RADIO AS INSTRUMENT OF WAR
(8.0.W.) RUGBY, November 11. The Director-General of the British Broadcasting Corporation, Mr F. W. Ogilvie, speaking in London, said that radio was itself an instrument of war and helped powerfully to depict military events. “Fear of people listening, fear of people with ears and mouths haunts the temporary masters of Europe,” he said. “The British Broadcasting Corporation broadcasts day and night to the world in 20 different languages, and with a daily output of between 150,000 and 250,000 words, which carry the voice of truth and sanity and courage across Europe.”
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Bibliographic details
Southland Times, Issue 24592, 14 November 1941, Page 5
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96RADIO AS INSTRUMENT OF WAR Southland Times, Issue 24592, 14 November 1941, Page 5
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