<P> You are listening to a CBS presentation of Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre of the Air, in an original dramatization of The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells . The performance will continue after a brief intermission . </P> <P> The last third of the program is a monologue and dialogue . Professor Pierson, having survived the attack on Grover's Mill, attempts to make contact with other humans . In Newark, he encounters an opportunistic militiaman who holds fascist ideals in regards to man's relationship with the Martians, and intends to use Martian weaponry to take control of both species . Declaring that he wants no part of "his world", Pierson leaves the stranger with his delusions . His journey takes him to the ruins of New York, where he discovers that the Martians have died--as with the novel, they fell victim to earthly pathogenic germs, to which they had no immunity . Life eventually returns to normal, and Pierson finishes writing his recollections of the invasion and its aftermath . </P> <P> After the conclusion of the play, Welles reassumed his role as host and told listeners that the broadcast was a Halloween concoction: the equivalent, he says, "of dressing up in a sheet, jumping out of a bush and saying,' Boo!"' Popular mythology holds the disclaimer was hastily added to the broadcast at the insistence of CBS executives, as they became aware of panic inspired by the program . In fact, at the station break, network executive Davidson Taylor had attempted to prevent Welles, who had added the speech at the last minute, from reading it on air for fear of allowing the network to legal liability, but Welles delivered it anyway . </P> <P> Radio programming charts in Sunday newspapers listed the CBS drama, "The War of the Worlds". The New York Times for October 30, 1938, also included the show in its "Leading Events of the Week" ("Tonight--Play: H.G. Wells's' War of the Worlds"') and published a photograph of Welles with some of the Mercury players, captioned, "Tonight's show is H.G. Wells' ' War of the Worlds"'. </P>

How does orson welles conclude the radio broadcast war of the worlds
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