In the last programme of this series Dr. Herbert Howells discusses the views of the three previous speakers and adds his own conclusions
Suite, for viola and piano played by William Primrose (viola) and Fritz Kitzinger (piano) on gramophone records
N. G. Long criticises some of the recent music broadcasts in the Third Programme
Alexandra Trianti (soprano)
Frederick Stone (piano)
Am Grabe Anselmos (Claudius) Heimliches Lieben (Klenke) Abendbilder (Silbert)
Der Winterabend (Leitner) Todesmusik (Schober) Bei dir allein (Seidl)
Written by Ernst Schnabel
Translated and adapted by A. L. Lloyd
Produced by Laurence Gilliam
This programme does not set out to be anything more than a piece of journalism. It consists of facts. It is the total of what 35.000 Germans reported on that day; what a dozen magistrates dealt with; what a weather station and an observatory noticed in the sky; and what two reporters noticed on a stroll through a German town
(Originally broadcast by Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk, Hamburg, in January 1947)
' Dardanus
Act 2 .
' Hippolyte et Aricie '
Act 4
' Les Fetes d'Hebe '
Prologue
The London Choir
(Conductor, Maurice Vinden)
The Boyd Neel Orchestra
(Leader, Maurice Clare)
Josephine Lee (harpsichord)
Conducted by Roger Desormiere
To be repeated next Sunday
' Stop Borrowing ! 'by Robert Eisler, Ph.D.
Dr. Eisler's view is that credit is make-believe and that there is no need for it. He believes that a cash and carry ' economy would put an end to waves of deflation, depression, and unemployment