Your Local Independent 2nd June 2016

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YOUR LOCAL

E E FR

Live Local, Love Local, Supporting Local

The Hastings and Macleay Valley

Your locally owned community news • Phone: 6583 9088 • Thursday 2 June 2016

Unmask how much you care The Masquerade Ball will take place on Saturday, August 13, at Rydges Port Macquarie, and there are many ways to help out. “People can become a sponsor … everything is tax deductible,” Mr Munro said. “Businesses, or anyone, can provide the prizes. We have five major prizes that we will auction off on the night and then we have a lot of silent auctions and the highest bidder gets the prize.” Your Local Independent (YLI) has been a long-time supporter of the Hope Shop and will again be a major sponsor of the Masquerade Ball. “The Hope Shop is an integral part of our community,” said YLI general manager Sandy Mackenzie. • Continued Page 3

people in need and provide a vital community service

By LIZZIE McLEOD BUSINESSES across the mid north coast are urged to show their real heart to families struggling in the region. The Hope Shop, one of our busiest and most successful welfare outlets, is about to hold its annual fundraiser – a Masquerade Ball on August 13 – and organisers have pleaded for local support. “The need for these services is increasing all the time,” said General Manager of the Hope Shop, Roger Munro. “I find that a lot of the other agencies have pulled back because of a reduction in government funding. “We’re not government funded, we’re the care arm of the local church, the Honour Church. So more and more people are coming to us.”

They are always “there to help

FRONT PAGE AD General Manager of the Hope Shop, Roger Munro, and Your Local Independent General Manager Sandy Mackenzie are urging support for the upcoming Masquerade Ball

Page 3: Kempsey Hospital reunion Page 7: Locals celebrate turning 100

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016 Advertisement

DID YOU KNOW

VOTING RULES HAVE CHANGED?

Make your vote count this federal election Saturday 2 July At this year’s federal election, the way you vote for the Senate has changed and it’s important that you understand how to vote correctly. On the large white Senate ballot paper, you can choose to vote either above or below the line. If you choose to vote above the line, you now need to number at least 6 boxes. Put the number ‘1’ in the box for the party or group that is your first choice, a ‘2’ for your second choice and so on until you’ve numbered at least 6 boxes.

If you choose to vote below the line, you need to number at least 12 boxes, from 1 to 12, for individual candidates in the order of your choice. Voting for the House of Representatives has not changed. On the green ballot paper, you need to number every box, starting with the number ‘1’ for your first choice, ‘2’ for your second choice and so on until you have numbered every box. ‘How to vote’ instructions will be clearly displayed on your ballot paper. Don’t worry if you make a mistake — just ask for another ballot paper.

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

3

Unmask how much you care

Friends for life, Shirley Harper, Jenny Patterson, Brenda Smith and Trudy Lynch are excited to be organising the biggest reunion for staff that Kempsey District Hospital has ever seen

Let’s get together Kempsey hospital staff plan bumper reunion

By SUE PATERICK KEMPSEY’S first hospital was opened in 1881 until the current hospital replaced it in 1914, and to celebrate 102 years of community service a staff reunion is planned for later this year. One of the organisers, Registered Nurse and Midwife Trudy Lynch, said there hasn’t been a staff reunion for Kempsey District Hospital (KDH) since 1992. When 77 former staff members turned up for a special guided tour of the hospital’s new Clinical Services Building before it opened last year, everyone was overwhelmed with the enthusiastic response and Trudy has been asked when another reunion will be held. September is the answer, and Trudy and her helpers invite anyone who worked at KDH prior to 2005, from medical staff to administration, cleaners and maintenance, to attend the two-day celebrations. “So this is a big one,” Trudy said. “An all staff event.” Trudy has worked at KDH since 1980 and remembers the great staff camaraderie.

NO GAP • • • •

“A lot of good friends were made in those days and lifelong friendships were formed, so everyone is getting excited,” she said. Reunion helper, retired Enrolled Nurse Brenda Smith, worked at KDH for 30 years and echoes her friend Trudy’s sentiments. “We made a lot of friends that turned out to be family and even though we retire, we still keep in touch,” she said. “When I was still working, it was good days. “We learnt a lot, not only about nursing but about life.” Fellow reunion helper, Registered Nurse Jenny Patterson, agrees. “We’ve all worked hard and worked well together, and forged lifelong friendships,” she said. Another reunion helper, retired Enrolled Nurse Shirley Harper, also worked at KDH for 30 years. “When we worked together we had fun and formed great friendships,” she said. “We’re still friends.” And the fact that the oldest former employee attending the reunion is 92 and several other ladies are in their eighties, confirms the feelings

of the reunion organisers. To celebrate those lifelong friendships, the KDH reunion will begin on Saturday, September 10, with a sumptuous dinner party at the South West Rocks Country Club from 5.30pm. The cost is $45 per person, and Trudy urges everyone to book early because there is a limit of 300 seats. To cater for a bigger gathering, a breakfast barbecue will be held the next morning, Sunday, September 11, at Kempsey Riverside Park from 8am. The cost per person is $25. So to catch up with good friends and relive old memories of Kempsey District Hospital come along to both or one of these events. Trudy asks anyone to write down a few memories or bring a photograph to share, as these mementoes will be placed in an album and given to the hospital. For more information or to book, contact Trudy on 6562 7794 or Brenda on 6567 4532.

• From Page 1 “They are always there to help people in need and provide a vital community service, whether that is helping families with clothes, food vouchers, or whatever. “I think it is really important that local businesses show how community-minded they are by providing goods and or services to the silent auction at the Masquerade Ball. “This is a great cause.” Unfortunately homelessness remains one of the biggest community issues facing the Hope Shop. “Young girls that are pregnant become homeless because their mother and father can’t handle the situation and kick them out,” explains Mr Munro. “If you were a young mum and you came to Port and you had nothing or you had been kicked out of home, we would find you accommodation and we will furnish your whole house including a fridge, a bed, everything. We give away $80,000 to the homeless each year. “People come to the Hope Shop and we give them help. Some of them volunteer at the shop and we continue to help them all the way through. “I suppose family break ups would be the biggest cause for people coming to us. Some have homes, but they have no money. They’re broke. They live from week to week. They struggle to get food. So we give away food vouchers and sometimes we will give away Woolworths vouchers. “We try not to give anyone money because that’s just giving them a hand out, and we are trying to give these people a hand up so that they can be members of the community like everyone else.” The Honour Church started the Hope Shop about 13 years ago, and this is the 10th annual Masquerade Ball. If you’ve got any goods or services to provide contact the Hope Shop on 02 6581 3303 or for more information about Hope Shop visit www.hopeshop.org.au

We give you a voice YOUR Local Independent can well empathise with the confusion its readers are feeling towards making a definitive choice at the polling booths on July 2. Tell us your five most important election issues before Tuesday June 14 and we will collate and present the top five issues to each of the candidates for Lyne and Cowper in the weeks prior to the election. Tell us by Facebook, email to Newsdesk@ pminews.com.au or drop in to the office of Your Local Independent newspaper.

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

LETTERS

From the Heart...

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LETTER WEEK

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WELL, I’ve certainly managed to touch a few nerves over the last couple of weeks with this column - all good though. The tree has been shaken and I’m pleased to say we will have comments from candidates in the coming weeks. Nominations for candidates close at midday June 9. In the meantime, if you have a burning issue that you would like addressed go to Page 3 of today’s paper. We look forward to hearing what our community wants! My column the previous week asking for your feedback has brought surprising results. Once again we have been blown away by the encouraging comments and positive feedback that has been the majority of responses, the only negative that we don’t home deliver. There has been so much valuable information gleaned from this exercise that we have decided to extend the length of the competition so you we can really measure what our readers want. Go to page 23 and tell us what you think. On a lighter note, how did your week start? Our Monday started with a bang! Husband woke up to dog vomit at the end of the bed; closely followed by a turd in the walk-in wardrobe to then discover once dressed; the said turd was in fact all over the clean clothes he had just got into! He diligently cleaned up the mess to then discover cat poo in the bathroom. I hope this is not the tone for the week!

Phone: 6582 6366

A tough Budget for Aussie battlers WHAT a wonderful Budget for the battlers of this country! Unless you’re picking up $80,000 a year, you’re one of the unlucky ones who has been forgotten about and will not be having two extra cups of coffee with your tax savings. For pensioners, an extra 80 cents for scripts, $20 for blood tests, then no dental help so you will have to join the long queues at the public hospitals

which they say have waiting lists of some ten thousand people. This government axed the Pensioners’ Dental Scheme and gave it to the children - there was nothing wrong with that but now they want to take it away all together. Not only blood tests will cost more, but also many X-rays which are now free, will no longer fall into that category and you will have to pay. They also

want patients going to see the doctor to pay upfront and then make a claim through Medicare for their refund. The fee talked about was $79 - how many pensioners could afford to pay that? How many battlers out there watched the Current Affair program where they showed how easy it was to survive on very little money - it was a real joke when it was said $50 a week

would feed you. The cost of living is through the roof. The cost of meat is becoming dearer each time you shop, along with many other items. The coalition government never wanted Medicare and has always done everything they could when in power to destroy it. Allan Ward West Haven

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Road to frustration FOR the past six years Council has, for unknown reasons, not proceeded with the completion of the duplication of Ocean Drive through Lake Cathie, which was instigated as a matter of urgency in the early 2000s. Plans were completed in 2004 and then partly constructed shortly after, but halted when the building with a lot of glass caused financial problems. I have done a presentation to Council and written many letters, but to no avail. In their Autumn 2016 Community Connect, Port Macquarie Hastings Council outline the ‘factors’ they

use to prioritise their road upgrades and maintenance. Their road renewal hierarchy system ‘factors’ include road function, traffic volumes, community connectivity, regional/ local significance, speed limit, bus routes, proximity to schools and pedestrian activity. I have observed with interest the push for Houston Mitchell Drive renewal and upgrade. When one compares the factors for Houston Mitchell Drive with Ocean Drive through Lake Cathie, I wonder where the hierarchical logic is in Council. For instance: compare Houston Mitchell Drive 1,500 traffic

THUMBS

movements per day with Ocean Drive through Lake Cathie with 10,000 movements per day. Compare Houston Mitchell Drive, a link road to Princes Highway, with Ocean Drive through Lake Cathie as a major arterial and designated ‘Tourist Road’. Compare Houston Mitchell Drive, used by several school buses, with Ocean Drive through Lake Cathie, used by a larger number of school and general buses going both north and south. I keep getting informed by people at PMHC that Ocean Drive through Lake Cathie is not on any priority list and no work is likely in my lifetime. I

have just turned 72 and unless I suffer some unexpected malady or get hit by a truck, I expect to live many more years. By then Ocean Drive through Lake Cathie will have double its current traffic movements and further surface degradation. I travel along Houston Mitchell Drive twice a week and don’t deny that it needs an upgrade, as do other parts of Ocean Drive. I do however believe, using Council’s own factors, I could successfully prosecute a case for the immediate completion of the dual roadway through Lake Cathie. John Simon Lake Cathie

Thumbs Down

Thumbs Down

UP

TO the lady who talked on her mobile while in a toilet for quite some time at Port Central downstairs toilet block. People were lined up waiting to use the toilet while you stayed in the toilet having a long conversation on your mobile for the people waiting to hear.

THUMBS

DOWN

PORT Macquarie Hastings Council took 2 years to resurface Hamilton Green, then neatly marked parking spaces for all 4 buildings - then did disabled parking markings for only 3 clever!

Thumbs Up

Thumbs Down TO the organisers of the triathlon. No one’s picked up the discarded drink containers from the competitors from the side of the road.

Thumbs Up TO Kerry Medway for the celebration of mothers that are not with us. We celebrated mothers love that nurtured us to the mothers we are. Thank god for foster, adopted birth and spiritual mothers. Personally I thank God for my birth mother though I have never met her. I am most thankful for my adopted mother, an angel named mother, who gave me food, clothing and shelter. The best gift of all LOVE. Thank you

TO Brian and Jayne at Coastal Screens and Glass for providing some window barrier screens at the Port Macquarie Museum as a donation. Thank you, your generous support is much appreciated!

Thumbs Up SPECIAL thanks to the two young men who changed the wheel for me when I damaged my tyre and also to the young man at Coles Laurieton in loading dock who carried my groceries across the road to where my car was at the garage the next day.

Thumbs Up TO the two young gentlemen that dealt with the evacuated patrons of Majestic Cinemas after the fire evacuation alarms went off. For someone so young, they handled the large group of people very professionally.

Thumbs Up Thumbs Down is your chance to have your say. Malicious or defamatory submissions will not be accepted. All submissions must include a full name, address and daytime phone number. Contributions over the telephone will not be accepted. Contributors will not be identified. Your Local Independent reserves the right to edit submissions. To submit a Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down: email us at newsdesk@pminews.com.au or mail us at Your Local Independent PO Box 683, Port Macquarie 2444.

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

5

A school for the future The new open“ plan building

By SUE PATERICK

will incorporate learning that can’t be achieved in a square classroom

SNUGGLED among 12 hectares of native bush, the Kempsey Adventist School (KAS) is a happy place where smiles and a sense of community are as prevalent as birdsong and sunshine. With the announcement last week of a NSW Government grant of $719,000, the school’s strong community has even more reason to celebrate. The funding is part the $50 million Building Grants Assistance Scheme announced in 2015, which will see an additional $12.5 million delivered this year. Member for Oxley, Melinda Pavey, said the funds are designed to help schools across NSW improve learning environments for their students, giving schools contemporary facilities that reflect the learning needs of today’s students. After sending four staff members to Harvard University in 2015 to complete post graduate studies in Learning Environments for the 21st century, KAS plans to build a Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) facility. “STEM literacy will be key areas that our students must be capable in for the future and the new open-plan building will incorporate learning that can’t be achieved in a square classroom,” said KAS Principal, Rohan Deanshaw. Australia is currently ranked 23rd internationally in STEM Education, which is founded upon project-based learning that will meet the 21st century’s needs. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development identified STEM learning as a priority of national significance and linked Australia’s future to it. “Peak funding bodies around the world

The scientific and technological brains of the future, Kempsey Adventist School’s five-yearold, Alika Edwards, and six-year-old, Rory McManus, with Principal, Rohan Deanshaw, displaying a drone that will one day assist learning believe that 60 per cent of students in primary schools will work in jobs we don’t even have yet,” Mr Deanshaw explained. “Such as learning to write code for robots and how to use drones that interface with learning and link to design projects like 3D printing and laser cutters. “These skills are directly linked to the

employment skills of the future.” To achieve this goal the school concentrates on teaching communication, creativity, collaboration and critical thinking, and STEM learning incorporates these four key areas into meaningful learning projects within the school. KAS also implements STEAM learning programs, which includes the Arts.

Mr Deanshaw said including STEM and STEAM in our schools was not a luxury or an option, but a core priority. The Kempsey Adventist School has provided teaching excellence to the Macleay Valley for 40 years, but has really blossomed since moving to its current site on the Crescent Head Road in 2003. When it first opened there were 11 students ranging from kindergarten to year six. These days the school has 600 students from pre-kindy to Year 12. There are 40 insulated and air conditioned classrooms, plus a courtyard, library, church, office block, trade training centre, solar power and rain water tanks. Its students learn in classrooms that were created to provide different learning environments and Years 11 and 12 students visit Fiji and Nepal, trips that help them understand what opportunities are open to them in Australia. To find out more phone 6562 7023 or visit www.kas.nsw.edu.au

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

Swap meet to raise funds for cancer unit

Rotarian Ross Evans, as UN Scrutineer, ensures that the Cubans, represented by Max Murray and Jason Reineker from Woolgoolga High at Coffs Harbour, are kept in detention after concealing ‘weapons’ at the Model United Nations Assembly at Kempsey High

FOR motoring tinkerers, there is just the event you are waiting for this Sunday. The 15th Annual Port Macquarie Swap Meet will be held at the Port Macquarie Racecourse on Sunday, June 5 from 7am to after lunch. The event will support the Port Macquarie Base Hospital’s Cancer Unit and over the years, the Hastings Auto Restorers Society have raised over $42,500 to assist local residents Originally set up by vintage car and motorcycle enthusiasts looking for that elusive part to work on their restoration projects, swap meets have evolved to become a popular market event with something for everyone. There will be 185 sites selling and showing all sorts of bits and pieces for cars plus general bric-a-brac, tools, books and collectibles. Admission is only $3 for adults with kids admitted free. Catering will be available on site so bring the whole family for a Sunday treat. There will be a display of restored vehicles similar to that pictured. Contact the Hastings Auto Restorers Society on 0427 640 779 or check the website at www. portmacquarieswapmeet.com.au

New ‘Cold War’ erupts Future leaders debate a better world

By CHRISTINA PARKIN ‘RUSSIA is accused of hiding nuclear arms!’ Before you feel the world has been plunged into another ‘Cold War’, the context of this statement is a result of the Model United Nations Assembly (MUNA) Secretary General, Fran Tarbox, enforcing the need for peaceful deliberation by all participants attending Kempsey High School last weekend. Escorted to the assembly gaol after being accused of hiding nuclear arms under their desk, the Russians denounced the accusation as a ‘set-up’ by China after issuing China with a ‘warning’, not a threat, as announced by Secretary-General Tarbox. Flaunting the rules relating to ‘no weapons or drugs at the assembly’, Cuba alone had two detentions in the morning session after being accused of bringing both weapons into the assembly hall and for smuggling drugs. The Norwegians also had to suffer the indignity of detention when their swords and shield were classified as weapons rather than a ‘cultural attachment’. Thirty-four teams, each representing a country, came from high schools as far as

the placement of international refugees’ was defeated following an address by Sweden. Among other resolutions proposed, there were ones relating to a tax on sugar in soft drinks, mandatory penalties for people smuggling, underage marriage, gender equity, banning plastic bags and international child surrogacy. Confectionary bribes to gain support for resolutions were rife, with the ultimate aim over the weekend to gain points for arguments and presentation. The opening flag ceremony was also a picturesque array of costumes and props. Dialogue behind the scenes, although vetted by UN scrutineers, can become contentious and reporting of misdemeanours performed by a nation to the Secretary-General can result in the removal from the floor with an escort to the gaol and removal of voting privileges. At the conclusion of the weekend Sweden, represented by Sam Harris and Shaun Wilson from the Hastings Secondary College Port Macquarie Campus was declared the overall winner based on their arguments, presentation and alliances formed. For more images taken at the event, please visit Your Local Independent’s Facebook page.

Quirindi, Coonabarabran, Armidale, Tamworth, Coffs Harbour, the Macleay and Hastings to compete in the annual Model United Nations Assembly (MUNA). Billeted with families in the Macleay, this year’s MUNA was hosted by the Rotary clubs of Kempsey, Kempsey West and South West Rocks. Organised by Rotary District 9650, MUNA has alternated from being held at a centre ‘over the range’ or on the mid north coast. “Each team of two Year 11 students, take on the persona of a nation, learning about the culture, people, politics, issues and resources and prepares one resolution to present at MUNA,” explained Margaret Hammersley, President of Kempsey West Rotary. “They have two minutes to announce and argue their resolution, which is seconded by another nation and opposed by two other nations and then the proposing nation are given another brief ‘right of reply’. “The assembly floor is also given an opportunity to support or oppose the resolution before a vote is taken.” One resolution, argued by Greece, ‘to establish a compulsory quota system based on population and a development index for

Council comes to Beechwood RESIDENTS of Beechwood and surrounding areas are invited to attend a meeting with Port Macquarie-Hastings Councillors and executive staff as part of the ‘Engaging and Communicating with our Community’ program. The meeting will be held at the Beechwood School of Arts Hall on Wednesday, June 8, with a ‘meet and greet’ afternoon tea at 5.30pm, and the meeting commencing at 6pm. The engagement sessions are designed to improve communication with community members and provide the opportunity for questions to be asked on matters of local interest. Questions are invited from the community but must be submitted one week in advance of the meeting to allow Council the opportunity to investigate and adequately respond to any issues raised. Questions can be lodged by completing a form available on Council’s website at www. pmhc.nsw.gov.au/communitymeetings or by contacting Council on 6581 8111.

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

7

Celebrating our living history “

It has been a pleasure to share this celebration of our residents’ 100th year and the Coop’s wonderful achievement

By CHRISTINA PARKIN BIRTHDAY cake, presents, party food, friends and family were the perfect recipe to come together to celebrate a common milestone for seven residents of Wauchope’s Bundaleer facility and the Hastings Co-op. Conducted over two days, there was lots of good cheer and celebration as family and friends gathered to enjoy the festivities. Six centurion females and one male resident were honoured with the combined celebration. Hastings Co-op chief executive officer Allan Gordon said the co-operative was ‘honoured to share the special milestone with seven amazing Bundaleer residents, who have been part of our journey since the beginning’. Bundaleer Care Services’ chief executive officer Gareth Norman said he was proud to partner with the Hastings Co-op for this unique event. “Life at 100: it only gets better. Bundaleer is committed to ‘adding life to later years’ and it has been a pleasure to share this celebration

The only male centurion, George Bain (seated) is pictured with Tim Walker from the Hastings Co-op, Gareth Norman from Bundaleer and Allan Gordon, CEO for Hastings Coop, hoping to gain from George for reaching 100 when so few men do of our residents’ 100th year and the Co-op’s wonderful achievement,” Mr Norman said. “To have seven centenarians living at Bundaleer at the same time is quite extraordinary. “It’s amazing to think that when they were growing up, the only mode of transport was horse and cart. “During the past 100 years, they’ve seen people fly not only across the country, but the world, they’ve lived through world wars and the Great Depression and witnessed amazing inventions like electricity, phones and computers that have shaped the way we live.

