and SUN complex portrayal of frontier life in post Civil War Texas SUN dominated by the brooding presence of John Wayne's Ethan SUN Edwards, a bitter, brooding war SUN veteran searching for his kidnapped niece. Adapted from Alan SUN LeMay's classic novel, dramatized later today on Radio 4, SUN The Searchers has become an enduring classic. But what is SUN the real history behind the 1954 novel and later film? Who SUN were the real searchers? SUN Mark Burman takes an epic journey across the American West SUN that begins in God's own movie set, Monument Valley, the SUN backdrop for all Ford's Westerns from Stagecoach onwards. On SUN screen this is Texas 1868, marauded by Comanches. In reality SUN this is Arizona, the Indians are Navajo and their leader, SUN Scar, is actually Heinrich von Kleinbach! This is a piece of SUN casting that finds unlikely echoes in the real history SUN behind The Searchers. SUN Three decades separate two raids that encapsulate the long SUN war between the Comanches and the white settlers who found SUN their way to Texas in ever growing numbers. In 1836 a brutal SUN attack on Fort Parker saw the abduction of 9 year old SUN Cynthia Ann Parker whilst in 1864 the Elm Creek Raid took SUN the family of black slave Britt Johnson. These events and SUN other bitter encounters between Comanches and Texans shaped SUN both Texas history and the later mythology of the Wild West. SUN The real searchers, Burman finds, are even more heroic than SUN John Wayne and a challenge to the movie stereotypes of SUN cowboys and Indians. SUN Producer: Mark Burman. SUN SUN 14:00 Gardeners' Question Time b04lsxhc (Listen) SUN Findon SUN SUN Eric Robson chairs the horticultural panel programme from SUN Findon in West Sussex. Bunny Guinness, Christine Walkden and SUN Matthew Wilson take questions from the audience of local SUN gardeners. SUN SUN Produced by Howard SUN Shannon SUN A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4 SUN For more information on Tristan Gooley, the Natural SUN Navigator featured in this week's programme - visit his SUN website here: www.naturalnavigator.com SUN This week's questions and answers: SUN Q. Can I dig out and transplant a small offshoot (a sucker SUN from the rootstock) of a Japanese Maple? If so, what is the SUN best time to do this? SUN A. Yes, you could do this, but as Japanese Maples are SUN grafted onto the rootstock of other Acers, so you may get a SUN surprise if the shoot is from the roots! However, it could SUN be a seedling. Either way, move it in late spring. SUN Q. How and when should I prune a vigorous Honey Suckle? SUN A. Cut it down to two foot next May. You could train the SUN shoots horizontally to encourage flowering. SUN Q. Can I propagate from Agapanthus seeds? Do they need to be SUN dried and what's the best time to do this? SUN A. The seeds have to be fully ripe before you sow them. The SUN capsule will turn brown and start splitting - this is the SUN time to harvest. Leave the seeds somewhere quite warm to dry SUN out for about a month. Sow the seeds in a gritty soil mix - SUN possibly a mix of John Innes cutting compost with 25 to 50 SUN percent grit added. Plant them about an inch deep, leave SUN them on the kitchen windowsill and be prepared to wait for SUN anything from a month to up to six months for germination. SUN Leave the seedlings in the seed tray for the first year SUN until you see at least one true leaf. Feed the bulbs with a SUN half-strength fertiliser in the fist year to keep them SUN growing and try and keep them growing for as long as SUN possible. Then let them go dormant and when they come into SUN growth the second year it's time to pot them individually. SUN Alternatively, you could just divide up existing Agapanthus SUN plants. SUN Q. Is there a good time to move Peonies and does the panel SUN have any advice on how to encourage flowering? SUN A. The books say don't do it, but Peonies do move well. Lift SUN the plant in a big clump if possible. Move it in February/ SUN March if you have clay soil. Make sure it has enough SUN moisture. If it's too big to move as one clump, split it SUN gently with your hands and a knife. Make sure you don't SUN plant too high because peonies need lots of moisture and SUN they won't get this if grown on high ground. SUN Q. What is the secret to the successful propagation of SUN French Tarragon? SUN A. Cuttings. Put them straight into a gritty soil early in SUN the spring. SUN Q. When is a gnarly old rose bush too old? SUN A. When it stops flowering well and looks decrepit. SUN Q. How should I tame my large Callistemon (Bottlebrush) SUN plant? SUN A. Prune beyond the knobbly bits soon after flowering and be SUN bold - they look great if you grow them in large swathes. SUN SUN 14:45 The Listening Project b04mh75g (Listen) SUN Fi Glover introduces a conversation between a mother and son SUN from Carlisle about whose right it was to reveal he was gay, SUN and the depression which both he and his father have SUN experienced, in the Omnibus edition SUN of the series that proves it's surprising what you hear when SUN you listen. SUN The Listening Project is a Radio 4 initiative that offers a SUN snapshot of contemporary Britain in which people across the SUN UK volunteer to have a conversation with someone close to SUN them about a subject they've never discussed intimately SUN before. The conversations are being gathered across the UK SUN by teams of producers from local and national radio stations SUN who facilitate each encounter. Every conversation - they're SUN not BBC interviews, and that's an important difference - SUN lasts up to an hour, and is then edited to extract the key SUN moment of connection between the participants. Most of the SUN unedited conversations are being archived by the British SUN Library and used to build up a collection of voices SUN capturing a unique portrait of the UK in the second decade SUN of the millennium. You can learn more about The Listening SUN Project by visiting bbc.co.uk/listeningproject SUN Producer: Marya Burgess. SUN SUN 15:00 Classic Serial b04mh75j (Listen) SUN The Searchers, Episode 1 SUN SUN By Alan Le May SUN Dramatised for radio by Adrian Bean SUN SUN Episode one of a new adaptation of the classic western SUN novel, upon which the famous film was based. SUN SUN Texas, 1848. When Comanches attack the Edwards family's SUN settlement on the Texas plains, they kidnap two girls - SUN seventeen year-old Lucy and ten year-old Debbie. So Amos SUN Edwards sets out on the dangerous mission to recover his two SUN nieces, with the help of his nephew Mart and a rag-tag bunch SUN of searchers. Their epic mission will last six years. The SUN concluding episode is at the same time next week. SUN Alan Le May's 1954 novel is a timeless work of western SUN fiction and a no-holds-barred portrait of the real American SUN frontier. It explores the fear and the hatred that SUN underpinned the lives of both the white settlers and the SUN Native Americans. And what emerges is a violent account of a SUN creeping genocide, as one culture inevitably triumphs over SUN the other. SUN John Ford's 1956 film, based on the novel, starred John SUN Wayne as Ethan Edwards (called Amos in the book and radio SUN adaptation). Ford's film was named the Greatest Western SUN Movie of all time by the American Film Institute in 2008. SUN Radio 4 investigates the story behind the novel with 'In SUN Search of the Real Searchers' at 1.30pm on Sunday 26th SUN October. And for more western drama, a new adaptation of SUN Glendon Swarthout's 'The Shootist' is broadcast Saturday SUN 25th October at 2.30pm. SUN Directed by James Robinson SUN A BBC Cymru/Wales Production. SUN SUN Credits SUN Mart Pauley: Simon Lee Phillips SUN Amos Edwards: William Hope SUN Laurie Mathison: Kezrena James SUN Aaron Mathison: Kerry Shale SUN Captain Clinton: Kerry Shale SUN Mrs Mathison: Marilyn Le Conte SUN Brad Mathison: Ronan Summers SUN Charlie McCorry: PJ Brennan SUN Mose Harper: John Cording SUN Lije Powers: Alun Raglan SUN Adaptor: Adrian Bean SUN Author: Alan Le May SUN Director: James Robinson SUN SUN 16:00 Open Book b04mgxtn (Listen) SUN Sports Writing SUN SUN A special edition of Open Book about sports writing. SUN Mariella Frostrup is joined by novelist Philip Kerr, who has SUN just written a murder mystery set in fictional premiership SUN football club; by former England SUN rugby player Brian Moore whose second book is a hair-raising SUN account of life on rugby tour and by critics John Gaustad SUN and Professor Diane Roberts who chose their favourite sports SUN books. SUN SUN BOOKLIST SUN SUN January Window by Philip Kerr – Publisher: Head of Zeus SUN A Man Without Breath: A Bernie Gunther Novel (Bernie Gunther SUN Mystery 9) by Philip Kerr – Publisher: Quercus SUN What Goes on Tour, Stays on Tour by Brian Moore - Publisher: SUN Simon & Schuster SUN Beware of the Dog: Rugby’s Hard Man Reveals All by Brian SUN Moore – Publisher: Simon & Schuster SUN End Zone by Don Delillo - Publisher: Picador SUN Underworld by Don Delillo - Publisher: Picador SUN Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream by H G SUN Bissinger – Publisher: Yellow Jersey SUN Netherland by Joseph O’Neil – Publisher: Harper Perennial SUN The Game by Ken Dryden – Publisher: Triumph Books SUN The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach – Publisher: Fourth SUN Estate SUN Love Game: A History of Tennis, from Victorian Pastime to SUN Global Phenomenon by Elizabeth Wilson – Publisher: Serpent's SUN Tail SUN The Bogeyman by George Plimpton – Publisher: Harper and Row SUN SUN Credits SUN Presenter: Mariella Frostrup SUN Interviewed Guest: Philip Kerr SUN Interviewed Guest: Brian Moore SUN Interviewed Guest: John Gaustad SUN Interviewed Guest: Diane Roberts SUN Producer: Nicola Holloway SUN SUN 16:30 Cold War Poet b04mh75l (Listen) SUN Within a year of his death, Dylan Thomas exploded into SUN occupied West Germany with his popular radio play Under Milk SUN Wood. By the end of the 80s, his poetry had firmly SUN established his reputation on the other SUN side of the Berlin Wall, in Communist East Germany. In this SUN programme marking the Welsh poet's centenary, former Berlin SUN correspondent Stephen Evans explores how Dylan Thomas became SUN a cultural export for the British during the Cold War, and SUN how his work helped sustain a generation of East Germans SUN struggling with a totalitarian state trying to control what SUN they read, wrote and thought. SUN SUN 17:00 File on 4 b04lq2yg (Listen) SUN Ebola SUN SUN Ebola is now regarded as an international threat to peace SUN and security, according to the World Health Organisation. SUN Yet, when the WHO was first warned of an unprecedented SUN outbreak, the organisation said it was SUN "still relatively small." SUN Now the UK has asked for volunteers to travel to West Africa SUN to try to bring Ebola under control. Thousands of American SUN troops are also flying out to the region. But could all this SUN have been avoided? Simon Cox asks why it took so long for SUN the world to wake up to the threat posed by Ebola? He also SUN investigates the treatments that are now, belatedly, being SUN developed - treatments that have existed for decades. SUN Vaccines and other drugs are being rushed into production at SUN an unprecedented pace, by-passing the usual safety controls. SUN However, all predictions are that many more people will die SUN before the disease is brought under control. Even then, will SUN it become endemic? SUN Reporter: Simon Cox SUN Producer: John Murphy. SUN SUN 17:40 Profile b04lp5cl (Listen) SUN [Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Saturday] SUN SUN 17:54 Shipping Forecast b04mb0sy (Listen) SUN The latest shipping forecast. SUN SUN 17:57 Weather b04mb0t0 (Listen) SUN The latest weather forecast. SUN SUN 18:00 Six O'Clock News b04mb0t2 (Listen) SUN The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. SUN SUN 18:15 Pick of the Week b04mh917 (Listen) SUN Flying cars, singing monks and the true story behind one of SUN the greatest Westerns ever made are just some of this week's SUN highlights. SUN SUN We look back on the day Paul Robeson sang to an audience in SUN London, from New SUN York thanks to the technology of the transatlantic telephone SUN cable and we visit Bhutan to hear how technology is SUN threatening the countries linguistic traditions. SUN There's Cerys Matthews singing Dylan Thomas and Ian Fleming SUN complaining about New York waiters. SUN Join Sarfraz Manzoor on Pick of the Week, 6.15pm this Sunday SUN evening. SUN SUN 19:00 The Archers b04mbw5q (Listen) SUN Contemporary drama in a rural setting. SUN SUN 19:15 The Write Stuff b04mh919 (Listen) SUN Jerome K Jerome SUN SUN Radio 4's literary panel show, hosted by James Walton, with SUN team captains Sebastian Faulks and John Walsh and guests SUN Mark Billingham and Lynne Truss. The author of the week - SUN Jerome K Jerome. SUN SUN Produced by Alexandra Smith. SUN SUN 19:45 Under My Bed b04mh91c (Listen) SUN Ruthless SUN SUN Three writers fictionally explore the memories and stories SUN of what characters might have stashed away in the dark, SUN under their beds with some shocking revelations. SUN SUN Many children believe there is a monster or SUN something strange and dark and menacing lurking under their SUN bed, just waiting to leap out when the lights are off and SUN everyone is asleep. As we grow up it's a place for hiding SUN things, for playing or exploring. Later still it's where we SUN stash the overspill of student or adult lives, where we keep SUN boxes of photos or the detritus of life that holds memories SUN we can't bring ourselves to throw away. It's where we hide SUN the Christmas presents, stash diaries, love letters and SUN wedding albums. As we get older still perhaps it's the place SUN where slippers, half read books or life savings nestle. And SUN it's a place which evolves and changes with us throughout SUN life. SUN Writer ..... Kate Perry SUN Reader ..... Conleth Hill SUN Producer ..... Gemma McMullan. SUN SUN Credits SUN Writer: Kate Perry SUN Reader: Conleth Hill SUN Producer: Gemma McMullan SUN SUN 20:00 Feedback b04m3jd2 (Listen) SUN Lord Heseltine has been criticised for his use of the word SUN 'handicapped' on Radio 4's Any Questions. But should SUN Jonathan Dimbleby or the programme's producers have stepped SUN in to correct him? Radio 4's Peter SUN White, who's also the BBC's Disability Affairs SUN Correspondent, gives his take on the evolution of SUN terminology -and the minefield of words to avoid. SUN Moral Maze presenter Michael Buerk also came under fire this SUN week for his choice of words in a live on-air trail. He was SUN promoting this week's debate on whether the footballer and SUN convicted rapist Ched Evans should be allowed to return to SUN his footballing career. But the trail led many to accuse the SUN presenter of victim blaming. SUN And will there ever be a perfect political interview to SUN please all listeners? This week the interviewing skills of SUN Today presenters John Humphrys and Sarah Montague are called SUN into question. But who is really at fault here - is it the SUN combative approach of interviewers or the impenetrable SUN defence of politicians? SUN The BBC wants to reflect the UK's ethnic diversity more SUN accurately in both television and radio broadcasting. In SUN order to widen their pool of expert contributors, the BBC SUN Academy has launched a series of Black and Minority Ethnic SUN Expert Voices Days. Two applicants who attended the event SUN explain why they want to help change the look and sound of SUN the BBC. SUN And get your headphones at the ready for a glimpse into the SUN world of surround sound and binaural audio. SUN Produced by Will Yates SUN A Whistledown production for BBC Radio 4. SUN SUN 20:30 Last Word b04m3jd0 (Listen) SUN Lynda Bellingham, Ben Bradlee, Geoffrey Perry, John Holt SUN SUN Andrea Catherwood on: SUN Lynda Bellingham, a much loved actress, best known as the SUN gravy making mum in Oxo television ads. SUN SUN Ben Bradlee, charismatic editor of the Washington Post, at SUN the helm of the paper when it SUN broke the Watergate scandal which brought down President SUN Nixon. SUN John Holt, the honey voiced Jamaican reggae artist and SUN songwriter. SUN Geoffrey Perry, a Berlin born Jew who became an officer in SUN the British army and captured Lord Haw Haw, the Nazi SUN propaganda broadcaster, at the end of the war. SUN SUN Lynda Bellingham (pictured) SUN SUN Andrea spoke to her husband, Michael Pattemore and to Jan SUN Etherington, script writer on SUN Second Thoughts. SUN SUN Born 31 May 1948; died 19 October 2014 aged 66. SUN SUN Ben Bradlee SUN SUN Andrea spoke to the journalist and broadcaster Michael SUN Goldfarb. SUN SUN Born 26 August 1921; died 21 October 2014 aged 93. SUN SUN Geoffrey Perry (Horst Pinschewer) SUN SUN Andrea spoke to his son Nick Perry and to the historian SUN Helen Fry. SUN SUN Born 11 April 1922; died 14 September 2014 aged 92. SUN SUN John Holt SUN SUN Andrea spoke to the reggae expert David Katz. SUN SUN Born 11 July 1947; died 19 October 2014 aged 67. SUN SUN Credits SUN Presenter: Andrea Catherwood SUN Producer: Neil George SUN SUN 21:00 Money Box b04lp5c0 (Listen) SUN [Repeat of broadcast at 12:04 on Saturday] SUN SUN 21:26 Radio 4 Appeal b04mgxtl (Listen) SUN [Repeat of broadcast at 07:55 today] SUN SUN 21:30 Analysis b04lpyhv (Listen) SUN The Idea of the Caliphate SUN SUN What is a caliphate? What ideals does such an Islamic state SUN embody - and how could or should it be implemented? Analysis SUN consults a range of voices to explore how the concept has SUN evolved and has been expressed SUN over the centuries. Edward Stourton talks to historians, SUN religious scholars and political thinkers who offer their SUN perspectives on caliphates of the past, the revivalist SUN rhetoric of the present and the beliefs shared by many SUN Muslims about its future return. SUN Contributors: SUN Prof Hugh Kennedy, School of Oriental and African Studies SUN Sheikh Ruzwan Mohammed, Sunni theologian and scholar SUN Rebecca Mastertron, Shiite commentator SUN Dr Reza Pankhurst, author, "The Inevitable Caliphate?" SUN Dr Caroline Finkel, author, "Osman's Dream: the History of SUN the Ottoman Empire" SUN Dr Salman Sayyid, Leeds University, author, "Recalling the SUN Caliphate" SUN Dr Abdou Filali Ansary, Aga Khan University SUN Presenter: Edward Stourton SUN Producer: Polly Hope. SUN SUN 22:00 Westminster Hour b04mb0t6 (Listen) SUN Weekly political discussion and analysis with MPs, experts SUN and commentators. SUN SUN 22:45 What the Papers Say b04mh91f (Listen) SUN Oly Duff of The I Paper analyses how the newspapers are SUN covering the biggest stories. SUN SUN 23:00 The Film Programme b04lss81 (Listen) SUN Babadook, Scary children, Nightcrawler, Lightsabers SUN SUN Director of The Babadook, Jennifer Kent explains how she SUN used the psychological to create horror, and the talks about SUN the challenges in casting kids. Film critic Kim Newman takes SUN a look at children in horror SUN films, from The Innocents to The Exorcist. British actor Riz SUN Ahmed discusses his new role in Nightcrawler and discusses SUN the role that instant internet news plays in todays media SUN and our responsibility as consumers of it. Francine Stock SUN presents a new series running throughout The Film Programme SUN for the next two months- The Story Of The Sound Effect. To SUN mark the BFI's season Days Of Fear And Wonder, the programme SUN will hear from the people who created some of the most SUN famous sound effects in the history of science fiction SUN cinema. This week, Ben Burtt on the lightsaber. SUN SUN Nightcrawler SUN SUN Credits SUN Presenter: Francine Stock SUN Interviewed Guest: Ben Burtt SUN SUN 23:30 Something Understood b04mh74v (Listen) SUN [Repeat of broadcast at 06:05 today] SUN SUN MON MONDAY 27 OCTOBER 2014 MON MON 00:00 Midnight News b04mb0v7 (Listen) MON The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. MON Followed by Weather. MON MON 00:15 Thinking Allowed b04lsmhl (Listen) MON Junk Food Traders in Secondary Schools; Darjeeling Tea MON Workers MON MON Tea workers in Darjeeling. Laurie Taylor talks to Sarah MON Besky, Assistant Professor in Anthropology at the University MON of Michigan, about her study of the tough lives of tea MON plantation workers, and the struggle MON to re-make one of the world's most expensive teas for the MON 21st century consumer. Also, the sociologist, Adam Fletcher, MON discusses an emerging underground trade in junk food at MON English secondary schools. Is this an unforeseen result of MON 'healthy food' policies? MON MON Adam Fletcher MON MON Senior Lecturer in Social Science and Health, School of MON Social Sciences, Cardiff University MON MON Find out more about Dr MON Adam Fletcher MON MON MON Abstract: MON ‘We’ve Got Some Underground Business Selling Junk Food’: MON