‘LIFEBLOOD OF PROGRESS’
(11 a-m.) LONDON, June 21. Dr. E. Marsden, leader of the New Zealand delegation, told the conference of the Royal Society of scientific information that freedom of publication and exchange of scientific information was the lifeblood of national progress.
“It is certainly the life-blood of happy international relations,” he added. Five hundred scientists from the United Kingdom, Dominions, the colonies, American, and UNESCO headquarters in Paris attended the conference which will continue until July 2.
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Bibliographic details
Gisborne Herald, Volume LXXV, Issue 22670, 22 June 1948, Page 5
Word Count
78‘LIFEBLOOD OF PROGRESS’ Gisborne Herald, Volume LXXV, Issue 22670, 22 June 1948, Page 5
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