by Charles Rosen
A series of seven programmes
5-Reasons of State: Principles and their Application
by R. M. Hare
Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford
(The recorded broadcast of June 17) Political Judgment, by Isaiah Berlin: Friday at 6.30
Motets and Anthems
London Chamber Singers
Conductor, Anthony Bernard
Margaret Cobb (organ)
Nolo mortem peccatoris Heu mihi Domine
Teach me thy way, 0 Lord Out of the deep (first setting)
How long wilt thou forget me.
0 Lord?
Eheu! Sustulerunt Dominum
Out of the deep
Last of three programmes
by Geoffrey Burgess C.M.G., CLE.
One of the main problems confronting Pakistan on the occasion of independence was that of building up an efficient civil administration. Mr. Burgess, who was a member of the Indian Civil Service from 1928 to 1947 and is now director of the Pakistan Civil Service Academy in Lahore, assesses Pakistan's achievement in this respect during the past ten years.
First of a group of three talks
(flute) with Robert Veyron-Lacroix
(harpsichord) on gramophone records
Sonata No. 3, in A (S.1032) (Bach) Sonata No. 2, in E minor (Leclair)
by Denis Diderot
London Philharmonic Orchestra
(Led by Harold Parfitt )
Conducted by Basil Cameron
Part 2
From the Royal Albert Hall, London Part 1 at 7.30 (Home). See page 29
by H. G. Wood
But thought's the slave of life, and life time's fool;
And time, that takes survey of all the world,
Must have a stop.
This talk is part of the tenth Eddington Memorial Lecture delivered by Dr. Wood in Cambridge on February 19.
Songs and a commentary
Tom Lehrer has experimented with most of the accepted American song-forms. The result has been something new in American-or any other-satire.
See page 4
by George Kane
Professor of English Language and Literature at Royal Hollowav College in the University of London
Langland made the figure of Piers Plowman a focus for his views on the contemporary scene and the individual's position there. Professor Kane shows the importance of this figure in the ordinance of the poem.
(The recorded broadcast of March 13)
Quartet No. 5, in A
Op. 13 played by the Macgibbon String Quartet:
Margot Macgibbon (violin)
Lorraine du Val (violin)
Anatole Mines (viola) Lilly Phillips (cello)
(The recorded broadcast of Dec 11)