Warwick Today - 2nd December 2021

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Thursday, 2 December, 2021

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For a choice A meeting for locals to advocate for choice in the Southern Downs will be held at WIRAC on 7 December at 6:15 pm. The meeting is being held so locals can “come together with peaceful and compassionate hearts to strongly and in unity to convey to our council our volition and authorisation for freedom of choice in the Southern Downs”. Pam Burley, one of the organisers being the meeting, stated that the meeting is an opportunity for locals to be informed about what will happen on 17 December. STORY PAGE 5

Funds to flow Scots PGC goes all red for the day Queensland Reds players, Zane Nonggorr and Tuaina Tualima, accompanied by QRU Official, Kris Burton, visited Scots PGC last week as part of the “Reds to Region” tour.

Middle school students got to participate in a Q&A with Zane and Tuaina, before they swapped a red jersey for a Scots PGC one so the team can hang it up in their dress-

ing room in Brisbane and know exactly who they’re representing. See our gallery on page 12

Southern Downs Regional Council approved 17 Community Drought Recovery Program applications, for a total of $200,981, at the recent Ordinary Council Meeting. Councillor Ross Bartley stated that looking through the applications, he stated that there were some pretty good choices there and they were very fair and evenly spread throughout the community. He raised concerns about the buying of equipment by the deadline of March 2022, stating shortages may prevent this. STORY PAGE 6

‘Just want to live’ “We’ve been dealing with this since March last year,” she says. Christine says they’ve had to negotiate a sort of half-system. “Most of the police on the border are very good,” she says. “But it’s the constant wondering if when you get to the border you’re going to get the one who’s going to be hard.” “Lots of other locals have really struggled with the stress of getting to the border and not knowing if you’re going to get back over.”

She says it feels like they’re being required to jump through more and more hoops. When the border rules changed recently, Christine says she had an hour and a half hour of notice. “Teachers weren’t classed as essential workers then,” she says. So for six or seven weeks, she stayed in Warwick. She couldn’t get home to Old Koreelah, because she’d need her vaccinations to get over.

Now she has her vaccinations, they’re being asked to get tested every time they want to cross the border for non-essential purposes. Christine says it feels like they haven’t been given the choice, and have to jump through whatever hoops the State Government creates. “We have no real voice because we’re not Queensland voters, even though we basically function as a Queensland community,” she says. STORY PAGE 4

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A border resident has spoken out about the struggles those on the border face, stating they can more easily go and see their daughter and grandchildren in London than they can family in Queensland. With the Christmas period coming up, locals have raised concerns over the impacts mandates and border rules will have on locals. Christine Peterson lives in Old Koreelah but works in Warwick, and travels across the border pretty much every day.

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INSIDE TV GUIDE .............................pages 14-17 PUZZLES ................................... page 18 RURAL LINKS .......................pages 19-20 CLASSIFIEDS ............................. page 23

The editor’s desk

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Once again GBIP have shown a lack of courtesy and consideration towards affected landowners. A milestone in the project of ESD so significant to us affected landowners that the proponents and the CEO of the project couldnt have the decency to tell us personally. I might add that this is not the first time that we have been ignored, just one of several. A “Pause” in the project...how long..a month..three months...six months or years. Once again we are left up in the air with no end in sight. After all these years i think we are entitled to know an end date so that we can get on with our lives. We have always supported ESD even though we were to lose a portion of our property only to find out Christmas Eve that GBIP wanted the whole property. Shame on GBIP for your lack of compassion, consideration and courtesy. How would you like it if it was your property and it was happening to you? Jacqui and Martin Heppleston, Glen Aplin

Clean green hydroelectric power Rightly or wrongly the Federal Government has Telephone: 07 4661 9800 Address: 94 Palmerin St, Warwick QLD 4370 Website: WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au Editorial: Email: newsdesk@WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au Advertising: Email: advertising@WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au Classifieds: Phone: 1300 666 808 Email: sales@networkclassifieds.com.au EDITORIAL Garry Howe Group Editor E: garry.howe@StarNewsGroup.com.au T: 03 5945 0624

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signed up to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, at present there is only two reliable base load power sources that are net zero emissions that is hydroelectric and nuclear, I’m not suggesting that we go nuclear, the other is hydro or better still pump hydro. Southern Downs is extremely well situated for pump hydro, by the time the Severn River gets to Sundown it is quite a substantial river, if a dam were to be situated at the optimum site in Sundown it could provide a substantial amount of emissions free power. The Sundown dam would hold approximately twice the amount Glen Lyon dam holds, and would have > half the surface making the Sundown dam a very deep dam, the wall would be well over 120m high giving this dam enormous hydro potential, especially when coupled to another power source for pump hydro. Given the dams enormous size it could also be used for flood mitigation. Incidentally the volume of irrigation water allocated to Emu Swamp Dam would only take up the top few inches of the Sundown dam. Of course this dam won’t be built as we don’t have any visionary leaders like B Chifley, J McEwen or our lat great Queensland visionary Sir Joh, instead we get the Don Quixotes of the world “jousting with windmills”. John Salata, Glen Aplin

Right, here we go. Let’s talk about the vaccine mandate. Now, I’ve always been quite pro-vax. Straight off the bat, there it is. I got vaccinated the first chance I could. I was raised getting them, trusting science. Did you know Australia is the only country to successfully vaccinate again HPV? That’s huge! But I struggle a little bit with my thoughts on the vaccine mandate, because like a Koreelah resident put it this week, it’s all about choice. Even if you know it’s the right choice, the choice you would have made on your own had you had options, it’s the not having options that gets you. That makes you question whether it’s what you want. That being said, we always knew we were never going to reach 100 per cent. That’s the whole point. People will always be too young or too old, or have health, religious, or other reasons for not getting vaccinated. The point was for people who could and were willing to get vaccinated to do so, so we can protect those who can’t. So it seems a bit…odd to me that we’re putting in place these rules and mandates, because if we hit 80 per cent that’s really all we can do. We will most likely have an end vaccination rate of over 80 per cent, but at some point, we are going to have to learn to live with Covid-19. Covid will become another flu-like virus we have to deal with, getting boosters every year like we do the flu shot, and this is the reality we have to face. Having those who are unvaccinated wear a mask around town when borders initially open seems quite logical to me, as they’re the most at risk of catching and spreading the virus. We don’t want to see locals get sick. More than that, we honestly don’t have the facilities to look after those who get sick. If you need to go to the hospital due to Covid-19 out here, you will most likely get airlifted to another hospital with the facilities to properly care for you. It will be very interesting to see how things pan out, and how the meeting goes next week. I would really like to get a broader view of the community’s thoughts on the mandate, so please let me know your thoughts.


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Eight Mile revamp update Construction is progressing to improve safety at the Eight Mile intersection, north of Warwick where the Cunningham and New England highways meet. To construct the single-lane overpass for traffic travelling from Toowoomba to Warwick, piles have now been driven into the median of the Cunningham Highway, and the remaining piles at the northern and southern abutments will be installed early next year. These will provide the foundation for the piers that will support the 66m long overpass. When complete, the overpass will be a single lane for traffic travelling from Toowoomba to Warwick on the New England Highway. Effective soil and erosion control measures on site are critical, especially ahead of the predicted wet season. Installation is underway for the permanent concrete structures which will manage water flow and facilitate drainage at the intersection. To support this, extensive foundations have been laid to overcome the shrinking and swelling of the local black soil and to ensure the longevity of the infrastructure. After the spring rains is a good time for project staff to be monitoring the site for Picris evae, commonly known as Hawkweed. Hawkweed is a member of the daisy family and flow-

ers annually, like dandelions. Picrus evae is a local native and is listed as vulnerable under both the Environmental Protection and Biodi-

versity Conservation Act 1999 and the Nature Conservation Act 1992. To protect the local Hawkweed population, the team is minimis-

ing disturbance at known plant locations and stockpiling topsoil that is likely to contain seed so it can be re-spread following construction. Works are being carried out between 6 am and 6 pm, Monday to Friday with a reduced speed limit of 40km/h. Saturday works will be carried out for the remainder of the year, between 6 am and 2 pm, weather permitting. The safety of motorists and road workers is the department’s top priority. Motorists are reminded to be alert as traffic conditions will often change during construction. Changes will include road shoulder and lane closures, as well as minor diversions through the intersection. We thank the public for their patience during construction and ask that they continue to follow all traffic management signs and signals, and instructions from traffic controllers. The project has been jointly funded, with the Australian Government contributing $20 million and Queensland Government contributing $5 million. Works at the intersection started in February 2021 and are expected to be completed in mid-2022, weather and construction conditions permitting.

Proud achievements: Teilah McKelvey riding out of rodeo By Dominique Tassell Teilah McKelvey has announced her resignation from the Warwick Show and Rodeo Society. Her last day will be 10 December. In her time with the society, she’s been involved in three Warwick Rodeo and Campdrafts under her belt, two shows and three New Year’s Eve Rodeos. She has also been involved in firsts such as the BBQ Competitions, Opera in the Arena, Long Lunches and Country Harvest Markets. “At the core of it all the most important part for me has always been community, so thanks for letting me be a part of that,” she stated online. Teilah also noted to us her involvement in projects like Buy a Bale with Sleeping Dogs and Water Distribution during the drought. “It’s been an interesting ride,” she says. She noted the society’s hosting of firies during the bushfires, and the bakesale for bushfires the society did with the correctional facilities. Teilah says her job has allowed her to contribute to the community and for that, she’s extremely grateful. Teilah says she’s incredibly proud of what she achieved at the Warwick Show and Rodeo Society, given the historic time in which most of her time working there took place. She says dealing with Covid-19 has also pushed her to be more innovative, launching endeavours such as the Country Harvest Markets which helped small businesses

make a profit during a hard time. It’s been nice to see other things launch on the grounds, she says. Teilah will still be a fixture of the community, and says she’ll “see what other doors open”. Her consultancy business, Skye Creative Consultancy, is open for business. Teilah credits the volunteers and society members, saying nothing would be possible without them. She wants to thank Peel Tribe, who gave her the rundown on the rodeo when she first took the position, and Jeff Grant, who showed her the way with campdrafting.

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‘We’re just trying to live’ By Dominique Tassell A border resident has spoken out about the struggles those on the border face, stating they can more easily go and see their daughter and grandchildren in London than they can family in Queensland. With the Christmas period coming up, locals have raised concerns over the impacts mandates and border rules will have on locals. Christine Peterson lives in Old Koreelah but works in Warwick, and travels across the border pretty much every day. “We’ve been dealing with this since March last year,” she says. Christine says they’ve had to negotiate a sort of half-system. “Most of the police on the border are very good,” she says. “But it’s the constant wondering if when you get to the border you’re going to get the one who’s going to be hard.” “Lots of other locals have really struggled with the stress of getting to the border and not knowing if you’re going to get back over.” She says it feels like they’re being required to

jump through more and more hoops. When the border rules changed recently, Christine says she had an hour and a half hour of notice. “Teachers weren’t classed as essential workers then,” she says. So for six or seven weeks, she stayed in Warwick. She couldn’t get home to Old Koreelah, because she’d need her vaccinations to get over. Now she has her vaccinations, they’re being asked to get tested every time they want to cross the border for non-essential purposes. Christine says it feels like they haven’t been given the choice, and have to jump through whatever hoops the State Government creates. “We have no real voice because we’re not Queensland voters, even though we basically function as a Queensland community,” she says. Travelling to towns outside of the border community is pretty much out of the question normally due to the distance, and all the emergency services areas like Old Koreelah use are Queensland ones.

Christine says the process of crossing the border is also incredibly hard on the elderly, who have to do applications online when they may not have access to the required technology. Christine says the big issue is that nobody knows what the plan is. Border residents face constant stress over whether they can cross the border, to do essential tasks or otherwise. “We’re just trying to live,” Christine emphasises. The new testing mandate is a source of stress, as locals don’t know where to even get the test. They can’t come into Queensland to get tested, and they don’t know where else to go. “It’s just not viable for us to travel an hour and a half,” Christine says. “It’s ten or fifteen minutes into Queensland.” She says the hardest part is not being able to cross the border to see family. Christine says that frankly it doesn’t make sense to her that she can go to school and see 200-300 people but not see her family. She says one of the biggest causes of unrest in the border communities is the spotlight on

areas such as Tweed. “It’s frustrating for us,” she says. “Koreelah is just farms and a church, we don’t have shops.” While residents of areas such as Tweed are undoubtedly impacted by border restrictions, they can still do many things that border residents out here cannot. Christine says kids can’t cross the border to go to sport, and locals can’t attend any sort of recreational activity. “We’re not meant to do anything but what is classed essential,” she says. “It’s the social part of it that’s been really difficult.”. But more than that, it’s what exactly the State Government classifies as essential. “We can’t go to funerals, can’t go to weddings,” Christine says. Christine says mental health is a real concern for border residents. “It is a stress on people; it’s the constant stress that is impacting people.”

Note of some concern: Letter causes rift in council By Dominique Tassell A letter was the cause of debate at the recent Southern Downs Regional Council meeting, with Mayor Vic Pennisi requesting that councillors endorse a letter that had already been sent. This left some councillors questioning why he could not delay the letter a day to hold off until they had endorsed it. Councillor Sheryl Windle confirmed that the letter was sent out to councillors on Tuesday night, the night before the Ordinary Council Meeting, but had already been sent off “some time earlier in the day”. “I just would have preferred it if we’d had an opportunity to have some input,” she said. She also highlighted that the locals organising a meeting regarding the topic would have probably had some valuable input too. In the meeting, Mayor Pennisi stated that councillors had been receiving “volumes of correspondence” in relation to the changes coming into effect on 17 December. His letter, sent to Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk, asked the premier to reconsider this decision. He also suggested in the letter, which you can find on our website, that the unvaccinated could simply wear masks to protect themselves and other members of the community once the 80 per cent vaccination target is reached or 17 December arrives. Councillor Jo McNally was the first in the meeting to raise that she would have preferred to see the letter delayed one day in order to be properly endorsed. “Why couldn’t it wait one day?” Mayor Pennisi stated he’d been planning

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the letter “for a number of days”, and he sent it as soon as it was ready. While he was hoping for councillors to endorse it, he said: “If you don’t endorse it you don’t endorse it”. “At the end of the day, Councillor McNally, I am the mayor and I made a call based on the community sentiment that was coming across my desk.” Councillor McNally raised that the community sentiment represented in the letter may only be a small proportion of the community, as the vast majority of the Southern Downs is now vaccinated. “So the amount of correspondence that we have had is small in comparison to those amounts,” she said. She raised that it seemed as if the rest of the community had not been consulted. “So we’re not going to bother to ask the rest of the people?” “And there are a lot of people who have actually gone and done the right thing and got vaccinated. “They had concerns in regards to getting vaccinated, but they actually went and did the right thing. “For our community, we are a community. “So as I said, Mr Mayor, whether you’d been working on it for a few days, I’m not quite sure, but it would have been nice if you actually waited until today. “One day was not going to make any difference to actually get it endorsed today rather than sending it off then asking for endorsement later.” Councillor Andrew Gale then stated he was happy to endorse the letter, stating he

didn’t believe there was anything in its contents that “particularly spoke to one status or another”. “You spoke to the potential that it could divide the community,” he said. He stated the letter was not about people getting vaccinated, but about the matter of “and the matter of not creating divisiveness in the community”. Councillor Ross Bartley stated he thought the letter was a good response to community sentiment and a united response from Council. He stated the letter “shows that we are thinking of everybody whether they are double vaccination, not vaccinated, or otherwise”. He stated that people in the community had concerns for their employees and for the divide the mandate may cause. “I think your letter conveys the sentiments that are being directed towards us as a council,” he said. Councillor Windle stated that she was surprised to see the letter had been sent when she received it. “We talk about openness and transparency, we haven’t been very transparent with this as far as us councillors go,” she said. “We should have been informed or given an opportunity to speak on this before it was sent out. “I firmly believe, and I also believe that the letters that we’ve been receiving, or the emails that we’ve been receiving are from a minority of people. She stated some businesses in the community were happy with the mandate be-

cause they felt protected by it, while others were not. “So there’s a cross-section of people, but we didn’t get an opportunity to consult those people, or to hear their views before this was sent out so I think we’re here to represent everybody not just those minority and we should’ve given people the opportunity to have their say on this as well.” Councillor Stephen Tancred then spoke in support of the letter, particularly the Mayor’s recommendation regarding mask-wearing. He stated that speed is important in politics. “This letter shows that we care, shows that we can act, that our aim is also to keep people safe and we’re connected at the grassroots but also want to speak to the Queensland Government.” Councillor Marco Gliori noted that he’d only received “anti-mandate emails”, but did not know that this was a clear indication of the wider community sentiment. He stated that we’ve seen the pandemic “wreak havoc on our medical systems throughout the world, and stress our medical staff to the max”. “With this pandemic moving swiftly throughout the community, the numbers of those infected requiring treatment are terrifying.” He stated that we have been incredibly fortunate in our region, but need to listen to the wider community’s concerns. The motion to endorse the letter was carried, with a division called. Councillors McNally and Windle voted against the motion.


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Don’t risk the flood waters Police have issued a stark warning to motorists after officers were forced to put their own lives at risk in a number of floodwater rescues throughout the Darling Downs area earlier this week and over the weekend. Just after 10.40 pm on Saturday 27 November, police and emergency services were called to the Cunningham Highway at Warwick where water had risen half a metre over Freestone Creek Bridge. Police entered the fast-flowing waters to extract two women and an infant from a vehicle and bring them back to safety. Around 10.50 pm officers were called out to Jack Smith Gully Road at Swan Creek where another vehicle had become inundated by floodwaters. Police used rope to form a human chain and waded through strong, waist-high currents to retrieve a woman through the driver’s window and carry her back to dry land. At around 3.20 am on Sunday 28 November, morning a man and a boy were rescued from a four-wheel-drive stranded in floodwaters along Forest Hill Fernvale Road at Glenore Grove. Darling Downs District Superintendent Danny Shaw said with more rain predicted,

now is not the time to be complacent and take chances around floodwaters. “As we can see from these incidents overnight, flash flooding can occur very quickly and without any notice, even on roads that you usually travel on without any issues,” Superintendent Shaw said. “This type of rain also causes significant structural damage to roads, so even if you think it looks safe, you can never be sure exactly what is underneath the water. “It’s not worth risking the lives of yourself, your loved ones, and those of emergency services.” “I’m urging residents to use common sense – back away from flooded roadways, delay your journey if necessary. If it’s flooded, forget it.” On Monday 29 November, a truck was involved in a floodwater rescue at Goondiwindi. Paramedics assessed a male patient after a truck rolled over into water flood water at the intersection of the Cunningham Highway and Kerimbilla Road at 3.25 am. The driver self-extricated and was rescued by Queensland Fire and Rescue Service swift water technicians and did not require transport to the hospital.

Local meeting organised for ‘choice’ over mandate By Dominique Tassell

SRC Mayor Vic Pennisi suggested mask wearing for the unvaccinated over a mandate. a letter to Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk detailing his concerns. He stated he was concerned that this would create division in the community, and recommended mask wearing for the unvaccinated instead. Pam stated that the meeting was prompt-

ed by the concerns of local business owners, who she says felt quite defeated about the mandate. She also highlighted the mental and general health impacts she believed the mandate would have. “It’s a terrible position to put business

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A meeting for locals to advocate for choice in the Southern Downs will be held at WIRAC on 7 December at 6:15 pm. The meeting is being held so locals can “come together with peaceful and compassionate hearts to strongly and in unity to convey to our council our volition and authorisation for freedom of choice in the Southern Downs”. Pam Burley, one of the organisers being the meeting, stated that the meeting is an opportunity for locals to be informed about what will happen on 17 December or for those with a set view against it to let Council know about it. “It’s to encourage Council to make a stand alongside other local government authorities to be pro-choice regions,” she said. She said the meeting is not an opportunity for locals to discuss vaccination status, but rather to make the point that they didn’t believe in discriminating against other locals based on vaccination status. Pam says the agenda is very clear, and the meeting is about the state government’s mandate which they have asked local governments to provide community views on. SDRC Mayor Vic Pennisi has already sent

owners and staff in,” she said. She stated that she couldn’t fathom business owners having to turn away a friend or regular customer because of their vaccination status. Pam said her passion is community development, and it saddens her to see potential division caused by the mandate. “Once you start making rules, instead of relying on people living by principle it becomes a matter of managing those rules,” she said. “It just goes on and on.” “What we don’t want to see happen is the soul and spirit of Queenslanders particularly Southern Downs, we don’t want to see people broken about this. “We’re not powerless; we can stand with other regions to say we choose to be a prochoice community.” Pam said she wants to see the region maintain its humanity and kindness. She encourages anyone who is unsure or on the fence about the mandate to come and listen at the meeting. “This is about what we can do as a region to make a stance and look after our community,” Pam said. “If you’re curious and not sure, come and listen,” she said. “It’s for everybody.”

