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April show? Warwick school’s segregation plan Warwick Christian College has made a controversial decision in the lead up to the coming school year regarding the school’s handling of Covid-19.
Queensland Chief Health Officer late last year.
A letter sent out by the school outlines how the school will be accommodating unvaccinated staff members amid a Health Direction issued by the
Read more on page 4
The postponed Stanthorpe Show has a potential alternative date scheduled for the end of April. Stanthorpe Agricultural Society president Brett Boatfield said he is having ongoing discussions with Queensland Agriculture Shows to finalise this date. “It’s a bit of logistics to work it out, but we’re certainly looking at mid to the end of April,” Brett said. STORY PAGE 6
Over-running with RATs While most residents of the Southern Downs are finding it impossible to get their hands on a Rapid Antigen Test, Southern Downs Regional Council (SDRC) says they have 400 tests on the way to be used within the organisation. SDRC CEO Dave Burges stated that they have ordered 200 two-packs of the tests, and “the delivery is imminent“. He stated he’s not sure when they will be delivered, and that SDRC is still considering how those tests will be used. STORY PAGE 8
Stress at delays because she had to pay for extra holiday care due to work commitments. “I don’t have the option not to work,” parent one said. “It also stresses me because I’m worried about my kids falling behind. “My kids don’t do well with an unsettled routine and this has thrown their routine out.”
In contrast, parent two said the delay has no effect as she is currently not working. “Health is more important than a week or two of school, that’s the priority,” parent two said. “But the kids are going stir crazy.” Education Minister Grace Grace said in a press conference on Monday that there have
been very positive responses to the announcement. “This common sense measure is to avoid opening schools during the predicted peak of the Queensland Omicron variant wave,” Ms Grace said. STORY PAGE 5
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The two-week delay to this year’s school start date has prompted mixed reactions from certain parents after its announcement last week. Due to privacy, the names of these parents will not be revealed and instead referred to as parent one and parent two. Parent one said the delay was frustrating
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INSIDE
The editor’s desk
150 YEARS OF STANTHORPE..pages 12-13 TV GUIDE .............................pages 15-18 PUZZLES ................................... page 19 Another week, another edition, another angry Mini. And about Covid again, too. This morning (Tuesday 18 January) we recorded our highest number of deaths in Queensland so far in the pandemic. In today’s press conference, Health Minister Yvette D’Ath urged Queenslanders to get their boosters, stating only one of the people who has died so far has received one. The problem? No one can get their hands on a bloody booster. Just like no one can get their hands on a bloody Rapid Antigen Test. Oh wait, apparently Council can. Weird how that works. It is incredibly frustrating feeling this helpless. I want to be able to write an article listing where locals can get their boosters and find RATs, but I can’t. It seems to be a running theme; politicians seem to forget that Brisbane does not encompass the entirety of Queensland and our needs get forgotten. I’ve considered going to Brisbane on a weekend and trying to get into one of their walk-in clinics. That seems to be the only way I might be able to get one. But then I feel like I shouldn’t take that booster away from someone in the city, from someone who is elderly and more at risk of suffering severe symptoms from the virus. Darling Downs Health states that they have no plans to hold another vaccine clinic in the region, effectively abandoning us in my opinion. The federal government is responsible for providing vaccines to GPs, and who knows what’s going on there. As we lay out in an article this week, boosters are basically unavailable in the region for the next few months. Yet everyone is talking about the peak we’re going to see at the end of this month. So what do we do with that? We can’t get boosters, can’t get RATs, and the government is doing a bang-up job of dissuading people from going to get a PCR test. People should not be made to feel like a burden for wanting to do the right thing by going to get a test. It’s similar to what we saw last year, when huge campaigns were running to get young people vaccinated…when we weren’t allowed to get the right vaccine yet. It is, FRANKLY, ridiculous. It’s acting as if the public is doing the wrong thing when we all know it’s the mess behind the scenes that’s the problem. It’s the different levels of government refusing to take accountability and take action to help the community. People are trying to do the right thing, and they’re being blocked at every turn. But don’t worry, the government’s made damn sure everyone is as scared as possible. Again, I’m pissed off.
RURAL LINKS .......................pages 20-22 BEST OF JUDY BARNET ............... page 23 CLASSIFIEDS .......................pages 27-28 ENTERTAINMENT ........................ page 28 SPORT .................................pages 29-31
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150 years of Stanthorpe To celebrate 150 years of Stanthorpe, we’ll be focussing on each individual year of the town’s history. Check out our features on 1872 and 1873 on pages 12 and 13 of this edition.
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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 Dominique Tassell Journalist E: dominique.tassell@WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au T: 07 4542 6253
Plea to increase Afghanistan refugee quota to 20,000 It has been nearly five months since the Taliban forcibly took over Afghanistan, prompting thousands to head to Kabul Airport with the hope they could be evacuated. Although the Government managed to evacuate 4,100 people with Australian visas, there have been no evacuation flights since, and not one humanitarian visa application has been approved. Meanwhile the persecuted Hazara Shia Muslim community has experienced an escalation in sectarian violence and displacement. Many who helped the United Nations and coalition troops as guides or translators are in hiding, fearful of being killed. Despite these acute dangers, the Australian Government has not provided any additional humanitarian places. The offer of 3000 places is already contained within Australia’s prior intake. The Southern Downs Refugee and Mi-
grant Network (SDRAMN) urgently calls on the Australian government to increase its humanitarian intake to 20,000 places. We have as examples action taken by Canada and the UK, which both accepted up to 20,000 refugees from Afghanistan. We ask that the government prioritise the family reunification visas of people from Afghanistan in Australia. There are Afghans living in Australia who have been separated from their families for up to a decade. SDRAMN has also written to MPs including Federal member David Littleproud. Australia is known for its tough stance on refugees, particularly those who arrive by boat. But this has resulted in the debacle of offshore processing and some 30,000 ‘legacy’ cases – that is, refugees who live in Australia but on temporary visas. There is growing evidence that more ordinary Australians are worrying about this complex issue. Afghanistan is a humanitarian tragedy. It requires an urgent, humanitarian response. -Southern Downs Refugee and Migrant Network (SDRAMN)
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NEWS
IN BRIEF Bugging out Police are investigating several break ins at Warwick Golf Club between Friday 14 January and Sunday 16 January. On Friday 14 January unknown offenders have broken into a shed and stolen a golf buggy, which was located the following day at a nearby school. Then on Sunday 16 January at approximately 10.50 pm police were called to reports of three people driving golf buggies around the golf course. They were located abandoned shortly after, two on the course and a third on Hawker Road. Initial investigations indicate a number of sheds were broken into to gain access to the golf buggies. Anyone with information is asked to contact police. President of Warwick Gold Club, Scott McLennan, asked member to please check their shed and report anything that has been taken to Police Link. It was later reported that at least nine sheds had been broken into. Members were reportedly being contacted if these were their sheds, but police recommended that all locks be upgraded.
Attempted theft on Acacia Avenue
Pringle Cottage has temporarily closed due to Covid-19 cases.
Cottage on a break “We’re all elderly volunteers and we didn’t want to deal with the public,” Evelyn said. “We can also catch up on a few jobs that are made more difficult with the public there.” Pringle Cottage is a heritage listed sandstone cottage and is part of Warwick’s museum which showcases the town’s history.
By Emily-Rose Toohey Warwick’s historic Pringle Cottage temporarily closed to the public two weeks ago due to a Covid-19 case surge. Warwick Historical Society secretary Evelyn Eastwell said the closure was to protect volunteers who will continue their roles at the cottage.
It officially opened as a museum in 1968 and is currently furnished with different period items donated by early settler families. Evelyn said there is no official reopening date at this time. “Once we decide to open, we’ll put it out,” she said.
Investigations are underway after an attempted theft in Warwick on Sunday 16 January. A man was walking south on Acacia Avenue at about 6.30am when he was approached by a man, who attempted to grab a phone and wallet from the victim’s pocket. He then attempted to take a bag from the man, who fell over in the struggle. The offender then got into a vehicle, and left the scene. Anyone with information or dashcam in the area at the time are asked to contact police. The man was reportedly taken to hospital but is doing okay.
Call-out: Let us know the first babies born this year Warwick Today and Stanthorpe Today would like to feature an article about the first babies born in 2022 across the Southern Downs region. If our readers know someone who welcomed a child early this year, whether it be
at Warwick Hospital or at home, please let us know. Our contact number is (07) 4661 9800 and our email is newsdesk@warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au
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Plan courts controversy By Dominique Tassell Warwick Christian College has made a controversial decision in the lead up to the coming school year regarding the school’s handling of Covid-19. A letter sent out by the school outlines how the school will be accommodating unvaccinated staff members amid a Health Direction issued by the Queensland Chief Health Officer late last year. The Health Direction stated that workers in high-risk settings, such as schools and kindergartens, must be vaccinated in order to be on campus when students are in attendance. Principal Sean Greenacre states in the letter that “whilst most staff at Warwick Christian College are vaccinated, there are some staff who have decided not to be vaccinated”. He states that when school resumes, “some staff who have chosen not to be vaccinated will continue working in their roles in a modified way whereby they will not be able to be within the school grounds when students are in attendance from 8:00 am – 3:10 pm”. “Some administration staff including myself who are not vaccinated will be working at 72 Horsman Rd, Warwick – near G Block, with separate entrance from the rest of the College together with its own parking on the street.” Mr Greenacre goes on to explain that as classes will be taught face-to-face, some unvaccinated staff members will not be able to return. He then states it is “regretful” that the Health Direction will impact schools. It is unknown how the majority of parents have responded to the news. One local expressed disbelief at the situation and how the principal thinks it is a good idea. “He should be leading by example but he’s not.” In response to the College’s decision, a
The letter states that staff will work from a building near G Block. Queensland Health spokesperson stated “We can’t make this any clearer: Vaccines. Save. Lives.” “The vast majority of Queenslanders are sensible enough to know this. “Vaccinations are a global phenomenon that have saved countless lives around the world. They are backed by science, and approved by the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA). The Covid-19 vaccination is no different. “Although the Covid-19 vaccine isn’t mandatory for most people, we strongly encourage every Queenslander who can be vaccinated to do so to protect themselves and others.” Upon investigation, it appears the building that unvaccinated staff will be working on is on the same block as the rest of the school. The G Block mentioned in the letter is la-
belled from the outside as the Prep to Year 6 building. In order for the building to not be affected by the Health Direction, it must: be unoccupied by users and workers of the high-risk setting; and be physically separate from the occupied part of the high-risk setting or be secured and delineated so that users and workers of the high-risk setting cannot enter; and not have shared points of access with the users and workers of the high-risk setting; and not be accessed by a person who uses the facilities (for example, toilets or lunchroom) in the high-risk setting. It is unclear whether the building unvaccinated staff will work from has its own toilet facilities and lunchroom, and how staff will work for the foreseeable future without interacting
· · · ·
with any other staff members or students. One local questioned how the Principal will perform his duties to the standard required without interacting with any students or setting foot on the rest of campus during school hours. As the College is an independent school, Education Queensland could not comment on the situation. Independent Schools Queensland was contacted for comment, but stated they do not comment on individual schools. A spokesperson stated that they “don’t govern the schools, they govern themselves”. “We just provide support.” Warwick Christian College could not provide a comment in time for publication, but will hopefully have a response in next week’s edition.
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Warwick Christian College has made a controversial decision in the lead up to the coming school year regarding the school’s handling of Covid-19.
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Mixed feelings at delay By Emily-Rose Toohey The two-week delay to this year’s school start date has prompted mixed reactions from certain parents after its announcement last week. Due to privacy, the names of these parents will not be revealed and instead referred to as parent one and parent two. Parent one said the delay was frustrating because she had to pay for extra holiday care due to work commitments. “I don’t have the option not to work,” parent one said. “It also stresses me because I’m worried about my kids falling behind. “My kids don’t do well with an unsettled routine and this has thrown their routine out.” In contrast, parent two said the delay has no effect as she is currently not working.
“Health is more important than a week or two of school, that’s the priority,” parent two said. “But the kids are going stir crazy.” Education Minister Grace Grace said in a press conference on Monday that there have been very positive responses to the announcement. “This common sense measure is to avoid opening schools during the predicted peak of the Queensland Omicron variant wave,” Ms Grace said. Alongside encouraging vaccinations, she said her main priority is to ensure student learning is not impacted. “After some very productive meetings with the Queensland Teachers Union and key stakeholders, I am satisfied that the full curriculum can now be delivered in the condensed semes-
ter,” Ms Grace said. As a result, she said the originally proposed extra school week at the year’s end will no longer be required – school will finish 9 December. “Students will not miss out on any essential content,” Ms Grace said. In terms of vaccinations, Queensland Health Minister Yvette D’ath said in the same press conference that 12.82 per cent of the five to eleven year old school age group have now been vaccinated. “This is extraordinary, especially as it is one week since we started the vaccinations for this age group,” Ms D’ath said. However, parents one and two said they are unsure whether to get their young children vaccinated at this stage. Parent one said it is concerning as one of
her children has respiratory problems and a history of negative vaccine reactions. “Once there are more studies and kids have started receiving the vaccine more, I might change my mind, but until then I will not,” parent one said. “We don’t want to rush into it.” Parent two said that she is unsure at the moment and is happy to wait longer. “It’s a lot easier to make that choice for yourself than for your kids,” parent two said. When students go back to school on 7 February, Ms Grace said there will be Covid-19 guildlines in place. “Under the health advice, we are working nationally on a consistent set of guidelines dealing with Covid in schools when it resumes,” Ms Grace said.
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Alternative show dates By Emily-Rose Toohey The postponed Stanthorpe Show has a potential alternative date scheduled for the end of April. Stanthorpe Agricultural Society president Brett Boatfield said he is having ongoing discussions with Queensland Agriculture Shows to finalise this date. “It’s a bit of logistics to work it out, but we’re certainly looking at mid to the end of April,” Brett said. “We don’t want to compete with other shows, so I’m liaising with the president of Goombungee, who’s on that weekend.” Brett said it was a good decision that the show was not cancelled. “We had a meeting with the 25 sub-committee chief stewards who showed overwhelming support to basically picking the whole show up and moving it to an alternative date,” Brett said. “It was pleasing to me in that meeting, they could have said no but they didn’t.” He said the show will occur on Saturday and Sunday only, with no Friday events. “It’ll be two nights of entertainment rolled into one night,” Brett said. “Whilst there might be some things that we won’t have or we can’t have due to the season, like the fruit, we’re thinking outside the box and we’re going to make the most of it.” Although the main Stanthorpe Show has been postponed, the campdraft will still go ahead on the 29 and 30 January. “It can run because in the Chief Medical Officer’s directive, it states that an outdoor community sporting event is not subject to the conditions of the directive,” Brett said. “It’s great to have something on the weekend that the show would have been on.” Campdraft Secretary Lana Russell said the show society has outside stakeholders that the
campdraft does not have. “There are so many factors in our favour and we can shut down in a heartbeat,” Lana said. “If the show gets shutdown in such short notice it would prove costly.” Brett said the campdraft will comply with Covid-19 safe guidelines for spectators, including social distancing and QR code checkins. “Apart from that, you’re out on a horse socially distanced, which is quite allowable,” he said.
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2021 Stanthorpe Show ‘social distancing’ notice, a health directive the 2022 show will follow. Brett said under the health directive, a number of conditions were put on shows which prompted its postponement. “The big thing this year was the fact that they were predicting a Covid increase in cases at the end of January and early February, right when our show was going to be,” he said. “We just can’t take the financial hit nor do I want to have an event that could be considered a spreader event.” Brett said he was watching the Covid situation carefully and was monitoring the show society’s expenditure. “If we had waited any later, we would have
had potential financial loss, which is why we made the decision early,” he said. “I’ve got a duty of care as a president to make sure that the health and safety of our patrons and our people are prioritised.” He said although the postponing decision was disappointing for the community, he is positive about the possible new show dates. “I’d like to thank everyone in the community who understood why we did it and were fully supportive,” Brett said. Nonetheless, if Covid cases rise later this year, he said the Stanthorpe Show will be cancelled for 2022.