Qualitative Evidence of the Unintended Effects of English MON School Food Policies MON Adam Fletcher, Farah Jamal, Natasha Fitzgerald-Yau and Chris MON Bonell MON Sociology June 2014 vol. 48 no. 3 500-517 MON doi: 10.1177/0038038513500102 MON MON Sarah Besky MON MON Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of Michigan MON MON Find out more about MON Sarah Besky MON The Darjeeling Distinction: Labor and Justice on Fair-trade MON Tea Plantations in India MON Publisher: University of California Press MON ISBN-10: 0520277392 MON ISBN-13: 978-0520277397 MON MON Ethnography Award MON Thinking Allowed in association with the British MON Sociological Association announces the annual award for a MON study that has made a significant contribution to MON ethnography: the in-depth analysis of the everyday life of a MON culture or sub-culture. MON MON Are you involved in social science research and completing MON or will have completed ethnography this year? The Award is MON open to any UK resident currently employed as a teacher or MON researcher or studying as a postgraduate in a UK institution MON of higher education. MON MON An entry should be a MON completed ethnography MON a qualitative research project which provides a detailed MON description of the practices of a group or culture. Any sole MON authored book or peer reviewed research article published MON during the calendar year of the award will be eligible. MON MON The judges for the Award are yet to be announced. MON MON The judges will be looking for work which displays MON flair MON originality MON and MON clarity MON alongside sound methodology. The work should make a MON significant contribution to knowledge and understanding in MON the relevant area of research. MON MON The panel of judges will select six finalists, and from that MON shortlist the judges will select an overall winner who will MON be awarded a prize of £1000. MON MON The winner of the Award will be announced at the MON BSA Annual Conference MON in April 2015. MON MON Read on for essential information and details on how to MON enter. MON MON HOW TO ENTER: MON MON You may submit one entry only, which must be sole authored. MON MON All entries must include the summary and contact details and MON a hard copy or electronic copy (attachments must be under MON the filesize of 10MB) of the ethnography. MON MON Email a summary of your work to MON ethnoaward@bbc.co.uk MON (no more than 250 words) along with your name and phone MON number. MON Please include the name of your paper in the 'Subject' MON category of your email. MON If you are submitting a paper MON it can be attached to your email, provided it is no more MON than 10MB. If you receive no automatic email confirmation MON your paper is too large and you will need to send it by MON post. MON If you are submitting a book MON (which must be published during this year) it should be MON posted to: MON Thinking Allowed MON Ethnography Award MON Room 6045 MON Broadcasting House MON London MON W1A 1AA MON Entries must be submitted by the closing date of 31st MON December 2014 MON TERMS & CONDITIONS: MON The Thinking Allowed Award for Ethnography Terms and MON Conditions MON MON MON 1. To be eligible to enter you must meet the following MON criteria: MON MON 2. Proof of age, identity and eligibility may be requested. MON The BBC’s decision as to the eligibility of individual MON entrants will be final and no correspondence will be entered MON into. MON MON 3. Entrants must submit by way of email to MON ethnoaward@bbc.co.uk MON a summary outlining the nature of an ethnography undertaken MON and published by the entrant. Please include the name of MON your paper in the 'Subject' category of your email. The MON summary should not be longer than 250 words. The ethnography MON must consist of a qualitative research project which MON provides a detailed, in-depth description of the everyday MON life and practice of a group, people or culture and been MON included in a peer-reviewed paper or in a book published in MON 2014. All entries and research must be in English. MON MON 4. The email entry must include the following information MON and contact detail for the entrant: full name, postal MON address, institution of higher education, email address and MON contact telephone number. MON MON 5. If you are submitting a book (which must be published MON during this year) it should be posted to: Thinking Allowed MON Ethnography Award, room 6045 Broadcasting House, London W1A MON 1AA. If it is a paper, it can be attached to your email, MON provided it is no more than 10MB. If you receive no MON automatic email confirmation your paper is too large and you MON will need to send it by post. MON MON 6. All entries must include the: (i) summary (by email); MON (ii) the contact details (by email) and (ii) hard MON copy/electronic copy (if under 10MB) of the ethnography. MON MON 7. Only one entry will be allowed per person. MON MON 8. Entries cannot be submitted by any other method or they MON will not be considered. MON MON 9. All entries must be sole authored. MON MON 10. A panel of 5 highly experienced academics will select MON six finalists. These may be contacted by the Production Team MON for an interview. From the finalists, the panel will select MON an overall winner. The selection criteria will be based on MON the work which displays flair and originality, and which MON makes a significant contribution to knowledge and MON understanding in the relevant area of research. Each entry MON will be a completed ethnography, a qualitative research MON project which provides a detailed, in-depth, description of MON the everyday life and practice of a group, people, or MON culture. Judges will be looking for work which displays MON flair, originality and clarity, alongside sound methodology. MON It should make a significant contribution to knowledge and MON understanding in the relevant area of research. MON MON 11. The prize will consist of: £1,000. The judges' decision MON will be final and the BBC will not enter into correspondence MON with the applicants. In the event of two outstanding MON entries, the prize of £1000 will be shared. MON MON 12. The finalists will be contacted by telephone in spring MON of 2015 and the winner announced in April 2015. If a MON selected entrant cannot be contacted after reasonable MON attempts have been made to do so, the BBC reserves the right MON to offer the prize to the next best entry. MON MON 13. The winner should refrain from referring to the award in MON order to promote commercial ventures. All references must be MON compliant with BBC branding policies. MON MON 14. The BBC will only ever use personal details for the MON purposes of administering the scheme. Please see the MON BBC’s Privacy Policy MON . MON MON 15. Closing date for entries is 23:59 on 31st December 2014. MON All entries which are received after that will not be MON considered. MON MON 16. The BBC cannot accept any responsibility for any problem MON with the internet or electronic mail system. MON MON 17. All entries must be the original work of the entrant and MON must not infringe the rights of any other party. The BBC MON accepts no liability if entrants ignore these rules and MON entrants agree to fully indemnify the BBC against any claims MON by any third party arising from any breach of these rules. MON MON 18. Entrants retain the copyright in their original ideas MON but on being selected will grant to the BBC a licence to MON broadcast their entry (or parts thereof) across all media, MON as well as use it on any online platforms on standard MON prevailing BBC terms (as agreed with the Writer’s Guild, MON Society of Authors and Personal Managers Association). MON MON 19. By applying for the award, entrants warrant that they MON have legal capacity to enter the scheme and agree to be MON bound by these terms and conditions. MON MON 20. The names of the all selected entrants and any entrant MON whose entry is broadcast or used on-line will be made MON public. Entrants must agree to take part in any post-event MON publicity if required. MON MON 21. The BBC reserves the right to disqualify any entry which MON breaches any of these terms and conditions. MON MON 22. The BBC reserves the right to cancel or alter the award MON (including amending these terms and conditions) at any MON stage, including members of the judging panel if deemed MON necessary in its opinion, and if circumstances arise outside MON its control. In this event, a notice will be posted on the MON following website: MON http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/thinkingallowed MON MON MON 23. These Terms and Conditions are governed by the laws of MON England and Wales. MON MON MON MON 00:45 Bells on Sunday b04mb2r3 (Listen) MON [Repeat of broadcast at 05:43 on Sunday] MON MON 00:48 Shipping Forecast b04mb0v9 (Listen) MON The latest shipping forecast. MON MON 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b04mb0vf (Listen) MON BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. MON MON 05:20 Shipping Forecast b04mb0vh (Listen) MON The latest shipping forecast. MON MON 05:30 News Briefing b04mb0vk (Listen) MON The latest news from BBC Radio 4. MON MON 05:43 Prayer for the Day b04mq2zs (Listen) MON Spiritual reflection to start the day with The Rev Laurence MON Twaddle. MON MON 05:45 Farming Today b04mb2r5 (Listen) MON The latest news about food, farming and the countryside. MON Presented by Charlotte Smith and Produced by Emma Campbell. MON MON 05:56 Weather b04mb0vm (Listen) MON The latest weather forecast for farmers. MON MON 05:58 Tweet of the Day b04hkym5 (Listen) MON Blue-Footed Booby MON MON Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship MON with them, from around the world. MON MON Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the Galapagos Islands MON blue-footed booby. Far off the Ecuador coastline the MON Galapagos MON Archipelago is home to a strange courtship dance and display MON of the male blue-footed booby and his large bright blue MON webbed feet. The intensity of the male's blue feet is viewed MON by the female as a sign of fitness and so he holds them up MON for inspection as he struts in front of her. She joins in, MON shadowing his actions. As the pair raise and lower their MON feet with exaggerated slow movements, they point their bills MON sky-wards while spreading their wings, raising their tails MON and calling. MON MON Blue-footed booby (Sula nebouxii) MON MON Webpage image courtesy of Christophe Courteau / MON naturepl.com. MON N MON PL Ref 01126446 MON © Christophe Courteau / naturepl.com. MON MON Credits MON Producer: Andrew Dawes MON Writer: Brett Westwood MON Executive Producer: Julian Hector MON Production Coordinator: Jamie Merritt MON Production Assistant: Tom Bonnett MON MON 06:00 Today b04mb2r7 (Listen) MON Morning news and current affairs. Including Sports Desk, MON Weather and Thought for the Day. MON MON 09:00 Start the Week b04mb2r9 (Listen) MON Revolution MON MON Russell Brand's calling for revolution now, to overthrow the MON system that he says supports extreme inequality. David MON Babbs, executive director of 38 Degrees, wants popular MON campaigns to bring about change and MON strengthen democracy. Juliet Barker re-examines the Great MON Revolt of 1381 and finds not a peasants' revolt but one by a MON new middle class in the shires, dissatisfied with a London MON elite. Philosopher Susan Neiman looks at how we are expected MON to abandon the adventures of youth if we are to grow up and MON asks, is there a new way to imagine what it means to be MON mature? MON Producer: Simon Tillotson. MON MON Credits MON Presenter: Tom Sutcliffe MON Interviewed Guest: Russell Brand MON Interviewed Guest: Susan Neiman MON Interviewed Guest: Juliet Barker MON Interviewed Guest: David Babbs MON Producer: Simon Tillotson MON MON 09:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6sd7 (Listen) MON Bismarck the Blacksmith MON MON Neil MacGregor charts the career of Otto von Bismarck MON (1815-98), known as the Iron Chancellor: he argued that the MON great questions of the day should be decided by 'iron and MON blood'. MON MON Bismarck was disliked and MON feared by foreigners, and reviled by liberals at home for MON his authoritarianism, but among many sections of the German MON population, he was a hero. MON At his death, monuments were erected across the whole MON country by public subscription, but Bismarck could also be MON brought into your own home. Small statues of Bismarck came MON in many guises, but few are more striking than the little MON bronze and plaster figure belonging to the German Historical MON Museum in Berlin, showing Bismarck the Blacksmith. MON Bald-headed, sleeves rolled up, wearing a leather apron and MON wielding his hammer, the middle-aged Bismarck is at his MON forge, the trusty village blacksmith. MON Producer Paul Kobrak. MON MON 10:00 Woman's Hour b04mb2rc (Listen) MON Miranda Hart; Changing your appearance; Fleet Street legend MON Felicity Green MON MON Jane Garvey presents the programme that offers a female MON perspective on the world. MON MON Miranda Hart MON MON The queen of slapstick comedy Miranda Hart pops into the MON studio for a cup of tea and a natter with some of her MON biggest fans. Five lucky admirers were picked to meet their MON comedy idol after responding to our ‘What Would You Most MON Like To Ask Miranda?’ appeal. Our special interviewers ask MON her about being funny, the role of female comedians, and of MON course, about her award winning TV series MON Miranda. MON "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /> MON MON Felicity Green, Fleet Street Legend MON MON Fleet Street legend Felicity Green joins Jane Garvey to MON describe her unique editorial position in the 60’s, riding a MON great wave of change for women who were celebrating a newly MON forged emancipation. She embraced youth culture with MON editorials full of vibrancy, miniskirts and cool; a part of MON the team who oversaw the circulation of the Daily Mirror MON rise above five million. MON MON Changing Your Appearance MON MON The radically changed appearance of Hollywood actress Renee MON Zellweger continues to provoke a heated debate about whether MON she may or may not have had plastic surgery. Is the MON criticism of the actress fair? After all, more of us are MON choosing to go under the knife. Last year in the UK more MON than 45,000 women and 4,700 men underwent some form of MON cosmetic procedure. A 17 % jump on the previous 12 months. MON So what does the debate about the Hollywood actress reveal MON about our own attitudes to changing our body shape? Shock, MON confusion or hypocrisy? Susie Orbach, writer and MON psychotherapist and Guardian beauty editor, Sali Hughes join MON the programme. MON "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /> MON MON The Conversation: Success Stories From Women Around The MON World MON MON The Oscar Pistorius trial has been dubbed ‘the trial of the MON century’ and Judge Thokozile Masipa, who presided over MON proceedings, is probably the best known judge in the world MON at the moment. But her story is as incredible as the role MON she’s played in the courtroom drama that has unfolded over MON the past year. From protester against apartheid, to becoming MON only the second black female judge in South Africa. Her MON story inspired the first programme of a new series on the MON BBC’s World Service, The Conversation. Each week the MON programme will explode the success stories of two women from MON two cultures, through conversation hosted by BBC Africa’s MON Kim Chakanetsa. Kim joins Jane to discuss the significance MON of this series. MON "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /> MON MON Rae Morris MON Rae Morris MON is one of the most in-demand new singer-songwriters in the MON UK. The 22 year old from Blackpool was the headliner at BBC MON Introducing Stage at Reading and Leeds Festival in August, MON where she had also appeared in 2011 at the early stages of MON her career . Her lustrous and emotive tones have received MON critical acclaim and she’s been compared to acts such as Cat MON Power and Feist. Although she’s played the piano since the MON age of 4, she started to write her own songs aged 17 and MON she’s already played venues such as the Shepherds Bush MON Empire and Albert Hall. She joins Jane Garvey to talk about MON her musical inspirations and to perform her new single MON Closer. MON MON MON MON Her new single Closer is out now and her debut album will be MON out in January. She will be performing at Portsmouth on MON Monday 27th and Cardiff on 30th October MON prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /> MON MON MON MON MON BBC Introducting Stage at Reading and Leeds Festival MON MON Sleep – how does it change at different stages in a woman’s MON life? MON MON Do you find that as you get older, your sleep is more MON disturbed? How do different stages in a woman’s life, from MON puberty, to pregnancy, the menopause and old age affect her MON sleeping patterns? And is it true that women need more sleep MON than men? Jane is joined by Professor Jim Horne from the MON Sleep Research Centre at Loughborough University to explain MON what is happening with women’s bodies and brains throughout MON her lifespan and what you can do if you want to get more MON sleep. MON British Sleep Society MON The Sleep Council MON Surrey Sleep Research Centre MON School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences MON Sleep Station MON British Psychological Society MON Sleep Apnoea Trust MON MON MON MON MON MON MON MON Credits MON Presenter: Jane Garvey MON MON 10:45 15 Minute Drama b04mb5z2 (Listen) MON My Life with Flu, Episode 1 MON MON By Sarah Woods MON MON A love story, about flu. MON MON It's January 1969, the winter after the summer of love, and MON Jill and David's fledgling relationship is about to be put MON to test by the outbreak of Hong Kong Flu. MON MON My Life with MON Flu has been produced in collaboration with the Wellcome MON Trust Sanger Institute. In five episodes it follows the MON story of Jill across five decades as she struggles with the MON highs and lows of life, love and viral infection. At the MON same time the story tracks the life of Hong Kong Flu - how, MON over 45 years, it has traversed the globe, evolved and is MON ultimately being superseded by new, more virulent strains, MON such as Swine Flu. MON Using cutting edge science - of transmission, viral MON evolution and genetic predisposition - it tells the story of MON flu, and investigates the unique qualities of Jill's genome MON which make her a 'severe responder'. Paul Kellam, Virus MON Genomics team leader at the Sanger Institute worked closely MON with writer Sarah Woods to weave the science seamlessly into MON the story. The drama underlines the deep connection human MON beings have to the viruses that survive through us, and how MON illness can shape the course of our lives. MON Directed by James Robinson MON A BBC Cymru/Wales Production. MON MON Credits MON Jill: Hannah Daniel MON David: Ronan Summers MON John: Lia Williams MON Doctor: John Norton MON Protestor: Eirlys Bellin MON Narrator: Eiry Thomas MON Writer: Sarah Woods MON Director: James Robinson MON MON 11:00 On Language Location b04mb5z4 (Listen) MON Myanmar MON MON Formerly known as Burma, the Republic of the Union of MON Myanmar is in a state of upheaval. Business is booming in MON Yangon, thanks to new access to international markets. And MON while the country is offering greater MON stability for investors, ethnic and political tensions still MON run high. Burma/Myanmar is a rapidly changing and MON challenging place. MON Anthropologist and linguist Mark Turin travels to Myanmar to MON explore what these transformations mean for the indigenous MON ethnic groups that make up much of the population, and MON specifically for their languages and cultures. Myanmar is a MON hugely diverse nation: according to a contested recent MON census, it is home to 135 distinct ethnic groups who are in MON turn grouped into eight "major national ethnic races." Among MON them are the Mon, whose Austroasiatic language is still MON widely spoken and who lay claim to an ancient script that's MON used to write Pali and Sanskrit. In highland areas, the MON states of Chin, Kachin and Shan derive their names from the MON dominant ethnic groups of the region, but these states are MON also home to many smaller, distinct communities. To date, MON the state has focussed on national building around a united MON Burmese identity rather than supporting minority MON communities. Official government education policy, for MON example, still prohibits the teaching of ethnic languages in MON schools. MON Mark Turin speaks to government representatives, teachers, MON religious leaders and language experts in the field to find MON out