ANGUISHED ORATORS
THE REPORTER INVALUABLE (From Our Own Correspondent) (By Air Main LONDON, Nov. 24. A cable arrived from .New Zealand a few days ago foreshadowing the disappearance of the shorthand reporter and the substitution of a recording machine. It is the expressed opinion of the Manchester Evening News that shorthand writers and reporters are not alarmed —nor have they reason to be. The reporter could never be replaced by a machine—not because the reporters would object, but because there would be such a howl of anguish from orators when they heard the results of literal recording of their speeches as would shake the heavens. There Can be few things more salutary for a speaker than to read a truly verbatim report of one of his speeches. THE "ERS" and the "UMS" " It is the reporter who omits the 'ers' and the 'urns,' who adds grammar to eloquence, who removes the repetitions and elictes the stumblings. It is he who provides every sentence with a verb, gives uniformity to tenses, and ensures that plural subjects shall act in the plural. "And, more serious still for the orator, particularly the political orator, where would he find his scapegoat if the reporter were a machine? How could he persuade people to believe that he had never said those foolish things he was reported to have said?"
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Bibliographic details
Otago Daily Times, Issue 23689, 22 December 1938, Page 12
Word Count
224ANGUISHED ORATORS Otago Daily Times, Issue 23689, 22 December 1938, Page 12
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