Jean-Pierre Rampal (flute)
Pierre Pierlot (oboe)
Jacques Lancelot (clarinet)
Paul Hongne (bassoon) Gilbert Coursier (horn)
Suite d'apres Corrette, for oboe, clarinet, and bassoon
La Cheminee du Roi Rene , for flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, and horn on gramophone records
Thurston Dart talks about Monteverdi's opera ' Orfeo '
This Is to be performed in the Third Programme on Friday and next Monday
Symphony No. 39, in G minor
Heiligmesse (1796)
(A second performance of the programme broadcast yesterday)
Haydn's Symphony No. 77: June 11
Talk by Jules Supervielle
Sonata In G minor, Op. 19 played by James Whitehead (cello)
Gerald Moore (piano)
The Scientist as Surveyor
Third of four talks by - Stephen Toulmin
Lecturer in the Philosophy of Science in the University of Oxford
A scientific theory gives a connected * picture ' of a range of phenomena just as a map does of a stretch of country. Stephen Toulmin shows how this view of scientific theories avoids the difficulties that logicians have felt about scientific method.
Selections from a dramatic verse-fantasy for broadcasting by Hugh Gordon Porteus
followed by an Interlude at 9.56
Sonata In D, Op. 10 No. 3 Sonata in E, Op. 109 played by Claudio Arrau (piano)
Seventh of sixteen recitals
Talk by Rev. Ivo Thomas , O.P.
Father Ivo, a student of modern logic, discusses the effect of Aristotle on the thinking of the Middle Ages.
Pierre Bernac (baritone)
Harry Danks (viola d'amore)
Desmond Dupr6
(tenor viol and lute)
Helen Gaskell (oboe d'amore)
Ralph Downes (organ)
(Continued in next column)
(Music edited by Denis Stevens )