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Over-run with RATs
Little boost By Dominique Tassell
By Dominique Tassell While most residents of the Southern Downs are finding it impossible to get their hands on a Rapid Antigen Test, Southern Downs Regional Council (SDRC) says they have 400 tests on the way to be used within the organisation. SDRC CEO Dave Burges stated that they have ordered 200 two-packs of the tests, and “the delivery is imminent”. He stated he’s not sure when they will be delivered, and that SDRC is still considering how those tests will be used. “It’ll be probably for our essential workers, so we’re not going to be doing them to all staff every day.” He stated that SDRC will probably focus on their “core services such as water and sewerage and waste and those sorts of things”. The CEO stated that he wanted to be able to get these workers back to work as soon as possible with a negative test. National cabinet agreed last week on 14 January to include more workers to be exempt from Covid isolation to help ease the pressure on workforces and supply chains. In the ‘energy, resources and water, and waste management’ industry, the following areas are included: Energy supply (electricity, liquid fuels, gas) Water supply, sewerage, sanitation and drainage Supply of resources, including mining and FIFO workers Waste resource recovery (including collection, treatment, storage and disposal services) Essential workers are able to go to work when deemed a close contact of someone with
· · · ·
While most residents of the Southern Downs are finding it impossible to get their hands on a Rapid Antigen Test, SDRC says they have 400 tests on the way to be used within the organisation. Covid-19 as long as they are not exhibiting any symptoms. Stores in the region have been unable to confirm when they will have Rapid Antigen
Tests available for locals to buy, with one commenting that they had “no clue” when they could get more in and it “would be great” if they could be more readily available.
Premier announces end of border closure By Dominique Tassell Border restrictions came to an end on Saturday 15 January at 1 am, with domestic travellers no longer required to provide a negative Covid-19 test or fill out a border pass in order to enter the state. It was previously stated that these requirements would be lifted when the state hit 90 per cent of residents 16 and over being double vaccinated. At the time of print, 91.6 per cent of Queenslanders have had their first dose of the vaccine, with 88.7 per cent receiving their second dose. “Now is the time for the barricades to come down, and for the police to come home, to continue on their normal operational duties on the front lines,” Ms Palaszczuk said. “The time is now right as we head towards hitting that 90 per cent next week.” Chief Health Office John Gerrard said the domestic border restrictions had served their purpose, which was to allow Queenslanders time to access the vaccine.
Border restrictions came to an end on Saturday 15 January at 1 am, with domestic travellers no longer required to provide a negative Covid-19 test or fill out a border pass in order to enter the state. “Now the virus, as always was expected, is spreading through Queensland, but with a vaccinated population,” he said. International restrictions will still apply until the state hits the 90 per cent vaccination target. Health Minister Yvette D’Ath said the gov-
ernment had chosen to wait because “international arrivals are the ones who are going to bring in new variants”. “We do still have to look very carefully at international arrivals, and particularly unvaccinated international arrivals.” Ms D’Ath emphasised that they are focussing now on where unvaccinated people can go. She stated social restrictions will not change when the state reaches the 90 per cent target. Ms D’Ath also criticised the Nurses Professional Association of Queensland (NPAQ) for sharing a Sky News article containing information she stated was “not correct”. The article claimed that the government had decided to allow unvaccinated health workers to return to work. “We are not planning, nor are we welcoming back unvaccinated health workers into the health system at all,” Ms D’Ath said. At the time of print, the Southern Downs has a recorded total of 607 cases, doubling from just under 300 this time last week.
While the government is pushing hard for Queenslanders to get their boosters, Southern Downs locals are facing a shortage of boosters lasting until March. Condamine Medical Centre could not confirm the availability of their boosters; however locals can call between 9 am and 4 pm to speak to their Covid booking team. From 20 January, locals will be able to book an appointment to get their booster online. It is unclear when or if they will have appointments available. Stanthorpe Medical Clinic currently only has a waiting list, stating they have to wait for the government to send more boosters to the clinic. A staff member stated that locals can call to find out when appointments are available, however they will probably not have any until at least next month. A staff member at MyFamily Medical in Stanthorpe stated that they will probably not have availability until February or March. “It changes all the time,” they said and encouraged locals to give them a call. A staff member at Priceline Pharmacy in Warwick stated they don’t have any availability until March. They said they’re waiting on a staff member to return next week, after which locals may be able to call up and find out if they book appointments or join a waiting list. A staff member at Discount Drug Stores in Warwick said availability depends on the patient at the moment; however they are booked out until at least the last week of February. Friendlies Pharmacy in Warwick also does not have availability until March or April. Peppertree Medical is not currently offering booster, nor is Rose City Medical Centre. Carbal Medical Centre is not currently taking new patients or Covid-only patients. The practice manager at Granite Belt Medical Services was not available so staff could not confirm booster availability, however Granite Belt Medical has been updating their Facebook when they receive new supply and letting patients know when these supplies are fully assigned. The practice manager at Allora Medical Centre was also not available when we called.
While the government is pushing hard for Queenslanders to get their boosters, Southern Downs locals are facing a shortage of boosters lasting until March.
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NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au
More cobwebs on the windows.
One of the children’s rooms.
Build up of grime on the stove top.
Bitter rental experience By Emily-Rose Toohey A privately owned Warwick house was left in disrepair after tenants vacated the premises on 31 December last year. Due to privacy concerns, the home and owners will remain unidentified and referred to as source one and source two in this article. The couple bought the property 18 months ago after source one briefly inspected it in the dark after work. “I didn’t have time to pull back curtains, to check or analyse it properly,” source one said. Consequently, the owners said they were unaware of its poor state. “That’s the trap, you can’t go prying when somebody’s at home,” source two said. Several months later, the couple said they received an email from the tenants asking for the front yard to be cleaned-up. “The tenants had seen a snake and they have small children,” source one said. “It was going to cost us a considerable amount, so we thought we’d move in and renovate it instead.” After giving the tenants 60 days leave notice, the owners said they checked the house once the family had moved out. “When we walked in, the smell was that offensive that we opened up every single window and door that we conceivably could open,” source one said. They said the front yard was overgrown with bushes and trees, and the inside floors and walls were dirty, alongside the windows which had been hidden behind curtains. “From our understanding the tenants had been here for about seven and a half to eight years,” source one said. “To bring young children up in a place like this, I’m lost for words.” As a result, the owners wanted to claim the bond for cleaning. “The tenants complained that they’d spent three days cleaning and taken time off work – we received a nasty phone call,” source two said. “Their excuse was that all the dirt that was there was what they had moved in to. “It’s not a grievance to them because I actu-
Dirt and cobwebs along a window, which was hidden behind curtains. ally feel sorry for the tenants.” Despite 30 years of experience buying and renovating properties, the couple said this was new territory for them. “We didn’t have an entry condition report, so it’s highly likely we won’t get our bond back because we have no proof of the house’s state,” source two said. Wade Real Estate agent Maree Fern said undesirable tenants usually target private owners because they cannot do the necessary checks. “We do full entry reports, full exit reports, and we do our inspections,” Maree said.
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“Definitely be wary of private renters because they’re often the ones that can’t get through an agent.” This had an impact on the Warwick property’s current owners, who said the former owners were friends with the tenants. “I think the tenants had the opinion that, ‘we didn’t make the mess, we’re not going to clean it and we’re going to live with it’,” source two said. “I don’t understand, it’s beyond comprehension, and it’s a moral issue that I have trouble with.”
Source one said if they receive the $1080 bond, it would only cover the professional cleaning costs for the walls, ceilings and windows. “We’ve already spent over two weeks cleaning ourselves,” source one said. “We’re also losing two months’ worth of rent.” The owners said at the end of the day, going through the real estate would have saved them thousands of dollars. “I would never private rent ever again,” source one said.
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By Dominique Tassell National Cabinet declared thousands more workers exempt from isolation rules on Thursday 13 January to mixed responses from the community. The change is designed to ease pressure on supply chains and workforces across the country. While food distribution is a focus, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the exemption would be extended to cover all those working in transport and freight. Southern Downs locals have certainly been affected by the food shortage; with sparse shelves a common sight. However, the Transport Workers’ Union has slammed the National Cabinet decision to send those most likely carrying the virus back to work without even the provision of free rapid antigen tests, predicting the transport crisis will significantly worsen in the coming weeks. The exemption states that high-risk close contacts, such as those who are living with a person who has Covid-19, must return a rapid test every second day until day six of their isolation period. Low-risk contacts do not have to return regular tests. TWU National Secretary Michael Kaine said sickness will bring down supply chains already buckling under worker shortages. “National Cabinet has cut the last thread of hope the transport industry had of recovering from chronic worker shortages. “Distribution centres will become virus hotbeds sending more essential workers to their sick beds, infecting their families along the way. “We’re already hearing reports of close contact transport workers forced to return to work, leaving childcare to sick partners. Other close contacts were handed gloves
Covid impact By Dominique Tassell
Bare shelves in Warwick grocery stores. and wipes and told to keep working until they tested positive. “These are the workers who’ve kept us going throughout the pandemic, now given no choice but to risk their own health and that of their families. “Months ago, we warned Morrison that supply chains would be crippled if he failed to set aside free and abundant supplies of rapid antigen tests. True to character, the Prime Minister refused to act. Now, he’s sacrificing workers to save his own skin. “For the industry to survive this wave, transport workers need free and abundant rapid antigen tests, prioritisation and leave for booster shots, and isolation of those most likely carrying the virus. Now is the time to shield the suffering industry, not detonate more virus explosions in essential workplaces. TWU has called on all states and territories to adopt similar requirements to the Victorian Government, which states all other options must be exhausted before bringing close contacts into the workplace, and that consent must be given from both worker and workplace.
A predicted peak in Covid-19 at the end of January has affected multiple events, with Southern Downs Regional Council (SDRC) responding by cancelling or changing events. SDRC Mayor Vic Pennisi has stated that “we’re going to continue with Australia Day at this point in time”. However, SDRC CEO Dave Burges confirmed it will look a little different this year. “We’re going to continue with the ceremonial aspects of it,” he said. SDRC will not be holding any associated festivities to accompany the award presentation and citizenship ceremony. He also stated that events run by other organisations, such as the triathlon in Stanthorpe, have been cancelled. “It will probably be a lower-key day than we’re used to,” he said. “But people can still do what they want to do.” “If they want to have a picnic in Leslie Park they can do so.”
The Great Australian Bites event has been cancelled, SDRC confirmed last week. The CEO said holding the event “really goes against what the Premier and the Government are trying to achieve by not encouraging mass groupings so we felt that we had a responsibility to act in that vein”. He stated that the government was providing around $14,000 in funding which is no longer available. “They’re not going to fund a Great Australian Bites program this year,” he said. The CEO stated that the event had a significant SDRC contribution, which is still set aside in the budget. He said SDRC will decide what to do with that money, such as holding another event, “in due course”. At this stage, Stanthorpe 150 events have not been affected. Mayor Pennisi confirmed that SDRC is looking at holding a reenactment in May. The CEO stated that discussions around what to do with the funding from Great Australian Bites will be had by councillors in February.
A predicted peak in Covid-19 at the end of January has affected multiple events, with SDRC responding by cancelling or changing events.
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STANTHORPE TURNS 150 1872 202201182706_1-SN04-22
St Pauls Church of England, Stanthorpe, Queensland built as a bark hut in 1872. Reverend Frederick Richmond is standing at the door. The bark hut was a temporary structure, with a new church erected in 1873.
Small schoolchildren pose in front of a slab building, which was Stanthorpe’s first school.
Wedding at Stanthorpe’s Presbyterian Church, December 1872. The groom was Robert Mungall, the proprietor of a local drapery called ‘The Working Man’s Friend’ and his bride was the former Miss Jean Farrier Matthews. Although an early union, this was not the town’s first wedding. That event had taken place a few months earlier, when a young woman who worked behind the bar at Farley’s hotel, ‘threw in her lot with a lucky tin selector’.
Stanthorpe in 1872
Tin miners near Stanthorpe, ca. 1872.
Picture: WILLIAM BOAG, STATE LIBRARY OF QUEENSLAND
People gathered at the Roll-up tree in the centre of town for meetings. Advertisements were also posted on the tree. 12 TODAY Thursday, 20 January, 2022
150 years ago, the name ‘Stanthorpe’ first appeared in print on 27 April 1872. While the township did not have their own paper just yet, the name appeared in the neighbouring paper called the Warwick Examiner and Times. The question of what to name the township had been up in the air for some time, and it has been speculated that this announcement in the Examiner coincides with the visit of Bishop Tufnell to Stanthorpe and Warwick for a reason. Bishop Tufnell had reportedly stated that the name Quart Park Creek, while a “charming appellation”, lacked the dignity required to support a Bishop. The name Stanthope reportedly comes from the area’s first Mineral Lands Commissioner and later magistrate, Mr Gregory. The area was previously called Quart Pot or Stannum, the latter coming from the private township.
Hessian and bark shelters at Stanthorpe, 1872. Four men pose in front of bush dwellings at Stanthorpe. The dwellings are constructed of hessian walls and rough bark slabs.
The official naming of Stanthorpe apparently took some time to settle in with the locals, with stories that at least one licensee gave his address on his publican’s license as “Stanthorpe, otherwise Stannum, otherwise Quart Pot”. For several years afterwards, maps depicted two different places named Stanthorpe and Stannum. The Divisional Board made reference to them as the “Twin towns of Stanthorpe and Stannum”. When the area did get its own paper, it was titled “The Border Post and Stannum Miner”, though this may have been to help differentiate between the area’s paper and Albury’s “Border Post”. While the area was definitely a growing town at the time, photos depict at least two churches and a school in 1872.
Rough bush dwelling made of sawn timber with a stone chimney and some household brooms and water containers in front. A man stands at the front door.
STANTHORPE TURNS 150 1873 202201182706_1-SN04-22
Stanthorpe in 1873 1873, the year after Stanthorpe acquired its name, saw the region grow exponentially. The Sportsman’s Arm’s Hotel, built where O’Mara’s Hotel now stands, started operating in 1873 and continued to do so until it was destroyed by fire. This time period saw a great rush to mine alluvial tin in the area. Of course, Stanthorpe gets its name from the Latin word for tin, stannum. Geoscience Australia records that Tin (Sn) is one of the few metals that has been used and traded by humans for more than 5,000 years. One of its oldest uses is in combination with copper to make bronze. Tin has the advantageous combinations of a low melting point, malleability, and the ability to alloy with other metals. Tin is almost always found closely allied to the granite from which it originates, hence the discovery of tin in the Granite Belt region of Queensland’s Southern Downs. The Pioneer Tin Mining Company had started mining at Stanthorpe in 1872, after which a steady stream of people migrated to the region. The Warwick Examiner reported that, “There is a great stampede to the district, parties on horseback, as well as large numbers on
foot, with swags before them ... Cobb and Co coaches commenced running services twice a day from the railway terminus in Warwick. Passengers clung precariously to every available part of the coach. Express coaches were run.” Goods started coming by teams, and saddle horses were advertised to ride to the diggings. Later, The Warwick Examiner said, “the invasion of tin hunters still arrive in a countless host. All labour which arrives seems to be absorbed.” Miners came from all over, and when substantial deposits were discovered near Stanthorpe a stampede of European and Asian miners made their way south. Tin prices boomed globally throughout the 1870s, with prices rising by 20 pounds per ton. With tin found along the watercourses, streams and creeks, the region quickly became the largest alluvial tin mine in Queensland. In the early years of Stanthorpe, Mr Miles MLA said that “the district of Stanthorpe had contributed more largely to the prosperity of Queensland than any other district in it.” Tin valued at 2.5 million pounds was reportedly produced from the area. Commercial mining operations continued in the area for over 60 years.
Thomas Merry’s general drapery, men’s clothing, millinery and fancy goods store, Stanthorpe, ca. 1873.
