3-Administrative Justice by C. J. Hamson
Professor of Comparative Law in the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Trinity College
(The recorded broadcast of March 9)
A further lecture in this series will be given in April by Andre Bertrand , Professeur des Facultcs de Droit et Directeur des Etudes de 1'Ecote Nationale d' Ad ministration
Quartet No. 5
Molto lento-Allegro molto;
Scherzo (presto):
Lento espressivo; Allegro played by the Aeolian String Quartet: Sydney Humphreys (violin)
Trevor Williams (violin)
Watson Forbes (viola)
John Moore (cello)
Illustrated talk by Denis Stevens
The speaker talks about a fourteenth-century manuscript, containing anonymous settings of Sanctus and Agnus Dei, which turned up unexpectedly in the Public Record Office. The music is sung by members of the Deller Consort. (The recorded broadcast of Sept. 18)
Second of three programmes
(Pamphilus's Tale on the Fourth Day)
Fifth of twelve stories from Boccaccio's Decameron
An oratorio
For details see Tuesday at 6.0
Part 1
This listing contains language that some may find offensive.
Part 2
Talk by Sybil Wingate
The writer today has abandoned the public themes of the thirties in favour of the private theme, of which the Victorians were the great masters. The speaker believes there is a danger that instead of making a critical use of the past we shall merely furnish a certain number of ivory towers with the fashionable Victorian mahogany.
Part 3
V. Sackville-West speaks about the writing of Orlando, the book in which Virginia Woolf was inspired by her own conception of the Sackville family, of Knole their family home, and of Miss Sackville-West herself. In the course of her talk Miss Sackville-West reads a passage from Orlando which does not appear in the printed version.
(The recorded broadcast of Jan. 8)