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Funding to flow to clubs By Dominique Tassell Southern Downs Regional Council approved 17 Community Drought Recovery Program applications, for a total of $200,981, at the recent Ordinary Council Meeting. Councillor Ross Bartley stated that looking through the applications, he stated that there were some pretty good choices there and they were very fair and evenly spread throughout the community. He raised concerns about the buying of equipment by the deadline of March 2022, stating shortages may prevent this. He questioned whether the equipment being paid for, and a receipt provided, would allow the applicants to get some leeway. Staff members said they expected this may be an option. Councillors changed the motion before moving it, so that authority would be delegated to SDRC CEO Dave Burges “to reallocate funding for withdrawn projects, or projects that do not meet their specific conditions of their funding offer, using the next highest scoring application”. Groups on the list to receive funding include the Killarney Rec Club, Dalveen Film Society, Warwick Killarney Uniting Church,

Stanthorpe Agricultural Society, Ballandean Football Club, Warwick Gymnastics Club, Warwick Men’s Shed, Killarney Show and Rodeo Society, and more. The Killarney Rec Club application is of note, as it applies for machinery to mow their facilities. The club inquiring about SDRC help was the source of debate at the last Connecting with Council meeting in Leyburn, with some councillors concerned that their approving Stanthorpe Sports Association’s lease with added benefits would cause other clubs to ask for help too. As the list of projects for this motion shows, many clubs in the region simply need help. It is stated the Killarney Rec Club is currently using borrowed mowers from local farmers. The club states that “having unlimited access to our own equipment allows volunteers to schedule their time”. Ensuring the timing of borrowing local mowers suits all parties is involved is becoming “quite difficult”, they state. The motion was moved by Councillor Jo McNally and seconded by Councillor Cameron Gow.

$3.1 million on wish list By Dominique Tassell

SDRC approved 17 Community Drought Recovery Program applications, for a total of $200,981, at the recent Ordinary Council Meeting.

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Southern Downs Regional Council approved a list of projects to submit to the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications for consideration from Council’s $3,154,682 allocation under the Local Roads and Community Infrastructure Phase Three (LRCI – Phase 3) Program at the recent Ordinary Council Meeting. Councillor Jo McNally raised concerns about the Brock Park toilets in Stanthorpe not being a designated park. She stated it may be on a road reserve, and whether it was part of the parks rationalisation plan. SDRC CEO Dave Burges stated they would be refurbishing what is there, gutting it and maintaining the outside with murals. He stated he thought the facility was quite well-used. Councillor Andrew Gale stated he noted they were re-asphalting some roads, and queried whether Maria and Sangricoli Court in Stanthorpe could be added into the mix He stated Council had received “numerous items of correspondence” in relation to these streets. “They were re-sealed with the spray bitumen treatment and there’s still considerable issues there,” he said. Councillor Gale stated that he believed other projects on the list had been asphalted by developers originally, while the two streets he was drawing attention to had been Council’s responsibility. He further stated that the spray-reseal and the loose gravel that’s come off it has been a problem for residents, who have “to go and sweep the cul-de-sac to get the rocks off”. The CEO stated they could certainly consider those projects. Councillor Stephen Tancred referred to the

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list as “Christmas come early for Southern Downs”. He stated it was $3,154,682 million of works with no Council contribution, which is great for ratepayers. The CEO later stated during discussions that they had prioritised the projects with asset renewal, stating they had a backlog for this. Projects on the list Stanthorpe streetscapes $399,682 Regional Urban Design Framework $120,000 New Christmas Tree - Warwick $50,000 McGregor Park, Stanthorpe Ablution Refurbishment $250,000 Brock Park Stanthorpe redevelopment of Toilets, Shelter and playground equipment $425,000 WIRAC Switchboard & Emergency Lighting $210,000 WIRAC change rooms upgrades $225,000 Lighting and shade sails at Allora pool $20,000 Footpath Replacement Program $150,000 Re-sheet projects $600,000 Tooth St Drainage Southern End $100,000 Glennie Heights State School Disabled Access $30,000 Boronia Streets - Boronia, Teatree, Hakea and Casuarina $155,000 Brook, Bernecker, Willow and Hansborgar Street, Warwick $195,000 Homestead Road, Rosenthal Heights Drainage Improvement $150,000 Alice St and Amosfield Road, Stanthorpe $75,000

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NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

The change from a few weeks ago is clear to see.

Local birds enjoying the high dam levels.

Locals will be pleased to see this boat ramp is now actually in the water.

A dam good sight By Dominique Tassell Leslie Dam sure is a sight to see, with locals guaranteed to be up basking in the high levels every time this newspaper goes on their weekly “dam watch” trip. At the time of print, Leslie Dam was sitting at 79.49 per cent, having gone up steadily from 75 per cent over the weekend. With the rain pouring down outside as I write this, it’s expected that the dam levels will rise to 80 per cent sometime this week. Leslie Dam hit 70 per cent last week, and 60 per cent the week before, with locals now crossing their fingers that we might see the dam join the others in the region at full capacity. Connolly Dam, which also supplies Warwick, is 100 per cent full. As is Stanthorpe’s sole urban water supply, Storm King Dam. Storm King Dam reached full capacity for the first time in years in late March 2021. Glenlyon Dam spilled over last week. In Wallangarra, recent rainfall has restored the water level in both the Beehive Dam and The Soak to full capacity. Council is reportedly still in discussion with Toowoomba Regional Council and Seqwater to supply water to Warwick via a new pipeline – a project led by the Queensland government, though locals have questioned why Council is investing in a dam that was at such a low level during the drought and currently sits at 39.8 per cent at the time of print. Some have commented that perhaps a dam should be built in the northern end of the region.

Water running into the dam at Sandy Creek. The Emu Swamp Dam, set for the Granite Belt, has also recently commenced a “pause” stage of the project. As reported in this newspaper last week, this may be due to the breakdown of negotiations between the project and affected landholders after Granite Belt Irriga-

tion Project asked landholders to sell their entire properties, to be used as “environmental offset”. GBIP did not respond to this newspaper’s questions in time to be included in this week’s edition of the paper.

Kangaroos were out enjoying the break in the rain.

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WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

NEWS

Taking stand by taking seat By Warwick Anglican Parish and Mothers’ Union Warwick Branch Warwick Anglican Parish and Mothers’ Union Warwick Branch celebrated our annual Church Service to pray for an end to Domestic and Family Violence. We welcomed Mrs Bette Bonney from Warwick Safe Haven who talked to the congregation about the work that Warwick Safe Haven does in our local area to provide support to victims of family and domestic violence. The service also promoted the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-based Violence which begins on Thursday, 25 November until 10 December. Anglican Mothers’ Union Australia (AMUA) joins with 6,000 organisations from 187 countries to participate in this campaign.

This year’s theme is “NO MORE 1 in 3 - END ABUSE AND VIOLENCE NOW”. The Venerable Lizzie Gaitskell, the rector of St Mark’s Parish, unveiled and blessed a Red Rose Foundation “Red Bench” garden seat at the end of the church service. The Red Bench will be placed in the St Mark’s church grounds. The presence of a Red Bench in a public location aims to raise public awareness and provides an opportunity for this critical issue of Domestic Violence to remain visible. There are over 250 Red Benches across Queensland, NSW and South Australia and local Councils are getting behind this project and they are springing up everywhere. Take a Seat to Take a Stand - To End Domestic Violence.

Left to right back Rev’d Barbara Diery, Bev Spence, Joan and Wendy Finlay, Gloria Brady. Front L-R Elaine Stewart, Ruth Locke.

The Red Rose Foundation- Red Bench. Left to right Elaine Stewart President of St Mark’s Mothers’ Union, Rev’d Barbara Diery and member Bev Spence.

Please help with some identities Do you know the people in this picture? The photo, featuring the junior school at St Catherine’s in 1948, was posted into the Lost Faces of Warwick and District Facebook group. While some students have been identified, and some information corrected, not all students are known. If you have any information, let us know or email jane_morse@bigpond.com

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NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

QPS speak at league AGM By Dominique Tassell Warwick Police were in attendance at the recent Warwick Pensioners League Annual General Meeting, informing the group of the dangers of scams. Senior Constable Kirsty Moore stated that if something seems too good to be true, it probably is. She also urges locals present not to stay on phone calls that seemed suspicious, stating they obviously want to keep you on the line

for a reason. Kirsty also stated that locals should not be hesitant to contact local police, as they are there to help. She said that if locals have gotten to the point where they are considering calling the police, they shouldn’t worry about it not being a “real emergency”. The Warwick Pensioners League also plans for discussed the upcoming year at the meeting, including their events calendar.

Members can look forward to plenty of social outings, including to the Pittsworth Chocolate Factory. A trip was planned for earlier this month but had to be cancelled due to a Covid-19 case in Warwick at the time. The group is planning to reschedule for next year. The Warwick Pensioners League is the oldest pensioners league in the state and was started in town on the 23rd of September 1937 by Arthur Ernest Pacey.

The league is a volunteer organisation with members of varying ages and supports those living on limited incomes. They strive to ensure that issues affecting pensioners, self-funded retirees, those over 60, and people with disabilities. They are always interested in welcoming new members. You can find out more by contacting Michael Holland on 0408 982 157 or Madeleine Holland on 0427 324 380.

Friendlies AGM elects new friendly face By Dominique Tassell

The Warwick Friendly Society elected a new person to their board at the recent AGM.

Ahmad Almesfer gave the General Manager’s Report.

Current board member, Cate Sester, retained her seat.

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Warwick Friendly Society held their Annual General Meeting on Friday 26 November, electing a new person to take a seat on the board. Current board member, Cate Sester, spoke to the meeting and was re-elected to the board. Paul Noye, Phy Nguyen, Gerard Walsh, and Corinne Butler also spoke to the meeting before members cast their votes. Corinne Butler, who specialised in Human resources, was elected to the board. She read out a letter of recommendation from Southern Downs MP James Lister, to the meeting. Corinne also stated that her skills in human resources would be an asset to the board. With the election of Corrine to the board and the stepping down of John Creed, the board is now majority female.

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Meeting, but not to plan By Dominique Tassell The Warwick town planning meeting was held earlier this week, after being delayed due to a Covid-19 case in the community earlier this month. The meeting was initially going to be held in Warwick Town Hall, but due to other bookings, it was held in the Rose City Shopping Centre outside Woolworths, which proved to be a good strategy for engaging locals. Local concerns included that we need to make young people stay in the region, and give them things to do. Along the same line of thought, it was raised that the housing crisis is impacting the ability of people to move to the region. Locals also highlighted that we currently have homeless people in the region who need support and housing. Another local said that often, low-quality housing is expensive in the main towns and blocks should be made smaller so houses are cheaper. Jobs in the region were another topic of discussion, with some locals pointing out we need jobs for older people too, stating we need more diverse industries in the region. Jobs for people of all qualifications were also frequently mentioned, and concerns about there being enough of them. Locals also highlighted that they’d like to see more trees on Council land, and bike trails so people can get out and enjoy the nature in the region. Locals raised concerns about Council’s acting on climate change, saying they would like

Due to flooding from rain overnight on Friday 26 November, Warwick Gymnastics was forced to cancel their Christmas Carnival on Sunday 28 November.

Weather blow to carnival By Dominique Tassell to see more done in the Southern Downs. “Southern Downs region can always do more,” one local said. Another local suggested that Connolly Dam be improved, with higher walls and a second wall to capture more water. Other comments centred on the character of the town, with many pointing out that signage was an issue. Some locals raised concerns about too much advertising on the way into town. “We have a unique soul to our town, if we lose that we lose our character,” one local said. Concerns were raised about small businesses finding it difficult to establish themselves in town, and lacking support from Council. Some locals stated that businesses, and the people behind them, were moving to places like Toowoomba where they had a better chance to grow. All in-person meetings have been held, however locals can still provide feedback directly to Council if they wish to do so.

Due to flooding from rain overnight on Friday 26 November, Warwick Gymnastics was forced to cancel their Christmas Carnival on Sunday 28 November. Warwick Gymnastics posted early on Saturday morning stating that the gym was flooded and training for the day was cancelled. They posted hours later stating that the carnival would have to be cancelled too, with refunds worked out through individual clubs. Coby Walker from Warwick Gymnastics stated that the competition was a small, friendly competition that was “a bit of fun for the kids”. About 100 kids were expected to attend, with kids travelling from Toowoomba and other areas outside the region. “They’re all devastated,” Coby said. “They were really looking forward to it.” The carnival was to be the last competition for the kids this year. Coby stated that they would have to can-

cel training during the week too, as it takes a week for the mats to dry. However, the flooding may well have destroyed the mats and new ones will most likely need to be purchased. With the damage to facilities and equipment, and some fees still needing to be paid for the cancelled carnival, the impact of the flooding will be quite significant. The facilities have reportedly flooded several times before, with a Council drain the source of the issue. Coby said they have applied for grants but have been unsuccessful. “At the end it’s impacting very significantly on our club,” he said. Coby estimates the damage, and fees from the event, will probably cost the club around $5000 to $6000. They have to refund fees, while still paying coaches and repair costs. Coby estimates around $100,000 worth of mats have been wrecked by the flooding. “It’s getting a bit stressful,” he said. “But we’ll keep battling on, it’s what we do.”

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Thursday, 2 December, 2021 TODAY 11


NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Scots PGC goes all Red

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Queensland Reds players, Zane Nonggorr and Tuaina Tualima, accompanied by QRU Official, Kris Burton, visited Scots PGC last week as part of the “Reds to Region” tour. Middle school students got to participate in a Q&A with Zane and Tuaina, before they swapped a red jersey for a Scots PGC one so the team can hang it up in their dressing room in Brisbane and know exactly who they’re representing. See our pictures from the day...

12 TODAY Thursday, 2 December, 2021


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

NEWS

Have a ball for chaplaincy By Dominique Tassell A local charity ball is being held on 11 December to raise money and awareness for chaplaincy in the region. The event is for the state schools in Warwick, and the Killarney, Maryvale and Wheatvale state schools. There are seven schools in total, with five chaplains. The event will be held at 7 pm at King’s Theatre in Warwick CBD. Peter James, the Group Chief Executive Officer at Scripture Union Australia, will be in attendance as will Goondiwindi Mayor, Lawrence Springborg. Brenton Drennert, the president of the committee behind the event, says Mr Springborg will come and share his experience in all the different levels of government he’s been

involved in, and his experience helping young people in rural areas. Brenton says it’s all about highlighting the importance of investing in the well-being of our youth. He says there is often a misconception that chaplains are in schools to carry out religious work, which is not the truth. He says while they may be there in a spiritual aspect, their actual job is to provide emotional support. While they may provide students with spiritual help if they ask for it, the main thing they do is work as youth workers. Brenton says all chaplains are qualified youth workers, and that’s the most important part of what they do. “The focus at the moment is on getting more people involved and interested in the

wellbeing of children in the community,” he says. The committee is also aiming to raise money to increase programs and hours for chaplaincy services. “We get a certain amount of government funding, but for some of these schools that don’t receive government funding we’re looking to increase the availability of chaplains.” He says some schools don’t have councillors or social workers, so it’s important for our youth to have someone to talk to about their wellbeing. Chaplains also carry out breakfast and lunch programs, which is an important way they look after youth in our region. “We want to get an increased number of monetary donations and volunteers to help chaplains carry out wellbeing programs that

boost kids’ self-esteem,” Brenton says. He highlighted that in some schools a lot of grandparents help out. He says the pandemic has highlighted the community spirit but also presented a lot of opportunities for people to help each other. Brenton says it’s been a rough time for everybody. He says they were lucky in that their chaplain from Killarney is from Warwick, so could still go to school even when half the teachers were stuck on the other side of the border. Brenton says checking in on families on the new South Wales side of the border was an important part of the chaplaincy program. You can find the ball on Facebook on the Warwick District Chaplaincy Charity Ball page, and buy your tickets at https://bit.ly/NightOfHope2021.

Youth Council wraps up for the year By Dominique Tassell Southern Downs Regional Council noted the minutes of the recent Youth Council meeting at the last Ordinary Council Meeting, shedding light on the concerns of local youth. On 21 October 2021, the Southern Downs Youth Council held its final meeting for 2021 at the Stanthorpe Civic Centre. Students from Allora P-10 State School, Assumption College Warwick, Killarney P-10 State School, School of Total Education, SCOTS PGC College, Stanthorpe State High School, St Joseph’s School, and Warwick State High School were present at the meeting. The Manager of Community and Cultural Services thanked the students for their time throughout the year, their dedication and

sharing of ideas. “They are the future leaders of our community and Council encourages their frank and fearless feedback,” it was stated in the agenda. Students gave feedback on the Youth Council Program, with half the students stating that the program delivered in only some areas of their expectations while the other half stated it delivered beyond their expectations. Some students felt that the Youth Council meetings were too short, with there also being the sentiment that there were not enough meetings throughout the year. General feedback included that some guest speakers were interesting however they

took away from the things the group wanted to achieve. Students also enjoyed the connection between schools that Youth Council gave them, but felt this could also be improved and prioritised. When asked what topics students were interested in reading about in the media, responses included national politics, mental health, environmental issues and sustainability, natural disasters around the world, new businesses within the community, sports, international news, local efforts to reduce carbon emissions, local people, and information on higher education. SDRC Mayor, Vic Pennisi, stated when presenting students with their certificates

SDRC Mayor Vic Penissi emphasised at the meeting that the Youth Council played an important role in the community. that it is important that the Youth Council move into next year knowing that they matter, that their contributions are important and that they are the future leaders of the Southern Downs community.

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The Guide PICK OF THE WEEK NCIS 10, Tuesday, 8.30pm

Can a long-running series be the same when an integral, much-loved character takes a back seat? This is what fans are wondering as season 19 of the police procedural premieres tonight. In perhaps a merciful move, the show’s writers appeared to kill off Special Agent Leroy Jethro Gibbs (Mark Harmon) via a massive boat explosion in last season’s finale, planting the seed that the central protagonist’s days were numbered after 18 years on the beat. In “Blood in the Water”, the team searches for Gibbs after discovering the wreckage of his boat, and find out he was tracking a serial killer. Harmon bows out this season, with limited appearances promised in future.

MADDY THE MODEL SBS Viceland, Friday, 9.50pm

TOTAL CONTROL ABC TV, Sunday, 8.40pm

Swedish filmmaker Jane Magnusson embarked on a four-year, round-theworld journey following Brisbaneborn Madeline Stuart (pictured) and her mother Rosanne to film this intimate documentary. It tells the story of how Maddy, who was born with Down syndrome, became a star on the New York Fashion Week runway, and how her remarkable career unfolded while the media watched with fascination. At its core, it’s an exploration of the bond between a mother and daughter who have gone up against the odds with optimism and a can-do attitude, and an examination of the concept of disability and beauty.

The penultimate episode of season two of this piercing political drama is bolstered by excellent performances from its stars Deborah Mailman (pictured), Rachel Griffiths and William McInnes. At a short and sharp six episodes long, its perhaps enough time for viewers to marinate in the absurdity and selfishness of politics; one can easily imagine certain scenes playing out across the country as political leaders hustle to keep their jobs. This week, the identity of Alex’s (Mailman) troll is finally uncovered, and he’s someone she knows. Meanwhile, Alex and Rachel (Griffiths) band together to ultimately decide who will be the next PM.

