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BRITAIN TELLS THE WORLD ABOUT RADAR SECRETS.—Britain recently "handed on a plate" to every nation outside Germany the radar secrets which were protected during the war by every device known to security experts. A radar convention was held at the Institute of Electrical Engineers, London, and the secrets were told by some of the men who invented and developed radar. Mr John Wilmot, Minister of Supply, Sir Robert Watson-Watt, principal inventor, and Dr F. B. Llewellyn, president of the Institute of Radio Engineers, spoke at the meeting. One result of the convention was to establish the fact that radar is predominantly a British invention, contary to the belief of people in many other countries. Mr Wilmot is shown addressing the gathering.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19460416.2.59

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 25769, 16 April 1946, Page 5

Word Count
121

BRITAIN TELLS THE WORLD ABOUT RADAR SECRETS.—Britain recently "handed on a plate" to every nation outside Germany the radar secrets which were protected during the war by every device known to security experts. A radar convention was held at the Institute of Electrical Engineers, London, and the secrets were told by some of the men who invented and developed radar. Mr John Wilmot, Minister of Supply, Sir Robert Watson-Watt, principal inventor, and Dr F. B. Llewellyn, president of the Institute of Radio Engineers, spoke at the meeting. One result of the convention was to establish the fact that radar is predominantly a British invention, contary to the belief of people in many other countries. Mr Wilmot is shown addressing the gathering. Evening Star, Issue 25769, 16 April 1946, Page 5

BRITAIN TELLS THE WORLD ABOUT RADAR SECRETS.—Britain recently "handed on a plate" to every nation outside Germany the radar secrets which were protected during the war by every device known to security experts. A radar convention was held at the Institute of Electrical Engineers, London, and the secrets were told by some of the men who invented and developed radar. Mr John Wilmot, Minister of Supply, Sir Robert Watson-Watt, principal inventor, and Dr F. B. Llewellyn, president of the Institute of Radio Engineers, spoke at the meeting. One result of the convention was to establish the fact that radar is predominantly a British invention, contary to the belief of people in many other countries. Mr Wilmot is shown addressing the gathering. Evening Star, Issue 25769, 16 April 1946, Page 5