How Joh wins. Brisbane (197?) 2 p.
- FVF434-U2.21
- Item
- [197-] - [198-]
University of Queensland Labor Club
How Joh wins. Brisbane (197?) 2 p.
University of Queensland Labor Club
Constitution and general rules. (Brisbane, 196?) 2 p.
University of Queensland Labor Club
Our very own "National Party of Australia". (Brisbane, 197?) 2 p.
University of Queensland Labor Club
Kerr-Fraser axis. (Brisbane, 1975) 1 p.
University of Queensland Labor Club
From a previously unpublished interview conducted in May 1981 by Bruce Dickson on the eve of the first public exhibition of Oodgeroo Noonuccal's art at the Brisbane Community Arts Centre (now Metro Arts Centre), staged as part of NAIDOC Week. NAIDOC - or National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Week - is a tribute to indigenous Australian culture and the contribution of indigenous Australians to the nation.
Includes a floppy disk containing the transcript of the interview and two emails from Bruce Dickson.
Oodgeroo Noonuccal, 1920-1993
University of Queensland Labor Club, Brisbane : a snapshot from the late sixties/early seventies
Typescript (photocopy). By Bruce Dickson. Founded in 1946 the Labor Club's objectives were to support social democratic principles and policies of reform that were a feature of the Australian Labor Party and other labor style parties. The club changed its name to the ALP Club. Possibly written in the 1970s.
Dickson, Bruce
The mass media bias: a street theatre performance
Part of Bruce Dickson Papers
A street theatre performance at Queensland University on 31.3.76 which deals with radio news bias on the issue of rape. It is a satire on journalist cadets, newsmaking, and inventing suitable headlines. The Video Unit of the University of Queensland Union is the publisher.
University of Queensland Union
Part of Bruce Dickson Papers
During a nation-wide anti-conscription campaign by the National Union of Australian University Students (NUAUS), about 40 University of Queensland students planned to march in support of this initiative. The demonstrators attempted to march from the university campus along the footpath to Brisbane's city centre. Police prevented the protestors from marching along the footpath forcing their return to campus.The students subsequently decided to drive to the city by car in order to continue their anti-conscription protest in central Brisbane. The demonstration was broken up by police and 27 people were arrested (a majority of the demonstrators). The following year, several of those arrested went to jail rather than pay their fines.
University of Queensland Union
'... and it was here' / written by Bruce Dickson
Five scenes.
Original production by the Saturday Group of Canberra Youth Theatre: 4-7 December, 1974.
Dickson, Bruce