Serenade (1958) played by Julius Baker (flute)
Ralph Froehlich (horn) Robert Nagel (trumpet) Keith Brown (trombone) Hirry Zaratzian (viola)
Charles McCracken (cello) Yehudi Wyner (piano) Conducted by Werner Torkanowsky on a gramophone record
A Portrait
Drawn from the recorded memories and opinions of those who knew him by W. R. Rodgers Those taking part
Brinsley Macnamara , Dudley Walsh Kpvin O'Shiel
Lord Glenavy . Lady Glenavy
Robert O'Doherty. Padraic Colum The late Mgr. Patrick Browne
Pearse Beaslev , Denis Johnston
Austin ClarkeMartha McCulloch John Chichester , Monk Gibbon John Colbert
Mrs. James Montgomery
Oliver D. Gogarty , Cathal O Shannon The late Dr. Thomas Bodkin Sir Compton Mackenzie Major Dermot Freyer
Richard Aherne , Lady Hanson William Cosgrave
Sheelah O'Mahoney
Michael Noyk , Brenda Williams
Brendan Considine , Marjorie Ellis David Flaherty , Liam O'Briain Ballad singer. Dominic Behan Narrator, W. R. Rodgers Edited and produced by MAURICE BROWN
Mieczyslaw Horszowski (piano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra Leader. Paul Beard
Conductor, Rudolf Schwarz
PART 1
to Diplomatic Negotiation
SIR WILLIAM HAYTER speaks on the chapter of this title by Gordon A. Craig , in the recently published book Studies in Diplomatic History in honour of G. P. Gooch
PART 2
HENRY SWAIN , Deputy County Architect of Nottinghamshire, talks to GRAEME SHANKLAND, architect and planner.
Prefabrication, once regarded as a mere expedient to overcome shortage of site labour, now appears as one important means of creating a higher over-all level of design. It was a prefabricated. school that last year won for Britain the first prize for architecture at the Milan Triennale. Henry Swain talks about the special feaures that make the systems of construction now used by thirteen local authorities in Britain interesting to the outside world.
The third of a group of programmes on aspects of public architecture in Britain.
Fourth programme: November 12
This listing contains language that some may find offensive.
or Old Soldiers Never Die
A poem written and read by DAVID JONES with an introduction by Saunders Lewis
The time of this prose-poem is the first century A.D. and the site is the Roman Procuratorship of Judea. Private Clitus, a legionary of long service from the Urbs, recounts to a new recruit from Hellas a dream he had when serving in Germany years before. : second broadcast