BROADCAST WAR.
RUSSIA AND GERMANY. CONDITIONS UNDER SOVIET. BERLIN. May B.' The Soviet's aggressive and manytongucd propaganda broadcasts from strident stations are even interfering with those in Britain. They have found a speedy retort from Germans ■who havo begun a broadcast war and are exposing the shortcomings of the Soviet system. The first German-lecture broadcast consisted of eye witnesses' unsparing descriptions of Russia's unhygienic and overcrowded homes, her shoddily-dressed citizens and the unclean and inadequate food of the country.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXVIII, Issue 20866, 7 May 1931, Page 9
Word Count
79
BROADCAST WAR.
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXVIII, Issue 20866, 7 May 1931, Page 9
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