A Chinese tin miner.
Miners working at St. Leonard’s Tin Mine, Sugarloaf Creek near Stanthorpe, ca. 1873.
Tin miners, Stanthorpe mineral district, ca. 1873. Although in many parts of the tin fields, a prospector might discover a few grains of tin in a pie-dish full of sand scooped up near a creek, other speculators cut trenches into the ground in pursuit of walnut-sized pieces of ore. Some of the men in this photograph may have been Chinese labourers who worked hard at extracting this richer material. The heap of refuse at left is discarded mining spoil. Picture: WILLIAM BOAG
St. Paul’s Church of England, Stanthorpe, ca. 1873. Exterior view of a timber church with a shingled roof. The walls have exposed studs and diagonal braces. The image includes a paling fence with split posts and rails.
Residence of E. W. Hollinworth, Stanthorpe, 1873. A small, timber dwelling with a slab roof is the home of E.W. Hollinworth in Maryland Street, Stanthorpe. In the photograph, from left to right, are Messrs Darcy, E. Hollinworth and E. Hollinworth Jnr. Thursday, 20 January, 2022 TODAY 13
THURSDAY 20 JANUARY 2022
Southern Downs
Your Community Your Voice Your Council
R EG I ONA L COUNC I L
Mayor Pennisi’s Australia Day message
multicultural fabric into the future. They will be the ones that will help mould and shape our communities and I welcome them to this country, our region and our community. We live in in the greatest country on Earth built on blood, sweat, tears, toil and turmoil. This is home to many different nationalities and Southern Downs in particular offers communities built on selfless contributions by many different generations and nationalities. Southern Downs is a great place to live, work, play and say thanks to our residents past, present and emerging.
New Year! New job? Word is spreading that the Southern Downs is a great place to live, work, play and stay, and with mobile technology increasingly enabling better outcomes for professional people wanting to move to the regions, now is the time to look at the great employment opportunities right on our doorstep. Whether you are a school leaver looking for a traineeship or a seasoned professional considering a career change, Council might just have the right career opportunity for you. With an overriding commitment to its people, Council strives to be an employer of choice, offering diverse and rewarding career paths and attractive employment benefits. We offer competitive remuneration packages, generous
leave provisions and self-development and training schemes. With one of the most favourable work-life balance environments, a bustling regional economy and excellent access to the major metropolitan areas of Brisbane and Toowoomba, the Southern Downs was recently announced as one of the top five local government areas by annual growth in migration. Right now is the right time to join Council and be a part of the growth and exciting future of our region. Potential residents looking to make the move to the Southern Downs can visit www. makesoutherndownshome.com.au – Council’s one-stop online portal with links to major services and resources on the Southern Downs.
Top 9 picnic spots for your Australia Day BBQ Pack the cricket set and lay down your rug! We’ve rounded up the top nine picnic spots on the Southern Downs for your Australia Day BBQ. 1. Leslie Dam BBQ in your bathers at Leslie Dam, one of Queensland’s most popular freshwater fishing and camping destinations. It’s also an ideal spot for swimming and watersports, so BYO kayak, tinnie or jetski and head out onto the water! 2. Girraween National Park Throw a shrimp on the barbie before heading off on a walk at Girraween National Park. Bald Rock Creek picnic area is at the base of The Pyramid, 9km from the New England Highway. Electric barbecues, picnic tables, toilets and drinking water available. 3. Queen Mary Falls Settle in for a BBQ lunch at the Queen Mary Falls picnic area, a shady spot nestled in fragrant eucalypt forest. With plenty of space for the kids to run around, this picnic area has modern facilities, including BBQs and superb walking adventures. After your picnic, head of to explore spectacular Queen Mary Falls, with an easy stroll to the lookout point. BBQs, picnic tables, playground and toilets available. 4. Australiana Park Get patriotic at Warwick’s Australiana Park, with a new learn to ride bicycle track and cycling velodrome onsite, as well as a BMX track. The park has plenty of facilities for your lunchtime spread. Don’t forget your bikes! BBQs, picnic tables, play equipment and toilets available. 5. Quart Pot Creek Quart Pot Creek meanders through granite country and passes through Stanthorpe. There
are plenty of spots along the river to picnic, with five kms of cycling and walking tracks along the creek. BBQs and picnic tables available at Lions Park and Gleeson Park. 6. Storm King Dam Storm King Dam rests in a picturesque rural setting with many water birds and is an ideal spot for your Australia Day picnic. BBQs, picnic tables, toilets, drinking water, jetty, boat ramp, swimming area and playground available. 7. Condamine River The Condamine River curves through Warwick, with plenty of spots to lay the picnic rug and throw a line in. There aren’t any BBQs by the river, but there are plenty of waterside shady spots to open up the picnic basket. The pontoon at Federation Park is the perfect launching pad for a day of swimming and sunbaking. 8. Leslie Park Located in the centre of Warwick, Leslie Park is a perfect lunch spot, with BBQs, picnic tables and shelters available for your Aussie Day spread. The kids will love the play equipment and walking trails alongside the many flower beds, with plenty of room to run around. 9. Mt Marlay Lookout For a panoramic view over Stanthorpe, head to Mt Marlay lookout and picnic area. Located within Stanthorpe itself, you can drive all the way to the top of the summit. Or get your legs pumping and take the concrete stairs path from the bottom of the mountain. Pack a picnic and settle in at the top for relaxing views over the Granite Belt.
Council wishes the Southern Downs a
Happy Australia Day! 26 JANUARY 2022
Southern Downs online
A great place to live, w k, play and stay. 14 TODAY Thursday, 20 January, 2022
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On Australia Day, we recognise those who have made outstanding contributions to our country. We should never forget where we have come from because we are defined today from past contribution. Our country has been forged over many generations and we have ridden on the back of countless volunteers to be the unique region that we call home. Australia Day also recognises the contributions made by those present. Those who pitch in selflessly. All they offer is toil and sweat, however they do make a difference and the difference does not go unnoticed. Through the Australia Day Awards, we are reminded of the ordinary people making an extraordinary difference. It always amazes and reminds me each year when I read the nominations, of what great communities we have. Communities made up of people from many cultures, all contributing something for us all to enjoy. I sincerely thank the volunteers in our community for all they do. I often say, “It’s not governments that make communities, it’s people”. Australia Day is also a day when immigrants choose to become Australian citizens. These will be the people who will contribute to our
The Guide PICK OF THE WEEK ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL ABC TV, Saturday, 8.30pm
Community and kind-hearted people are the style du jour in this heartwarming British series, premiering tonight. Based on the novels of James Herriott about a young vet in the 1930s working in the Yorkshire Dales, the books are so popular that they have been continually in print since their debut in the 1970s. Starring newcomer Nicholas Ralph as Herriott, as well as the late Diana Rigg (Game of Thrones) in the excellent cast, it’s perfect viewing for our divided world. In “You’ve Got to Dream”, Herriott discovers that treating the animals is as much about treating their owners. Featuring cute animals, idyllic scenery, and lighthearted stories, its well-timed fare.
MUSTER DOGS ABC TV, Sunday, 7.40pm
BRITAIN’S SCENIC RAILWAYS SBS, Monday, 7.35pm
NCIS: LOS ANGELES 10, Tuesday, 10.30pm
Puppies, and kelpie puppies in particular, are ridiculously cute and will make even the hardest of hearts skip a beat and swoon involuntarily. These pups may pull at the heart strings but don’t be fooled – they are here to work, and work they shall. In this four-part series, training begins hard and fast as the graziers – helped by master dog trainer Neil McDonald – try to get Annie, Gossip, Lucifer, Spice and Chet up to speed in just 12 months instead of the usual three years. This series reveals the emotional, economic and environmental benefits of using dogs, rather than machines, to muster on the land.
When not stuck in a peak-hour push on the morning commute, travelling by train is by far one of the most enjoyable and relaxing ways to travel. And venturing further afield, you get to soak up some spectacular scenery along the way. In the final part of this series, we explore the heritage railway that runs through the Severn Valley between Worcester and Shropshire, following the tracks of the old Great Western Railway. Celebrating its historical importance, we’ll learn how a group of dedicated volunteers revived the line 50 years ago so generations to come can marvel at the preserved locomotives, quaint stations and rolling fields.
Try as they might, social media and politics have a troubled relationship and we see that in full force tonight after Gia, the highly popular social media influencer daughter of an equally high-profile and powerful US ambassador, goes missing. Are their clues in any of her posts that may help Callen (Chris O’Donnell, pictured) and the team track her down? And in the world of international diplomacy, are there any secrets the special agents are not privy to? In an online world of manufactured and stylised lives, the agents are going to need all the help they can get to get to the truth, so call on Aliyah De Leon (Briana Marin) to help.
Animal instincts: Samuel West, Nicholas Ralph, Callum Woodhouse and Anna Madeley star in All Creatures Great and Small.
Friday, January 21 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
SEVEN (7)
NINE (8, 9)
TEN (5, 1)
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Our Dementia Choir. (PG, R) 11.00 The Heights. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 1.30 Van Der Valk. (Mdsv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Think Tank. (PG, R) 5.00 Restoration Australia. (PG, R) 5.55 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery. (PG, R) Julia Zemiro interviews various celebrities.
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 PBS NewsHour. (R) 2.00 Gourmet Farmer. (PG, R) 2.30 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (PG, R) 3.00 NITV News: Nula. 3.30 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 4.00 Great Canadian Railway Journeys. (R) 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Singin’ In The Rain. (1952, G, R) 2.30 Border Security: International. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. (R)
6.00 Today. The latest in news, current affairs, sport, politics, entertainment, fashion, health and lifestyle. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. Reviews, previews, interviews, highlights and opinions from the Australian Open at Melbourne Park. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 5. From Melbourne Park. Hosted by Tony Jones and Roz Kelly.
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 To Be Advised. 2.45 Entertainment Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Left Off The Map. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.
6.30 Summer Drum. Analysis of the day’s news. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 Midsomer Murders. (Mav, R) Barnaby attends a family friend’s wedding. 9.00 Miniseries: The War Of The Worlds. (Mv) Part 3 of 3. Amy plumbs the depths of her memory looking for the key to resist the Martian terror. 10.00 Mum. (Mls, R) Cathy’s having a barbecue. 10.35 ABC Late News. Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 11.00 Van Der Valk. (Final, Mlv, R) Part 3 of 3. 12.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Good With Wood. 8.30 Walking Britain’s Roman Roads: Dere Street. (PG, R) Dan Jones explores Dere Street. 9.25 Ancient Superstructures: The Great Wall Of China. (PG, R) Part 3 of 4. 10.25 SBS World News Late. 10.55 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mls, R) 11.50 Agatha Christie’s Criminal Games. (Madv, R) 1.35 The Kimberley Cruise: The Full Journey. (R) 4.25 Kambuwal, Guuwa & Gayiri Country. (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. Eliminator. 10.00 MOVIE: The Fast And The Furious. (2001, Malv, R) An LAPD officer goes undercover to infiltrate an illegal street-racing gang in Los Angeles. Paul Walker, Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez. 12.10 MOVIE: Reaper. (2000, Mav, R) A novelist becomes a murder suspect. Chris Sarandon, Catherine Mary Stewart. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R) Hosted by Simon Reeve. 5.00 NBC Today. News and current affairs.
6.00 Nine News. 7.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 5. From Melbourne Park. Hosted by James Bracey. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Madm, R) Sharpe lands in hot water when she goes out on a limb for a patient. Max’s grief comes to a head. 12.00 Reverie. (Mav, R) Monica seeks help after a bombing. 1.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures: Cairns To Cape Pt 1. (PG, R) The boys head to Cape York. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) Home shopping. 4.30 Global Shop. (R) Home shopping. 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Customs. (PG, R)
6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 Soccer. AFC Women’s Asian Cup. Group Stage. Australia v Indonesia. 10.30 The Graham Norton Show. (Ms, R) 11.30 Drunk History Australia. (MA15+l, R) 12.00 Bull. (Mv, R) 12.00 The Project. (R) 12.00 Bull. (Mv, R) 1.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 2.00 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 Leah Remini: Scientology And The Aftermath. 2.30 Bamay. 2.50 The Ice Cream Show. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland Street. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Hoarders. (Final) 9.20 Sex & Music: Sex and Pain and Rock ‘N’ Roll. 10.25 Sexplora. 11.25 Narcos. 12.15am VICE News Tonight. 1.10 MOVIE: The Breaker Upperers. (2018, M) 2.35 NHK World English News. 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 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Bargain Hunt. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Last Chance Learners. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 5.00 Escape To The Country. 6.00 Bargain Hunt. 7.00 Better Homes And Gardens. 8.30 The Amazing Homemakers. 9.30 Australia’s Big Backyards. 10.30 The Mentalist. 12.45am The Fine Art Auction. 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. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 5. 5pm Tennis. Australian Open. Night 5. 10.00 House. 11.00 The Equalizer. Midnight My Favorite Martian. 12.30 Adventures In Rainbow Country. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping.
10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 NBL Slam Highlights Show. 7.30 Seinfeld. 8.00 Man With A Plan. 8.30 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 The King Of Queens. Noon Becker. 1.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.30 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Mom. 10.30 Nancy Drew. 11.30 Friends. 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 Crazy Ex-Girlfriend. 4.30 Home Shopping. 5.30 Infomercials.
SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Richard The Stork. Continued. (2017) 6.35 Bill. (2015, PG) 8.20 A Matter Of Life And Death. (1946, PG) 10.15 Heidi. (2015, PG, German) 12.20pm Woman At War. (2018, M, Icelandic) 2.15 About Elly. (2009, PG, Persian) 4.25 The Nightingale. (2013, Mandarin) 6.20 Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 8.30 The Song Of Names. (2019, M) 10.35 Do Not Hesitate. (2021, M, Dutch) 12.20am The Wave. (2015, M, Norwegian) 2.20 Young And Beautiful. (2013, MA15+, French) 4.00 Accidentally Dad. (2020, M, Vietnamese)
7MATE (73) 6am Morning Programs. 9.00 Down East Dickering. 10.00 NFL: Road To The Playoffs. 11.15 Sound FX: Best Of. Noon Billy The Exterminator. 12.30 Pawnography. 1.30 Shipping Wars. 2.00 American Pickers. 3.00 Storage Wars: TX. 3.30 Bull Riding. PBR Australia. Monster Energy Tour. Round 10. Mackay Invitational. 4.00 Timbersports. 4.30 Heavy Rescue: 401. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Eliminator. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 MOVIE: Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes. (2014, M) 10.05 MOVIE: The Last Boy Scout. (1991, MA15+) 12.15am Late Programs.
9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs.
10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 7.00 Infomercials. 8.00 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 9.00 iFish Summer Series. 9.30 Jake And The Fatman. 10.30 Diagnosis Murder. 11.30 JAG. 1.30pm Star Trek: The Next Generation. 3.30 Jake And The Fatman. 4.30 Diagnosis Murder. 5.30 JAG. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 10.30 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. 12.30am Home Shopping. 1.00 Infomercials. 1.30 Home Shopping. 2.00 SEAL Team. 3.00 NCIS. 4.00 NCIS: New Orleans. 5.00 Diagnosis Murder.
Programs. 5.10pm The Wonder Gang. 5.20 Kangaroo Beach. 5.35 Milo. 5.50 Peppa Pig. 5.55 Hey Duggee. 6.05 Octonauts. 6.20 Bluey. 6.25 Peter Rabbit. 6.40 Andy’s Dinosaur Adventures. 7.00 Dino Dana. 7.15 Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 MOVIE: The Florida Project. (2017, MA15+) 10.15 Doctor Who. 11.05 Brassic. 11.50 QI. 12.20am Community. 12.40 Parks And Recreation. 1.00 Last Woman On The Planet. (Final) 2.05 ABC News Update. 2.10 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Wallykazam! 5.55 Late Programs.
N ITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 8.45 Waabiny Time. 9.10 Bushwhacked! 9.35 The Magic Canoe. 10.00 Great Blue Wild. 11.00 Who Do You Think You Are? Noon Lagau Danalaig: An Island Life. 1.00 Pacific Lockdown: Sea Of Resilience. 2.00 Shortland Street. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Wapos Bay. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Project Planet. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 NITV News: Nula. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.35 Great Blue Wild. 7.30 Little J And Big Cuz. 7.45 MOVIE: Storm Boy. (1976, PG) 9.20 Robbie Hood. 10.25 MOVIE: Jedda. (1955, PG) Midnight Late Programs.
Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 SeaQuest DSV. 2.00 The A-Team. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 Raymond. 4.30 Malcolm. 5.30 News. 6.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 5. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 MOVIE: Madagascar. (2005, PG) 9.15 MOVIE: Wedding Crashers. (2005, M) 11.40 Young Sheldon. 12.05am Lipstick Jungle. 1.05 Summer House. 2.00 Love Island USA. 2.50 Clarence. 3.00 Bakugan: Battle Planet. 3.30 Ninjago: Masters Of Spinjitzu. 4.00 Pokémon Journeys. 4.30 Beyblade Burst Rise. 4.50 The Tom And Jerry Show. 5.10 Care Bears: Unlock The Magic. 5.30 Gumball.
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.
QLD
Thursday, 20 January, 2022 TODAY 15
Saturday, January 22 ABC TV (2)
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 Midsomer Murders. (Mav, R) 2.00 Australia Remastered. (R) 3.00 Landline Summer. (R) 3.30 Rulla’s Cooking On Country. (R) 4.00 Basketball. WNBL. Round 8. Melbourne Boomers v Townsville Fire.
6.00 WorldWatch. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (R) 2.00 Figure Skating. ISU European Championships. Highlights. 3.30 Cycling. Road National Championships. Women’s Race. Highlights. 4.30 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (PG) 4.35 London’s Great Bridges. (R) 5.30 Tony Robinson’s Forgotten War Stories.
6.00 NBC Today. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) 12.00 Coastwatch Oz. (PG, R) 12.30 Motorbike Cops. (PG, R) 1.00 Cricket. The Women’s Ashes. Twenty20 International. Australia v England. Game 2. From Adelaide Oval. 4.30 Harbour Cops. (PGa, R) 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Creek To Coast. (R)
6.00 Weekend Today. News, current affairs and sports. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. Reviews, previews, interviews, highlights and opinions from the Australian Open at Melbourne Park. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 6.
6am Morning Programs. 7.30 Escape Fishing. (R) 8.00 My Market Kitchen. (R) 8.30 Pooches At Play. (R) 9.00 Freshly Picked. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 4x4 Adventures. (R) 1.00 All 4 Adventure. (a, R) 2.00 Destination Dessert. (R) 2.30 Three Blue Ducks. (PGl, R) 3.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.30 Taste Of Australia. (R) 4.00 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PGls, R) 4.30 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 5.00 News.
6.10 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. (R) George Clarke travels to Dudley. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 Death In Paradise. (Return, Mv) A TV news presenter is found strangled. 8.30 All Creatures Great And Small. (Premiere, PG) Fresh out of Glasgow Veterinary College, a young man follows his dream to become a vet in the Yorkshire Dales, where he soon discovers that treating the animals is as much about treating their owners. 9.20 Call The Midwife. (Ma, R) The prospect of a new romance for Lucille brightens the mood at Nonnatus House. 10.20 Father Brown. (Ma, R) A convention of jesters visits Kembleford. 11.05 Finding Alice. (Ml, R) Alice grows desperately short of money. 11.55 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)
6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Great Escapes With Morgan Freeman: El Chapo. (M) Takes a look at drug kingpin El Chapo. 8.30 The World’s Greatest Hotels: Browns, London. (PG) Takes a look at the Browns, London. 9.20 World’s Most Beautiful Railway. (R) A look at the Caledonian Sleeper. 10.15 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (M, R) 11.10 Dublin Murders. (MA15+a, R) 12.15 MOVIE: Ali’s Wedding. (2017, Mal, R) Osamah Sami, Don Hany, Helana Sawires. 2.15 MOVIE: The Extraordinary Journey Of The Fakir. (2018, Mlv, R) Dhanush, Bérénice Bejo. 3.55 Sinkholes: Deadly Drops. (PGa, R) 4.50 Destination Flavour Down Under 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 Cricket. Big Bash League. Qualifier. 10.00 MOVIE: 2 Fast 2 Furious. (2003, Mlv, R) A disgraced cop with an eye for fast cars agrees to work undercover and help bring down a drug lord in Miami. However, before their mark will hire him, he has to first prove his skills by engaging in a race. Paul Walker, Tyrese Gibson, Eva Mendes. 12.10 Air Crash Investigation: Deadly Go Round. (PGa, R) Takes a look at China Airlines Flight 140, which crashed 104m from Nagoya Airport in Japan. 1.10 The Zoo. (R) Narrated by Melissa Doyle. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Get Clever. (R) Educational kids’ program. 5.00 My Greek Odyssey: Karpathos And Kasos. (PG, R) Hosted by Peter Maneas.
6.00 Nine News Saturday. 7.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 6. From Melbourne Park. Hosted by James Bracey. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Ma, R) When an inmate comes in with a preventable illness, Max, Sharpe and Iggy head to the source, Rikers Island. 12.00 Manifest. (Mav, R) Afraid of losing his daughter to the Believers, Ben confronts Adrian. Saanvi seeks help from an old flame. 1.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures: Cairns To Cape Pt 2. (PG) The boys continue their trip to Cape York. 1.30 Customs. (PG, R) Follows customs officers at work. 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) Home shopping. 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Wesley Impact With Stu Cameron. (PG, R) Hosted by Stu Cameron.
6.00 Soccer. A-League Men. 9.00 Ambulance. (Ma, R) With a spike in staff illness due to COVID-19, the ambulance service calls on the military for help. However, before the recruits can be deployed they must undergo three days of intensive training. 11.00 FBI: Most Wanted. (MA15+v, R) Missteps along the way lead to more death as the team investigates the high-profile murder of a professional basketball player’s wife, who was a famous supermodel-turned-lifestyle guru. 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. 7.30pm Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2021: Opening Night. (Final) 9.25 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 10.10 Insert Name Here. 10.40 Schitt’s Creek. 11.05 The Trip To Greece. 11.30 MOVIE: Red Dwarf: The Promised Land. (2020, PG) 1am David Attenborough: Kingdom Of Plants. 1.50 ABC News Update. 1.55 Close. 5.05 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. 9.30 SBS Courtside. 10.00 Basketball. NBA. Philadelphia 76ers v Los Angeles Clippers. 12.30pm WorldWatch. 1.30 What Would Diplo Do? 2.00 Unknown Amazon. 2.50 The Pizza Show. 3.20 WorldWatch. 4.50 It’s Suppertime! 5.50 Delivering The World: Inside DHL. 6.40 The Story Of The Songs. 7.35 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. 8.30 Why Women Kill. 10.15 The X-Files. 11.55 Late Programs.
7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 8.30 Travel Oz. 10.00 Weekender. 10.30 Creek To Coast. 11.00 Horse Racing. Royal Randwick Raceday. 4.30pm Border Security: International. 5.00 Ed And Karen’s Recipes For Success. 6.00 Football. AFL Women’s. Round 3. Gold Coast Suns v Brisbane Lions. 8.00 The Yorkshire Vet. 9.00 Escape To The Country. 11.00 The Mentalist. 1am The Fine Art Auction. 4.00 Late Programs.
9GEM (81, 92) 6am Newstyle Direct. 6.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 7.00 Leading The Way. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 8.00 Beyond Today. 8.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 6. 5pm Tennis. Australian Open. Night 6. 10.00 House. 11.00 The Equalizer. Midnight My Favorite Martian. 12.30 Rainbow Country. 1.00 TV Shop.
10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.40pm Rugby Union. Ella 7s. 2.00 Ice Hockey. National Hockey Super League. 4.00 Soccer. Scottish Women’s Premier League. 5.50 Away From Country. 6.50 News. 7.00 Chuck And The First People’s Kitchen. 7.30 MOVIE: Gurrumul. (2017, PG) 9.15 Looky Looky Here Comes Cooky. 10.15 MOVIE: Toomelah. (2011, MA15+) Midnight Late Programs.
SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am
7MATE (73)
9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Malcolm. 2.00 MOVIE: Finding Neverland. (2004, PG) 4.00 MOVIE: Are We There Yet? (2005, PG) 6.00 Tennis. Austn Open. 7.00 MOVIE: Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa. (2008, PG) 8.45 MOVIE: The Incredible Hulk. (2008, M) 11.00 Stunt Science. Midnight Lipstick Jungle. 1.00 Summer House. 2.00 Below Deck Mediterranean. 2.50 Late Programs.
10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 8.00 Home Shopping. 9.00 The Doctors. 10.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 11.00 Jake And The Fatman. Noon JAG. 2.00 All 4 Adventure. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 4.00 Bondi Rescue. 4.30 iFish Summer Series. 5.00 Waltzing Jimeoin. 5.30 Scorpion. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 10.20 NCIS: New Orleans. 1.10am 48 Hours. 2.10 Late Programs. 12503970-JW29-21
6am Morning Programs. 12.30pm Timbersports. 1.00 Blokesworld. 1.30 Australia ReDiscovered. 2.00 Football. AFL Women’s. Round 3. Melbourne v St Kilda. 4.00 Heavy Rescue: 401. 5.00 Pawn Stars. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. Qualifier. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 MOVIE: The Island. (2005, M) 10.20 MOVIE: Dredd. (2012, MA15+) 12.20am Late Programs. IENDLY BAN FR
NG KI
EA SY
Selkie. (2000, PG) 7.40 Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 9.50 Richard The Stork. (2017) 11.25 The Nightingale. (2013, Mandarin) 1.20pm The Elephant And The Butterfly. (2017, M, French) 2.55 Bill. (2015, PG) 4.40 A Matter Of Life And Death. (1946, PG) 6.35 Adam. (2019, PG) 8.30 The Place Beyond The Pines. (2012, MA15+) 11.05 Woman At War. (2018, M, Icelandic) 1am Late Programs.
With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Man With A Plan. 8.30 Frasier. 9.30 To Be Advised. 2pm Man With A Plan. 3.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 10.15 Friends. 12.10am Home Shopping. 1.10 Infomercials. 1.40 Mom. 2.05 Seatbelt Psychic. 2.35 Crazy Ex-Girlfriend. 3.30 Nancy Drew. 4.30 Home Shopping.
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, January 23 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
SEVEN (7)
NINE (8, 9)
TEN (5, 1)
6am Morning Programs. 10.30 World This Week. (R) 11.00 Compass. (PG, R) 11.30 Praise. (R) 12.00 News. 12.30 Landline Summer. (R) 1.00 Finding Alice. (Ml, R) 1.45 Mum. (Mls, R) 2.15 Doc Martin. (Return, PGa, R) 3.00 Aussie Inventions That Changed The World. (PG, R) 4.05 Nigel Slater’s Middle East. (R) 5.00 Dream Gardens. (R) 5.30 Nigella’s Cook, Eat, Repeat. (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 Speedweek. 3.00 Figure Skating. ISU European Championships. Highlights. 4.30 Cycling. Road National Championships. Men’s race. Highlights. 5.35 Tony Robinson’s Forgotten War Stories. (PG)
6.00 NBC Today. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) 12.00 Dog Patrol. (PGa, R) 12.30 Coastwatch Oz. (PG, R) 1.00 Cricket. The Women’s Ashes. Twenty20 International. Australia v England. Game 3. From Adelaide Oval. 4.30 Border Security: International. (PG) 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Weekender.
6.00 Weekend Today. News, current affairs and sports. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. Reviews, previews, interviews, highlights and opinions from the Australian Open at Melbourne Park. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 7.
6.00 Mass. 6.30 Hillsong. 7.00 Leading The Way. (PGa, R) 7.30 Tomorrow’s World. (PGa) 8.00 GCBC. (R) 8.30 Freshly Picked. (R) 9.00 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 To Be Advised. 1.45 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 2.15 My Market Kitchen. (R) 2.30 Australia By Design: Architecture. (Return) 3.00 Taste Of Australia. (R) 3.30 Roads Less Travelled. (PGl, R) 4.00 All 4 Adventure. (l) 5.00 News.
6.05 Australia Remastered: Forest. (Final, R) Presented by Aaron Pedersen. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. (R) 7.40 Muster Dogs. (PG) Part 1 of 4. Follows five kelpie puppies from the same litter on their journey to become muster dogs. 8.40 Vera. (Ma, R) Part 4 of 4. Vera investigates the death of a teenager whose body was found floating in a reservoir. 10.10 Doc Martin. (Ma, R) Penhale holds a police open day. 11.00 Harrow. (Malv, R) The death of a student is investigated. 11.50 Silent Witness. (MA15+av, R) 1.55 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.00 Keeping Australia Safe. (Ma, R) 5.00 Gardening Australia. (R)
6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Treasures Of Gibraltar. Historian Bettany Hughes visits the small British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar. 8.30 Caesar’s Doomsday War. Explores Julius Caesar’s war in Gaul as well as the stories of the local tribes who fought the might of Rome. 10.00 Top Ten Mummies Of Egypt. (PGa, R) A look at the mummies of Egypt. 11.45 The Great Plague: Decimation. (Ma, R) 12.40 24 Hours In Emergency: Children Of Men. (Mal, R) 1.35 The Indian Pacific. (PG, R) 4.40 Bamay. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. The Knockout. 10.00 MOVIE: Cold Pursuit. (2019, MA15+av, R) An unassuming snowplough driver seeks revenge on a criminal kingpin for his son’s murder. Liam Neeson, Laura Dern, Micheál Richardson. 12.25 Air Crash Investigation: Dead Of Winter. (PGa, R) Examines Continental Airlines Flight 1713. 1.25 The Zoo. (R) A circus elephant is given to Western Plains Zoo. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R) Hosted by Simon Reeve. 4.00 NBC Today. News and current affairs. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 Nine News Sunday. 7.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 7. From Melbourne Park. Hosted by James Bracey. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Mamv, R) With the hospital on lockdown, Sharpe and Max find their lives in danger. 12.00 Manifest. (Madv, R) In the wake of a devastating tragedy, Ben tries to connect with a despondent Olive. 1.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures: Hawaii Ocean Paddle Pt 1. (PGl) The lifeguards head to Hawaii. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) Religious program. 4.30 Take Two. (R) Home shopping. 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today. The latest in news and current affairs.
6.30 The Sunday Project. Panellists dissect, digest and reconstitute the daily news, events and hottest topics. 7.30 I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! Aussie celebrities continue their test of survival in the Australian outback. 9.15 FBI. (Mv, R) After a front-running female presidential candidate is targeted with a car bomb, FBI special agents Maggie Bell and Omar Adom “OA” Zidan must hurry to track down the bomber before they strike again. 11.00 The Sunday Project. (R) Panellists dissect, digest and reconstitute the daily news, events and hottest topics. 12.00 Home Shopping. (R) 1.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings. Morning news and talk show.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.05pm The Deep. 7.30 Compass. 8.00 You Can’t Ask That. 8.30 Return To Belsen. 9.20 The Hunt For Gaddafi’s Billions. 10.05 David Bowie: Finding Fame. 11.40 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 12.25am MOVIE: The Florida Project. (2017, MA15+) 2.15 ABC News Update. 2.20 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Wallykazam! 5.55 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Basketball. NBA. Philadelphia 76ers v Los Angeles Clippers. Replay. 2.00 Black Market: Dispatches. 2.30 Tattoo Age. 3.25 WorldWatch. 3.55 Insight. 4.55 Look Me In The Eye. 5.55 Speed With Guy Martin. 6.50 Deadly Destruction. 7.45 When Big Things Go Wrong. 8.35 Patriot Brains. 9.25 Dark Side Of The Ring. (Final) 10.15 Late Programs.