whether these minority languages can survive in 21st MON Myanmar. Is the growth of English threatening Myanmar's MON indigenous languages? What is the role of religion in MON maintaining linguistic diversity? What does the future hold MON for Myanmar's unique tapestry of cultural and linguistic MON diversity? MON Producer Mark Rickards. MON MON 11:30 Kerry's List b04mb80b (Listen) MON Series 2, Politics MON MON We continue to find Kerry Goldiman making her vitally MON important weekly lists - without which she simply wouldn't MON survive as a mother, working comedian and actress. MON MON Husband Ben (Ben Abell) is waging a very MON personal war on the local council with a street protest MON against the speed bumps that have been put into their road. MON Around this protest, Kerry's List includes being thrifty, MON shaping her eyebrows, teaching her daughter to ride a bike, MON fixing the smoke alarm and reading an OFSTED report. MON We encounter some truly odd You Tube gurus, Kerry meets the MON supermarket checkout girl from hell and Ben finds himself at MON odds with the local police force. MON Also, we find out how Kerry's best friend Hazel (Bridget MON Christie) is doing - and sadly, she's not doing very well! MON The cast includes co-writer David Lane Pusey, Rosie MON Cavaliero, Lucy Briers, Nicholas Le Prevost, and Melissa MON Bury - with a guest appearance form Jenni Murray. MON Producer: Paul Russell MON An Open Mike production for BBC Radio 4. MON MON Credits MON Actor: Kerry Godliman MON Actor: Ben Abell MON Actor: Bridget Christie MON Actor: David Pusey MON Actor: Rosie Cavaliero MON Actor: Lucy Briers MON Actor: Nicholas Le Prevost MON Actor: Melissa Bury MON Actor: Jenni Murray MON Producer: Paul Russell MON Writer: Kerry Godliman MON Writer: David Pusey MON MON 12:00 News Summary b04mb0vp (Listen) MON The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. MON MON 12:04 Across the Board b04mb80d (Listen) MON Series 2, Magnus Carlsen MON MON Across The Board: a series of interviews conducted by MON Dominic Lawson over a game of chess. Today, Dominic takes on MON the world's greatest chess player, Magnus Carlsen - and asks MON whether it wouldn't be better for Magnus to put his MON extraordinary intelligence to another use. MON MON 12:15 You and Yours b04mb80g (Listen) MON Consumer news with Shari Vahl. MON MON 12:57 Weather b04mb0vr (Listen) MON The latest weather forecast. MON MON 13:00 World at One b04mb80j (Listen) MON Analysis of current affairs reports, presented by Martha MON Kearney. MON MON 13:45 Voices of the First World War b03thb2s (Listen) MON First Impressions MON MON There are now no living veterans of WW1, but it is still MON possible to go back to the First World War through the MON memories of those who actually took part. In a unique MON partnership between the Imperial War Museums MON and the BBC, two sound archive collections featuring MON survivors of the war are brought together for the first MON time. The Imperial War Museums' holdings include a major MON oral history resource of remarkable recordings made in the MON 1980s and early 1990s with the remaining survivors of the MON conflict. The interviews were done not for immediate use or MON broadcast, but because it was felt that this diminishing MON resource that could never be replenished, would be of unique MON value in the future. Speakers recall in great detail as MON though it were yesterday the conditions of the trenches, the MON brutality of the battlefield, the experience of seeing their MON first casualty and hearing their first shell, their daily MON and nightly routines as soldiers, pilots or navy members of MON all ranks, and their psychological state in the face of so MON much trauma. This series will broadcast many of these MON recordings for the first time. Among the BBC's extensive MON collection of archive featuring first hand recollections of MON the conflict a century ago, are the interviews recorded for MON the 1964 TV series 'The Great War', which vividly bring to MON life the human experience of those fighting and living MON through the war. MON Dan Snow narrates this new oral history, which will be MON broadcast in short seasons throughout the commemorative MON period. MON Programme 1 - First impressions MON The war gets underway, with speakers' recollections of the MON day war broke out, their journey to France, and their first MON experiences of the Front. Dan Snow also explores some of the MON issues around oral history as evidence. MON MON Credits MON Dan Snow MON Joe Armstrong MON William Collins MON Charles Carrington MON Thomas Painting MON Jim Davies MON Horace Calvert MON Henry Williamson MON Peter Hart MON George Ashurst MON Basil Farrer MON MON 14:00 The Archers b04mbw5q (Listen) MON [Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Sunday] MON MON 14:15 Afternoon Drama b04mbw5s (Listen) MON The City of Tomorrow MON MON New drama by poet and writer Glyn Maxwell about the 100 year MON history of a garden city. Made in collaboration with the MON British Academy and performed in front of an audience there. MON It will be broadcast on the MON 100th anniversary of the birth of Dylan Thomas and is MON created and performed in the knowledge of Under Milk Wood, MON another play about the makings and breakings of a tight-knit MON community. Glyn Maxwell was born and raised in Welwyn Garden MON City and his play is both a love letter to his home town and MON a searching and telling account of how city making is no MON picnic. The cast of six have many roles from almost every MON decade of the garden city's life from the first adventures MON in planning a city of tomorrow out of green fields to MON present day un-neighbourly hostilities. The cast includes MON Pippa Haywood, Julian Rhind-Tutt, Samuel Barnett, Alex MON Tregear, Rebecca Smith Williams and Robin Soans. Producer: MON Tim Dee. MON MON Credits MON Actor: Pippa Haywood MON Actor: Julian Rhind-Tutt MON Actor: Samuel Barnett MON Actor: Alex Tregear MON Actor: Rebecca Smith Williams MON Actor: Robin Soans MON Producer: Tim Dee MON Writer: Glyn Maxwell MON MON 15:00 Counterpoint b04mbw5v (Listen) MON Series 28, Episode 6 MON MON (6/13) MON Russell Davies chairs the sixth heat in the 2014 season of MON the most wide-ranging music quiz anywhere on radio, this MON week from the BBC's Maida Vale studios in London. MON Competitors from Twickenham, the MON Vale of Glamorgan and Brighton answer questions on MON everything from orchestral music and opera to film and stage MON musicals, folk and jazz, classic rock and sixty years of the MON pop charts. MON As always, as well as demonstrating their musical general MON knowledge, they'll be asked to pick a specialist musical MON topic, from a list of which they've had no prior warning and MON no chance to prepare. MON The winner will take another of the places in the series MON semi-finals towards the end of the year. MON Producer: Paul Bajoria. MON MON 15:30 Food Programme b04mh757 (Listen) MON [Repeat of broadcast at 12:32 on Sunday] MON MON 16:00 The Spirit Child b04mc1hc (Listen) MON A radio poem inspired by the story of Alice Glaston, who at MON eleven years old, is the youngest person ever hung in MON England. Alice Glaston was hung from the gallows tree in MON Much Wenlock in Shropshire in 1545. MON When writer Paul Evans who was born here, later returned to MON live here and discovered the story of Alice Glaston from a MON passing reference in a local history book, he was both MON shocked and intrigued. The more he thought about the story, MON and walked the same places Alice walked; the more he stood MON in the spot where the gallows tree once grew, the more he MON felt a responsibility to tell the story. This poem links MON Alice with the landscape, which in some sense still contains MON her, and back to the memory of the people. MON This ghostly tale spans almost five centuries (from the MON dissolution of the monasteries to the present day). Alice is MON a benign presence; through her we see the landscape in a MON different way. Her story elicits compassion and stimulates MON the imagination. Beautiful landscapes have dark histories. MON Some events are so powerful they leave a trace of themselves MON as a memory in the place where they occurred. Like mud in a MON pond stirred up by someone poking around, these memories are MON recovered from the place and take on a life of their own. MON Alice became part of the landscape but a forgotten ghost. MON For Paul, this telling is a way to free Alice's ghost; she MON should not be brushed out of history because she represents MON an uncomfortable truth; she should not be forgotten. With MON the passage of time and the seasons, her story does not die, MON but is relived and retold. MON It is the landscape and its stories which have inspired this MON poem, and this landscape is powerfully evoked through sound MON recordings by Chris Watson. Alice is played by Bettrys MON Jones. MON Producer: Sarah Blunt. MON MON Download For Free MON Best of Natural History Radio MON ' podcast. MON MON Paul Evans MON Bath Spa University MON and is the leader of the MA Travel and Nature Writing MON course. He is a freelance nature writer and radio MON broadcaster, a contributor of MON Country Diaries MON for MON The Guardian MON since 1992, as well as Nature Watch columns for the Guardian MON Weekly from 1994-2008. MON He has also written feature articles for The Guardian and MON for magazines such as MON BBC Wildlife MON Geographical MON The National Trust Magazine MON Natural World and Country Living. His radio broadcasting MON began with reports for MON Costing the Earth MON on BBC Radio 4 then moved to the BBC Natural History Unit as MON a regular writer and presenter of Radio 4 programmes such as MON Nature, and more recently providing pieces for MON World on the Move MON and MON Saving Species MON ; feature programmes based on creative landscape writing and MON sound such as Wicken Fen, Islay, The Wrekin, Orford Ness, MON Dungeness; and a presenter of the natural history programme, MON The Living World MON MON MON Bettrys Jones MON National Theatre MON Productions of Edward II and War Horse as well as West End MON productions Wait Until Dark and the MON Royal Shakespeare Company MON productions of A Midsummer Night's Dream and The Comedy of MON Errors. She also appeared in the television series MON Skins MON and the film MON Private Peaceful MON MON Chris Watson MON Chris Watson MON is one of the world's leading recorders of wildlife and MON natural phenomena, and for MON Touch MON records he edits his field recordings into a filmic MON narrative. For example. the unearthly groaning of ice in an MON Icelandic glacier is a classic example of, in Watson's MON words, putting a microphone where you can't put your ears. MON Watson has recorded and featured in many BBC Radio MON productions including; ‘ MON The Ice Mountain MON ', ‘The Reed Bed’, ‘The Ditch’, ‘The Listeners’ and ‘The MON Wire’ which won him the Broadcasting Press Guild’s MON Broadcaster of The Year Award (2012). His music is regularly MON featured on the BBC Radio 3 programme ‘Late Junction’. MON MON 16:30 Digital Human b04mc1hf (Listen) MON Series 6, Abandon MON MON What happens when we abandon a place? And why is it so MON difficult for us to leave these places behind? MON In this episode, Aleks explores abandon both on and offline. MON We tell the story of the only permanent MON resident of Fukushima's radiation exclusion zone. Naoto MON Matsura stayed in Tomioka while everyone around him fled. MON He's now the unofficial caretaker of this abandoned town. MON Aleks contrasts this with a remarkable example of digital MON abandon. Meridian 59 was the first massively multiplayer MON online game. When newer competitors arrived on the scene, MON many players left. The game has been abandoned and restarted MON several times over since. Aleks hears from the hardcore MON community of players who refuse to let the game disappear MON entirely. MON MON 17:00 PM b04mc1hh (Listen) MON PM at 5pm- Carolyn Quinn with interviews, context and MON analysis. MON MON 18:00 Six O'Clock News b04mb0vt (Listen) MON The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. MON MON 18:30 The Museum of Curiosity b04mc1hk (Listen) MON Series 7, Episode 4 MON MON This week, the Professor of Ignorance John Lloyd and his MON curator Phill Jupitus welcome Rich Hall, the Emmy MON award-winning American comedy writer, stand-up, playwright, MON musician, author and documentary maker who MON has worked on such iconic American programs as the Late Show MON with David Letterman and Saturday Night Live.Dr Anna Keay, MON who is a historian, author and television presenter. Over MON the course of her career, she has overseen hundreds of the MON most significant edifices in Britain, including Kensington MON Palace, the Tower of London and Stonehenge. She is now the MON Director of the Landmark Trust. MON Henry Marsh CBE, a leading neurosurgeon who works at St MON George's hospital in London. He's been the subject of two MON award-winning documentaries, and his remarkable memoir Do No MON Harm not only looks into the intricacies of brain operations MON but gives us a searingly honest and poignant insight into MON the brains behind the operations. MON This week, the Museum's Steering Committee discusses how the MON Wild West wasn't at all like what we think it was; how brain MON surgery isn't exactly rocket science; how tourists were MON encouraged to chip off their own souvenirs from Stonehenge; MON why the key to understanding the difference between the MON Americans and British is on the front porch; how British MON monarchs used to borrow their crown jewels and how our MON brains disappear when they're not needed. MON The show was researched by James Harkin and Stevyn Colgan of MON QI. MON The producers were Richard Turner and Dan Schreiber. MON MON Credits MON Presenter: John Lloyd MON Presenter: Phill Jupitus MON Interviewed Guest: Rich Hall MON Interviewed Guest: Anna Keay MON Interviewed Guest: Henry Marsh MON Producer: Richard Turner MON Producer: Dan Schreiber MON MON 19:00 The Archers b04mc1hn (Listen) MON Contemporary drama in a rural setting. MON MON 19:15 Front Row b04mc1hq (Listen) MON Arts news, interviews and reviews. MON MON 19:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6sd7 (Listen) MON [Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 today] MON MON 20:00 America's Ballot Battles b04mc1hs (Listen) MON Rajini Vaidyanathan travels to North Carolina to investigate MON whether current bitter disputes over voting rights mean that MON the United States is involved in a crisis of democracy. MON MON Over the last two decades the MON controversy over voting rights has become increasingly MON bitter and polarised along party lines. This process has MON intensified since 2013 when the US Supreme Court overturned MON important parts of the Voting Rights Act. North Carolina is MON one key location for these crucially important arguments. It MON has seen one of the furthest-reaching packages of voting MON reform of any state and is now in the midst of one of the MON closest election campaigns this year. MON Rajini travels across the state and hears from those who MON argue that a concerted campaign is under way to deprive MON liberal-leaning groups of access to the electoral process. MON And she speaks to those responsible for the legislation who MON insist that they are trying to stop voter fraud and ensure MON the sanctity of the ballot. MON Rajini looks at a number of states where political control MON has alternated over the last 20 years, and voting law with MON it, as Democrats pass laws which make it easier to vote - MON typically benefiting groups which vote for them - and MON Republicans often do the opposite. She asks what this is MON doing to American democracy. MON Producer: Giles Edwards. MON MON 20:30 Analysis b04mc1hv (Listen) MON Inside Welfare Reform MON MON Economist Jonathan Portes assesses how well the government MON has implemented its controversial welfare reforms. The MON government describes the programme as "the most ambitious, MON fundamental and radical changes to MON the welfare system since it began". MON When the Coalition came to power in 2010, welfare - not MON including pensions - was costing the country nearly £100 MON billion a year. Iain Duncan Smith, the secretary of state MON for work and pensions, was given the task of making work pay MON and - in so doing - taking millions of people off benefit MON and saving the country billions. MON Influential figures from parliament, the civil service and MON one of Iain Duncan Smith's closest advisers offer revealing MON accounts of what's been happening during those past 4 years. MON Economist Jonathan Portes asks whether these changes are a MON vital strategy to stem a welfare system spiralling out of MON control or - as some argue - nothing short of a fiasco, MON which has caused genuine hardship? MON Producer: Adele Armstrong. MON MON 21:00 Shared Planet b04lpzz0 (Listen) MON Hen Harriers: Trust in Conservation MON MON Hen harriers are persecuted in the British Isles because MON they eat grouse. Seals cause problems for salmon fishermen; MON lions eat the livestock of pastoralists in Africa and so on. MON All over the world there are MON conflicts between people and wildlife, often with MON devastating consequences. In Shared Planet this week Monty MON Don looks at how we are approaching solving these issues, MON who is taking the bull by the horns and getting people MON around a table to come up with a shared solution? Conflict MON resolution is growing area that brings together scientists, MON local people, businesses, NGOs and many others who are MON affected by wildlife conflict. It is a demanding task MON finding a solution that all parties feel they can accept, on MON a par with the negotiations undertaken with trade unions by MON ACAS. This new area for conservation brings political and MON social science to sit alongside traditional conservation MON ideas. Monty Don investigates. MON MON Dr Juliette Young MON Centre for Ecology and Hydrology MON (CEH) in Edinburgh. Her enthusiasm for ecology was kindled MON through helping to rehabilitate chimpanzees in Sierra Leone, MON exploring the illegal trade in tiger parts in India, and MON chasing fig wasps in the Cook Islands. MON This experience combined with her early research at CEH led MON her to realise that people with differing, often MON conflicting, perceptions of nature and its management were MON central to conservation outcomes. As a result she did a PhD MON in political science at the University of East Anglia to MON understand how people view the natural world and to develop MON sustainable solutions to complex problems. MON Within the context of understanding the social dimensions of MON nature conservation, she researches public attitudes towards MON biodiversity, the communication between scientists and MON decision-makers, and human conflicts over nature MON conservation. MON She has contributed to a MON guide on developing and improving science-policy MON communication MON and a range of MON one-page briefs MON The Centre for Ecology and Hydrology focusses on integrated MON research in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems and their MON interaction with the atmosphere. MON MON Simon Lester MON Hen harriers were first recorded at Langholm in the 1980s MON and for several years there were between 2 and 5 pairs. Hen MON harriers have had an incredible breeding season at Langholm MON with a total number of 12 nests (12 females, 6 monogamous MON and 3 bigamous males). MON 10 of these nests were successful and fledged 47 young MON (brood sizes between three and six), which is more than in MON all previous breeding seasons since the start of the MON Langholm Moor Raptor Project MON project combined, the other two nests were deserted during MON incubation. MON MON Professor Bill Sutherland MON Miriam Rothschild Professor of Conservation Biology at the MON University of Cambridge MON He is interested in applying ecological data and models to MON understand conservation problems. MON This can involve field work, use of existing data or purely MON theoretical problems. He is especially interested in bird MON population ecology as well as the impacts of agriculture of MON biodiversity. MON Recently he has become intrigued by understanding how MON decisions are made. This has involved horizon scanning to MON identify future issues, collation of evidence to determine MON which interventions are effective and then a rigorous means MON of weighting the evidence to guide policy and practice. MON MON 21:30 Start the Week b04mb2r9 (Listen) MON [Repeat of broadcast at 09:00 today] MON MON 21:58 Weather b04mb0vw (Listen) MON The latest weather forecast. MON MON 22:00 The World Tonight b04mc6sj (Listen) MON In-depth reporting