The British Machine
Despite a popular belief, Britain Iwas not starving, In cold, scien- | tlfic terms -she~Was living on 11 per oent. fewer calories than she was before the war, state'd Mr. A. W. Snelling, recently appointed Deputy High Commissionar to the United Kingdom, during the course of an address to the weekly luncheon of the Palmerston North Rotary Club yesterday, Mr, Snelling said that the effect was hard, but it was not •disastrous. He likened the British people to a eound machine which could run efficiently in the face of such difficulties.
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Bibliographic details
Chronicle (Levin), 22 June 1948, Page 5
Word Count
93The British Machine Chronicle (Levin), 22 June 1948, Page 5
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