7TWO (72) 6am Morning Programs. 10.00 Ed And Karen’s Recipes For Success. 11.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 11.30 Animal Rescue. Noon The Yorkshire Vet. 1.00 Ed And Karen’s Recipes For Success. 2.00 Escape To The Country. 4.00 MOVIE: Superman. (1978, PG) 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 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 6.30 Amazing Facts Presents. 7.00 Leading The Way. 7.30 In Touch Ministries. 8.00 Beyond Today. 8.30 The Incredible Journey Presents. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 7. 5pm Tennis. Australian Open. Night 7. 7.00 MOVIE: The Great Train Robbery. (1978, PG) 9.15 Confessions Of A Serial Killer. 10.15 House. 11.15 Late Programs.
10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am Crazy Ex-Girlfriend. 6.50 Brides Of Beverly Hills. 7.50 The Big Bang Theory. 8.15 Neighbours. 10.15 To Be Advised. Noon Basketball. NBL. Round 8. Sydney Kings v New Zealand Breakers. 2.00 Basketball. NBL. Round 8. Cairns Taipans v Brisbane Bullets. 4.00 Carol’s Second Act. 5.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 Friends. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 11.15
SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am
7MATE (73)
Football. WKFL. From Western Australia. 12.45pm Motor Racing. W Series. Highlights. 1.15 Soccer. Serie A Femminile. 3.00 Rugby Union. Monsoon Rugby Union. 4.30 Rugby Union. WA Premier Grade. 6.00 Going Native. 6.30 News. 6.40 Great Blue Wild. 7.30 Who Do You Think You Are? 8.30 Australia Uncovered: Incarceration Nation. 10.00 MOVIE: Radiance. (1998, M) 11.30 Late Programs.
Morning Programs. 7.00 The Nightingale. (2013, Mandarin) 8.55 Adam. (2019, PG) 10.50 Do Not Hesitate. (2021, M, Dutch) 12.35pm Win My Baby Back. (2019, M, Vietnamese) 2.30 Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 4.40 Max Richter’s Sleep. (2019, PG) 6.35 The Ash Lad 2. (2019, PG, Norwegian) 8.30 Vita & Virginia. (2018, M) 10.35 Canola. (2016, M, Korean) 12.45am Late Programs.
9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm MOVIE: Pokémon The Movie: Genesect And The Legend Awakened. (2013) 3.00 Malcolm. 4.00 MOVIE: Win A Date With Tad Hamilton! (2004, PG) 6.00 Tennis. Austn Open. 7.00 MOVIE: Junior. (1994) 9.15 MOVIE: Kindergarten Cop. (1990, M) 11.30 Malcolm. Midnight Lipstick Jungle. 1.00 Summer House. 2.00 Below Deck Mediterranean. 2.50 Late Programs.
10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Morning Programs. 10.30 Bondi Rescue Kathmandu Coast To Coast. 11.30 Australia By Design: Interiors. Noon Australia By Design: Architecture. 12.30 Scorpion. 2.30 Soccer. A-League Women. Round 8. Canberra United v Melbourne Victory. 5.00 Snap Happy. 5.30 What’s Up Down Under. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 6.30 JAG. 7.30 NCIS. 9.25 NCIS: Los Angeles. 10.20 48 Hours. 11.20 Late Programs.
16 TODAY Thursday, 20 January, 2022
6am ITM Fishing Show. 6.30 A Football Life. 7.30 NFL. NFL. Divisional Round. 11.00 NFL. NFL. Divisional Round. 2pm Football. AFL Women’s. Round 3. Western Bulldogs v Carlton. 4.00 Ultimate Fishing. 5.00 Pawn Stars. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 Cricket. Big Bash League. The Knockout. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.30 MOVIE: Total Recall. (1990, MA15+) 10.55 Late Programs.
Monday, January 24 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. (Final, R) 11.00 Fly Me To The Moon. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 The Cook And The Chef. (R) 1.25 Vera. (Ma, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Think Tank. (R) 5.00 Restoration Australia. (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 Where Are You Really From? (PG, R) 2.30 Talk For Life. 3.30 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 4.00 Great Canadian Railway Journeys. (PGa, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Doc Hollywood. (1991, PGalns) Michael J. Fox, Julie Warner, Woody Harrelson. 2.00 Surveillance Oz Dashcam. (PGl, R) 2.30 Border Security: International. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. (R)
6.00 Today. The latest in news and current affairs. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. Reviews, previews, interviews, highlights and opinions from the Australian Open at Melbourne Park. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 8.
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. (PGa, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.45 Entertainment Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Left Off The Map. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery. (PG, R) 6.30 Summer Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. (Return) 8.00 Back Roads: Boulia, Queensland. Hosted by Heather Ewart. 8.30 The China Century: City Of Protest. (Malv) Part 4 of 5. 9.30 The Rise Of The Murdoch Dynasty: The Rebel Alliance. (Ml, R) Part 2 of 3. 10.25 Strong Women. (PGl, R) 10.55 ABC Late News. 11.25 Old People’s Home For 4 Year Olds. (R) 12.25 Killing Eve. (MA15+v, R) 1.10 Silent Witness. (Mav, R) 2.10 MOVIE: Maigret In Montmartre. (2017, Madnsv, R) Rowan Atkinson, Sebastian De Souza. 3.40 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.55 Summer Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Britain’s Scenic Railways. (PG) Part 4 of 4. 8.30 Secret Scotland: Loch Ness. (R) Part 3 of 5. Susan Calman continues her search for secrets on the banks of Loch Ness. 9.20 Historic House Rescue: Welsh Farmhouse Pt 1. (R) Part 1 of 3. Follows the restoration of Llwyn Celyn, a medieval hall house in Monmouthshire, Wales. 10.15 SBS World News Late. 10.45 The Crimson Rivers. (MA15+av) 11.45 Wisting. (Malv, R) 12.35 Unit One. (Malsv, R) 3.55 Sinkholes: Deadly Drops. (PG, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour Down Under 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 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R) 7.30 Motorway Patrol. (PGl) Authorities hunt down car thieves. 8.00 Highway Cops. (PG) A man on the run abandons his pooch. 8.30 9-1-1. (M) An explosion rocks the hospital where Michael Grant’s boyfriend, Dr David Hale, is performing surgery. 9.30 MOVIE: Fast & Furious. (2009, Mlsv, R) A fugitive battles a drug cartel. Vin Diesel, Paul Walker. 11.40 Surveillance Oz. (PG, R) 12.10 Hooked On The Look. (MA15+ad, R) 1.10 Travel Oz. (PG, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 Nine News. 7.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 8. From Melbourne Park. Hosted by James Bracey. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Mam, R) Max and Luna make some new friends as he struggles with the realities of being a single father. 12.00 Reverie. (Mav, R) Mara tries to save a young dancer. 1.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures: Hawaii Ocean Paddle Pt 2. (PG) The lifeguards tackle a challenge. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) Home shopping. 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) Religious program. 4.30 Customs. (PG, R) Follows customs officers at work. 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 I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! Aussie celebrities continue their test of survival in the Australian outback. 9.30 FBI: Most Wanted. (Mv) After a prized Kentucky racehorse is stolen and its groomer is taken hostage, the Fugitive Task Force learns that they may be the only ones who consider the young woman’s safety a priority over the horse’s. 11.30 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings. Morning news and talk show.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 David Attenborough: Kingdom Of Plants. (Final) 8.25 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 9.10 To Be Advised. 10.00 Doctor Who. 10.45 Auschwitz Untold: In Colour. 11.55 QI. 12.25am Escape From The City. 1.25 Community. 1.45 Parks And Recreation. 2.10 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. 8.30 Courtside. 9.00 Basketball. NBA. Heat v Lakers. 11.30 WorldWatch. 12.30pm Nirvanna. 2.00 Justin Trudeau Talks Weed. 2.50 Ice Cream Show. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland Street. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.30 News. 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Trip Hazard: My Great British Adventure. 9.30 Hypothetical. 10.20 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. 10.30 Better Homes And Gardens. Noon Mighty Trains. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. 8.30 The Inspector Lynley Mysteries. 10.30 Cold Case. 11.30 Late Programs.
9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop: Home Shopping. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 8. 5pm Tennis. Australian Open. Night 8. 7.00 Antiques Roadshow. 8.00 Poirot. 9.10 Silent Witness. 11.20 House. 12.10am The Equalizer. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.30 Joyce Meyer. 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping.
10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am Man With A Plan. 6.30 The Big Bang Theory. 8.00 Friends. 10.00 The Middle. 11.30 Seinfeld. Noon Carol’s Second Act. 1.00 Brides Of Beverly Hills. 1.30 The Big Bang Theory. 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 Mom. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm Going Native. 2.00 Shortland Street. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Jarjums. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 APTN National News. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Great Blue Wild. 7.30 Who Do You Think You Are? 8.30 You Are Here: We Don’t Need A Map. 10.00 MOVIE: Sweet Country. (2017, M) 11.55 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 Soccer. A-League Men. Replay. 10.30 Jake And The Fatman. 11.30 JAG. 1.30pm Star Trek: The Next Generation. 3.30 Jake And The Fatman. 4.30 Diagnosis Murder. 5.30 JAG. 7.30 Soccer. AFC Women’s Asian Cup. Group Stage. Philippines v Australia. 10.30 A-League Highlights Show. 11.30 Blue Bloods. 12.30am Infomercials. 1.00 Shopping. 2.00 Late Programs.
IENDLY BAN FR
NG KI
EA SY
Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 SeaQuest DSV. 2.00 The A-Team. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 Malcolm. 5.30 News. 6.00 Tennis. Austn Open. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Gold Coast Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: The Chronicles Of Riddick. (2004, M) 10.50 To Be Advised. 12.20am Lipstick Jungle. 1.15 Love Island USA. 3.00 Bakugan: Battle Planet. 3.30 Ninjago: Masters Of Spinjitzu. 4.00 Late Programs.
12503971-SG29-21
6am NFL. NFL. Divisional Round. 9.00 Sound FX: Best Of. 9.30 NFL. NFL. Divisional Round. 12.30pm Armchair Experts: NFL Edition. 1.00 Sound FX: Best Of. 2.00 Pawn Stars. 3.30 Highway Thru Hell. 4.30 Heavy Rescue: 401. 5.30 Storage Wars: Texas. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 American Pickers. 8.30 MOVIE: Braveheart. (1995, MA15+) 12.05am Late Programs.
Max Richter’s Sleep. Continued. (2019, PG) 7.00 Jour De Fete. (1949, French) 8.30 The Ash Lad 2. (2019, PG, Norwegian) 10.25 Umrika. (2015, M, Hindi) 12.20pm The Cougar Queen. (2018, M, Vietnamese) 2.15 Adam. (2019, PG) 4.10 The White Balloon. (1995, Farsi) 5.50 Watership Down. (1978, PG) 7.30 Lola Versus. (2012, M) 9.05 The Wave. (2019, MA15+) 10.40 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, January 25 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
SEVEN (7)
NINE (8, 9)
TEN (5, 1)
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Nigel Slater’s Middle East. (Final, R) 11.00 Muster Dogs. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 All Creatures Great And Small. (PG, R) 2.00 Death In Paradise. (Mv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Think Tank. (R) 5.00 Restoration Australia. (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 PBS NewsHour. (R) 2.00 Where Are You Really From? (PG, R) 3.00 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (PG, R) 4.00 Great Canadian Railway Journeys. (PGad, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Joe Versus The Volcano. (1990, PGl, R) Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, Lloyd Bridges. 2.00 Motorbike Cops. (PG, R) 2.30 Border Security: International. (PGad, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. (R)
6.00 Today. The latest in news and current affairs. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. Reviews, previews, interviews, highlights and opinions from the Australian Open at Melbourne Park. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 9.
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. (PGa, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Left Off The Map. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery. (PG, R) 6.30 Summer Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Australian Of The Year 2022. (PG) From the National Arboretum, Canberra. 8.45 Old People’s Home For 4 Year Olds. (Final, R) Part 5 of 5. 9.50 Griff’s Great Australian Rail Trip: Darwin To Alice Springs Make Sure You Drink Water! (PG, R) Griff Rhys Jones heads to Darwin. 10.40 QI. (Final, Mls, R) 11.10 ABC Late News. 11.40 Miriam & Alan: Lost In Scotland. (Ml, R) 12.30 Killing Eve. (Masv, R) 1.10 Silent Witness. (Mav, R) 3.15 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 5.00 Summer Drum. (R) 5.30 7.30: The Interviews. (R)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great Continental Railway Journeys: Palermo To Mt Etna. (PGav, R) Hosted by Michael Portillo. 8.35 Alhambra: Secrets Of The Ancient Builders. Takes a look at Alhambra, a fortress and palace in southern Spain built more than 800 years ago. 9.35 Australia In Colour: Making Australia. (PGa, R) Part 4 of 4. 10.35 SBS World News Late. 11.05 Shadow Lines. (Premiere, Malv) 12.00 The Looming Tower. (Mlsv, R) 3.35 Sinkholes: Deadly Drops. (PGa, R) 4.30 VICE Guide To Film. (Mdlv, 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 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R) A man makes a shocking confession. 7.30 The Queen Unseen. (PG) Takes a look at Queen Elizabeth II. 8.30 MOVIE: Little Women. (2019, G, R) During the 19th century, four young sisters are each determined to live life on their own terms. Saoirse Ronan, Emma Watson, Florence Pugh. 11.20 Autopsy USA: Donna Summer. (Ma) 12.20 Absentia. (MA15+av, R) 1.20 The Zoo. (R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 Nine News. 7.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 9. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Ma, R) Max and Reynolds treat a young patient who comes to New Amsterdam with symptoms of a heart attack. 12.00 Reverie. (Mav, R) The team help a wrongly imprisoned boy. 1.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures: Hawaii Ocean Paddle Pt 3. (PGl) The lifeguards tackle a challenge. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) Religious program. 4.30 Customs. (PG, R) Follows customs officers at work. 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 I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! Aussie celebrities continue their test of survival in the Australian outback. 9.30 NCIS. (Mv) The team investigates after the body of a US Navy reservist is found riddled with bullets in a beat-up car used for target practice at a gun range. Kasie weighs the pros and cons of buying a gun. 10.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. An ambassador’s daughter goes missing. 11.30 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? 9.00 Gavin & Stacey. 9.30 Brassic. 10.15 Schitt’s Creek. 10.40 Doctor Who. 11.25 The Trip To Greece. 11.55 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.40am Community. 1.05 Parks And Recreation. 1.25 ABC News Update. 1.30 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Wallykazam! 5.55 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Basketball. NBA. Miami Heat v Los Angeles Lakers. Replay. 2.00 Funny How? 2.30 Woman With Gloria Steinem. 3.30 Bamay. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland Street. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Woodstock. 10.20 The Story Of. 10.45 Cults And Extreme Belief. 11.35 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 Bargain Hunt. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Creek To Coast. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. 8.30 Foyle’s War. 10.40 Without A Trace. 12.45am Billy Connolly: Made In Scotland. 2.00 Late Programs.
9GEM (81, 92) 6am Morning Programs. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Seaway. 1.00 World’s Greatest Journeys. 2.00 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: The Baby And The Battleship. (1956) 5.30 Antiques Roadshow. 6.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 9. 7.00 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 The King Of Queens. 7.30 Seinfeld. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 The King Of Queens. Noon Becker. 1.00 Brides Of Beverly Hills. 1.30 Friends. 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. 11.10 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. Noon
SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am
7MATE (73)
Yothu Yindi Tribute Concert. 1.30 Shortland Street. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Wapos Bay. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Project Planet. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 Indian Country Today. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Great Blue Wild. 7.30 NITV News: January 25. 8.00 Insight. 9.00 The Beach. 11.50 Late Programs.