Chain of command: Mark Harmon has played NCIS stalwart Special Agent Gibbs since 2003.

TRAVEL, COOK, REPEAT WITH CURTIS STONE SBS Food, Monday, 6.30pm

Curtis Stone (pictured) is living the travelling chef dream. The Aussie, who now resides in LA with a Michelin-starred restaurant under his apron, obviously loves to eat, cook and create. In this leisurely series, he adds travel into the concoction for the perfect mix of escapism and food because, let’s face it: travel is food’s best friend. In this six-part sojourn, he begins in Western Australia, with further episodes indulging in Rome, Umbria, Rioja, Sonoma and New South Wales. Tonight, mud crabs are the star when Stone catches some at the beach. The result is a delicious Vietnamese salad.

Friday, December 3 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Q+A. (Final, R) 11.05 Searching For Superhuman. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Barrie Cassidy’s One Plus One. (R) 1.30 The Sound. (R) 2.00 Re-Frame 2021. (Ml) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.10 Think Tank. (PG, R) 5.05 Grand Designs Australia. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 No Distinguishing Features. (PGa, R) 3.30 Specially For Me. 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 4.10 Focus On Ability Film Festival 2021. 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. News, sport and weather. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) The latest news and views. 9.30 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 12. Bathurst 1000. 4.30 Seven News At 4.30. 5.00 The Chase Australia. (R) Contestants race to answer quiz questions correctly to avoid being caught by The Chaser.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: The Flight Before Christmas. (2015, PGa) 1.45 Garden Gurus Moments. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) 5.30 WIN News.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGad, R) 1.00 The Living Room. (PG, R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 My Market Kitchen. (R) 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. Analysis of the day’s news. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 Gardening Australia. Millie Ross shows how to shop smart at the nursery. 8.30 Endeavour. (Masv) Part 2 of 3. A taxi driver who owes a large debt to a colleague is found dead in his vehicle. 10.00 Talking Heads. (PG) A woman befriends her neighbour. 10.40 ABC Late News. Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 10.55 The Vaccine. (R) Presented by Jeremy Fernandez. 11.10 Gruen. (R) Presented by Wil Anderson. 11.45 Preppers. (Mls, R) 12.20 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Inside Balmoral: 1955-1997. (PG) 8.30 Empire With Michael Portillo. (Mad, R) Part 2 of 4. 9.25 Dig World War II. (R) Part 2 of 4. 10.20 SBS World News Late. 10.50 The Back Side Of Television. (MA15+, R) 11.25 Miniseries: The Hunting. (Malns, R) 3.25 Sinkholes: Deadly Drops. (PGa, R) 4.20 VICE Guide To Film. (Madlv, R) 4.50 Poh & Co. Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Better Homes And Gardens Summer. Hosted by Johanna Griggs. 8.30 MOVIE: This Means War. (2012, Mlsv, R) Two CIA operatives find themselves vying for the affections of the same woman. Reese Witherspoon, Chris Pine, Tom Hardy. 10.30 MOVIE: The Campaign. (2012, MA15+ls, R) Two men vie for a political office. Will Ferrell. 12.25 MOVIE: Jailhouse Rock. (1957, PGav, R) Elvis Presley. 2.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 5.00 NBC Today.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Taronga: Who’s Who In The Zoo: Nala’s Pup. (PG) Staff and vets care for a sea lion pup. 8.30 MOVIE: The Green Mile. (1999, MA15+alv, R) An elderly man recalls his time as a prison guard where he befriended a man with an unusual gift. Tom Hanks, Michael Clarke Duncan, David Morse. 12.00 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.00 Destination WA: Discovering The East Kimberley. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Global Shop. (R) 4.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 A Current Affair. (R)

6.30 The Project. 7.30 The Living Room. Barry Du Bois tackles a tricky renovation. 8.40 The Graham Norton Show. (R) Graham Norton chats with Will Smith, Richard Osman, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Yola. 9.40 The Montreal Comedy Festival. (MA15+s, R) Stand-up performances from comedians. 10.40 Just For Laughs. (Mls, R) 11.10 The Project. (R) 12.10 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.00 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Infomercials. (PG, R)

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Letterkenny. 1.55 Gymnastics. FIG Artistic World Challenge Cup. H’lights. 3.55 WorldWatch. 5.25 Takeshi’s Castle. 5.55 Shortland Street. 6.25 RocKwiz. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 MOVIE: Code Of The Freaks. (2020) 9.50 Maddy The Model. 10.55 The Search For Sexy. 11.25 Project Blue Book. 12.15am Letterkenny. 12.45 Nirvanna The Band The Show. 1.45 VICE. 2.20 The Big House. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Jabba’s Movies. 7.00 Mighty Ships. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Better Homes And Gardens. 3.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Billy Connolly: Made In Scotland. 8.30 The Amazing Homemakers. 9.30 Australia’s Big Backyards. 10.30 The Mentalist. 12.30am The Fine Art Auction. 3.30 Travel And Eat With Dan & Steph. 4.00 Better Homes And Gardens. 5.30 Home Shopping.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop: Home Shopping. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Death In Paradise. 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. 2.05 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: Billy Liar. (1963, PG) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Saved & Remade. 8.30 MOVIE: Star Trek: The Motion Picture. (1979) 11.10 Memory Lane. 12.30am Antiques Roadshow. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Seinfeld. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 The Big Bang Theory. Noon In The Dark. 1.00 2 Broke Girls. 2.00 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Friends. 11.30 2 Broke Girls. Midnight Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 2.30 The Late Late Show With James Corden. 3.30 In The Dark. 4.30 Home Shopping. 5.30 Infomercials.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Every Day. Continued. (2018, PG) 7.35 Remi Nobody’s Boy. (2018, PG, French) 9.35 The Boy And The Beast. (2015, PG) 11.45 Chevalier. (2015, M, Greek) 1.45pm Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 3.55 Little Nicolas On Holiday. (2014, PG, French) 5.45 Gagarin. (2013, PG, Russian) 7.50 Source Code. (2011, M) 9.30 The Iron Lady. (2011, M) 11.30 Tanna. (2015, M, Bislama) 1.25am Microbe And Gasoline. (2015, M, French) 3.20 Aloys. (2016, M, Swiss German) 5.00 Little Nicolas On Holiday. (2014, PG, French)

7MATE (73) 6am ITM Fishing Show: Best Of The Best. 6.30 Mark Berg’s Fishing Addiction. 7.30 Creek To Coast. 8.00 Storage Wars: Texas. 8.30 Seven’s Motorsport Classic. 9.30 Pawn Stars. 10.00 America’s Game: The Super Bowl Champions. 11.00 A Football Life. Noon Storage Wars Canada. 1.00 Ink Master. 2.00 Ink Master: Redemption. 2.30 Pawn Stars. 3.00 Barter Kings. 3.55 MOVIE: Inside Out. (1975, PG) 6.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 12. Bathurst 1000. Pit Lane. 7.30 MOVIE: The Water Diviner. (2014, M) 9.45 MOVIE: Where Eagles Dare. (1968, M) 1am American Pickers. 2.00 Late Programs.

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 7.00 Infomercials. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon MacGyver. 1.00 Star Trek: Discovery. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 11.30 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. 12.30am Home Shopping. 1.00 Infomercials. 1.30 Home Shopping. 2.00 Madam Secretary. 3.00 NCIS: New Orleans. 5.00 Diagnosis Murder.

Programs. 6.10pm Hey Duggee. 6.20 Bluey. 6.25 Shaun The Sheep. 6.40 Andy’s Prehistoric Adv. 7.00 Dino Dana. 7.15 Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 MOVIE: My Girl. (1991, PG) 10.10 Doctor Who. 11.10 MOVIE: Jaimen Hudson: From Sky To Sea. (2021, M) 12.05am Art Works. 12.30 Brush With Fame. 1.00 Live At The Apollo. 1.50 Would I Lie To You? 2.20 Sick Of It. 2.40 Community. 3.05 Parks And Recreation. 3.25 ABC News Update. 3.30 Close. 5.05 Five Minutes More. 5.10 Sarah & Duck. 5.20 The Hive. 5.30 Digby Dragon. 5.40 Late Programs.

N ITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 8.00 Raven’s Quest. 8.10 Wolf Joe. 8.20 Wapos Bay. 8.40 Bushwhacked! 9.30 The Magic Canoe. 10.00 Going Places. 11.00 On The Road. Noon MOVIE: Fruitvale Station. (2013, M) 2.00 MOVIE: The Fade. (2012, M) 3.00 Wapos Bay. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.00 Project Planet. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Pete & Pio’s Kai Safari. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Nulla Nulla. 7.20 NITV News Update. 7.30 MOVIE: Lord Of The Flies. (1963, PG) 9.05 Bedtime Stories. 9.15 The Song Keepers. 10.45 Late Programs.

Noon Supergirl. 1.00 Revenge Body. 2.00 America’s Top Dog. 3.00 Malcolm. 3.30 The Nanny. 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.30 That ’70s Show. 5.00 Malcolm. 6.00 The Nanny. 6.30 MOVIE: Casper. (1995, PG) 8.30 MOVIE: The Hobbit: The Desolation Of Smaug. (2013, M) 12.10am Desperate Housewives. 2.10 Revenge Body With Khloé Kardashian. 3.00 Teen Titans Go! 3.30 Ninjago: Masters Of Spinjitzu. 4.00 Pokémon. 4.30 Transformers Bumblebee: Cyberverse Adventures. 4.50 Bakugan: Armored Alliance. 5.10 Yu-Gi-Oh! 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh!

CONSUMER ADVICE (P) Pre-school (C) Children (PG) Parental Guidance Recommended (M) Mature Audiences (MA15+) Mature Audiences Only (AV15+) Extreme Adult Violence (R) Repeat (a) Adult themes (d) Drug references (h) Horror (s) Sex references (l) Language (m) Medical procedures (n) Nudity (v) Violence.

14 TODAY Thursday, 2 December, 2021

QLD


Saturday, December 4 SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 10.00 Rage. (PG) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Endeavour. (Masv, R) 2.00 Restoration Australia. (PG, R) 2.55 Dream Gardens. (PG, R) 3.30 Landline. 4.00 Basketball. WNBL. Round 1. Southside Flyers v Bendigo Spirit.

6.00 WorldWatch. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Figure Skating. ISU Grand Prix. Round 6. Rostelecom Cup. Highlights. 3.30 Lucknow. (PG, R) 3.40 Life Is A Battlefield. 5.35 Nazi Megastructures. (PGa, R)

6.00 NBC Today. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 9.00 Motor Racing. Supercars C’ship. Round 12. Bathurst 1000. 12.00 Motor Racing. Supercars C’ship. Round 12. Bathurst 1000. 3.30 Motor Racing. Supercars C’ship. Round 12. Bathurst 1000. Top 10 Shootout. From Mount Panorama Circuit, Bathurst, NSW. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Creek To Coast.

6.00 Animal Tales. (PG, R) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG) 12.00 Animal Embassy. (R) 12.30 Destination WA. 1.00 What If...? The Brandon Wilson Story. (PGa) 1.30 My Way. 2.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures. (PG) 2.30 Explore. 2.40 MOVIE: The Christmas Gift. (2015, PGa) 4.30 Garden Gurus. 5.00 News. 5.30 Good Food Christmas. (PG)

6.00 Reel Action. (R) 6.30 Leading The Way. 7.00 Healthy Homes Aust. (R) 7.30 Escape Fishing. (R) 8.00 All 4 Adventure. (PGl, R) 9.00 Freshly Picked. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 12.20 The Living Room. (R) 1.30 4x4 Adventures. (R) 2.30 All 4 Adventure. (PGl, R) 3.30 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PGan, R) 4.00 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 4.30 Taste Of Australia. (R) 5.00 News.

6.00 Rick Stein’s Secret France. (Final, R) Rick approaches the end of his journey. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 The Larkins. (Ms) Mariette’s heart is being pulled in many directions with the arrival of Charley and Tom Fisher. 8.20 Miniseries: Ridley Road. (Final, Mv) Part 4 of 4. With time running out, Vivien risks everything to make one last attempt to sabotage the fascists. 9.15 Total Control. (MA15+l, R) The day of the election arrives and Alex and her team make a final push to win over the voters of Freeman. 10.10 Call The Midwife. (Ma, R) Barbara’s friends continue to wait for more news. 11.10 Father Brown. (PG, R) A woman is found dead in the church. 11.55 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)

6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Celebrity Letters And Numbers. (M) Hosted by Michael Hing. 8.30 The World’s Greatest Hotels: Bellagio, Las Vegas. (PG) Takes a look at The Bellagio in Las Vegas, one of the most expensive hotels ever built when it was first opened. 9.25 Russia To Iran: Across The Wild Frontier. (PGa, R) Part 4 of 5. 10.20 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 11.15 MOVIE: The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. (2009, MA15+lsv, R, Swedish) 1.55 MOVIE: Love And Other Drugs. (2010, MA15+as, R) Jake Gyllenhaal, Anne Hathaway, Oliver Platt. 4.00 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+av, R) 4.50 Poh & Co. Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Surveillance Oz. (PGa) A man tries to outrun a speeding train only to fall face first onto the tracks. 7.30 MOVIE: Ford V Ferrari. (2019, Ml, R) American car designer Carroll Shelby and driver Ken Miles try to build a race car for Ford so they can defeat Ferrari. Matt Damon, Christian Bale, Jon Bernthal. 10.45 MOVIE: The Gumball Rally. (1976, Man, R) A motley group of people takes part in a non-stop car race from New York to Long Beach, California. Norman Burton, Michael Sarrazin. 1.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 12. Bathurst 1000. Top 10 Shootout. Replay. 2.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Get Clever. (R) Educational kids’ program. 5.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R)

6.00 Nine News Saturday. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 MOVIE: Gladiator. (2000, Mav, R) After a successful Roman general is betrayed and his family murdered by the emperor’s heir, he seeks revenge. Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. 10.35 MOVIE: Conan The Barbarian. (2011, MA15+sv, R) A barbarian seeks revenge. Jason Momoa, Stephen Lang. 12.35 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures: Road Boss Rally Pt 1. (PG, R) The Bondi boys compete in a rally race. 1.05 Australia’s Top Ten Of Everything. (Msv, R) 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Wesley Impact With Stu Cameron. (PG)

6.00 Soccer. A-League Men. Round 3. Sydney FC v Newcastle Jets. From Netstrata Jubilee Stadium, Sydney. 9.00 Ambulance. (Mm, R) It is a wild payday weekend in London, and as revellers pack the streets ambulance crews are called to attend the scene of a double shooting, a stabbing, a brawl and a grandmother in need of CPR. 11.00 FBI. (Mv, R) When a shooting at a girl’s 15th birthday leaves two people dead, the team questions who was the intended target and decides the best plan is to use a witness to take down their prime suspect. 12.00 Home Shopping. (R) 1.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 2.30 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Hour Of Power. Religious program.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Sir Mouse. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.20 Live At The Apollo. 9.05 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 9.50 To Be Advised. 10.20 Schitt’s Creek. 11.05 Catastrophe. 11.35 GameFace. Midnight Unprotected Sets. 12.25 Red Dwarf. 12.55 Escape From The City. 1.55 Stuffed. 2.15 ABC News Update. 2.20 Close. 5.05 Five Minutes More. 5.10 Sarah & Duck. 5.20 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. 11.00 SBS Courtside. 11.30 Basketball. NBA. Dallas Mavericks v New Orleans Pelicans. 2pm WorldWatch. 2.30 Cloning The Woolly Mammoth. 3.00 The Djarn Djarns. 3.30 Munchies Guide To Basque Country. 4.20 WorldWatch. 5.50 Megafactories. 6.40 The Story Of The Songs. 7.35 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. 8.30 Creamerie. 9.30 The X-Files. 12.05am Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 8.30 Travel Oz. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 Horse Racing. 4.30pm Weekender. 5.00 Creek To Coast. 5.30 Ed And Karen’s Recipes For Success. 6.30 The Hotel Inspector. 7.30 The Yorkshire Vet. 8.30 Escape To The Country. 10.30 The Mentalist. 12.30am The Fine Art Auction. 3.30 Travel And Eat With Dan & Steph. 4.00 Weekender. 4.30 Creek To Coast. 5.00 1 Man And A Bike. 5.30 Shopping.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am Newstyle Direct. 6.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.00 Seaway. 11.05 Edgar Wallace Mysteries. 12.20pm The Avengers. 1.20 MOVIE: Huckleberry Finn. (1974) 3.45 MOVIE: Hawaii. (1966, PG) 7.00 MOVIE: Dune. (1984, PG) 9.45 MOVIE: Star Trek II: The Wrath Of Khan. (1982, M) Midnight Seaway. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 6.55 The King Of Queens. 7.55 Becker. 8.55 The Middle. 10.25 Frasier. 11.25 The King Of Queens. 12.20pm MOVIE: Father Of The Bride Part II. (1995) 2.30 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.45 2 Broke Girls. 12.10am Home Shopping. 1.10 Infomercials. 1.40 Nancy Drew. 3.30 Undercover Girlfriends. 4.30 Home Shopping.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 10.00 MOVIE: Lord Of The Flies. (1963, PG) 11.35 The Song Keepers. 1pm Boxing Night To Remember V. 2.00 Baseball. SA Super League. 4.00 Rugby League. NRL NT. 5.00 Indian Country Today. 5.30 APTN National News. 6.00 Karla Grant Presents. 6.30 Going Places. 7.30 NITV News Update. 7.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 8.30 MOVIE: Ray. (2004, M) 11.10 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Malcolm. 2.00 MOVIE: Paddington. (2014) 3.50 MOVIE: The Secret Life Of Pets. (2016) 5.30 MOVIE: Wonder Park. (2019, PG) 7.05 MOVIE: Puss In Boots. (2011, PG) 8.50 MOVIE: Meet The Parents. (2000, M) 11.00 MOVIE: Starsky & Hutch. (2004, M) 1am Desperate Housewives. 3.00 Power Rangers Super Beast Morphers. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Teen Titans Go! 4.50 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 8.00 Home Shopping. 9.00 Soccer. Women’s International Friendly. Australia v USA. Replay. 11.30 Bondi Rescue. Noon The Doctors. 1.00 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 2.00 All 4 Adventure. 3.00 JAG. 4.00 Bondi Rescue. 4.30 iFish. 5.00 Reel Action. 5.30 MacGyver. 6.30 Scorpion. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: New Orleans. 10.20 MacGyver. 11.20 Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 11.30 Your 4x4. Noon The Mike & Cole Show. 12.30 Timbersports. 1.00 Blokesworld. 1.30 Australia ReDiscovered. 2.00 Storage Wars Canada. 3.00 Rides Down Under: Workshop Wars. 4.00 Barter Kings. 5.00 American Pickers. 6.00 Desert Collectors. 7.15 Pawn Stars. 7.45 MOVIE: Pompeii. (2014, M) 9.50 MOVIE: Just Cause. (1995, MA15+) 11.55 Late Programs. IENDLY BAN FR

NG KI

EA SY

Morning Programs. 9.00 Gagarin. (2013, PG, Russian) 11.05 Microbe And Gasoline. (2015, M, French) 1pm Remi Nobody’s Boy. (2018, PG, French) 3.00 Jungle Book. (1942, PG) 5.00 Kirikou And The Men And Women. (2012, PG, French) 6.40 Swallows And Amazons. (2016, PG) 8.30 The Ides Of March. (2011, M) 10.25 Room In Rome. (2010, MA15+) 12.25am Late Programs.

12503970-JW29-21

ABC TV (2)

WARWICK CREDIT UNION

Warwick Credit Union Ltd ABN 98 087 651 116. Trading as Warwick Credit Union, Gympie Credit Union and Dalby Credit Union, AFSL and Australian credit licence 240556.