and analysis from a global perspective. MON MON 22:45 Book at Bedtime b04mc6sl (Listen) MON The Restoration of Otto Laird, Episode 1 MON MON A story of memory and place, old age and architecture. MON MON "Otto had felt surprisingly nervous on the plane across from MON Geneva; not from any fear of flying, but a fear of what he MON was flying to. [...] Throughout the MON short flight he experienced a strange inner turbulence. He MON had a queasy sensation that he was re-establishing a MON connection with the past; flying backwards into his own MON memories. He would no longer be experiencing them from a MON distance, but in the city where they had once been real." MON Architect Otto Laird has been living a semi-reclusive life MON with his second wife in Switzerland. But he is forced to MON re-engage with the wider world when he learns that his MON landmark building Marlowe House - a 1960s tower block in MON South London - has been marked for demolition. MON Episode One. MON Otto's mood darkens after he reads a disturbing article in MON the Architectural Review. MON Nigel Packer lives in London. He has been a music reviewer MON for BBC News Online and Ceefax, a reporting officer at the MON International Committee of the Red Cross and a contributor MON to various magazines and newspapers. The Restoration Of Otto MON Laird is his first novel. MON Reader: Allan Corduner MON Abridger: Jeremy Osborne MON Producer: Rosalynd Ward MON A Sweet Talk production for BBC Radio 4. MON MON Credits MON Reader: Alan Corduner MON Author: Nigel Packer MON Abridger: Jeremy Osborne MON Producer: Rosalynd Ward MON MON 23:00 Wireless Nights b04mc6sn (Listen) MON Series 3, Lava and Ice MON MON Jarvis Cocker wanders the lava fields of Iceland in search MON of the unseen forces of night. In the midnight shadow of MON Snaefellsjokull, the volcano featured in Jules Verne's MON Journey to the Centre of the Earth, MON Jarvis considers the timelessness of the landscape, until he MON discovers sheep time. His sheep guides only lead him further MON into the unknown, through a hole in the lava floor and on a MON journey through a magma underworld, finding there a symphony MON orchestra, human seals and a wake. MON Producer Neil McCarthy. MON MON 23:30 Today in Parliament b04mc7pd (Listen) MON Sean Curran reports from Westminster. MON MON TUE TUESDAY 28 OCTOBER 2014 TUE TUE 00:00 Midnight News b04mb0wt (Listen) TUE The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. TUE Followed by Weather. TUE TUE 00:30 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6sd7 (Listen) TUE [Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 on Monday] TUE TUE 00:48 Shipping Forecast b04mb0ww (Listen) TUE The latest shipping forecast. TUE TUE 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b04mb0wy (Listen) TUE BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. TUE TUE 05:20 Shipping Forecast b04mb0x0 (Listen) TUE The latest shipping forecast. TUE TUE 05:30 News Briefing b04mb0x2 (Listen) TUE The latest news from BBC Radio 4. TUE TUE 05:43 Prayer for the Day b04mq31b (Listen) TUE Spiritual reflection to start the day with The Rev Laurence TUE Twaddle. TUE TUE 05:45 Farming Today b04mcbhk (Listen) TUE The latest news about food, farming and the countryside. TUE Presented by Anna Hill and Produced by Sally Challoner. TUE TUE 05:58 Tweet of the Day b04hkyn2 (Listen) TUE Snow Goose TUE TUE Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship TUE with them, from around the world. TUE TUE Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the snow goose found breeding TUE across Canada and Alaska. Although most snow geese are TUE all-white with black wing-tips, some known as blue geese are TUE blue-ish grey with white heads. Snow geese breed in the TUE tundra region with goslings hatching at a time to make the TUE most of rich supply of insect larvae and berries in the TUE short Arctic summer. As autumn approaches though, the geese TUE depart and head south before temperatures plummet, and the TUE tundra becomes sealed by snow and ice. As they head for TUE areas rich in grain and nutritious roots hundreds of TUE thousands of snow geese fill the sky with their urgent TUE clamour providing one of the greatest wildfowl spectacles in TUE the world. TUE TUE Snow goose (Chen caerulescens / Anser caerulescens) TUE TUE Webpage image courtesy of Christophe Courteau / TUE naturepl.com. TUE N TUE PL Ref 01125123 TUE © Christophe Courteau / naturepl.com. TUE TUE 06:00 Today b04mcbhm (Listen) TUE Morning news and current affairs. Including Sports Desk, TUE Yesterday in Parliament, Weather and Thought for the Day. TUE TUE 09:00 The Life Scientific b04mcbhp (Listen) TUE Richard Fortey TUE TUE Richard Fortey found his first trilobite fossil when he was TUE 14 years old and he spent the rest of his career discovering TUE hundreds more, previously unknown to science. TUE TUE Professor of Palaeontology at the Natural TUE History Museum, he talks to Jim Al-Khalili about why these TUE arthropods, joint-legged creatures which look a bit like TUE woodlice and roamed the ancient oceans for almost 300 TUE million years, are so important for helping us to understand TUE the evolution of life on our planet. TUE These new trilobite fossils were found at an exciting time TUE for the earth sciences because of the emergence of plate TUE tectonics. The discovery of communities of trilobite fossils TUE could be used to reconstruct the shape of the ancient world TUE and Richard used the new discoveries to help map the TUE geologically very different Palaeozoic continents and seas. TUE He admits that he's a born naturalist, fascinated by all TUE aspects of the natural world (he's a leading expert on TUE fungi) with a powerful drive to communicate its wonders to a TUE wider public. His books and TV programmes on geology, the TUE evolution of the earth, fossils as well as the creatures TUE that survived mass extinctions have brought him a whole new TUE audience. TUE And Richard reveals to Jim an earlier secret life, as a TUE writer of humorous books, all written under a pseudonym. TUE TUE 09:30 One to One b04mcbhr (Listen) TUE Isabel Oakeshott and Surrogacy TUE TUE Political journalist Isabel Oakeshott seriously considered TUE surrogacy in India after having four miscarriages, when TUE trying to have a second child. Although her fifth attempt at TUE having a baby naturally worked, TUE she's always wondered about the route she very nearly took. TUE In this series for One to One, Isabel talks to two mothers TUE who went down the surrogacy road, one in the UK and now in TUE the second of two programmes, to Rekha, who went to India in TUE 2012 to try to have a baby there through surrogacy. TUE Producer: Sara Conkey. TUE TUE 09:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t0s (Listen) TUE Kathe Kollwitz: Suffering Witness TUE TUE Neil MacGregor focuses on the art of Käthe Kollwitz TUE (1867-1945), who expresses the loss and suffering of war, TUE especially after the death of her younger son Peter at the TUE front in 1914. TUE TUE Neil MacGregor argues that TUE she is one of the greatest German artists. Like no other TUE artist of the time, Kollwitz gave voice to the overwhelming TUE sense of personal loss felt by ordinary Germans - the loss TUE of a whole generation, the loss of political stability and TUE of individual dignity. TUE Producer Paul Kobrak. TUE TUE 10:00 Woman's Hour b04mcmnd (Listen) TUE Jane Garvey presents the programme that offers a female TUE perspective on the world. TUE TUE Credits TUE Presenter: Jane Garvey TUE TUE 10:45 15 Minute Drama b04mcmng (Listen) TUE My Life with Flu, Episode 2 TUE TUE By Sarah Woods TUE TUE A love story, about flu. TUE TUE It's 1975, six years since Jill and David huddled under the TUE blankets together, full of flu. Now Jill is preparing to TUE marry John - the wedding preparations are in full TUE swing, but then David arrives on the doorstep. TUE My Life with Flu has been produced in collaboration with the TUE Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. In five episodes it follows TUE the story of Jill across five decades as she struggles with TUE the highs and lows of life, love and viruses. At the same TUE time the story tracks the life of Hong Kong Flu - how, over TUE 45 years, it has traversed the globe, evolved and is TUE ultimately being superseded by new, more virulent strains, TUE such as Swine Flu. TUE The series uses cutting edge science - of transmission, TUE viral evolution and genetic predisposition - to tell the TUE story of flu, and investigate the unique qualities of Jill's TUE genome which make her a 'severe responder'. Paul Kellam, TUE Virus Genomics team leader at the Sanger Institute worked TUE closely with writer Sarah Woods to weave the science TUE seamlessly into the story. The drama underlines the deep TUE connection human beings have to the viruses that survive TUE through us, and how illness can shape the course of our TUE lives. TUE Directed by James Robinson TUE A BBC Cymru/Wales Production. TUE TUE Credits TUE Jill: Hannah Daniel TUE David: Ronan Summers TUE John: Lia Williams TUE Minister: Alun Raglan TUE Yvette: Eirlys Bellin TUE Narrator: Eiry Thomas TUE Writer: Sarah Woods TUE Director: James Robinson TUE TUE 11:00 Shared Planet b04mcmnj (Listen) TUE Albatross and Fishing TUE TUE Albatrosses are giant flying seabirds that inhabit the TUE southern oceans. Many species have been studied intensively TUE over decades on their breeding grounds in the sub-Antarctic TUE and the Pacific. Clever studies TUE involving satellite tracking and simple observations from TUE ships have shown they can disperse and forage across the TUE whole of the southern ocean. Monitoring of their populations TUE has shown a marked decline in their numbers since the 1980's TUE so much so all albatross species are now threatened. A key TUE cause of albatross decline was found quickly after the TUE decline in populations was noticed; long-line fishing hooks TUE baited with squid and floating on the surface after being TUE deployed was an easy meal for an ocean scavenger and often TUE their last. Shared Planet visits this story many years after TUE it broke to report a cautious success on the high level TUE conservation measures that were put in place involving TUE biologists and the fishing industry. On this trajectory, it TUE seems, we might be able to share the ocean with albatrosses TUE and catch fish. TUE TUE Alastair Fothergill TUE The Blue Planet TUE ’, ' TUE Planet Earth TUE ' and ' TUE Frozen Planet TUE ', all narrated by Sir David Attenborough. TUE In addition to his work with the BBC Natural History Unit, TUE Alastair has co-directed two cinematic movies for Disney as TUE part of their Disneynature label. He set up Silverback Films TUE in 2012 and is currently making ‘The Hunt’, which looks at TUE the relationships between predators and their prey. TUE Alastair is fellow of the TUE Royal Geographic Society TUE who awarded him their gold medal in 2012. He has honorary TUE doctorates from the Universities of Durham and Hull. TUE TUE Dr Richard Phillips TUE British Antarctic Survey Core Science Ecosystems programme TUE The British Antarctic Survey (BAS) has helped carry out TUE long-term population studies of albatrosses and petrels at TUE Bird Island dating back to the early 1960s for wandering TUE albatross, the 1970s for grey-headed and black-browed TUE albatrosses and the 1990s for light-mantled sooty TUE albatrosses and giant petrels. TUE BAS also carries out a variety of dedicated studies, TUE integrating conventional observational techniques with the TUE latest in tracking and logging technology, and molecular and TUE stable isotope analysis. A large component of the current TUE research is directed at addressing the declines in albatross TUE and petrel populations as a result of incidental mortality TUE in longline and trawl fisheries. TUE TUE Ben Sullivan TUE RSPB TUE and TUE BirdLife International TUE 's TUE Global Seabird Program TUE In 2010 he was awarded a TUE Pew Fellowship in Marine Conservation TUE for his project to reduce seabird “bycatch,” or the catching TUE and killing of non-target species, in open-ocean longline TUE and trawl fisheries. TUE His research analyses devices to scare birds from behind TUE longliners and trawlers, and aims to develop and evaluate TUE new technology to prevent birds accessing hooks. The project TUE also tests innovative line weighting to increase the sink TUE rate of longline hooks as they leave the vessel. TUE Dr Sullivan received a PhD from the University of TUE Queensland. Prior to his current position with the RSPB - TUE the UK partner of BirdLife International - he served as TUE project manager for the Seabirds at Sea Team of TUE Falklands Conservation TUE He has been involved in the implementation of the TUE Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) International Plan TUE of Actions for seabirds TUE for many years, and he is also actively involved with the TUE work of the TUE Agreement for the Conservation of Albatross and Petrels TUE (ACAP). TUE TUE Russell Hall TUE MSC TUE certification for sustainability. He has been involved with TUE the company’s vessels for more than 20 years, but he now TUE finds himself devoting an increasing amount of time to TUE ensuring his firm is fishing responsibly. TUE In the past, he says, his concern was maintaining the hake TUE quota but now that’s just one small part of a much bigger TUE equation. He argues that businesses have to deal with every TUE aspect of sustainability in order to stay in the fishing TUE business for the long term. TUE TUE 11:30 Dr Hepcat and the Hepster's Dictionary b04mcmnl (Listen) TUE In 1938, the singer and band leader Cab Calloway became the TUE first known African American to publish a book and call it a TUE dictionary. His book of jive talk, Cab Calloway's Hepster's TUE Dictionary, translated some TUE of the lively and inventive slang being used among musicians TUE and entertainers in New York's Harlem, for a new audience of TUE jazz fans who weren't yet 'hep to the jive'. TUE The poet Lemn Sissay finds out how Calloway, famous for his TUE hit song Minnie the Moocher, came to write the dictionary, TUE and how it became the official reference book of jive in the TUE New York Public Library at a time when black people in TUE America were still highly segregated from the white TUE mainstream. TUE Lemn speaks to Cab Calloway's eldest daughter Camay Murphy TUE who remembers Harlem in the 1930s and 40s, and Cab's TUE grandson Christopher Calloway Brooks who is a bandleader TUE himself. TUE Jive grew out of older African American vernaculars which TUE had their roots in slave plantations in the nineteenth TUE century. As people came up from the southern states to the TUE northern cities to look for work, jive developed around the TUE world of jazz music, entertainment and night life in Harlem. TUE It was a private 'in the know' language, a form of TUE protection and a way to get past the authorities, but it was TUE also fun and incredibly creative. TUE Some words survive, like hip, chick, groovy, dig, cool and TUE beat. Other jive terms may no longer be in use - like collar TUE to comprehend, pounders for policemen, or a rug cutter for a TUE good dancer - but the words of jive remain a revealing TUE portrait of Harlem in its heyday. TUE Produced by Jo Wheeler TUE A Brook Lapping production for BBC Radio 4. TUE TUE 12:00 News Summary b04mb0x4 (Listen) TUE The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. TUE TUE 12:04 Across the Board b04mcmnp (Listen) TUE Series 2, Murray Campbell TUE TUE Across The Board: a series of interviews conducted by TUE Dominic Lawson over a game of chess. Today Dominic takes on TUE Murray Campbell, the brains behind the chess computer Deep TUE Blue. Deep Blue made headlines around the world when it beat TUE the former world chess champion Garry Kasparov. TUE TUE 12:15 You and Yours b04mcmnr (Listen) TUE Call You and Yours TUE TUE Consumer phone-in. TUE TUE 12:57 Weather b04mb0x6 (Listen) TUE The latest weather forecast. TUE TUE 13:00 World at One b04mcmnt (Listen) TUE Analysis of current affairs reports, presented by Martha TUE Kearney. TUE TUE 13:45 Voices of the First World War b03thb8x (Listen) TUE Battle and Retreat TUE TUE There are now no living veterans of WW1, but it is still TUE possible to go back to the First World War through the TUE memories of those who actually took part. In a unique TUE partnership between the Imperial War Museums TUE and the BBC, two sound archive collections featuring TUE survivors of the war are brought together for the first TUE time. The Imperial War Museums' holdings include a major TUE oral history resource of remarkable recordings made in the TUE 1980s and early 1990s with the remaining survivors of the TUE conflict. The interviews were done not for immediate use or TUE broadcast, but because it was felt that this diminishing TUE resource that could never be replenished, would be of unique TUE value in the future. Speakers recall in great detail as TUE though it were yesterday the conditions of the trenches, the TUE brutality of the battlefield, the experience of seeing their TUE first casualty and hearing their first shell, their daily TUE and nightly routines as soldiers, pilots or navy members of TUE all ranks, and their psychological state in the face of so TUE much trauma. This series will broadcast many of these TUE recordings for the first time. Among the BBC's extensive TUE collection of archive featuring first hand recollections of TUE the conflict a century ago, are the interviews recorded for TUE the 1964 TV series 'The Great War', which vividly bring to TUE life the human experience of those fighting and living TUE through the war. TUE Dan Snow narrates this new oral history, which will be TUE broadcast in short seasons throughout the commemorative TUE period. TUE Programme 2 - Battle and Retreat TUE In the second programme of the series, we hear from those TUE who experienced the Battle of Mons, which was the first TUE realisation for many British soldiers of what they were up TUE against. TUE TUE 14:00 The Archers b04mc1hn (Listen) TUE [Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Monday] TUE TUE 14:15 Tommies b03thc4z (Listen) TUE 28 October 1914 TUE TUE by Michael Chaplin. TUE TUE Series created by Jonathan Ruffle. TUE TUE Meticulously based on unit war diaries and eye-witness TUE accounts, each episode of TOMMIES traces one real day at TUE war, exactly 100 years ago. TUE TUE Through it all, TUE we'll follow the fortunes of Mickey Bliss and his fellow TUE signallers, from the Lahore Division of the British Indian TUE Army. They are the cogs in an immense machine, one which TUE connects situations across the whole theatre of the war, TUE over four long years. TUE Indira Varma, Danny Rahim and Nicholas Farrell star in this TUE story, as the first Indian Army soldiers arrive on the TUE battlefields of France, and the under-equipped infantry of TUE the 9th Bhopal Regiment find themselves on the front line at TUE the first battle of Neuve Chapelle. TUE Producers: David Hunter, Jonquil Panting, Jonathan Ruffle TUE Director: Nandita Ghose. TUE TUE Credits TUE Mickey Bliss: Lee Ross TUE Ahmadullah Khan: Danny Rahim TUE Pavan Jodha: Rudi Dharmalingam TUE Lt Colonel Dobbie: Nicholas Farrell TUE Commentator: Indira Varma TUE Hector Monkhouse: Clive Hayward TUE Sowar Alam Sher: Sagar Radia TUE Havildar Mishra: Jassa Ahluwalia TUE Captain Wilson: Sam Valentine TUE Captain Jamieson: Mark Edel-Hunt TUE Sir John French: David Cann TUE Producer: David Hunter TUE Producer: Jonquil Panting TUE Producer: Jonathan Ruffle TUE Director: Nandita Ghose TUE Writer: Michael Chaplin TUE TUE 15:00 Short Cuts b04mcp9f (Listen) TUE Series 6, After Dark TUE TUE Love found after a blackout, telephone counselling for TUE bereaved rock star managers and erotica for the elderly. TUE Josie Long presents tales of blackouts, late nights and TUE bedtime stories. TUE TUE Series Producer: Eleanor McDowall TUE A Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4. TUE TUE 15:30 Costing the Earth b04mcp9h (Listen) TUE Where Have All the Flowers Gone? TUE TUE Despite being protected on paper, many of the world's and TUE the UK's rare plants and flowers are being targeted by TUE thieves and smugglers. From the moment a new species is TUE discovered it can have a high price on TUE its head, with collectors going to the ends of the earth to TUE source a prized specimen. Tom Heap discovers how easy it is TUE to find rare plants for sale on the net and how such trade TUE not only threatens those plant species with extinction but TUE could destroy the elements within them that could help in TUE medicine. TUE There are five times as many plants as animals protected by TUE CITES (Convention on International Trade of Endangered TUE Species) meaning they can only be sold if a permit is TUE granted