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AIR WAVES

Our skies are filled with more than stars, for the invisible highways above us are crowded with complex traffic — broadcasting and television, air traffic control, police and fire service messages, marine navigation, even complex signals between astronauts and earth.

A “U.N. Report” programme shows how man uses the air for communication and how past confusion (and sometimes disaster) has led nations to the conference table to agree upon the use of the electro-magnetic spectrum of radio “highways.” “U.N. Report: World-Wide Communications” was produced by United Nations Television and screens from CHTV3 on Wednesday.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19720104.2.42.5

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume CXII, Issue 32805, 4 January 1972, Page 4

Word Count
95

AIR WAVES Press, Volume CXII, Issue 32805, 4 January 1972, Page 4

AIR WAVES Press, Volume CXII, Issue 32805, 4 January 1972, Page 4

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