Sunday, December 5 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. (Final) 10.00 Offsiders. (Final) 10.30 World This Week. (R) 11.00 Compass. (PG, R) 11.30 Praise. (R) 12.00 News. 12.30 Landline. (Final) 1.30 Gardening Aust. (R) 2.30 Pilgrimage: Road To Rome. (PG, R) 3.30 Rick Stein’s Secret France. (R) 4.30 Everyone’s A Critic. (PG, R) 5.00 Art Works. (PG, R) 5.30 The Sound.

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Motorcycle Racing. Australian Superbike Championship. Round 4. 3.00 Arabic News F24. 3.30 France 24 English News Second Edition. 4.00 Cycling. Cape To Cape MTB. Highlights. 5.00 The Untold Story Of Australian Wrestling. (R) 5.05 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 5.35 Nazi Megastructures. (PGav, R)

6.00 NBC Today. News and current affairs. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. The team takes a look at the latest in entertainment, current affairs, news, sport and weather. 7.30 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 12. Bathurst 1000. Warm Up and Support Races. 10.30 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 12. Bathurst 1000. Race 31.

6.00 Animal Tales. (PG, R) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Cows For Cambodia. 11.00 The Xtreme CollXtion. (PG, R) 11.30 Fishing Australia. 12.00 Ultimate Rush. (PGl, R) 1.00 Snackmasters. (PG, R) 4.00 Bondi Vet. (PGm) 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 RBT. (PGl, R)

6am Morning Programs. 8.00 Jamie’s Easy Meals For Every Day. (R) 8.30 Freshly Picked. (R) 9.00 Australia By Design: Interiors. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 Luca’s Key Ingredient. (R) 12.30 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 1.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 1.30 Healthy Homes Aust. 2.00 GCBC. (R) 2.30 Taste Of Australia. (R) 3.00 4x4 Adventures. 4.00 All 4 Adventure. (PG) 5.00 News.

6.00 Antiques Roadshow. Hosted by Fiona Bruce. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 Death In Paradise. (Ma, R) A wealthy coffee magnate is shot. 8.40 Total Control. (Mal) Alex and a small group of independents meet in Canberra to decide the future of the nation. 9.35 Noughts + Crosses. (Malv) When the McGregor family receives life-changing news, Callum tries to uncover the truth. 10.30 Harrow. (Malnv, R) A forensic pathologist investigates a suicide. 11.25 Talking Heads. (PG, R) 12.00 Silent Witness. (MA15+a, R) 1.00 Press. (Mals, R) 2.00 Midsomer Murders. (Mv, R) 3.30 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.00 Death In Paradise. (Ma, R) 5.00 Insiders. (Final, R)

6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 DNA Family Secrets. (PG) Part 3 of 3. 8.40 Muhammad Ali. (M) Part 2 of 4. A look at the life of Muhammad Ali continues with a focus on his conviction for draft evasion. 10.40 Michael Palin: Travels Of A Lifetime. (PG, R) A look at Michael Palin’s next series. 11.30 24 Hours In Emergency: The Survivors. (Ma, R) 12.25 Chasing The Moon: A Place Beyond The Sky. (PG, R) 2.25 George W. Bush. (Malv, R) 4.30 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+alnv, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 6.30 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 1. Sydney Sixers v Melbourne Stars. 10.30 Homicide: With Ron Iddles: Erwin Kastenberger. (Mav, R) Ron Iddles takes a look at the investigation into the murder of Erwin Kastenberger. 11.30 Autopsy USA: Tammy Wynette. (M) Takes a look at the death of Tammy Wynette. 12.30 Gold Coast Medical. (PGa, R) Medical staff deal with a stabbing. 1.30 Harry’s Practice. (R) Information about pet care. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 60 Minutes. Current affairs program. 8.00 David Attenborough’s A Perfect Planet: Volcano. (PG, R) An examination of the impact of volcanoes, without which life on Earth would never have begun. 9.10 MOVIE: The Equalizer. (2014, Madv, R) A former black-ops agent, who faked his death, comes out of retirement to rescue a girl. Denzel Washington, Chloë Grace Moretz, Marton Csokas. 11.40 Nine News Late. 12.10 Chicago Med. (Mam, R) 1.00 The Xtreme CollXtion. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Sunday Project. A look at the day’s news. 7.30 The Graham Norton Show. Celebrity guests include Tom Holland. 8.30 CSI: Vegas. The team looks into the world of sideshows when a couple of performers are found burned in a pit. Hodges mulls a plea deal as his trial kicks off, while Max, Grissom and Sara search for evidence to exonerate him. 9.30 FBI. (Mv, R) The team must infiltrate a drug trafficking gang after a chemical plant robbery leaves two customs agents dead. 11.30 The Sunday Project. (R) 12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 1.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Sir Mouse. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Compass. 8.30 Louis Theroux: Life On The Edge. 9.25 Pilgrimage: Road To Istanbul. 10.25 The Misadventures Of Romesh Ranganathan. 11.25 Brian Johnson’s A Life On The Road. 12.10am George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 1.00 Getting Their Acts Together. 2.00 Unprotected Sets. 2.20 In The Long Run. 2.45 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. 11.00 SBS Courtside. 11.30 Basketball. NBA. Golden State Warriors v San Antonio Spurs. 2pm Dopesick: Fentanyl’s Deadly Grip. 2.30 Dopesick: Policing An Addiction. 3.00 Nulla Nulla. 3.10 Vote Yes. 3.25 Ancient Aliens. 4.15 WorldWatch. 4.45 Insight. 5.45 Underground Worlds. 6.35 Country Music. 7.35 Our Guy In Russia. 8.30 Patriot Brains. 9.25 Incarceration Nation. 11.00 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Morning Programs. 8.30 Shopping. 9.00 House Of Wellness. 10.00 The Thrill Of The Chase. 11.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 11.30 Your 4x4. Noon 1 Man And A Bike. (Return) 12.30 Animal Rescue. 1.00 Mighty Ships. 4.00 Ed And Karen’s Recipes For Success. 5.00 Escape To The Country. 7.00 Border Security. 8.30 Chris Tarrant’s Extreme Railways. 9.30 Mighty Trains. 10.30 Heathrow. 11.00 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am Morning Programs. 7.30 In Touch. 8.00 Beyond Today. 8.30 The Incredible Journey. 9.00 TV Shop. 10.00 Seaway. 11.05 Edgar Wallace Mysteries. 12.20pm MOVIE: Where No Vultures Fly. (1951) 2.35 MOVIE: Attack On The Iron Coast. (1968, PG) 4.30 MOVIE: The Hallelujah Trail. (1965) 7.30 Christmas At Highclere Castle. 8.30 MOVIE: Downton Abbey. (2019, PG) 10.55 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am This Is Us. 8.00 Brides Of Beverly Hills. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Neighbours. Noon Basketball. NBL. Round 1. Adelaide 36ers v Illawarra Hawks. 2.00 Basketball. NBL. Round 1. Sydney Kings v Melbourne United. 4.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 Friends. 9.30 2 Broke Girls. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 12.45pm

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

Motor Racing. Dakar Rally. Highlights. 1.15 Soccer. Serie A Femminile. 3.00 Rugby Union. Monsoon Rugby Union. 4.30 Softball. SA Premier League. 6.00 Karla Grant Presents. 6.30 Dust And Bones. 7.30 NITV News Update. 7.40 Map To Paradise. 8.40 MOVIE: Teddy Pendergrass – If You Don’t Know Me. (2018, M) 10.30 Vogue Australia: Sixty Years Through The Lens. 11.20 Late Programs.

Morning Programs. 9.50 Kirikou And The Men And Women. (2012, PG, French) 11.30 Tanna. (2015, M, Bislama) 1.25pm Gagarin. (2013, PG, Russian) 3.30 A Monster In Paris. (2011, French) 5.10 Operation Arctic. (2014, PG, Norwegian) 6.50 Rosie. (2018, PG) 8.30 Disorder. (2015, MA15+, French) 10.20 Aloys. (2016, M, Swiss German) Midnight Late Programs.

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm MOVIE: Pokémon: Giratina And The Sky Warrior. (2008) 3.30 MOVIE: Pokémon: Arceus And The Jewel Of Life. (2009) 5.30 LEGO Masters Bricksmas Special. 7.00 MOVIE: The Mummy. (1999, PG) 9.30 MOVIE: Birds Of Prey. (2020, MA15+) 11.40 Young, Dumb And Banged Up In The Sun. 12.40am Desperate Housewives. 2.30 The Break Boys. 3.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Morning Programs. 8.30 Reel Action. 9.00 Healthy Homes Aust. 9.30 Escape Fishing. 10.00 iFish Summer. 10.30 The Doctors. 11.30 Scorpion. 12.30pm MacGyver. 1.30 The Offroad Adventure Show. 2.30 Soccer. A-League Women. Round 1. Melbourne Victory v Adelaide United. 5.00 All 4 Adventure. 6.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 9.25 Star Trek: Discovery. 11.25 Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 11.00 River To Reef: Retro. 11.30 Step Outside. Noon The Fishing Show By AFN. 1.00 Hook, Line And Sinker. 2.00 On The Fly. 2.30 Merv Hughes Fishing. 3.00 Fishing Addiction. 4.00 Ultimate Fishing. 5.00 Life On The Line: The Story Of The Southern Bluefin Tuna. 6.00 Pawn Stars. 6.30 MOVIE: Ender’s Game. (2013) 8.50 MOVIE: The Recruit. (2003, M) 11.20 Late Programs.

Thursday, 2 December, 2021 TODAY 15


Monday, December 6 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Landline. (Final, R) 11.00 The Great Acceleration. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 The Larkins. (Ms, R) 2.00 Press. (Mals, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.10 Think Tank. (PG, R) 5.10 Grand Designs. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 Al Jazeera News. 2.00 Scotland From The Sky. (R) 3.05 Journey Through Armenia. (PG, R) 3.35 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 4.05 Dog Tales. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Christmas At Maple Creek. (2020, PGal) 2.00 Criminal Confessions: Jackson County, Wisconsin. (Malv, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. (R)

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Christmas In Mississippi. (2017, PGa, R) Jana Kramer, Wes Brown, Faith Ford. 1.45 Explore. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) 5.30 WIN News.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 Bold. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa, R) 1.00 The Graham Norton Show. (R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Australian Story Summer Series: The Tipping Point. (R) The story of Veena Sahajwalla. 8.30 Universe With Brian Cox: Heart Of Darkness – Black Holes. Part 4 of 5. Professor Brian Cox continues his exploration of the universe with a look at black holes. 9.30 Media Watch. (Final, PG) Hosted by Paul Barry. 9.50 Hunting The Essex Lorry Killers. (Ma) A look at the deaths of 39 migrants. 10.50 ABC Late News. 11.20 Books That Made Us: Place. (Mlv, R) 12.15 Noughts + Crosses. (Malv, R) 1.15 Press. (Mlv, R) 2.15 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Britain’s Most Historic Towns: Georgian Edinburgh. (PGa, R) Alice Roberts visits Edinburgh. 8.30 Tony Robinson’s World By Rail: India And Myanmar. (R) Sir Tony Robinson continues his journey around the globe by exploring India and Myanmar. 9.25 The Best Of 24 Hours In Emergency: On The Edge. (M) A compilation of stories from St George’s. 10.20 SBS World News Late. 10.50 The Crimson Rivers. (MA15+av) 11.45 Tell Me Who I Am. (Premiere, Mv) 3.40 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 4.30 VICE Guide To Film. (Malv, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 2. Sydney Thunder v Brisbane Heat. 10.00 Fantasy Island. (Ms) A young woman must choose between marrying her parents’ proposed match or her longtime boyfriend. 11.00 Motorway Patrol. (PG) Follows the work of a police unit dedicated to patrolling the motorways of Auckland, New Zealand. 11.30 Highway Cops. (PGl) Follows people who help keep motorists safe. 12.00 MOVIE: Rabbit. (2017, MA15+lv, R) A woman tries to find her sister. Adelaide Clemens, Alex Russell. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. News and current affairs. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Snackmasters. (PGl) Part 3 of 4. Two fine-dining chefs battle it out to make a perfect replica of the iconic choc mint Drumstick. 9.10 Spice Girls: How Girl Power Changed The World. (Mal) Part 1 of 3. Takes a look at how the iconic British girl group Spice Girls influenced a generation of women. 11.10 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 11.40 Chicago Med. (MA15+am, R) 12.30 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 Bondi Rescue. (PGal) Lifeguards try to enforce social distancing. 8.00 Territory Cops. (Madlv) Cops hunt for a couple of brazen car thieves. 8.30 FBI: Most Wanted. (MA15+sv, R) A local FBI case involving two murdered women turns into a manhunt for a crime lord. 10.30 The FBI Declassified: Saving Ethan. (Premiere, Ma) 11.30 The Project. (R) 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Doctor Who. 8.35 Countdown To Disaster. 9.25 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 10.10 Doctor Who. 11.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 12.10am Escape From The City. 1.10 Red Dwarf. 1.40 Community. 2.05 The Letdown. (Final) 2.35 Parks And Recreation. 2.55 ABC News Update. 3.00 Close. 5.05 Five Minutes More. 5.10 Sarah & Duck. 5.20 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Basketball. NBA. Dallas Mavericks v New Orleans Pelicans. 2.00 Most Expensivest. 2.30 Figure Skating. 2019-2020 ISU European C’ships. Replay. 4.00 WorldWatch. 5.25 Takeshi’s Castle. 5.55 Shortland Street. 6.25 RocKwiz. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Dark Side Of The ‘90s. 9.20 Iggy & Ace. 10.35 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 7.30 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 10.30 One Road: Great Australian Road Trips. 11.00 Mighty Trains. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Deadly Dates. 3.00 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. 8.30 The Inspector Lynley Mysteries. 10.30 Cold Case. 12.30am Families Of Crime. 3.00 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Christmas At Highclere Castle. 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. 1.55 The Young And The Restless. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: Heart Of The Matter. (1953, PG) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Poirot. 8.40 Silent Witness. 10.50 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Big Bang Theory. 7.30 Friends. 10.00 The Middle. 11.30 Seinfeld. Noon In The Dark. 1.00 Nancy Drew. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Seinfeld. 11.00 2 Broke Girls. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 Stephen Colbert. 2.30 James Corden. 3.30 In The Dark. 4.30 Shopping.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.50pm Dust And Bones. 2.50 Emptying The Tank. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Jarjums. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 The 77 Percent. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Keep Calm And Decolonize. 7.20 News. 7.30 Road Open. 7.40 Through The Wormhole. 8.30 Karla Grant Presents. 9.00 College Behind Bars. 10.00 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Infomercials. 7.30 Home Shopping. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Bondi Forever. 10.00 JAG. Noon SEAL Team. 2.00 NCIS. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 A-League Highlights Show. 11.20 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 21. Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. Highlights. 12.20am Infomercials. 12.50 Home Shopping. 2.20 48 Hours. 3.15 Hawaii Five-0. 5.05 The Doctors.

Noon Supergirl. 1.00 Revenge Body. 2.00 America’s Top Dog. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 Children’s Programs. 4.30 Malcolm. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 Raymond. 8.30 MOVIE: Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues. (2013, M) 10.55 MOVIE: The Inbetweeners 2. (2014, MA15+) 12.50am Late Programs.

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6am Morning Programs. 12.30pm Inside Line. 1.30 Seven’s Motorsport Classic. 3.00 More Than 1000. 4.00 Barter Kings. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 2. Sydney Thunder v Brisbane Heat. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 American Pickers. 8.30 MOVIE: The Osiris Child: Science Fiction Volume One. (2016, MA15+) 10.35 MOVIE: Eraser. (1996, MA15+) 12.55am Late Programs. IENDLY BAN FR

NG KI

EA SY

Kirikou And The Men And Women. Continued. (2012, PG, French) 7.15 Operation Arctic. (2014, PG, Norwegian) 8.55 A Monster In Paris. (2011, French) 10.35 Jungle Book. (1942, PG) 12.35pm Summer Of ’92. (2015, M, Danish) 2.15 Rosie. (2018, PG) 3.55 Swallows And Amazons. (2016, PG) 5.45 Believe. (2013, PG) 7.35 The Program. (2015, M) 9.30 Sweet Country. (2017, M) 11.35 Late Programs.

WARWICK CREDIT UNION

Warwick Credit Union Ltd ABN 98 087 651 116. Trading as Warwick Credit Union, Gympie Credit Union and Dalby Credit Union, AFSL and Australian credit licence 240556.

Tuesday, December 7 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 War On Waste: Turning The Tide. (R) 11.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Miniseries: Ridley Road. (Mv, R) 1.55 Press. (Mlv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.10 Think Tank. (PG, R) 5.10 Grand Designs. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 2.05 Scotland From The Sky. (R) 3.10 Journey Through Armenia. (PG, R) 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 4.10 Animal Einsteins. (PGa, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Maggie’s Christmas Miracle. (2017, PGa) 2.00 House Of Wellness. (PG) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. (R)

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Lonestar Christmas. (2020, PGa) Stephanie Bennett, Marco Grazzini, Brent Stait. 1.45 Talking Honey: Princess Diana. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) 5.30 WIN News.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 Bold. (R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa, R) 1.00 The Dog House Australia. (PG, R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Anh’s Brush With Fame: Sophie Delezio. (PG, R) Anh Do paints Sophie Delezio. 8.30 Books That Made Us. (Malnv) Part 3 of 3. Claudia Karvan delves into how power is portrayed in stories. 9.25 Australia Remastered: Nature’s Great Divide: Where Worlds Collide. Part 2 of 3. 10.40 ABC Late News. 11.10 Q+A. (Final, R) 12.15 Midsomer Murders. (Mv, R) 1.45 Press. (Mls, R) 2.45 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) Presented by Marc Fennell. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Stonehenge: The New Revelations. (PG) Follows a team of experts as they investigate a previously undetected monument near Stonehenge. 9.00 Pearl Harbor. (M) Takes a look at the attack on December 7, 1941, on the US naval base at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.05 Before We Die. (Final, Mlv) Hanna goes on the run. 12.10 Miss S. (Mav) 4.35 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+adls, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 3. Melbourne Renegades v Adelaide Strikers. 10.00 Born To Kill? Ivan Milat. (Mav, R) Takes a look at the case of Ivan Milat, who served life for the murders of seven backpackers. 11.00 Beat The Chasers UK. Presented by Bradley Walsh. 12.00 Dr Harry’s Animal Encounters. (PGa, R) Dr Harry meets a bomb detection dog unit. 1.00 Gold Coast Medical. (Ma, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Snackmasters. (PG) Part 4 of 4. 9.10 Travel Guides. (PGls, R) Ordinary Australians become travel critics, experiencing a holiday in the tropical island paradise of Mauritius. 10.10 Spice Girls: How Girl Power Changed The World. (Mals) Part 3 of 3. 11.10 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 11.40 Damian Lewis: Spy Wars: Merchant Of Death. (Mv) 12.35 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 The Dog House Australia. (PG) Narrated by Dr Chris Brown. 8.30 NCIS. (Return, Mv) The team searches for Gibbs after wreckage of his boat is discovered. 9.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. (Mv) A man threatens to blow-up a busload of hostages unless his daughter’s war crimes are posthumously cleared. 10.30 NCIS. (Mv, R) A US Navy officer is murdered. 11.30 The Project. (R) 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 9.10 Schitt’s Creek. 9.55 Preppers. 10.30 Doctor Who. 11.20 Catastrophe. 11.45 In The Long Run. 12.10am Sick Of It. 12.30 GameFace. 12.55 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 1.40 Community. 2.00 Parks And Recreation. 2.25 ABC News Update. 2.30 Close. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Basketball. NBA. Golden State Warriors v San Antonio Spurs. Replay. 2.00 Date My Race. 3.05 Gymnastics. 2020 FIG Trampoline World Cup. H’lights. 4.00 WorldWatch. 5.25 Takeshi’s Castle. 5.55 Shortland Street. 6.25 RocKwiz. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Fear Of Dancing. 9.30 Stacey Dooley: Young And Homeless. 10.40 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Deadly Dates. 3.00 Creek To Coast. 3.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. 8.30 Lewis. 10.30 Without A Trace. 12.30am Deadly Dates. 2.30 The Real Seachange. 3.00 Mighty Ships. 4.00 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Poirot. 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. 2.05 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 Explore. 3.05 Antiques Roadshow. 3.35 MOVIE: Carry On Cabby. (1963, PG) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 New Tricks. 8.40 The Closer. 9.40 Rizzoli & Isles. 10.40 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Seinfeld. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 The King Of Queens. Noon In The Dark. 1.00 2 Broke Girls. 2.00 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Mom. 11.35 Frasier. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2.20pm

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

Always Was Always Will Be. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.00 Project Planet. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Pete & Pio’s Kai Safari. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Keep Calm And Decolonize. 7.20 News. 7.30 The Whole Table. 8.30 Power Meri. 9.30 Black Market. 10.00 Hate Thy Neighbour. 10.50 Late Programs.