but arguably there is less public concern about TUE flora than fauna. Many orchids, cacti, cycads and various TUE timbers are among them which the Border Force and Kew TUE Botanic Gardens try to help monitor and police. TUE But not all thieves are on expeditions to remote mountains. TUE Tom hears how many of the UK's botanic gardens have been TUE targeted. In some cases it may be an opportunist gardener TUE but in other cases it involves organised crime. Some gardens TUE are using new techniques to protect specimens or simply TUE having to keep them locked away, out of sight. TUE Some thefts which aren't in monitored collections may not TUE even be discovered for months, if at all. Calls are being TUE made for us to monitor pathways, hills and towpaths and TUE report when plants disappear. But Tom also learns about TUE clever new devices and scientific methods to help raise the TUE alarm, detect illegal sales and prove guilt in the absence TUE of a smoking trowel. TUE Presented by Tom Heap. Produced by Anne-Marie Bullock. TUE TUE 16:00 Law in Action b04mcp9k (Listen) TUE The Spywatcher TUE TUE The Intelligence Services Commissioner, Sir Mark Waller, TUE gives Law In Action his first broadcast interview. TUE TUE Sir Mark, a retired judge, is charged with judicial TUE oversight of, among other organisations, MI5, MI6 TUE and GCHQ. TUE It's his job to check the security services comply with the TUE law when applying for warrants against individuals. Joshua TUE Rozenberg asks him about the delicate balance between TUE privacy and security, and the challenges created by Edward TUE Snowden's revelations. TUE Also: why the County Court might not be the best place to TUE solve disputes. We hear from a disappointed litigant and TUE explore the possibility of resolving disputes online in the TUE fashion pioneered by companies eBay and PayPal. TUE Presenter: Joshua Rozenberg TUE Producers: Tim Mansel and Keith Moore TUE Editor: Rich Knight. TUE TUE 16:30 A Good Read b04mcp9n (Listen) TUE Martina Cole and Janet Street-Porter TUE TUE Janet Street-Porter and crime writer Martina Cole discuss TUE their good reads with Harriett Gilbert. The guests talk - TUE and vociferously disagree - over American Wife, Curtis TUE Sittenfeld's fictionalised biography of TUE Laura Bush, The Iron King, the first novel of Maurice TUE Druon's 1950s series which has been hailed as 'the original TUE Game of Thrones', and Muriel Spark's classic novel The TUE Ballad of Peckham Rye. TUE Producer Sally Heaven. TUE TUE Credits TUE Presenter: Harriett Gilbert TUE Interviewed Guest: Martina Cole TUE Interviewed Guest: Janet Street-Porter TUE Producer: Sally Heaven TUE TUE 17:00 PM b04mcp9q (Listen) TUE PM at 5pm- Carolyn Quinn with interviews, context and TUE analysis. TUE TUE 18:00 Six O'Clock News b04mb0x8 (Listen) TUE The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. TUE TUE 18:30 Mark Watson Talks a Bit About Life b04mcssb (Listen) TUE Money TUE TUE A new series from multi-award winning comic Mark Watson TUE where he attempts to answer the big questions and make sense TUE of life, nimbly assisted by Tim Key and Tom Basden. TUE TUE Mark and his two henchmen tackle academic TUE and abstract topics. Themes will be examined from every TUE angle, torn apart, laughed at and put back together again in TUE an effort to understand ourselves and the world around us, TUE and make it a slightly better place using stand-up, poetry, TUE songs and dippy interactions. TUE This week Mark looks at "Money". These days it's quite TUE unfashionable to like money. People get demonised for having TUE high salaries. Bankers are seen as bad-guys. Less-is-more TUE philosophies abound, yet they are flawed - mathematically, TUE more is actually more. Is it so bad to try and get rich? TUE The programme looks at the corrupting influence of money and TUE the harm it does versus the good impact it can have, and TUE weigh them up. Mark discusses his own experiences of being TUE poor and quite well-off and how each impacted his TUE personality. TUE Is money really the root of all evil? Or a useful way of TUE buying things like Polo mints, fruit, etc? TUE Mark Watson is a multi-award winning comedian - his awards TUE include the inaugural If.Comedy Panel Prize 2006. He is TUE assisted by Tim Key, winner of an Edinburgh Comedy Award in TUE 2009, and Tom Basden who won the the If.Comedy Award for TUE Best Newcomer in 2007. TUE Written and performed by Mark Watson, Tim Key and Tom Basden TUE Produced by Lianne Coop TUE An Impatient production for BBC Radio 4. TUE TUE 19:00 The Archers b04mctvz (Listen) TUE Contemporary drama in a rural setting. TUE TUE 19:15 Front Row b04mctw1 (Listen) TUE Arts news, interviews and reviews. TUE TUE 19:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t0s (Listen) TUE [Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 today] TUE TUE 20:00 File on 4 b04mctw3 (Listen) TUE As inquiries into child abuse in Rotherham continue, File on TUE 4 investigates claims of a hidden problem of sexual abuse TUE within Britain's Asian communities. TUE While the victims of recent grooming scandals have TUE mostly been white girls, campaigners say Asian boys and TUE girls have also been subjected to abuse over many years. TUE Male and female survivors tell Manveen Rana there's a TUE powerful culture of denial stopping many speaking out and TUE getting justice. They say communities too often close ranks TUE and ostracise or threaten those who complain, while leaving TUE perpetrators to carry on. TUE Reporter: Manveen Rana TUE Producer: Sally Chesworth TUE Researcher: Yasminra Khan. TUE TUE 20:40 In Touch b04mctw5 (Listen) TUE News, views and information for people who are blind or TUE partially sighted. TUE TUE 21:00 Inside Health b04mctw7 (Listen) TUE Dr Mark Porter goes on a weekly quest to demystify the TUE health issues that perplex us. TUE TUE 21:30 The Life Scientific b04mcbhp (Listen) TUE [Repeat of broadcast at 09:00 today] TUE TUE 21:58 Weather b04mb0xb (Listen) TUE The latest weather forecast. TUE TUE 22:00 The World Tonight b04mctx8 (Listen) TUE In-depth reporting and analysis from a global perspective. TUE TUE 22:45 Book at Bedtime b04mcw87 (Listen) TUE The Restoration of Otto Laird, Episode 2 TUE TUE A story of memory and place, old age and architecture. TUE TUE "Otto had felt surprisingly nervous on the plane across from TUE Geneva; not from any fear of flying, but a fear of what he TUE was flying to. [...] Throughout the TUE short flight he experienced a strange inner turbulence. He TUE had a queasy sensation that he was re-establishing a TUE connection with the past; flying backwards into his own TUE memories. He would no longer be experiencing them from a TUE distance, but in the city where they had once been real." TUE Architect Otto Laird has been living a semi-reclusive life TUE with his second wife in Switzerland. But he is forced to TUE re-engage with the wider world when he learns that his TUE landmark building Marlowe House - a 1960s tower block in TUE South London - has been marked for demolition. TUE Episode Two. TUE 79-year-old Otto gets an invitation to go to London to make TUE a TV documentary about Marlowe House. But will he decide to TUE go? TUE Nigel Packer lives in London. He has been a music reviewer TUE for BBC News Online and Ceefax, a reporting officer at the TUE International Committee of the Red Cross and a contributor TUE to various magazines and newspapers. The Restoration Of Otto TUE Laird is his first novel. TUE Reader: Allan Corduner TUE Abridger: Jeremy Osborne TUE Producer: Rosalynd Ward TUE A Sweet Talk production for BBC Radio 4. TUE TUE Credits TUE Reader: Alan Corduner TUE Author: Nigel Packer TUE Abridger: Jeremy Osborne TUE Producer: Rosalynd Ward TUE TUE 23:00 Small Scenes b04mcw89 (Listen) TUE Series 2, Episode 3 TUE TUE Episode three of the symphonious sketch show, starring TUE Daniel Rigby, Sara Pascoe, Mike Wozniak, Cariad Lloyd and TUE Henry Paker. This week, a man gets lost in a breakfast TUE buffet and a stag party goes very wrong. TUE Written by Benjamin Partridge, Henry Paker and Mike Wozniak TUE with additional material from Olly Cambridge. TUE Produced by Simon Mayhew-Archer. TUE TUE Credits TUE Performer: Daniel Rigby TUE Performer: Sara Pascoe TUE Performer: Mike Wozniak TUE Performer: Cariad Lloyd TUE Performer: Henry Paker TUE Producer: Simon Mayhew-Archer TUE Writer: Benjamin Partridge TUE Writer: Henry Paker TUE Writer: Mike Wozniak TUE Writer: Olly Cambridge TUE TUE 23:30 Today in Parliament b04mcw8c (Listen) TUE Susan Hulme reports from Westminster. TUE TUE WED WEDNESDAY 29 OCTOBER 2014 WED WED 00:00 Midnight News b04mb0y8 (Listen) WED The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. WED Followed by Weather. WED WED 00:30 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t0s (Listen) WED [Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 on Tuesday] WED WED 00:48 Shipping Forecast b04mb0yb (Listen) WED The latest shipping forecast. WED WED 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b04mb0yd (Listen) WED BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. WED WED 05:20 Shipping Forecast b04mb0yg (Listen) WED The latest shipping forecast. WED WED 05:30 News Briefing b04mb0yj (Listen) WED The latest news from BBC Radio 4. WED WED 05:43 Prayer for the Day b04mq33j (Listen) WED Spiritual reflection to start the day with The Rev Laurence WED Twaddle. WED WED 05:45 Farming Today b04md4n9 (Listen) WED The latest news about food, farming and the countryside. WED Presented by Anna Hill and Produced by Sally Challoner. WED WED 05:58 Tweet of the Day b04hkxpc (Listen) WED Resplendent Quetzal WED WED Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship WED with them, from around the world. WED WED Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the resplendent quetzal of WED Guatemala. The image of resplendent quetzals are everywhere WED in Guatemala, but the source of their national emblem is now WED confined to the cloud forests of Central America. Its beauty WED has long entranced people, the male quetzal a shimmering WED emerald-green above and scarlet below. His outstanding WED features are the upper tail feathers which, longer than his WED entire body, extend into a train almost a metre in length, WED twisting like metallic ribbons as he flies through the tree WED canopy. Historically resplendent quetzals were considered WED sacred to the Mayans and Aztecs for their brilliant plumage, WED with the lavish crown of the Aztec ruler Moctezuma the WED Second, containing hundreds of individual quetzal tail - WED plumes. WED WED Resplendent quetzal (Pharomachrus mocinno) WED WED Webpage image courtesy of Konrad Wothe / naturepl.com. WED N WED PL Ref 01390393 WED © Konrad Wothe / naturepl.com. WED WED 06:00 Today b04md4nc (Listen) WED Morning news and current affairs. Including Sports Desk, WED Yesterday in Parliament, Weather and Thought for the Day. WED WED 09:00 Midweek b04md4nf (Listen) WED Lively and diverse conversation with weekly guests. WED WED Credits WED Presenter: Libby Purves WED Interviewed Guest: Clive Rowe WED Interviewed Guest: Jo Brand WED Interviewed Guest: Henry Winkler WED Interviewed Guest: Richard Mawbey WED Producer: Paula McGinley WED WED 09:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t1g (Listen) WED Neil MacGregor examines the emergency money - Notgeld - WED created during World War One and its aftermath. Small WED denomination coins began to disappear because their metal WED was worth more than their face value. WED People hoarded them or melted them down. Paper notes WED replaced coins, but as cities produced their own money, WED there was also currency made from porcelain, linen, silk, WED leather, wood, coal, cotton and playing cards. WED He also focuses on the crisis of hyperinflation in the early WED 1920s. At its peak, prices doubled every three and a half WED days, and in 1923 a 500 million mark note might buy a loaf WED of bread. WED Producer Paul Kobrak. WED WED 10:00 Woman's Hour b04md4nh (Listen) WED Jenni Murray presents the programme that offers a female WED perspective on the world. WED WED Credits WED Presenter: Jenni Murray WED WED 10:41 15 Minute Drama b04md4nk (Listen) WED My Life with Flu, Episode 3 WED WED By Sarah Woods WED WED A love story, about flu. WED WED 1986, New York - Jill and David embark upon an illicit WED affair. And as she travels home for Christmas Jill has a WED life changing decision to make. But inside her body, Hong WED Kong Flu is travelling with her. WED My Life with Flu has been produced in collaboration with the WED Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. In five episodes it follows WED the story of Jill across five decades as she struggles with WED the highs and lows of life, love and viruses. At the same WED time the story tracks the life of Hong Kong Flu - how, over WED 45 years, it has traversed the globe, evolved and is WED ultimately being superseded by new, more virulent strains, WED such as Swine Flu. WED The series uses cutting edge science - of transmission, WED viral evolution and genetic predisposition - to tell the WED story of flu, and investigate the unique qualities of Jill's WED genome which make her a 'severe responder'. Paul Kellam, WED Virus Genomics team leader at the Sanger Institute worked WED closely with writer Sarah Woods to weave the science WED seamlessly into the story. The drama underlines the deep WED connection human beings have to the viruses that survive WED through us, and how illness can shape the course of our WED lives. WED Directed by James Robinson WED A BBC Cymru/Wales Production. WED WED Credits WED Jill: Hannah Daniel WED David: Ronan Summers WED John: Lia Williams WED Paramedic 1: Alun Raglan WED Paramedic 2: Eirlys Bellin WED Narrator: Eiry Thomas WED Writer: Sarah Woods WED Director: James Robinson WED WED 10:55 The Listening Project b04md4nm (Listen) WED Janey and Sarah - Living in the Loss of Harry WED WED Fi Glover with a conversation between Harry's Mum and play WED worker, who know they will never forget Harry but are WED determined his death won't overshadow his younger brother's WED life. WED WED The Listening Project is a Radio WED 4 initiative that offers a snapshot of contemporary Britain WED in which people across the UK volunteer to have a WED conversation with someone close to them about a subject WED they've never discussed intimately before. The conversations WED are being gathered across the UK by teams of producers from WED local and national radio stations who facilitate each WED encounter. Every conversation - they're not BBC interviews, WED and that's an important difference - lasts up to an hour, WED and is then edited to extract the key moment of connection WED between the participants. Most of the unedited conversations WED are being archived by the British Library and used to build WED up a collection of voices capturing a unique portrait of the WED UK in the second decade of the millennium. You can learn WED more about The Listening Project by visiting WED bbc.co.uk/listeningproject WED Producer: Marya Burgess. WED WED 11:00 The Move b04md4np (Listen) WED A Move into the Unknown WED WED In a brand new series aims to satisfy our fascination with WED moving, as Rosie Millard charts the progress of people WED across the UK as they take the plunge and look for a new WED home - whether out of necessity or just WED for a change. WED Whether contemplating a mansion or a shoe-box, all her WED subjects have one thing in common - it's a jump into the WED unknown, somewhere where there is no network of friends WED waiting for them, no family and no preconceptions. WED In the first programme we follow Hannah and John, cycling WED fanatics, who are hoping to buy a live/work space in a WED converted mill in the Yorkshire dales. It's a big step for WED them both as Hannah has always lived in the far South of WED England, and now contemplates a new life in the North, WED whilst John, Cumbrian born and bred has, like so many 30 WED somethings, still kept his room on at his parent's house. WED Most of the time he just lives out of a kit bag as he WED travels the world as a cycle guide, and he certainly never WED contemplated having a mortgage. WED Trudi, meanwhile, is facing eviction for the second time in WED two years, as her run-down flat in Islington has WED dramatically turned into prime London real estate. "There WED was a two bed flat across the road went on the market for WED £770,000. It was sold in a week!" WED The notice to quit has arrived, and as a wheelchair user WED she's facing life on the streets or in sheltered WED accommodation, something she's none too pleased to WED contemplate at the age of 55 - "It's like God's waiting WED room..." WED But as Rosie finds out, things don't always turn out for the WED worst, or the best, in the moving business. WED Producer: Sara Jane Hall. WED WED 11:30 Welcome to Our Village, Please Invade Carefully WED b04md4nr (Listen) WED Series 2, Questioning Loyalties WED WED 3/6 Questioning Loyalties. Field Commander Uljabaan's WED loyalty cards, rewarding villagers for their collaboration, WED are not only ruining Katrina's plans but also Richard's WED chances in the weekly pub quiz. They WED turn to Ron, the landlord of the Rose & Crown for help in WED scuppering the scheme. WED Welcome To Our Village, Please Invade Carefully is a sitcom WED about an alien race that have noticed that those all-at-once WED invasions of Earth never work out that well. So they've WED locked the small Buckinghamshire village of Cresdon Green WED behind an impenetrable force field in order to study human WED behaviour and decide if Earth is worth invading. WED The only inhabitant who seems to be bothered by their new WED alien overlord is Katrina Lyons, who was only home for the WED weekend to borrow the money for a deposit for a flat when WED the force field went up. So along with Lucy Alexander (the WED only teenager in the village, willing to rebel against WED whatever you've got) she forms The Resistance - slightly to WED the annoyance of her parents Margaret and Richard who wish WED she wouldn't make so much of a fuss, and much to the WED annoyance of Field Commander Uljabaan who, alongside his WED unintelligible minions and The Computer (his WED hyper-intelligent supercomputer), is trying to actually run WED the invasion. WED Written by Eddie Robson WED Script-edited by Arthur Mathews WED Produced by Ed Morrish. WED WED Credits WED Katrina Lyons: Hattie Morahan WED Richard Lyons: Peter Davison WED Margaret Lyons: Jan Francis WED Lucy Alexander: Hannah Murray WED Field Commander Uljabaan: Charles Edwards WED The Computer: John-Luke Roberts WED Ron: Dave Lamb WED Lawrence: Michael Bertenshaw WED Producer: Ed Morrish WED Writer: Eddie Robson WED WED 12:00 News Summary b04mb0yn (Listen) WED The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. WED WED 12:04 Across the Board b04md54h (Listen) WED Series 2, Sigrid Rausing WED WED Across The Board: a series of interviews conducted by WED Dominic Lawson over a game of chess. Today Dominic takes on WED one of Britain's leading philanthropists, Sigrid Rausing, WED who plays chess every day with her husband. WED WED 12:15 You and Yours b04md54k (Listen) WED Consumer news. WED WED 12:57 Weather b04mb0yq (Listen) WED The latest weather forecast. WED WED 13:00 World at One b04md54m (Listen) WED Analysis of current affairs reports, presented by Martha WED Kearney. WED WED 13:45 Voices of the First World War b04md54p (Listen) WED Outnumbered and Outgunned WED WED There are now no living veterans of WW1, but it is still WED possible to go back to the First World War through the WED memories of those who actually took part. In a unique WED partnership between the Imperial War Museums WED and the BBC, two sound archive collections featuring WED survivors of the war are brought together for the first WED time. The Imperial War Museums' holdings include a major WED oral history resource of remarkable recordings made in the WED 1980s and early 1990s with the remaining survivors of the WED conflict. The interviews were done not for immediate use or WED broadcast, but because it was felt that this diminishing WED resource that could never be replenished, would be of unique WED value in the future. Speakers recall in great detail as WED though it were yesterday the conditions of the trenches, the WED brutality of the battlefield, the experience of seeing their WED first casualty and hearing their first shell, their daily WED and nightly routines as soldiers, pilots or navy members of WED all ranks, and their psychological state in the face of so WED much trauma. This series will broadcast many of these WED recordings for the first time. Among the BBC's extensive WED collection of archive featuring first hand recollections of WED the conflict a century ago, are the interviews recorded for WED the 1964 TV series 'The