by Geoffrey Marshall
Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford
It is a good principle that justice should not be contaminated by politics. What happens when politics is subject to police interference? Who is responsible for police action? Can the responsibility be enforced?
: second broadcast
London String Trio
Emanuel Hurwitz (violin) Watson Forbes (viola) Vivian Joseph (cello)
A conversation piece by ROBERT BALDICK based on the Goncourt Journals
Produced by RAYNER HEPPENSTALL
The Restaurant Magny, in the Rue Contre-Escarpe-Dauphine in Paris, was the scene in the eighteen-sixties of some of the most famous literary gatherings of modern times. The date of this particular dinner may be supposed to be Sunday,
October 22, 1866.
Manoug Parikian (violin)
BBC Scottish Orchestra Led by Granville Casey
Conductor, Norman Del Mar
Part 1
Six talks on David Hume
4: Hume's Theory of the Passions by Patrick Gardiner Fellow of Magdalen College,
Oxford Hume tried to construct a psychological science on the basis of a theory which divides the mind from the body. Mr. Gardiner analyses some of his conclusions.
Part 2
An illustrated talk by Alec Robertson
The findings of the Council of Trent had far-reaching implications for church music. Alec Robertson discusses the way in which the composers of the time responded to the Tridentine Decrees.
Cantata:
Tu fedel? Tu costante?
Helen Watts (contralto) with the English Chamber Orchestra
Directed by Raymond Leppard on a gramophone record