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第 472 頁
699 702 711 713 716 718 720 722 725 726 727 728 730 735 739 Media of Communication and Propaganda , by B. S. Murty Nongovernmental Communications in the Nigerian Civil War , by Morris Davis News Broadcasting on Soviet Radio and ...
699 702 711 713 716 718 720 722 725 726 727 728 730 735 739 Media of Communication and Propaganda , by B. S. Murty Nongovernmental Communications in the Nigerian Civil War , by Morris Davis News Broadcasting on Soviet Radio and ...
第 473 頁
Influencing Political Change by Broadcasting to the Soviet Union , by Robert L. Tuck 830 Content Analysis 835 Coding and Analysis of Documentary Materials from Communist China , by Paul Wong 836 Polite Propaganda : “ USSR ” and ...
Influencing Political Change by Broadcasting to the Soviet Union , by Robert L. Tuck 830 Content Analysis 835 Coding and Analysis of Documentary Materials from Communist China , by Paul Wong 836 Polite Propaganda : “ USSR ” and ...
第 474 頁
Ideology 1058 Communist Ideology and Revolution , by John H. Norton ---- 1059 Propaganda and Ideology , by Jacques Ellul 1065 Psychological Total War , by Bernard Yoh 1072 Propaganda 1075 Western Europe 1075 The Projection of Britain ...
Ideology 1058 Communist Ideology and Revolution , by John H. Norton ---- 1059 Propaganda and Ideology , by Jacques Ellul 1065 Psychological Total War , by Bernard Yoh 1072 Propaganda 1075 Western Europe 1075 The Projection of Britain ...
第 532 頁
Since 1965 , according to source , because of Japan's closer relations with the United States and the use of the theme of the revival of Japanese militarism in North Korean propaganda , the credibility of Japanese news among North ...
Since 1965 , according to source , because of Japan's closer relations with the United States and the use of the theme of the revival of Japanese militarism in North Korean propaganda , the credibility of Japanese news among North ...
第 533 頁
A package of North Korean propaganda materials was given to each two - man team , about 200 or 300 booklets . The plan was for each team to carry its package of propaganda materials to a location on the West Coast area of North Korea .
A package of North Korean propaganda materials was given to each two - man team , about 200 or 300 booklets . The plan was for each team to carry its package of propaganda materials to a location on the West Coast area of North Korea .
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acceptance action activities American analysis appeal areas Army associated attitude audience become believe broadcasts Chinese communication Communist concerning considered credibility cultural determine direct discussed effective efforts enemy example fact factors field forces foreign given important included individual influence intellectuals intelligence interest International interview Janis language leaders leaflets live major mass material means measure method military North Korean objectives Office operations opinion organizations Party persons persuasion planning political population position present Press problems produced programs propaganda psychological PSYOP questions radio reason received reported represent requires responses sample selected situation social society soldiers South Soviet survey target techniques theory tion understand United University usually values Viet Vietnam Vietnamese Warfare workers
熱門章節
第 948 頁 - ... a state which consistently upholds its political and economic independence, fights against imperialism and its military blocs, against military bases on its territory; a state which fights against the new forms of colonialism and the penetration of imperialist capital; a state which rejects dictatorial and despotic methods of government; a state in which the people are...
第 625 頁 - We had so much trouble getting those two French generals [de Gaulle and Giraud] together that I thought to myself that this was as difficult as arranging the meeting of Grant and Lee — and then suddenly the press conference was on, and Winston and I had had no time to prepare for it, and the thought 8.
第 651 頁 - Franz Schurmann, Ideology and Organization in Communist China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1968), vii, 504.
第 499 頁 - Prisoners of war shall be evacuated, as soon as possible after their capture, to camps situated in an area far enough from the combat zone for them to be out of danger. Only those prisoners of war who, owing to wounds or sickness, would run greater risks by being evacuated than by remaining where they are, may be temporarily kept back in a danger zone.
第 537 頁 - Every prisoner of war, when questioned on the subject, is bound to give only his surname, first names and rank, date of birth, and army, regimental, personal or serial number, or failing this, equivalent information.
第 900 頁 - Union, has stated categorically that "most of the things of a positive character that are happening in the Soviet Union tod'ay are explainable only in terms of the influence of the West, for which the most important single channel is radio. . . . There is now enough communication to keep us part of a single civilization, to keep us influencing each other, to assure that any Western idea circulates in the Soviet Union too. The pessimistic expectation that totalitarianism could develop an accepted...
第 980 頁 - They claimed that the deteriorating situation ... is a direct result of colonial conquest, and the people of Algeria cannot be said to have exercised their right to self-determination as envisaged in the United Nations Charter.
第 804 頁 - The working group also stated that "international cooperation was increasingly an important factor in establishing satellite systems for direct broadcasting." The report includes three specific conclusions : (a) While it is considered that satellite technology has reached the stage at which it is possible to contemplate the future development of satellites capable of directing broadcasting to the public at large, direct, broadcasting TV signals into existing...
第 651 頁 - guiding" the masses not to hold big meetings, not to put up big-character posters and by creating all kinds of taboos, aren't you suppressing the masses' revolution, not allowing them to make revolution and opposing their revolution?
第 643 頁 - ... assuredness, since they did have access to otherwise unavailable information — or at any rate to otherwise unavailable devices for carrying that information. Hence, for example, the repeated pronouncements, inside and outside Parliament, of Harold Wilson, Michael Stewart, Maurice Foley, and Lord Shepherd. The authoritative tone which the executive branch adopted on Nigeria-Biafra, as on foreign policy questions generally, was enhanced by a feeling common in Western capitals that the Nigerian...