Great War', which vividly bring to WED life the human experience of those fighting and living WED through the war. WED Dan Snow narrates this new oral history, which will be WED broadcast in short seasons throughout the commemorative WED period. WED Programme 3 - Outnumbered and Outgunned WED Dan Snow looks at the Great Retreat, when all armies marched WED long distances with little food or sleep in scorching heat. WED Those who took part in the almost 200 mile journey across WED Belgium and France recall what it was like. WED WED 14:00 The Archers b04mctvz (Listen) WED [Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Tuesday] WED WED 14:15 Afternoon Drama b01h6670 (Listen) WED The Dreamer WED WED The son of a renowned Nazi hunter attempts to retrieve a WED stolen Matisse painting. Jane Asher and William Gaminara WED star in this atmospheric drama by Ronald Frame. WED WED Paulette is a music teacher in Nice. She is being WED shadowed by a man. Levin, when cornered, claims that he WED wants to take up the piano again. In fact Levin is the son WED of a famous Nazi-hunter, recently deceased. Paulette is the WED daughter of an SS officer who escaped to Buenos Aires. In WED Paulette's apartment Levin locates the object of his WED searches - a Matisse painting. But is it an original? Both WED Paulette and Levin have been held in a dream-like state, WED troubled by and unable to shake off the past. Paulette moved WED to Nice, attracted by the image in the painting, and WED frustrated by her mother's attempts to ruin her romances. WED Levin was never able to please his father: by finding the WED painting, will he finally be 'proving' himself? WED Producer/ Director: David Ian Neville. WED WED Credits WED Paulette Dubois: Jane Asher WED Howard Levin: William Gaminara WED Director: David Neville WED Producer: David Neville WED Writer: Ronald Frame WED WED 15:00 Money Box Live b04md569 (Listen) WED Energy Bills and Saving WED WED Paying too much for energy? To cut your bills, find out WED about help with insulating your home or challenge a customer WED service issue, call 03700 100 444 from 1pm to 3.30pm on WED Wednesday or e-mail WED moneybox@bbc.co.uk. WED Energy switching companies claim they can save you up to WED £400 per year so what is the cheapest plan on the market? WED Are you eligible for help with the costs of installing WED energy-saving improvements in your home? WED Can you benefit from the Warm Home Discount Scheme, Winter WED Fuel or Cold Weather Payments? WED Or perhaps you're having a problem with billing or customer WED service, what should you expect and how do you get it sorted WED out? WED Whatever your question, Paul Lewis will be joined by: WED Joe Malinowski, The Energy Shop. WED Brian Horne, Energy Saving Trust. WED Call 03700 100 444 between 1pm and 3.30pm on Wednesday or WED e-mail moneybox@bbc.co.uk now. Standard geographical charges WED apply. Calls from mobiles may be higher. WED WED 15:30 Inside Health b04mctw7 (Listen) WED [Repeat of broadcast at 21:00 on Tuesday] WED WED 16:00 Thinking Allowed b04md56c (Listen) WED Post-dictatorship art in Argentina; young jazz musicians in WED London WED WED Post dictatorship art in Argentina and beyond. Laurie Taylor WED talks to Vikki Bell, Professor of Sociology at Goldsmiths WED College, about the role of the arts in a society's journey WED to democracy. Whilst scholars of WED transitional justice tend to focus on the courts and the WED streets; this study asks how culture enables a country WED marked by state oppression to both mark, as well as WED transcend, its past. They're joined by Sanja Bahun, Lecturer WED in the Department of Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies WED at the University of Essex. Also, Charles Umney, Senior WED Lecturer in Human Resources and Organisational Behaviour at WED the University Of Greenwich, talks about the 'creative WED labour' of jazz musicians in London. WED Producer: Jayne Egerton. WED WED Vikki Bell WED WED Professor of Sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London WED WED Find out more about WED Vikki Bell WED The Art of Post-Dictatorship: Ethics and Aesthetics in WED Transitional Argentina WED Publisher: Routledge WED ISBN-10: 0415717337 WED ISBN-13: 978-0415717335 WED WED Sanja Bahun WED WED Professor in the Department of Literature, Film and Theatre WED Studies at the University of Essex WED WED Find out more about WED Sanja Bahun WED WED Essay: WED Broken Music, Broken History: Sound and Silence in Virginia WED Woolf's Between the Acts WED By Sanja Bahun WED Published in WED Virginia Woolf and Music WED by Adriana L. Varga WED Publisher: Indiana University Press WED ISBN-10: 0253012554 WED ISBN-13: 978-0253012555 WED WED Charles Umney WED WED Senior Lecturer in Human Resources and Organisational WED Behaviour, University of Greenwich WED WED Find out more about WED Dr Charles Umney WED WED Abstract: WED Creative labour and collective interaction: the working WED lives of young jazz musicians in London WED Charles Umney and Lefteris Kretsos WED Work Employment & Society August 2014 vol. 28 no. 4 571-588 WED doi: 10.1177/0950017013491452 WED WED Ethnography Award WED Thinking Allowed in association with the British WED Sociological Association announces the annual award for a WED study that has made a significant contribution to WED ethnography: the in-depth analysis of the everyday life of a WED culture or sub-culture. WED WED Are you involved in social science research and completing WED or will have completed ethnography this year? The Award is WED open to any UK resident currently employed as a teacher or WED researcher or studying as a postgraduate in a UK institution WED of higher education. WED WED An entry should be a WED completed ethnography WED a qualitative research project which provides a detailed WED description of the practices of a group or culture. Any sole WED authored book or peer reviewed research article published WED during the calendar year of the award will be eligible. WED WED The judges for the Award are yet to be announced. WED WED The judges will be looking for work which displays WED flair WED originality WED and WED clarity WED alongside sound methodology. The work should make a WED significant contribution to knowledge and understanding in WED the relevant area of research. WED WED The panel of judges will select six finalists, and from that WED shortlist the judges will select an overall winner who will WED be awarded a prize of £1000. WED WED The winner of the Award will be announced at the WED BSA Annual Conference WED in April 2015. WED WED Read on for essential information and details on how to WED enter. WED WED HOW TO ENTER: WED WED You may submit one entry only, which must be sole authored. WED WED All entries must include the summary and contact details and WED a hard copy or electronic copy (attachments must be under WED the filesize of 10MB) of the ethnography. WED WED Email a summary of your work to WED ethnoaward@bbc.co.uk WED (no more than 250 words) along with your name and phone WED number. WED Please include the name of your paper in the 'Subject' WED category of your email. WED If you are submitting a paper WED it can be attached to your email, provided it is no more WED than 10MB. If you receive no automatic email confirmation WED your paper is too large and you will need to send it by WED post. WED If you are submitting a book WED (which must be published during this year) it should be WED posted to: WED Thinking Allowed WED Ethnography Award WED Room 6045 WED Broadcasting House WED London WED W1A 1AA WED Entries must be submitted by the closing date of 31st WED December 2014 WED TERMS & CONDITIONS: WED The Thinking Allowed Award for Ethnography Terms and WED Conditions WED WED WED 1. To be eligible to enter you must meet the following WED criteria: WED WED 2. Proof of age, identity and eligibility may be requested. WED The BBC’s decision as to the eligibility of individual WED entrants will be final and no correspondence will be entered WED into. WED WED 3. Entrants must submit by way of email to WED ethnoaward@bbc.co.uk WED a summary outlining the nature of an ethnography undertaken WED and published by the entrant. Please include the name of WED your paper in the 'Subject' category of your email. The WED summary should not be longer than 250 words. The ethnography WED must consist of a qualitative research project which WED provides a detailed, in-depth description of the everyday WED life and practice of a group, people or culture and been WED included in a peer-reviewed paper or in a book published in WED 2014. All entries and research must be in English. WED WED 4. The email entry must include the following information WED and contact detail for the entrant: full name, postal WED address, institution of higher education, email address and WED contact telephone number. WED WED 5. If you are submitting a book (which must be published WED during this year) it should be posted to: Thinking Allowed WED Ethnography Award, room 6045 Broadcasting House, London W1A WED 1AA. If it is a paper, it can be attached to your email, WED provided it is no more than 10MB. If you receive no WED automatic email confirmation your paper is too large and you WED will need to send it by post. WED WED 6. All entries must include the: (i) summary (by email); WED (ii) the contact details (by email) and (ii) hard WED copy/electronic copy (if under 10MB) of the ethnography. WED WED 7. Only one entry will be allowed per person. WED WED 8. Entries cannot be submitted by any other method or they WED will not be considered. WED WED 9. All entries must be sole authored. WED WED 10. A panel of 5 highly experienced academics will select WED six finalists. These may be contacted by the Production Team WED for an interview. From the finalists, the panel will select WED an overall winner. The selection criteria will be based on WED the work which displays flair and originality, and which WED makes a significant contribution to knowledge and WED understanding in the relevant area of research. Each entry WED will be a completed ethnography, a qualitative research WED project which provides a detailed, in-depth, description of WED the everyday life and practice of a group, people, or WED culture. Judges will be looking for work which displays WED flair, originality and clarity, alongside sound methodology. WED It should make a significant contribution to knowledge and WED understanding in the relevant area of research. WED WED 11. The prize will consist of: £1,000. The judges' decision WED will be final and the BBC will not enter into correspondence WED with the applicants. In the event of two outstanding WED entries, the prize of £1000 will be shared. WED WED 12. The finalists will be contacted by telephone in spring WED of 2015 and the winner announced in April 2015. If a WED selected entrant cannot be contacted after reasonable WED attempts have been made to do so, the BBC reserves the right WED to offer the prize to the next best entry. WED WED 13. The winner should refrain from referring to the award in WED order to promote commercial ventures. All references must be WED compliant with BBC branding policies. WED WED 14. The BBC will only ever use personal details for the WED purposes of administering the scheme. Please see the WED BBC’s Privacy Policy WED . WED WED 15. Closing date for entries is 23:59 on 31st December 2014. WED All entries which are received after that will not be WED considered. WED WED 16. The BBC cannot accept any responsibility for any problem WED with the internet or electronic mail system. WED WED 17. All entries must be the original work of the entrant and WED must not infringe the rights of any other party. The BBC WED accepts no liability if entrants ignore these rules and WED entrants agree to fully indemnify the BBC against any claims WED by any third party arising from any breach of these rules. WED WED 18. Entrants retain the copyright in their original ideas WED but on being selected will grant to the BBC a licence to WED broadcast their entry (or parts thereof) across all media, WED as well as use it on any online platforms on standard WED prevailing BBC terms (as agreed with the Writer’s Guild, WED Society of Authors and Personal Managers Association). WED WED 19. By applying for the award, entrants warrant that they WED have legal capacity to enter the scheme and agree to be WED bound by these terms and conditions. WED WED 20. The names of the all selected entrants and any entrant WED whose entry is broadcast or used on-line will be made WED public. Entrants must agree to take part in any post-event WED publicity if required. WED WED 21. The BBC reserves the right to disqualify any entry which WED breaches any of these terms and conditions. WED WED 22. The BBC reserves the right to cancel or alter the award WED (including amending these terms and conditions) at any WED stage, including members of the judging panel if deemed WED necessary in its opinion, and if circumstances arise outside WED its control. In this event, a notice will be posted on the WED following website: WED http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/thinkingallowed WED WED WED 23. These Terms and Conditions are governed by the laws of WED England and Wales. WED WED 16:30 The Media Show b04md56f (Listen) WED Steve Hewlett presents a topical programme about the WED fast-changing media world. WED WED 17:00 PM b04md56h (Listen) WED PM at 5pm- Carolyn Quinn with interviews, context and WED analysis. WED WED 18:00 Six O'Clock News b04mb0ys (Listen) WED The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. WED WED 18:30 In and Out of the Kitchen b01qdsms (Listen) WED Series 2, The Dinner Party WED WED Damien and Anthony invite their nearest and dearest round WED for a dinner party to celebrate some good news: Anthony has WED finally decided to start his own investment company, whilst WED Damien has finally got from Sky WED Arts for a new series all about the culinary habits of the WED great poets. WED Unfortunately, things do not get off to an auspicious start WED when Anthony is beset by incurable hiccups, and Damien's WED agent Ian arrives with marital problems in tow. WED Includes recipes for Baked Camembert, Trout "en papillotte" WED and Rum Baba. WED Written by Miles Jupp WED Producer: Sam Michell. WED WED Credits WED Damien Trench: Miles Jupp WED Anthony MacIlveny: Justin Edwards WED Damien's Mum: Selina Cadell WED Ian Frobisher: Philip Fox WED Damien's Dad: Philip Fox WED Mr Mullaney: Brendan Dempsey WED Marion Duffett: Lesley Vickerage WED Producer: Sam Michell WED Writer: Miles Jupp WED WED 19:00 The Archers b04md585 (Listen) WED Contemporary drama in a rural setting. WED WED 19:15 Front Row b04md587 (Listen) WED Arts news, interviews and reviews. WED WED 19:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t1g (Listen) WED [Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 today] WED WED 20:00 Moral Maze b04md589 (Listen) WED Moral Maze - Presented by Michael Buerk. WED WED 20:45 Four Thought b04md5b0 (Listen) WED Series 4, Killing the Consumer WED WED Jon Alexander argues that consumer power has become an idea WED which from parenting to politics is damaging society. WED WED He argues that the age of the internet offers an alternative WED path, but that it is one we as a society must choose WED proactively. WED WED Producer: Giles Edwards. WED WED 21:00 Costing the Earth b04mcp9h (Listen) WED [Repeat of broadcast at 15:30 on Tuesday] WED WED 21:30 Midweek b04md4nf (Listen) WED [Repeat of broadcast at 09:00 today] WED WED 21:58 Weather b04mb0yv (Listen) WED The latest weather forecast. WED WED 22:00 The World Tonight b04mgsqm (Listen) WED In-depth reporting and analysis from a global perspective. WED WED 22:45 Book at Bedtime b04md5b2 (Listen) WED The Restoration of Otto Laird, Episode 3 WED WED A story of memory and place, old age and architecture. WED WED "Otto had felt surprisingly nervous on the plane across from WED Geneva; not from any fear of flying, but a fear of what he WED was flying to. [...] Throughout the WED short flight he experienced a strange inner turbulence. He WED had a queasy sensation that he was re-establishing a WED connection with the past; flying backwards into his own WED memories. He would no longer be experiencing them from a WED distance, but in the city where they had once been real." WED Architect Otto Laird has been living a semi-reclusive life WED with his second wife in Switzerland. But he is forced to WED re-engage with the wider world when he learns that his WED landmark building Marlowe House - a 1960s tower block in WED South London - has been marked for demolition. WED Episode Three. WED Otto flies from Geneva to London to start work on the TV WED documentary, only to become haunted by his past. WED Nigel Packer lives in London. He has been a music reviewer WED for BBC News Online and Ceefax, a reporting officer at the WED International Committee of the Red Cross and a contributor WED to various magazines and newspapers. The Restoration Of Otto WED Laird is his first novel. WED Reader: Allan Corduner WED Abridger: Jeremy Osborne WED Producer: Rosalynd Ward WED A Sweet Talk production for BBC Radio 4. WED WED Credits WED Reader: Alan Corduner WED Author: Nigel Packer WED Abridger: Jeremy Osborne WED Producer: Rosalynd Ward WED WED 23:00 The Music Teacher b01h75l2 (Listen) WED Series 2, Episode 6 WED WED Richie Webb returns as multi-instrumentalist music teacher WED Nigel Penny. WED WED Nigel finds himself losing pupils as a new music teacher who WED is able to get outstanding exam results starts working at WED the Arts Centre. WED Meanwhile Belinda is keen to put the new income stream to WED good use. WED Audio production by Matt Katz WED Directed by Nick Walker WED Written and produced by Richie Webb WED A Top Dog Production for BBC Radio 4. WED WED Credits WED Nigel Penny: Richie Webb WED Belinda: Vicki Pepperdine WED Chloe: Isobel Webb WED Mrs Taylor: Felicity Montagu WED Aleesha: Jess Robinson WED Rachel: Jess Robinson WED Maurice: Dave Lamb WED Guy: Jim North WED Bobby: Joseph Webb WED Writer: Richie Webb WED Producer: Richie Webb WED Director: Nick Walker WED WED 23:15 Terry Pratchett b01rgj25 (Listen) WED Eric, Episode 4 WED WED Adapted by Robin Brooks. WED WED Terry Pratchett's many Discworld novels combine a WED Technicolor imagination with a razor sharp wit, especially WED when he rewrites Faust as spotty teenage demonologist Eric. WED WED 4/ 4 Demon King WED Astfgl surfs the space-time continuum in a rage, determined WED to lure Eric and Rincewind finally to Hell. But when they WED arrive at the Dread Portal, there's a bit of a staff WED motivation issue. WED Rincewind ..... Mark Heap WED Eric ..... Will Howard WED Demon King Astfgl ..... Nicholas Murchie WED Urglefloggah ..... Jack Klaff WED Duke Vassenego ..... Ben Crowe WED Screwpate ..... Michael Shelford WED Drazometh ..... Robert Blythe WED Narrator ..... Rick Warden WED Director ..... Jonquil Panting. WED WED 23:30 Today in Parliament b04md5b4 (Listen) WED Sean Curran reports from Westminster. WED WED THU THURSDAY 30 OCTOBER 2014 THU THU 00:00 Midnight News b04mb0zx (Listen) THU The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. THU Followed by Weather. THU THU 00:30 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t1g (Listen) THU [Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 on Wednesday] THU THU 00:48 Shipping Forecast b04mb0zz (Listen) THU The latest shipping forecast. THU THU 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b04mb101 (Listen) THU BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. THU THU 05:20 Shipping Forecast b04mb103 (Listen) THU The latest shipping forecast. THU THU 05:30 News Briefing b04mb105 (Listen) THU The latest news from BBC Radio 4. THU THU 05:43 Prayer for the Day b04mq34c (Listen) THU Spiritual reflection to start the day with The Rev Laurence THU Twaddle. THU THU 05:45 Farming Today b04mgtdn (Listen) THU The latest news about food, farming and the countryside. THU Presented by Charlotte Smith and Produced by Emma Campbell. THU THU 05:58 Tweet of the Day b04hkyr5 (Listen) THU Greater Honeyguide THU THU Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship THU with them, from around the world. THU THU Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the greater honeyguide of THU sub-Saharan Africa. A loud repetitive "it's - here" - "it's THU -here" is a sound the greater honey guide only makes to THU humans in an extraordinary co-operative act between humans THU and bird. Relatives of woodpeckers they are one of the few THU birds which can digest wax and also feed on the eggs, grubs THU and pupae of bees. A greater honeyguide knows the location THU of the bee colonies in its territory and is able to lead THU honey-hunters to them. Once it has successfully guided its THU helpers to a nest, it waits while