LONDON SCHOOL’S BROADCASTING STATION.—Using tape recorders, the Crown Woods Secondary School, near London, trains pupils as radio announcers, interviewers, studio managers, actors, musicians, secretarial assistants, and all the other helpers required in broadcasting. An associated group runs a newspaper on the programmes. Pupils built their own studies and editing rooms, and they broadcast their material over the school’s public address system. When a B.B.C. reporter called recently to get a story, he was interviewed by “Station CWSS” before he could get his own interview. In this picture, a roving reporter interviews a pupil about school meals.
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Bibliographic details
Press, Volume CV, Issue 30951, 6 January 1966, Page 7
Word Count
96LONDON SCHOOL’S BROADCASTING STATION.—Using tape recorders, the Crown Woods Secondary School, near London, trains pupils as radio announcers, interviewers, studio managers, actors, musicians, secretarial assistants, and all the other helpers required in broadcasting. An associated group runs a newspaper on the programmes. Pupils built their own studies and editing rooms, and they broadcast their material over the school’s public address system. When a B.B.C. reporter called recently to get a story, he was interviewed by “Station CWSS” before he could get his own interview. In this picture, a roving reporter interviews a pupil about school meals. Press, Volume CV, Issue 30951, 6 January 1966, Page 7
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