Sonatas for violin and harpsichord
No. 1; No. 2; No. 3 played by Louis Kaufman (violin)
Frederick Stone (harpsichord)
POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS seen by visiting students
A series of six programmes devoted to the baroque organ and its predecessors.
6-The Baroque Organ
(completed 1764) in the Abbey Church, Ottobeuren, Germany
Introductory talk by Cecil Clutton and Recital by Geraint Jones
by the Rev. F. L. Cross D.D. , Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity in the University of Oxford
A jar of papyri discovered near the Nile in 1946 was found to contain a collection of mainly unknown gnostic writings, some of them probably dating from the second century A.D. Most of these manuscripts are now in the Coptic Museum at Cairo, but one detached from the rest has been made accessible to students through the Jung Institute at Zurich : this is the document known as the Jung Codex. In this talk Dr. Cross examines its significance for our understanding of Christian origins.
A chronicle of the Thirty Years' War by Bertolt Brecht
Translated by Charlotte and A. L. Lloyd and adapted for radio by A. L. Lloyd with music by Paul Dessau conducted by Edward Clark
Produced by R. D. Smith
(Continued in next column)
Catt in order of speaking: with Emerton Court . Anthony Jacobs
Wvndham Milligan. Jill Nyasa Mary Savidge. Anthony Viccars and members of the BBC Drama Repertory Company
Repetiteur, Douglas Gamley
DURING THE INTERVAL (9.35-9.45 app.): Sibelius's Romance in C. played by the strings of the Royal Opera House Orchestra, Covent Garden, conducted by John Hollingsworth on records
Quartet in E, Op. 80 played by the Aeolian String Quartet