Quartet in E minor, Op. 121 played by the London String Quartet:
Erich Gruenberg. John Tunnell
Keith Cummings. Douglas Cameron
Welsh writers fall into two categories: those who write in Welsh and those who write in English. Is there a more fundamental difference between them? For instance, are Anglo-Welsh writers less conscious of their Welshness than those writing in Welsh? Do they feel as great a sense of responsibility towards Wales? Also, has Anglo-Welsh writing made a special contribution to the general body of English literature?
These are some of the questions discussed in this conversation among a group of Welsh writers.
Speakers:
Pennar Davies
Emyr Humphreys
Professor Gwyn Jones
Glyn Jones , Goronwy Rees
Gwyn Thomas , Vernon Watkins
In the chair: W. John Morgan
by Bela Siki
The clarinet is often said to have been developed from the chalumeau by J. C. Denner of Nuremberg. JOAN RIMMER suggests that the cylindrical pipes still played in the Caucasus and eastern Europe were more likely models.
Illustrations on gramophone records and by James MacGillivray
Tom HARRISSON describes his recent discovery in Sarawak of cave drawings and burial boats strikingly similar in design and apparent symbolism to those in some European bronze age sites. Mr. Harrisson is Government Ethnologist and Curator of the Sarawak Museum.