Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 283,040 playable programmes from the BBC

Introduced by Vernon Mitchell
News Comment: Mark Gibbs
Hymns with a Beat composed by members of the Twentieth Century Church Light Music Group, and sung by the Twentieth Century Singers of St. Barnabas' Church. Gillingham, Kent (director, Reginald Simpson ; organist, Brian Shilling ): a third selection is introduced by the Vicar, the Rev. Donald Mills
The Church and Young People: Hilary Knight discusses some of the answers sent by young people to her questionnaire published by The Catholic Herald last June

Contributors

Introduced By:
Vernon Mitchell
Unknown:
Mark Gibbs
Organist:
Reginald Simpson
Organist:
Brian Shilling
Unknown:
Rev. Donald Mills
Unknown:
Hilary Knight

A series of ten programmes about the ancient Greeks, their history, genius and contribution to European civilisation.
7:PHILOSOPHY by A. H. Armstrong
Gladstone Professor of Greek in the University of Liverpool
From Thales (585 B.C.) to Damascius (A.D. 529) the continuous history of Greek philosophy lasted over a thousand years; if indeed a philosophy whose ideas are still being seriously discussed can be called dead, or its history finished even today. Reader, Gary Watson
A Listen and Learn series
The 52-page booklet published by the BBC to accompany these programmes can be obtained by sending a crossed postal order for 5s. to [address removed]With the booklet will be enclosed details of weekend courses on the Greeks now being arranged by residential colleges in Durham, Yorkshire, Lancashire, Cheshire, and Northamptonshire. Listeners who already have the booklet and who would like details of these courses should send a stamped addressed envelope to The Greeks, Follow-Up Courses, at the same address.

Contributors

Unknown:
A. H. Armstrong
Reader:
Gary Watson

Network Three

Appears in

About this data

This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More