Watership Down. Continued. (1978, PG) 7.10 The White Balloon. (1995, Farsi) 8.45 Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday. (1953, French) 10.20 Max Richter’s Sleep. (2019, PG) 12.15pm Canola. (2016, M, Korean) 2.25 The Ash Lad 2. (2019, PG, Norwegian) 4.20 Jour De Fete. (1949, French) 5.50 Rosie. (2018, PG) 7.30 The Skin Of Others. (2020) 9.15 Jindabyne. (2006, M) 11.30 Late Programs.
9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 SeaQuest DSV. 2.00 The A-Team. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 Raymond. 4.30 Malcolm. 5.30 News. 6.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Gold Coast Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Under Siege. (1992, M) 10.40 To Be Advised. 12.30am Lipstick Jungle. (Final) 1.30 Summer House. 2.30 Love Island USA. 3.30 Late Programs.
10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 7.00 Infomercials. 8.00 Roads Less Travelled. 8.30 A-League Highlights Show. 9.30 Jake And The Fatman. 10.30 Diagnosis Murder. 11.30 JAG. 1.30pm Star Trek: The Next Generation. 3.30 Jake And The Fatman. 4.30 Diagnosis Murder. 5.30 JAG. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Blue Bloods. 10.25 Socceroos: Road To Qatar. 10.55 NCIS: New Orleans. 11.50 Late Programs.
6am Morning Programs. 10.00 A Football Life. 11.00 America’s Game. Noon Billy The Exterminator. 12.30 Pawnography. 1.30 Picked Off. 2.30 Shipping Wars. 3.00 Highway Thru Hell. 4.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Heavy Rescue: 401. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.30 Secrets Of The Supercars. 10.30 Counting Cars. 11.00 Late Programs.
Thursday, 20 January, 2022 TODAY 17
Wednesday, January 26 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
SEVEN (7)
NINE (8, 9)
TEN (5, 1)
6.00 News. 7.30 WugulOra Morning Ceremony 2022. 8.30 News. 9.00 Australia Day. 10.20 ABC News Mornings. 11.00 How Australia Got Its Mojo. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Australian Of The Year 2022. (PG, R) 2.30 Heywire. (R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Wildflowers Of The Midwest Of WA. (PG, R) 4.30 Restoration Australia. (R) 5.30 January 26.
6.00 Sunrise Ceremony. 8.00 Lil Bois. (PG, R) 8.15 Our Place. (PGa, R) 9.40 Bamay. (R) 10.00 MOVIE: Rabbit-Proof Fence. (2002, PG, R) Everlyn Sampi, Tianna Sansbury. 11.30 NITV News Special: Day 26. 12.00 Sunrise Ceremony. (R) 2.00 Where Are You Really From? (PG, R) 4.00 Great Canadian Railway Journeys. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: The BBQ. (2018, PGal, R) 2.00 Motorbike Cops. (PG, R) 2.30 Border Security: International. (PGad, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. (R)
6.00 Today. The latest in news and current affairs. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. Reviews, previews, interviews, highlights and opinions from the Australian Open at Melbourne Park. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 10.
6.00 Sunrise Ceremony. 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Left Off The Map. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) Carter gets uncomfortable. 5.00 10 News First.
6.25 Summer Drum. 6.55 Governor-General’s Australia Day Message 2022. An address to the nation. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 Australia Day Live 2022. Concert and fireworks spectacular. 9.30 Fisk. (PG, R) Helen meets formidable opposing counsel Alice Pike and stumbles upon Roz’s passion project. 10.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) Presented by Tom Gleeson. 10.35 ABC Late News. 11.05 The China Century: City Of Protest. (Malv, R) 12.05 Killing Eve. (Mav, R) 12.45 Father Brown. (Ma, R) 1.35 Silent Witness. (MA15+, R) 2.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 5.05 Summer Drum. (R) 5.30 7.30 Special: The Property Market. (R)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) Presented by Marc Fennell. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great Australian Railway Journeys: Kuranda To Townsville. (PGa, R) Michael Portillo explores Queensland. 9.30 Araatika! Rise Up. (MA15+) Documents how a group of Indigenous NRL players came together to develop a pre-game ceremony. 11.00 SBS World News Late. 11.30 In Therapy. (Mls) 12.25 Witch Hunt. (MA15+l, R) 2.15 Cacciatore: The Hunter. (MA15+v, R) 4.25 VICE Guide To Film. (Mlv, R) 4.55 Destination Flavour Down Under 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. The Challenger. 10.30 Gordon, Gino & Fred: American Road Trip: Brokeback Mountain (Texas) (Mls) Gordon Ramsay, Gino D’Acampo and Fred Sirieix continue their road trip, travelling to Texas. 11.30 Surveillance Oz. (PG, R) A man dices with death at a train station. 12.00 Mean Mums. (PGl, R) Jess loses the school rat. 1.00 Harry’s Practice. (R) Information about pet care. 1.30 The Zoo. (R) A fennec fox is due to give birth. 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 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 10. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Mad, R) The doctors stop at nothing to help their patients following changes at the hospital. 12.00 Reverie. (Mav, R) Mara tracks down an elderly woman. 1.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures: Hawaii Ocean Paddle Pt 4. (PGl) The lifeguards tackle a challenge. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) Home shopping. 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) Religious program. 4.30 Customs. (PG, R) Follows customs officers at work. 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 I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! Aussie celebrities continue their test of survival in the Australian outback for the chance to claim the title of King or Queen Of The Jungle and a cash prize for charity. Hosted by Julia Morris and Dr Chris Brown. 9.30 Bull. 11.30 The Project. (R) The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late night talk show. 1.30 The Talk. (PGa) Talk show. 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings. Morning news and talk show.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Anh’s Brush With Fame. 8.00 Making Child Prodigies. 8.30 Golden Guitar Awards. 10.00 Tate Britain’s Great British Walks. 10.45 Doctor Who. 11.35 Return To Belsen. 12.25am Community. 12.45 Parks And Recreation. 1.05 ABC News Update. 1.10 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Wallykazam! 5.55 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon MOVIE: Kim Dotcom: Caught In The Web. (2017, M) 2.05 The Last Shot. 2.55 Rise. 3.45 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland Street. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.30 TikTok And NITV Present: First Sounds. 9.30 MOVIE: Shock Wave 2. (2020) 11.45 MOVIE: Gangs Of Wasseypur Part 2. (2012, MA15+) 2.40am France 24. 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 Bargain Hunt. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Sydney Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The Coroner. 8.30 To Be Advised. 10.30 Miranda. 11.50 What A Carry On! 12.30am Andrew Denton’s Interview. 1.30 Late Programs.
9GEM (81, 92) 6am Morning Programs. 10.30 Australia’s Top Ten Of Everything. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Seaway. 1.00 World’s Greatest Journeys. 2.00 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 MOVIE: A Hole In The Head. (1959) 5.30 Antiques Roadshow. 6.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 10. 7.00 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 As Time Goes By. 8.50 MOVIE: The Man From Snowy River. (1982, PG) 11.00 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 The King Of Queens. Noon Becker. 1.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.30 Friends. 2.30 NBL Slam. 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. 10.10 Mom. 11.05 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 11.30 NITV News Special: Day 26. Noon Sunrise Ceremony. 3.15 Persons Of Interest. 4.15 Anthem Sessions Interstitials. 4.35 My Survival As An Aboriginal. 5.30 Always Was Always Will Be. 6.00 NITV News Special: Day 26. 6.30 Island Paradise: Living In The Torres Straits. 7.30 TikTok And NITV Present: First Sounds. 9.30 Araatika: Rise Up! 11.00 Late Programs.
SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Jour De Fete. Continued. (1949, French) 6.40 Rosie. (2018, PG) 8.20 Mon Oncle. (1958, French) 10.25 Back To Burgundy. (2017, M, French) 12.30pm The White Balloon. (1995, Farsi) 2.10 Watership Down. (1978, PG) 3.50 The Boy And The Beast. (2015, PG) 6.00 Satellite Boy. (2012, PG) 7.40 Storm Boy. (1976, PG) 9.20 Samson And Delilah. (2009, M) 11.15 Late Programs.
7MATE (73)
9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 SeaQuest DSV. 2.00 The A-Team. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Malcolm. 5.30 News. 6.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Gold Coast Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Mad Max. (1979, MA15+) 10.30 To Be Advised. 12.30am Late Programs.
10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Infomercials. 8.00 Unknown Road Adventures. 8.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 9.30 Jake And The Fatman. 10.30 Diagnosis Murder. 11.30 JAG. 1.30pm Star Trek: The Next Generation. 3.30 Jake And The Fatman. 4.30 Diagnosis Murder. 5.30 JAG. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.15 FBI. 12.10am Home Shopping. 1.40 Infomercials. 2.10 48 Hours. 3.10 SEAL Team. 4.05 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 Jake And The Fatman.
IENDLY BAN FR
NG KI
EA SY
6am Morning Programs. Noon Billy The Exterminator. 12.30 Pawnography. 1.30 Picked Off. 2.30 The Grade Cricketer. 3.00 Highway Thru Hell. 4.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Heavy Rescue: 401. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 Pawn Stars. 6.30 Cricket. Big Bash League. The Challenger. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.30 Storage Wars. 9.30 Extreme Unboxing. 10.00 Desert Collectors. 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, January 27 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
SEVEN (7)
NINE (8, 9)
TEN (5, 1)
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Back Roads. (R) 10.30 Nigella’s Cook, Eat, Repeat. (R) 11.10 Griff’s Great Australian Rail Trip. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Miniseries: The War Of The Worlds. (Final, Mv, R) 2.00 Miniseries: A Very English Scandal. (Final, Malsv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Think Tank. (R) 5.00 Restoration Australia. (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 PBS NewsHour. (R) 2.00 Where Are You Really From? (PG, R) 3.00 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 4.00 Great Canadian Railroad Journeys. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6am Morning Programs. 11.00 The Women’s Ashes Lunch Break. 11.40 Cricket. The Women’s Ashes. Test Match. Australia v England. Day 1. Afternoon session. 1.40 The Women’s Ashes Tea Break. 2.00 Cricket. The Women’s Ashes. Test Match. Australia v England. Day 1. Late-afternoon session. 4.00 News. 5.00 The Chase Aust. (R)
6.00 Today. 9.00 Australian Open Tennis Pre-Show. Hosted by Tony Jones. 10.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Day 11. 4.00 Tipping Point. (PG, R) Hosted by Ben Shephard. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) Six contestants answer multiple-choice questions that escalate in cash-prize value.
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. (PGal, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Left Off The Map. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery. (Final, PG, R) 6.30 Summer Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. Kurt Fearnley speaks with Harry Garside. 8.30 Miriam & Alan: Lost In Scotland. (Mls) Part 2 of 3. 9.20 Our Dementia Choir. (Final, PG, R) People with dementia form a choir. 10.35 ABC Late News. 11.05 Aussie Inventions That Changed The World. (PG, R) 12.00 Killing Eve. (Mav, R) 12.40 The Rise Of The Murdoch Dynasty. (Ml, R) 1.35 Call The Midwife. (PG, R) 2.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.55 Summer Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Druids: The Mystery Of Celtic Priests. Takes a look at the druids. 8.30 Extra Life: A Short History Of Living Longer: Behaviour. (PG) Part 4 of 4. Explores public involvement and engagement during a health crisis. 9.35 La Fortuna. (Mls) Alex and Lucia must put their skills when they travel to Atlanta to attend the beginning of the trial. 10.40 SBS World News Late. 11.10 Gomorrah. (MA15+v) 12.10 We Are Who We Are. (Ml, R) 1.15 The Hot Zone. (Ma, R) 3.55 Blinded. (MA15+s, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour Down Under 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 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R) A French traveller attracts attention. 7.30 Mates On A Mission. (PGal) Shane Jacobson, Todd McKenney, Brian Taylor and Kris Smith head to Japan. 8.55 MOVIE: Fast Five. (2011, Mlv, R) A crew of street racers plan a heist as they deal with the attentions of a drug lord and a federal agent. Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Jordana Brewster. 11.35 Surveillance Oz. (PG, R) 12.05 Scandal. (Mav, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 Nine News. 7.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 11. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Mam, R) Max races against the clock to rearrange the budget when faced with employees going unpaid. 12.00 Reverie. (Mav, R) Mara’s personal tragedy comes to a head. 1.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures: Outback Adventure. (PGl) The lifeguards head off on a road trip. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) Home shopping. 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) Religious program. 4.30 Customs. (PG, R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! Aussie celebrities continue their test of survival in the Australian outback. 9.00 Law & Order: SVU. (Ma) Assistant District Attorney Carisi prosecutes Richard Wheatley for the murder of Kathy Stabler. 10.00 Blue Bloods. Frank is at odds with his friend. 11.00 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.00 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 QI. 9.00 Hard Quiz. 9.30 Insert Name Here. 10.05 Doctor Who. 11.05 Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2021: Opening Night. Midnight Would I Lie To You? 12.30 Community. 12.50 Parks And Recreation. 1.10 ABC News Update. 1.15 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Leah Remini: Scientology And The Aftermath. 2.30 Most Expensivest. 3.00 The Ice Cream Show. 3.30 Bamay. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland Street. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 The Curse Of Oak Island. 10.10 Chasing Famous. (Premiere) 11.00 Vikings. 11.55 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 Bargain Hunt. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Last Chance Learners. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 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 Morning Programs. 10.30 Australia’s Top Ten Of Everything. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Seaway. 1.00 World’s Greatest Islands. 2.00 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: School For Scoundrels. (1960) 5.30 Antiques Roadshow. 6.00 Tennis. Australian Open. Night 11. Women’s singles semi-final. 7.00 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Death In Paradise. 8.40 To Be Advised. 11.00 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 King Of Queens. Noon Becker. 1.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.30 Friends. 2.00 Carol’s Second Act. 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 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm
SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am The Thief Lord. Continued. (2006, PG) 6.50 Ottolenghi And The Cakes Of Versailles. (2020, PG) 8.15 Mary And The Witch’s Flower. (2017, PG) 10.10 Nadia, Butterfly. (2020, M) 12.10pm The Rocket. (2013, M) 2.00 Rosie. (2018, PG) 3.40 Mon Oncle. (1958, French) 5.50 Bugsy Malone. (1976, PG) 7.30 Irrational Man. (2015, M) 9.20 Margin Call. (2011, MA15+) 11.20 Late Programs.
7MATE (73)
9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs.
10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 8.00 Socceroos: Road To Qatar. 8.30 NBL Slam. 9.00 Escape Fishing. 9.30 Jake And The Fatman. 10.30 Diagnosis Murder. 11.30 JAG. 1.30pm ST: Next Gen. 3.30 Jake And The Fatman. 4.30 Diagnosis Murder. 5.30 JAG. 6.30 Soccer. FIFA World Cup Qualifier. AFC Third Round. Australia v Vietnam. 9.30 Hawaii Five-0. 10.30 MOVIE: Parkland. (2013, M) 12.30am Late Programs.
Shortland Street. 2.00 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Project Planet. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Te Ao With Moana. 5.30 The 77 Percent. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Great Blue Wild. 7.30 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. 8.30 Miniseries: New Gold Mountain. 9.30 MOVIE: O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000, M) 11.25 Late Programs. 18 TODAY Thursday, 20 January, 2022
6am Morning Programs. Noon Billy The Exterminator. 12.30 Pawnography. 1.30 Picked Off. 2.30 Shipping Wars. 3.00 Highway Thru Hell. 4.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Heavy Rescue: 401. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 MOVIE: The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy. (2005, PG) 9.45 MOVIE: The 5th Wave. (2016, M) 12.10am Late Programs.
Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 SeaQuest DSV. 2.00 The A-Team. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 News. 6.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 MOVIE: The Sum Of All Fears. (2002, M) 10.00 MOVIE: American Made. (2017, MA15+) 12.10am Late Programs.
