CHANGING STATIONS FULL BIBLIOGRAPHY Archives And

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

CHANGING STATIONS FULL BIBLIOGRAPHY Archives And CHANGING STATIONS FULL BIBLIOGRAPHY Archives and manuscripts Arts Centre, Performing Arts Collection, Melbourne, Vic Nancy Lee Papers Frank Thring Papers Battye Library, State Library of Western Australia Australian Labor Party Western Australia Branch Records BBC Written Archives Centre, Reading (BBCA) Bible Society of NSW Records, North Ryde, NSW B.G. Judd Papers Cooma Historical Society, NSW 2XL records Eurobodalla Homes Charitable Organisation Records, Newport, NSW 2GB Happiness Club Papers Fryer Library, University of Queensland (FL) MSS F1186, Matthew O’Brien Papers MSS F2295, Charles Porter Papers Geelong Heritage Centre, Vic 3GL records HO-FM, Hobart 7HO & HO-FM records HWT Library 3DB Files John Fairfax Archives (JFA) Records of Macquarie Broadcasting Network John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland OMEQ, Australian Labor Party Queensland Branch Records OM72-45, James J. Dobbie Papers OM90-04, Australian Women’s Land Army Papers OM90-04/34-43, Australian Women’s Land Army Records La Trobe Library, State Library of Victoria (SLV) MS 10389, Democratic Labor Party Records MS 10508, Australian Labor Party Victorian Branch Records MS 11696, W.D. Maxwell-Mahon Papers MS 12185, Box 2753/11, Brian McKinlay Papers MS 12616, Bob Cugley Papers MS 13390, Gwen Noad Papers PA02/07, Norman Banks Papers PA03/72, Norman Banks Papers 2 Mitchell Library, State Library of NSW (ML) MSS 2083, Australian Labor Party NSW Branch Records, c. 1956-1969 MSS 2385, Liberal Party NSW Division Records, 1945-1972 MSS 2954 Add-on 1910, Amalgamated Wireless Australasia (AWA) Ltd Records, 1896-1985 MSS 3261 & MSS 5401, Frank Grose Papers MSS 3269, Angus & Robertson Ltd Further Records (Part 2) MSS 3525, Donald Horne Papers MSS 3641, Women’s Christian Temperance Union Records MSS 5184, Dorothy Gordon Jenner Papers MSS 5288 Add-on 1982, Lena Gustin Papers MSS 6275, Sir E.T. Fisk Papers MSS 6713, Oswald Francis Mingay Papers IRN 412494, NSW Council of Churches Records ML 1243/91, Ashby Research Service Records Murdoch University Library, WA Irene Greenwood Papers National Archives of Australia (NAA) Records held in Canberra (ACT), Melbourne (Vic), Perth (WA) and Sydney (NSW) National Film and Sound Archive, ACT(NFSA) F.W. Daniell Papers Federation of Australian Radio Broadcasters Records 5DN Collection, 1905-1988 National Library of Australia, ACT (NLA) MS 1536, Don Rodgers Papers MS 1903 & MS 1996, Australian Federation of Commercial Broadcasting Stations (FARB) Reports MS 2823, Sir Keith Murdoch Papers MS 2941, Hugh Elliot Papers MS 4738, Arthur Calwell Papers MS 4846, Australian Labor Party Victorian Branch Records, 1947-1952 MS 4849, Sir Lloyd Dumas Papers MS 4851, J.A. Lyons Papers MS 4852, Dame Enid Lyons Papers MS 4866, Anderson Analysis Market Survey Documents MS 4936, Sir R.G. Menzies Papers MS 4985, Australian Labor Party Federal Secretariat Records MS 5000, Liberal Party Federal Secretariat Papers MS 5852, Graham Perkin Papers MS 6150, Casey Family Papers MS 6216, Sir Billy Snedden Papers MS 6220, Agnes Dobson Papers MS 7702, Adrian Jose Papers MS 7732, Sir Frederick Stewart Papers MS 8021, Gordon Leed Papers (‘From 78s to Satellites: The Journey of Two Men through the Radio Broadcasting Industry’, by Gordon Leed and Dick Heming) MS 8856, Nancy Robinson Whittle Flannery Papers Noel Butlin Archive Centre, Australian National University, ACT (NBAC) E241, Actors & Announcers’ Equity Association of Australia N59, Australian Journalists’ Association NSW Branch N122, Actors’ Equity of Australia, Federal Office Orange City Library, NSW 3 