Gordon Clinton (baritone)
Clifton Helliwell (piano)
Talk by Russell Meiggs, Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford
Mr. Meiggs began his study of this port of ancient Rome in 1925. He describes the way in which archaeological work since then has revealed its daily life and fortunes, from the rising commercial centre of the first century B.C. to the poor Christian community that survived into the Middle Ages.
(The recorded broadcast of Aug. 13)
A radio melodrama for some voices and a few instruments
Composed by Max Saunders to the words of Lewis Carroll
(Also broadcast yesterday)
Mr. Monck, a chartered engineer, examines the changing composition of the Boards of British industry and considers how far the qualifications of the present-day director arc suited to the demands of modern technology.
Chosen and introduced by Frank Kermode
Read by Anthony Jacobs
followed by an interlude at 8.20
Quartet in B flat. Op. 18 No. 6 Quartet in E flat. Op. 127 played by the Hungarian String Quartet:
Zoltan Szekely (violin)
Alexander Moskowsky (violin)
Denes Koromzay (viola)
Vilnius Palotai (cello)
A workshop record based on the correspondence between Hugo von Hofmannsthal and Richard Strauss
Devised by H. A. Hammelmann
Production by Christopher Sykes (The recorded broadcast of Jan. 1)
4--Contemporary
The London Bach Society Conductor, Paul Steinitz
John Wills (organ)
Last of a series of programme*
Compiled by Alan Pryce-Jones
Including a comment by Filippo Donini , of the Italian Institute in London, on the political and cultural periodicals in Italy; and a talk by John McLcish , of the University of Leeds, about the developments in psychology in the Soviet Union.
(The recorded broadcast of Dec. 24)