Oral histories on the topic 'commonwealth public service union'
Terry Malcolm, born 1943 in Sydney, worked for the Australian Broadcasting Commission in Canberra from 1975 to 1994. During this period he was a parliamentary broadcaster at the Provisional Parliament House and later at the Australian Parliament House and he was also an announcer and newsreader o...
Topics:
Canberra, Journalism, Cooma, Snowy Mountain Scheme, Public Gallery, Harry Malcolm, Cinematography, Chicken Man incident, Radio, Bruce Goodluck, Charles McLachlan, School of Radio, John Scott, 2XL, Mick Young, Bronte, Sydney, Fred Daly, Bert James, Billy Snedden, Peter Carrodus, 2CA, Peter Leonard, Steve Liebmann, 2UE, 2CC, Chris Neilson, Parliamentary broadcasting, Kevin Chapman, Australian Broadcasting Commission, Rod Henshaw, Errol Silver, Parliamentary Broadcasting Committee, Commonwealth Public Service Union, George Negus, Paul Lockyer, Technology, New Parliament House, Jim Killen, Kaiser, Walsh, Perini and Raymond
Brian Walshe was an attendant in the House of Representatives in the provisional Parliament House from 1980 to 1988. He remained an attendant with the Parliament until retirement in 2007. He was born at Shepparton, Victoria, in 1934.
Topics:
Alan Browning, Albury, Attendants, Baniana (Victoria), Ben Chifley, Benalla (Victoria), Billy Snedden, Bob Hawke, Bonegilla, Bruce Goodluck, Canberra Fruit & Vegetables, Chicken Man incident, Commonwealth Public Service Union, Conditions of work, Dick Currie, Dick Liscombe, Dookie (Victoria), Family, Female attendants, Fred Daly, Geoff Brecht, Hansard, Harold Whitby, Holder (ACT), Hours of work, Ian Cochran, Iannelli’s, Jacob’s Foodliner, Jock Bigge, Malcolm Fraser, Matthew Walshe, McPherson & Turner, Mick Young, Neville Gathercole, New Parliament House, Norm Crawford, Pat Smith, Paul Feldsman, Paul Keating, Queanbeyan, Question Time, Retirement, Routines of work, Sarah Crabbe, Shepparton (Victoria), St Augustine’s school, Tennis, Thelma Dixon, Uniforms, Valley Potatoes, Wodonga