BRITISH NEEDS
ALLEGED SUPPRESSION OF FACTS AMERICAN ATTACK ON CENSORSHIP*. REMARKABLE ASSERTIONS. (By Telegraph—Press Association—Copyright) (Received This Day. 1.10 p.m.) NEW YORK. November 25. The censorship has harmed Britain’s cause more than a whole night’s bombing by the Germans, declares the London correspondent of the “New York Times.” He says: “Even British newspapers are printing German communiques, in order to tell their readers what is going on at Home. It is Alice in Wonderland journalism, whereby the censors have succeeded in fooling only their best friends. They want war materials from the United States which they can only get by informing the United States of the extremity of such need. Yet every American correspondent causes the censor to rear up on his hind legs when ho suggests that cevrything is not ‘hunkydory.’ The fact remains that everything is not ’hunkydory,’ because Britain's need of help is greater than ever.”
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 26 November 1940, Page 6
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149BRITISH NEEDS Wairarapa Times-Age, 26 November 1940, Page 6
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