the honey-hunters remove THU the comb. Then it moves in to snap up the grubs and wax from THU the opened nest. So reliable are honeyguides that the Boran THU people of East Africa save up to two thirds of their THU honey-searching time by using the bird's services and use a THU special loud whistle (called a fuulido) to summon their THU guide before a hunt. THU THU Greater honeyguide (Indicator indicator) THU THU Also known as black-throated honeyguide, this webpage image THU is courtesy of Roland Seitre / naturepl.com. THU N THU PL Ref 01469763 THU © Roland Seitre / naturepl.com THU THU 06:00 Today b04mgxt2 (Listen) THU Morning news and current affairs. Including Sports Desk, THU Yesterday in Parliament, Weather and Thought for the Day. THU THU 09:00 In Our Time b04mgtdq (Listen) THU Nuclear Fusion THU THU Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss nuclear fusion, the THU process that powers stars. In the 1920s physicists predicted THU that it might be possible to generate huge amounts of energy THU by fusing atomic nuclei THU together, a reaction requiring enormous temperatures and THU pressures. Today we know that this complex reaction is what THU keeps the Sun shining. Scientists have achieved fusion in THU the laboratory and in nuclear weapons; today it is seen as a THU likely future source of limitless and clean energy. THU Producer: Thomas Morris. THU THU Credits THU Presenter: Melvyn Bragg THU Producer: Thomas Morris THU THU 09:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t2s (Listen) THU Purging the Degenerate THU THU Neil MacGregor examines how the Nazis attacked art they THU viewed as 'entartet' - degenerate. THU THU He charts how Goebbels, Hitler's propaganda minister, led a THU process designed to purify all German culture, including THU books, music, paintings and pottery. THU The programme focuses on a vase created by Grete Marks, with THU an evident debt to Chinese ceramics, and a loose THU brush-splashed glaze suggestive of modernist painting. THU Goebbels condemned this vase in his newspaper Der Angriff - THU The Attack. Grete Marks, who was Jewish and had trained at THU the Bauhaus, left Germany for England. THU Producer Paul Kobrak. THU THU 10:00 Woman's Hour b04mgtds (Listen) THU Jenni Murray presents the programme that offers a female THU perspective on the world. THU THU Credits THU Presenter: Jenni Murray THU THU 10:45 15 Minute Drama b04mgtdv (Listen) THU My Life with Flu, Episode 4 THU THU By Sarah Woods THU THU A love story, about flu. THU THU It's the year 2000 and Jill's lungs bear the scars of the THU bacterial pneumonia she suffered fourteen years ago. The THU doctor urges her to have the flu jab, but Jill has other THU things on her mind - her daughter Polly is preparing to THU leave for University, and Jill has the urge to phone an old THU friend. THU My Life with Flu has been produced in collaboration with the THU Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. In five episodes it follows THU the story of Jill across five decades as she struggles with THU the highs and lows of life, love and viruses. At the same THU time the story tracks the life of Hong Kong Flu - how, over THU 45 years, it has traversed the globe, evolved and is THU ultimately being superseded by new, more virulent strains, THU such as Swine Flu. THU The series uses cutting edge science - of transmission, THU viral evolution and genetic predisposition - to tell the THU story of flu, and investigate the unique qualities of Jill's THU genome which make her a 'severe responder'. Paul Kellam, THU Virus Genomics team leader at the Sanger Institute worked THU closely with writer Sarah Woods to weave the science THU seamlessly into the story. The drama underlines the deep THU connection human beings have to the viruses that survive THU through us, and how illness can shape the course of our THU lives. THU Directed by James Robinson THU A BBC Cymru/Wales Production. THU THU Credits THU Jill: Hannah Daniel THU David: Ronan Summers THU John: Lia Williams THU Polly: Hannah Daniel THU Doctor: John Norton THU Narrator: Eiry Thomas THU Writer: Sarah Woods THU Director: James Robinson THU THU 11:00 From Our Own Correspondent b04mb107 (Listen) THU Reports from writers and journalists around the world. THU Presented by Kate Adie. THU THU 11:30 In a Nutshell b04mgxt4 (Listen) THU Frances Glessner Lee revolutionised the study of crime THU investigation, founding the first centre for the study of THU forensic pathology at Harvard University . Glessner Lee THU built a series of Dolls Houses in the THU 1940's with a carpenter in which she constructed meticulous THU replica crime scenes to teach detectives their craft. These THU are still used in training new detectives today . THU Poet Simon Armitage travels to the Medical Examiners office THU in Baltimore to investigate them , and their maker - THU regarded as the mother of modern CSI. THU with Bruce Goldfarb, Corinne May Botz, Dr David Fowler, THU Detective Robert Ross and Jerry Dziecichowicz. THU THU Excerpt from Dark Bathroom by Simon Armitage THU Dark Bathroom THU THU Here’s a shabby scene, THU THU a pitiful sight, THU THU a dingy bathroom THU THU half-panelled with wood, THU THU THU THU toilet paper in single sheets THU THU on a metal hook THU THU at the side of the loo, THU THU hand-washed underwear strung on a line THU THU THU from doorframe to beam – THU THU you can almost THU THU smell the loneliness, THU THU taste the damp. THU THU Excerpt from Medical Examiner’s Office / Three Room Dwelling THU By Simon Armitage THU THU Here is an office block THU THU on a downtown street, THU THU to the outside eye THU THU just several storeys THU THU THU THU of swivel chairs and computer screens. THU THU And here is a key. A regular THU key THU THU for a standard lock. THU THU When opened, the door THU THU THU THU doesn’t gasp or swoon. THU THU This isn’t a mausoleum or tomb. THU THU The visitor here THU THU won’t faint or puke. THU THU Barn by Simon Armitage THU THU Whether theatre sets THU THU or murder scenes, whether THU THU science or art, THU THU each piece is the work THU (Photo: Simon With Bruce Goldfarb) THU THU of a nerveless calm, THU THU an architect’s eye, THU THU an artist’s hand, THU THU a singular mind. THU THU Poke a flashlight beam THU THU through the open doors THU THU of this model barn. THU THU Framed by timbers THU THU THU THU of seasoned wood THU THU from an actual farm, THU THU poor Eben Wallace THU THU hangs by his neck, THU THU THU THU the coarse rope hitched THU THU from a hook on the door jamb, THU THU bottom left, THU THU then over the hay-hoist THU THU THU THU and in through the hatch. THU THU The thin wooden crate THU THU couldn’t bear his weight, THU THU so he swings THU THU THU THU just inches at most THU THU above the floor. THU THU Straw everywhere, THU THU everywhere straw. THU THU THU THU Mrs Wallace suggests THU THU he’d made threats before, THU THU but this time has Eben THU THU gone too far? THU THU THU THU Those tread marks THU THU made by a tractor tyre – THU THU are they fresh? THU THU An ox yoke leans THU THU THU THU against the wall, THU THU a good luck horseshoe THU THU rests on nail, THU THU sunlight breaks in THU THU THU THU through the planks and slats. THU THU Would Eben really THU THU have topped himself? THU THU Hay everywhere, everywhere hay THU THU THU THU and somewhere among it THU THU the needle of truth, beneath THU THU that weathervane, or is it THU THU a cross on the roof? THU THU THU 12:00 News Summary b04mb109 (Listen) THU The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. THU THU 12:04 Across the Board b04mgxt6 (Listen) THU Series 2, Sol Campbell THU THU Across The Board: a series of interviews conducted by THU Dominic Lawson over a game of chess. Today Dominic takes on THU the former England footballer Sol Campbell - and asks him THU whether his decision to transfer from Tottenham Hotspur to THU Arsenal was a chess player's move. THU THU 12:15 You and Yours b04mgxt8 (Listen) THU Consumer news. THU THU 12:57 Weather b04mb10c (Listen) THU The latest weather forecast. THU THU 13:00 World at One b04mgxtb (Listen) THU Analysis of current affairs reports, presented by Martha THU Kearney. THU THU 13:45 Voices of the First World War b04mgxtd (Listen) THU At Sea THU THU There are now no living veterans of WW1, but it is still THU possible to go back to the First World War through the THU memories of those who actually took part. In a unique THU partnership between the Imperial War Museums THU and the BBC, two sound archive collections featuring THU survivors of the war are brought together for the first THU time. The Imperial War Museums' holdings include a major THU oral history resource of remarkable recordings made in the THU 1980s and early 1990s with the remaining survivors of the THU conflict. The interviews were done not for immediate use or THU broadcast, but because it was felt that this diminishing THU resource that could never be replenished, would be of unique THU value in the future. Speakers recall in great detail as THU though it were yesterday the conditions of the trenches, the THU brutality of the battlefield, the experience of seeing their THU first casualty and hearing their first shell, their daily THU and nightly routines as soldiers, pilots or navy members of THU all ranks, and their psychological state in the face of so THU much trauma. This series will broadcast many of these THU recordings for the first time. Among the BBC's extensive THU collection of archive featuring first hand recollections of THU the conflict a century ago, are the interviews recorded for THU the 1964 TV series 'The Great War', which vividly bring to THU life the human experience of those fighting and living THU through the war. THU Dan Snow narrates this new oral history, which will be THU broadcast in short seasons throughout the commemorative THU period. THU Programme 4 - At Sea THU Dan Snow hears the extraordinary experiences of those who THU took part in and witnessed the battles of the British and THU German navies during the first few months of the war. THU THU 14:00 The Archers b04md585 (Listen) THU [Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Wednesday] THU THU 14:15 Afternoon Drama b04mgxtg (Listen) THU Hancock's Ashes THU THU by Caroline and David Stafford THU THU Based on a real event. In 1968 Willie Rushton brought Tony THU Hancock's ashes back to Britain from Australia. This play THU imagines what might have happened behind the scenes... THU THU Directed by Marc Beeby. THU THU Credits THU Willie Rushton: Ewan Bailey THU Brian Foster: Richard Dillane THU Danny the Deserter: Paul Heath THU Stewardess: Roslyn Hill THU Writer: Caroline Stafford THU Writer: David Stafford THU Director: Marc Beeby THU THU 15:00 Open Country b04mgxtj (Listen) THU Elmley Nature Reserve THU THU As Open Country returns for a new series, Helen Mark THU ventures to The Isle of Sheppey where she becomes immersed THU both in the marsh swathed landscape of Elmley Nature Reserve THU and the infectious enthusiasm of the THU man who oversaw its creation. THU Elmley is the only National Nature Reserve in the UK to be THU managed by a farming family and this unique status is down THU to the forward thinking of farmer Philip Merricks. Bumping THU along the ridge of the reserve's sea wall in his trusty 4x4, THU Philip introduces Helen to this historic Kent landscape, THU accompanied by the flight of lapwing and wigeon. THU It's an area that is believed to have inspired Charles THU Dickens in the writing of 'Great Expectations' but as Helen THU discovers, it has also inspired an even bigger story of THU ground breaking conservation. THU During the 1980's, farmers were paid compensation for THU turning land over to wildlife but Philip felt that this was THU unproductive for both farmers and wildlife and so wrote - THU what he calls - a fairly strong letter to the House of THU Commons Select Committee that had been tasked with finding a THU solution to what was becoming a rural battle ground. THU Remarkably, Philip's letter found its way into Parliament THU and his ideas were held up as a potential way forward. THU Thirty years on Philip's enthusiasm and dedication to this THU one of a kind nature reserve is as strong as it ever and now THU - with the support and care of long standing farm manger THU Steve Gorden - Philip's daughter Georgina and son-in-law THU Gareth are moving forward with sharing this special place THU with visitors and encouraging that passion for farming and THU conservation that Philip began decades ago. THU Produced by Nicola Humphries. THU THU 15:27 Radio 4 Appeal b04mgxtl (Listen) THU [Repeat of broadcast at 07:55 on Sunday] THU THU 15:30 Open Book b04mgxtn (Listen) THU [Repeat of broadcast at 16:00 on Sunday] THU THU 16:00 The Film Programme b04mgxtq (Listen) THU Francine Stock presents a new series running throughout The THU Film Programme for the next two months- The Story Of The THU Sound Effect. To mark the BFI's season Days Of Fear And THU Wonder, the programme will hear from THU the people who created some of the most famous sound effects THU in the history of science fiction cinema. This week, Gary THU Rydstrom on Jurassic Park. THU THU Credits THU Presenter: Francine Stock THU Interviewed Guest: Gary Rydstrom THU THU 16:30 BBC Inside Science b04mgxts (Listen) THU The Making of the Moon THU THU It's the nearest and most dominant object in our night sky, THU and has inspired artists, astronauts and astronomers. But THU fundamental questions remain about our only natural THU satellite. THU THU Where does the Moon come THU from? THU Although humans first walked on the Moon over four decades THU ago, we still know surprisingly little about the lunar THU body's origin. Samples returned by the Apollo missions have THU somewhat confounded scientists' ideas about how the Moon was THU formed. Its presence is thought to be due to another planet THU colliding with the early Earth, causing an extraordinary THU giant impact, and in the process, forming the Moon. But, THU analysing chemicals in Apollo's rock samples has revealed THU that the Moon could be much more similar to Earth itself THU than any potential impactor. Geochemist Professor Alex THU Halliday of the University of Oxford, and Dr Jeff THU Andrews-Hanna, Colorado School of Mines - who is analysing THU the results from NASA's Gravity Recovery and Interior THU Laboratory (GRAIL) lunar mission - discuss the theories and THU evidence to-date. THU Are we going back? THU Settling the question of the Moon's origin seems likely to THU require more data - which, in turn, requires more missions. THU BBC Science correspondent Jonathan Amos tells us about the THU rationale and future prospects for a return to the Moon, THU including the Google Lunar XPrize. THU As the Moon's commercial prospects are considered, who THU controls conservation of our only natural satellite? THU If commerce is driving a return to the Moon, who owns any THU resources that may be found in the lunar regolith? Dr Saskia THU Vermeylen of the Environment Centre at Lancaster University THU is researching the legality of claiming this THU extra-terrestrial frontier. THU Producer: Jen Whyntie. THU THU 17:00 PM b04mgypq (Listen) THU PM at 5pm- Carolyn Quinn with interviews, context and THU analysis. THU THU 18:00 Six O'Clock News b04mb10g (Listen) THU The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. THU THU 18:30 John Finnemore's Souvenir Programme b04mgyps (Listen) THU Series 4, Episode 3 THU THU John Finnemore, the writer and star of Cabin Pressure, THU regular guest on The Now Show and popper-upper in things THU like Miranda, records a fourth series of his hit sketch THU show. THU THU 3/6: In this third edition of the THU fourth series we get updates from some ongoing political THU negotiations; witness an awkward encounter at an interfaith THU conference; and hear a curious tale of a young man who heads THU to Canada to win the respect of his father. THU The first series of John Finnemore's Souvenir Programme was THU described as "sparklingly clever" by The Daily Telegraph and THU "one of the most consistently funny sketch shows for quite THU some time" by The Guardian. The second series won Best Radio THU Comedy at both the Chortle and Comedy.co.uk awards, and was THU nominated for a Radio Academy award. The third series THU actually won a Radio Academy award. THU In this fourth series, John has written more sketches, like THU the sketches from the other series. Not so much like them THU that they feel stale and repetitious; but on the other hand THU not so different that it feels like a misguided attempt to THU completely change the show. Quite like the old sketches, in THU other words, but about different things and with different THU jokes. (Although it's a pretty safe bet some of them will THU involve talking animals.) THU Written by and starring ... John Finnemore THU Also featuring ... Margaret Cabourn-Smith, Simon Kane, Lawry THU Lewin and Carrie Quinlan. THU Producer ... Ed Morrish. THU THU Credits THU Presenter: John Finnemore THU Ensemble: Margaret Cabourn-Smith THU Ensemble: Simon Kane THU Ensemble: Lawry Lewin THU Ensemble: Carrie Quinlan THU Producer: Ed Morrish THU Writer: John Finnemore THU THU 19:00 The Archers b04mgypv (Listen) THU Contemporary drama in a rural setting. THU THU 19:15 Front Row b04mh3r1 (Listen) THU Arts news, interviews and reviews. THU THU 19:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t2s (Listen) THU [Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 today] THU THU 20:00 Law in Action b04mcp9k (Listen) THU [Repeat of broadcast at 16:00 on Tuesday] THU THU 20:30 The Bottom Line b04mh3r3 (Listen) THU From smartglasses to smartwatches, tech companies like THU Apple, Google and Samsung are investing big money in THU technology that you can wear. They're designed to keep us THU eternally connected, fully fit and super THU smart. But will they go mainstream or are they still the THU preserve of the gadget geeks? Evan Davis and guests discuss THU how fitness bands that measure how far you walk and how THU deeply you sleep could transform our healthcare. And hear THU about the intelligent fabric that's set to revolutionise the THU way US and British soldiers are kitted out. THU Guests: THU Andy Griffiths, President, Samsung UK and Ireland THU Asha Peta Thompson, Co-founder, Intelligent Textiles THU Joss Langford, Technical Director, Activinsights THU Producer: Sally Abrahams. THU THU 21:00 BBC Inside Science b04mgxts (Listen) THU [Repeat of broadcast at 16:30 today] THU THU 21:30 In Our Time b04mgtdq (Listen) THU [Repeat of broadcast at 09:00 today] THU THU 21:58 Weather b04mb10j (Listen) THU The latest weather forecast. THU THU 22:00 The World Tonight b04mh3r5 (Listen) THU In-depth reporting and analysis from a global perspective. THU THU 22:45 Book at Bedtime b04mh3r7 (Listen) THU The Restoration of Otto Laird, Episode 4 THU THU A story of memory and place, old age and architecture. THU THU "Otto had felt surprisingly nervous on the plane across from THU Geneva; not from any fear of flying, but a fear of what he THU was flying to. [...] Throughout the THU short flight he experienced a strange inner turbulence. He THU had a queasy sensation that he was re-establishing a THU connection with the past; flying backwards into his own THU memories. He would no longer be experiencing them from a THU distance, but in the city where they had once been real." THU Architect Otto Laird has been living a semi-reclusive life THU with his second wife in Switzerland. But he is forced to THU re-engage with the wider world when he learns that his THU landmark building Marlowe House - a 1960s tower block in THU South London - has been marked for demolition. THU Episode Four. THU With no filming to do until the afternoon, Otto goes for a THU walk in Fitzrovia and revisits the scenes of former THU triumphs. THU Nigel Packer lives in London. He has been a music reviewer THU for BBC News Online and Ceefax, a reporting officer at the THU International Committee of the Red Cross and a contributor THU to various magazines and newspapers. The Restoration Of Otto THU Laird is his first novel. THU Reader: Allan Corduner THU Abridger: Jeremy Osborne THU Producer: Rosalynd Ward THU A Sweet Talk production for BBC Radio 4. THU THU Credits THU Reader: Alan Corduner THU Author: Nigel Packer THU Abridger: Jeremy Osborne THU Producer: Rosalynd Ward THU THU 23:00 52 First Impressions with David Quantick b04mh3r9 (Listen) THU Episode 3 THU THU Journalist and comedy writer David Quantick has met and THU interviewed hundreds of people. What were his first THU impressions, how have they changed and does it all matter? THU THU In this third programme (of four), there are THU stories about Tom Jones, Morrissey and Mrs Phyllis Pearsall, THU among others. THU Producer: Steve Doherty THU A Giddy Goat production for BBC