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
1:53:00
look like a fairy tale
1:53:02
We should have to postpone
the broadcast
1:53:04
Let's go as long as we can
1:53:06
No if we have to go downstairs
1:53:08
What do you say CaroI?
1:53:09
They're listening to you
in America
1:53:14
I can't read the rest of the speech
because the lights have gone out
1:53:17
so I just have to talk of what
I see
1:53:20
All that noise you hear is the static
is dead coming to London
1:53:23
You can hear the bombs falling on
the streets and the homes
1:53:25
Hang on a while, this is a big story
and you're a part of it
1:53:30
It's too late to do anything here
except stand in the dark
1:53:34
The lights are all out everywhere
except in America
1:53:38
Keep those lights burning,
cover them with steal
1:53:40
Bring up your guns, build a vessel,
battle ships and bombing plants
1:53:44
Hello America!
Hang on to your lights!
1:53:47
They're the only lights
left in the world!