Difference between revisions of "From Beatleland—It's the Daleks"
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| title2 = Daleks Will Invade U.S. from British TV | | title2 = Daleks Will Invade U.S. from British TV | ||
| publication2 = [[Has Publication::The Cumberland Times]] | | publication2 = [[Has Publication::The Cumberland Times]] | ||
+ | | date2 = 1965-01-03 | ||
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LONDON, Jan. 2 (UPI)—With Christmas over, Britain is resounding to the footsteps of "things from outer space"— Daleks. And the United States could be next. | LONDON, Jan. 2 (UPI)—With Christmas over, Britain is resounding to the footsteps of "things from outer space"— Daleks. And the United States could be next. |
Revision as of 01:09, 19 October 2013
- Publication: Has Publication::Chicago Tribune]]
- Date: 1965-01-03
- Author: Maris Ross
- Page: A3
- Language: English
LONDON, Jan. 2 (UPI)—With Christmas over, Britain is resounding to the footsteps of "things from outer space"— Daleks. And the United States could be next.
Daleks are trundling, pepperpot-shaped mental monsters which can be heard to say in strange, mechanical voices: "We will destroy you earthmen."
They trundled first across television screens—then became popular as king-sized toys and gimmick novelties.
Stars of BBC Series The Daleks are the conquerors of earth in a British Broadcasting corporation weekly science fiction television serial which was written for children but has picked up a hefty adult following as well. The Daleks might also invade the United States because the BBC is offering the series, called Dr. Who, for sale there.
Here, the fad has produced big Dalek toys 4 1/2 feet tall which children can climb into and operate, little Daleks measuring 6 inches, Dalek books, Dalek jigsaw puzzles, and Dalek brooches.
Daleks keep appearing in newspaper cartoons, such as one with a de Gaulle nose pointing a weapon at the other members of the North Atlantic Treaty organization.
Welshman Terry Nation, 34, who writes the script for the science fiction serial, says he named the Daleks after a volume of an encyclopedia which was marked "Dal to Lek." He made them invade the earth in 2164 in flying saucers to steal the world's magnetic core.
Tough to Master
Inside each Dalek in the television serial is an actor hard at work. "You have to pedal a machine like a child's tricycle and work four gadgets at the same time," said one of them, Peter Murphy. "It takes a long time to master a Dalek and even then they have a tendency to skid." Caption: Two Daleks pay visit to London shopping center, much to the delight and awe of youngsters. [UPI Telephoto]
Disclaimer: These citations are created on-the-fly using primitive parsing techniques. You should double-check all citations. Send feedback to whovian@cuttingsarchive.org
- APA 6th ed.: Ross, Maris (1965-01-03). From Beatleland—It's the Daleks. Chicago Tribune p. A3.
- MLA 7th ed.: Ross, Maris. "From Beatleland—It's the Daleks." Chicago Tribune [add city] 1965-01-03, A3. Print.
- Chicago 15th ed.: Ross, Maris. "From Beatleland—It's the Daleks." Chicago Tribune, edition, sec., 1965-01-03
- Turabian: Ross, Maris. "From Beatleland—It's the Daleks." Chicago Tribune, 1965-01-03, section, A3 edition.
- Wikipedia (this article): <ref>{{cite news| title=From Beatleland—It's the Daleks | url=http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/From_Beatleland%E2%80%94It%27s_the_Daleks | work=Chicago Tribune | pages=A3 | date=1965-01-03 | via=Doctor Who Cuttings Archive | accessdate=26 November 2024 }}</ref>
- Wikipedia (this page): <ref>{{cite web | title=From Beatleland—It's the Daleks | url=http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/From_Beatleland%E2%80%94It%27s_the_Daleks | work=Doctor Who Cuttings Archive | accessdate=26 November 2024}}</ref>