“From humble beginnings as a group of local dairy farmers in 1916, Hastings Co-op has also evolved into a diverse retailer with 13 businesses across the Hastings and is now one of the longest serving independent co-ops in Australia.” The guests of honour on Thursday were Jessie Sharp, 101, who moved into Bundaleer just before her 100th birthday and George Bain, a grandson of the well-known Wauchope Bain family. George had lived in Bain Street with his wife Edie since they got married. However, George

Bundaleer centurion Jessie Sharp is delighted with her presentation of flowers only moved to Bundaleer less than six months ago and will celebrate his 100th birthday on June 10 this year. “Dad has been a well-known boxer and local taxi driver, as well as a singer and elder in the local Presbyterian Church,” said George’s daughter, Patti Chelman. “He’s always kept very fit, played footie and golf into his 90s, so when he broke his hip six weeks ago, he has had to slow down.” “I’ve had a good life,” said George, who appeared quite bemused with the morning’s proceedings.

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

OUR

8

Green light for GAL pool upgrade

JANELLE FRANCIS

How long have you lived in or around the Hastings? Twenty and a half years. After living in the US for over thirty years we retired here. What do you love most about the Hastings? I love the scenery, beaches and most of all the weather. Where do you work and what do you love about your work? I am retired and volunteer giving tours of the St Thomas’ Church, where I meet very interesting people from Australia and all over the world. I joined the church because I am an Anglican and the history is so interesting. What do you like least about your work? As I am in charge of the volunteer roster, I find difficulty in recruiting volunteers. How do you start your day? Up at 6am and attend a brief chapel service at 8.15am. What do you do in your spare time? Bridge three afternoons a week and golf twice a week. What is the achievement you are most proud of? Giving tours of the church where I can promote a small piece of Australia’s colonial history. I am proud to explain how the convicts made the bricks and built the church especially the tower without scaffolding.

IT will be all systems go for a $3-million upgrade of Wauchope Pool under a re-elected Coalition Government after Nationals Leader and Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce visited the region through the week to commit $1.5-million funding to the project. Barnaby was visiting Wauchope at my invitation to attend a Community Morning Tea which attracted about 150 people from across the Hastings. The multi-million dollar Wauchope Pool upgrade will not only increase the capacity of the aquatic centre to cater for local use, but also broader regional events including swimming and diving events. I can see Council has begun work on reconstructing the Olympic Pool to meet current competition standards and with this additional funding package I announced on behalf of a reelected Coalition Government, a new grandstand will be constructed along with a new children’s waterpark. The Coalition Government has an unwavering focus on jobs and growth and I understand this project will support 14 jobs during construction and 9 jobs on completion. Those numbers underline the importance of local projects like this one, which provide top shelf facilities for regional communities and also lead to plenty of spinoff benefits for local

With Dr David Gillespie Federal MP for Lyne

businesses and tradies. The new waterpark will also feature a shaded interactive splash play area. Congratulations to the local pool steering committee, particularly Wauchope Pool Association President Di Gilbert on years of campaigning to make this important regional project become a reality. As a local resident, I have been a regular user of the pool in the past and I know for many years Di has been campaigning to bring the facility up to scratch to meet its full potential not only for local residents, but the entire region. With today’s commitment from a re-elected Coalition Government, I am delighted to say Di’s efforts and the work of her committee have paid off. It’s a fantastic day for the Wauchope community. The upgrade will not only cater for the immediate catchment area of Wauchope, but also the broader North Coast population.

PORT Macquarie-Hastings Council has advised that road rehabilitation works occurring in Lord Street and Kennedy Drive, Port Macquarie are now complete. The final layer of asphalt has laid on Lord Street today, completing the project as scheduled. Line marking of the new road surface is expected to take place in approximately 4 - 6 weeks, to allow time for the asphalt to settle and prevent discolouration of line marking. The project along this high traffic road is part of Council’s Road Reseal and Rehabilitation Program and was delivered at a cost of $2.1 million. “The original project cost was estimated at $1.7 million, however Council took the opportunity to extend the works program by placing additional asphalt, to further increase the life of the pavement,” said Director Jeffery Sharp. “This decision is a sound investment in providing a high quality road surface resulting in a smoother ride for motorists, securing the life span of the entire road and reducing ongoing maintenance costs.” Pedestrian safety will also be improved with the construction of kerb extensions in Lord Street at the intersection with Home Street. Pedestrians and cyclists will now find it safer to cross Lord Street with the distances between crossing points being reduced. Works included the milling of the road surface, stabilisation of the existing pavement, application of bitumen seal and overlaying of new asphalt.

Finding the funny side to ‘hospital’

I MUST admit I have been to hospital a couple of times. One occasion was when I had a continuing conversation with the surgeon and I asked him: “When are you going to start?” His reply was: “I’ve just about finished”. I was about to laugh until I realised he was serious. I had woken up a bit early. Did you know that hospitals were places of merriment? Don’t take my word for it. Just remember the word hospitality. I was watching a news item recently about a doctor who went around hospitals making sick kids feel more at home, even laughing sometimes. I thought about that word hospital and merriment. A hospital, in the words of my big dictionary, was originally a place for the entertainment of travellers ‘and strangers’. The key word was entertainment. If you were travelling the road to Jerusalem a long, long time ago you could stop over at places run by religious orders along the way. They might try to convert you, but that’s an item for another column. The early hospitals were a bit like our modern motels, without the cars. They were places where travellers could rest for a while before continuing their journey.

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LAURIE BARBER

Then, when the word came into our English language it denoted a place for lodging of travellers. I found an item from 1300 that said ‘there is nouth an hospital arerd of Seint Thomas’. I think they were lamenting the lack of a hospital, but I could be wrong. The word comes from Latin, which meant something like ‘host’. So a hospitale was a place where guests were received. Their welfare was also considered. French took the word as hospital, without the ‘e’, and in time it came into the English language. I don’t need to tell you about the knights Hospitaller, but in most cases they were good blokes who looked after the travellers, who were sometimes sick or shouldn’t be out at night. But as the years wore on, the word hospital changed slightly. Firstly, it became a place for the needy.

Now, travellers go to hospital if they are sick. They go to hotels or motels if they are simply travelling. Sometimes, they get sick in motels and then they go to hospital. It wasn’t until about the 16th century that the word denoted a place where the sick could go for medical treatment. They say St Bartholomew’s Hospital in London was founded in 1123 by a traveller who had returned from Rome but had become sick along the way. He was described as a jester, in case you wanted to know. Dr Rudolph Brasch in his book ‘How Did It Begin’ describes an early hospital as a ‘guest house’. He said the English called syphilis the French pox, the French called it the Italian disease and the Japanese linked it with the Portuguese. Forget I mentioned that. It has nothing to do with this column. The First English Dictionary, of 1604, calls hospitality ‘good entertainment for friends and strangers’. Many expressions add to the word hospital, such as a hospital ship or a hospital pass. These days, hospitals for the most part only look after the sick. But if you should happen to wake up during an operation, try not to laugh. lauriebarber.com; lbword@midcoast.com.au

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

Business PROFILE

9

Retire to a better lifestyle Get ready for The Governor’s first stage

community. For further information about The Governor’s visit www.australianunity.com.au/thegovernors or phone 6584 3731.

The central living areas will be ideal for entertaining and “ relaxing whilst looking out towards the private balcony or backyard

PORT Macquarie’s latest retirement living development at The Governor’s continues its progress towards delivery of 12 brand new, architecturally designed units, with the first stage of construction, consisting of the first four units, on track for completion in September, 2016. With external finishes now nearing completion and internal fit-out well underway, now is the time to secure your new home in this sought-after community. Each of the brand new units has been designed entirely with the future resident in mind, featuring spacious and functional designs with quality finishes throughout. The central living areas will be ideal for entertaining and relaxing whilst looking out towards the private balcony or backyard. The grand master bedrooms will include generous storage and an impressive ensuite. Your kitchen needs are well catered for with wide stone benchtops and the inclusion of a built-in stainless steel wall oven, ceramic glass cooktop and ample storage space. For additional peace of mind, there will be 24/7 emergency call monitoring. With an enviable location and the opportunity to choose from either a ground floor position or upper level, accessible by lift, The Governor’s represents an opportunity to experience stylish, secure and convenient living in a thriving

Artist impression


10

Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

State boost for volunteers

Pictured with their winning creations are Jaclyn Elliott with her lemon meringue cupcake, Janis Dick (standing in for Julieann Weatherley) with the lime delight, Student Liaison Officer Clara Koch, and Danielle Mifsud with her red velvet cupcake

CSU cupcake queens By CHRISTINA PARKIN ONE of the rarer academic achievements to aspire to is that of who can bake the best cupcake. Students from Charles Sturt University (CSU) challenged those attending the nearby University of NSW to ‘put their money where their mouth is’. As part of Australia’s Biggest Morning Tea fundraising movement for the Cancer Council, students from both universities had their cupcake creations judged by an independent panel of tasters. Dr Rhonda Shaw from CSU, Dr Sandy McColl from UNSW and Jenny Koch, volunteer with the Port Macquarie Social Seniors who were also invited to enjoy the tasty treats, had a difficult time assessing the cupcakes for appearance, flavour and texture. “It’s a tough job, but someone’s got do

it,” explained Dr Shaw, on the challenge of selecting the winning cupcake. “Last year, the challenge was won by Port Macquarie Hastings Council,” explained organiser, Clara Koch, who works as the Student Liaison Officer for CSU. “However, now that we are neighbours, it seemed fitting to challenge UNSW, as they only have to walk over the hill.” Jaclyn Elliott’s winning creation was a butter cake delight containing a lemon cream centre, topped with meringue. It was so popular, that finding one for the photo proved difficult. “It’s a good cause and a bit of fun. I really like baking and to see everyone come and enjoy the cakes,” said CSU radiography student, Jaclyn Elliott. A ‘lime delight’ baked by UNSW student Julianne Weatherley was narrowly beaten for second place, followed by CSU student Danielle Mifsud’s red velvet creation.

$2 MILLION funding boost to support volunteers: The State Government has announced more than $2 million will be invested on innovative initiatives to better recruit, support and recognise volunteers in NSW. The government has released the second NSW Volunteering Strategy 2016-2020. The Strategy was informed by consulting with more than 2,500 people, and builds on the success of the inaugural strategy. Volunteers are the lifeblood of our community. The generous and selfless efforts of our more than two million volunteers deeply enrich our community. A key focus of the NSW Volunteer Strategy is making it easier than ever for people to volunteer. We are investing in new and better ways of connecting people who want to make a real difference with organisations who need their support. The strategy will also expand and enhance the successful ‘Statement of Principles for the Recognition of Volunteers’, which promotes dignity and respect for 800,000 volunteers in NSW, as well as increase support for the Volunteer of the Year Awards and Premier’s Volunteer Recognition Program. For further information on the NSW Volunteering Strategy, go to www.volunteering. nsw.gov.au. Completion rates and apprenticeship approvals up: Vocational education students in NSW are successfully completing their training at twice the rate of students in other states, ensuring they are ready to take advantage of the booming NSW jobs’ market. Early figures show that 79 per cent of students enrolled in government subsidised places in private providers completed their courses. For comparison, the national estimated completion rate for government subsidised training was 34 per cent. The NSW Government is helping young people into jobs by directing funding towards courses which are most likely to lead to employment. There are over 740 courses on the NSW Skills List which are critical to growing our

STATE MATTERS

With Leslie Williams State Member for Port Macquarie

economy, and the NSW Government pays up to 75 per cent of the student cost to enrol in those courses. Apprenticeship approval rates for 2016 are up seven per cent on the same time last year; with Building and Construction up by twelve per cent and Electrotechnology up eight per cent. Apprenticeship fees for 2016 are capped at $2000 and traineeship fees are capped at $1000 for the whole qualification, which makes fees for apprenticeships and traineeships among the lowest in the country. Students or employers interested in accessing subsidised training under Smart and Skilled can contact the NSW Department of Industry on 1300 772 104 or www.smartandskilled.nsw.gov.au

Wauchope work planned MEMBER for Oxley, Melinda Pavey MP has announced that King and Campbell Pty Ltd have been named the successful tenderer to design all stages of the Wauchope Main Street Plan. “The new plan is proposed to improve pedestrian safety and amenity of Wauchope CBD area in High Street,” Mrs Pavey said. “The NSW Government has committed $530,000 from Transport for NSW’s Active Transport program. “High Street is the main road through Wauchope and forms part of the Oxley Highway. “The first stage of work will include improving the Bransdon Street intersection and relocating the pedestrian crossing to improve safety. “Work is expected to start early next year with completion expected by the end of June.”

Kairos Prison Ministry presents… 3rd - 4th JUNE

Up to Up to

Selected items storewide

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Spend $30 or more for a chance to WIN shopping spree* * Offer only available 3-4 June

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Enjoy Bago Bluff tastings

Spot prizes throughout both days

10am Friday, 3rd June Cooking demonstration by The Other Chef’s Eric Robertson The Department Store WAUCHOPE (02) 6585 2299

22 High Street, Wauchope, NSW 2446

The Department Store PORT MACQUARIE (02) 6584 5817

Peachtree Arcade, Port Macquarie, NSW 2444

Gavin Chatelier

Christian/Country/Gospel Singer-song writer

In concert For one night only Wednesday 15th June 2016 7pm Uniting Church, Cnr Oxley Highway & Sherwood Road, Port Macquarie

In aid of Kairos Prison Ministry Admission by donation

www.kairos.org.au


Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

Business PROFILE

11

River cruise and winery experience tour

The perfect combination

the Port Macquarie CBD. Serving as a wonderful introduction to the region, this River Cruise and Winery Experience Tour is perfect for couples, groups and families visiting the area; it’s also a unique way to

celebrate a birthday or special occasion with friends and family (gift vouchers available). Tickets are $99 per person. Bookings can be made by calling The Cruise Terminal on 6583 3058.

It’s also a unique way “ to celebrate a birthday

THE Cruise Terminal and Cassegrain Wines are delighted to be collaborating together to launch a River Cruise and Winery Experience Tour. With both already popular tourist attractions on the mid north coast in their own right, locals and visitors alike can now experience the best of both worlds on a half-day tour. Guests will board the Port Venture/River Princess at The Cruise Terminal at 8.45am. The two-hour cruise offers a scenic journey along the Hastings River from three different viewing levels; highlights include dolphin watching, informative commentary and relaxing on our picturesque waterways. Guests will be treated to a high tea including a selection of sweets and savouries, matched with Cassegrain sparkling wine. At the conclusion of the cruise, guests will be picked up from Sancrox Park and transported on an air-conditioned coach to Cassegrain Winery. Cassegrain Winery is a charming estate featuring manicured hedges, expansive parklands and over two thousand rose bushes. Guests will enjoy a behind-the-scenes guided tour of the winery, followed by tastings of their award-winning range in the spacious Cellar Door. A gourmet lunch will be served in Seasons Café-Restaurant, with a chefs’ selection of tasting platters on offer, paired with a complimentary glass of wine. Guests depart at 2.30pm and are returned to

or special occasion with friends and family

PORT MACQUARIE WINERY RIVER CRUISE River Cruise and Winery Experience Tour

Includes: 2 hour cruise, high tea with bubbly, winery tour and tastings, gourmet lunch at Cassegrain Wines

Starts on Friday 10th June and runs every Friday

Just $99

per person 6583 3058

River End of Clarence Street, Port Macquarie www.cruiseterminal.com.au


12

Thursday 2 June, 2016

Business PROFILE

Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Major facelift for Port Panthers “

We want to be able to offer the best array of facilities ... It’s an exciting period ahead for us

IMMINENT renovations for Port Panthers are designed to enhance the venue for versatility, fun and entertainment for all age groups. “The multi-million dollar renovation will see the entire club refreshed and completed in 40 weeks,” says General Manager, Jamie Williams. “The work will be staged and as much of the disruptive elements done at times to cause minimal disruption to our patrons.” While the renovations start with the major overhaul of the auditorium, smaller intimate concerts will be hosted down below in ‘The Basement’, which was the old ‘Atlantis Room’ and can cater for up to 300 concert attendees. Pier One will become a craft beer bar with TAB facilities with smoke-fired pizza and tapas on offer – perfect to meet friends before a show. The gaming area will receive a major face-lift with new carpet, stools and machines. With a new alfresco gaming area, there will be the ability to walk all the way around to the new craft beer bar. “Many of our staff have been with us a long time and are very excited about this new phase so they are being encouraged to design a new name for the Pier One area,” says Jamie.

Port Panthers’ General Manager, Jamie Williams pictured with the display of plans for the refurbishment of the club An upgrade to the ‘Cubby House’ and playground for the kids will make the bistro more family-friendly, which is destined to be redesigned as a carvery before the work begins on refreshing the rooms on the first floor. Rooms such as ‘The Renaissance Room’ often host special events such as smaller weddings

Uni helps bridge cultural divide

for up to 80 people. All the meeting rooms will receive a technology and audio visual overhaul to enhance the capacity to be multi-functional as event venues. “Anzac Day is our biggest day of the year for the club, so it is important that the RSL rooms benefit from a refresh and technology boost in

Good Guys aim to keep us warm, dry

By CHRISTINA PARKIN

RECONCILIATION Week, where all Australians are encouraged to build stronger relationships, respect and trust with their Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island peoples, began with a special ceremony at the new Charles Sturt University (CSU) campus at Port Macquarie last week. CSU students initiated a day of activities which began when Aunty Rhonda Radley offered the Welcome to Country in the local Gathang language of her Birpai people. Aunty Rhonda then led a very spiritual ceremony, anointing the hands of guests with ochre and inviting them to place a stick in the lighted fire-pit. Aunty Rhonda explained how important fire is in Aboriginal culture, especially from a perspective of renewal. For some students, connection with their culture has been a difficult journey. “I feel sad that my Maori partner can teach and read to our children using his Maori language, yet I am unable to use the language of my Kamilaroi grandmother,” said Sarah Harwood, a first year paramedic student from

Participants engage in the recent inaugural fire pit ceremony at the new Charles Sturt University (CSU) campus at Port Macquarie Uni Newcastle, who studies at the campus. Lio Brown, a Samoan who has lived in Australia for seven years, admitted that there is a disconnect in fitting in with a culture which is not your own. “I live in Australia by choice, but I didn’t know what ‘Reconciliation’ was and I kind of felt ashamed about that,” says Lio. “We have a choice to make about reconciliation with those cultures different to our own that will affect the generations that come after us.” John Brownsberger, long term teacher with Aboriginal students, says there is a lot of positive things starting to happen towards building the respect and equality that many of our Aboriginal people want to feel without facing daily racism.

the same way the Rushcutter Room will do,” explains Jamie. “As a precinct for functions and conferences, we want to be able to offer the best array of facilities for organisers and attendees in Port Macquarie. “It’s an exciting period ahead for us.”

“We can all change one person’s opinion by being as positive as possible,” says Mr Brownsberger. A strong respect for Aboriginal culture is reflected in the sentiment at the heart of CSU’s approach to education and the university’s ethos ‘for the public good’. CSU uses the phrase ‘Yindyamarra Winhanganha’, a Wiradjuri phrase meaning ‘the wisdom of respectfully knowing how to live well in a world worth living in’. Heather Cavanagh, Head of Campus for CSU, Port Macquarie said: “Days like today remind us that we all live in one land and that it is important to look forward to when we can live together as one people.”

DURING winter, the need for clean, dry clothes and linen is more important than ever, which is why Hastings and Macleay locals are encouraged to nominate a community group or family in need of a quality dryer, with worthy recipients being granted a new machine through The Good Guys’ ‘Dryers for Communities’ initiative. Residents are encouraged to put forward a community group or family they know who could do with a helping hand - it might be a child care centre or kindergarten, an aged care facility, an animal shelter, a sporting club or a family. “During the colder months it is hard to wash and dry clothes and linen without a dryer, especially when you have a lot to wash, so we encourage members of our community to submit a deserving recipient to receive a brand new dryer,” The Good Guys Port Macquarie Store General Manager, Tony Green, said. “As part of our ‘Doing Good’ program we support Orange Sky Laundry to provide washing and drying facilities to Australia’s homeless, so it seemed fitting at this time of year to find other groups in the community who need a dyer and continue our assistance at a local level. “We’re always looking to support people in need and organisations that make a difference in the local community and this winter it’s by ensuring they have the equipment to provide dry, clean clothes and linen.” In addition to the ‘Dryers for Communities’ program, The Good Guys Port Macquarie will be doubling its donation to Orange Sky Laundry through the sale of laundry products made instore until the end of the financial year. “Every $6 we donate to Orange Sky Laundry enables them to do another load of washing so we are aiming to fund over 800 additional loads of washing for people living without a home this winter,” Mr Green said. You can lodge your nomination for a worthy recipient via the Good Guys Facebook page.


Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

13

Thursday 2 June, 2016

OUR TRANSFORMATION HAS BEGUN

We are extremely pleased to announce our renovation & refurbishment plans that will create a new and exciting Club for our Members.

Proposed Works Staging – Phase 1 Auditorium | Reception | Commencement of Alfresco Gaming May – August 2016

Proposed Works Staging – Phase 2 Alfresco Gaming Completion | Main Entrance | Club Internal Entrance August – October 2016

Proposed Works Staging – Phase 2a Completion of Main Entrance | Internal Gaming | Tavern & TAB Commencement October – November 2016

Proposed Works Staging – Phase 3 Members Lounge | Completion of Internal Gaming | Completion of TAB & Tavern November 2016 – January 2017

With contemporary design and modern themes, the new & improved Panthers Port Macquarie will deliver a truly inviting social environment, making us a destination venue of choice with both local residents and tourists. We will be open during our renovations and will aim to minimise any inconvenience to Club services during each phase.

