A group of programmes about their impact on the ancient world
2-The Hittites: the first mixed civilisation by R. A. Crossland
Lecturer in Ancient History at
King's College, Newcastle upon Tyne
Alexander Young (tenor)
Ernest Lush (piano)
Chanson d'amour: Serenade toscane; Le plus doux chemin; La chanson du pêcheur; Nocturne; Adieu: Le voyageur
Translated from the Anglo-Saxon
PART 3
by Iris Loveridge
A series of seven programmes
4-Reasons of State:
Acts and their Consequences by R. M. Hare
Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford
How do you define and isolate an action in order to judge it?
A selection of his poema
Read by Felix Felton
Symphony No. 4 (1916)
(L'Inestinguibile)
Orchestra of Statsradiofonien, Denmark
Conducted by Launy GrOndahl on gramophone records
Symphony No. 6 (1922). June 16
A programme about the fight for the Copyright Act of 1842 Script by Eric Ewens
Production by David Thomson
The struggle for the revision of the Copyright Act of 1814 lasted from 1837 to 1842. It involved many of the leading literary figures of the period, with Sergeant Talfourd as their spokesman in the House of Commons.
Serenade in D minor, Op. 44 played by the Portia Wind Ensemble Director, James Verity with Joy Hall (cello) and Joan Hutchinson (double-bass)