*Drei Rote Rosen" (Three Red Roses) by Lale Andersen restored.
Written by John Brason.
While Albert and Lisa continue to worry about Curtis, Lifeline is tested in the midst of attempting to assist a small group of evaders. The Germans capture one of them, Sergeant Walker, who possesses some knowledge of Lifeline. Walker makes a desperate bid to avoid talking by throwing himself down a staircase at Gestapo Brussels HQ. He recovers in hospital in the company of an undercover German officer. Prompted by a doctor in contact with the evasion line, the sergeant escapes from a surgery and is subsequently hunted by both the Germans and Lifeline. He is found and killed by Jacques Bol on Albert's order, to avoid his possibly revealing Lifeline and because he is now too infirm for the escape line.
In his BBC radio broadcast January 14, 1941, de Laveleye proposed what became the “V campaign.”
“I am proposing to you as a rallying emblem the letter V,” he said, “because V is the first letter of the words ‘Victoire’ in French, and ‘Vrijheid’ in Flemish [the two major languages in Belgium]...the Victory which will give us back our freedom, the Victory of our good friends the English. Their word for Victory also begins with V. As you see, things fit all round.”
Featuring Martin Burrows, Jan Francis, Bernard Hepton, Christopher Neame, Michael Culver, Angela Richards, Clifford Rose, Timothy Morand, Ron Pember, Valentine Dyall, Juliet Hammond.
*The video's end is not cut off, but occasionally the video trim that YouTube requires just cuts the video at the precise finish, which is what happens here. I have, at the beginning of the description for each episode, noted when dialog is cut off at the end and reproduced that, which is usually just one line. That's due to the theme song's beginning being cut off, which is part of the entire Secret Army series being copyright protected, hence not able to be completely downloaded, on YouTube.
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