2GZ records Queen Victoria Museum, Launceston, Tas (QVM) CHS5, J.S. Forward Collection CHS6, Northern Tasmanian Football Association Records CHS40, The Examiner W.R. Rolph Collection LCC3, Launceston City Council Records 7LA, Launceston 7LA records State Library of NSW Ephemera Collection State Library of South Australia PRG 204, Portus Family Papers State Library of Tasmania Launceston Reference Library (SLTL) MSS 0194, 7LA Women’s Association Papers 7LA records Swan Hill Regional Library, Vic 3SH records Sydney Archdiocesan Archives, St Mary’s Cathedral, NSW (SAA) 2SM records 2BS, Bathurst 2BS records University of Melbourne Archives, Vic (UMA) Acc. 81/143, Rev. Victor James Papers Accession 87/114, Alan Bell Papers Western Australia broadcasting records, Claremont In possession of John Cranfield Wisconsin Historical Society National Broadcasting Company (NBC) Records Interviews Albert, Sir Alexis interviewed by Leon Becker, 1994, 255748, NFSA Archer, Kenneth interviewed by Jeffrey Rushton, 1995, 294305, NFSA Bean, Ray interviewed by Jeffrey Rushton, 7 March 1995, 2777272, NFSA Becker, Leon interviewed by Phil Haldeman, 20 January 1994, 247411, NFSA Bitsis, Koula interviewed by Peter Parkhill, 14 December 2001, TRC 5109, NLA, & interviewed by Bridget Griffen-Foley, 19 June 2006 Button, Bert interviewed by John Pearce, 25 August 1992, 236197, NFSA Camplin, Ron interviewed by Jeffrey Rushton, 1994, 260084, NFSA Clifford, Rev. Dr Ross & Rev. John Edmondstone interviewed by Bridget Griffen-Foley, 5 Oct 2005 de Veer, Walter interviewed by Nancy Robinson Flannery, 25 July 2001, 2226565, NFSA Duffy, Barbara interviewed by Jeffrey Rushton, 28 June 1995, 294204, NFSA Ellis, Max interviewed by Hazel de Berg, 15 November 1980, ORAL DeB 1209-1210, NLA Fairhall, Sir Alan interview, 1989, 287812, NFSA 4 Finch, Kerry interviewed by Gwen D’emden, 9 September 1996, 304882, NFSA Foster, Desmond interviewed by Phil Charley, 1992, 294424, NFSA 4BU 60th anniversary interview, 1995, 307439, NFSA 4MB history narrated by Greig Bolderrow, 1996, 498279, NFSA Francis, Bob interviewed by Nancy Robinson-Flannery, March 1984, 213472, NFSA Gibbons, Denis interviewed by Denzil Howson, 1994, 271765, NFSA Gibson, Grace interviewed by Nick Erby, 1979, 259182, NFSA Hoysted, Des interviewed by Phil Haldeman, 25 February 2003, 237051, NFSA Lanyon, Bill interviewed by Denzil Howson, 3 April 1995, 280770, NFSA Laws, John interviewed by Bridget Griffen-Foley, 5 May 2005 McConville, Bill interviewed by Richard Raxworthy, 4 February 1986, TRC 1948/16, NLA Medwell, Jeff interviewed by Paul Linkson, 1995, 319341, NFSA Nicol, Beth interviewed by Leon Becker, 1993, 253142, NFSA Piddington, Sidney, interviewed by Nancye Bridges, n.d., 219802, NFSA Rushton, Jeffrey interviewed by Phil Charley, 1994, 258701, NFSA 7LA recordings and oral histories, QVM Smith, Joan interviewed by Leicester Warburton, 1996, 294494, NFSA Sparkes, Ken interviewed by Phil Haldeman, 1994, 260180, NFSA Warnock, Diana Muriel interviewed by Criena Fitzgerald, 2001, Battye Library, State Library of Western Australia Whiteman, Joyce interviewed by Leon Becker, 1994, 260088, NFSA Wright, Eric interviewed by Leon Becker, 1992, 273538, NFSA Newspapers and periodicals Advertiser (Adelaide), Advertiser’s Weekly, Advocate (Bathurst), Advertising News, Age, Argus, Australasian Post, Australia To-Day, Australian & Weekend Australian, Australian Business Monthly, Australian Church Record, Australian Financial Review (AFR), Australian Journal of Politics & History (AJPH, political chronicles), Australian Radio News, Australian Women’s Weekly, AWA Journal, Barrier Miner, Broadcast, Broadcaster, Broadcasting Business/Commercial Broadcasting (BB), Broadcasting and Television (B&T), Brother Bill’s Monthly, Bulletin, Business Review Weekly (BRW), Cairns Post, Canberra Times, Catholic Weekly, Cavalcade, Central Magazine, Central Queensland Herald, Central Western Times, Chicago Daily Tribune, Commercial Broadcasting Rate Book, Commonwealth Home, Commonwealth Record, Country Life and Stock and Station Jnl, Courier-Mail, Cowra Guardian, Daily Mirror, Daily News, Daily Telegraph (DT), Equity, Examiner (Launceston), 4BC Extra, Happiness, Herald (Melbourne), Goulburn Post, Home, Labor Daily, Listener In (LI), Lithgow Mercury, Major News, Mentor, Mercury (Hobart), Molong Express, Music Maker, Nation, National Times, New Life, Newspaper News, Northern Scene, Northern Territory News, Observer, Orange Leader, People, Queensland Radio News, Radio Active News (3AW), Radio Call, Radio & Electrical Merchant, Radio Pictorial of Australia (RPA), Radio Program, Radio Times, Round Table Club, Scene, 7LA Radio ’Rap Up, SA Wireless Monthly, Sid Jordan’s Views on the News, Smith’s Weekly, Sound Advertiser, South Western Times, Sporting Globe, Standard, Sun, Sun-Herald, Sun News-Pictorial, Sunday Examiner, Sunday Mail, Sunday Press, Sunday Sun, Sunday Telegraph (ST), Sunday Times, Sydney Morning Herald (SMH), Tasmanian Farmer, Tasmanian Truth, Telegraph (Brisbane), Teleradio, Theosophy in Australia, Things I Hear, Times on Sunday, Tribune, Truth, TV Radio Guide, TV Times, TV Week, Voice of Prophecy News, Western Mail, Wireless Weekly (WW), Woman’s Day, Western Mail, Workers’ Weekly. Reference works Allen, Y. & Spencer, S. The Broadcasting Chronology 1890-1980, Australian Film & Television School, Sydney, 1983 Australian Broadcasting Control Board (ABCB) Annual Reports, 1949-76 Australian Broadcasting Tribunal (ABT) Annual Reports, 1977-92 5 Australian Broadcasting Authority (ABA) Annual Reports, 1993-2005 Australian Encyclopaedia, Australian Geographic Society, Sydney, 1988 Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) Annual Reports, 2006-08 Australian Dictionary of Biography (ADB), MUP, Melbourne Broadcast Year Books Broadcasting and Television Year Books Broadcasting Business Year Books Commonwealth Parliamentary Debates (CPD) Currency Companion to Music and Dance in Australia, J. Whiteoak & A. Scott-Maxwell
Recommended publications
  • An Australian Mirage
    An Australian Mirage Author Hoyte, Catherine Published 2004 Thesis Type Thesis (PhD Doctorate) School School of Arts, Media and Culture DOI https://doi.org/10.25904/1912/1870 Copyright Statement The author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise. Downloaded from http://hdl.handle.net/10072/367545 Griffith Research Online https://research-repository.griffith.edu.au AN AUSTRALIAN MIRAGE by Catherine Ann Hoyte BA(Hons.) This thesis is submitted in fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Griffith University Faculty of Arts School of Arts, Media and Culture August 2003 Statement of Authorship This work has never been previously submitted for a degree or diploma in any university. To the best of my knowledge and belief, this dissertation contains no material previously published or written by another person except where due reference is made in the dissertation itself. Abstract This thesis contains a detailed academic analysis of the complete rise and fall of Christopher Skase and his Qintex group mirage. It uses David Harvey’s ‘Condition of Postmodernity’ to locate the collapse within the Australian political economic context of the period (1974-1989). It does so in order to answer questions about why and how the mirage developed, why and how it failed, and why Skase became the scapegoat for the Australian corporate excesses of the 1980s. I take a multi-disciplinary approach and consider corporate collapse, corporate regulation and the role of accounting, and corporate deviance. Acknowledgments I am very grateful to my principal supervisor, Dr Anthony B. van Fossen, for his inspiration, advice, direction, guidance, and unfailing encouragement throughout the course of this study; and for suggesting Qintex as a case study.
