A reminder of  the  extensive output of  the late  journalist and author , Keith  Willey,
 has come to light with the recent
acquisition of this  1982  volume,  published by Sunshine Books , which covers  the nation’s newspapers  from 1881. 
A  winner of  three 
Walkley  Awards , Willey
spent  time  in 
Alice  Springs  and 
Darwin  where  in  the latter 
he was  news editor under  Jim Bowditch . Edited  by  him, 
it  also  contains 
an  informative , wide-ranging    introduction  in  which
 he said  he had  covered wars  in South Vietnam, Cambodia and
Israel, racial strife in Cyprus and  Malaysia,  Australian natural disasters,  including Cyclone Tracy . 
With  illustrated  endpapers , the book includes  pages  from actual  newspapers 
 in the National Library of
Australia . Items  of    particular  interest  to  this  reviewer 
include : the  1935  Coogee Aquarium (Sydney )  Shark Arm Case which  resulted 
from a  shark vomiting up  the distinctive  tattooed 
 arm of a  murdered man ; disappearance of
Kingsford-Smith’s plane ;Victorian bushfires.
WW11...disappearance of HMAS Sydney with 645 aboard , ALP Prime Minister John Curtin’s address to the nation setting out the task ahead, the fall of Singapore , the atomic bomb and a page of photos , highlights of the Pacific War, in which the bombing of Darwin and the New Guinea operations are covered.
The atomic bomb tests at Monte Bello and Maralinga are there ; the 1956 Melbourne Olympics ; a 1958 Sydney Morning Herald article by British journalist Malcolm Muggeridge on the cult of the one armed bandit in Australia ; the rise and fall of Aboriginal artist Albert Namatjira , a front page article by Douglas Lockwood in the Melbourne Herald of October 8, 1958 ; the assassination of President Kennedy ; Voyager naval disaster off NSW ; resignation of PM Sir Robert Menzies , disappearance of PM Harold Holt ; the Moon landing ; the Poseidon share boom ; election of the Whitlam Government and the subsequent dismissal by Kerr ; the destruction of Darwin by Cyclone Tracy.
There are two items bearing the Keith Willey byline , one dealing with his investigation into a suggestion that there was a powerful , wild animal , possibly a Tasmanian Tiger or a Panther , roaming the New England district of NSW. Although Willey was present at the hanging in Pentridge of Ronald Ryan, the account by Sydney columnist , Ron Saw, is featured in the book . During the 1970s , the head of the NT Information and Public Relations section in Darwin , Dick Timperley, was attending his yacht in the harbour , when a voice was heard shout, “ Dick Timperley!-You old bastard , what are you doing here ?” It was Ron Saw on some yachting trip . Saw had known Timperley in Western Australia .
WW11...disappearance of HMAS Sydney with 645 aboard , ALP Prime Minister John Curtin’s address to the nation setting out the task ahead, the fall of Singapore , the atomic bomb and a page of photos , highlights of the Pacific War, in which the bombing of Darwin and the New Guinea operations are covered.
The atomic bomb tests at Monte Bello and Maralinga are there ; the 1956 Melbourne Olympics ; a 1958 Sydney Morning Herald article by British journalist Malcolm Muggeridge on the cult of the one armed bandit in Australia ; the rise and fall of Aboriginal artist Albert Namatjira , a front page article by Douglas Lockwood in the Melbourne Herald of October 8, 1958 ; the assassination of President Kennedy ; Voyager naval disaster off NSW ; resignation of PM Sir Robert Menzies , disappearance of PM Harold Holt ; the Moon landing ; the Poseidon share boom ; election of the Whitlam Government and the subsequent dismissal by Kerr ; the destruction of Darwin by Cyclone Tracy.
There are two items bearing the Keith Willey byline , one dealing with his investigation into a suggestion that there was a powerful , wild animal , possibly a Tasmanian Tiger or a Panther , roaming the New England district of NSW. Although Willey was present at the hanging in Pentridge of Ronald Ryan, the account by Sydney columnist , Ron Saw, is featured in the book . During the 1970s , the head of the NT Information and Public Relations section in Darwin , Dick Timperley, was attending his yacht in the harbour , when a voice was heard shout, “ Dick Timperley!-You old bastard , what are you doing here ?” It was Ron Saw on some yachting trip . Saw had known Timperley in Western Australia .
Other articles  of  note  are  about the death of  thirsty  journalist, Lennie Lower, writer  of  comedic  
copy   and  books , Here’
Luck  being a novel  about the life of a man  separated from his wife , going to parties with  his stupid son, angry sessions with  his mother-in-law who claims she is being robbed by the Lane Cove Council, a belief  shared by her screeching  pet parrot   ;  the   Australian 
stage   and radio   star ,  Roy Rene (stage name ) ,  a Jewish boy from
Adelaide , who  was notorious for using  risqué  Australian slang  in   Mo  McCackie
, of  McCackie Mansions , whose noble  
nose  decorates  the  bottom right hand corner of  the  dust jacket .