132 PIPER STREET BATHURST NSW 2795 tel. (02) 6330 0600 www.panthers.com.au /panthers.bathurst Panthers Bathurst practices the responsible service of alcohol P229_Reno Signage_INDEPENDENT_May16_v1.indd 1 P229_Reno Signage_A1_May16_v9.indd 1

27/05/2016 12:55 pm 27/05/2016 11:49 am


14

Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

CPA a godsend for families LIVING in regional areas has always been a challenge for anyone suffering illness or a condition that needs specialised treatment. But thankfully things are changing. On the mid north coast there are many families who are rejoicing at the opening of the Cerebral Palsy Alliance (CPA) centre at Port Macquarie. I recently had the honour of opening the centre and meeting the staff who work there, and the families and carers of clients now coming to the centre. For some families, such as Erin and Trent Fisher, who I met on the day, it means a half hour drive for vital regular therapy instead travelling to Newcastle or Sydney or depending on outreach services. Speaking to the Fisher family, it is obvious the impact the centre is already having on the life of their son since it opened in January. The therapy their six-year-old son Kaleb is now undertaking at CPA is truly life-changing for them. On top of that, they also have a two-year-old, Flynn, who is undergoing diagnosis at the centre. The Wauchope couple told of the dramatic

THE COWPER REPORT

steps in their son Kaleb’s communication since coming to the new centre. Kaleb has been diagnosed with autism, ADHD and is non-verbal. Erin and Trent said they had tried everything to help him communicate and were trying to work out the complicated communication technology by themselves. They were feeling overwhelmed about what technology to buy to help their son communicate or even whether they could learn it themselves. Since starting with the Cerebral Palsy Alliance team, Erin and Trent have been supported by the CPA speech pathologist to introduce an iPad and app that their son has been using. He has taken to it like a ‘duck to water’ and the change for this family has been monumental.

Kaleb can now tell them what he needs and when he needs it. He can participate in his school classes and even gives news updates to his fellow students by using the communication app. What is truly inspiring is that this has been achieved in three months – giving this family so much hope. If Kaleb can achieve what he has in three months – imagine what developments may lay ahead in the years to come. It’s great to see that an organisation like Cerebral Palsy Alliance is listening to the Port Macquarie-Hastings community, knowing that families need services close to home, bricks and mortar buildings and also the best therapists. I also want to mention Sargent’s Pies. Many may not be aware of the charitable donations that the Sargent’s Pies Charitable Foundation makes to so many worthy causes in New South Wales. Their charitable donations to the Cerebral Palsy Alliance alone have topped $11 million since 2004. This has allowed the CPA to develop and build centres across rural and regional NSW, including the new Port Macquarie CPA centre.

AUSTRALIA’S first on-line business and leadership Mastermind program specifically designed for rural women will provide the support, resources and networking opportunities empowering rural women to expand their businesses, take on inspired leadership roles and improve their mental and physical health. The program, launched recently, will be delivered by a powerhouse collaboration of 9 of rural Australia’s leading business, leadership and wellbeing coaches and is backed by Lightning Ridge based company THE Rural Woman. Couched as ‘the place to be’ if you are an entrepreneurial rural women wanting to experience more from life and business and

expand her influence, Full Bloom, as the program is known as, has been developed with the unique needs of rural women in mind. By harnessing readily available online webinar technology CEO of THE Rural Woman Rebel Black says they are able to create virtual rooms and discussion forums that women can gather in to learn from the coaches - and from each other. “We are always looking for ways to make the world better for women who are geographically isolated,” she said. “We are particularly keen to empower rural women who are out there making things happen in their own businesses or in leadership positions,

but who, because of issues around access, are unable to tap into strong networking groups or are struggling to get connected to business and leadership development without making massive sacrifices because of travel and time away.” Delivered over the course of 9 months, each of the coaches host a month each and have a particular focus and outcome. The coaches are all rural women who have been successful in their chosen fields and are deeply passionate about sharing their knowledge and empowering other rural women. Applications for Full Bloom are being taken now. The program starts June 6. For more info go to: www.theruralwoman.com.au/full-bloom/

With Luke Hartsuyker

Federal Member for Cowper

@ Lake Cathie Bowling Club

New program aiming to empower rural women

Centre needs your help now AFTER 18 years of continuous operation serving the local community and visitors to this reegion, the Camden Haven Neighbourhood Centre sadly looks to be in danger of having to close its doors due to lack of funds to cover ongoing operational costs. The Centre receives no regular funding and relies solely on the services of volunteers and donations from generous benefactors plus funds from the sale of ‘brica-brac’ within the Centre. Services such as free tax help to low income earners, assistance with access to local legal, medical and social support services, a placement option for Newstart clients to meet their voluntary obligations to Centrelink, an access point for seniors papers and other publications including tourist information maps and brochures are all in danger of being lost if funding support to this valuable local community service isn’t forthcoming. Ideally a ‘sponsor’ or sponsors who could assist with some recurrent funding could be found to assist this worthy organization. The Centre struggles to meet significant ongoing expenses such as insurance, electricity, rental costs of the premises, telephone and internet costs. The Neighbourhood Centre is open from Monday to Friday between 9am and 1pm in the School of Arts Building on the corner of Bold and Laurie Streets in Laurieton. The Centre’s phone number is 6559 5676. Your help to save this service is urgently needed.

Charity Fish Auction Sunday 19th June 2016

Weigh in – 11:00am

Auction -1:00pm

IN THE RESERVE BEHIND LAKE CATHIE BOWLING & RECREATION CLUB

Come along & bid for a Fresh Feed of Quality Fish Open to ALL- FREE ENTRY

17th, 18th, 19th JUNE

ENTER COMPETITION & DONATE YOUR CATCH!!

- FISHERIES SIZES - BAG LIMITS - GREAT PRIZES - ALL AGES

All Proceeds go to the Lake Cathie Rural Fire Service & Laurieton Marine Rescue

“Lakeview”

Bistro

@ Lake Cathie Bowling Club

Open Tuesday to Sunday for Lunch I Dinner Monday to Sunday 6pm to 8pm for School Holidays

45 Evans St, Lake Cathie 6585 5701

13 MONTHS FOR THE PRICE OF 12 - JOIN NOW!

WHAT’S FOR DINNER?

Shop online for vouchers, etc. at www.majesticcinemas.com.au

thie 6585 5701

Ph 6583 8400 PROGRAM INFORMATION THURS 2nd to WED 8th JUNE George Clooney, Julia Roberts and Jack O’Connell in MONEY MONSTER (M) NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (M) You haven’t seen anything yet. Disney presents ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) THE NICE GUYS (MA15+) stars Russell Crowe and Ryan Gosling Only the strong will survive. X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (M) THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) Why so angry? CHECK WEBSITE OR PHONE FOR SESSION TIMES

also

FREE SOFT SERVE WITH ALL KIDS MEALS

OPEN 7 DAYS LUNCH & DINNER

Nicole Kidman in QUEEN OF THE DESERT (M)

and the MET OPERA presents Madama Butterfly - EVENT pricing applies. Ritz Centre, Cnr Horton & Clarence Sts, PORT MACQUARIE

24 KING STREET WAUCHOPE

WWW.WAUCHOPECOUNTRyClUb.COm.AU

PH 65853020


Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

My House MY HOME

15

Refund to cut down mountains of waste

President for the Port Macquarie Garden Club Mary Biden urges locals to grow some joy in their lives

Grow some soul food My favourite plant would have to be the rose for its “variety of colours and fragrance, but they are a greedy

GARDENING restores the soul, says Mary Biden, President for the Port Macquarie Garden Club. “I love gardening because you can make a small place or larger acreage look beautiful with a variety of plants.” Mary’s love of gardening has grown from her grandmother’s influence, who Mary says was a great gardener. “My favourite plant would have to be the rose for its variety of colours and fragrance, but they are a greedy guts and need to be fed every five to six weeks.

“I find a good quality rose food alternating with a blood and bone treatment is just what they need. Even banana skins placed at their roots are full of potassium and magnesium.” Mary has downsized to a smaller villa but finds she can still have tiny garden roses in her front yard in a ‘cottage style’ garden with easy care natives at the back. Mary invites anyone with an interest in gardening to come along and share their tips and learn from the more experienced members. “You can even bring in some samples to get advice, and we often invite guest speakers. For

guts and need to be fed every five to six weeks.

example, a physiotherapist came to advise us on how to look after our backs while gardening and a waste management speaker came to give us information on composting,” says Ms Biden. The club meets on the second Tuesday of the month at the Baptist Church Hall at 1 McIntyre Street, Port Macquarie from 2-3.15pm. On the third Tuesday of the month, there is an outing such as a visit to a nursery or a local garden and car-pooling is encouraged to keep costs down. Contact Mary Biden on 0488 502 123.

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THE news that the NSW Government will introduce a refund container deposit scheme (CDS) to drive down litter across our local area has been met with mixed feelings for long-term anti-plastics campaigner, Silva Vaughan-Jones. “People want sustainability, not just ‘jobs and growth’,” said Ms Vaughan-Jones. “The politicians are behind on public opinion that is identifying global warming, the loss of habitats such as the Great Barrier Reef and the subsequent loss of so much of our planet’s unique wildlife. “We can’t keep going with endless amounts of ‘growth’ and the impact of that growth on our local environment – what we need to do is change the way we are doing things. “The government won’t speak up or legislate against large companies who are using excessive packaging and plastic, so nothing gets done. “We need to pick up all the plastic before it gets into our storm water drains and beaches and poisons sea life. “We also need to be less short-sighted by investing in developing better packaging with materials such as corn starch that breaks down, not pollutes. “We need to stop plundering the earth.” The Member for Port Macquarie, Leslie Williams said residents would be able to return their drink containers for a 10 cent refund, as part of the government container deposit scheme to tackle litter from July, 2017. “Giving people a financial incentive to do the right thing and recycle drink containers will help to tackle the estimated 160 million drink containers littered across NSW every year and improve our neighbourhoods for everyone to enjoy.” NSW Environment Minister, Mark Speakman, said successive governments put container deposit scheme in the too hard basket for decade after decade. “Drink containers make up the largest proportion of litter volume in NSW, at 44 per cent, so it makes sense to act,” Mr Speakman said.


16

Thursday 2 June, 2016

My House MY HOME

Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Lend a hand to help a great service

Ollie Debreceny loves his TAD-produced ‘special steps’

There’s a chill in the air, might be time to think about winterising your pool!

SOMETIMES all it takes is a simple adaptation or device to make a huge difference in the life of a person with a disability. The Technical Aids for the Disabled (TAD) Disability Services provide personalised equipment, technology and services to change the lives of people living with a disability. Requests for custom equipment and devices have been steadily growing and volunteers are desperately needed to keep up. “Not only has the volume of work increased, but we have many people with disabilities in Port Macquarie and surrounds who can’t find equipment to help them achieve their goals,” explains John Brumby, Coordinator of TADS. “Our group would love some new volunteers to make sure these people don’t have to wait. “We require persons with good skills in wood, metal work, welding – even sewing upholstery would be a huge help. “The only cost to the client is for materials, travelling costs for the assessment of what is needed and delivery of the adapted item – there is no costs for labour as the volunteers provide that. In the past few months the TAD group has had quite a number of requests for access platforms and rails (APRs) to assist young children with a disability increase their independence by easily accessing benchtops, smart boards at school and toilets.

One of TAD’s recent clients, Ollie, uses his TAD-designed and built APandR at home. “He is delighted with what he calls ‘his special steps’,” said Ollie’s mum, Michelle Debreceny. The TAD Port Macquarie Group has recently celebrated ten years of service to the local community. John would like to appeal to prospective volunteers to join the group. While the projects can sometimes be quite challenging, it provides the opportunity to use some lateral thinking to produce a design to meet the need and is very rewarding. The group has modified tables, standing frames similar to a ladder so the client can stand and hang on to use their legs to take their weight, bedrails and walkers for stroke-affected persons. “It is a privilege to meet the various clients, and be asked to design and fabricate some very challenging pieces of equipment to assist people perform their routine daily tasks,” says John. “The sense of achievement in creating a solution for an unusual problem and the gratitude we receive from the client and their family is ample reward for effort.” If you would like to volunteer at TAD and help change the lives of people living with a disability, contact John on 6582 0089, email PortMacquarie@tadnsw.com.au or visit www. tadnsw.org.au

It is a privilege to meet the various “clients, and be asked to design and

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

My House MY HOME

17

Heather’s honey ‘sweet as’ By CHRISTINA PARKIN

CREATING an oasis to escape to on weekends was the motivation in fully utilising 140 acres past Pappinbarra, west of Wauchope. Heather Maynard and horticulturalist husband, David Maynard planted dozens of citrus and fruit trees among the eucalypts on their property. Heather added bee hives three years ago, starting with two from a local, and was only interested in them as a hobby to complement their other ‘locavore’ (local food production) activities on the property. It was a way of pollinating her small orchard of fruit trees among the unspoilt bushland on and around their property, nestled between Brombin and Lower Pappinbarra. Encouragement from her husband and lucky friends who have been enjoying the liquid amber, led Heather to enter in the Sydney Royal Easter Show. Her entries in the ‘eucalypt honey’ and ‘small producers’ sections led to a first prize in the liquid honey section, Class 16, and then overall

Heather Maynard pictured with her award winning honey at the Royal Sydney Easter Show champion for liquid honey in Classes 14 – 18 (light through dark honey colours). Heather then entered the Wauchope show with two jars of honey from two different hives. Naming her hives after queens of history, the Queen Nefertiti (Sydney winner) gained a ‘Highly commended’ while her inaugural Queen Cleopatra honey won first place. Heather entered her honey in the Kempsey Show as well but it did not receive the same recognition.

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the honey before it’s jarred. “I also entered a dozen of my chicken eggs which also won first place. I think local shows are a great way for the community to get in and showcase their various interests from primary production to hobbies, like sewing and arts and crafts. “The volunteers at the local show societies work very hard and could do with more input from younger persons in the community to keep everyone attracted to participating.”

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“I was only interested in getting some professional feedback on my hobby – I didn’t expect to win as I don’t sell my honey,” explained Mrs Maynard, who is a pre-school teacher at Kempsey Children’s Services. “It’s all in the types of flowers the bees have access to that determines the colour and flavour of the honey and you need to ensure you wait until the ‘girls’ have finished ‘ripening’ the honey before you rob their stores. “Then there’s a bit of work to spin and filter

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Enterta nment Thursday 2 June, 2016

WEEKLY Hidden talents exposed By LIZZIE McLEOD PREPARE to be hypnotized as Matt Hale makes his way to the Glasshouse Port Macquarie. In his new show ‘Hypnolicious’, comedy hypnotist Matt is bringing a night of laughs and entertainment. He is a true entertainer who aims to bring audience participation and interaction without the embarrassment of other hypnotist shows. Instead, Matt hypnotizes his volunteers and highlights their creativity and imagination, often taking them on journeys into bizarre cars, speaking alien, and releasing all the talents they didn’t know they had. Matt is the winner of three national comedy awards and has hypnotised people from all over the globe including London and Vegas, where Mike Tyson told him ‘You are amazing!’ Matt’s talents have also given him the chance to appear on BBC, ABC, Today Tonight, as well

as being included in the National Film and Sound Archive and Ripley’s Believe It Or Not. Matt also trains stage hypnotists, has released his own range of hypnosis CDs, and conducts group seminars including stressbusting, motivation, quitting smoking, and weight management. For a night of laughs, hidden talents, and hypnosis, see Matt Hale perform his show ‘Hypnolicious’ at the Glasshouse Port Macquarie this Saturday, June 4, from 8pm. Tickets are $39.90 for adults, $34.90 for concession, $29.90 for members, $24.90 for under 25s, and $115 for families. To book tickets call 02 6581 8888 or for more information visit www.glasshouse.org.au/ Participants to be hypnotised on stage are to be volunteers only and must be 18 and over. The show will also be filmed and will be on sale after the show.

IN a circus of comedy, music and magic, Aria award-winning Mic Conway and flat-picking guitar champion, Robbie Long, present an hilarious array of idiosyncratic songs that will make your jaw drop, toes tap and sides split. Best known for his tongue-in-cheek humour as lead singer of ‘The Captain Matchbox Whoopee Band’, this show is stripped back, irreverent, and shameless - surreal vaudeville for crooning and swooning. Join in all the fun and craziness that is longtime Wauchope Arts favourites Mic Conway

and Robbie Long. And just for something a little bit different there will be members of the Port Macquarie Ukestra to play and sing along with a couple of songs. This will be one of Mic and Robbie’s last shows before Mic’s next European tour so catch them on Saturday, June 4, at 8pm at the Wauchope Community Arts Hall, Oxley Lane (opposite Bain Park). Tickets are available at trybooking.com and at the door from 7.30pm for $25; $20 for members (plus a booking fee if purchased online).

Music, laughs and magic

WHAT’S ON FREE LUNCHTIME RECITALS AT THE GLASSHOUSE MACKILLOP College Vocal Program will be performing at the Glasshouse in the Ross Family Studio on Friday, June 3, 2.30pm – 1.30pm. OXLEY TREFOIL GUILD WILL hold a luncheon at the Garden Village Cafe on Friday, June 3 at 12pm. Contact Margaret on 0415 155 437. KEMPSEY RED CROSS WILL be holding their winter street stall in the grounds of their opportunity shop at Red Cross House, 144 Belgrave Street on Friday, June 3 at 8am. Contact 6562 2460. NATIONAL PARKS ASSOCIATION WALK for Saturday, June 4 will be a grade 3/4 walk of about 10km in Comboyne SF. Contact Ian 0458 240 401. PORT MACQUARIE ANIMAL WELFARE SERVICE WILL be holding their monthly Cat/Kitten Adoption Day on Saturday, June 4 from 10am to 1pm at PetStock, Lake Road, Port Macquarie. Contact Leonie 0405 138 825. PT MACQUARIE MID NORTH COAST ULYSSES COFFEE on Saturday, June 4 at Abundance Café, 274 Rawdon Island Rd, Sancrox at 9.30am. Ride on Sunday, June 5 departing The Donut at 9am, lunch at Walcha. Ph: Wayne on 0422 581 142. LADIES PROBUS CLUB OF PORT MACQUARIE NEXT meeting will be held on Monday, June 6 at Port Macquarie Panthers. New members and visitors are welcome. Contact Maria 6584 9690. KEMPSEY PROBUS CLUB WILL hold its next meeting at 10.30am on Wednesday, June 8 at the Kempsey RSL Club. New members welcome contact Steve 6562 7797 or Betty 6562 4539 if you would like to join us. WAUCHOPE VIEW CLUB WE are an active club designed for ladies meeting on the second Monday of each month at 11am at the Wauchope Country Club. Contact Secretary Kerrie Innes on 0413 002 148.

LINE DANCING MACLEAY VALLEY South West Rocks - beginner classes Mondays 11.30am at School of Arts Hall. Kempsey beginner classes Tuesday 5pm, Wednesdays 9am at Kempsey Heights Bowling Club. Contact Shirley 0429 368 112. THE GIRLS FRIENDSHIP CLUB MEETS at the Port Macquarie Baptist Church hall on a Monday afternoon after school until 5.30 for girls 7 – 12 years old. $4 donation. Contact Elizabeth Noble on 0400 907 516 or 6582 5938. WAUCHOPE COUNTRY CLUB SOCIAL Monday afternoon mixed bowls. Individual names need to be in by 12noon to play 1pm. Call 6585 3020 or contact Pam 6585 1275. PORT MACQUARIE ALATEEN MONDAYS at 4pm to 5pm at The Youth Hub. Contact Dianne 6584 9227 or Kerry 6584 9694. LINE DANCING BEGINNER classes on Mondays 1pm at North Haven Bowling Club; Tuesdays 12.30pm at Port Rotary Community Hall. Di Andrews 0418 636 278 / 6581 0898; www.didenim.com PORT MACQUARIE HASTINGS SENIOR CONCERT BAND COME along to the Mac Adams Music Centre, near the Players Theatre and Port Macquarie Pool, on Tuesday nights from 6.30pm. Phone Ben Simon on 0408 486 859. HASTINGS MORNING TALKERS TOASTMASTERS CLUB MEETINGS are held every second Tuesday morning from 7am to 8.30am upstairs at Town Green Inn, Horton Street with free tea/coffee. Contact Hilton King on 0411 350 820. SAHAJA YOGA MEDITATION FREE weekly program on Tuesdays from 7pm to 8.30pm at the Girl Guides Hall, Hollingworth Street, Port Macquarie. Linda: 6581 3356. PORT MACQUARIE PANTHERS ROCK ‘N’ ROLL DANCE CLUB EZY STEPS rock and roll dance learners classes held Tuesdays weekly for 6.45pm in the Senior Citizens Hall in Munster Street. Rockers mid-week social is held Wednesday nights from 6.30pm in the Paws Lounge at Panthers,

arts, music and more...