Morning Programs. 8.30 The Finishers. (2013, PG, French) 10.10 Operation Arctic. (2014, PG, Norwegian) 11.50 Rams. (2015, M, Icelandic) 1.30pm A Monster In Paris. (2011, French) 3.10 Long Way North. (2015, PG) 4.40 Little Nicolas. (2009, PG, French) 6.20 This Beautiful Fantastic. (2016, PG) 8.00 Grandma. (2015, M) 9.30 Dean Spanley. (2008, PG) 11.25 Late Programs.

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon Supergirl. 1.00 Revenge Body. 2.00 America’s Top Dog. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Malcolm. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 Raymond. 8.30 MOVIE: American Pie 2. (2001, MA15+) 10.30 MOVIE: EuroTrip. (2004, MA15+) 12.20am Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 7.00 Infomercials. 8.00 Bondi Rescue. 8.30 Waltzing Jimeoin. 9.00 A-League Highlights Show. 10.00 JAG. Noon NCIS: Los Angeles. 1.00 NCIS. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Blue Bloods. 10.25 NCIS: New Orleans. 11.20 Evil. 12.15am Shopping. 12.45 Infomercials. 1.15 Shopping. 2.15 MOVIE: Pawno. (2015, MA15+) 4.10 Madam Secretary. 5.05 JAG.

16 TODAY Thursday, 2 December, 2021

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Ink Master. 2.00 Ink Master: Redemption. 2.30 Pawn Stars. 3.00 American Pickers. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 7th Gear. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 3. Melbourne Renegades v Adelaide Strikers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.30 Secrets Of The Supercars. 9.30 Supercar Customiser: Yianni. 10.30 Vegas Rat Rods. 11.30 Late Programs.


Wednesday, December 8 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Invisible Wars. (PG, R) 10.55 The Great Australian Bee Challenge. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 National Press Club Address. (Final) 1.35 Media Watch. (PG, R) 2.00 Press. (Mls, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.10 Think Tank. (R) 5.10 Grand Designs. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (PGaw, R) 2.05 Scotland From The Sky. (R) 3.10 Journey Through Armenia. (PG, R) 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 4.10 Animal Einsteins. (PG) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6am Morning Programs. 12.00 The Ashes: The Lunch Break. 12.40 Cricket. The Ashes. First Test. Australia v England. Day 1. Afternoon session. 2.40 The Ashes: Tea Break. 3.00 Cricket. The Ashes. First Test. Australia v England. Day 1. Late afternoon session. 5.30 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 4. Hobart Hurricanes v Sydney Sixers.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Christmas Ever After. (2020, G) Ali Stroker, Daniel di Tomasso, Bill Marchant. 1.45 Explore. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) 5.30 WIN News.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa, R) 1.00 Jamie & The Nonnas. (R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Hard Quiz. (PG) Hosted by Tom Gleeson. 8.30 Gruen. Wil Anderson and a team of experts analyse the advertising industry and consumerism. 9.10 Preppers. (Mls) Charlie’s hippie mother is hiding a secret when she arrives at Eden 2 to reconnect with daughter. 9.40 QI. (PG, R) Hosted by Sandi Toksvig. 10.10 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (R) UK-based panel show. 10.50 ABC Late News. 11.20 Universe With Brian Cox. (R) 12.20 Media Watch. (Final, PG, R) 12.40 Father Brown. (PG, R) 1.25 Silent Witness. (MA15+a, R) 2.25 Press. (Mls, R) 3.25 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) Presented by Marc Fennell. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Scotland’s Sacred Islands With Ben Fogle: Shetland. Part 4 of 4. 8.30 Michael Mosley On Cosmetic Treatments. (PGaw, R) Part 1 of 2. Michael Mosley and Mehreen Baig explore the world of cosmetic enhancement. 9.30 Before We Die. (Final, Madlv) The police undercover team try to bust the Mimicas’ drug smuggling operation, with unpleasant results. 10.25 SBS World News Late. 11.00 In Therapy. (PGa) A swimmer needs a psychological assessment. 11.50 Departure. (Ma, R) 4.45 Poh & Co. Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 4. Hobart Hurricanes v Sydney Sixers. From University of Tasmania Stadium. 8.40 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 5. Perth Scorchers v Brisbane Heat. From Optus Stadium, Perth. 12.00 American Crime. (Mads, R) An undocumented Mexican worker discovers modern servitude thriving in an agricultural community. 1.00 RSPCA Animal Rescue. (R) Two greyhounds are found neglected. 1.30 Harry’s Practice. (R) Information about pet care. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. News and current affairs. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise. News, sport and weather.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Mega Zoo. (PG) A crafty orangutan puts keepers to the test. 8.30 Emergency. (Md, R) Nurse Julie helps a smitten young couple who spend most of their first date in emergency. 9.30 A+E After Dark. (Mlm) A young woman is admitted after sustaining a nasty injury falling off a bar stool in Hull. 10.30 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Mam, R) A history-making blizzard hits New York. 11.50 The Fix. (Mav, R) 12.40 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 2021 AACTA Awards. Coverage of the 11th Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts Awards from the Sydney Opera House. 9.00 Bull. Bull’s legal troubles go from professional to personal when new evidence in his bribery trial implicates his wife. However, the TAC team’s efforts to assist their leader in court are thwarted by his cautious lawyer. 12.00 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 1.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late night talk show. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? 8.30 Art Works. 9.00 Brian Johnson’s A Life On The Road. 9.45 The Sound. 10.15 Doctor Who. 11.05 Books That Made Us. (Final) 12.05am Love On The Spectrum. 1.00 Pilgrimage: Road To Istanbul. 2.00 Louis Theroux: Life On The Edge. 2.50 Community. 3.15 Parks And Recreation. 3.35 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Hustle. 12.55 North To South: The Full Journey. 4.00 WorldWatch. 5.25 Takeshi’s Castle. 5.55 Shortland Street. 6.25 RocKwiz. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 MOVIE: Donnie Darko. (2001, M) 10.35 MOVIE: A Good Old Fashioned Orgy. (2011, MA15+) 12.20am The X-Files. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Deadly Dates. 3.00 Travel And Eat With Dan & Steph. 3.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The Vicar Of Dibley. 8.30 Mrs Brown’s Boys. 10.30 Miranda. 11.10 What A Carry On! 11.50 Bones. 1.50am Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon New Tricks. 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. 2.05 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 Explore. 3.05 Antiques Roadshow. 3.35 MOVIE: An Elephant Called Slowly. (1970) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 As Time Goes By. 8.50 Midsomer Murders. 10.50 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 Friends. Noon In The Dark. 1.00 2 Broke Girls. 2.00 Mom. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.20 2 Broke Girls. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2pm My Life As I Live It. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Jarjums. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Pete & Pio’s Kai Safari. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Keep Calm And Decolonize. 7.20 News. 7.30 Celtics/Lakers: Best Of Enemies. 9.20 NITV News Update. 9.30 My Family Matters. 10.00 Karla Grant Presents. 10.30 Wild Kai Legends. 11.00 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Little Nicolas. Continued. (2009, PG, French) 6.40 Dean Spanley. (2008, PG) 8.35 This Beautiful Fantastic. (2016, PG) 10.15 Long Way North. (2015, PG) 11.45 The Motorcycle Diaries. (2004, M, Spanish) 2.05pm Believe. (2013, PG) 3.55 The Finishers. (2013, PG, French) 5.35 1982. (2019, PG, Arabic) 7.30 Chef. (2014, M) 9.35 Skin. (2008, M) 11.35 Late Programs.

7MATE (73)

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon Hollywood Medium. 1.00 Revenge Body. 2.00 America’s Top Dog. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Malcolm. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 Raymond. 8.30 MOVIE: Billy Madison. (1995, M) 10.15 MOVIE: Mr Deeds. (2002, M) 12.15am Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Infomercials. 8.00 Stories Of Bikes. 8.30 iFish Summer Series. 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon NCIS: Los Angeles. 1.00 NCIS. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.15 Evil. 12.10am Home Shopping. 1.40 Infomercials. 2.10 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 21. Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. Highlights. 3.10 48 Hours. 4.05 CSI. 5.00 The Doctors.

IENDLY BAN FR

NG KI

EA SY

6am Morning Programs. 11.00 A Football Life. Noon Storage Wars Canada. 1.00 The Grade Cricketer. 1.30 Seven’s Motorsport Classic. 2.00 Inside Line. 3.00 7th Gear. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 4. Hobart Hurricanes v Sydney Sixers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.30 Storage Wars. 9.30 Storage Wars: Miami. 10.00 Irish Pickers. 11.00 Late Programs.

WARWICK CREDIT UNION 12503972-NG29-21

Warwick Credit Union Ltd ABN 98 087 651 116. Trading as Warwick Credit Union, Gympie Credit Union and Dalby Credit Union, AFSL and Australian credit licence 240556.

Thursday, December 9 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Australia Remastered: Nature’s Great Divide. (R) 11.00 The Pool. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 1.30 QI. (PG, R) 2.00 Press. (Mls, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.15 Think Tank. (PG, R) 5.10 Grand Designs. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 2.10 Royals At War. (PG, R) 3.15 Journey Through Armenia. (PG, R) 3.45 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 4.15 The Wonderful World Of Chocolate. (R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Ashes: Pre-Game Show. 10.00 Cricket. The Ashes. First Test. Australia v England. Day 2. Morning session. 12.00 The Ashes: The Lunch Break. 12.40 Cricket. The Ashes. First Test. Australia v England. Day 2. Afternoon session. 2.40 The Ashes: Tea Break. 3.00 Cricket. The Ashes. First Test. Australia v England. Day 2. Late afternoon session. 5.30 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: A Christmas Wish. (2019, PGa, R) Hilarie Burton, Tyler Hilton, Megan Park. 1.45 Talking Honey: Princess Diana. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) 5.30 WIN News.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal, R) 1.00 Jamie & The Nonnas. (R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Barrie Cassidy’s One Plus One. Jane Barnes speaks with Barrie Cassidy. 8.30 Designing A Legacy. (Ml, R) Tim Ross meets families whose lives have been shaped by the designs of their iconic homes. 9.30 To Be Advised. 10.30 You Can’t Ask That: Terminally Ill. (Ml, R) 11.00 ABC Late News. 11.30 Pilgrimage: Road To Rome. (PG, R) 12.35 Hunting The Essex Lorry Killers. (Ma, R) 1.35 Call The Midwife. (Ma, R) 2.35 Press. (Mal, R) 3.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 The Wonderful World Of Chocolate. (PG) Follows chocolatier Chris Zammit. 8.30 Red Election. (MA15+) Katrine prepares to deliver to Oleg the USB that can be used to mimic a nuclear meltdown at a power plant. 9.25 Murder Case: The Search For Julie Reilly. (MA15+) Part 2 of 3. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 Gomorrah. (MA15+av, R) 12.00 We Are Who We Are. (MA15+n, R) 1.05 Darklands. (MA15+dlv, R) 3.45 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mas, R) 4.40 Poh & Co. Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 6. Adelaide Strikers v Melbourne Renegades. 10.00 World’s Deadliest Weather: Caught On Camera. (PGa) A drone captures a young daredevil caught in a flash flood on the Hawaiian island of Maui. 11.00 Nurses. (Mam, R) A look at the experiences of nurses. 12.00 American Crime. (Mads, R) Luis finds himself sinking into servitude. 1.00 Harry’s Practice. (R) Information about pet care. 1.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. (R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Great Getaways. (Return, PG) Takes a look at holiday ideas. 8.30 Paramedics. (M, R) A paramedic worries his patient might give birth to twins in the back of the ambulance. 9.30 Inside The Mind Of Freddie Mercury. (Ma) Psychiatrist Dr Bob Johnson takes a look at legendary Queen frontman Freddie Mercury. 10.30 Nine News Late. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Mam, R) 11.50 Prison. (MA15+d, R) 12.40 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 Christmas With Australian Women’s Weekly. Tips and ideas for the festive season. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. (Mav) Chief McGrath pressures Benson to get a conviction as the bodies start piling up in the probe into Congressman Howard, while the search for witnesses on the run leads Fin and Kat down a dangerous path. 10.30 Blue Bloods. 11.30 The Project. (R) 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG) 3.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 To Be Advised. 9.00 Would I Lie To You? 9.30 Hard Quiz. 10.00 Gruen. 10.40 Doctor Who. 11.30 You Can’t Ask That. Midnight Countdown To Disaster. 12.50 The Misadventures Of Romesh Ranganathan. 1.50 Community. 2.10 Parks And Recreation. 2.30 ABC News Update. 2.35 Close. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Project Blue Book. 1.40 North To South: The Full Journey. 4.00 WorldWatch. 5.25 Takeshi’s Castle. 5.55 Shortland Street. 6.25 RocKwiz. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 The Curse Of Oak Island. 10.10 The Source. 11.00 Vikings. 11.50 News. 12.45am Me And My Mental Illness. 1.35 The X-Files. 2.25 Miracle Fish. 2.45 Deutsche Welle. 3.00 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Deadly Dates. 3.00 Weekender. 3.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.30 Inspector George Gently. 10.30 Murdoch Mysteries. 12.30am The Fine Art Auction. 3.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop: Home Shopping. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon As Time Goes By. 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. 2.05 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 Explore. 3.10 MOVIE: Silver Bears. (1978, PG) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Death In Paradise. 8.40 The Brokenwood Mysteries. 10.40 Law & Order. 11.35 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Frasier. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 The Big Bang Theory. Noon In The Dark. 1.00 2 Broke Girls. 2.00 Mom. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. (Final) 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.00 TikTok For You Fest. 10.30 Seinfeld. 11.00 2 Broke Girls. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.50pm

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am The Finishers. Continued. (2013, PG, French) 6.40 Long Way North. (2015, PG) 8.10 1982. (2019, PG, Arabic) 10.05 Infernal Affairs 3. (2003, M, Cantonese) 12.15pm Little Nicolas. (2009, PG, French) 1.55 Dean Spanley. (2008, PG) 3.50 This Beautiful Fantastic. (2016, PG) 5.30 Jappeloup. (2013, PG, French) 7.55 Joshy. (2016, M) 9.30 My Brilliant Career. (1979) 11.25 Late Programs.

7MATE (73)

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 8.00 What’s Up Down Under. 8.30 Escape Fishing With ET. 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon NCIS: Los Angeles. 1.00 NCIS. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Hawaii Five-0. 10.30 SEAL Team. 12.30am Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 2.00 Madam Secretary. 3.00 Blue Bloods. 4.00 Hawaii Five-0.

My Survival As An Aboriginal. 2.45 Hand Talk. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Jarjums. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Pete & Pio’s Kai Safari. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Keep Calm And Decolonize. 7.20 News. 7.30 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. 8.30 MOVIE: Precious. (2009, MA15+) 10.30 News. 10.40 Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Ink Master. 2.00 Ink Master: Redemption. 2.30 Pawn Stars. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Game 6. Adelaide Strikers v Melbourne Renegades. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 MOVIE: Heartbreak Ridge. (1986, M) 10.15 MOVIE: Last Man Standing. (1996, M) 12.30am Late Programs.

Noon Hollywood Medium. 1.00 Revenge Body. 2.00 America’s Top Dog. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Malcolm. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 Survivor 41. 8.30 Metro Sexual. 10.00 MOVIE: Ted 2. (2015, MA15+) 12.20am Late Programs.

Thursday, 2 December, 2021 TODAY 17


PUZZLES No. 057

To solve a Sudoku puzzle, every number from 1 to 9 must appear in: each of the nine vertical columns, each of the nine horizontal rows and each of the nine 3 x 3 boxes. Remember, no number can occur more than once in any row, column or box.

6

6 2 8 5 8 9 1 3 7 2 8 1 6 6 1 6 3 5 9 6 2 8 5 9 7 7 3 4 1 2 medium

1

4 3 4

Resource (5) Social exclusion (9) Arab State (5) Fine ceramic material (9) Put a file online (6) Italian church (8) Candle holders (10) Set (3) Tree (3) Repetition (10) Large marsupial (8) Gardening implement (6) Destroy (9) Chickens, pigeons etc. (5) Brazen (9) Now (5)

1 4 9 10 11 12 14 15 17 19 23 24 26 27 28 29

No. 057

Drinking vessel (7) ‘My bad!’ (4) Well-worn (10) Common name for the US (7) Medical technique (7) By hand (8) Voters (10) Submissiveness (8) US state (7) Accomplish (7) Show (7) Camouflaged (7) Meaty (6) Tidings (4)

3 4 5 6

ACROSS

easy

4

QUICK CROSSWORD

7 8 13 16 18 19 20 21 22 25

DOWN Sanctuary (6) Country in Horn of Africa (7)

1 2

DECODER

No. 057

9 6 1 7 2

2 9 6

9

8 5 5 9 7

7 3

1 9

2

6 hard

2

21

22

23

24

25

26

3

2

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

ACUTE AFTIE AGREE ALERT ALGAE ASKEW BLURB CAUSE CHASE CREPT DRESS DUSTY EASES EERIE ERROR GROUP HALES HAVOC INERT IOTAS

9-LETTER WORD Using the nine letters in the grid, how many words of four letters or more can you list? The centre letter must be included and each letter may only be used once. No colloquial or foreign words. No capitalised nouns, apostrophes or plural words ending in “s”.

D

Today’s Aim: 7 words: Good 11 words: Very good

X

N

O

A

T I

I

4 LETTERS BARD GOAT ICES LOGO ONTO PIPE PULP ROBE SEEM SEES SHAM TERM TOGA TWIG 5 LETTERS ABODE

No. 057

ISLES LARGE LOINS LOSES MESSY MUSIC OTTER OUTDO PANDA PEACE PETAL PRESS RUINS SCORN SHIRE SKILL SLAVE SPOUT SPRIG TALES

TRILL TRUCE TSARS TWIRL UNTIE 6 LETTERS EASTER MEAGRE PELLET PRIEST 7 LETTERS ADOPTED APPLAUD

AVOCADO BURGLAR DOUBLES OUTGROW 8 LETTERS HABITATS PATIENTS RATTLERS REDIRECT 11 LETTERS CHARISMATIC SWEETHEARTS

adit, anti, dint, doit, idiot, into, iota, nota, onto, oxidant, OXIDATION, taxi, toad, tondo, toxin 03-12-21

1

7

Insert the missing letters to make 10 words – five reading across the grid and five reading down.

If a reptile or insect is parthenogenetic, what is unusual about its method of reproduction?

Australian drama series The Secret Life Of Us was set in which Melbourne beachside suburb?

2

On which Australian island was the drama series RAN (Remote Area Nurse) filmed?

8

NOTE: more than one solution may be possible

3

True or false, the film Juno was based on a novel?

Found in Australia, what is said to be the only living thing on earth that can be seen from outer space?

9

4

How many active volcanoes exist in Australian territories?

What is the chemical symbol for neon?

5

Which US director’s (pictured) children are named Rocket, Racer, Rebel, Rogue and Rhiannon?

6

How many lines are there in a cinquain poem?