    [Show full text]
  • Member for Wakefield South Australia
    Conference delegates 2016 *Asterisks identify the recipients of the 2016 Crawford Fund Conference Scholarships ACHITEI, Simona Scope Global ALDERS, Robyn The University of Sydney ANDERSON AO, John The Crawford Fund NSW ANDREW AO, Neil Murray-Darling Basin Authority ANGUS, John CSIRO Agriculture *ARIF, Shumaila Charles Sturt University ARMSTRONG, Tristan Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs & Trade ASH, Gavin University of Southern Queensland ASTORGA, Miriam Western Sydney University AUGUSTIN, Mary Ann CSIRO *BAHAR, Nur The Australian National University BAILLIE, Craig The National Centre for Engineering in Agriculture (NCEA), University of Southern Queensland *BAJWA, Ali School of Agriculture & Food Sciences, The University of Queensland BARLASS, Martin Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre BASFORD, Kaye The Crawford Fund *BEER, Sally University of New England, NSW *BENYAM, Addisalem Central Queensland University BERRY, Sarah James Cook University / CSIRO *BEST, Talitha Central Queensland University BIE, Elizabeth Australian Government Department of Agriculture & Water Resources BISHOP, Joshua WWF-Australia BLACKALl, Patrick The University of Queensland *BLAKE, Sara South Australian Research & Development Institute (SARDI), Primary Industries & Regions South Australia BLIGHT AO, Denis The Crawford Fund *BONIS-PROFUMO, Gianna Charles Darwin University BOREVITZ, Justin The Australian National University BOYD, David The University of Sydney BRASSIL, Semih Western Sydney University BROGAN, Abigail Australian Centre
    [Show full text]
  • Media Locks in the New Narrative
    7. Influences on a changed story and the new normal: media locks in the new narrative It was the biggest, most powerful spin campaign in Australian media history—the strategy was to delay action on greenhouse gas emissions until ‘coal was ready’—with geo-sequestration (burying carbon gases) and tax support. Alan Tate, ABC environment reporter 1990s On 23 September 2013 the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) program Media Watch explored a textbook example of why too many Australians and their politicians continue to stumble through a fog of confusion and doubt in regard to climate change. The case under the microscope typified irresponsible journalism. Media Watch host Paul Barry, with trademark irony, announced: ‘Yes it’s official at last … those stupid scientists on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [IPCC] got it wrong’, in their latest assessment report. He quoted 2GB breakfast jock Chris Smith from a week earlier saying the IPCC had ‘fessed up’ that its computers had drastically overestimated rising temperatures. ‘That’s a relief,’ said Barry, and how do we know this? ‘Because Chris Smith read it on the front page of last Monday’s Australian newspaper. When it comes to rubbishing the dangers of man-made global warming the shock jocks certainly know who they can trust.’ But wait. The Australian’s story by Environment Editor Graham Lloyd—‘We got it wrong on warming says IPCC’ was not original either. According to Media Watch, Lloyd appeared to have based his story on a News Limited sister publication from the United Kingdom. Said Barry: ‘He’d read all about it in the previous day’s Mail on Sunday,’ which had a story headlined ‘The great green con’.