GIG GUIDE Thu Jun 2 5.30pm - Glasshouse - Artist Talk with Julie Paterson - 6581 8888 6pm - Glasshouse - Hastings Choristers Wintersong - 6581 8888 9pm - Port Macquarie Hotel - Geoff Jones - 6580 7888 Fri Jun 3 5.30pm - Glasshouse - NRW Mabo Film Festival - MABO - 6581 8888 6.30pm - Finnians - Lennox Lust - 6583 4646 7pm – Settlers Inn – Karaoke – 6583 3100 7pm – Harrigans Irish Pub – Connecting Souls – 6556 0555 Sat Jun 4 10am - Glasshouse - Fabric Printing Workshop 6581 8888 2pm - Glasshouse - La Vive Studio - 2016 Preview - 6581 8888 7pm - Harrigans Irish Pub – Chill Factor – 6556 0555 7pm - Laurieton United Services Club - Jade Hurley - The Naked Tour - 6559 9110 7.30pm - Panthers - Josh Pyke - 6580 2300 7.30pm – Wauchope Country Club - Darren Clarke – 6585 3020 7.30pm - Finnians - Dirty Coverz - 6583 4646 8pm - Glasshouse - Matt Hale - Hypnotist Hypnolicious - 6581 8888 Sun Jun 5 7am - Racecourse - Port Macquarie Swap Meet 0427 640 779 12pm - Panthers - UFC – Rockhold vs Weidman 2 - 6580 2300 1pm - Harrigans Irish Pub – Elisa Kate – 6556 0555 2pm - Glasshouse - Port Macquarie Performing Arts - Mid Year Showcase 2016 - 6581 8888 everyone is welcome. Info 0427 823 344 CAMDEN HAVEN ORCHID SOCIETY MEETS on the third Tuesday of the month at 7.30pm at Laurieton United Service Club, Seymour Street, Laurieton. PROBUS CLUB OF OXLEY MONTHLY meetings are held at Port City Bowling Club 2nd Wednesday of the month 9.30am – 11.30.am. Contact Jean Dodd - Membership Officer on 0402 008 212 or Brian Richardson Secretary 0437 718 672. PORT MACQUARIE CRAFT GROUP MEETS at the Baptist Church, 18 McIntyre Close each Wednesday during School terms from 12.30-2.30 pm. Ph: Jean Edwards 6582 1854. PORT TABLE TENNIS CLUB A MIXED group of over 45s meet Wednesdays between 9am and 12pm at Palm Court Motor Inn, William Street. Phone 6581 5388. KEMPSEY TABLE TENNIS ASSOCIATION IS held Thursdays at Kempsey Macleay RSL Bowling Club from 6pm. A membership to the RSL is required. Ph: John or Barbara Morley 6566 8405 or Steve Tarbox 6562 7797. PORT CITY COMBINED PROBUS MEET first Friday of each month 9.30am at Panthers. Join us for fun, friendship and social occasions. Contact Scott 6584 6414. PORT MACQUARIE BADMINTON (SENIORS) Mixed group of over 55s meet Fridays from 9.15am to 11.15am at indoor stadium, Hastings River Drive. Racquets, tea and coffee are provided. Phone Margaret on 6584 3673. PORT MACQUARIE MEDITATION AND RELAXATION FREE classes are held at Governor’s Retirement Village, 166 Riverpark Road each Friday from 4.30pm. Contact Pam Sainsbury 0414 484. RHYTHM REVUE Rehearsals Saturdays from 10am to 1pm at North Haven Public School. Contact Cecily 6582 6663. SOCIAL CHESS EVERY Saturday afternoon from 1pm at Flynn’s Book Café, 1/4 Flynn Street, Port Macquarie. For more information, phone 0401 733 700.

Todd McKenney sings Peter Allen 7.30pm - Club North Haven - The Crew - 6559 9150 Coming Up Sat Jun 11 8pm - Glasshouse - Brothers 3 - 6581 8888 Sun Jun 12 9.30am - Bago Winery - Jazz in the Vineyards Jordan Jive - 6585 7099 Tue Jun 14 10pm - Glasshouse - Lah-Lah Sing It Loud! Stars of ABC KIDS will be playing up a storm - 6581 8888 Fri Jun 17 8pm - Glasshouse - Todd McKenney sings Peter Allen - 6581 8888 Sat Jun 18 7.30pm - Club North Haven - The Leadbellies 6559 9150 TAI CHI GET TOGETHER ALL Tai Chi and Qigong players are invited to the free Tai Chi get together held the first Sunday of the month at Town Green at 10am. John 0428 080 963. KEMPSEY COUNTRY MUSIC CLUB CONCERTS are held at the Slim Dusty Centre at 11am first Sunday in the month. Everyone is welcome. Contact 6561 5094 or 0411 502 411. PORT MACQUARIE OVER 50S MIXED TRAVELLING BOWLERS INTERESTED in a day out once per month including coach, bowls and lunch for a moderate cost? Contact Geoff for further details 6583 9503 or email byno1937@hotmail.com. SORT Port Macquarie OLD computers, printers, modems, phones etc recycled or refurbished. Donate your unwanted items at 13 Chestnut Road, Port Macquarie. 6581 2071 THE HASTINGS NET IS a women’s group which meets monthly in Port Macquarie for dinner with a guest speaker. Contact Sue 6583 7612 or Chris 0419 246 664. PORT MACQUARIE HASTINGS U3A OFFERING seniors a wide range of interest groups. Enrol anytime at www.pmhu3a.org.au or call 6584 4192. PORT MACQUARIE SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB ARE you over 50? We would like to see you. Join our members in bowls, dancing, darts, cards, table tennis and embroidery. If any of these is in your sphere call in and join us. If you have a group doing something else, come and see us. Cheap fees and activities, at 74 Munster St, contact 6583 7149. What’s On is for non-commercial, volunteer organisations to include upcoming meetings. Please limit submissions to three lines. Submissions should be sent to newsdesk@ pminews.com.au by 10am Monday desired week of publication. Please use the words ‘Whats On’ in the subject line.


Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

TV GUIDE

19

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6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 Movie: A Perfect Day. (PG) (2006) 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Home And Away. (PG) 8.00 House Rules. (PG) 9.15 Movie: Ride Along. (M) (2014) Ice Cube, Kevin Hart, Tika Sumpter. 11.25 To Be Advised. 12.30 Shopping. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 12.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG) 1.00 Movie: My Week With Marilyn. (PG) (2011) 3.00 News Now. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 NBN News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 RBT. (PG) 8.30 The NRL Footy Show. (M) 10.30 World’s Funniest Videos Top 10 Countdown. (PG) 11.30 The AFL Footy Show. (M) 1.30 Extra. 2.00 TV Shop. 3.30 GMA. 5.00 News. 5.30 Today.

6.00 Ent. Tonight. (PG) 6.30 The Home Team. 7.00 Ben’s Menu. 7.30 Bold. (PG) 8.00 Family Feud. 8.30 Studio 10. (PG) 11.00 The Talk. 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG) 1.00 MasterChef Aust. 2.15 Ent. Tonight. (PG) 2.45 GCBC. 3.15 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.45 Ben’s Menu. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet. 4.30 Bold. (PG) 5.00 News. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Aust. 8.40 Law & Order: SVU. (M) 10.40 Blue Bloods. (M) 11.30 The Project. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Infomercials. (PG) 2.30 Shopping. 4.00 James Robison. (PG) 4.30 CBS Morning.

6.00 WorldWatch. 2.00 Creative Minds. (PG) 2.45 Bazaar. 3.15 The Dark Ages: An Age Of Light. (PG) 4.25 Fit To Rule: How Royal Illness Changed History. (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Food Safari. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 noma australia. 8.00 Gourmet Farmer. (PG) 8.30 Poh & Co. (PG) 9.00 Made In Italy. 9.30 Follow The Money. 10.35 SBS World News Late Edition. 11.05 Dogging Tales. (MA15+) 12.10 Movie: I Am Love. (MA15+) (2009) 2.20 MythBusters. (PG) 4.15 Food Lovers’ Guide To Australia. 5.00 WorldWatch.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. (PG) 7.30 Doctor Who. (PG) 8.20 Doctor Who: Confidential. 8.35 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (PG) 9.05 Episodes. (M) 9.30 Never Mind The Buzzcocks. (M) 10.05 Broad City. (M) 10.25 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (M) 10.55 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. (M) 11.35 Live At The Apollo. (M) 12.20 Alan Carr: Chatty Man. (M) 1.05 Doctor Who. (PG) 1.55 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. (M) 2.40 News Update. 2.45 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

6.00 Shopping. 7.00 Flushed. 7.30 Hairy Legs. 8.00 Pipsqueaks. 8.30 Harry’s Practice. 9.00 Home And Away: The Early Years. (PG) 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Jonathan Creek. (M) 1.00 Dealers. (PG) 2.00 House Doctor (A To Z Of Design) 2.30 Drug Bust. (PG) 3.00 Medical Emergency. (PG) 3.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 4.00 Dog Patrol. (PG) 4.30 60 Minute Makeover. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The Vicar Of Dibley. (PG) 8.15 Keeping Up Appearances. (PG) 8.45 Murdoch Mysteries. (M) 10.45 Air Crash Investigation. (M) 11.45 Late Programs.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 2.00 Sonic Boom. (PG) 2.30 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Regular Show. (PG) 6.30 Adv Time. (PG) 7.00 The Middle. (PG) 7.30 Big Bang. (PG) 8.30 Movie: 3 Days To Kill. (M) (2014) 10.50 Movie: The Sentinel. (M) (2006) 11.30 Two And A Half Men. (M) 12.00 Impractical Jokers. (M) 12.30 Adv Time. (PG) 1.00 Regular Show. (PG) 1.30 Batman. (PG) 2.00 Rabbids Invasion. (PG) 2.30 Wild Kratts. 3.00 Yo-Kai. (PG) 3.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG) 4.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. (PG) 4.30 Sonic Boom. (PG) 4.50 Late Programs.

6.00 Infomercials. (PG) 8.00 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 6. Monaco Grand Prix. Replay. 10.30 M*A*S*H. (PG) 11.00 Hogan’s Heroes. 12.00 Get Smart. (PG) 1.00 Matlock. (M) 2.00 Nash Bridges. (M) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 M*A*S*H. (PG) 7.30 Extreme Fishing. (PG) 8.30 Movie: Top Secret! (M) (1984) 10.30 House Of Lies. (MA15+) 11.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG) 12.00 Shopping. 2.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG) 3.00 Bellator MMA. (M) 5.00 The Doctors. (PG)

6.00 WorldWatch. 12.30 Dutch News. 1.00 Urdu News. 1.30 Tamil News. 2.00 Thai News. 2.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 3.00 Bangla News. 3.30 Somali News. 4.00 The Feed. 4.30 India’s Dancing Superstar. 5.35 If You Are The One. 6.40 American Ninja Warrior. 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 Adam Ruins Everything. (PG) 8.30 MythBusters. (PG) 9.30 Dark Net. (M) 10.30 Plastic Paradise. (PG) 11.35 League Nation Live. 1.10 The Feed. 1.40 On The Piste. (M) 2.30 Alarm For Cobra 11. (M) 3.30 NHK World English News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 3.15 Jamie’s Got Tentacles. 3.25 Vic The Viking. 3.40 Sea Princesses. 3.50 Jamillah And Aladdin. 4.00 Odd Squad. 4.25 Numb Chucks. (PG) 4.40 Grojband. 5.00 Camp Lakebottom. 5.25 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 5.50 BtN Newsbreak. 5.55 Little Lunch. 6.10 Game On. 6.25 Hank Zipzer. 6.50 BtN Newsbreak. 7.00 The Adventures Of Merlin. (PG) 7.45 Deadly Mission: Madagascar. 8.15 Adventure Time. 8.35 Degrassi: Next Class. (PG) 9.00 World’s End. 9.30 House Of Anubis. 9.50 Rage. (PG) 10.55 Close.

6.00 Morning Programs. 7.30 Mark Berg’s Fishing Addiction. (PG) 8.30 Dream Car Garage. (PG) 9.00 Fifth Gear. (PG) 10.00 Great Escapes. 11.00 Starsky & Hutch. (PG) 12.00 T.J. Hooker. (PG) 1.00 Bomb Hunters. (PG) 2.00 American Chainsaw. (PG) 2.30 Doomsday Castle. (PG) 3.30 Hillbilly Handfishin’. (PG) 4.30 American Restoration. (PG) 5.30 American Pickers. (PG) 6.30 MythBusters. (PG) 7.30 Bad Ink. (PG) 8.00 Tattoo Nightmares Miami. (M) 8.30 Ink Master. (M) 10.15 America’s Hardest Prisons. (M) 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Friends. (PG) 6.30 Skippy. 7.00 TV Shop. 8.00 Gilmore Girls. (PG) 9.00 TV Shop. 10.30 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 11.00 Friends. (PG) 12.00 Movie: Hue And Cry. (G) (1947) 1.50 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 2.20 Monarch Of The Glen. (PG) 3.30 Secret Dealers. (PG) 4.30 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG) 5.30 Gilmore Girls. (PG) 6.30 Friends. (PG) 7.30 River Cottage Autumn. (PG) 8.30 Movie: Fracture. (M) (2007) 10.50 Blackadder II. (PG) 11.30 New Tricks. (M) 12.40 Monarch Of The Glen. (PG) 2.00 TV Shop. 2.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Toasted TV. 8.00 Scope. 8.30 Toasted TV. 9.30 Crocamole. 10.00 Dr Quinn. (PG) 11.00 JAG. (PG) 12.00 Judging Amy. (PG) 1.00 Medium. (M) 2.00 Becker. (PG) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG) 3.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG) 5.00 Frasier. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 The Simpsons. 7.30 How I Met Your Mother. 8.00 New Girl. (M) 8.30 Jane The Virgin. (M) New. 9.30 Sex And The City. (M) 10.50 How I Met Your Mother. (PG) 11.20 James Corden. (PG) 12.20 Sleepy Hollow. (M) Final. 1.20 Frasier. (PG) 1.55 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 Iron Chef America. 11.30 Beat Bobby Flay. 12.30 My Grandmother’s Ravioli. 1.00 Chuck’s Eat The Street. 1.30 Man Fire Food. 2.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 2.30 Good Eats. 3.00 Guilty Pleasures. 3.30 The Great Food Truck Race. (PG) 4.30 Iron Chef America. 5.30 Beat Bobby Flay. 6.30 Chuck’s Eat The Street. 7.00 Boys Weekend. 7.30 My Grandmother’s Ravioli. 8.00 Good Eats. 8.30 Mystery Diners. (PG) 9.30 Man Fire Food. 10.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 10.30 Beat Bobby Flay. 11.00 Late Programs.

Thursday, June 2

6.00 News. 9.00 News Mornings. 10.00 Australian Story. 10.30 Foreign Corre. 11.00 The Dreamhouse. (PG) 11.30 Eggheads. 12.00 News. 1.00 Silk. (PG) 1.55 Antiques Roadshow. (PG) 2.55 The Cook And The Chef. 3.25 The Bill. (PG) 4.10 Murder, She Wrote. (PG) 5.00 News. 5.30 The Drum. 6.00 Antiques Roadshow. 7.00 News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Kitchen Cabinet. 8.30 Rake. (M) 9.30 Cleverman. (M) New. 10.25 Lateline. 10.55 The Business. 11.10 Making Couples Happy. (M) 12.10 Agony Aunts. (M) 12.40 Press Club. 1.40 Late Programs.

6.00 News. 9.00 News Mornings. 12.00 News. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 ABC News Afternoons With The Business. 5.00 Grandstand. 6.00 ABC News Evenings. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News Grandstand. 8.00 The Business. 9.00 ABC National News. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Million Dollar Listing NY. 1.00 Million Dollar Listing. 3.00 The Block. 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. 5.00 Flipping Out. 6.00 House Hunters Off The Grid. 6.30 House Hunters Int. 7.00 House Hunters. 7.30 The Millionaire Matchmaker. (PG) 8.30 Housewives Of Beverly Hills. (M) 10.30 Late Programs.

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20

Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

7 DAY TV GUIDE 6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 Movie: Loss Of Faith. (M) (1998) 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Better Homes And Gardens. 8.30 Movie: Now You See Me. (M) (2013) Mark Ruffalo, Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson. 10.50 To Be Advised. 1.00 Shopping.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 TV Shop. 12.00 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG) 1.00 Movie: Doc Hollywood. (PG) (1991) 3.00 News. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.30 Hot Seat. 6.00 NBN News. 7.00 ACA. 7.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 13. Canberra Raiders v Manly Sea Eagles. 10.10 Movie: Above The Law. (MA15+) (1988) 12.15 Movie: The Men Who Stare At Goats. (M) (2009) 2.00 Anger Management. (M) 2.30 Avengers. (PG) 3.30 Extra. 4.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 7.00 Ben’s Menu. 7.30 Bold. (PG) 8.00 Family Feud. 8.30 Studio 10. (PG) 11.00 The Talk. 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG) 1.00 MasterChef Aust. 2.10 Ent. Tonight. (PG) 2.40 GCBC. 3.10 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.40 Ben’s Menu. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet. 4.30 Bold. (PG) 5.00 News. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 The Living Room. 8.30 The Graham Norton Show. (M) 9.30 Have You Been Paying Attention? (M) 10.30 Shark Tank. (PG) 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 2.00 Lily Cole’s Art Matters. (PG) Final. 3.00 The Point Review. 3.25 Italy Unpacked. (PG) 4.25 Who Do You Think You Are? (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Food Safari. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Blood And Gold: The Making Of Spain. 8.30 The Missing Evidence. (PG) 9.30 Rise Of The Machines. (PG) 10.25 SBS World News Late Edition. 11.00 Movie: Henry And June. (MA15+) (1990) 1.25 My Father And The Man In Black. (M) 3.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 5.50 Go Jetters. 6.00 Peg + Cat. 6.15 Peter Rabbit. 6.25 Octonauts. 6.40 Ben And Holly’s Little Kingdom. 6.50 Shaun The Sheep. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. (PG) 7.30 Doctor Who. (PG) 8.15 Doctor Who: Confidential. (PG) 8.30 I’m Having Their Baby. (PG) 9.15 My Dad Is A Woman. (M) 10.00 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (M) 10.30 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. (M) 11.10 Rage. (PG) 4.30 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Home And Away: The Early Years. (PG) 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Better Homes. 1.00 Dealers. (PG) 2.00 Medical Rookies. (PG) 3.00 Medical Emergency. (PG) 3.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 4.00 Before And After. 4.30 60 Minute Makeover. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 ABBA: Dancing Queen. (PG) 8.30 Escape To The Country. 9.30 To Build Or Not To Build. 10.30 Front Of House. 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 5.00 Ben 10. (PG) 5.30 Teen Titans. (PG) 6.00 Movie: Over The Hedge. (G) (2006) 7.45 Movie: Harry Potter And The Prisoner Of Azkaban. (PG) (2004) 10.30 iZombie. (MA15+) 12.30 Sun, Sex And Suspicious Parents. (M) 1.30 Batman. (PG) 2.00 Rabbids Invasion. (PG) 2.30 Wild Kratts. 3.00 Yo-Kai. (PG) 3.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG) 4.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. (PG) 4.30 Sonic Boom. (PG) 4.50 Thunderbirds. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG)

6.00 Infomercials. (PG) 8.00 Reel Action. 8.30 Operation Repo. (PG) 9.00 Extreme Fishing. (PG) 10.00 M*A*S*H. (PG) 11.00 Hogan’s Heroes. 12.00 Get Smart. (PG) 1.00 Matlock. (M) 2.00 Nash Bridges. (M) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 M*A*S*H. (PG) 7.30 MacGyver. (PG) 8.30 Walker, Texas Ranger. (PG) 9.30 Movie: El Gringo. (MA15+) (2012) 11.30 Matlock. (M) 12.30 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 4.00 The Feed. 4.30 India’s Dancing Superstar. 5.40 Brain Games. 6.05 Street Genius. (PG) 6.30 MythBusters. (PG) 7.30 Friday Feed. 8.00 Illusions Of Grandeur. (PG) 8.25 Release The Hounds. 9.20 Adam Looking For Eve (Germany) (MA15+) 10.15 Movie: Legend Of The Fist: The Return Of Chen Zhen. (MA15+) (2010) 12.15 Movie: 20th Century Boys: The Final Chapter – Our Flag. (MA15+) (2009) 3.05 PopAsia. (PG) 4.10 WorldWatch.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 10.45 The Story Of Bran Nue Dae. 11.10 Children’s Programs. 5.50 BtN Newsbreak. 5.55 Good Game: SP. 6.25 Hank Zipzer. 6.50 BtN Newsbreak. 7.00 The Adventures Of Merlin. (PG) 7.45 Deadly Mission: Madagascar. 8.15 Adventure Time. 8.35 Degrassi: Next Class. (PG) 9.00 World’s End. 9.30 Miraculous Tales Of Ladybug And Cat Noir. 9.50 Lanfeust Quest. 10.15 Kamisama Kiss. (PG) 10.40 Close.

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Great Escapes. 11.00 Starsky & Hutch. (PG) 12.00 T.J. Hooker. (PG) 1.00 Bomb Hunters. (PG) 2.00 American Chainsaw. (PG) 2.30 Doomsday Castle. (PG) 3.30 Hillbilly Handfishin’. (PG) 4.30 American Restoration. (PG) 5.30 American Pickers. (PG) 6.30 Border Security USA. (PG) 7.00 AFL Pre-Game Show. 7.30 Football. AFL. Round 11. North Melbourne v Richmond. 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Friends. (PG) 6.30 Skippy. 7.00 TV Shop. 8.00 Gilmore Girls. (PG) 9.00 TV Shop. 10.30 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 11.00 Friends. (PG) 12.00 Movie: Mister Ten Per Cent. (G) (1967) 1.50 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 2.20 Monarch Of The Glen. (PG) 3.30 River Cottage Autumn. (PG) 4.30 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG) 5.30 Gilmore Girls. (PG) 6.30 Friends. (PG) 7.30 As Time Goes By. 8.50 Movie: True Crime. (M) (1999) 11.25 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Crocamole. 10.00 Dr Quinn. (PG) 11.00 JAG. (PG) 12.00 Judging Amy. (PG) 1.00 Medium. (M) 2.00 Becker. (PG) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG) 3.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG) 5.00 Frasier. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 The Simpsons. 7.30 How I Met Your Mother. 8.00 Rules Of Engagement. (PG) 8.30 Movie: The Breakfast Club. (M) (1985) 10.30 James Corden. (PG) 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.30 My Grandmother’s Ravioli. 1.00 Chuck’s Eat The Street. 1.30 Man Fire Food. 2.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 2.30 Chopped Junior. 3.30 The Great Food Truck Race. 4.30 Brazilian Street Feasts. 5.00 Kelsey’s Essentials. 5.30 Beat Bobby Flay. 6.30 Chuck’s Eat The Street. 7.00 Boys Weekend. 7.30 My Grandmother’s Ravioli. 8.00 Good Eats. 8.30 Mystery Diners. 9.30 Man Fire Food. 10.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 10.30 Late Programs.

