Talk by A. J. P. Taylor
This is a shortened version of the leoture given last December at the John Ryands Library, Manchester. This talk was originally broadcast last week on March 31, the 100thanniversary of Bright's speech in the House of Commons when the Crimean War was declared.
Jennifer Vyvyan (soprano)
Ernest Lush (piano)
The Wigmore Ensemble:
Geoffrey Gilbert (flute)
Terence MacDonagh (oboe)
Jack Brymer (clarinet)
Gwydion Brooke (bassoon)
Frederick Riddle (viola)
Eugene Cruft (double-bass)
Wilfrid Parry (piano) (Continued in next column)
Talk by John Moody
by Herman Melville
Adapted for broadcasting by Preston Lockwood with Catherine Fleming
Harry Hutchinson. Sulwen Morgan
Mary O'Farrell, Hilda Schroder
Produced by Leslie Stokes
A lyric drama for radio
Written by James Forsyth for music by Brian Easdale
A Study in Cross-Purposes
Second of three talks by Stephen Toulmin
Lecturer in the Philosophy of Science in the University of Oxford
In these talks Mr. Toulmin asks why ethics seems to make so much less progress than natural science, and suggests that thaa apparent immobility is an illusion which comes of our expecting the wrong sort of anwers from the subject
The talks are a revised version of lecture delivered to rhc Royal Institute of Philosophy on November 27
Motets and Mass sections transcribed and edited by Manfred F. Bukofzer
Alfred Deller (counter-tenor)
The Ambrosian Singers
An Instrumental Ensemble
Sanctus and Agnue Dei Crux fldeiis
Gloria and Credo
Veni sancte spiritus —Vend creator spiritus —Mentes tuorum
A talk by Geoffrey Tyson on the problems of finance for underdeveloped territories
Mr Tyson spent many years India u editor of Capital, a British financial news, paper in Calcutta He also represened British commercial interests in rhe former Indian Central Legislative Assembly