    [Show full text]
  • GP Text Paste Up.3
    FACING ASIA A History of the Colombo Plan FACING ASIA A History of the Colombo Plan Daniel Oakman Published by ANU E Press The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at: http://epress.anu.edu.au/facing_asia _citation.html National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication Entry Author: Oakman, Daniel. Title: Facing Asia : a history of the Colombo Plan / Daniel Oakman. ISBN: 9781921666926 (pbk.) 9781921666933 (eBook) Notes: Includes bibliographical references. Subjects: Economic assistance--Southeast Asia--History. Economic assistance--Political aspects--Southeast Asia. Economic assistance--Social aspects--Southeast Asia. Dewey Number: 338.910959 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design by Emily Brissenden Cover: Lionel Lindsay (1874–1961) was commissioned to produce this bookplate for pasting in the front of books donated under the Colombo Plan. Sir Lionel Lindsay, Bookplate from the Australian people under the Colombo Plan, nla.pic-an11035313, National Library of Australia Printed by Griffin Press This edition © 2010 ANU E Press First edition © 2004 Pandanus Books For Robyn and Colin Acknowledgements Thank you: family, friends and colleagues. I undertook much of the work towards this book as a Visiting Fellow with the Division of Pacific and Asian History in the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University. There I benefited from the support of the Division and, in particular, Hank Nelson and Donald Denoon.
    [Show full text]
  • Author Biography & Book Introduction
    “AUSTRALIAN RADIO HISTORY ” by BRUCE CARTY Ph.D. BOOK INTRODUCTION and AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY. Bruce Carty started his interest in radio at the age of five as a member of the A.B.C. “Argonauts” club. By seven his radio interest was listening to A.B.C. news broadcasts. By twelve, Bruce avidly followed the 2UE TOP 40, obtaining their weekly listings from the local music store. At fourteen he became Australia’s youngest commercial radio announcer in 1963 with radio 2KA in Katoomba. He used to pester the announcers to let him panel for them. One day they were short an announcer so Bruce was asked to step in. So started his media career. Later, in Brisbane, he studied announcing, script writing, and program production with Jim Illiffe’s School of Broadcasting classes held at radio 4BC. Bruce then studied for his Broadcast Operators Certificate of Proficiency, with lectures in Brisbane by P.M.G. engineers. These lectures included an examination on the theory and operation of a 2,000 watt transmitter with water-cooled valves. Bruce launched his own closed circuit radio station in his spare time on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast, with a studio in the Mooloolaba surf lifesaving club. From here, his SUNRADIO station was relayed via P.M.G. landlines to every Sunshine Coast beach through the public address system at each surf club. SUNRADIO operated every weekend and public holiday, playing the current Top 40. On the odd occasion, he even announced shark warnings for swimmers. Bruce moved into television, working for BTQ-7, TVQ-0 and ABQ-2 in Brisbane, plus stations at Tamworth, Mackay, Darwin, Newcastle, and Wagga Wagga.