Friday, June 3

6.00 News. 9.00 News Mornings. 10.00 One Plus One. 10.30 Catalyst. (PG) 11.00 Wild Life At The Zoo. 11.30 Eggheads. 12.00 News. 1.00 Silk. (M) 2.00 Antiques Roadshow. (PG) 2.50 Kitchen Cabinet. 3.20 The Bill. (PG) 4.15 Murder, She Wrote. (PG) 5.00 News. 5.30 The Drum. 6.00 Antiques Roadshow. 7.00 News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Tony Robinson’s Time Walks. 8.30 Silent Witness. (MA15+) 9.30 Scott & Bailey. (M) Final. 10.20 Lateline. 10.50 Late Programs.

6.00 News. 9.00 News Mornings. 12.00 News. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 ABC News Afternoons With The Business. 5.00 Grandstand. 6.00 ABC News Evenings. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News Grandstand. 8.00 The Business. 9.00 Planet America. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Housewives Of Beverly Hills. (M) 2.00 The Bachelorette US. (PG) 4.00 Postcards. (PG) 5.00 Flip Or Flop. 6.00 House Hunters Off The Grid. 6.30 House Hunters Int. 7.00 House Hunters. 7.30 Beachfront Bargain Hunt. 8.30 Hotel Impossible. (PG) 10.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 Morning Show. (PG) 12.00 Road To Rio. 12.30 Olympians: Off The Record. 1.00 I Dream Of Jeannie. 1.30 Surf Patrol. 1.50 Movie: Race To Witch Mountain. (PG) (2009) 4.00 Better Homes. 5.00 News. 5.30 Border Security. (PG) 6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Movie: Men In Black. (PG) (1997) 9.00 Movie: Bad Boys. (MA15+) (1995) 11.30 The Goldbergs. (PG) 12.00 Desperate Housewives. (M) 1.00 Shopping.

6.00 TV Shop. 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG) 12.00 The Investment Series. 12.30 Hot In Cleveland. (PG) 1.00 Who Do You Think You Are? (PG) 2.00 Movie: Zeus And Roxanne. (G) (1997) 4.00 Jimmy Barnes: Soul Searchin’. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Getaway. (PG) 6.00 NBN News. 7.00 The Voice. (PG) 10.10 Movie: The Big Wedding. (MA15+) (2013) 12.10 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 The Living Room. 12.00 All 4 Adventure. (PG) 1.00 Healthy Homes TV. 1.30 The Doctors. (PG) 2.30 GCBC. 3.00 The Renovation King. 3.30 Everyday Gourmet. 4.00 What’s Up Down Under. 4.30 Escape Fishing With ET. Final. 5.00 News. 6.00 Modern Family. (PG) 6.30 Ice Age: The Great Egg-Scapade. 7.00 Movie: Ice Age 4: Continental Drift. (PG) (2012) 8.45 Movie: Independence Day. (M) (1996) 11.40 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 2.00 Equestrian. FEI Jumping World Cup. 3.00 Food Lovers’ Guide To Australia. 3.30 Pan-American Road Trip. (PG) 4.30 Beat The Ancestors. (PG) 5.25 DNA Nation. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Who Do You Think You Are? (PG) 8.35 RocKwiz Salutes The Legends. 9.35 Movie: Saturday Night Fever. (MA15+) (1977) 11.45 RocKwiz. (PG) 12.45 Inspector Rex. (PG) 3.25 Nelson Mandela: The Final Chapter. (PG)

6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.40 Ben And Holly’s Little Kingdom. 6.50 Shaun The Sheep. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. (PG) 7.30 Highway Thru Hell. (PG) 8.15 Would I Lie To You? 8.45 The Warehouse Comedy Festival. (M) 9.15 Live At The Apollo. (M) 10.00 Comedy Up Late. (MA15+) 10.30 Broad City. (M) 10.50 Episodes. (M) 11.20 Louie. (M) 12.30 Louie. (PG) 1.15 Louie. (M) 2.00 Highway Thru Hell. (PG) 2.45 News Update. 2.50 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Dealers. (PG) 10.30 Great Escapes. 11.30 SA Life Favourites. 12.00 Home In WA. 12.30 Great South East. 1.00 Creek To Coast. 1.30 Qld Weekender. 2.00 WA Weekender. 2.30 Sydney Weekender. 3.00 Rugby Union. Shute Shield. 5.00 Intolerant Cooks. (PG) 5.30 Secret Location. (PG) 6.30 Movie: Mamma Mia! (PG) (2008) 8.50 Escape To The Country. 9.50 Original Features. 10.50 Late Programs.

Of Doom. (PG) 6.20 Puss In Boots: The Three Diablos. (PG) 6.40 Movie: Puss In Boots. (PG) (2011) 8.30 Movie: The Legend Of Zorro. (M) (2005) 11.00 Movie: Ballistic: Ecks Vs Sever. (M) (2002) 12.50 Go Girls. (M) 1.50 Surfing Australia TV. 2.30 Yo-Kai. (PG) 3.00 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG) 3.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG) 4.00 Beware The Batman. (M) 4.30 Problem Solverz. (PG) 4.50 Thunderbirds. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG)

Walker, Texas Ranger. (PG) 12.30 Operation Repo. (PG) 1.30 Champions Of The Rottnest Channel. 2.00 World Class Bartender Of The Year. (PG) 3.00 M*A*S*H. (PG) 4.00 Reel Action. 5.00 Adventure Angler. 5.30 David Attenborough’s Planet Earth. (PG) 6.30 Last Man Standing. 7.30 ST: Next Gen. (PG) 8.30 The X-Files. (M) 9.30 Minority Report. (M) New. 10.30 Zoo. (M) 11.30 Late Programs.

Ferriss Experiment. (PG) 1.50 Do Or Die. (PG) 2.40 Motorcycle Racing. Superbike World Championship. Round 7. 3.35 Celebrity Chef. 5.00 Brain Games. 5.30 Movie: Tales From Earthsea. (PG) (2006) 7.30 If You Are The One. 8.30 7 Days In Hell. (M) 9.20 Movie: Red Dawn. (M) (1984) 11.25 Movie: River’s Edge. (MA15+) (1986) 1.15 Movie: The Basketball Diaries. (MA15+) (1995) 3.10 WorldWatch.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 2.35 House Of Anubis. 3.00 Deadly 60. 3.25 Officially Amazing. 3.55 Good Game: SP. 4.20 Spectacular Spider-Man. 4.45 Camp Lakebottom. 4.55 SheZow. 5.05 Grojband. 5.30 Roy. 5.55 Little Lunch. Final. 6.10 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 6.30 Horrible Histories. (PG) 7.00 Operation Ouch! 7.30 Movie: Nowhere Boys: The Book Of Shadows. (PG) (2016) 8.50 World’s End. 9.20 House Of Anubis. 9.45 Close.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Harley-Davidson TV. (PG) 10.00 Triathlon. Busselton Jetty Ironman. 11.00 Bull Riding. 2015 Pro Tour. Replay. 12.00 Bomb Hunters. (PG) 1.00 Motor Racing. Outlaw Nitro Funny Cars. Replay. 2.00 Big Shrimpin’. (PG) 3.00 Footy Flashbacks. 4.30 Football. AFL. Round 11. Geelong v GWS. 7.20 Football. AFL. Round 11. Gold Coast v Sydney. 10.00 Movie: Face/Off. (MA15+) (1997) 1.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Movie: Up The Chastity Belt. (PG) (1971) 8.00 Danoz. 8.30 TV Shop. 9.00 As Time Goes By. 10.20 Movie: The Brigand Of Kandahar. (PG) (1965) 12.00 Movie: Don’t Bother To Knock. (PG) (1961) 2.00 Movie: Sabrina. (PG) (1954) 4.20 Movie: Paper Moon. (PG) (1973) 6.30 Heartbeat. (PG) 8.45 Silent Witness. (MA15+) 11.00 Dalziel And Pascoe. (M) 12.10 Movie: Ransom. (M) (1974) 2.10 Late Programs.

6.00 Toasted TV. 7.30 Kuu-Kuu Harajuku. 8.00 Totally Wild. 8.30 Scope. 9.05 The Loop. (PG) 11.35 Neighbours. 2.05 To Be Advised. 8.30 The Graham Norton Show. (M) 9.30 Sex And The City. (M) 11.30 The Loop. (PG) 2.00 Neighbours. 4.30 Sabrina. (PG) 5.00 Shopping.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.30 My Grandmother’s Ravioli. 1.00 Chuck’s Eat The Street. 1.30 Man Fire Food. 2.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 2.30 Chopped Junior. 3.30 The Great Food Truck Race. (PG) 4.30 Brazilian Street Feasts. 5.00 Kelsey’s Essentials. 5.30 Chopped. (PG) 6.30 Man Fire Food. 7.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 7.30 Kitchen Inferno. 8.30 Mystery Diners. (PG) 9.30 The Freshman Class. (PG) 10.30 Late Programs.

Saturday, June 4

6.00 Max Richter’s Sleep. 7.30 Rage. (PG) 11.30 Reality Check. (PG) 12.05 Australians Of The Year: In Conversation. 1.05 Scott & Bailey. (M) 2.00 Tony Robinson’s Time Walks. 2.30 Landline. 3.00 Soccer. Women’s International. Australia v New Zealand. Game 1. 5.00 Midsomer Murders. (PG) 6.30 Gardening Australia. 7.00 News. 7.30 Father Brown. (PG) 8.20 Indian Summers. (M) 9.05 The Doctor Blake Mysteries. (M) 10.05 Rake. (M) 11.00 Late Programs.

Our Central Road shop is opening 6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 World WorldWatch. 1.00 The Tim on10.30September 8th. 6.00 6.00 Megamind: The Button Sport. MacGyver. (PG) 11.30 Ferriss Experiment. 1.25 The Tim

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 News. 12.30 Landline. 1.00 News. 1.30 Planet. 2.00 News. 2.30 Mix. 3.00 News. 3.30 Foreign Corre. 4.00 News. 4.30 Drum Weekly. 5.00 News. 5.30 One Plus One. 6.00 ABC News. 6.30 Aust. Story. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Mix. 8.00 Four Corners. 8.45 One Plus One. 9.00 Australians Of The Year. 10.00 News. 10.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Hotel Impossible. (PG) 2.00 Postcards. (PG) 3.00 House Hunters Off The Grid. 4.00 Good Bones. (PG) 5.00 Beachfront Bargain Hunt. 6.00 House Hunters Off The Grid. 6.30 Masters Of Flip. 7.30 House Hunters. 8.30 House Hunters Int. 9.30 House Hunters Reno. (PG) 10.30 Late Programs. PMI

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

21

7 DAY TV GUIDE 6.00 Home Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) 12.00 Bewitched. 12.30 To Be Advised. 3.00 Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Sydney Weekender. 6.00 Seven News. 7.00 House Rules. (PG) 8.50 Sunday Night. 9.50 Bones. (M) 10.50 Castle. (M) 1.00 Shopping. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 It Is Written. (PG) 6.30 TV Shop. 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Wide World Of Sports. (PG) 11.00 NRL Sunday Footy Show. (PG) 1.00 Full Cycle. 1.30 Wild China. 2.30 The NRL Rookie. (PG) 3.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 13. Sydney Roosters v Wests Tigers. 6.00 NBN News. 7.00 The Voice. 8.40 60 Minutes. 9.40 Inside The World’s Toughest Prisons. (M) 10.40 Teens Behind Bars. (M) 11.40 Major Crimes. (MA15+) 12.35 Late Programs.

6.00 Creflo. 6.30 Hillsong. 7.00 Mass. 7.30 Joel Osteen. 8.00 GCBC. 8.30 St10. (PG) 11.00 Let’s Do Coffee. Final. 11.30 Ben’s Menu. 12.00 Netball. ANZ Championship. Round 10. Adelaide Thunderbirds v West Coast Fever. 2.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 2.30 The Offroad Adventure Show. 3.00 iFish. 3.30 RPM GP. 4.00 RPM. 5.00 News. 6.00 Family Feud: Sunday. 6.30 Modern Family. (PG) 7.30 MasterChef Aust. 9.00 Movie: Noah. (M) (2014) 12.00 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 1.00 The Bowls Show. 2.00 Speedweek. 4.00 FIFA World Cup 2018 Magazine. 4.30 Voxwomen Cycling. 5.00 InCycle. 5.30 Spying On Hitler’s Army. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 America’s Hidden Pyramid City. 8.30 DNA Nation. (PG) 9.30 Uranium: Twisting The Dragon’s Tail. (PG) 10.30 Cancer: The Emperor Of All Maladies. (PG) 11.40 Movie: A Brand New Life. (PG) (2009) 1.20 Movie: Black Field. (MA15+) (2009) 3.15 Late Programs.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. (PG) 7.30 Seconds From Disaster. 8.20 The Daters. (PG) 8.30 Michael McIntyre’s Showtime. (M) 9.30 Louis Theroux: A Place For Paedophiles. (M) 10.30 My Dad Is A Woman. (M) 11.20 Never Mind The Buzzcocks. (M) 11.50 Junior Doctors: Your Life In Their Hands. (PG) 12.50 Seconds From Disaster. 1.35 The Home Show. 2.25 News Update. 2.30 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Home And Away Catch-Up. (PG) 12.30 Dealers. (PG) 2.00 Secret Location. (PG) 3.00 Original Features. 4.00 Before And After. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 5.30 Catch Phrase. 6.15 Keeping Up Appearances. (PG) 7.00 For The Love Of Dogs. (PG) 7.30 Border Patrol. (PG) 8.00 Motorway Patrol. (PG) 8.30 Escape To The Country. 9.30 Escape To The Continent. 10.45 Late Programs.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Batman. (PG) 6.30 Movie: Big Momma’s House 2. (PG) (2006) 8.30 Movie: Rush Hour 2. (M) (2001) 10.30 Movie: Project X. (MA15+) (2012) 12.20 The Magaluf Weekender. (MA15+) 1.30 Surfing Australia TV. 2.00 Wild Kratts. 2.30 Yo-Kai. (PG) 3.00 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG) 3.30 SpongeBob. 4.00 Beware The Batman. (M) 4.30 Problem Solverz. (PG) 4.50 Thunderbirds. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG)

6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 Temporary Australians. (PG) 11.30 Extreme Fishing. (PG) 12.30 Undercover Boss. (PG) 1.30 ST: Next Gen. (PG) 2.30 World Sport. 3.00 Moments Of Impact. (PG) 4.00 Megafactories. 5.00 What’s Up Down Under. 5.30 iFish. 6.00 Family Feud: Sunday. 6.30 M*A*S*H. (PG) 7.30 CSI: Cyber. (M) 8.30 Attenborough’s Animal House. 9.30 Motorcycle Racing. MotoGP. Catalunya Grand Prix. Race 7. 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 10.00 WorldWatch. 6.40 Ninja Warrior Sweden. 7.30 If You Are The One. 8.30 Drunk History UK. (MA15+) Return. 9.00 South Park. (M) 9.25 Strangeface. (M) 9.35 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Criterium du Dauphiné. Prologue. Les Gets to Les Gets. 3.9 km time trial. From France. 11.05 Full Frontal With Samantha Bee. (M) 11.35 Best Undressed. (MA15+) 12.35 Shot By Kern. (MA15+) 1.05 Favela Rising. (M) 2.35 Kurt Wallander. (MA15+) 4.20 WorldWatch.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.20 Spectacular Spider-Man. 4.45 Camp Lakebottom. 4.55 The Flamin’ Thongs. Final. 5.05 Grojband. 5.30 Roy. 5.55 Scream Street. 6.10 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 6.30 Horrible Histories. 7.00 Operation Ouch! 7.30 Keeping Up With The Kaimanawas. (PG) 7.55 Degrassi: The Next Generation. (PG) 9.10 Girls In Love. 9.25 House Of Anubis. 9.50 Good Game: Pocket Edition. (PG) 10.00 Rage. (PG) 2.30 Close.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Dream Car Garage. (PG) 10.00 AFL Game Day. 11.30 My Fishing Place. (PG) 12.00 Fishing Cape York With Josh & Jamie. (PG) 1.00 The AFN Fishing Show. (PG) 1.30 Prospectors. (PG) 2.30 AFL Pre-Game Show. 3.00 Football. AFL. Round 11. Western Bulldogs v West Coast. 6.00 Seinfeld. (PG) 7.00 Movie: Battleship. (PG) (2012) 9.35 Movie: Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machines. (M) (2003) 11.50 Late Programs.

6.00 TV Shop. 6.30 Movie: Alive And Kicking. (G) (1964) 8.30 TV Shop. 10.00 Avengers. (PG) 11.00 Movie: Not Now, Comrade. (PG) (1976) 1.00 The Investment Series. 1.30 Getaway. (PG) 2.00 Movie: Invitation To A Gunfighter. (PG) (1964) 4.00 Movie: The Sea Wolves. (PG) (1980) 6.30 Movie: Goldfinger. (PG) (1964) 8.45 Movie: Thunderball. (PG) (1965) 11.25 Rizzoli & Isles. (M) 12.25 Getaway. (PG) 1.00 Seaway. (PG) 2.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Mako: Island Of Secrets. 10.30 Sabrina. (PG) 11.00 Infomercials. (PG) 11.30 Family Ties. (PG) 1.00 Cheers. (PG) 2.00 Frasier. (PG) 3.00 Everybody Loves Raymond. 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG) 4.50 To Be Advised. 6.00 Family Feud: Sunday. 6.30 Snog, Marry, Avoid? (PG) 7.30 How I Met Your Mother. (PG) 8.00 The Simpsons. (PG) 8.30 Movie: Epic Movie. (M) (2007) 10.30 James Corden. (PG) 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 The Great Food Truck Race. (PG) 10.30 Chopped. (PG) 11.30 Brazilian Street Feasts. 12.00 Kelsey’s Essentials. 12.30 Mystery Diners. (PG) 1.30 Kitchen Inferno. 2.30 Chopped Junior. 3.30 Chopped. (PG) 4.30 Brazilian Street Feasts. 5.00 Kelsey’s Essentials. 5.30 Beat Bobby Flay. 6.30 Chopped. (PG) 7.30 Kids Baking Championship. 8.30 Mystery Diners. (PG) 9.30 Restaurant: Impossible. (PG) 10.30 Chopped. (PG) 11.25 Late Programs.

