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T. E. MAY, Reader in Spanish in the University of Aberdeen, tells the story of Baltasar Gracian, who spent his life discovering himself and his fellows.
The first of modern psychologists and one of the great moralists of the world, Gracian died in 1658 just after finishing his greatest work, El Criticon.
by Sophocles
Translated by C. A. Trypants
Chorus:
Leslie Perrins , Frank Partington
Will Leighton , Howard Rose
Duncan Mclntyre , Leonard Trolley
Music composed by Richard Drakeford played by Edward Sehvvn (oboe) and Joy Hall (cello)
Production by Val Gielgud
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The Second Industrial Revolution
Sir WALTER PUCKEY , an authority on automation and a former President of the Institute of Production Engineers, sees the new revolution as an opportunity to delegate control of machines to the machines themselves in order to improve man's overall control of his environment.
See panel and page 8
Next programme : March 11 followed by an interlude at 9.45
A poem of the Westmorland fells by Margaret Cropper
Adapted for radio by the author with Fred Wilson and Margaret Cropper
Produced by Christopher Holme
See panel