No. 057

QUICK QUIZ

T

3 6 5 2 8 1 4 7 9

1 6 7 9 2 8 5 4 3

5 2 4 6 3 1 9 7 8

9 3 8 4 7 5 6 2 1

4 1 2 3 6 7 8 5 9

R E

S

S

E R D Y

N

E A S T N D E R T O N E

L E A

3 8 9 1 5 2 7 6 4

6 7 5 8 9 4 3 1 2 1 3 7 5 4 8 2 9 6

S

10 11 12 13

1

8 4 3 7 1 6 2 9 5

2 9 6 5 4 3 1 8 7

7 5 1 2 8 9 4 3 6

4 1 8 7 9 6 3 2 5

7 2 9 5 4 3 6 8 1

8 4 1 9 6 7 2 5 3

2 7 6 8 3 5 1 9 4

9 5 3 4 1 2 8 6 7

6 9 7 1 2 4 5 3 8

5 3 4 6 7 8 9 1 2

1 8 2 3 5 9 7 4 6

6 8 2 9 1 3 7 4 5

9 5 4 7 6 2 1 3 8

5 4 8 3 7 6 9 2 1

2 7 6 1 9 4 8 5 3

3 1 9 2 8 5 4 6 7

8 9 5 4 3 1 6 7 2

4 2 1 6 5 7 3 8 9

7 6 3 8 2 9 5 1 4

18 TODAY Thursday, 2 December, 2021

E

9

B C 20

T

8

14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26

19

E D

E

7

18

E O

A

6

17

T

A N

5

O

Puzzles and pagination © Pagemasters | pagemasters.com

L

4

15 words: Excellent

hard

5x5

3

16

medium

2

15

easy

1

J P V I E N Y F Z L X R U

8 6 9 5 3 3 4 8 1 7 8 5 8 2 5 2 1 9 8 4 7 3 2 4

3 LETTERS ALE APT ARC ASH CAP EVE FLU FOR FUR IDS LIE LOP MAT NOR NOW PIS PRO RAG ROD SAG SEA TOT UPS USE

14

9 5

OD A SWK HQGM T B C

1

WORDFIT

10 Which US rock band had a hit in the 1990s with the song Seether? ANSWERS: 1. Its eggs develop without fertilisation (that is, without a male) 2. Masig Island 3. False 4. Two (on Heard Island and McDonald Islands) 5. Robert Rodriguez 6. Five 7. St Kilda 8. Great Barrier Reef 9. Ne 10. Veruca Salt

SUDOKU


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

RURAL LINKS

Rural Links This week on the farm By Judy Barnet, Ag Columnist I can’t believe I didn’t hear a thing. Chaos reigned this morning at 5 am. I was lying in bed enjoying my morning coffee that had not long been delivered to me by my nearest and dearest when Richie called out, “Cows in the garden,” and rushed out the door. By the time I got outside, still in my slippers, a delighted Dora rushed out to greet me and straight away I knew where the trouble had started. Dora had somehow slipped her collar and with no one around had been unable to resist the temptation of chasing the cows and sheep. It was no use going mad at her as she hadn’t been caught in the act. The cows had pushed (or more likely been chased) through one of our “temporary” fences and into the gardens. It looks like they started in the outside gardens and demolished only that which appealed to them – all of the lettuces, beetroot and silverbeet. Carrots and potatoes were spared. They then moved into the main garden devouring more than half of the Isabella grapevine that gives the cottage its summer shade. Grapes were lying in bunches on the ground everywhere. The roses were next to go. They are right underneath our bedroom window but I never heard a thing. They then turned their attention to the parsley, however, it had already gone to seed so was no big loss. Their big bellies must have been getting full by then as the other plants have only been sampled. Of course, giant hoof prints and even more giant cow patties have made one hell of a mess of the neatly mowed lawn. Neither CJ nor the cottage guests (to my knowledge) woke up through all this but I can only imagine the look on our guest’s faces when they drew back the curtains in their bedroom that face onto the cottage verandah! The ewe and lamb (the one the goanna attacked) in the yards near the house also escaped, undoubtedly helped by Dora. Richie has vowed to make permanent the temporary fencing a high priority job! Earlier in the week, I had to deal with my own chaos and dummy spit with an apology thrown in to boot. I had asked Richie to come home before dark if he could to help load the pigs into the trailer. No worries he said. I arrived home around 5 pm, fed the calves and did a few other jobs, then I thought I would have a go at loading the pigs as Richie wasn’t home yet. Now, remember the pigs had been put back in the pigpen after last week’s episode of ransacking the chook pen. However, once again I decided it would be easier to let them out and try to get them in the trailer outside the yards rather than back the trailer up to the (wonky) ramp and load them that way. All went well to start with and before you could say “Jumping Jack Flash” one of the gilts

Bird with beak open.

Dora racing through the water. jumped in the trailer! The second was a bit wary though and kept putting her front feet up and eating the pig pellets I had thrown in to encourage self-loading that were within her reach. After a few minutes, I couldn’t risk the other pig jumping out so I snuck up, grabbed the back end of the gilt that was half in the trailer and pushed hard. She weighed around 70kg and was trying equally hard to push back out and what happened next would have been funny if it had happened to anyone else but me! I hadn’t chocked the trailer as it was on flat ground, however, with me pushing the trailer started rolling forward. After about five metres I lost the battle, the pig took off but the other remained in the trailer quite unperturbed. Not one to give up easily I figured the trailer couldn’t move much further so I got some more food to give it a second go. Unfortu-

Young bird.

Kings of the castle. nately, the second attempt went rather like the first only this time both pigs escaped. I was pretty annoyed by this time and decided it was time to walk away. By this time the trailer was a fair way into the scrub and would need a couple of people to push it back before it could be hooked on a vehicle. I walked back up to the house just on dark and also just as Richie drove in. I said a few unkind words to Richie who waited patiently for me to finish my rave before telling me he had a flat tyre. He asked where the pigs now were and my reply was along the lines of “well not on the way to the abattoir, that’s for sure.” I went inside to start on dinner and, seriously, only five minutes later I hear Richie drive up with the trailer complete with pigs inside. When I asked how he was able to get them in the trailer he replied “they were already in there when I arrived at the yards.” I later apologised!

I am sorry to report that the sheep have still not been shorn due to the wet weather and we are still spending plenty of time cleaning up maggoty sheep. This is likely to continue until we get a break in the weather. The calves are thriving and growing very quickly and I have resisted the temptation to buy any more. For now! Glenlyon Dam is now over 102% full and a good majority of our boundary fence with the dam is well underwater. I will have to go for a swim next week and tie some plastic water bottles along the fence-line in case boaties decide to venture up to our part of the dam. It is an incredible sight though and just amazing to wake up and look out the window to see. Photos just don’t do the view justice! Wishing everyone a good a safe week. - Judy

Southern Downs Ag 87 Ogilvie Road, Warwick Q 4370 www.southerndownsag.com.au (Ph 07 4661 5900)

12525188-HC49-21

Thursday, 2 December, 2021 TODAY 19


RURAL LINKS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Livestock agent ROSS ELLIS of McDougall and Sons brings us an update on the local lamb and cattle markets from last week…

Livestock markets update

Sheep and lamb numbers Lamb numbers were also subdued with 985 head meeting the market missing one major buyer. The quality of the yarding was up and down with some good export and butcher lambs along with some runs of breeding ewes and light feed on lambs keeping the restockers interested. Lambs topped at $241 to average $182.97, par week on week Hoggets topped at $195 to average $160.67, $11 down week on week Ewes topped at $170 to average $104.38, $14 down week on week

MCDOUGALL & SONS STOCK AND STATION AGENT & Licensed Auctioneers 141 Palmerin Street, Warwick

Wethers topped at $156 to average $138.08, $3 down week on week Lamb rams topped at $214 to average $181.41, $21 up week on week Total yarding averaged $161.53 a fall of $15/ head week on week. Pig and poultry numbers Pig numbers increased to 119 head with the majority being stores. The market was firm with Sows returning from $152 to $405/head, Baconers from $70 to $192, Boars to $130, Pork from $203 to $210 and stores ranging from $57 to $205 Poultry numbers continue to soar with some good results mainly for the scarcer types. Guinea Fowl sold to $80/unit of 6, Ducklings sold to $25/unit of 6, Chickens got to $12.50 for a pair , Roosters sold to $22.50, Pullets and Brown hens sold to $15 each, Bantam Pullets sold to $17.50 and a pen of Silkys sold to $42.50 McDougall and Sons sheep and lamb report Agents today yarded a smaller package of sheep and lambs for the weekly sale the 985 head falling 400 short of last sale. The stock was of differing quality with some substantial runs of good export types mixed in with some light lambs and a few runs of mutton and with one major buyer not attending the odds were in favour of the buyers, back to the paddock sales helped alleviate this too much. Lambs topped at $241 to average $182.97(Par), hoggets topped at $195 to average $160.67($11down), ewes topped at $170 to average $104.38($14down), wethers topped at $156 to average $138.08($3down), lamb rams topped at $214 to average $181.41($21up). The total yarding averaged $161.53, $15 per

head down week on week. Woodland Farming sold Dorper x lambs 67.8kg to Thomas Foods for $230, 69.1kg ram lambs to Warwick Meats for $193, 80kg ewe lambs to Thomas Foods for $227, 50kg Xb lambs to Warwick Meats for $190 Tom & Tracie Cooper sold Dorset x lambs off feed 62kg to Thomas Foods for $225, 53.2kg to Ashtons Butchery for $226, 46.6kg to Ashtons for $200 Widgeegoera Past Co sold Dorset x lambs 66.87kg , 65.6kg 63kg to Thomas Foods for $240 Tony & Julia Simmons sold Dorper x lambs 70kg to Thomas Foods for $240, 50kg to Ashtons Butchery for $210 Oakley Past Co sold Dorper lambs 50kg to Ashtons Butchery for $215, 43.3kg to Elliots Butchery for $186 Tony & Lynne Duncan sold Dorperram lambs 45kg to Uniplaza Meats for $181, 45kg lambs to GR Prime for $195 JCD Past sold Dorper wether lambs 49.5kg to Ashtons Butchery for $215, ewe lambs 52.5kg to Uniplaza Meats for $220 Warrick Ryan sold Dorper lambs 60kg to Thomas Foods for $241, 50kg to Grants Quality Meats for $220 Darryl Polzin sold Dorper x lambs 37.5kg to Highchester Meats for $162 Darcy & Melissa Filmer sold Dorper x sucker lambs 43.3kg to GR Prime for $174, 40kg to Grants Quality Meats for $180 and Leslie Lamb for $177 Phil Sissman sold Dorset lambs 50kg to Warwick Meats for $200, 70kg hoggets to restockers for $178, Xb ewes to restockers for $80, Merino ewes to Thomas Foods for $100

· · · · · · · · · · ·

PTY LTD

The rain affected the yarding as vendors and agents worked to get a reasonable number for the weekly sales. The yarding of 467 head was half of what was presented last week but the yarding had some good types in most categories. Cattle numbers Vealer Steers averaged 669.3c/kg to a top of 760.2c/kg or $1672.72 to a top of $2189.01 Vealer heifers averaged 591.5c/kg to a top of 684.2c/kg or $1483.21 to a top of $1899.96 Feeder steers averaged 582.9c/kg to a top of 696.2c/kg or $2246.35 to a top of $2772.00 Feeder heifers averaged 512.3c/kg to a top of 582.2c/kg or $2133.29 to a top of $2212.36 Yearling steers averaged 678.2c/kg to a top of 808.2c/kg or $2059.78 to a top of $2420.00 Yearling heifers averaged 572.8c/kg to a top of 660.2c/kg or $1689.70 to a top of $2028.78 Steers averaged 449.1c/kg to a top of 459.2c/ kg or $2958.57 to a top of $3468.21 Heifers averaged 436.4c/kg to a top of 451.2c/kg or $2296.31 to a top of $3411.55 Manufacturing steers averaged 433.1c/kg to a top of 447.2c/kg or $2907.21 to a top of $3376.36 Cows averaged 403.3c/kg to a top of 431.2c/ kg or $2364.78 to a top of $3532.86 Bulls averaged 404.2c/kg to a top of 532.2c/ kg or $2110.39 to a top of $3536.17 A feel-good story of the sale was the toppriced articles being cow and calf units making $4000 / unit, these were purchased at the weekly pig and calf sale from local breeders during the dry and have returned the buyers confidence in the articles by making the top price, as well as the breeder who was at the sale and saw the result.

Office - 4661 1411 Dennis Bourke - 0427 031 442 Ross Ellis - 0419 744 151

• Cattle Sale - Tuesdays 7.30am • Pig and Calf Sales - Wednesdays 10.30am • Sheep and Lamb Sale - Wednesdays 1pm • Poultry Sale - Wednesdays 9.30am • Sundry Sale - Wednesdays 10.30am • Direct sales to feedlots & processors weekly 12459960-SN36-20

PLUS STEEL SUPPLIES, TRAILER PARTS, WELDING SUPPLIES, NUTS, BOLTS, VARIOUS FASTENERS, TRAY PARTS, LIGHTS AND ELECTRICAL, GENERAL WELDING REPAIRS, FABRICATION, REPAIRS, FOLDING OF SHEET STEEL, ROLLING AND BENDING OF PIPE AND RHS, PIPE THREADING.

UNDERTRAY TOOL BOXES CONTACT BRUCE OR NEIL 20 TODAY Thursday, 2 December, 2021

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07 4661 2178

12498006-AV23-21

SUPPLIERS OF THE FOLLOWING


FOCUS ON … REAL ESTATE

KILLARNEY PROPERTY WITH VIEWS THIS 80-acre property is located just two kilometres south of the Killarney township and approximately 20 minutes (30km) drive east of Warwick The property features a bitumen road frontage and undulating elevation and has quality scrub soil, Kikuyu pasture and a lovely lightly timbered gully. The 80 acres are divided into five paddocks with good quality fencing. There are four dams and shared bore water on the property. The three-bedroom old style high set Queenslander includes two external decking

areas on the northern and southern sides of home, there is a sunroom on three-sides of house, high ceilings, wood fireplace, serviceable kitchen with walk-in pantry, wood heating and two living areas. The property is located within close proximity to childcare centre, primary school, medical centre, aged care facility, bowls club, Killarney Hotel, local shops/cafes and Killarney Co-Operative. The current owners are motivated to sell For further information or to arrange an inspection, contact Stuart Bond on 0419 677 775. ●

HOME ESSENTIALS Address: 127 Killarney Barlows Gate Rd, KILLARNEY Description: 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom Price: $950,000.00 Inspect: By appointment Contact: Stuart Bond 0419 677 775, STUART BOND

*MULTI VENDOR CLEARING SALE* Stuart Bond Real Estate & Auctioneer O ONED DUE T Saturday 11th December 2021 – POn OSTPSite R WET WEATHE Be Advised 9AM (Gates open from 7am) o T te a D w e N

TRACTORS & ACCESSORIES:- Massey Harris Tractor, 3pt Linkage Scoop, Back Blade, Carry All, Half Tracks for Massey Ferguson Tractor, VEHICLES:- Kawasaki Mule 4x4, Old Polaris Quad Bike, Cossack 650cc Motor Bike, FARM MACHINERY:- Crump Fertilizer Spreader Ground Drive, Oliver Dozer, Hay Binder, Variety of Ploughs, Chaff Cutter, RABBIT & DOG TRAPS:- TBA BLACKSMITH GEAR:- Swage Block, SLASHERS:- Swage Block, ANTIQUES & COLLECTABLES:- Cast Iron Tractor Seats, Kero Lights, Sandstone Grindstone, Arcade Games, Grain Grinder, Landmark Rotary Hoe, Metal Punch, Cast Iron Press, Stationary Engine Generators, Grader Badge, Convict Leg Iron, Sunshine Milker, Lucky Number Machine, Cast Iron Fireplace Insert, Cast Iron Kettles, Army Telephone Wire, Cooper Handpiece Sharpener, Moffatt Virtue Handpiece Sharpener, Circular Saw Blade Tooth Setter, Cant Hook, Axe Heads, STATIONARY ENGINES:- JAP Twin Cyl Engine, Lamborghini Engine, Vintage Motor, Moffatt-Virtue Reconditioned Motor, Villiers Reconditioned Motor, Armstrong Sidley Stationary Engine, GENERAL EQUIPMENT:- National Panasonic Mobile Cold Room, Aluminium Pantec (Trailer not included), 256KVA Generator & 4 cyl Detroit Diesel Engine, Double Horse Float, Cattle Grid, Pipe Fittings, Wallaby Jacks, Mechanical Jacks, Cable Tensioner, Monkey Endless Chain Hoist, MISCELLANEOUS:- TBA

Photos of items updated on website daily For more information, please contact STUART BOND ON 0419 677 775

STUART BOND REAL ESTATE & AUCTIONEER WARWICK, QLD, 4370

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450 MT MARSHALL CLINTONVALE ROAD, GLENGALLAN 15KM NORTH OF WARWICK --- 10KM SOUTH OF ALLORA - Outside Vendors Welcome – Genuine Items Only - All items to be delivered to site by 8th December 2021-

Please contact Stuart Bond on 0419 677 775 or 4661 3462 www.stuartbondrealestate.com.au sbondrealestate@bigpond.com Thursday, 2 December, 2021 TODAY 21


NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

COMMUNITY DIARY Monday 20th - 24th December Warwick Anglican Church presents Community Christmas Tree Festival from 5pm - 7pm at St Mark’s Anglican Church

Wednesday 23rd December Warwick Anglican Church pop up markets at St Mark’s Anglican Church. Artworks at Stanthorpe Station, Art groups meet weekly on Tuesdays, (beginner) & Thursdays, from 9am - 12 noon. New friends/artists/poets/crafters are welcome. Café open weekends. Workshops spaces available. Phone 0468 879 081. Stanthorpe Cycling Club meets at Burton and Sons, High St, Stanthorpe every Sunday at 7 am for a ride around the Granite Belt. Call Keith on 0413 870 021 for more information. Zonta Club of Warwick meets every third Tuesday with a focus on empowering women and girls. Contact on warwickzonta@gmail.com for more information Rotary Club of Warwick Sunrise meets every Thursday from 7am to 8am at Warwick Gardens Galore, Albion Street. Everyone welcome. Contact Don Hughes on 0456 654 814. Border Ranges Amateur Radio Club meets the first Saturday of each month at club rooms Eduardo Vern park Stanthorpe at 12 midday. Further details contact David VK4HDE on 0427 830 030 or enquiries@brarc.org.au. Rose City Probus Club meet third Wednesday of the month. From 9.30am at The Granary (behind Dairy Lounge - was Weeping Mulberry). Phone Marion: 0499 267 547; Leslie: 4661 4273. Lapidary Club meets every Wednesday and Saturday from 12-4pm at their workshop in Barnes Park, Warwick (off Horsman Road). Membership is just $25, $5 workshop fee. Enquiries to 4661 7865. Killarney all-ages Skate Nights meet the last Friday of every month from 5.30pm until 8.30pm at Killarney Recreation Hall opposite showgrounds. Entry is gold coin donation. For more information phone Sonya 0439 618 371. Stanthorpe Probus Club meet the fourth Tuesday of the month at Stanthorpe RSL Services Club, from 9.30 am. Phone: Elaine 0418 479 687 or Glen 0498 462 954. Warwick Community Hub program for people with or without disability held each Friday from 9.30am at Warwick Senior Citizens Centre in Albert St. Warwick. Monthly program of events published on Warwick Community Hub Facebook page, email: warwickcommunityhub@gmail.com. Small cost involved. Enquiries: Christine 0414 687 651. Warwick Combined Probus Club meet 1st Wednesday of each month, 9.30am to noon. New Meeting Venue: The Auditorium, Church of Christ Aged Care, Dragon St, Warwick. New members always welcome. Phone Secretary on 0457 317597. Warwick Golf Club beginner sessions. Four weekly 60-minute sessions. All equipment included, coaching with PGA Pro Sam Eaves. Location: Warwick Golf Course. Date: Thursdays and Sundays. Time: 11am – 12pm. Enquiries: seaves@pgamember.org.au, 07 4661 3664 or 0408 222 602. Register: www.golf.org.au/getintogolf/facility/Warwick+Golf+Club. Warwick Lions Club meets on the first and third Wednesday of the month. Criterion Hotel 6.30pm to 7pm meet and greet. 7pm dinner meeting. All welcome. Ring Jenny 0432 804 826 for more information. Warwick Spinners and Weavers Group Inc. meets every Wednesday and the first and third Saturday of the month in the third room of St. Mark’s Anglican Church Grafton Street, Warwick. Phone 0417 595 178 for more information. Warwick Bridge Club meets at Victoria Park Clubhouse. Lessons on Wednesday at 9.30am. Play Monday and Friday 1pm. Please be seated by 12.45pm. Contact Noela on 0417 757 255 for further information. Salvation Army Warwick community gathering held every Saturday from 4pm at the Salvation Army, 25 Guy Street, Warwick. Enquiries to Richard on 0428 230 431 or Leanne on 0419 379 738. QCWA Glen Aplin meets on the first Tuesday of every month at the Glen Aplin hall, 14 Foster St, Glen Aplin from 9am. Visitors very welcome. Enquiries to Kay 0406 828 602. Allora Photography Group meets second Wednesday of each month – 7pm Meeting, 7.30pm photo screening and workshop at Allora State School Library, Raff Street, Allora. Enquiries: 0411 772 339. Email: alloraphotographygroup4362@gmail.com Warwick Fish Stocking Club meet at Leslie Dam every third Sunday of the month from 9am to 12 noon. Membership is only $10 yearly. Warwick Toastmasters Club meets on the 2nd and 4th Tuesday of each month, between 7pm and 9pm at the CWA hall in Grafton Street (next to Crisp’s bus depot.) For further details contact Chris on 0435 994 763. View Club meeting and lunch (3rd Wed each month). 11am start at GOLF CLUB, Warwick. Join women sharing lunch whilst at same time supporting work of the Smith Family. Contact Sue 0427 792 840

If you are a community group and would like to list your event please email. advertising@warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au 12526217-SG49-21

22 TODAY Thursday, 2 December, 2021

Joey Scout experience By William Lister On the weekend I went to another Joey Scout camp at the Den, but it was a bit short because it was only for two days and one night. The first thing that we did was Indigenous style paintings. There were two group: stripes and dots, and I was in the stripes group. We got to grind up chalk to use as paint to paint my face and some rocks. The next thing that I did was make homemade pizza. And the stripes group got to cook first. And then as soon as we made the pizza it was night time. And we were cooking marshmallows and playing a game in the dark.

