by R. B. Braithwaite
Knightbridge Professor of Moral Philosophy in the University of Cambridge
A broadcast version in two parts of the ninth Eiddington Memorial Lecture, delivered at Oxford on November 22, 1955)
Part 2-Stories
Erich Gruenberg (violin)
Celia Arieli (piano)
Dorothy Parfitt (soprano)
Josephine Lee (piano)
Prelude and Fugue on a theme of Cyril Scott , for piano
Out in the dark Jesukin
Two Songs:
A prayer
Invocation to Spring
In dark weather
Sonata, Op. 31, for violin and piano
Fifth of seven programmes of Rubbra's chamber works
2-Seventeenth Century
Songs sung by Margaret Fraser and Duncan Robertson
Poems read by Duncan Mclntyre
Music edited by Kenneth Elliott
Programme compiled and introduced by Helena Shire
In the second of these programmes Helena Shire tells how the Scottish poets ceased to write for the courtly song after James VI succeeded to the English throne, and how the native air came into its own.
by A. C. Allison, D.Phil. Dr. Lee's Reader in Anatomy in the University of Oxford
The speaker discusses how, if applied cautiously, knowledge of the distribution of the different blood groups can be used by anthropologists to provide useful information about the affinities and differences between human populations.
The poem by Charlotte Mew
Read by Flora Robson
Artur Balsam (piano) The Haydn Orchestra
(Leader, Leonard Friedman )
Conductor, Harry Newstone
Piano Concerto in D (K.461)
Divertimento in B flat (K.137) Piano Concerto in G (K.463)
Second of three programmes of Mozart's piano concertos (1784)
A new radio play by Giles Cooper
Production by Donald McWhinnie
(attrib.)
Mass
Choir of the Chapelle de Bourgogne. Brussels
Directed by Bernardin van Eeckhout on gramophone records