    [Show full text]
  • Apo-Nid63005.Pdf
    AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING TRIBUNAL ANNUAL REPORT 1991-92 Australian Broadcasting Tribunal Sydney 1992 ©Commonwealth of Australia ISSN 0728-8883 Design by Media and Public Relations Branch, Australian Broadcasting Tribunal. Printed in Australia by Pirie Printers Sales Pty Ltd, Fyshwick, A.CT. 11 Contents 1. MEMBERSIDP OF THE TRIBUNAL 1 2. THE YEAR IN REVIEW 7 3. POWERS AND FUNCTIONS OF THE TRIBUNAL 13 Responsible Minister 16 4. LICENSING 17 Number and Type of Licences on Issue 19 Grant of Limited Licences 20 Commercial Radio Licence Grant Inquiries 21 Supplementary Radio Grant Inquiries 23 Joined Supplementary /Independent Radio Grant Inquiries 24 Remote Licences 26 Public Radio Licence Grants 26 Renewal of Licences with Conditions or Licensee Undertaking 30 Revocation/Suspension/Conditions Inquiries 32 Allocation of Call Signs 37 5. OWNERSHIP AND CONTROL 39 Applications and Notices Received 41 Most Significant Inquiries 41 Unfinished Inquiries 47 Contraventions Amounting To Offences 49 Licence Transfers 49 Uncompleted Inquiries 50 Operation of Service by Other than Licensee 50 Registered Lender and Loan Interest Inquiries 50 6. PROGRAM AND ADVERTISING STANDARDS 51 Program and Advertising Standards 53 Australian Content 54 Compliance with Australian Content Television Standard 55 Children's Television Standards 55 Compliance with Children's Standards 58 Comments and Complaints 59 Broadcasting of Political Matter 60 Research 61 iii 7. PROGRAMS - PUBLIC INQUIRIES 63 Public Inquiries 65 Classification of Television Programs 65 Foreign Content In Television Advertisements 67 Advertising Time On Television 68 Film And Television Co-productions 70 Australian Documentary Programs 71 Cigarette Advertising During The 1990 Grand Prix 72 Test Market Provisions For Foreign Television Advertisements 72 Public Radio Sponsorship Announcements 73 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 74 John Laws - Comments About Aborigines 75 Anti-Discrimination Standards 75 Accuracy & Fairness in Current Affairs 76 Religious Broadcasts 77 Review of Classification Children's Television Programs 78 8.
    [Show full text]
  • Heath Franklin
    HEATH FRANKLIN As 'Chopper', Heath Franklin is an Australian cultural and comedy icon. With his own TV show, four live comedy specials, 2 ARIA nominations, 1 Logie nomination and over 500,000 tickets sold worldwide, Chopper has nearly done it all. The man behind the tatts and 'stache, Heath Franklin, is an Australian actor, comedic performer, improviser and writer. Franklin made his television debut on the sketch show, The Ronnie Johns Half Hour, from where his comedic impersonation of real-life criminal Mark 'Chopper' Read, became an international cult hit. In 2006, Franklin's talent was rewarded with the nomination an Australian TV Logie award, the inaugural Graham Kennedy Award for Most Outstanding New Talent. Since 2007, he has toured Chopper across the country, and around the world, culminating in 2018, when Heath was awarded the Comedians Choice Award - The Piece of Wood Award - at The Melbourne International Comedy Festival for his sell-out, international tour 'Bogan Jesus'. As Chopper, he created and performed the variety show, Chopper's Republic of Anzackistan (TV3/Network 10) in 2015, and featured in his own segment, Chopper's Weekly Review, on the Triple M Network's, Merrick and Australia drive show. Since 2009, he has also been a season regular on NZ's news panel show, 7 Days (TV3). As himself, Heath Franklin has guest starred in numerous Australian comedies, such as Thank God You're Here, Drunk Histories and Review with Myles Barlow, as well as being regular cast in Best Bits (Seven), Wednesday Night Fever (ABC), How Not to Behave (ABC) and Randling (ABC).
