Gramophone records
and forecast for farmers and shipping
Directed by David Wolfsthal
The Certainties of Faith
Bible reading and comment by the Rev. Glyn Parry-Jones
4—' Certainty that God will judge the world '
and forecast for farmers and shipping
George Hardeman (baritone)
Arnold Ashby (cello)
Ernest Lush (piano)
Talk by George Godwin
The speaker was at school in Dresden forty years ago and remembers it as a city of rich food, fine music, good art, sound science, and very cheap living: a city of culture, in those days little contaminated by 'Kultur.'
RAVEL
Records of his Bolero and two of the ' Sheh6razade ' songs
Be thou mv guardian and my guide
(BBC Hymn Book 135)
New Every Morning, page 76
Psalm 118, vv. 1-14 (Broadcast Psalter) Isaiah 40, vv. 1-11
Lead us, heavenly Father, lead us
(BBC Hymn Book 307)
Louis Mordish and his Players
Special Health Week for Schools
4-Health and Leisure
Music of the Sunny South played by the Southern Serenade Orchestra
Directed by Lou Whiteson
Today's Variety on records
Introduced by Paul Martin
From a canteen in Smethwick, Staffordshire
with Joan Butler, George Williams, The Fred Adcock Trio
Jack Wilson at the piano
Presented by Philip Garston-Jones
and forecast for farmers and shipping
(Leader, Frank Thomas )
Conductor, Leo Wurmser
Tom Bromley (piano)
by Noel Coward
Adapted for broadcasting and produced by Archie Campbell
Introduction by Stephen Williams
The fourth of a series of gramophone programmes in which Trevor Harvey presents a selection of different kinds of music for stringed instruments, performed by famous artists
Shipping and general weather forecasts. followed by a detailed forecast for South-East England
Anona Winn , Joy Adamson
Jack Train , and Richard Dimbleby ask all the questions and Gilbert Harding knows some of the answers
(‘Twenty Questions’ is broadcast by arrangement with Maurice Winnick )
To be repeated tomorrow at 7.30 (Light); Wednesday at 4.0 (Home)
East Africa in Transition by the Rev. Lyndon Harries
See top of page
TV for Marine Research by Harold Barnes , Ph.D. of the Scottish Marine Biological Station
Television has considerable possibilities for the marine biologist, since with it he can penetrate rhe natural habitat of his plants and animals. In this talk the speaker describes how he is using underwater TV to s-tudy marine life in the estuary of the Clyde.
(piano)
Ballade in D minor (Edward) (Brahms) Elegy, Op. 3 No. 1 (Rachmaninov) Toccata in C (Schumann) on gramophone records