5. Stiffly starched white coats, and other differences
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots The coats on all the men in the photo on the middle pages of the last Una Voce remind me of an essential difference between the early 50s and, say, the...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots The coats on all the men in the photo on the middle pages of the last Una Voce remind me of an essential difference between the early 50s and, say, the...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots Everyone agreed that you had to get an outside interest but nobody told you how. Monte Phillips had started the Port Moresby Music Society which put on musical comedies, and Ruth...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots The Queen against Lapae was a wilful murder trial at Rabaul on 4 and 5 March 1952. It was so important that I immediately wrote a full report to Crown Law...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots Snapshot No 3 describes my first day in court in TPNG but, rather than give Monte’s speech then, I preferred to give his performance in two truly remarkable cases. He commenced...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots The next two snapshots are for the benefit of younger readers who may sometimes fear that, perhaps, their father or uncle who was in the Admin. may not always have been...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots Readers who watched the recent BBC TV series Ruling Passions on SBS, and whose father or grandfather served in the Admin., must have been affected by the fact that it depicted...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots The King against Peter James Jameson (Kavieng, 14-22 February 1952) was my very first trial in TPNG and the only one in which I faced two lawyers defending the one man....
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots In the Jameson Case I produced evidence that he had used several different schemes for stealing the money, all of them directed against village people and never against European or Asian...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots God alone knows how often Monte hammered home the ‘Expulsion of Undesirables’ warning before I arrived in TPNG but he returned to it (so as to make sure that it was...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots Not that it was only Monte who was talking about deportation and “undesirables”. The case of Queen against Donald Drury (no relation to the then Director of Civil Aviation) was the...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots In previous Snapshots I have described certain roneoed sheets so that, if you come across one when clearing out an old collection of papers, you will think twice before you throw...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots There can be no better indication of the difference between the early 50s and, say, the mid 60s and 70s than the report in The South Pacific Post, in its issue...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots The Commonwealth Grant paid for all Administration expenses including salaries, housing, hospitals, roads, bridges, schools, ships, prisons, etc., but there are (amongst many others) four special items of expenditure in the...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots Librarian Ruth Carter (who referred to herself as ‘The Original Lady Who Lived in a Lavatory’ because the library had been an Officers’ Club during the war and she had converted...
Paul Quinlivan’s Snapshots In regard to Papua my task was very different. I simply had to read Murray Groves’ conclusion (p. 588 n. 39) where he said: “On the general question of native attitudes...