Sunday, June 5

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Landline. 1.00 Gardening Australia. 1.30 The Mix. 2.00 Polly Borland: Polymorphous. (PG) 2.45 Love & Fury. 3.15 The Book Club. 3.45 Australian Story. 4.15 Rise Of The Animals. 5.15 Father Brown. (PG) 6.00 Surfing The Menu: The Next Generation. 6.30 Compass. 7.00 News. 7.40 Grand Designs. 8.30 Midsomer Murders. (PG) Final. 10.00 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (PG) 10.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 News. 12.30 Drum Weekly. 1.00 News. 1.30 Landline. 2.00 News. 2.30 One Plus One. 3.00 News. 3.30 Offsiders. 4.00 News. 4.30 The Mix. 5.00 Australians Of The Year. 6.00 ABC News. 6.30 Foreign Corre. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Aust. Wide. 8.00 Insiders. 9.00 ABC News. 9.30 One Plus One. 10.00 News. 10.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 House Hunters. 1.00 House Hunters Int. 2.00 Masters Of Flip. 3.00 House Hunters Reno. (PG) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 5.00 Extreme Homes. 6.00 House Hunters Off The Grid. 6.30 Fixer Upper. (PG) 7.30 Nashville Flipped. 8.30 Flip Or Flop. 9.30 Good Bones. (PG) 10.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 News. 12.00 Movie: Accused At 17. (M) (2009) 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 News. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Home And Away. (PG) 7.30 House Rules. (PG) 8.45 Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders. (M) 10.45 Grey’s Anatomy. (M) 11.45 Dynamo: Magician Impossible. (PG) 1.00 Shopping. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 TV Shop. 12.00 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG) 1.00 Movie: Agatha Christie’s A Caribbean Mystery. (PG) (1983) 3.00 News. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.30 Hot Seat. 6.00 NBN News. 7.00 ACA. 7.30 The Voice. 9.30 Soundbreaking. (M) 10.40 Obsessive Compulsive Cleaners. (PG) 11.40 Movie: Underbelly Files: The Man Who Got Away. (MA15+) (2011) 1.30 Anger Management. (M) 2.00 TV Shop. 3.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Ent. Tonight. 6.30 The Home Team. 7.00 Ben’s Menu. 7.30 Bold. (PG) 8.00 Family Feud. 8.30 Studio 10. (PG) 11.00 The Talk. 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG) 1.00 MasterChef Aust. 2.40 Ent. Tonight. 3.10 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.40 Ben’s Menu. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet. 4.30 Bold. (PG) 5.00 News. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Aust. 8.40 Have You Been Paying Attention? (M) 9.40 NCIS: New Orleans. (M) 10.40 Elementary. 11.30 The Project. 12.30 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 2.00 Summer Night Concert. 3.35 Hairy Bikers’ Asian Adventure. 4.35 A Great Welsh Adventure With Griff Rhys Jones. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Food Safari. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Michael Mosley: Trust Me, I’m A Doctor. 8.30 Ireland With Simon Reeve. (PG) 9.35 Lockerbie: My Brother’s Bomber. (PG) 10.35 SBS World News Late Edition. 11.05 Trepalium. (M) New. 1.05 Food Lovers’ Guide To Australia. 5.00 WorldWatch.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. 7.30 Doctor Who. (PG) 8.15 Doctor Who: Confidential. 8.30 Louis Theroux: Twilight Of The Porn Star. (M) 9.30 Ross Kemp: Extreme World. (MA15+) 10.15 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (M) 10.45 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. (M) 11.25 Michael McIntyre’s Showtime. (M) 12.30 Doctor Who. (PG) 1.15 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. (M) 2.00 News Update. 2.05 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Home And Away: The Early Years. (PG) 9.30 NBC Today. 10.30 Escape To The Continent. 12.00 Escape To The Country. 1.00 City Homicide. (M) 2.00 Dealers. (PG) 3.00 Medical Emergency. (PG) 3.30 ICU. (PG) 4.00 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 4.30 60 Minute Makeover. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Cities Of The Underworld. (PG) 8.30 Prime Suspect. (M) 10.30 Air Crash Investigation. (PG) 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Regular Show. (PG) 6.30 Adv Time. (PG) 7.00 The Middle. (PG) 7.30 Auction Hunters. (PG) 8.00 Top Gear. (PG) 9.30 Movie: Ransom. (MA15+) (1996) 12.00 The NRL Rookie. (PG) 1.00 Regular Show. (PG) 1.30 Batman. (PG) 2.00 Power Rangers Dino. (PG) 2.30 Wild Kratts. 3.00 Yo-Kai. (PG) 3.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG) 4.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. (PG) 4.30 Sonic Boom. (PG) 4.50 Thunderbirds. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG)

6.00 Infomercials. (PG) 8.00 RPM GP. 8.30 RPM. 9.30 Attenborough’s Animal House. 10.30 M*A*S*H. (PG) 11.00 Hogan’s Heroes. 12.00 Get Smart. (PG) 1.00 Matlock. (M) 2.00 Nash Bridges. (M) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 M*A*S*H. (PG) 7.30 Undercover Boss. (PG) 8.30 Movie: Braveheart. (M) (1995) 12.00 Wilfred. (MA15+) 12.30 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 4.00 The Numbers Game. 4.30 India’s Dancing Superstar. 5.40 If You Are The One. 6.40 American Ninja Warrior. 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 Human Resources. (PG) 8.30 Awkward. 8.55 Faking It. 9.25 Movie: Serenity. (M) (2005) 11.40 Voice Over. (M) 11.55 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Criterium du Dauphiné. Stage 1. Cluses to Saint-Vulbas. 186 km flat stage. 1.25 The Feed. 1.55 Assassination Classroom. (PG) 2.45 RuPaul’s Drag Race. (M) 3.35 WorldWatch.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.30 Numb Chucks. 4.40 Grojband. 5.00 Camp Lakebottom. 5.25 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 5.50 BtN Newsbreak. 5.55 Roy. 6.25 Hank Zipzer. 6.50 BtN Newsbreak. 7.00 The Adventures Of Merlin. (PG) 7.45 Deadly Mission: Madagascar. 8.15 Adventure Time. 8.35 Pocket Protectors. 8.45 Degrassi: Next Class. (PG) 9.05 Girls In Love. 9.30 House Of Anubis. 9.55 Rage. (PG) 10.55 Close.

6.00 Morning Programs. 8.30 Dream Car Garage. 9.00 Fifth Gear. (PG) 10.00 The One: Australia’s Most Gifted Psychic. (PG) 11.00 Starsky & Hutch. (PG) 1.00 Bomb Hunters. (PG) 2.00 American Chainsaw. (PG) 2.30 Doomsday Castle. (PG) 3.30 Hillbilly Handfishin’. (PG) 4.30 American Restoration. (PG) 5.30 American Pickers. (PG) 6.30 MythBusters. (PG) 7.30 Pawn Stars. (PG) 8.30 Big Bang. (PG) 9.30 Bogans. (M) 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Movie: Saraband For Dead Lovers. (G) (1948) 2.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 2.30 Amazing Medical Stories: My Skin Could Kill Me. (PG) 3.30 Antiques Roadshow. 4.00 Customs. (PG) 4.30 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG) 5.30 Gilmore Girls. (PG) 6.30 Friends. (PG) 7.30 Kings Cross ER. (PG) 8.30 RPA. (PG) 9.30 Embarrassing Bodies. (M) 10.30 Supersize Vs Superskinny. (M) 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 JAG. (PG) 12.00 Judging Amy. (M) 1.00 Medium. (M) 2.00 Becker. (PG) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG) 3.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG) 5.00 Frasier. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 The Simpsons. (PG) 7.30 How I Met Your Mother. (M) 8.00 Fresh Off The Boat. (PG) 8.30 Sleepy Hollow. (M) Return. 9.30 The Strain. (MA15+) 10.30 How I Met Your Mother. (M) 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.30 Kids Baking Championship. 1.30 Restaurant: Impossible. (PG) 2.30 Chopped Junior. 3.30 Dinner At Tiffani’s. 4.00 5 Ingredient Fix. 4.30 Brazilian Street Feasts. 5.00 Kelsey’s Essentials. 5.30 Restaurant: Impossible. 6.30 Chuck’s Eat The Street. 7.00 Boys Weekend. 7.30 My Grandmother’s Ravioli. 8.00 Big Bad BBQ Battle. (PG) 8.30 Mystery Diners. (PG) 9.30 Man Fire Food. 10.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 10.30 Late Programs.

Monday, June 6

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 News. 1.00 Grand Designs. 1.55 Rise Of The Animals. 2.55 Surfing The Menu: The Next Generation. 3.20 The Bill. 4.15 Murder, She Wrote. (PG) 5.00 News. 5.30 The Drum. 6.00 Antiques Roadshow. 7.00 News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Australian Story. 8.30 Four Corners. 9.20 Media Watch. (PG) 9.35 Q&A. 10.40 Lateline. 11.10 The Business. 11.30 Golf. PGA Tour. Memorial Tournament. Highlights. 12.25 Rage. (MA15+) 1.30 Late Programs.

6.00 News. 9.00 News Mornings. 12.00 News. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 ABC News Afternoons With The Business. 5.00 Grandstand. 6.00 ABC News Evenings. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News Grandstand. 8.00 The Business. 9.00 ABC National News. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 Late Programs.

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6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Flip Or Flop. 1.00 Postcards. 2.00 Extreme Homes. 3.00 The Block. 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. 5.00 House Hunters. 6.00 House Hunters Off The Grid. 6.30 House Hunters Int. 7.00 House Hunters. 7.30 Four Weddings US. (PG) 8.30 The Real Housewives Of New Jersey. (M) 10.30 Late Programs. PMI

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22

Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

7 DAY TV GUIDE 6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 News. 12.00 Movie: Blood On Her Hands. (M) (1998) 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 News. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Home And Away. (PG) 7.30 House Rules. (PG) 9.15 Kiss Bang Love. (PG) 10.25 Ramsay’s Hotel Hell. (M) Final. 11.30 The Goldbergs. (PG) 12.00 Hannibal. (MA15+) 1.00 Shopping. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 TV Shop. 12.00 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG) 1.00 Movie: Pure Country 2: The Gift. (PG) (2010) 3.00 News. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.30 Hot Seat. 6.00 NBN News. 7.00 ACA. 7.30 20 To One. (PG) 8.30 Britain’s Got Talent. (PG) 10.00 2 Broke Girls. (M) 11.00 Beauty And The Beach. (M) 12.00 20/20. (M) 1.00 Anger Management. (M) 1.30 TV Shop. 3.30 GMA. 5.00 News. 5.30 Today.

6.00 Ent. Tonight. 6.30 The Home Team. 7.00 Ben’s Menu. 7.30 Bold. (PG) 8.00 Family Feud. 8.30 Studio 10. (PG) 11.00 The Talk. 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG) 1.00 MasterChef Aust. 2.10 Ent. Tonight. 2.40 GCBC. 3.10 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.40 Ben’s Menu. (PG) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet. 4.30 Bold. (PG) 5.00 News. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Aust. 8.40 NCIS. (M) 9.40 NCIS: LA. (M) 11.30 The Project. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 2.00 Classical Destinations. 3.00 Tracks And Trails. 3.30 Which Universe Are We In? 4.30 The Great Serengeti. (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Food Safari. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great Continental Railway Journeys. (PG) 8.30 Insight. 9.30 Dateline. 10.00 SBS World News Late Edition. 10.30 1864: Denmark’s War. (MA15+) New. 12.45 Inspector Montalbano. (M) 2.45 RocKwiz. 4.30 Soccer. International Friendly. Spain v Georgia.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. (PG) 7.30 Doctor Who. (PG) 8.15 Doctor Who: Confidential. 8.30 Good Game. (M) 9.00 Black Comedy. (M) 9.30 Our Crime. (M) 10.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (M) 11.00 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. (M) 11.40 Ross Kemp: Extreme World. (MA15+) 12.25 A Different Breed. (PG) 1.10 Doctor Who. (PG) 2.00 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. (M) 5.00 Children’s Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Pipsqueaks. 8.30 Harry’s Practice. 9.00 Home And Away: The Early Years. (PG) 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Cities Of The Underworld. (PG) 1.00 City Homicide. (M) 2.00 Dealers. (PG) 3.00 Medical Emergency. (PG) 3.30 ICU. (PG) 4.00 RSPCA Animal Rescue. (PG) 4.30 60 Minute Makeover. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. (PG) 8.30 The Last Detective. (M) 10.10 Air Crash Investigation. (PG) 11.10 Late Programs.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Regular Show. (PG) 6.30 Adv Time. (PG) 7.00 The Middle. (PG) 7.30 The NRL Rookie. (PG) 8.30 Best Ink. (M) 10.30 Tattoo Fixers. (MA15+) 11.30 South Beach Tow. (M) 12.00 Impractical Jokers. (M) 12.30 Adv Time. (PG) 1.00 Regular Show. (PG) 1.30 Batman. (PG) 2.00 Problem Solverz. (PG) 2.30 Wild Kratts. 3.00 Yo-Kai. (PG) 3.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG) 4.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. (PG) 4.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Infomercials. (PG) 8.00 Moments Of Impact. (PG) 9.00 Megafactories. 10.00 M*A*S*H. (PG) 11.00 Hogan’s Heroes. 12.00 Get Smart. (PG) 1.00 Matlock. (M) 2.00 Nash Bridges. (M) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 M*A*S*H. (PG) 7.30 48 Hours. (M) 8.30 Movie: Man On Fire. (M) (2004) 11.30 The Americans. (M) 12.30 Shopping. 2.00 Matlock. (M) 3.00 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 6.35 American Ninja Warrior. 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 Full Frontal With Samantha Bee. (M) 8.30 Angry Girls: The Rise Of Female Violence. 9.35 Orphan Black. 10.25 Wild Ride. (MA15+) 11.25 South Park. (M) 11.55 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Criterium du Dauphiné. Stage 2. Crêchessur-Saône to Chalmazel-Jeansagnière. 167.5 km hill stage. 1.25 The Feed. 1.55 12 Monkeys. (MA15+) Final. 2.45 The Returned. (M) 3.45 @ midnight. (M) 4.40 WorldWatch.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.25 Numb Chucks. 4.40 Grojband. 5.00 Camp Lakebottom. 5.25 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 5.50 BtN Newsbreak. 5.55 Worst Year Of My Life, Again. 6.25 Hank Zipzer. 6.50 BtN Newsbreak. 7.00 The Adventures Of Merlin. (PG) 7.45 Deadly Mission: Madagascar. 8.15 Adventure Time. 8.35 Pocket Protectors. 8.45 Degrassi: Next Class. (PG) 9.05 Girls In Love. 9.30 House Of Anubis. 9.55 Rage. (PG) 10.55 Close.

6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 Starsky & Hutch. (PG) 12.00 T.J. Hooker. (PG) 1.00 Bomb Hunters. (M) 2.00 American Chainsaw. (PG) 2.30 Doomsday Castle. (PG) 3.30 Hillbilly Handfishin’. (PG) 4.30 American Restoration. (PG) 5.30 American Pickers. (PG) 6.30 Pawn Stars. (PG) 7.00 Nabbed. (PG) 7.30 Highway Patrol. (PG) 8.30 Outback Truckers. (PG) 9.30 Ice Road Truckers. (PG) 10.30 Outback Hunters. (M) 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Friends. (PG) 6.30 Skippy. 7.00 TV Shop. 8.00 Gilmore Girls. (PG) 9.00 TV Shop. 9.30 Danoz. 10.30 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 11.00 Friends. (PG) 12.00 Movie: Sweeney! (M) (1977) 2.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 2.30 Kings Cross ER. (PG) 3.30 RPA. (PG) 4.30 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG) 5.30 Gilmore Girls. (PG) 6.30 Friends. (PG) 7.30 Poirot. (PG) 8.40 Upstairs Downstairs. (PG) 11.00 Dalziel And Pascoe. (M) 12.10 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 JAG. (PG) 12.00 Judging Amy. (PG) 1.00 Medium. (M) 2.00 Becker. (PG) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG) 3.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. (PG) 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG) 5.00 Frasier. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 The Simpsons. 7.30 How I Met Your Mother. (M) 8.00 Rules Of Engagement. (PG) 8.30 The Graham Norton Show. (M) 9.30 Dating Naked. (M) 10.30 How I Met Your Mother. (M) 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.30 My Grandmother’s Ravioli. 1.00 Chuck’s Eat The Street. 1.30 Man Fire Food. 2.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 2.30 Chopped Junior. 3.30 Dinner At Tiffani’s. 4.00 5 Ingredient Fix. 4.30 Brazilian Street Feasts. 5.00 Kelsey’s Essentials. 5.30 Restaurant: Impossible. 6.30 Chuck’s Eat The Street. 7.00 Boys Weekend. 7.30 My Grandmother’s Ravioli. 7.55 Poh & Co. Bitesize. 8.30 Mystery Diners. 9.30 Man Fire Food. 10.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 10.30 Late Programs.

Tuesday, June 7

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 News. 1.00 Silk. (M) 2.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.00 The Cook And The Chef. 3.25 The Bill. (PG) 4.15 Murder, She Wrote. 5.00 Soccer. Women’s International. Australia v New Zealand. Game 2. 7.00 News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Catalyst. (PG) 8.30 Revolution School. 9.30 Foreign Corre. 10.00 The Book Club. 10.30 Lateline. 11.00 The Business. 11.20 Q&A. 12.25 Derek. (M) 12.50 Rage. (MA15+) 1.45 Late Programs.

6.00 News. 9.00 News Mornings. 12.00 News. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 ABC News Afternoons With The Business. 5.00 Grandstand. 6.00 ABC News Evenings. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News Grandstand. 8.00 The Business. 9.00 ABC National News. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 Late Programs. 6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 News. 12.30 Press Club. 1.30 Australians Of The Year: In Conversation. 2.30 Jennifer Byrne Presents. 2.55 The Cook And The Chef. 3.25 The Bill. 4.15 Murder, She Wrote. 5.00 News. 5.25 The Drum. 5.55 Antiques Roadshow. (PG) 7.00 News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 QI. (M) 8.30 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (PG) 9.00 The Chaser’s Election Desk. 9.30 Would I Lie To You? (PG) 10.00 Comedy Up Late. (M) 10.35 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 The Millionaire Matchmaker. 1.00 Masters Of Flip. 2.00 Fixer Upper. 3.00 The Block. 3.30 Getaway. 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. 5.00 Beachfront Bargain Hunt. 6.00 House Hunters Off The Grid. 6.30 House Hunters Int. 7.00 House Hunters. 7.30 The Bachelorette US. 9.30 Dinner Date. (PG) 10.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 TV Shop. 12.00 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG) 1.00 Extra. 1.30 Britain’s Got Talent. (PG) 3.00 News. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.30 Hot Seat. 6.00 NBN News. 7.00 ACA. 7.30 David Attenborough’s The Hunt. (PG) 8.40 The NRL Footy Show. (M) 10.40 The NRL Rookie. (PG) 11.40 Anger Management. (M) 12.10 The Last Ship. (MA15+) 1.00 Extra. 1.30 TV Shop. 3.30 GMA. 5.00 News. 5.30 Today.

6.00 Ent. Tonight. 6.30 The Home Team. 7.00 Ben’s Menu. 7.30 Bold. (PG) 8.00 Family Feud. 8.30 Studio 10. (PG) 11.00 The Talk. 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG) 1.00 MasterChef Aust. 2.10 Ent. Tonight. 2.40 GCBC. 3.10 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.40 Ben’s Menu. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet. 4.30 Bold. (PG) 5.00 News. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Aust. 8.40 Shark Tank. (PG) 9.40 Hawaii Five-0. (M) 11.30 The Project. 12.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Soccer. 7.00 WorldWatch. 2.00 Trespassing Bergman: 1711 Videos. (M) 3.00 Dateline. 3.30 Insight. 4.30 Wild Britain. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Food Safari. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Armada: 12 Days To Save England. 8.40 24 Hours In Emergency. (M) 9.35 Bosch. (M) 10.30 SBS World News Late Edition. 11.00 Plastic Galaxy: Star Wars Toys. 12.20 Movie: Goethe! (M) (2010) 2.15 Movie: Free Men. (M) (2011) 4.00 Salvage Hunters. 5.00 WorldWatch.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. 7.30 Doctor Who. (PG) 8.15 Doctor Who: Confidential. (PG) 8.30 Gruen Pitch Rewind. (PG) 8.45 Don’t Blame Facebook. (M) 9.30 Rise Of The Superstar Vloggers. 10.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (M) 11.00 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. (PG) 11.45 Our Crime. (M) 12.45 Doctor Who. (PG) 1.30 Doctor Who: Confidential. (PG) 1.40 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. (PG) 5.00 Children’s Programs.

6.00 Shopping. 7.00 Flushed. 7.30 Hairy Legs. 8.00 Pipsqueaks. 8.30 Harry’s Practice. 9.00 Home And Away: The Early Years. (PG) 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Pie In The Sky. (PG) 1.00 City Homicide. (M) 2.00 Dealers. (PG) 3.00 Medical Emergency. (PG) 3.30 ICU. (PG) 4.00 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 4.30 60 Minute Makeover. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Jonathan Creek. (M) 8.30 Lewis. (M) 10.30 Air Crash Investigation. (PG) 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Regular Show. (PG) 6.30 Adv Time. (PG) 7.00 The Middle. (PG) 7.30 Big Bang. (PG) 8.30 Movie: Lethal Weapon. (M) (1987) 10.50 Ghost Town Gold. (PG) 11.50 Impractical Jokers. (M) 12.30 Adv Time. (PG) 1.00 Regular Show. (PG) 1.30 Batman. (PG) 2.00 Problem Solverz. (PG) 2.30 Wild Kratts. 3.00 Yo-Kai. (PG) 3.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG) 4.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. (PG) 4.30 Sonic Boom. (PG) 4.50 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 8.30 Let’s Do Coffee. 9.00 Undercover Boss. (PG) 10.00 M*A*S*H. (PG) 11.00 Hogan’s Heroes. 12.00 Get Smart. (PG) 1.00 Matlock. (M) 2.00 Nash Bridges. (M) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 M*A*S*H. (PG) 7.30 Megafactories. 8.30 David Attenborough’s Planet Earth. Final. 9.30 Moments Of Impact. (PG) Final. 10.30 Sons Of Anarchy. (MA15+) 12.00 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 3.30 African News. 4.00 The Feed. 4.30 India’s Dancing Superstar. 5.30 If You Are The One. 6.30 American Ninja Warrior. 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. (PG) 8.50 Movie: Evil Dead. (2013) 10.35 Movie: High Lane. (MA15+) (2009) 12.05 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Criterium du Dauphiné. Stage 3. Boën-sur-Lignon to Tournon-sur-Rhône. 182 km hill stage. 1.30 The Feed. 2.00 No Limit. (M) 4.10 Deutsche Welle English News. 5.00 WorldWatch.

