Talk by John Midgley
There is in Bonn a growing wish for political change. Mr. Midgley discusses its origins and implications.
(The recorded broadcast of April 14)
Four programmes devised by H. C. Robbins Landon 4—The Pre-Classieal Symphony in London and Paris
London Chamber Orchestra
(Leader. Thomas Carter )
Conductor, Anthony Bernard
Charles Spinks
(harpsichord continuo)
Introduced by H. C. Robbins Landon
(Dioneus's Tale on the Tenth Day)
Last of twelve stories from Boccaccio's Decameron in the anonymous translation of 1620 Arranged by Sasha Moorsom and Rayner Heppenstall
Produced by Sasha Moorsom
(
(Leader. Paul Beard )
Conductor, Sir Malcolm Sargent
Max Rostal (violin)
Part 1
The second ot three legends of the Arawak Indians, retold by Jan Carew in the fashion and dialect of the Negroes of British Guiana.
Part 2
From the Ulster Hall. Belfast (in association with C.E.M.A.)
Talk by Theodore Gillman
Professor of Physiology.
University of Natal. Durban
Professor Gillman examines the nature of chronic malnutrition as distinct from specific deficiency diseases. He believes that the distinction is often misunderstood, and the prospect of relief on so large a scale made remote by the fact (first revealed by his own research) that the addition of nutrients to inadequate diets of single staple foods can actually precipitate disease.
Health and Cultural Change, by Sidney Kark : April 22
Eleanor Warren (cello)
Paul Hamburger (piano)
A topical programme on the arts, literature, and entertainment