Betty Bannerman
(mezzo-soprano)
Frederick Stone (accompanist) London Belgian Piano Quartet:
Maurice Raskin (violin)
Arie van de Moortel (viola)
Maurice Dambois (cello) André Dumontier (piano)
Talk by D. M. MacKay.
Lecturer in Physics at King's College, London
Information is that which enab!es us to make a selection from a set of posibilities.' D. M MacKay discusses some of the methods and consequences of the theory of information.
Opera in three acts and seven scenes
Libretto by SalvadoreCammarar.o
Music by Verdi
Chorus and Orchestra of Radio Italiana, Rome
(Chorus-Master, Gaetano Riccitelli )
Conductor. Mario Rossi
(Recording made available by courtesy of Radio Italiana. Rome)
Harold Rutland writes in this issue
The action takes place in a Tyrolean village during the seventeentth century
Act 1
Scene 1: An open apace outside
Miller's house
Scene 2: A room in the Count's castle
Scene 3: A room In Miller's house
The old Italian South in transition
Talk by Sean O'Faolain
Act 2
Scene 1: A room in Miller's house
Scene 2: The Count's room in the castle
Scene 3: In the castle garden
A series of ten readings from the English translation by René Hague
1-Marsiliun the pagan king, sends an embassy to Charles and Guenelun is chosen to bear the Emperor's re,ply
Reader, Hallam Fordham
Music specially composed by Antony Hopkins
Act 3
Inside Miller's house
by Sir William Hamilton Fyfe
The speaker has been closely concerned with the establishment of university colleges in the Colonies, particularly in West Africa,. which he visited with a small delegation appointed to choose the sites for the first colleges of Nigeria and the Gold Coast.
(The recorded broadcast of March 26)
Partita No. 5. In G Toccata in C minor played by Arnold Goldsbrough (harpsichord)
Story by Liam O'Flaherty
Read by Harry Hutchinson
(The recorded broadcast of Oct. 22)