PUZZLES No. 064
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.
easy
7 6 8 3 1 2 6 2 5 2 3 4 6
2 7 8 1 8 9 1 4 5 3 9 5 2 8 6 7
4 8 5
medium
7 4 3 1 3 6 4 7 9 3 5 2 4 8 8 4 6 1 3 2 5 8 9 4 9 2 4 8 5 4 7 6
QUICK CROSSWORD
Appear sporadically (4,3,2) Not edited (5) Healed (5) Keepsake (7) Most pleasant (6) Messages sent on holiday (9) Bit by bit (9) Appraised (8) Reprieve (7) Unauthorised disclosure (7) Support (4,2) From Dublin (5) Estimate (5)
4 5 6 7 8 14
ACROSS Swiss currency (5) Clergyman (9) Breastbone (7) Made of fine clay (7) African country (7) News (7) Made dapper (7,2) Not bad (4) Admirers (4) Things that hinder (9) Jogging (7) Bravery (7) Hobby (7) Puts more bullets in (7) Mental disorder (9) Give way; surrender (5)
1 4 9 10 11 12 13 15 17 19 22 25 26 27 28 29
No. 064
15 16 18 20 21 23 24
DOWN Place protected by natural features (8) Vindicator (7) Binding agreements (9)
1 2 3
DECODER
No. 064
hard
2 2 6
1
8 9 9
5
9
10 11 12 13
G O 19
20
21
22
23
24
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26
ACTOR ADAPT AGILE ALOOF ANGER APRIL ARENA ARISE AWAIT BASES CEASE DRAMA DREAD EASED EERIE ENDER ENDOW ENEMA GLOAT GRADE GRASS
1
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5
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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”.
V
Today’s Aim: 9 words: Good 13 words: Very good
C
G
A
D
A
7 3 5 9 8 1 6 4 2
8 5 7 1 2 9 6 3 4
2 1 4 6 8 3 5 9 7
6 3 9 4 5 7 2 1 8
9 6 3 2 4 1 8 7 5
I
N
N
4 LETTERS AWES BEAN COAT ERAS GEAR HAUL LYRE OKED PEAT POST SAGE SAKI TAGS TIDY
T
Insert the missing letters to make 10 words – five reading across the grid and five reading down. NOTE: more than one solution may be possible
N T E R E
R
A B I D E M O D E S P R I N T
1 3 9 7 2 6 8 5 4
S
O O S
5 9 6 3 7 2 4 8 1
4 7 2 8 1 6 3 5 9
3 8 1 5 9 4 7 6 2
8 5 6 4 9 1 2 7 3
3 2 1 8 6 4 7 9 5
5 6 8 9 1 7 3 4 2
I
No. 064
L
1 2 5 7 6 8 9 4 3
E
HOOFS LEAST LOCAL MANIA MEALY MERGE MYTHS NAEVE ODDLY OUNCE OUTDO PIANO PRESS PSALM ROUGH SAFES SATAN SAUTE SCALE SEDAN SEMEN
SENDS SHAFT STARS STUCK TOOTH ULTRA WEEPS
7 LETTERS INSPECT MAGENTA OATMEAL RAPTURE ROLLING SEASICK
6 LETTERS ORGASM SLOGAN THROAT TREATS
8 LETTERS CARDIGAN EMPHATIC FIREARMS SEMESTER
21-01-22
QUICK QUIZ
1
Jack in the Pulpit, Devils and Angels and Cuckoo-Pint are all common names for what?
7
Of what is the Big Mac Index an informal measure?
What seafood sauce, named after an expensive cognac, was created in the 1980s in Hong Kong?
2
8
3
Frank was the 2003 debut album of which English singer?
What was the first commercially successful video game?
9
4
Which former Australian cricketer played Ivan Milat in the 2003 film Fat Pizza?
What narrow strait connects the Black Sea with the Sea of Marmara?
5
Who created the sculpture Puppy (pictured), which was installed outside the Guggenheim Museum in Spain?
6
The talented Madame de Pompadour was the mistress of which French king?
E
E
No. 064
acid, acing, ADVANCING, again, aida, angina, avian, avid, caning, canna, caving, dancing, diva, divan, gain, naiad, vain, viand
7 4 8 9 3 5 1 2 6
2 7 4 3 8 5 9 6 1
5 LETTERS ABOUT
I
T
9-LETTER WORD
18 words: Excellent
6 9 2 3 5 4 7 8 1
8 1 4 6 2 7 3 9 5
1 4 8 2 3 6 5 7 9
9 5 6 4 7 8 2 1 3
3 2 7 1 9 5 8 6 4
2 6 9 7 1 3 4 5 8
5 7 1 8 4 2 9 3 6
4 8 3 5 6 9 1 2 7
4 9 7 5 3 2 6 1 8
6 8 3 1 5 9 4 2 7
9 4 5 2 7 8 1 3 6
7 1 2 6 4 3 5 8 9
Puzzles and pagination © Pagemasters | pagemasters.com
O
18
medium
O
17
easy
hard
E
8
16
3 9
P
7
3 LETTERS AGO AND BOA CIA ERR EWE FOG GAG GEE GIN GOP ITS LAY LEV LIE NOD OAR ODE OIL OLD OWL ROD RUE SAD
E A Z R K I MC J B F V D
1
A
6
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
4
5x5
5
4
7 2
5 7 1 3
4
15
6
3
S Q T HN Y L UWP X GO
8
2
2
14
3
6 7 8 4
WORDFIT
10 What five events are included in an outdoor Pentathlon? ANSWERS: 1. Arum maculatum, a common European plant species 2. Purchasing power parity (PPP) between two currencies 3. Amy Winehouse 4. Merv Hughes 5. Jeff Koons 6. Louis XV 7. XO sauce 8. Pong 9. The Bosporus 10. Long jump, javelin, 200 metres, discus, 1500 metres
SUDOKU
Thursday, 20 January, 2022 TODAY 19
RURAL LINKS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au
Rural Links 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 Agents opened the New Year selling roster with a smaller yarding of cattle, sheep and lamb numbers were up with 2169 head yarded. The prices across all sectors were on a similar rate to the final sales of 2021. Covid again is going to play a part in the delivery and processing chain as the factors facing the movement of people and product between paddock to plate still cause concern. Pig and poultry numbers were on a par with the final sales. Cattle numbers Vealer steers averaged 693.8c/kg topping at 810.2c/kg or $1744.54 to $2121.02 Vealer heifers averaged 606.3c/kg topping at 720.2c/kg or $1682.85 to $1960.29 Feeder steers averaged 606c/kg topping at 650c/kg or $2378.59 to $2551.40 Feeder heifers averaged 630.1c topping at 654.2c/kg or $2360.27 to $2707.13 Yearling steers averaged 663.2c/kg topping at 708.2c/kg or $2358.90 to $2672.75 Yearling heifers averaged 538.8c/kg topping at 606.2c/kg or $1844.10 to $2262.00 Steers averaged 397.5c/kg topping at 422.2c/ kg or $2106.99 to $2168.32 Heifers averaged 373.8c/kg topping at 420.2c/kg or $2080.95 to $2789.36 Cows averaged 327.7c/kg topping at 347.2c/ kg or $1786.16 to $2012.29 Bulls averaged 398.4c/kg topping at 508.2c/ kg or $1972.09 to $2668.05 Sheep and lamb numbers Lambs topped at $228 to average $182.21 Hoggets topped at $222 to average $179.19 Ewes topped at $221 to average $128.14 Wethers topped at $198 to average $143.89 Rams topped at $225 to average $188.56 Lamb rams topped at $264 to average $185.54 The total yarding of 2169 head averaged $168.60/ head. The yarding was of mixed quality with a fair few lighter feed on types available compared to the finished trade and export types. Pig and poultry numbers Boars topped at $62, Sows sold from $100 to $248, Pork sold from $160 to $194, Stores sold from $29 to $168 The pig yarding was dominated by light stores with only a few available for the processing types. Poultry was in good supply again with Quails selling to $23, Chicks selling from $7 to $15, Hen and chicks selling to $20, Duck-
· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
lings selling to $27.50, Guinea fowl selling to $35.50. The poultry section was mainly some lines of chickens as well as the ducks and ducklings that were prevalent last selling season. McDougall and Sons sheep and lamb report As we entered 2022 for the first sheep and lamb sale numbers increased to a total yarding of 2169 head to meet the first sale of 2022. The yarding had some good runs of lambs from western areas which were a mixture of both finished and replacement stock. There were some good lambs yarded from local producers with the local trade and export market keenly looking for stock. The back to the paddock types were also in demand with the market for fresh ,young lambs the most sought after. The mutton that was yarded still looked at about the rates of last year again with good replacement rams and ewes keenly sought after. Dyson Family sold Dorper lambs 45.5kg to Tonys Supa Meats for $195, to Eversons for
·
· · · · · · · ·
$195, 40.6kg to Shelley F/T for $166, 36.3kg to restockers for $158, 36.3kg lamb rams to GR Prime for $140 Bill Pentecost sold Dorper wether lambs 54kg to Eversons for $212, ewe lambs 49.2kg to restockers for $204, ewes to Fletchers for $153 Andy & Helen Ferrier sold Dorper lambs 52.7kg to Ashtons for $224 John & Marion Skinner sold Dorset x lambs 58.5kg to Eversons for $224 Rory & Kathy Frost sold Dorper lambs 43.1kg and 40.8kg to Luck Meats and 70kg hoggets to restockers for $222 Sally & Len Cadalora sold Dorper x lambs 51.8kg to Ashtons Butchery for $221, 43kg to Mc Mahon Bros for $178, 60kg ram lambs to restockers for $220 GSF Contracting sold Xb lambs 44kg to Mc Mahon Bros for $186 Malcolm & Pam Turner sold Dorset x lambs 44kg to GR Prime for $175 Galloway Family sold Dorper lambs 51.25kg to Eversons for $200
P/S sold Xbred lambs 57.5kg to · Cooinda Grants Quality Meats for $228, rams to
· · · · ·
Whites Trading for $165 Kim Nielsen sold 1stx ewes to restockers for $150 Alum Rock Pastoral sold Merino wethers to Fletchers for $150, rams to GR Prime for $198 Todd Nelson sold Xbred ewes to restockers for $172, Merino ewes to Whites Trading for $72, English Leicester lambs 20kg to restockers for $160, ewes to restockers for $175 and rams to restockers for $225 Woodleigh Keetah P/S sold Dorper lambs 41.8kg to restockers for $176, 42kg ram lambs to Eversons for $158, 45kg hoggets to Eversons for $178 St George Vineyards sold Dorper lambs 51.5kg to Eversons for $206, 45.1kg to Mc Mahon Bros for $198, 42.4kg and 41.4kg to GR Prime for $183.50 and $172, 55.4kg hoggets to Eversons for $200, rams to Whites Trading for $172 and $140.
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, 20 January, 2022
CUSTOM UTE TRAYS
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Summer Fun - Judy and Erin.
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New addition to the farm.
This week on the farm By Judy Barnet, Ag Columnist The state of affairs on the farm has been relatively calm lately with nothing breaking down except the tractor which has been out of order for a while. Nor have there been maggoty sheep to hand shear. Things can change very quickly, however. I had a wonderful day today which started with a paddle with my friends in the kayak at 5.30 am. It was actually my first time in a kayak and I was hooked by the time I had paddled about five metres! The water was like glass and the morning was picture perfect. There was no sting in the sun at that time of day. I suspect you are going to see your fair share of photos taken from the kayak once I get a waterproof case for my camera. My friend Erin is a qualified instructor, so I couldn’t have found a better teacher. I was on cloud nine. I would liked to have gone out again in the afternoon, however, I had a date with the doc for my third vaccination. I survived that experience and decided to grab some groceries on the way home but then noticed I had a missed call from CJ. When I called back she informed me that the power had gone off and all attempts to reset had failed. I advised her it would be a case of elimination testing to see what threw the breaker by unplugging everything and plugging them back in one by one. I called Richie and asked him to go home and see what he could find, but in the back of my mind a nagging thought was, “OMG, I hope it is NOT the incubator,” as it contained thirty-eight guinea fowl eggs that were due to hatch within the next 48 hours. Sure enough, when I arrived home Richie advised that it was the problem. I have a second incubator, an old Multiquip that is prone to blowing bulbs due to the fluctuating power supply, but I thought I could keep it going for a couple of days to hatch out the keets. For some unknown reason it would not work either. The fans came on but the heating lamps would not. My next thought was to find a clucky hen for at least some of eggs but a tour of the chook pens revealed none. Richie and our friends suggested putting the eggs under a heat bulb with a bowl of water in in a fry pan on low heat. Both ideas had merits and definitely had produced results for people in the past but chickens are a lot easier to hatch than guinea fowl. I sadly resigned myself to the fact that for the second time I was to lose eggs just a day or two off hatching. Yesterday also revealed another surprise, a better one this time! Early on Monday morning a deer had shown up only metres from the cottage. It now appears that he thinks our farm is not a bad place to hang out and he has joined up with the alpacas. I am quite found of deer and I think cottage guests are going to love to see a deer around the place if he chooses to stay. Emu seem to be more plentiful around the district now too as I am seeing a lot about. A few bunnies have had a date with destiny lately, but where you see a few there are always more so it is something we need to keep on top of. There have been a few mysteries of late. A few nights ago I had just got off to sleep when I was woken by a lamb calling out not far away. I didn’t worry unduly as lambs often get lost in the night but usually they find mum. However, this baaing in the night went on and on and on. Then other sheep started and I heard some
running up towards the house. I woke Richie and told him I would have to get up and check the sheep. He got the hint, stumbled out of bed and asked how I proposed to check them. I said, well the quad bike might work so off he went. Richie is good when it comes to noises in the night – he never leaves me to go outside and check! When he came back he said he couldn’t find anything amiss and the ducks were asleep on the lawn outside so perhaps the sheep were just off on a midnight stroll. A few days later CJ and I were carrying the Engel out to the car when we heard one hell of a bang and crash from somewhere in the vicinity of the verandah. The car fridge was not light so we continued to the car before I went back to see what was going on. I was positive that a sheep must have got into the house yard and up on the verandah but my search revealed not a single thing out of place. I walked around the house in case any windows had fallen out. Some of the glass panes in the ancient casement windows have come loose in their frames and occasionally fall out. I checked everywhere but still found nothing and so the mystery remains. The only thing I can think of is that a guinea fowl perhaps flew into a window and then hit the deck. Finally, we were able to move the cattle crush to its “temporary” position so we can get the cows artificially inseminated. However, moving the crush was a bit of a painful experience – for me at least. Dear Richie was on the backhoe and asked me to pull out a pin on the cattle panel joining the crush but it was stubborn. I grabbed a rock to force the pin up and the first clang of the rock hitting the steel stirred up a literal hornet’s nest. Well, actually, I think they were paper wasps. Luckily for me I only got four or five stings. They all came good except one that was hot, swollen and itchy for a couple of days. Needless to say I am pretty cautious everywhere I go now and on the lookout for the nests before I start pumps, etc! Having prepared my sheep, I was a bit saddened by the cancellation of the Allora Show and the postponement of the Stanthorpe Show. I also had some photos printed for my first ever entry into a photo competition at a show. At the end of the day though, it was a good call by the show societies and sooner or later the show will go on. As so many volunteers put a lot of time and effort into these events it is hard for everyone, but the health of the community will and should always take precedence. You probably already know that I am a real bookworm and this week I was delighted to hear that my friend Deanna Dunham has just published her memoir, “The Drovers Daughter”. Deanna was raised in Boggabilla, the daughter of a psychopathic drover. I met Deanna through my best friend Tina who lives near her at Kenilworth. Deanna had a goat dairy for many years and made exquisite soap as well as some wonderful cheeses. Deanna is a warm, vibrant and colourful person and I am looking forward to reading her book, published by Pendulum. Time spent with friends this week has been amazing. We have been swimming and kayaking and spent a lovely evening by the campfire down at the dam with Gary cooking a scrumdiddlyumptious pork roast in a camp oven! I could not have wished for a better start to 2022. Have a great week everyone.
Keeping Sunsmart.
Oh Deer.