Then we did a bush walk and kept playing the game. As soon as we got to bed Kanga read us a bedtime story. The next morning we woke up and as soon as we got dressed and packed up we went on another bush walk to a river. And then we used fishing nets to catch yabbies and the younger Joey’s used long butterfly nets. And then Dad came to pick me up early and Dad and I went to the LNP Christmas party at lunch time. It was a great camp and it was Possum’s last camp with the Stanthorpe Scout Group. Thank you Possum (Ann Richardson) for everything you have done for us, we will miss you.

Tickets for taste of Irish The seasonal spectacular, A Celtic Christmas by A Taste of Ireland, is coming to Warwick in December and promises to bring a night of romantic tales, tunes, taps and tradition. Warwick & Stanthorpe Today have 2 x double passes the the Celtic Christmas Show coming to Warwick on Thursday 16th December at the Warwick Town Hall - Warwick Combining red-hot rhythms, award winning talent and music under mistletoe, the show follows the story of two star-crossed lovers, and a whole lot of merry mischief from one cheeky elf.

Producer Brent Pace, multiple world medalist and six year Irish dancing national champion, developed the Christmas special alongside co-producer Ceili Moore, 2014 all-world champion and of both Riverdance and Lord of the Dance fame! Featuring festive favourites in carols and dazzling dance, this is one show not to miss. For your chance to WIN simply go to warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au/competitions and click on the A Celtic Christmas icon. Hurry, entries close Midday 14 December.


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

NEWS

The latest contribution from Rose City Writers, this week from FLEUR LIND... Check out more short stories at Fleur Lind’s website - fleursfabulousfables.wordpress.com A Word from the Big Guy

causing a global meltdown with them; don’t you fret about that. The only meltdown that could possibly occur is if Rudolph doesn’t get enough carrots on the journey! I digress. Back to Superman, he and I chase the Sun and dance around the Moon, just because we can. Mrs Claus times us on each lap. We were even going to enter the Intergalactic Games, but Superman kept getting called away to save the world. It seems there is always something going on to pull him away. His finger lights up too, so he’s a good stand-in when Rudolph is under the weather from too many carrots or drinking my eggnog. Such a naughty reindeer! On another note, with every household drop of presents I do, I am also giving your family a complimentary bottle of Santatiser… it’s my own branded version. Mine smells far more pleasant than the sanitiser you buy in the stores. My elves have been very inventive with

the aromas; there is Frankincense, Mistletoe, Fruitcake, and eggnog for the Northern part of the world, and for you good folk down under, we have done BBQ, Bubbly, Sandcastles, and Sea Spray. Anyway. Back to your list this year. I’ve been going to North Pole IT classes to try and find the fascination with the new phone you want. I still haven’t found it, but I get a lot of Christmas lists texted to me now. Also, my Facebook and Twitter page are busy with requests, well wishes and images of your pets. It is a good thing you are getting rain now, as that was a very popular present request. Sadly, I can’t control that, I am amazing, and magic is my middle name, but I can’t tell the clouds and weather systems what to do. Believe me, I’ve tried, but to no avail. So long as I can get through on my big night without a storm, strong winds and heavy rain; that will

be ideal. It is not a pretty sight when Dasher gets a lightning bolt tickling his tail! I will have to turn my turbo jets off if that happens, or I will have finished my present deliveries before I have started! But remember this when you are writing out those lists…or texting them to me…. I miss the good ol’ days when you wanted books and blocks and trains or dolls and skates. There are so many good reads out there now, and you should be outdoors more. Fresh air and exercise, but slip, slop, slap and wrap and wear a mask! But I know I must move with the times, so text me and tell me what you’re leaving out for my supper this year. I’m gluten-free now, so I’ll text you some menu ideas! Stay safe my friends, Yours, Santa

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I think it’s time you and I had a talk. Sure, you come and visit one of my many assistants each year when they are sitting in a big comfy chair in a mall or shopping Centre near you, but I need to have a word with you. I’ve been in the business of delivering presents to you and yours for many, many years. I’ve seen each new generation come along, grow and evolve. You have kept my elves busy with your ever-changing Christmas list over the years, from the cuddly stuffed toys, building blocks, train sets, dolls, books, play dough, skates, bikes, sports shoes, sailing ships for the bath, doll houses, trucks, remote control cars… (taking a breath…) As you all grew, your wants changed. We stepped up a gear or two, maybe four, to more sophisticated things. The elves weren’t happy about the racket that noisy muffler made for your dad’s car, and I had a job packing it in my big red Santa sack last year. If I had a dollar for every high-tech, blue tooth-enabled gadget or phone that I see on your Christmas list each year, I’d be on a Santa Cruise somewhere. That is, when they start up again. Maybe a river cruise along the Murray … The thing is – I’m not keeping up. Figuratively speaking, of course. We all know I am faster than a speeding bullet; as my good friend Superman, says. He and I go way back. We do laps round the Earth, and other planets just for fun. And we can go further afield, or planet, as it were, now that I have had my mechanic install a turbo jet that would make every petrol head’s eyes water. It’s magnificent if I do say so myself. As I had accumulated several million flybys points for the number of chimneys, front yards, and doorsteps I stop at each year on the 24th of December…well of course I had to cash them in. And in case you are wondering, the emissions from my turbo jets meet all the safety standards. I won’t be

Thursday, 2 December, 2021 TODAY 23


NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Farewell to class of 2021 By The School of Total Education The School of Total Education in Warwick held its annual Graduation on Sunday 21st November, farewelling its eight graduating students in a wonderful afternoon ceremony which was attended by Southern Downs Mayor,

Vic Pennisi. Guest speakers at the event were past students Chris Thornton (2009) and Ruby Doolan (2013) who delivered very genuine and insightful presentations to the students and parents in an authentic and personal style. Encouragement to maintain a good work life

balance, to take opportunities as they present themselves and to try and find where your passion lies were all parts f the advice given by the two presenters. The graduating students followed with their own speeches, expressing warm thanks to teachers, parents and friends

for their rich and varied learning journeys. A strong sense of connection and readiness to enter ‘the real world’ was conveyed by the conclusion of the students’ speeches. A celebratory afternoon tea for parents, teachers and friends concluded the afternoon.

After all the years and effort, its graduation glamour By St Joseph’s School Stanthorpe Year 12 is bittersweet. There’s stress, late nights and a lot of cramming. But there are also those highly anticipated events like the final athletics carnival, school formal and graduation. On Thursday 18th November, 13 Year 12 students from St Joseph’s School Stanthorpe stepped out of the classroom and on to the red carpet, to celebrate their graduation in a formal affair held at the Bathersby Centre. Dressed to impress, and with a celebratory tone, the proceedings moved seamlessly from Mass conducted by Fr Gonzo and Deacon Brian at St Joseph’s Catholic Church to a banquet-style dinner catered by Anna’s Restaurant, where students, staff and families could enjoy the evening. Year 12 Valedictorian, Eric Richards, reflected on the tumultuous circumstances presented to this year’s Seniors through the implications of the COVID-19 pandemic, praised his fellow Year 12 students for their resilience, and spoke of the value of friendship and connection between students and staff as the key to success in overcoming adversity. The evening provided a wonderful opportunity for this year’s graduates to reflect and celebrate their educational journey as individuals, as a community and, most of all, as friends; united together as they graduate, and each preparing to embark on their new chapter of post-school life. St Joseph’s School would like to take this opportunity to thank all of those involved in making this year’s graduation such a tremendous success, and to wish our Year 12 graduates the best success and luck for the future. 24 TODAY Thursday, 2 December, 2021

Back, from left: Brayden Spiller, Eric Richards, Adam Raccanello, Cooper Wren, Gregory Zournazidis, Struan Trenning Front: Karla Brien, Taylah Whiticker, Louise Day, Gianna Newman, Teresa Pozzebon, Vanessa Petroccitto. Picture: SHANE ANDERSEN PHOTOGRAPHY


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

NEWS

Local writer and journalist – and songwriter and musician – BOB WILSON shares his latest ‘Observations’ column.

Purple haze, the back story By Dominique Tassell On Remembrance Day (November 11), we met a Year 12 student who had been singing in our community choir but had taken time out to concentrate on her studies. She told us (with some excitement), that school was set to finish the following week. That reminded me of the old Queensland maxim about flowering jacarandas and exam times. The story goes that if the jacarandas are flowering and you are behind on your studies, it is too late! That may have changed over the decades, as climate change has led to earlier flowering, not only of jacarandas, but cherry blossoms (more on that later). When I visited Brisbane in late September, the jacarandas were already starting to bloom. They flower later across the Southern Downs, as we know, but even so, this old jacaranda in the grounds of St Mark’s Anglican Church (above) was starting to lose its blossoms as I took this photo on November 9. Warwick has some lovely mature examples of this tree, many of them in the yards of private homes. In some towns and cities (Grafton, Toowoomba, Brisbane, Sydney’s north shore), jacarandas were planted on either side of city streets, to create a stunning, if ephemeral display from mid-October to mid-November. Jacaranda is the name for a genus of 49 species of flowering plants in the family Bignoniaceae, native to tropical and subtropical regions of the Americas. Wikipedia describes it as a ‘cosmopolitan’ plant. It is common across many continents and countries including Argentina, Botswana, Brazil, Florida, Israel, Italy, Mexico, Paraguay, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Southern California, Spain, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

The jacaranda has been introduced to most tropical and subtropical regions and is widely planted in Asia. Australian towns and cities compete for status of champion jacaranda; examples including Grafton, Brisbane, Toowoomba, Sydney, Melbourne and Perth (although not until December in WA). Apart from the obvious connection with school and university exam times, the jacaranda’s purple haze is the first real sign of Spring. When at their peak, the showy trees are hard to beat for a visual spectacle. Unfortunately, the triumph is short-lived; with storms, rain and wind soon littering the ground with purple flowers. As staff in hospital emergency rooms would attest, ‘slipped on wet jacaranda flowers’ is a common refrain when patients present at the fracture clinic. Although I set out to write a ‘light and fluffy’ piece, it did not take much to uncover the climate science take on this. An article in The Conversation and republished in other journals similarly observed the early flowering of jacarandas in South Africa. Jennifer Fitchett, Associate Professor of Physical Geography, University of the Witwatersrand, explained why early flowering

of Jacaranda mimosifolia is a ‘warning sign’. Gauteng Province’s proliferating jacarandas have in recent years started flowering in early September. Octogenarian residents interviewed by researchers recalled the trees flowering in mid-November in the 1920s and 30s. The trees, native to Brazil, were introduced to Pretoria and Johannesburg in the late 1800s. Civic leaders of the time deemed them an ornamental worthy of lining streets in the suburbs and CBD. Professor Fitchett wrote that jacaranda flowering had gradually advanced over the decades to mid-October and now to September. She described this process as ‘phenological shift’, which has been observed in multiple flowering tree species around the world. The earlier flowering is a key indicator that the planet is warming. Prof Fitchett initiated the first known phenological shift study done in South Africa, singling out the jacaranda. “Because jacaranda blossoms result in such a dramatic change in the urban landscape each year, they are often reported on in the news and, more recently, in social media posts,” she said. “We mined these sources to compile a list of flowering dates of jacaranda trees spanning 1927-2019.” These records allowed researchers to confirm the advance in flowering dates, quantifying a mean rate of advance of 2.1 days per decade. The flowering took place against a backdrop of warming temperatures, ranging from 0.10.2°C per decade (daily maximums) and a more rapid 0.2-0.4°C per decade for daily minimums. phys.org/news/2021-07-jacarandas-southafrica-earlier.html Japan’s world-famous tourist attraction,

cherry blossom season, has been under threat in 2020 and 2021. Covid restrictions meant that international tourists keen to witness the ‘sakura’ were unable to travel.. The data suggests the peak blooming date in Kyoto has been gradually moving from mid-April to the beginning of the month. The Japanese have been studying phenological change for centuries, so they have a better handle on it than most. Cherry blossom flowerings last only a few weeks. They have been occurring earlier and earlier in recent decades. The ABC reported in April this year that the famous cherry blossoms in Kyoto, Japan, peaked on March 26, the earliest date in 1,200 years, according to data compiled by Osaka University. Records that date back to 812 AD in imperial court documents and diaries show that the previous record was set in 1409, when the cherry blossom season reached its peak on March 27. Kyoto experienced an unusually warm spring this season. The average temperature for March in Kyoto has climbed from 47.5 degrees Fahrenheit in 1953 to 51.1 degrees Fahrenheit in 2020. Japan’s national newspaper Mainichi reported that despite diminished human activity stemming from the Covid-19 pandemic, carbon dioxide levels in surrounding areas did not decrease. a b c n e w s . g o. c o m / I n t e r n a t i o n a l / j a pans-cherry-blossoms-hit-earliest-peak1200-years/story?id=76789632 As for the local jacarandas, go out into the suburbs with your camera or phone and capture those luscious jacaranda blossoms while they last. A handy illustration for those Christmas newsletters to family and friends. Bob’s weekly blog Friday on My Mind can be found at bobwords.com.au

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Garden Time

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Beatrice Hawkins

The busy season for bees This morning, since the rain, many bees were busy on the lavender bushes in my garden. They are an amazing insect and so vital to every aspect of our food production and life. Albert Einstein is reported to have said that if bees died, out human life on this planet would cease in 4 years. They are the only insect that produces food eaten by man, and this is the only insect-created food, and has therapeutic, medicinal, nutritional and cosmetic value. It is the only food that contains everything necessary for life. It contains necessary enzymes, minerals, vitamins and water and also an antioxidant called “pinocembrin” that is found in no other food and is associated with improved brain function. “Unique among all God’s creatures, only the honey bee improves the environment and preys not on other species” Royden Brown. Each hive has its own unique smell so that the bees can identify it. Their sense of smell is so acute that they can differentiate hundreds of different flower scents and also tell if the particular flower carries pollen or nectar from metres away. A bee visits between 50 and 100 flowers per collection trip from the hive. They have 170 odour receptors whereas mosquitoes have 79 and fruit flies only 62. Try as I might, I can’t find a reason for the existence of either of these pests! A bee’s wings stroke about 200 beats per second and this is what makes the buzzing

sound associated with them. They can fly at up to 15 miles per hour and as far as 6 miles in their quest for pollen. An average worker bee will only produce 1/2 of a teaspoon of honey in her life span of 122 to 152 days. A hive of bees will fly approximately 90,000 miles to produce 1 kg of honey. This is the equivalent of 3 times around the world. It takes 28gms of honey to fuel one bee’s flight around the world. So when you enjoy that honey in your tea or on your toast, it may only be a teaspoon of sweetness for you, but for a bee, it is more than a lifetime of work!! The worker bees also produce the beeswax to form the hive and 6 to 8 lbs of honey is ingested to produce 1lb of beeswax. While it has been proposed since 36BC that honeycomb was the most practical structure around, it has now become the content of a 19-page mathematical thesis by Thomas Hales proving that, of all possible structures, honeycomb uses the least amount of wax. Honeycomb is the most

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ly as productive as the regular honey bee and have a much shorter life span. The tiny native bees and the blue striped bees that I see in my garden are at the other end of the size spectrum and a delight to watch as they zoom around. Unfortunately, our bee population is on the decline because of the use of pesticides and the fact that gardeners do not now grow as many flowers as previously! With the size of house blocks declining and the fact that, because of work commitments, people have less time to spend in gardens and also because of the trend to easy-care, architectural gardens, urban spaces are becoming less attractive to these busy creatures. While it’s not a problem at the moment with all the wonderful rain we’ve had, remember to have water sources for them as the weather heats up. If you see a swarm, don’t worry and don’t panic!. They are just shifting home and will relocate within about 24 hours. If you want to be really kind to them, fill a shallow container with a sugar-water solution so they can replenish their energy and move on. So be kind to our bees, they are among the most important creatures on earth. They pollinate over 80% of all flowering plants including 70 of the top 100 human food crops. 1 in 3 bites of food eaten by humans are from plants pollinated by bees. Plant things that are attractive to them and be careful using sprays and chemicals that may harm them because just maybe, Einstein was right!

