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TELEVISION FOR BRITAIN

SIR WILLIAM HALEY’S HOPES \ 8.8. C. CO-OPERATION A pledge that the British Broadcasting Corporation intended tou. press on with the task of-making television available to as many homes and over as widespread an area of Britain as possible, was given recently by Sir William Haley, Director-General of the British Broadcasting Corporation, speaking at the Imperial Press Conference in London. ‘•‘Television has come to stay,” he said. “On behalf of the 8.8. C., I would say this: We approach this problem, in as broad and statesmanlike a way as possible. We seek no temporary advantage but hope to establish goodwill by confidence. The one thing we cannot envisage is the stifling of television, for television will go on. “We intend to press on as fast as physical resources allow with the task of making it available to as many homes and over as widespread an area of the Kingdom as we possibly can.” Declaring that it was clear that television was integral part of radiocasting and not an art separate from it, Sir William added: “In the long run both the cinema and the theatre will benefit from television. Thanks to the gramophone and to. broadcasting, serious music has never had such live audiences as it has today. Twenty years of the broadcasting of news bulletins finds newspaper sales higher than ever they were before.” Summing up the B.B.C’s “responsibility to the community,” he said this was “both to satisfy and to lead, to satisfy current demand.” Sir William said that of all the great purposes British broadcasting must unsparingly serve, none was more important than that of the Commonwealth. “Last year, even before the war was over but as soon as it became apparent its end was near, the BBC called together in London the first Commonwealth Broadcasting Conference. Programme, administrative, and engineering problems were discussed.”

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19470106.2.20

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 10, Issue 69, 6 January 1947, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
309

TELEVISION FOR BRITAIN Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 10, Issue 69, 6 January 1947, Page 4

TELEVISION FOR BRITAIN Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 10, Issue 69, 6 January 1947, Page 4

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