    [Show full text]
  • October 2008 Comedy Channel Highlights
    www.comedychannel.com.au OCTOBER 2008 HIGHLIGHTS THE MERRICK & ROSSO SHOW WORLD PREMIERE Thursday October 2 @ 8.30pm Continues Thursdays at 8.30pm Merrick and Rosso are back on the box where they belong, with the keys to the Foxtel car - and enough fuel in the tank to really cause some chaos! They’ll finally return to their broadcasting birth place at The Comedy Channel with THE MERRICK & ROSSO SHOW. So what’s on the cards for the new show? Each week the boys will front up before a live studio audience with their unique take on anything and everything. From what’s happening in the world of news to the big questions: Can you deep fry a watermelon? On THE MERRICK & ROSSO SHOW, celebrities will make regular guest appearances from in-studio interviews to recorded comedy pieces to show you a side of them never before seen. Into the mix will go plenty of studio audience interaction and more mayhem and stupidity than is legal in three states. For perhaps the first time, Merrick Watts and Tim Ross will truly focus the energy and excitement of their legendary sell-out live comedy shows and bring that force to the electric television. It’s hotter than Gordon Ramsay’s kitchen, is sure to top Brendan Nelson’s approval ratings and it’s ‘wronger’ than an Austrian family get-together. THE MERRICK & ROSSO SHOW will allow nobody to be immune from their parodies and sketch comedy. Finally, as Merrick and Rosso are keen to point out, “Put simply, the show is Morcambe and Wise meets The Star Wars Christmas Special at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting during The French Renaissance… on a weeknight.” Buckle up Australia, for a riotous half hour of THE MERRICK & ROSSO SHOW.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2006-2007: Part 2 – Overview
    24 international broadcasting then... The opening transmission of Radio Australia in December 1939, known then as “Australia Calling”. “Australia Calling… Australia Calling”, diminishing series of transmission “hops” announced the clipped voice of John Royal around the globe. For decades to come, through the crackle of shortwave radio. It was listeners would tune their receivers in the a few days before Christmas 1939. Overseas early morning and dusk and again at night broadcasting station VLQ 2—V-for-victory, to receive the clearest signals. Even then, L-for-liberty, Q-for-quality—had come alive signal strength lifted and fell repeatedly, to the impending terror of World War II. amid the atmospheric hash. The forerunner of Radio Australia broadcast Australia Calling/Radio Australia based itself in those European languages that were still in Melbourne well south of the wartime widely used throughout South-East Asia at “Brisbane Line” and safe from possible the end of in the colonial age—German, Dutch, Japanese invasion. Even today, one of Radio French, Spanish and English. Australia’s principal transmitter stations is located in the Victorian city of Shepparton. Transmission signals leapt to the ionosphere —a layer of electro-magnetic particles By 1955, ABC Chairman Sir Richard Boyer surrounding the planet—before reflecting summed up the Radio Australia achievement: down to earth and bouncing up again in a “We have sought to tell the story of this section 2 25 country with due pride in our achievements international broadcasting with Australia and way of life, but without ignoring the Television. Neither the ABC nor, later, differences and divisions which are inevitable commercial owners of the service could in and indeed the proof of a free country”.
    [Show full text]
  • 'They're My Two Favourites' Versus' the Bigger Scheme of Things': Pro-Am
    This may be the author’s version of a work that was submitted/accepted for publication in the following source: McKee, Alan & Keating, Chris (2012) ’They’re my two favourites’ versus ’the bigger scheme of things’: Pro-am historians remember Australian television. In Turnbull, S & Darian-Smith, K (Eds.) Remembering television: Histories, technologies, memories. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, United Kingdom, pp. 52-73. This file was downloaded from: https://eprints.qut.edu.au/54554/ c Copyright 2012 Alan McKee & Chris Keating This work is covered by copyright. Unless the document is being made available under a Creative Commons Licence, you must assume that re-use is limited to personal use and that permission from the copyright owner must be obtained for all other uses. If the docu- ment is available under a Creative Commons License (or other specified license) then refer to the Licence for details of permitted re-use. It is a condition of access that users recog- nise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. If you believe that this work infringes copyright please provide details by email to [email protected] Notice: Please note that this document may not be the Version of Record (i.e. published version) of the work. Author manuscript versions (as Sub- mitted for peer review or as Accepted for publication after peer review) can be identified by an absence of publisher branding and/or typeset appear- ance. If there is any doubt, please refer to the published source. http:// www.c-s-p.org/ flyers/ Remembering-Television--Histories--Technologies--Memories1-4438-3970-1.