6.00 Children’s Programs. 10.40 The Children Of The Holocaust. (PG) 10.50 Children’s Programs. 5.50 BtN Newsbreak. 5.55 Gortimer Gibbon’s Life On Normal Street. 6.25 Hank Zipzer. 6.50 BtN Newsbreak. 7.00 Deadly Mission: Madagascar. 7.30 Outnumbered. (PG) 8.00 Spooksville. (PG) 8.20 Adventure Time. 8.45 Degrassi: Next Class. (PG) 9.05 Girls In Love. 9.30 House Of Anubis. 9.55 Rage. (PG) 10.55 Close.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 T.J. Hooker. (PG) 1.00 Bomb Hunters. (M) 2.00 American Chainsaw. (PG) 2.30 Doomsday Castle. (PG) 3.30 Hillbilly Handfishin’. (PG) 4.30 American Restoration. (PG) 5.30 American Pickers. (PG) 6.30 MythBusters. (PG) 7.30 World’s Craziest Fools. (PG) 8.00 Pawn Stars. (PG) 8.30 Storage Wars. (M) 9.30 Baggage Battles. (PG) 10.00 Hardcore Pawn. (M) 10.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Friends. (PG) 6.30 Skippy. 7.00 TV Shop. 8.00 Gilmore Girls. (PG) 9.00 TV Shop. 10.30 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 11.00 Friends. (PG) 12.00 Movie: Circus Of Fear. (PG) (1966) 1.40 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 2.10 Monarch Of The Glen. (PG) 3.20 Britain’s Biggest Hoarders. (PG) 4.30 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG) 5.30 Gilmore Girls. (PG) 6.30 Friends. (PG) 7.30 New Tricks. (M) 8.40 Midsomer Murders. (M) 10.50 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 JAG. (PG) 12.00 Judging Amy. (PG) 1.00 Medium. (M) 2.00 Becker. (PG) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG) 3.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. (PG) 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG) 5.00 Frasier. (PG) 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 The Simpsons. 7.30 How I Met Your Mother. (PG) 8.00 Futurama. 8.30 The Simpsons. (PG) 9.00 Bordertown. (M) 9.30 Bob’s Burgers. (M) Return. 10.00 Duckman. 10.30 How I Met Your Mother. (PG) 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.30 Grandmother’s Ravioli. 1.00 Eat The Street. 1.30 Man Fire Food. 2.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 2.30 Chopped Junior. 3.30 Dinner At Tiffani’s. 4.00 5 Ingredient Fix. 4.30 Brazilian Street Feasts. 5.00 Kelsey’s Essentials. 5.30 Restaurant: Impossible. 6.30 Eat The Street. 7.00 Boys Weekend. 7.30 Grandmother’s Ravioli. 8.00 Bobby Flay’s Barbecue Addiction. 8.30 Mystery Diners. 9.30 Man Fire Food. 10.00 Diners, Drive-Ins And Dives. 10.30 Late Programs.

Wednesday, June 8

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 Movie: Sundays At Tiffany’s. (M) (2010) 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Home And Away. (PG) 7.30 Highway Patrol. (PG) 8.30 Criminal Minds. (M) 10.30 Blindspot. (M) 11.30 Defiance. (M) 12.30 Shopping. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 News. 12.30 Press Club. 1.30 News. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 ABC News Afternoons With The Business. 5.00 Grandstand. 6.00 ABC News Evenings. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News Grandstand. 8.00 The Business. 9.00 ABC National News. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 The Bachelorette US. 2.00 Dinner Date. (PG) 3.00 The Block. (PG) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG) 5.00 Hotel Impossible. (PG) 6.00 House Hunters Off The Grid. 6.30 House Hunters Int. 7.00 House Hunters. 7.30 Flipping Out. 8.30 Million Dollar Listing NY. (M) 9.30 Million Dollar Listing. 10.30 Late Programs. PMI

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3/07/15 2:55 PM


Cheeky Read carefully (past tense) Corruption Humorous Flank Habituated Transport company

21 22

Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

WEEKLY CROSSWORD

No. 3315

24 25 28 30 31

SUDOKU

Normal Stump Religious fanatic Couriers Shelter Pictures Unclad Monasteries

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 9

Resembling apes or monkeys 29 Erase 31 Cover 32 Kill by hanging 34 Informal greeting Thursday 2 June, 2016 37 Badges of authorisation (Abbrev.) 28

23

Difficulty: Hard

No. 1094

We want your feedback! Tell us in 25 words or less what you love or dislike most about Your Local Independent and go in the draw to win a Gold Coast Accommodation package. Name:

Across 3 Dirigible 8 Physical form 10 Australian birds 12 Brawl 14 Firm 16 Associate as a member 17 Information (informal) 18 Circular arrangement 19 Horse 21 Cheeky 22 Read carefully (past tense) 24 Corruption 25 Humorous 28 Flank 30 Habituated 31 Transport company Copyright © Reuben’s Puzzles www.reubenspuzzles.com.au

33 35 36 38 39 40 41

Exclamations of realisation To the smallest degree possible Faculty of sight Partake of nutrition Ogled Small, upper room Mercenary killer

doWN 1 Normal 2 Stump 3 Religious fanatic 4 Couriers 5 Shelter 6 Pictures 7 Unclad 9 Monasteries

11 13 15 20 22 23 24 26 27 28 29 31 32 34 37

Church councils High-pitched bark Rend Animal that chews the cud Photograph (informal) Series of eight notes Short tracks for shunting trains Tousles Example Resembling apes or monkeys Erase Cover Kill by hanging Informal greeting Badges of authorisation (Abbrev.)

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No. 3315

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THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

CLASSIFIEDS 02 6583 9088 PUBLIC NOTICES ORLA Organ

Owners and Players Please contact 0432 183 701

FOR SALE BEST OF James Herriot with colour prints. Hardback $20 Ph: 6585 5883 BOOKS, “BONES” series by Kathy Reichs, 13 for $25. Ph: 6583 5131

ELDERLY LADY keyboard player wanted to form duo with drummer/vocalist to entertain at Aged Care Centres. Ph.: Don 6582 6749

BOOKS BY Wilbur Smith, 13 for $25, also assorted others inc Ludlum, Clavell, $2 ea. Ph: 6583 5131

HOUSE/PET SITTER wanted between 6 July until 10 August. Ph: 0449 255 393

BOOK SHELVES 2 hole $15 3 hole $20 3 hole long $25. 4 of the 2 hole shelves available Ph: 0427 173 030

FOR SALE 1MTR HIGH ficus in 50cm sq, red ceramic pot, $50. Ph: 6585 5908 1,000 PIECE jigsaw puzzles. Ex cond $3 each Ph: 0428 530 401 6584 9565 2 BAR Bromic indoor gas heater, hardly used, downsizing, $150ono. Ph: 6559 9726 2 COLEMAN sun lounges and carry bags, red/grey, $40 each ono. Ph: 6584 6114 2 SEATER couch, spotless, beige. Excellent condition $75 Ph: 6584 9575 3 NEW Titanium clubs, 1-3 and 5, large leather bag, all brand new, great value, $200. Ph: 6584 6368 A&Y GEUSHER jacket, (38), front zip, (dress-up). Ph: 6585 4612 ADRIANO ZUMBO desserts cookbook, cost $50, new, $10. Ph: 0411 040 888 AIR COMPRESSOR 400l/min, excellent cond, hose, spray gun and tyre gauge incl, $325. Ph: 6582 0074 ANIMAL CAGE metal 1.1m x .65m. Retail $195 sell $95 Ph: 6585 5883 ANTIQUE TIMBER mirror, 76cmx46cm, $50. Ph: 6585 5908 ANIQUE DOLLS all types and sizes Ph: 6584 2932 ANTIQUE DOLLS pram ex cond. Ph: 6584 2932 ANTIQUE SEWING machine, jones cabinet, antique shoe maker, 2x retro stools, pine coffee table, 4 door chiswell cabinet. PH: 0421 020 649 AVOCA SURFMASTER fishing reel, used, $70 ono. Ph: 0402 141 231 AVON COLLECTABLE perfume bottles $10 each Ph: 6585 5883 BBQ 3 burner. 1 on side. Full gas bottle and cover $100 Ph: 0411 094 878 BBQ, MATADOR Classic 4, s/ steel hood, wok burner, on cabinet with black glass doors, little use, ex cond, $300. Ph: 6581 1419

FOR SALE

DOG KENNEL wooden $50 Ph: 6585 5883

SEWING MACHINE Bernina 730 record. 20 stitches, serviced. $200 Ph: 6559 4196

LADIES BICYCLE 26inch, 15 speed, carryall, detachable box, helmet, security chain lock, $60. Ph: 6584 4638

SOFA BED A1 blue and bone check $60 Ph: 0411 485 652

DOOR INTERNAL house door, 820 x 1040, painted, White enamel with white ceramic knobs, $25. Ph: 0422 987 743 DOUBLE BED base, black metal, timber slats, $20, Dunbogan. Ph: 0418 278 706 DRESSING TABLE white, 130cm long Ph: 6582 0898 ELECTRIC BLOWER Pope $40 Ph: 0411 094 878

LADIES CLOTHING large quantity, ex boutique, all large sizes, must go. Ph: 6582 2267 LADIES MOUNTAIN trail bike. Perfect condition plus extras $65ono Ph: 0429 330 593 LAWN MOWER Tractor. Ride on MTD yard machine 12inch cutter, vgc $750 Ph: 6585 0799

ELECTRIC FRYPAN $15, rice cooker $8, sandwich toaster $8, excellent condition. Ph: 0414 821 088

BUILDING MATERIALS red shed and cattle yard Ph: 6585 8257

FOLD OUT lounge handy spare bed vgc $250 Ph: 0427 173 030

LAZ-BOY GENUINE leather suite, 2 seater and 3 seater with pouffe, dark brown, $950. Ph: 0422 987 743

CARIBEE BACK Pack, ABS, Aust made, suit Backpacker, used for 1 trip 3 weeks, $65. Ph: 0422 987 743

FOX SKINS tanned Ph: 0408 070 260

LCD COMPUTER screen, 19”, new cond, $55. Ph: 6586 3998

CHILDS SMIGGLE back pack, unused, $15. Ph: 0413 478 873

FRENCH LITHOGRAPH “Colonne Morris”, Andre Renoux, number, signed, frame, $525. Ph: 0411 040 888

LEATHER RECLINERS (4), forest green, as new, $1,500 ono. Ph: 6584 6114

COLEMAN PADDED chairs x 2. !0kg weight $40 each Ph: 6584 6114

FRIDGE C’VAN domestic 90L 3 way. Good condition $300 Ph: 6582 2499

COLLAPSIBLE CANVAS awning 3.5m long, blue & white striped, good cond, $150. Ph: 6566 9350

FUTONS x 2 $50 each. VGC Ph: 0431 325 095

COLLECTABLE BALMAIN Tigers Poster mounted on board, pictures of all the legends, Ben Elias, Steve Roach, Gary Jack, Wayne Pearce, Gary Freeman, Bruce McGuire, Tim Brasher & Paul Sironen, balmain logo in centre, reluctant sale, $150. Ph: Jeff 0408 722 331 COLLECTABLES RARE Balmain Tiger Jacket, black satin look nylon, embroidered logo front & back, size medium, has been worn a few times but is in ex cond, reluctant sale. Ph: Jeff 0408 722 331 COLLECTABLES RETRO Balmain Tigers Jersey, size Large 3/4 sleeves, good cond, has been worn a few times, $70. Ph: Jeff 0408 722 331 COLLECTABLE THE History of Balmain ‘Tigers’ book by Alan Whitiker published in 1988, excellent cond, reluctant sale, $60. Ph: Jeff 0408 722 331 COMMODE OVER toilet seat as new $175 for both no use for them in as new condition Ph: 0427 173 030

GARDEN GATE stained pine, Windsor Profile Pickets fitted with slide bolt & hinges 880 W x 910 H, as new, $55. Ph: 0422 987 743 GAZEBO 3M x 3m with rear panel, green & white, $25. Ph: 0422 987 743 GITANO LEATHER vest black, (38), $10. Ph: 6585 4612 GLASS BRICK panel. Aluminum frame 1480 x 1480 $350 Ph: 6582 2499 GLASS TINTED smoky panels. 9 various sizes 890/2630 – 5mm to 10mm $20 each Ph: 6585 7118 GLASS TOP table and two chairs, outdoors, $25. Ph: 6583 9834 GOLF CLUBS large bag, buggy, 3 Taylor Made clubs 1-3 and 5,10 Titleist irons, all very good cond, $150. Ph: 6584 6368 GRIMMS FAIRYTALES with 16 colour plates by Harry G Theaker $20 Ph: 6585 5883 GUITAR WASHBURN 12 string, acoustic, as new, in hard case, $675. Ph: 0402 248 711

CORNER TV cabinet FREE Ph: 6582 0898

GYM BENCH 14 station with weights, $130. Ph: 6584 9884

CORNINGWARE DISHES and accessories $15 each Ph: 6585 5885

HEATER LINDA 10 bar, as new Ph: 6583 2504

COMPRESSION SOCKS new in box, cost $80, knee high, unisex, $20. Ph: 0411 040 888 CONSUL GAS fridge rough and ready $350 Ph: 6587 5165 CRICKET BOOKS Bradman, Hughes, Grace. 3 new books $10 for 3 Ph: 0411 040 888

BEER FRIDGE good condition $60 Ph: 0427 347 961

CRUTCHES NEW medium elbow adjustable aluminium $35ono Ph: 0407 556 550 or 6581 1294

BELFAST LEATHER jacket & pants, black, front zip, (80cm). Ph: 6585 4612

FOR SALE LADIES 8 speed bike with helmet, good condition, $30. Ph: 0414 821 088

BOOKCASE TV Unit white, vgc 2 x 2 metres. Takes large tv in centre. Easy to dismantle $90 Ph: 6582 5885

BEATRIX POTTER tales by Margaret Lane. 4 colour and 16 black and white pates. Hardback $20 Ph” 6585 5883

BEER FRIDGE $100 Ph: 0424 282 981

FOR SALE

CYCAD PALMS large, in pots, $140 for the 2. Ph: 0421 696 233 DOG KENNELS plastic x 2 $50 each Ph: 6585 5883

HEAVY DUTY battery 12 volt $50 Ph: 0411 094 878 HEAVY GREY Army Coat, $20. Ph: 6585 4612 HOMYPED SHOES Size 9. Mushroom colour. Never worn $50 Ph: 6559 4196 JAVI LOUNGE 30s lounge, 2 chairs, $450 ono. Ph: 0402 093 555

LORD SAFE combination and key safe has tray and places to hang keys 14 h x14d x 16w inches selling cheap $150 Ph: 0427 173 030 LOUNGE CHAIRS 1 x single, 1 x double. Beige, excellent condition $400 Ph: 0427 335 777 MCA LEATHER jacket, black, (M), front zip, $20. Ph: 6585 4612 MEXICAN CHIMENEA original. Imported from Mexico. Decorative pottery. On stand $200 ono Ph: 6566 8788

SHOWER PANEL and door. Semi frameless, brand new. Decina ezi clean 900mm x 900Smm $300 Ph: 0401 814 855 SINGLE ENSEMBLE bed on castors. Excellent condition $30 Ph: 6583 3557 SINKERS, SNAPPER, beach ball. All sizes. Make offer Ph: 0408 070 260 SLEEP/STUDY bunk VGC $80 Ph: 0431 325 095 SMALL WHITE dropside table $15 Ph: 6581 3581

POWER PACK Built in 6 stage charger, 10 amp 12v socket. LED battery charge indicator. Suits all batteries up to 130AH. As new $120 Ph: 5511 3204 PLUSH RECLINER brown, as new, hardly used paid $599 sell $275 ono Ph: 0427 173 030 PRESSURE COOKER Prestige. Never used $20 Ph: 6585 5883 QUEEN BED ensemble vgc & clean $250 Ph: 0432 183 701 RJAYS WINTER jacket, red, (M), front zip, $30. Ph: 6585 4612 ROLLATOR as new cost $139 selling for $90 Ph: 0427 173 030

KING SINGLE valance, cost $40, beige, fitted, new, $10. PH: 0411 040 888

ROUND DINING table and six chairs, good cond, $100. Ph: 6582 5784

KITCHEN TABLE and 4 Chairs hardly used need it gone $ 100 Ph: 0427 173 030

ROWING MACHINE brand new, $150. Ph: 0407 819 419 Place your FREE AD here

WHEEL CHAIR foldable and collapsible as new hardly been used$110 ono. Ph: 0427 173 030 WHEELCHAIR LIGHT weight, collapsible, $130 ono. PH: 0431 438 183 WINE MAKING equipment. From grape to the bottle. All you need $1,000ono Ph: 6585 7118 WINTER JACKET (M), zip out thermal lining, black, 3M scotchlite, $40. Ph: 6585 4612 WEBER CHARCOAL grill $90 Ph: 0424 282 981 WELDER TRANS MIG130, new helmet and wire $450 Ph: 6582 2499

AUSSIE TRAVELLER awning anti flap kit for caravan Ph: 0428 414 133

STERO/TV CABINET $50. Ph: 0431 325 095

CARAVAN STORAGE 16ft pop top. Ph: 6585 5908

SUN LOUNGES Coleman, red foxy lady + 1 grey carry bag $40 each Ph: 6584 6114

COINS GOLD, silver, collections or loose, world or Aust, up most privacy. Ph: 0418 965 650

TABLE SAW with stand good working order, $90. Ph: 6559 6413

ELEVATED ELECTRIC bench top stove with oven, hot plates. Good condition Ph: 6561 7132

TECHNIKS TURNTABLE very good cond, NB: frequency generator, b’casts on Fm, $220. PH: 0411 040 888

HARDWOOD PALLETS can pick up. Ph: 0448 420 067

TENT CANVAS 6 person. Excellent condition $125 Ph: 0401 741 622

POOL ROLLER vgc. Half price. New $80 Ph: 0421 166 265

WALL UNIT book/tv cabinet. Rosewood. $85 Ph: 6581 2353

SRI LANKAN cookbook by master chefs Kumar, new, $10. Ph: 0411 040 888

MOBILITY SCOOTERS 1.8 Hoprider Delux 8895L, $950, Pride Celebrity Delux XL, $1,900, must sell. Ph: 0427 173 030

PALM MAJESTIC advanced. Free to remove and re home from South West Rocks. Easy access to remove. Ph: 0428 566 678

FOR SALE

WHITE TABLE & chairs $40 Ph: 6583 3702

TENNIS RACQUETS wooden, strung, many brands, $5each. Ph: 6585 5908

PANASONIC DIGITAL cordless answering system, as new, $25. Ph: 0413 478 873

Text: 0456 454 749 Fax: 02 6583 7253 Email: info@pminews.com.au

SOFA BED foral, double, metal frame, good cond, $90. Ph: 6559 5404

MILK CANS x 2 10 gallons and 4 lids Ph: 6550 4003 Comboyne

O’NEAL RACEPROVEN large carry bag, boot dept, black, $15. Ph: 6585 4612

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TERRACOTTA BIRDBATH & 2 ceramic pot 30x30cm, $50. Ph: 6584 6114 TREADMILL OLD fashion in good working order $70 Ph: 0449 255 393 TREADMILL ELECTIRC as new $480 Ph: 6583 1364 THREE FOOT storage cabinets x 2 $5 each Ph: 6581 3581 TV 42inch Toshiba flat screen, excellent condition. See working $200 Ph: 0428 414 133 TWO FUTONS convert to double bed, $50 each. Ph: 0431 325 095 TWO POST and rail lounge chairs, $30 each. Ph: 6582 5784 VACUUM CLEANER MultiCyclonic with instructions, ex cond, $30. Ph: 6585 4612 VACCUUM CLEANER bagless ex cond $40ono Ph: 6581 3485 VARIOUS PICTURES Ph: 0431 325 095 VICTA LAWN mower. 4 stroke. Vgc $100 Ph: 0416 423 456 VICTA LAWN mower twin stroke ?$250 onon Ph: 0405 763 530 WASHBURN 12 string acoustic guitar. As new in hard case $675 Ph: 0402 248 721 WALKING MACHINE $125 Ph: 0431 325 095 Place your FREE AD here

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LINEN CUPBOARD for linen Ph: 6556 5443 PLANT POTS Large, ornamental. Bonsai or Chinese Ph: 6581 3323 SMALL WOOD fire in working cond. Ph: 0467 304 386 STORAGE/GARAGE in Laurieton area. Pay in advance Ph: 0418 965 650 WOOD FIRE Ph: 6556 5443

Nissan 370Z 2010 ZZ-0370 – RWC, Low 30,600 Kms mainly long trips. Manual, 12 mths reg, Brand new rear tyres. Always garaged, never driven hard. Full Nissan history from new. Immac cond inside out, will impress the fussiest buyer. Owner upgrading. No joy riders pls, $35,990. Ph: 0427 240 576 MITSUBISHI PAJERO 2002 manual, 4x4, 1 seat, good tyres, regularly services BR 32 YF $9,500ono Ph: 0416 116 600 NISSAN MICRA ST 2013, auto, silver, recently detailed, 1 owner, log books, serviced, no accidents, 38,000km, rego Jan 2017, CVT09C, $9,000 ono. Ph: 0401 877 984 SUZUKI CINO 98, 5sp hatch, 10yrs in storage, $30 = 650km, 138,000km, new tyres, battery, muffler & plates, will swap for van with rego. CG81QK, $2,850 ono. Ph: 0448 248 550

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LOST AND FOUND KIA CAR key found on Ocean Drive, Lake Cathie. Ph: 0408 656 886 LOST ON Sunday 29th May at 11.30am, antique Electronic Mosquito Repeller, on Edmund Barton statue, Town Green. Ph: 6584 2805 LOST PRINCESS Parrot Lighthouse beach area, mums baby of 10years, need people power to get home again, URGENT! Ph: 0413 395 007

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MOTORCYCLES 150G Step thru 2010. Rego 04/17 Extras 4356kms QRV 14 $1500 Ph: 0435 575 391 MOTO V5 250 auto 2012, 1,000kms 10 months rego, $2,800 Ph: 6566 8788 or 0417 498 418 YAMAHA FJR130A 2010 Tourer 40kms As New, ABS, traction control, TBox panniers, GPS, heated grips. Must See AIK 12 $9,999ono 0418 368 287 SUZUKI GS500 new tyres, carry rack and new bags, tank protector. Alarm. 12 months rego. Good condition $2,900 Ph: 6581 3443

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Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

CLASSIFIEDS 02 6583 9088 TRAILERS

PETS AND SUPPLIES

6X4 MARLIN camper trailer, q/ bed, annex included, all poles and ropes, $3,000 neg. Ph: 0438 201 766

CARAVAN/CAMPING 6X4 CAMPER trailer. 18” deep, queen bed, annex included, $3,000. Ph: 0438 201 766 CAMPER TRAILER as new, fully screened queen bed, 2x awnings, kitchen, water tank, swivel, jockey wheel, $4,200 ono. Ph: 0434 024 208

DOG GROOMING washing & clipping. Ph: Belinda 0409 837 337 GUINEA PIGS in various colour combinations, selling fast so don’t miss out, will deliver to you. Ph: 6550 4145

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3 Week Courses Private Lessons Available

COROMAL LIFESTYLE bunks, r/ out awning, new full annex, sleeps 6, electric brakes on duel axel, plus heaps of extras, $26,500. Ph: 0419 017 346 JAYCO ELITE 2010 Campervan vgc, new full annexe, easy to tow by family car, some extras $10,750 Ph: 0408 428 911 JAYCO WESTPORT 5.8m tandem p/top, very good cond, new awning, full annex, a/con, h/r towing aid, 1/17 rego, $14,000. Ph: 6584 7590

MARINE & ACCESSORIES 3.8M SEA Al boat heavy duty. 15hp Johnson motor, near new trailer both registered plus extras $3,200 Ph: 0481 299 673 4.4M FG half cab cruiser with 50hp motor & trailer all registered, $3,500. Ph: 6559 6442 or 0427 596 442 12FT TINNY & 15hp Yamaha, registered trailer and all gear, $2,500. Ph: 6581 1100 12FT TINNY, trailer and 5hp Mercury motor, $800. Ph: 6559 6442 or 0427 596 442 30FT HOUSEBOAT twin hulls. Good condition. Registered $10,000 Ph: 0447 674 415

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MATURE GUY needs work, odd jobs, will try anything, reasonable rates. Ph: 0438 980 145

ROOM TO rent, $150pw, working female pref, close to town and beach. Ph: 0423 741 169

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POSITONS VACANT Asbestos Removal Labourer Asbestos removal labourer required for casual work. Must have Bonded Asbestos Removal ticket and be able to work unsupervised.