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efficient structure in nature and the walls meet at a precise 120-degree angle producing a perfect hexagon. The bee’s brain is oval and about the same size as a sesame seed. It has, in this tiny space, a remarkable capacity to learn and make complex calculations retime and distance travelled when foraging. They are also capable of transferring this information to the other bees in the hive. Bees use the sun as a compass but on cloudy days have a backup plan. They are able to navigate by polarised light using special photoreceptors to locate the sun’s place in the sky. And all this is in a brain the size of a sesame seed?! A hive usually consists of between 20,000 and 60,000 workers, all female!, and 1 queen. While the workers only live less than 6 months in the cooler weather and about 6 weeks in the busy time, literally working themselves to death, the queen can live up to 5 years. Her sole role is to fill the hive with eggs. She can lay up to 2,500 eggs per day. Each hive contains some male bees, drones, larger than the workers and with no stinger and whose only purpose is to mate with the queen. During the winter the bees survive on the honey they have stored during the summer and form tight clusters in cold weather to keep themselves and the queen warm. It is not uncommon as winter approaches and food becomes scarce, for the worker bees to force the drones from the hive! The large storybook bumblebees that I first saw in Tasmania many years ago, are not near-

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The Spin Weather threatens Ashes The countdown to the Gabba is well and truly on and the curator must be having nightmares every time he hears a weather report. Organizers will also be anxious with the first day (next Wednesday, 8 December) already a sell-out and numbers for the remainder of the Test, the best for years. Pat Cummins and Steve Smith have been officially given the nod as Captain and ViceCaptain after some serious interview sessions with Cricket Australia. It is an amazing story of redemption for Steve Smith following his axing from the top job after the Sandpaper-gate although not everyone will be happy about his selection. The appointment of Cummins begins a unique era in Australian cricket with no fast bowler captaining the side other a one-off cameo, from the great Ray Lindwall in 1956. A long time between drinks. Cummins’ appointment has been endorsed by fast bowling great Dennis Lillee and one of Australia’s greatest captains Steve Waugh. After sandpaper-gate and the Tim Paine imbroglio Cricket Australia, the team and fans will be hoping for some clean air. A winning series against the Poms who have their own scandals to deal with, will fix everything. In the meantime, Tim Paine has stepped away from all forms of cricket for the time being and his keeper’s position is up for grabs. Front runners are Alex Carey and 26-year-old English born Aussie Josh Inglis who plays for WA . Carey is the better batsman of the pair, but many think the gloves should be thrown to Inglis who is regarded as the best at his craft after Tim Paine. Unfortunately, I cannot be at the game but there are no points for guessing where you’ll find me next week. – parked in front of the TV, eyes on every ball. I can’t wait and perhaps the Test will push the NRL off the lead sporting news. With a season of Test cricket ahead of us and months till the start of the 2022 NRL season I am fed up with reading who will be playing where not in 2022 but 2023 – give me a break. Now where’s that TV remote. - Casey

BOSSY REINS IN CAREER Last week Jockey Glen Boss announced he would hang up his boots and saddle following his ride on Spanish Mission in the group two Zipping Classic on Saturday at Caulfield. Starting a very short priced favourite, Boss gave Spanish Mission every chance before the gallopers Melbourne Cup campaign caught up with him and he finished fourth. Despite being denied the fairytale end to an illustrious career, the 52-year-old hoop, who is already a member of the Racing Hall Fame, was never going to quietly slip off into retirement. His riding cohort formed a guard of honour for Boss after he and Spanish Mission completed a parade of honour in the mounting yard following the race and then the fun began. Always crowd favourite, Bossy flung goggles, skull cap and other pieces of his gear into the crowd. Spanish Mission’s colours were the next to go (think the owners can afford a new set after recently purchasing the European invader after running fourth in the Melbourne Cup). The colours were followed by his riding boots followed by his socks. Stewards, broadcasters and the press had fingers crossed we were not in for a total striptease. Though it would have been no surprise. Boss retires with a magnificent record having won around 2400 races including 90 Group One races in Australia and six in Honk Kong. His career like many other Queensland riders of his generation had humble beginnings at the Gympie racetrack in 1986. In a nod to what was to come, Boss was successful at his first ride. After slaying them on 28 TODAY Thursday, 2 December, 2021

Glen Boss - thanks for the memories G Boss - So happy to have been at Moonee Valley to see you win on the Cox Plate on So you Think and again when you partnered Ocean Park. bush tracks, he moved firstly to the Gold Coast to finish his apprenticeship then to Brisbane. Successful stints riding in Sydney, Melbourne and in Hong Kong followed. Along with outstanding success came some significant injuries including a broken back in 2002 after an incident in Macau which could have ended in tragic circumstances. As recently as May the champion hoop was sidelined after surgery on his knee. While it was three times a charm for Bossy when he combined to win three consecutive Melbourne Cups partnering Makybe Diva, life has not always been a bed of roses. In recent times Boss has been open and forthcoming outlining his battles with mental health and his demons. By sharing that journey, he has undoubtedly helped show others there is a way out of that darkness. His retirement comes after he admitted to himself that he was no longer 100% invested in his craft although you would have never known it from his ride on Saturday giving Spanish Mission every chance. Over a career that spanned 36 years with many ups and downs there has been sensational success. Apart from his Melbourne Cup three-pete his impressive record includes four Cox Plates and most other major Group Ones races including a record seven Doncaster handicaps. He also added an Everest win to his resume but the one race missing will remain the Caulfield Cup. While Boss rubbed shoulders with the rich and famous and some of the world’s leading trainers, he has always found time for the punters as he showed on Saturday. When he left the jockey’s room for the last time on Saturday, his mounts had amassed an amazing $180 million in prizemoney. Not bad for a skinny kid from Caboolture who started with the dream and the belief that he would make it to the top. Bossy we salute you and look forward to what you bring to the table in your new role as an expert commentator with Ladbrokes. It certainly won’t be dull. G Boss was not the only hoop with retirement on his radar. Newcastle rider Robert

Thompson has also pulled the pin on his career. At 63 the popular rider has called time on a career that has seen him clock up more winners than any other rider in Australia. His tally 4447. Thompson estimates he has ridden in more than 30,000 races. Thompson, who chose to remain in Newcastle despite many offers to move to Sydney, said earlier in the week he has had his time in the sun and after 49 year has had enough of travel and wasting for light rides. Thompson is a legend in Newcastle and NSW racing. The riding ranks are poorer following the retirement of two brilliant exponents of their craft.

WEATHER SCUTTLES LOCAL SPORT Many Cricket pitches and golf courses and croquet courts across the Southern Downs resembled wading pools for much of last week and as a result many fixtures and games were cancelled. In Warwick, local cricket fixtures were washed out as well as the first game of the Mitchell shield. Club officials in Warwick are still exploring options for a date to replay the Round Six fixtures which have now been skuttled by wet weather twice. While it is understood the postponed Rep games will be played on the weekend of 9 January. This weekend, weather permitting, Round Eight of the Warwick Fixtures. On Saturday, The Redbacks and Sovereign will play at Slade and Vic Hill and Allora will be in action at Allora. On Sunday Colts and Maryvale will go head to head at Slade. Wheatvale have the bye this weekend. The proposed Free training clinic for Junior players, which was to be run by the Brisbane based Wanderers’ Cricket club Friday, was another event scuttled by the weather. A new date for this event will be released in coming weeks. Stanthorpe cricket fixtures suffered a similar fate at the weekend. The only thing on the fields other than water were ducks. As a result, this weekend (4 Dec) if play is possible – fixtures will be Day two of the two

day game postponed at the weekend. The game will get underway earlier than normal (12.15) with a minimum of 82 overs to be bowled in the game. Fingers crossed for better conditions. Junior cricket was also disrupted across the region however a small group of juniors were spotted taking advantage of a break in the weather to get in some training in the Stanthorpe nets. Stanthorpe’s first Mitchell shield game against Lockyer was also cancelled. Warwick and Stanthorpe Mallet players were also confined to quarters over the past week with courts unplayable due to the conditions. Everyone will be hoping for a change or pause at least in conditions to allow them back on court sometime this week.

RUGBY SEVENS STAR BACK TO BEST After being dogged by injury, Rugby Seven’s star Charlotte Caslick returned to her best form in the Dubai Sevens tournament at the weekend as the Australian women’s team dominated winning all five of their matches. After the win Caslick this week told us, “It was good to win our first tournament since Sydney in January 2018, but it was also bittersweet, showing where we should have been in Tokyo. We beat the silver and bronze Medalists here.” She went on to say there are bigger challenges ahead but believes there is also a lot of improvement and growth in this squad as they continue to develop their combinations. Looking back on the game Charlotte said, “I think our big improvement at this tournament, was our improved off-loading game. “We were too passive in defence. Good teams like France and Fiji can punish that, so it is something we need to work on.” Caslick was back to her dynamic best and was named Player of Final however she sees room for improvement and her assessment heralds a warning to other teams. The Australian team scored a total of 163 points and conceded only 39 tries in the tournament. “We’ve been working really hard since Tokyo. We were really disappointed with our results there,” Caslick said.


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Casey O’Connor The Australians took a new-look young side to Dubai and were well led by their senior players Demi Hayes and Caslick. This weekend the Rugby Sevens HBSC SERIES goes to another level. After playing behind closed doors this past weekend and throughout Covid, Caslick said 100,000 people are expected through the gates for the next round of the HBSC Sevens in Dubai this weekend. She said, “The atmosphere and support is amazing here. “Everyone back home can watch us free through the World Rugby streaming service on YouTube and Facebook”. The girls play their first game against Spain, on Friday (Aust time) kicking off at 3.22pm. It will be the final outing for the Sevens in 2021 before the HBSC Rugby Sevens caravan moves on to Malaga, Spain late in January but hopefully not before some down time at home with family, fiancee Lewis Holland and her cattle on their Stanthorpe property.

WHY ON A THURSDAY Why is it so – that is what the members of the Warwick East Bowls club have been asking. Why does it always rain on Thursdays? This past week once again inclement weather interfered with the scheduled bowls. Both monthly pairs and last week’s night bowls cancelled. There was better news for bowlers on Saturday as the semi-finals of the club-selected fours competition was able to be played. Matt Shepherd, Peter Collis, Dan Hughes and Paul Beaman has a comfortable 26-15 win over Chris Lawler, Peter Ridgewell, Dave Smith, Gordon Assay. Ed Diery, Steve Ford, Norm Hassum and Sid Morris proved to strong scoring a 22-18 win. Next Saturday the winners, Matt Shepherd, Peter Collis, Dan Hughes and Paul Beaman will play Ed Diery, Steve Ford, Norm Hassum and Sid Morris in the final. The final will be played on Saturday, at 1pm. While the semi-finals were underway there also three games of social triples being played. All eyes will be on the forecast, fingers crossed that today, weather permitting, the club will be able to hold their monthly triples due to get underway at 10am. That of course should be followed by night bowls at 6.30 pm. Submit your name or your team names by phoning the club on 4661 9050 by 6pm. The game will be followed by a sausage sizzle. There will be the usual mixed social bowls this Saturday. Play starts at 1pm, with names to be in by 12.30. Players will be chasing the usual trophies plus a chance to take out the jackpot on offer.

SCHOOL’S IN ON THE GREEN Saturday Night, Social Mixed Bowls went ahead without rain for a change. The volunteers green which ran well, despite the recent downpours certainly earned an “A” plus and gold stars. There were six enthusiastic teams played pairs teams and it was Geoff Davis and Penny who earned the highest grade after two games; however Val Gray (taxi-man) and Mark Dangerfield (limo-man) had their names pulled out of the hat for a prize. Thanks to Mark’s son, Bradyn also played well after receiving a late call up to even up the numbers. No bowls have been scheduled for today, (Thursday, 2 December). Following their Committee Meeting this morning, the ladies are having Lunch at the Criterion Hotel. Gentlemen are invited to attend also. Contact Cheryl on 0407 641 158 if you wish are planning to attend. Organisers of Friday night mixed bowls will be eyeing the weather forecast with interest as they prepare for a 6pm start. Anyone interesting in playing should be at the club by 5.30pm or contact Contact Clark 0427 673 277. Everyone including beginners are welcome. There are Free bowls to use if required and coaching is available at no charge. You can also enjoy a sausage sizzle (cost $10). As the countdown to Christmas begins, this Saturday (11 December), bowls commencing at 1pm, a Christmas Meal and $1000 raffle draw. For further information contact Cheryl 047 641 158. Remember for barefoot bowls, social and competition bowls, functions and bar, you

Bowlers were pleased to be on the green at the Southern Cross Bowls club but Clarke Davidson seems to be looking for something - his missing bowls or a missed opportunity. cannot go past the Southern Cross Bowls Club Inc. located opposite St Mary’s Church in Warwick. Follow the club on Facebook or contact the Secretary, Cheryl on 0407 641 158 for further information.

GREAT ROUND FOR WINNER ANNA COX Wednesday (24 November) was the final chance for the members of the Warwick ladies golf club to pick up points for the Shootout and was also the midweek Medal of Medallist round. Anna Cox had a great round in sometimes difficult conditions returning 73 nett to win Division One. On one back on 74 nett was runner up Janine Stewart who also had a great round. Balls in the run down went to Mary Young (74), Gwen Mills (75), Anne Lyons (76) and Margie Adcock (77). Results for the remainder of the field in this division were Tub Ingall and Judy Lester (78), Jill Barnes (80) and Annice Payne 89. Maria Carey returned 75 nett for a win in Division two. Roslyn Darton was the runner up with 75 nett. Then came Helen Olsen (80), Wendy Rhea (82), Di Macdonald (84), Trish Bell and Di Johnston (85), Judy Stiff (86), Trish Roberts (89) and Lyn McKillop (95). Collecting at the Pro Pin were Di Johnston, Margie Adcock and Trish Roberts. Anna Cox also won the putting honours in Division one with 27 putts for the round and Trish Bell won the Division Two contest with 30 putts. Last Saturday Medal of Medallist event was postponed and hopefully conditions will be kinder this Saturday (4 December). The ladies Christmas break up will be held next Wednesday (8 December). Seems no time at all since the 2020 breakup. This is one event everyone enjoys as everyone gets together for some fun golf and followed by a lovely lunch. $25 includes the game and lunch and remember to take a $10 wrapped gift to put under the tree.

FINGER LICKIN GOOD WIN The Warwick Bowls club held the popular monthly K.F.C. sponsored Bowls day last week. Darryl Collins, Ann Whitfield and Denis Sterling scored a 14-9 win in their game against Gerda Brack. Ken Hayes and Ray Schnitzerling had a comfortable 19-8 win over the team of Pat Seipelt, Garry Cooper and Trish Max Balfour. The winners determined a draw of the cards and went the way of Pat, Garry and Max who will be enjoying some seriously good “Finger Lickin’ Chicken” in the near future thanks to KFC’s sponsorship of monthly event.

The Australian Women’s Rugby Sevens celebrate their recent win in Dubai. charlotte Caslick (bottom row, second from right) returned to her best form an was named Player of the Final. Thanks Denis Sterling who stepped up in the absence of John Ruhle to organise the game. Unfortunately, John Ruhle has been unwell and along with the club members we wish him a speedy recovery. A big thank you to the catering crew, Pat and Trish who looked after the kitchen and BBQ.s. In other news the semi-final of the Club Selected Fours was played and congratulations to Trish Owens, Darryl Phillips, Jim Rickard and Bing Hansen (Skip Max Holder was unavailable to play). In a closes game they scored a 24-22 win over Kay Bloomfield, Ozzie McPaul, Ken Hayes and Craig Thurgate. Bing Hansen’s team led on the third end but Craig ‘s team fought back managing to remain in front until the 18th end. Their opponents hit back scoring six points and went to a 21-18 lead. At the 20th end scores were 22all and it was anyone’s game. Hansen’s team scored two on the next end after a piece of magic from their skip to nail the win. Congratulations to both teams, it was an entertaining Match, played in the right spirit. The final between the team of Trish, Darryl, Bing and Max Holder and Ann Whitfield, Pat

Seipelt, Denis Sterling and Edwin Welsh was scheduled to be played last Saturday however the wet weather forced the cancellation of the game. Players should check with their Skips for the new date of the game. The weather also forced the cancellation of the Bing Hansen sponsored bowls last Wednesday night. The Club’s Christmas Break-up dinner was held at the Stockyard Tavern last Thursday night. It was a great night with 41 members and their partners enjoying the great atmosphere and excellent meals. The club extends their thanks to the Chef staff and all concerned in making the evening such a success. The Tavern will certainly be seeing our Members and friends again. A reminder that the green will be closed from Monday 20 December. Looking ahead in December: Please note: Fri 3 Dec - Night bowls - 6pm. start. Tues 7 December - Monthly Triples - 10am start. Continued page 30

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Thursday, 2 December, 2021 TODAY 29


SPORT WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

The Spin From page 29 Tues 14 December - The Ladies Quarterly Birthday Luncheon at the Condamine Sports Club at midday. The Wives/Partners of male members, and friends of our Club, are also invited to attend. Please ring Trish on (07) 46 670 990, or leave a message, as numbers are required. Wed 15 Dec - Night Bowls with Jack Pot Pairs. The Jack Pot must go off so do come along as you must be in it to win it. Members your Annual Subscriptions are now due. Crafty Chicks please note; 9am, Fri 10 Dec is the final Craft morning at the Warwick Bowls Club in 2021. The morning’s activities will be followed by a Christmas Break-up Luncheon at Cafe Jacqui’s, Cnr Albion and Victoria Streets at midday. All Crafty Chicks are invited. Craft mornings resume at am on 9am Friday 28 January 2022.

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TRICKY ON THE RANGE There was a reprieve from the rain which held off for the Southern Downs Rifle crew at Risdon range on Sunday morning. However, the light winds and cool condition were enough to make things interesting for competitors. In open class Greg Wilson continued his good from to claim another outstanding again win ahead of Kevin Jones. Daryl Reck was the only contestant in the Standard Class but managed to pull off a memorable victory. Results: F Open 600 yards Greg Wilson (122.9); Kevin Jones (120.5); Murray Reck (118.7); Craig Montgomery (115.5); Bruce McAllan (109.3); Margaret Taylor (109.2); Abe Basson (106); Charlie Montgomery (93.1). F std 600 yards Daryl Reck (107.2) This Sunday (5 Dec) Shooters Risdon Rifle Range will be at the 300 yard mound at the for the club’s combined F Class and military rifle shoot. A reminder that it is a 7.30 am sign on with competition getting underway at 8am. If you require further details on Sunday’s event or would like more information about the Southern downs Rifle Club, please call Margaret on 4666 1018.

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FEAST FAMINE OR FLOOD It is so ironic that this time last year trucks were carting water into Stanthorpe and in recent weeks there are plenty of sporting organisations and some others who would welcome those trucks back to take some of the stuff away. Of course, as is always the way it is either a feast famine or flood and while the recent weather has been great for some and an inconvenience for others, it will no doubt benefit the areas long term. Bowls at the Stanthorpe Bowls club were thrown into disarray again last week. Only the resident ducks braved it onto the green last week but hopefully things will be back on track for twilight bowls tonight. If you have given it a go it is this well worth a look. The Stanthorpe

Casey O’Connor

Club hosts Twilight bowls every Thursday evening. The cost is only $5.00 per person, play in bare feet or wear flat soled shoes, bowls can be supplied and also tuition upon request. It is a great way to meet new friends or why not invite your own group and see what great fun bowling under the stars can be. Call the Club (07 46 811 276) on Thursday evening between 5.30pm and 6pm to book your spot. Play commences at 6.30pm and wraps up at 8.30 pm. The bar is open so if you are looking for something different remember twilight bowls. The Stanthorpe Bowls club acknowledges and thanks their featured sponsor, David and Amanda from J.S.I. Motorcycles this week and thank them for their continued Warwick Women’s Golf notes 27 November,2021

NO GO FOR STANTHORPE GOLFERS Rain forced the cancellation of all golf in Stanthorpe last weekend. Like so many others all eyes will be on the weather forecast this week with this week’s comepitition an Individual stroke and putts event for December Monthly Medal comepitition, sponsored by Andersens Carpets. The Stanthorpe Club is trialling a two tee hit off to condense the finish times and a special timesheet is in the usual place at the club. Don’t forget rain or shine the Club’s Xmas party and presentation evening will follow golf on Saturday. The knees up commences at 5.30pm and all members and their families are welcome. If you have not yet booked, please contact Kate at the club asap to assist with catering.

DEDICATED BOWLERS ON THE GREEN Despite the ominous weather forecast last weekend a small group of dedicated bowlers were on the green at the Summit Bowls Clun on Saturday. Thankfully the rain stayed away, allowing the bowls games to go ahead. Rod Newlands and Paul Zamprogno played Steve Jolly and Adrian Jackson in a game of Social three Bowl pairs and scored a 28-8 win. Pam Moore, John Graham and Jamie Zamprogno had a 14-12 win over Brian Brown, Michael Surch and Brian Wilmot in the Social Triples game. On the previous evening the club hosted a Christmas Themed Dinner for 100 people. The evening was a great success. Th big crowd enjoyed delicious meals quite a few raffles and Christmas Music provided by Tom Hodgson. The Summit Bowls Club Annual General Meeting was recently, and Frank Taylor takes the helm as Club President. Alex Mattiazzi will fill the Vice President’s role, Maree Ball the Secretary and Peter Balmer as the Treasurer. Congratulations to all who put their hand up to take on these important positions. Upcoming Program: Sat, 11 Dec - Christmas Party - Bowls at 1pm and Party at 3pm Sat, 18 Dec - Trophy Afternoon Tue, 21Dec - Turkey Triples

· · ·

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32 TODAY Thursday, 2 December, 2021


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Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.