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Robertson, Ronald Sinclair Munro 1910-1995 :Album of house, home, cars, and a world tri...
Date: ca 1960
From: Robertson, Ronald Sinclair Munro 1910-1995 :Photographs
By: Robertson, Ronald Sinclair Munro, 1910-1995
Reference: PA1-q-599
Description: Quantity: 1 album(s) Album(s).
Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989 :The N.Z.F.A. hopes that F.I.F.A. will permit the world...
Date: 1981
From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]
By: Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.); Lodge, Nevile Sidney, 1918-1989
Reference: B-135-792
Description: Shows three scenes. In the top right a helicopter hovers above the pitch providing an escape route for the referee. In the lower left the referee is wearing a special camouflage suit which allows only his head, hands and boots to be visible. In the lower right the players have to be warned not to step on the landmines which have been placed between the pitch and the spectators. Refers to crowd disturbances at Mt Smart stadium on 10 October in which the referee was attacked by spectators. There was a possibility that F.I.F.A. would move the N.Z. versus Saudi Arabia match in November 1981 to a neutral location, possibly in Australia, to avoid violence. It was also suggested that the violence was a hangover from the disruptions which occurred during the 1981 Sprinbok tour of New Zealand. Extended Title - As with rugby, provided by the army perhaps - Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink, letratone and crayon, 450 x 320 mm
Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:The week - No fly zone... [November 2011]
Date: 2011
From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald
By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)
Reference: DCDL-0019319
Description: 'The week -' a series of cameos relating to Prime Minister John Key with his head in the sand, a no-fly zone with Colonel Gaddafi holding a gun and surrounded by flies and dead bodies, a camel representing the 'Saudi regime' with a barrel of oil on its back, saying 'but I'm necessary for stability', and a man representing 'media works' who is terribly grateful to a taxpayer who is putting banknotes into a begging bowl. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Scott, Thomas, 1947-:'The Kingdom would be richer Your Highness if Saudis paid internat...
Date: 2011
From: Scott, Thomas, 1947- :[Digital cartoons published in the Dominion Post]
By: Dominion post (Newspaper); Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-
Reference: DCDL-0018899
Description: A Saudi official suggests to the King of Saudi Arabia that the kingdom might be richer if Saudis paid international prices for petrol but the king thinks this would be impossible because Saudis regard cheap petrol as a birthright. The official points out that 'Fonterra are getting away with it with milk pricing in New Zealand' and so the King tells the official to 'give them a call and find out how they do it.' Context: The public has been complaining about the steep price of milk which is hard in economically challenged times. In March, the Commerce Commission began investigations into whether it should make a formal inquiry into the price of milk, under Part 4 of the Commerce Act, which regulates markets with little competition and little likelihood of an increase in competition. But Fonterra has now welcomed the Commerce Commission's decision not to make an inquiry into the price of milk. The Commission is, however, still investigating claims that dairy giant Fonterra is misusing its market power. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).