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25

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Stay warm, save money WITH winter arriving for Hastings and Macleay residents, new research has revealed that just under half (47 per cent) of NSW households – or over a million homes– say their energy bills have increased in the past 12 months, while the majority (72 per cent) of household decision makers describe the cost of energy as expensive. Energy experts iSelect have released the results of a national Galaxy Research study assessing the attitudes and behaviours of Australians towards energy affordability. This coincides with the start of winter as Hastings and Macleay homes begin to crank up the heaters and turn on electric blankets following an extremely mild autumn. The survey also found that more and more NSW households are taking advantage of increased energy competition, with only 24 per cent of homes still on a standard retail plan without discounts. Over a third (38 per cent) of NSW households receive a discount for paying their energy bill on time, with 11 per cent on a guaranteed discount plan, while a further ten per cent receive a discount for online account management or paying by direct debit. Only 15 per cent of NSW respondents weren’t sure what kind of energy plan they are currently on. Laura Crowden, iSelect spokesperson, said the official start of winter should be a reminder for Hastings and Macleay residents to review their current energy plan. “In winter around forty per cent of your energy can be used up simply keeping your home warm, so it’s not surprising energy bills are often highest in winter,” Laura said. “Don’t get to the end of winter and then wonder why your energy bill is so high. Take action now to see if swapping to a different provider may help you avoid winter bill shock.” The survey found that NSW households are starting to shop around to find the best energy deal. “Forty-six per cent of NSW households have compared energy providers in the past two years, and of those who compared, 42 per cent or

half a million households went on to switch to a different energy provider.” Laura said taking the time to shop around isn’t just about switching, but rather finding out whether or not you are currently on the best deal. “One in five NSW households who did take the time to compare providers found they were already on the best deal,” Laura said. “While these households may not have saved any money, they did get peace of mind knowing that they should stay with their current provider.” While the majority (87 per cent) of households said they would switch energy providers in order to save money, Laura warned that price shouldn’t be the only factor when it comes to choosing the right energy plan. “On average, NSW households would need to shave $67 off their quarterly energy bill to be convinced to switch providers, although some households would switch for as little as a $20 quarterly saving,” Laura said. “However, sometimes the cheapest plan may not be the best value option over the longer term. For example, many people get enticed by generous payon-time discounts but if they often pay their bills late, they could end up paying a lot more than expected.” Laura said Hastings and Macleay residents should instead look for a plan that offers the right balance between price and flexibility. “Consider flexible payment options, such as paying your bills online, or the ability to pay your bills in installments to avoid the bill shock that comes from unexpected large quarterly bills.” Laura said it was worrying that 12 per cent of households who had taken the time to compare were putting off actually changing providers because they felt it was too much hassle to switch. “Switching energy providers is a really simple process that could end up saving your significantly over the long term. Many calls with our energy experts only take around 20 minutes.”


26

Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

Some ‘ruff’ training FOR Mia Wilbow’s love of running, she has the perfect training partner. “I just love running and hurdles!” says Mia. And run she does. Every morning, Mia can be seen running on Nobby’s Beach at Port Macquarie with her neighbour’s three-year-old dachshund, Lexie, tearing up and down the beach, legs, and ears flying. “Lexie makes me run faster,” explains Mia, a Year 7 student at Mackillop College. Twelve-year-old Mia has had an excellent season with Little Athletics and won the under-13s 80m and 200m hurdles, 100m, 200m, 1500m, 3000m races, high jump, long jump and javelin events. “I managed to jump 1.30m, which was a personal best.” Mia also does well at cross-country running, winning Mackillop’s under-13s age group and achieving seventh at the Diocesan level. “My hero is Sally Pearson as I just love hurdles – I’ve made a set in the grassed area on my street so I can practise on them. “I’d love to be a state champion but my dream will be to go to the Olympics one day,” says Mia.

Taking his best shot By CHRISTINA PARKIN

FOR seventeen-year-old, Jackson Jubelin, pictured, a career being a professional golfer would be his perfect life. “I’ve loved playing golf since I was 12 when Dad and I started to play and muck around,” says Jackson, now in Year 12 at Mackillop College. “I took it up as a school sport, and when I was 14, I got my first handicap and achieved a single figure handicap pretty quickly. “I now play off a +1, whereas Dad’s handicap is a +15.”

Bowls ROUND UP North Haven Women’s

LUCKY winners last Thursday were Meryl Wood, Judy Beckett, Rhondda Brown and Judith Clarke. Lucky runners-up were June Kirkland, Nola Morgan and Betty Lane.

Port Macquarie City Men’s

THURSDAY’S social winners were R Carkeek – J Carn – P Gunn and Friday’s social bowls winners were John Rossiter – Tom Smith with the consolation going to Ian Handley – Brian Crutcher. Forty eight bowlers played last Sunday in rather chilly conditions. Lucky envelopes to K Carmody, L Lennox, H Durrant, E Layton, J Barry, B Code, R McCrow, F Martin, J Iacono, P Gunn, J Scholz. Congratulations to Keith Ashdown and John O’Neill who are our Major Pairs winners for 2016. In a windy final Keith and John played the better bowls on the day against Terry Merchant and Wayne Anderson to win the game 21 - 9. In first round games of the Minor Pairs Paul Crosariol d Brian King, Tony Mallia d Graham Barry, Ken Dinham d Peter Gleeson with Geoff Bynon d Eddie King.

Port Macquarie Panthers

NO men’s bowls were played last Tuesday, May 24, due to the Ladies State Carnival. The winners in the Thursday afternoon social bowls were Gerard Grovenor - Terry Miles and John O’Neill. The runners up were Geoff Bynon - Paul Sloan and Ken Whittaker with the consolation prize going to Karl Toole - Alan Kesby and Mal McCall.

Lake Cathie Ladies

THE lucky rink winners last Saturday, May 28, were Moya Harper, Barbara Roberson and Kay Deas with the consolation prize going to Helene White and Hazel Durrant, who has transferred to our club.

Westport Women’s

WE had quite a busy week with the State Championships and social bowls for the ladies on Thursday saw the winners J Fulford, M Camilleri

Jackson won both the Open and Junior Lower North Coast District Championships at Tuncurry recently with an outstanding round of 2 under par 70, and played well at the Macquarie International Championships at Belmont. Jackson’s recent successful form is a continuation of when he was selected in the NSW team to play at the 2015 Australian All Schools Championship in Canberra, where he won four out of his five matches and was equal champion for the NSW Combined Catholic Colleges (NSWCCC). “I’ll give it my best shot to play professionally

and M Glover. Runners-up were F Laut, Y Hansell and A Hughes, nails went to M Madely. Sunday had a cold, fine day and the winners were K Wilson, B Roach and C Buttworth.

Wauchope Men’s

LAST Saturday, May 28, saw 5 games in the first round of this year’s Club Major Singles Championships. All matches were tightly contested with Ray Houghton def Bill Brooker 31-27, John Borg def John Lewis 32-12, Adolf Giacovani def Tim Renshall 32-7, Col Parkes def Jim Hopcroft 31-28 and Paul Harrison def Steve Latham 31-22. Match of the day was Col and Jim who contested 41 ends which included 27 single scores. In much better conditions on Sunday there were another 5 major singles games. Peter Ostler def Lance Wills 31-18, Ken Ansley def Phil Saville 31-30, Bill Reid def Alan Ebert 3312, Peter Jones def Paul Styles 32-26 and Peter McDonald def Dennis Simpson 31-20. Game of the round was Ken and Phil who needed 37 ends to get a result. Phil got away to a 6 shot lead early but was slowly pegged back by Ken with the score 30-29 to Phil on 36th end. On the next and what turned out to be the last end, Phil held 3 shots and game but with his final bowl Ken played into the head and scattered Phil’s 3 bowls giving him 2 shots and game. Friday’s nominated pairs gala had a good turnout of 24 players. Winners for a change were Ken and Barbie with +20, who played some visiting friends of Bill Geary who were up here from the Central Coast. Runners up were Bill Brooker and Jim Hopcroft +19.

Lake Cathie Men’s

MATCHES were not scheduled for the regular Mixed Social Bowls this Monday due to all three greens being allocated for the Women’s Bowls NSW Annual State Carnival matches being held in Port Macquarie throughout the week. Thursdays Men’s Muffti Social Bowls produced a winning triples team of Bob Thompson, Col Winner and Les Allport. The triples team placed as runners-up were Peter Harris, Vic Austin and Neil Proctor.

for as long as I can keep golf in my life. “My parents are really supportive and happy to see how far I can go with it - perhaps the Olympics in four years. “Gordon McCallum, the Port Macquarie Golf Club Professional coaches me, but at the moment I’m trying to play as many tournaments as possible, balanced with my HSC.” So what is it about golf that attracts Jackson’s commitment? “I like the way it comes down to me and the only person I have to rely on is me,” he says.

GOLF ROUND UP Wauchope Ladies Veterans

LAST Monday thirty five ladies played a 9 hole 4BBB in perfect conditions. Winners on the day with a fantastic score of 26 points were Robyn Maloney and Mary Harrison, runners-up were Jan Grant and Dawn Abell scoring 24 points. There were no NTPs so we gave out four extra balls in the ball competition because of this error. Daily ball winners were: B Ezzy and J Ottaway, L Kelly and I Gavin 22 points; C Slater and A Rudd 21 points; C Bentley and R Wilcox, J Semchyshyn and K Fowler 20 points; K Andrews and L Lyons 19 points on a countback. Next Monday is a 9 hole stroke event.

Port Macquarie Veteran’s Golf

TUESDAY, May 24, we played a single stableford with 131 starters in near perfect conditions. The best result of the day came from Ross Harder with 41 points. Today’s results are as follows: A grade winner Peter Tetfong 36 pts on a c/b, runner up Ed Williams 36; B grade winner Bob Hood 37 pts on a c/b, runner up Allan White 37 pts on a c/b; C1 grade winner Alan Holt 39 pts, runner up Ralph Cooney 38 pts; C2 Grade winner Ross Harder 41 pts, runner up Geoffrey Campbell 40 pts. NTPs: 5th - Forrest Niven 450 cm; 7th Russell Pirie 307 cm; Kel Treymayne 246 cm; Colin Morgan 285 cm. Ball Rundown 34 pts on a c/b. Next week’s event is a 2BBB with a single in conjunction.

Wauchope Men’s Veterans

SCORES in the 40’s across all grades, an Eagle on the ninth hole by Garry Duncan set the tempo for last Tuesday, May 24, Single Stableford event. The winners were as follows: A grade was won by Garry Duncan with 41 pts as well as the magnificent ‘Eagle’ on the 9th hole. Runner up was Bob Maggs with 38 pts and in third place was Ken Gallie with 37 pts; B grade was won by David Bowen with 42 pts with runner up

being Bob Waterhouse with 39 pts. In third place was Vic Riley with 38 pts; C grade was won by Bernie Quain with 40 pts on a c/b to Peter Jaye also with 40 pts. In third place was David Martin with 39 pts. NTP was again conducted over three grades on holes four and eighteen with an across the field comp on hole 7. On the fourth, A grade went to Roy Stokes with 3.73m, B grade was won by Rob Cannon with 50cm and C grade was won by Bert Splithof with 1.25m. On the eighteenth, A grade was won by Roy Stokes yet again with 52cm, B grade went to Mick Privett with 3.1m and C grade went to Don Waugh with 81cm. In the ball comp, balls went down to 33 on a c/b in A grade, 33 on a c/b in B grade and 32 on a c/b in C grade. This gave 40 players each a bonus ball for the day. Next week’s event is a Single Stableford game sponsored by Fred Ertl, Rob Cannon, David Crees and Russell Spooner.

Wauchope Ladies

DEFENDING champion Jane Horne came home strong in the second round of the 2016 54-hole Championships to record a great 78 gross to pull ahead of Jo Horton, followed by Barb Varcoe. Division 2 leader Finola Moorehead consolidated her lead with 95 over Jenny Taylor, who scored 100 off the stick. Division 3 is very closely contested, with three players tightly locked within three shots. Pat Smith leads the way, followed by Wendy Wallis and Jeanette Hardy. After 36 Holes, Jane Horne leads the way in Div. 1 with 161, Jo Horton 172, and Barb Varcoe 178. Div. 2 leader Finola Moorehead has a gross of 192, Jenny Taylor 200, followed by Leonie Lyon 201. In Division 3 Pat Smith leads with 216, Wendy Wallis 217 and Jeanette Hardy 218. Daily results on Wednesday, May 25, were gross winner in Div. 1 Jane Horne 78, nett winner Jo Hudson 76 and Wendy Price runner up with 77 on a count back. Division 2 gross winner was Finola Moorehead with 95. Net score was taken out by Leonie Lyon with 73, followed by Robyn Maloney 77 on a count back for the runner up voucher. Gross winner in Div. 3 was awarded to Jeanette Hardy 105, net winner Margaret Houghton 75 and runner up Anne Rudd with 76.


Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

27

footytips

What scars are left post SOO? THE first State of Origin is done and dusted, but the repercussions on the NRL comp will be felt for several days. How players pulled up after that game will have a huge bearing on this weekend’s clashes. Last weekend (Rd 12) Your Local Independent scored three from four, with the Broncos’ narrow loss to the Tigers the only hiccup. A quick glance at the ladder before we delve into this weekend’s round shows both the Broncos and North Queensland have stumbled from top spot, giving way to the Storm and the Sharks – both the latter teams also have a game in hand. The next few weeks will be a very testing time – as always – for both the northern teams. The Sharks are making every post a winner, but face another stern test this weekend against the Dogs. Remember, as Newcastle almost showed against the Eels, there are no certain results in this game. Let’s throw the dice for Round 13 (seven games and the action starts Friday night): Raiders v Eagles (Friday, June 3, 7.50pm, GIO Stadium, Canberra): Manly have had a week off and that is a major bonus at this stage of the year. However the Raiders are travelling very well, as indicated by their solid win over the Dogs last weekend. The Eagles are also due a couple of players back from injury – Koroisau and Mateo. But this is at cold Canberra. So the pendulum swings back to them. • Your Local Independent tips: Raiders Warriors v Broncos (Saturday, June 4, 3pm, Mt Smart Stadium, Auckland): This game is a real concern for the Broncos. The Warriors have had a week off, while the Broncos players have either been on NRL or Origin duty. Either way they will be sore. Although the Warriors’ form has been predictably unpredictable, any game against this team hurts. They are always physical.

ROUND 13

Roosters

3rd – 6th June

Friday 3rd June, 7.50pm, GIO Stadium Raiders vs Sea Eagles Saturday 4th June, 3pm, Mt Smart Stadium Warriors vs Broncos Saturday 4th June, 5.30pm, 1300 Smiles Stadium Cowboys vs Knights Saturday 4th June, 7.30pm, AAMI Park Storm vs Panthers Sunday 5th June, 4pm, Allianz Stadium Roosters vs Wests Tigers Sunday 5th June, 6.30pm, nib Stadium Rabbitohs vs Titans Monday 6th June, 7pm, ANZ Stadium Bulldogs vs Sharks

Dr Sagnik Sengupta Raiders

Allianz Stadium, Sydney): Very tough call. Both teams are in the bottom half of the ladder after disappointing their fans thus far. One factor is the Roosters are coming off a bye, while the Tigers have had a tough win over the Broncs. However instead of a tired Tigers outfit, expect them to come out with increased belief. • Your Local Independent tips: Tigers Rabbitohs v Titans (Sunday, June 5, 6.30pm, nib Stadium, Perth): Both these teams are sitting on 10 points and are next to each other on the ladder. At the start of the season you would have predicted ‘Souths by how far’. However with Reynolds and Inglis expected to have tired legs from Origin, this one could go either way. The Titans have the potential to spoil, and remember, this game is in Perth and the Titans are used to travelling big miles every other weekend. Toss a coin … • Your Local Independent tips: Titans Bulldogs v Sharks (Monday, June 6, 7pm,

It is also in Auckland. If ever the Warriors were going to catch the Broncs, this is it. Go for the upset! • Your Local Independent tips: Warriors Cowboys v Knights (Saturday, June 4, 5.30pm, 1300 Smiles Stadium, Townsville): Despite the Knights almost beating the Eels last weekend, there will be no fairytale at Smiles Stadium. The Cows may have injury concerns after Origin, but they will be able to limp past the Knights. • Your Local Independent tips: Cowboys Storm v Panthers (Saturday, June 4, 7.30pm, AAMI Park, Melbourne): Another very interesting one. If Cronk is struggling injury-wise after Origin then the Panthers could steal this one. However Melbourne are sharing the ladder lead and are at home, so deserve respect. • Your Local Independent tips: Storm Roosters v Tigers (Sunday, June 5, 4pm,

Roosters

ANZ Stadium, Sydney): Great game to finish the round. The Bulldogs will be hungry to avenge their last round loss, while the Sharks know they have to prove every weekend that they are real contenders. A few Origin players backing up, so late injury calls could make a difference. • Your Local Independent tips: Sharks

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Sharks

Panthers

Phone: (02) 6581 5066 193 Lake Road, Port Macquarie

Ken Little

Josh Dorrington

Caleb Rose Raiders

58 55 54 53 52 51

Raiders

Roosters

Wests Tigers

Raiders

Wests Tigers

Broncos

Titans

Broncos

Rabbitohs

Broncos

Rabbitohs

Broncos

Titans

Broncos

Rabbitohs

Cowboys

Sharks

Cowboys

Sharks

Cowboys

Sharks

Cowboys

Sharks

Cowboys

Sharks

Storm

Storm

Phone: (02) 6583 8868

46 Lord Street, Port Macquarie, NSW

Storm

Phone: (02) 6581 0081 Port Macquarie, NSW Booking App “Australia Wide Taxi”

Panthers

Storm

Phone: (02) 6585 3020

Phone: (02) 6586 4235

Phone: (02) 6583 5685

24 King St, Wauchope NSW

16 Business Cct, Wauchope, NSW

43 Munster Street, Port Macquarie

promise to provide expert honest advice and service on all your battery needs at the lowest price • Free testing and fitting • Camera • Computer • Auto • Solar set up and advice • Watches

• Marine • Fit outs • Pace Maker • Motorcycle • Dual battery systems • Dog Collar

• Golf • Phone • Cordless Drill • Caravan and Campers • Hearing Aids AND many more…

We deliver and will come to you to test, jump start or replace your battery

Open Saturday and Sunday 61 Hastings River Drive, Port Macquarie

6584 9873


28

Your Local Independent - The Hastings and The Macleay

Thursday 2 June, 2016

STOP PAYING TOO MUCH FOR POWER! 3.0 kW System

Save up to $300 per qtr

Only $2599 12 x 250 watt panels

FORGET ABOUT AN EXPENSIVE BATTERY, 20C FEED-IN-TARIFF IS AVAILABLE

HEAT

HEAT

$100 OFF

NEW 2016

EDITION

NEW 2016 EDITION $100 OFF

MAXBREEZE

®

Using the sun to keep your home cool

• Reduces heat and moisture build up • Pays for itself • Works day & night (With optional battery pack) • Latest Technology • Australian made, designed and owned

MAXLIGHT SERIES

®

The skylight without equal

• Choose Round or Square ceiling finishes • Energy Rated Skylight • Triple Lens Diffuser for optimum energy efficiency • Industry leading 15 year warranty • Don’t settle for less; Insist on Maxlight’s performance, quality, value and choice • Australian Designed, Owned and Made

SERIES

$100 offer applies to Maxlight skylights and Maxbreeze Roof Ventilation, Terms and Conditions apply. Prices are for standard Installation only, Meter not included, 20C Feed-In-Tariff for approved customers only, Fees and Charges May apply, STC’s to be assigned to SolarBright,While stock last, Feed-In-Tariff offer cannot be used in conjunction with other offers including special prices, Terms and conditions may apply

Contact Us On 6581 4649 8/35 Merrigal Rd, Port Macquarie 2444 www.solarbright.com.au I info@solarbright.com.au I facebook.com/BrightenUpAus


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