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BRITAIN AFTER THE WAR

Not only the war, but the " condition of Britain after the war," is the stake of the common man in England, declared Sir Gerald Campbe.ll, directorgeneral of the British Information Services in an address recently in which he described England's "new order," which he said has already burned away barriers of class and caste. In the same speech, delivered before the New York University School of Commerce Alumni Association at the Hotel Astor, he uttered a warning against an attempt to establish a new military front, declaring: "We must not be lulled into a false sense of: security by what has. happened in Russia, nor must we be persuaded to undertake ventures on any of our four fronts until we are sure that we are not just playing into Hitler's hands, for remember what Mr Churchill has often said 'Hitler cannot win until he defeats Britain.'" The British working man, said Sir Gerald, accepts the hardships of war because he knows that England's cause "transcends nationalism."

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19420203.2.90

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 24831, 3 February 1942, Page 6

Word Count
170

BRITAIN AFTER THE WAR Otago Daily Times, Issue 24831, 3 February 1942, Page 6

BRITAIN AFTER THE WAR Otago Daily Times, Issue 24831, 3 February 1942, Page 6