Foreign Correspondent
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1:51:00
We mustn't do anything to embarrass
the United States Government

1:51:03
Exactly, that's my point
1:51:07
If you don't want me to print it I
think you have to hear it first

1:51:11
That's only fair captain
1:51:13
You know who was the head of that
spy movement in London?

1:51:18
Mr. Stephen Fischer.
1:51:20
You mean the man that run the
Universal Peace Movement?

1:51:23
The same Mr. Fisher who had drawn
a few hours ago

1:51:26
He was using the Peace Treaty
as a cover

1:51:29
He was going to be arrested as son
as we landed and sent back

1:51:31
to England
Those are facts

1:51:33
I can't believe it, he was a
friend of mine

1:51:36
The same Stephen Fisher would
engineered the kidnapping of Van Meer

1:51:40
You don't expect anybody
to believe that?

1:51:42
Captain, I think this young lady
should know the truth

1:51:47
Yes, Mr. Fisher was my father and
I want the story printed

1:51:54
What is that?
1:51:56
I guess that's my uncle
Hello, hello uncle, how are you?

1:52:01
I'm calling you from the Mohican.
1:52:05
I'm all right, we got a little
accident but I can't tell you now

1:52:08
I'll tell you later, I'll write you.
Do you have any instruction for me?

1:52:16
Yes, keep on the job!
1:52:18
Have you get all that down?
Rush it out at once

1:52:33
This is London, we have as a guest
tonight one of the soldiers of the

1:52:35
press, one of the historians who
were writing history from behind

1:52:38
the canyon's mouth.
1:52:41
A foreign correspondent from the
New York Globe, Huntley Haverstock.

1:52:46
Hello America! I've been watching a
part of the world being blown into

1:52:48
pieces, a part of the world as nice
as Vermont, Ohio and Virginia and...

1:52:53
it's been ripped out and bleeding
like a stair on a Florida house and

1:52:58
I've seen things that make history

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