Radio 4. THU THU Credits THU Presenter: David Quantick THU Producer: Steve Doherty THU THU 23:30 Today in Parliament b04mh3rc (Listen) THU Susan Hulme reports from Westminster. THU THU FRI FRIDAY 31 OCTOBER 2014 FRI FRI 00:00 Midnight News b04mb11j (Listen) FRI The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. FRI Followed by Weather. FRI FRI 00:30 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t2s (Listen) FRI [Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 on Thursday] FRI FRI 00:48 Shipping Forecast b04mb11l (Listen) FRI The latest shipping forecast. FRI FRI 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b04mb11n (Listen) FRI BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. FRI FRI 05:20 Shipping Forecast b04mb11q (Listen) FRI The latest shipping forecast. FRI FRI 05:30 News Briefing b04mb11s (Listen) FRI The latest news from BBC Radio 4. FRI FRI 05:43 Prayer for the Day b04mq35m (Listen) FRI Spiritual reflection to start the day with The Rev Laurence FRI Twaddle. FRI FRI 05:45 Farming Today b04mhd54 (Listen) FRI The latest news about food, farming and the countryside. FRI Presented by Charlotte Smith and Produced by Lucy Bickerton. FRI FRI 05:58 Tweet of the Day b04hkysz (Listen) FRI Vampire Finch FRI FRI Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship FRI with them, from around the world. FRI FRI For Halloween, Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the blood FRI sucking vampire finch. On Wolf Island in the remote FRI Galapagos FRI archipelago, a small dark finch sidles up to a booby with a FRI taste for blood. Sharp-beaked ground finch is found on FRI several islands in the Galapagos and is one of the family FRI known as Darwin's finches. Several species of ground-finches FRI have devolved bill sizes which vary depending on their diet FRI and the competition for food. Usually seeds, fruits, nectar FRI and grubs. But one sharp-beaked ground-finch has gorier FRI ambitions. On the isolated islands of Wolf and Darwin where FRI seeds are scarcer in times of drought this bird has taken to FRI drinking the blood of other seabirds, especially boobies. It FRI pecks at the bases of their feathers and greedily laps up FRI the flowing blood. For this reason it's often known as the, FRI the vampire finch. FRI FRI Webpage image of Sharp-beaked ground-finch / Vampire finch FRI (Geospiza difficilis) FRI FRI Webpage image courtesy of Pete Oxford / naturepl.com. FRI NP FRI L Ref 01227974 FRI © Pete Oxford / naturepl.com. FRI FRI Recording of sharp-beaked ground-finch by Robert I Bowman / FRI Ref: ML 86756 FRI FRI This programme contains a wildtrack FRI recording of the sharp-beaked ground-finch FRI kindly provided by The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab FRI of Ornithology; recorded by Robert I Bowman on 07 Feb 1964, FRI in Culpepper, Galápagos, Ecuador. FRI FRI 06:00 Today b04mhfhs (Listen) FRI Morning news and current affairs. Including Sports Desk, FRI Yesterday in Parliament, Weather and Thought for the Day. FRI FRI 09:00 Desert Island Discs b04mh755 (Listen) FRI [Repeat of broadcast at 11:15 on Sunday] FRI FRI 09:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t31 (Listen) FRI At the Buchenwald Gate FRI FRI Neil MacGregor visits Buchenwald, one of the earliest and FRI largest concentration camps. FRI FRI Producer Paul Kobrak. FRI FRI 10:00 Woman's Hour b04mhfhv (Listen) FRI Jenni Murray presents the programme that offers a female FRI perspective on the world. FRI FRI Credits FRI Presenter: Jenni Murray FRI FRI 10:45 15 Minute Drama b04mhd56 (Listen) FRI My Life with Flu, Episode 5 FRI FRI By Sarah Woods FRI FRI A love story, about flu. FRI FRI It's October 2014 and Jill is now seventy-one. When she runs FRI into an old familiar face at the chemists, she has one last FRI shot at happiness. But the flu has other ideas. FRI FRI My FRI Life with Flu has been produced in collaboration with the FRI Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. In five episodes it follows FRI the story of Jill across five decades as she struggles with FRI the highs and lows of life, love and viruses. At the same FRI time the story tracks the life of Hong Kong Flu - how, over FRI 45 years, it has traversed the globe, evolved and is FRI ultimately being superseded by new, more virulent strains, FRI such as Swine Flu. FRI The series uses cutting edge science - of transmission, FRI viral evolution and genetic predisposition - to tell the FRI story of flu, and investigate the unique qualities of Jill's FRI genome which make her a 'severe responder'. Paul Kellam, FRI Virus Genomics team leader at the Sanger Institute worked FRI closely with writer Sarah Woods to weave the science FRI seamlessly into the story. The drama underlines the deep FRI connection human beings have to the viruses that survive FRI through us, and how illness can shape the course of our FRI lives. FRI Directed by James Robinson FRI A BBC Cymru/Wales Production. FRI FRI Credits FRI Jill: Hannah Daniel FRI David: Ronan Summers FRI John: Lia Williams FRI Polly: Hannah Daniel FRI Doctor: John Norton FRI Narrator: Eiry Thomas FRI Writer: Sarah Woods FRI Director: James Robinson FRI FRI 11:00 Assassination: When Delhi Burned b04mhd58 (Listen) FRI Bobby Friction was in Delhi visiting his relatives when the FRI Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated on the FRI 31st October 1984 by her two Sikh bodyguards. Riots erupted FRI across the city to avenge the FRI killing. Bobby went into hiding with his family to escape FRI the mobs who went on the rampage in the shocking aftermath FRI of her death. FRI Professor Swaran Singh, Medical Director at Warwick FRI University and Consultant Psychiatrist, was a trainee FRI surgeon in Delhi in 1984. He witnessed first-hand the riots, FRI the killings and the anguish of those who survived. He was FRI moved to work with the children who had lost either one or FRI both parents - and set up a play area for them where he FRI could also carry out medical checks in the Tilak Vihar area FRI of Delhi. FRI However, two years later he left not only Tilak Vihar, but FRI India, vowing never to return, traumatised by all he'd seen. FRI Now, 30 years on from the assassination of Indira Gandhi, FRI Bobby Friction takes Swaran back to Delhi and together they FRI go in search of the children he left behind in 1984. FRI Producer: Perminder Khatkar. FRI FRI 11:30 The Missing Hancocks b04ly3xv (Listen) FRI The Matador FRI FRI Between 1954 and 1959, BBC Radio recorded 102 episodes of FRI Ray Galton and Alan Simpson's comedy classic Hancock's Half FRI Hour. The first modern sitcom, it made stars of Tony FRI Hancock, Sid James and Kenneth FRI Williams, and launched Galton and Simpson on one of the most FRI successful comedy-writing partnerships in history. But 20 FRI episodes of the show are missing from the BBC archives, and FRI have not been heard since their original transmission nearly FRI sixty years ago. Now, five of those episodes have been FRI lovingly re-recorded in front of a live audience at the BBC FRI Radio Theatre, featuring a stellar cast led by Kevin McNally FRI as The Lad Himself. FRI Tonight's episode: The Matador. Tony uses Sid's travel FRI agency to book a holiday in Spain, little knowing that Sid FRI also runs a bullfighting business.... FRI Written by Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, and with the classic FRI score newly recorded by the BBC Concert Orchestra, the show FRI stars Kevin McNally, Kevin Eldon, Simon Greenall, Robin FRI Sebastian and Susy Kane. The Matador was last broadcast in FRI October 1955. FRI Produced by Ed Morrish and Neil Pearson. FRI FRI Credits FRI Hancock: Kevin McNally FRI Actor: Kevin Eldon FRI Actor: Simon Greenall FRI Actor: Robin Sebastian FRI Actor: Susy Kane FRI Writer: Ray Galton FRI Writer: Alan Simpson FRI Producer: Ed Morrish FRI Producer: Neil Pearson FRI FRI 12:00 News Summary b04mb11v (Listen) FRI The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. FRI FRI 12:04 Across the Board b04mhd5b (Listen) FRI Series 2, Demis Hassabis FRI FRI Across The Board: a series of interviews conducted by FRI Dominic Lawson over a game of chess. In this, the last of FRI the series, Dominic takes on Demis Hassabis. Demis was a FRI child chess prodigy, who moved into computer programming, FRI and has just sold his company to Google for £400million. FRI FRI 12:15 You and Yours b04mhg0d (Listen) FRI Consumer news. FRI FRI 12:57 Weather b04mb11x (Listen) FRI The latest weather forecast. FRI FRI 13:00 World at One b04mhg0g (Listen) FRI Analysis of current affairs reports, presented by Mark FRI Mardell. FRI FRI 13:45 Voices of the First World War b04mhd5d (Listen) FRI By Night FRI FRI There are now no living veterans of WW1, but it is still FRI possible to go back to the First World War through the FRI memories of those who actually took part. In a unique FRI partnership between the Imperial War Museums FRI and the BBC, two sound archive collections featuring FRI survivors of the war are brought together for the first FRI time. The Imperial War Museums' holdings include a major FRI oral history resource of remarkable recordings made in the FRI 1980s and early 1990s with the remaining survivors of the FRI conflict. The interviews were done not for immediate use or FRI broadcast, but because it was felt that this diminishing FRI resource that could never be replenished, would be of unique FRI value in the future. Speakers recall in great detail as FRI though it were yesterday the conditions of the trenches, the FRI brutality of the battlefield, the experience of seeing their FRI first casualty and hearing their first shell, their daily FRI and nightly routines as soldiers, pilots or navy members of FRI all ranks, and their psychological state in the face of so FRI much trauma. This series will broadcast many of these FRI recordings for the first time. Among the BBC's extensive FRI collection of archive featuring first hand recollections of FRI the conflict a century ago, are the interviews recorded for FRI the 1964 TV series 'The Great War', which vividly bring to FRI life the human experience of those fighting and living FRI through the war. FRI Dan Snow narrates this new oral history, which will be FRI broadcast in short seasons throughout the commemorative FRI period. FRI Programme 5 - By Night FRI Dan Snow looks at soldiers' experiences at night on the FRI battlefields of the Western Front during the early stages FRI war, when they had to be more alert than during the day. FRI FRI 14:00 The Archers b04mgypv (Listen) FRI [Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Thursday] FRI FRI 14:15 Afternoon Drama b04mhd5g (Listen) FRI The Devil's Violin FRI FRI A magical, murderous, musical fairy tale by Lucy Rivers. FRI FRI Life for 16 year old Hannah is pretty miserable. Her FRI mother's a drunk and her baby brother Gethin is an evil FRI little gremlin child. But then one night she FRI meets an alluring violinist who plays the most seductive FRI melodies. He offers Hannah the chance to fulfil her darkest FRI desires. How far will Hannah go to get what she wants? FRI A wickedly playful dark modern fable with an original score FRI composed and performed by Lucy Rivers. FRI Guitarist ..... Dan Messore FRI Violinist ..... Lucy Rivers FRI Composer ..... Lucy Rivers FRI Director ..... Helen Perry FRI A BBC Cymru Wales Production FRI Lucy Rivers is a multi-talented writer, musician and FRI performer. She's achieved great success with her company FRI Gaggle Babble on acclaimed shows such as The Bloody Ballad - FRI uniquely fusing music and theatre, humour and the macabre. FRI The Devil's Violin is her first radio drama. FRI FRI Credits FRI Hannah: Gwyneth Keyworth FRI Older Hannah: Melanie Walters FRI The Devil: Adam Redmore FRI Hannah's Mum: Lisa Palfrey FRI Sally: Katy Owen FRI Writer: Lucy Rivers FRI Director: Helen Perry FRI FRI 15:00 Gardeners' Question Time b04mhd5j (Listen) FRI Cambridge FRI FRI Eric Robson chairs the horticultural panel programme from FRI Cambridge. Chris Beardshaw, Bob Flowerdew and Christine FRI Walkden take questions from the audience. FRI FRI Produced by Darby Dorras FRI Assistant Producer: Hannah Newton FRI FRI A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4. FRI FRI 15:45 Man about the House b04mhd5l (Listen) FRI The Top Back FRI FRI Three specially commissioned stories explore men's FRI relationships with their homes: FRI FRI 1. The Top Back by Andrew Martin FRI When he was born, Clive's bedroom in the old house was full FRI of toys. Decades later he still seems to be there, FRI surrounded by them all.. FRI FRI Reader Paul Copley FRI FRI Producer Duncan Minshull. FRI FRI Credits FRI Reader: Paul Copley FRI Writer: Andrew Martin FRI Producer: Duncan Minshull FRI FRI 16:00 Last Word b04mpr5w (Listen) FRI Obituary series, analysing and celebrating the life stories FRI of people who have recently died. FRI FRI 16:30 Feedback b04mpr5y (Listen) FRI Radio 4's forum for comments, queries, criticisms and FRI congratulations. FRI FRI 16:55 The Listening Project b04mhd5n (Listen) FRI Diana and Elise - Travelling Companions FRI FRI Fi Glover introduces friends who are now in their 70s and FRI have travelled to more than 30 countries since they caught FRI the travel bug after bringing up their families. FRI FRI The Listening Project is a Radio 4 initiative FRI that offers a snapshot of contemporary Britain in which FRI people across the UK volunteer to have a conversation with FRI someone close to them about a subject they've never FRI discussed intimately before. The conversations are being FRI gathered across the UK by teams of producers from local and FRI national radio stations who facilitate each encounter. Every FRI conversation - they're not BBC interviews, and that's an FRI important difference - lasts up to an hour, and is then FRI edited to extract the key moment of connection between the FRI participants. Most of the unedited conversations are being FRI archived by the British Library and used to build up a FRI collection of voices capturing a unique portrait of the UK FRI in the second decade of the millennium. You can learn more FRI about The Listening Project by visiting FRI bbc.co.uk/listeningproject FRI Producer: Marya Burgess. FRI FRI 17:00 PM b04mpr60 (Listen) FRI PM at 5pm- Eddie Mair with interviews, context and analysis. FRI FRI 18:00 Six O'Clock News b04mb121 (Listen) FRI The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. FRI FRI 18:30 The News Quiz b04mhd5q (Listen) FRI Series 85, Episode 2 FRI FRI A satirical review of the week's news, chaired by Sandi FRI Toksvig, with Samira Ahmed, Susan Calman and Phill Jupitus, FRI and regular panellist Jeremy Hardy. FRI FRI Credits FRI Presenter: Sandi Toksvig FRI Panellist: Jeremy Hardy FRI Panellist: Samira Ahmed FRI Panellist: Susan Calman FRI Panellist: Phill Jupitus FRI Producer: Sam Michell FRI FRI 19:00 The Archers b04mhd5s (Listen) FRI There is fun to be had at The Bull, and there is big news FRI for Brookfield. FRI FRI Credits FRI Writer: Joanna Toye FRI Director: Julie Beckett FRI Editor: Sean O'Connor FRI Jill Archer: Patricia Greene FRI David Archer: Timothy Bentinck FRI Ruth Archer: Felicity Finch FRI Kenton Archer: Richard Attlee FRI Jolene Archer: Buffy Davis FRI Tony Archer: David Troughton FRI Pat Archer: Patricia Gallimore FRI Helen Archer: Louiza Patikas FRI Brian Aldridge: Charles Collingwood FRI Jennifer Aldridge: Angela Piper FRI Lilian Bellamy: Sunny Ormonde FRI Alice Carter: Hollie Chapman FRI Ian Craig: Stephen Kennedy FRI Eddie Grundy: Trevor Harrison FRI Emma Grundy: Emerald O'Hanrahan FRI Ed Grundy: Barry Farrimond FRI Shula Hebden Lloyd: Judy Bennett FRI Adam Macy: Andrew Wincott FRI Elizabeth Pargetter: Alison Dowling FRI Fallon Rogers: Joanna Van Kampen FRI Oliver Sterling: Michael Cochrane FRI Roy Tucker: Ian Pepperell FRI Rob Titchener: Timothy Watson FRI Peggy Woolley: June Spencer FRI Carol Tregorran: Eleanor Bron FRI Johnny Phillips: Tom Gibbons FRI Charlie Thomas: Felix Scott FRI PC Harrison Burns: James Cartwright FRI Justin Elliot: Simon Williams FRI FRI 19:15 Front Row b04mpr62 (Listen) FRI News, reviews and interviews from the worlds of art, FRI literature, film and music. FRI FRI 19:45 Germany: Memories of a Nation b04k6t31 (Listen) FRI [Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 today] FRI FRI 20:00 Any Questions? b04mhd5v (Listen) FRI David Blunkett MP, Allison Pearson, Nadhim Zahawi MP FRI FRI Jonathan Dimbleby presents political debate and discussion FRI from the Al Mahdi Mosque in Bradford with the former Home FRI Secretary David Blunkett MP, Daily Telegraph columnist FRI Allison Pearson and Conservative backbench MP Nadhim Zahawi. FRI FRI 20:50 A Point of View b04mhd5x (Listen) FRI A weekly reflection on a topical issue. FRI FRI 21:00 Plants: From Roots to Riches b04mhd5z (Listen) FRI Omnibus, Episode 4 FRI FRI Prof Kathy Willis, Director of Science at Royal Botanic FRI Gardens Kew, with an omnibus edition of her history of our FRI changing relationship with plants from the early 20th FRI century. FRI FRI She examines new insights into FRI plant hormones during the first few decades of the 20th FRI century, the manipulation of which underpinned the perceived FRI success of the so called Green Revolution; unlocking FRI biodiversity through the creation of plant flora FRI encyclopaedias - and their influence in conservation; the FRI surprising benefits to emerge from the devastation wreaked FRI by the great storm of 1987; what can be gained by preserving FRI the diversity of plants through seed banking; the legacy of FRI Arabidopsis - the first plant to have its entire genome FRI sequenced. FRI Producer Adrian Washbourne. FRI FRI 21:58 Weather b04mb123 (Listen) FRI The latest weather forecast. FRI FRI 22:00 The World Tonight b04mq07v (Listen) FRI In-depth reporting and analysis from a global perspective. FRI FRI 22:45 Book at Bedtime b04mhd61 (Listen) FRI The Restoration of Otto Laird, Episode 5 FRI FRI A story of memory and place, old age and architecture. FRI FRI "Otto had felt surprisingly nervous on the plane across from FRI Geneva; not from any fear of flying, but a fear of what he FRI was flying to. [...] Throughout the FRI short flight he experienced a strange inner turbulence. He FRI had a queasy sensation that he was re-establishing a FRI connection with the past; flying backwards into his own FRI memories. He would no longer be experiencing them from a FRI distance, but in the city where they had once been real." FRI Architect Otto Laird has been living a semi-reclusive life FRI with his second wife in Switzerland. But he is forced to FRI re-engage with the wider world when he learns that his FRI landmark building Marlowe House - a 1960s tower block in FRI South London - has been marked for demolition. FRI Episode Five. FRI During filming, Otto recalls how the design for Marlowe FRI House was achieved, and in particular the inspiration of his FRI first wife, Cynthia. FRI Nigel Packer lives in London. He has been a music reviewer FRI for BBC News Online and Ceefax, a reporting officer at the FRI International Committee of the Red Cross and a contributor FRI to various magazines and newspapers. The Restoration Of Otto FRI Laird is his first novel. FRI Reader: Allan Corduner FRI Abridger: Jeremy Osborne FRI Producer: Rosalynd Ward FRI A Sweet Talk production for BBC Radio 4. FRI FRI Credits FRI Reader: Alan Corduner FRI Author: Nigel Packer FRI Abridger: Jeremy Osborne FRI Producer: Rosalynd Ward FRI FRI 23:00 A Good Read b04mcp9n (Listen) FRI [Repeat of broadcast at 16:30 on Tuesday] FRI FRI 23:30 Today in Parliament b04mhd7c (Listen) FRI Mark D'Arcy reports from Westminster. FRI FRI 23:55 The Listening Project b04mhd7f (Listen) FRI Gill and Mari - A Good Team FRI FRI Fi Glover introduces a conversation about whether a massage FRI can ever feel too close for comfort, and the ups and downs FRI of a working relationship. FRI FRI The Listening Project is a Radio 4 initiative that offers a FRI snapshot of contemporary Britain in which people across the FRI UK volunteer to have a conversation with someone close to FRI them about a subject they've never discussed intimately FRI before. The conversations are being gathered across the UK FRI by teams of producers from local and national radio stations FRI who facilitate each encounter. Every conversation - they're FRI not BBC interviews, and that's an important difference - FRI lasts up to an hour, and is then edited to extract the key FRI moment of connection between the participants. Most of the FRI unedited conversations are being archived by the British FRI Library and used to build up a collection of voices FRI capturing a unique portrait of the UK in the second decade FRI of the millennium. You can learn more about The Listening FRI Project by visiting bbc.co.uk/listeningproject FRI Producer: Marya Burgess. FRI

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