Sayings of the Week
TF a statesman is a man who never . reads a newspaper, then I am not
'n2 .
~Mr_
Ernest
Brown
I ASKED a boy of 15 whether he ~. would like a book for Christmas. lle replied: "I won’t have any time to read books until I have left school."-
Mr:
H. B.
Lees Smith
NV ITH a favourable wind, 2000 bombers could cross London at different altitudes and from different directions, with devastating ioads of bombs at different times of the day, and eould
alevastate London WIChIn a weer
Mr
Garro-Jones
M.P
HAVE admired the truthfulness displayed by the undergraduates
In aimost ali eircumstances.--
~Mr;
W.
C.
Costin
Senior Proctor, Ovford,
HB strength of the whole fleet is to undergo a marked diminution, relatively to other Powers, in the next three or four vears. whatever we do-
Mr
Churchill
Waar is the matter with modern politics in the West, and especially in this country, is simply that we think we ean have thousands of theories and then make a policy out of
merely mixing them un
-Mr
G.
K.
Chesterton.
‘ r LONG-DISTANCE listening is bound to speed up musical interest and discernment beyond ,all previous ex-
perience.
Sir Walford Davies
HE manner in which Herr Hitler allows himself to ‘speak in public of the State I represent liberates me from the necessity of resorting to circumlo-
ention and dinlomatie niceties-
Litvinoff
(COMPARED with what used to happen before the war, even the most controversial debate in the House today is like a pleasant Sunday afternoon, with the Prime Minister in the
role of the dear vicar-
Earl
Winter
ton
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/RADREC19360731.2.31
Bibliographic details
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Radio Record, 31 July 1936, Page 18
Word count
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272Sayings of the Week Radio Record, 31 July 1936, Page 18
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