    [Show full text]
  • Hazard (Edition No
    Hazard (Edition No. 25) V.I.S.S. December 1995 Victorian Injury Surveillance System Monash University Accident Research Centre Translating injury surveillance to prevention: an update As VISS is moving to a new system of data collection in 1996 it is timely to review our achievements over the past eight years. This edition of Hazard highlights some VISS success stories and outlines some of the challenges that face us in 1996 and beyond. Erin Cassell or more significant injury issues and progress has been made by VISS and Virginia Routley Joan Ozanne-Smith a discussion of actions that need to be other bodies but where there is good taken to reduce or eliminate the potential for further gains. In these Summary potential for injury. areas a modest increase in human and financial resources applied to the The first edition of Hazard was As background to this (the 25th) problem could be repaid by significant published in July 1988, the year in edition of Hazard, progress on all the reductions in the number and/or the which the Victorian Injury recommendations to reduce injuries severity of injuries. Surveillance System was established. made in Hazard was reviewed. The The quarterly publication of Hazard review not only covered follow-up Enclosed in this edition is a client is one of the major methods VISS action undertaken by VISS alone or in survey. In 1995 VISS received a uses to disseminate information. The collaboration with other Monash small grant from the Victorian selection of topics forHazard is based University Accident Research Centre Health Promotion Foundation to on the relative severity, frequency (MUARC) projects but also included support the implementation of and the potential preventability of significant action on VISS findings from VISS data analyses injury problems that emerge from recommendations taken by other and research.
    [Show full text]
  • MS 5014 C.D. Rowley, Study of Aborigines in Australian Society, Social Science Research Council of Australia: Research Material and Indexes, 1964-1968
    AIATSIS Collections Catalogue Manuscript Finding Aid Index Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Library MS 5014 C.D. Rowley, Study of Aborigines in Australian Society, Social Science Research Council of Australia: research material and indexes, 1964-1968 CONTENTS COLLECTION SUMMARY………………………………………….......page 5 CULTURAL SENSITIVITY STATEMENT……………………………..page 5 ACCESS TO COLLECTION………………………………………….…page 6 COLLECTION OVERVIEW……………………………………………..page 7 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE………………………………...………………page 10 SERIES DESCRIPTION………………………………………………...page 12 Series 1 Research material files Folder 1/1 Abstracts Folder 1/2 Agriculture, c.1963-1964 Folder 1/3 Arts, 1936-1965 Folder 1/4 Attitudes, c.1919-1967 Folder 1/5 Bibliographies, c.1960s MS 5014 C.D. Rowley, Study of Aborigines in Australian Society, Social Science Research Council of Australia: research material and indexes, 1964-1968 Folder 1/6 Case Histories, c.1934-1966 Folder 1/7 Cooperatives, c.1954-1965. Folder 1/8 Councils, 1961-1966 Folder 1/9 Courts, Folio A-U, 1-20, 1907-1966 Folder 1/10-11 Civic Rights, Files 1 & 2, 1934-1967 Folder 1/12 Crime, 1964-1967 Folder 1/13 Customs – Native, 1931-1965 Folder 1/14 Demography – Census 1961 – Australia – full-blood Aboriginals Folder 1/15 Demography, 1931-1966 Folder 1/16 Discrimination, 1921-1967 Folder 1/17 Discrimination – Freedom Ride: press cuttings, Feb-Jun 1965 Folder 1/18-19 Economy, Pts.1 & 2, 1934-1967 Folder 1/20-21 Education, Files 1 & 2, 1936-1967 Folder 1/22 Employment, 1924-1967 Folder 1/23 Family, 1965-1966
    [Show full text]