WARWICK BREEDER SALE WARWICK SALEYARDS
280
SATURDAY 29th JANUARY 2022 To commence 12.30 p.m
40 x 40 Angus Heifers & Calves 10 x 10 Angus Cows & Calves 10 x 10 Angus/Shorthorn Cows & Calves 10 x 10 Angus x Cows & Calves 20 x 20 Angus Cows & Calves 10 x 10 Charbray Heifers & Calves 50 x 50 Charbray Cows & Calves 10 x 10 Brangus Cows & Calves 70 Angus & Angus/Shorthorn Heifers 5 Charolais x Heifers 10 Angus x Cows 10 Angus Cows 4 Santa Cows 5
Simmental/Hereford x Cows
280
3 yrs 4-5 yrs 5 yrs 5-8 yrs 3-6 yrs 6-8 yrs 2 yrs 30 mths 3-5 yrs 6-7 yrs 5-6 yrs 5-7 yrs
Very Good Quality PTIC Angus Ball PTIC Hereford Bull Calved & Springing PTIC Bazadais Bull PTIC Charolais or Santa Bull Calved & Springing Simmental or Charolais Bull
Special Lines Acc Owner 50 x 50 Charbray Cows & Calves 3-6 yrs Acc Owner 20 x 20 Angus Heifers & Calves 10 x 10 Angus/Shorthorn Cows & Calves 4-5 yrs 70 Angus & Angus/Shorthorn x Heifers 4-5 yrs
Very Good Quality Very Good Quality PTIC Angus Bull
This sale presents an ideal opportunity for any Buyers wanting to replenish their breeder herds with a top quality yarding of breeders on offer. PLEASE NOTE – Warwick Saleyards advise Vendors & Carriers of an 7.30 a.m 29th January 2022 curfew to enable NLIS SCANNING prior to sale For further information please call George & Fuhrmann OFFICE – (07) 4661 4644 www.gnfrealestate.com.au
Cnr.Albion & Grafton St Matthew Grayson: 0419 686 540 Maugan Benn 0427 253 528 Brian Gillam 0428 299 725 Blake Doro 0423 962 797 12532622-HC03-22
Thursday, 20 January, 2022 TODAY 21
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An interview from the farm By Judy Barnet, Ag Columnist Foreword by Judy: I did not realise until recently that the first cattle and sheep into Australia were actually African Cattle. An attempt to bring British Livestock to Australia mostly failed with most livestock perishing before they reached the Cape due to inadequate nutrition. Up until the 1970’s Afrikander cattle could be found in Warwick and many were processed at the Warwick Bacon Factory. I believe the Afrikander has all but gone in Australia now, a couple of years ago the CSIRO sold off the last of its Afrikander Semen.
Stone and Dora.
MCDOUGALL & SONS STOCK AND STATION AGENT & Licensed Auctioneers 141 Palmerin Street, Warwick
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
eral cattle group called Sanga, which comprised long established Zebu x humpless derivatives represented by several breeds in Eastern and Southern Africa. The breed is located in drier areas of Ghana towards the northern border and on the Accra plains extending into Volta Region Physical characteristics: The animals are small and have variegated coat colour. The head has a long straight and convex profile. Horns are variable in size and slender in shape, mostly small and U shaped. The neck is short and sturdy. The hump is rudimentary and usually inconspicuous. The back is short and concave with an elevated rump. These cattle are mostly solid black, although black pied and brown pied coats are also common. Height at withers is 110-115 cm. Judy: Tell me about the plans for your guesthouse in Ghana? Stone: Together with my Australian wife we have built a guesthouse in Mumford, Ghana. It is on a surf beach within one of the largest fishing towns in Ghana. The government has recently undertaken to build a harbour in Mumford to allow for the larger fishing vessels to bring their fishing fleets into the harbour to offload their catch. Our guesthouse provides for accommodation in 4 self contained units and a 10 bed dormitory. Were set to receive our first group of Americans on tour in April 2021 however the Covid epidemic disrupted our plans and the tour was cancelled in March 2021 and is on hold until further notice. We plan on bringing groups to Ghana based in Mumford and conduct cultural tours for Australians, Americans and Europeans. Judy: What do you like most about Australia? Stone: I love the sunrise, when the sun is shining and watching the sunset from our rooftop, penthouse apartment in Golden Beach, Sunshine Coast. I love the people, Australians are incredibly friendly. The variety of landscapes, gorgeous beaches, the vibrant cities, the slang, the food, the sports. Australia is safe and its beauty is unsurpassed. It’s not hard to see why Australia’s vast wilderness, relieved by a handful of
vibrant modern metropolises is one of the world’s great travel destinations, containing an immense diversity of cultures and climates, tastes and terrain for wanderers to explore. The climate is extraordinary. The people are friendly and accepting. I love Australian wildlife especially the kangaroos. Australia is one of the best countries that I have lived with access to educational opportunities are amazing. I feel extremely lucky to be in this beautiful country, Australia is a great place to live!!! I was fortunate to be invited to our friend’s 150 acre farm on the lake at Glenlyon for Christmas. It was a wonderful experience to be welcomed into their home and experience real country hospitality during the festive season. It was wonderful to meet the variety the farm animals including sheep, goats, calves, chickens, ducks and guinea fowls, the birdlife and Dora the adorable Kelpie dog. On the first day we arrived at the farm getting closer to all the animals around us, at the moment I saw the guinea fowls my first impression was WOW! I am in Ghana. Guinea fowls are native to Africa and I never expected to see them in Australia. This is an experience I will never forget and look forward returning to this beautiful place. Judy: How long have you been a Stonemason for? Stone: I have been a professional artist for decades and a Stonemason for more than twenty years. In Ghana as a tradesperson we do not have an apprenticeship system like in Australia and we are basically apprentices for life and do not receive certification qualification. Shortly after I arrived in Australia on a Resident Visa application I was able to work and received full time permanent employment with a family stonemason company. I applied for my experience to be assessed through the Recognised Prior Learn process and my employers assisted with providing evidence of my experience and after 6 months I have now been granted my Australian Certificate III as a Monumental Stone Mason which guarantees my career progression as a Qualified tradesperson.
RYANIE GETS YOU WHERE YOUR GOING 37 Victoria St., Warwick 4661 1819 Cnr Centenary & Logan Rds., Clifton 4612 22 TODAY Thursday, 20 January, 2022
3370
www.ryaniefortyres.com.au
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genomic breeding in many Western countries has resulted in tremendous gains in traits like milk production with the potential that implementation of genomic selection and other improved practices (nutrition, health care etc) can lead to rapid improvement in traits of economic importance in Africa. The African livestock populations are limited to cattle, goats, pigs, sheep and chickens which are mainly exploited for meat, milk and eggs. The major breed of cattle in Ghana is the Ghana Sanga, also called Sang, Pseudo-Sanga or Ghanaian Sanga it is the product of interbreeding (composite) between the Ghana Shorethorn (or sometimes the N’Dama) and Zebu (commonly White Fulani, occasionally Sokoto Gudali) in northern Ghana. Sanga is a more recent and specific cross compared to the genPTY LTD
Livestock in Africa The African continent is home to diverse populations of livestock breeds adapted to harsh environmental conditions with more than 70% under traditional systems of management. Animal productivity is less than optimal in most cases and is faced with numerous challenges including limited access to adequate nutrition and disease management, poor institutional capacities and lack of adequate government policies and funding to develop the livestock sector. Africa is home to more than 1.3 billion people and with increasing demand for animal protein by an ever-growing population. The current state of livestock productivity creates a significant yield gap for animal products. Although a greater section of the population, especially those living in rural areas depend largely on livestock for their livelihood; the potential of the sector remains underutilised and therefore unable to contribute significantly to economic development and social wellbeing of the people. With current advances in livestock management and the inclusion of all stakeholders African livestock populations can be sustainably developed to close the animal protein gap that exists in the continent. In particular, advances in gene technologies and the application of
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The best of Judy Barnet Here’s another instalment of some of our favourite photos submitted by JUDY BARNET in 2021 for her ‘This Week On The Farm’ column.
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Here are some of her best photos from the end of August through to September.
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Thursday, 20 January, 2022 TODAY 23
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Captain Trevor Clowes, AIF Each evening from sunset to sunrise, at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra, up to 1,200 names from the Roll of Honour are projected onto the façade of the Hall of Memory. This daily Commemorative projects one Australian soldier who has died in the Great War onto the wall and on January 28th 2020, at 10.56pm, former Warwick man Captain Trevor Marcel Clowes, will receive this honour. Here is Trevor’s story. Trevor was born on 4th September 1918 as the youngest son of Albert and Louise Annabel Clowes of Locke Street Warwick. He was born into a military family with his two older brothers, Cyril and Norman, entering the Royal Military College at Duntroon among the first cadets to be enrolled in 1911. Trevor being much younger than his two older brothers idolised them and really wanted to follow in their footsteps, which he eventually did many years later. His father, Albert Clowes, a local dentist, was a Lieutenant-Colonel and Commander of the 14th Australian Light Horse. Trevor received his early education at Warwick Central School and later, at Warwick State High School where he was a brilliant scholar and a member of the High School Cadet Corps in his time there. With his family’s military background, Trevor only wanted a career in the army like his two older brothers, so applied to the Royal Military College at Duntroon just as his brothers did, and was accepted in 1937. This received a mention in the Warwick Daily News when it said: “Advice has been received by Mr and Mrs A.E.Clowes, that their youngest son, Trevor, has been selected to enter the Royal Military College, Duntroon. In adopting the Army as his career, Trevor Clowes is following the family tradition set by his father and two brothers”. He had a brilliant career at Duntroon and on completion, was posted back to the Southern Downs Light Horse Regiment in Warwick. When World War 2 broke out in 1938, Trevor
Captain Trevor Marcel Clowes (left). was keen to get into the action and enlisted on 20th May 1940 as a soldier, when he transferred to the 2nd Australian Imperial Force. He was quickly promoted to Lieutenant and posted to the newly formed 2/33 Battalion, Seventh Division, and saw action in the Syrian campaign. In 1941, the battalion carried out garrison duty before fighting with the Vichy French in both Syria and Lebanon. In 1942 the battalion returned to Australia for further training and rest, before being deployed to New Guinea in early 1942. The New Guinea campaign was a lot different to desert warfare as the 2/33 fought the Japanese advance along the Kokoda track. The Japanese had moved quickly in SouthEast Asia and were firmly entrenched in the New Guinea jungles and were aiming to capture Port Morseby. Trevor, and his battalion, fought hard against this formidable foe around
Myola, Gorari and Gona in early November 1942, until Trevor’s war suddenly ended when he was killed at Gona on 22nd November 1942. He now lies at rest in Soputa War Cemetery in Papua, New Guinea. During this period, Trevor’s older halfbrother, Lieutenant- General Cyril Clowes, was a Commander of Australian forces in the Battle of Milne Bay where his strategies brought about the first land defeat of Japanese forces. Meanwhile, his other brother Norman was attached to the British Army serving in Egypt at this time. It is unknown if Trevor ever caught up with his two brothers, but both Cyril and Norman had outstanding military careers with Cyril reaching the rank of Major-General and Norman of similar rank who ended his service as Aide-de Camp to King George V1 from 1945 to 1949. Norman was arguably, one of Australia’s greatest soldiers and certainly the best
that Warwick had produced. Another brother, Kenneth, served in No 1 Garrison Battalion and saw service in Morotai and British North Borneo. Altogether, a great family tradition of military service. The death of young Trevor Clowes was met with much sadness around the Warwick district and it was acknowledged in an address at the Town Hall on the occasion of a welcome back to Major- General Norman Clowes, Trevor’s brother, when he visited his hometown in June, 1950. All the speakers were in high praise of the military contribution of the Clowes family to Australia. What was most significant was the speech by Major Robert Stewart, who not only spoke of the great credit that the Clowes family had brought to the city of Warwick, but to the sad loss of Captain Trevor Clowes from the family. In his address he made the following tribute to the memory of Trevor who he had known since his days in the High School Cadet Unit. He said: “I would also like to pay tribute this afternoon to one who is not with us. I refer to the younger brother of Major-General Clowes, Trevor Clowes, who made the supreme sacrifice during the last war. I was associated with him from his boyhood; I had him under my command among the school cadets. I followed his brilliant career at Duntroon and I was proud to be associated with him in the brigade in which we both served in the last war”. Captain Trevor Clowes, although the youngest of a distinguished military family, was never able to reach the same heights as his two older brothers in Cyril and Norman and never came home, but his supreme sacrifice in the battles along the Kokoda track has ensured the family of an Anzac legend that will be eternally remembered on such memorials as in Papua, the Australian War Memorial, the Warwick Cenotaph, and his Alma Mater; the Warwick High School Roll of Honour. It is fitting that come 28th of January, he will be accorded this great honour in the Hall of Memory in Canberra. Trevor Marcel Clowes – Lest we Forget.
Order now: aussietoysonline.com.au 24 TODAY Thursday, 20 January, 2022
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COSTUMeS
NEWS
Aus Day ode What is it about Australia that makes one want to write? A land of golden wattle – of beaches clean and white. Those native gums and coolibahs, with drought and floods at times; With coloured birds that catch the eye – and that fauna of various kinds. What is it about Australia that has a certain Mystique? With sport a dominant factor and a history quite unique. Famous for our holden cars and surf board riders on their belly; Where their heroes are the Australian cricket team, and an outlaw called Ned Kelly. What about that mateship ethic which is the dominant social theme? That “sends around the hat” at times when others don’t reach their dream. They’ll rally ‘round through bush fire and drought to lend a helping hand; This legend even carried on when Bradman made his stand. “Fair go” has always been the norm, egalitarian to the core. That outback spirit of equality comes always to the fore. Your always sure of where you stand when one looks you in the eye,
Always prepared to give and take, to share a beer and a hot meat pie. Patriotism cannot be questioned when the anthem is played for all, As our nation’s sporting heroes make us feel about ten feet tall. The Anzac story needs a mention as the Gallipoli legend spread, When once a year the nation stands still, as we honour those glorious dead. So, in conclusion to sum it up; what is it about Australia, Which makes one feel so proud of it when wearing the green and gold regalia. One thing that gives an inner glow and makes us all feel great; Is that friendly Aussie greeting, when all are referred to as “mate”. Even now as I finish this verse with this poem in my hand, My chest swells out, my voice chokes up, with love for this great land. So, lets all together rise as one and sing “Waltzing Matilda” out loud: As it makes one feel so Australian, in this land that makes one proud. John Telfer, Australia Day 2022
Celebrating all religions World Religion Day was started in America in 1949 by the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is of the United States. It is commemorated on the third Sunday in January each year across the world with the aim of fostering interfaith understanding and harmony, and focusing on those common truths that are at the core of each religion. All religions have as one of their main principles, the Golden Rule, to treat others as you would have them treat you, to assist and offer kindness and love to your neighbour, and to be patient in times of adversity and to rely on God.
We accept that humanity is one; although incredibly diverse in race and culture, we are one species, one people, one human race. So too can the religions be seen as one. If there is only one God, creator of the universe, then must not the Founders of the great religions like Krishna, Abraham, the Buddha, Jesus Christ, Muhammad and Baha’u’llah, be sent from this one Source. By the example of these prophets’ lives, their teachings and laws, they have changed individuals’ hearts and minds and been the animating spiritual source in the rise of civilisations and the progress of humanity.
COMMUNITY DIARY Warwick Pensioners League next meeting will be held on the 20th January at the Cowboys Clubhouse. Doors open at 10am. Mandatory mask wearing and double vaxxed must be adhered to. For more information contact Madeleine on 0427 324 380. Travelling Country Music Club wishes to advise everybody that the Socials are cancelled until further notice due to Covid. The next meeting will be held at 37 Warner Street, Warwick at 12noon on the 12th February, followed by practice. Phone Marlene on 0419 710 828, or Ruby on 0438 674 803. 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. Southern Downs Steam Railway - Volunteers are invited to participate in heritage rail operations in Warwick. Male and female roles available. Drop in Wednesday or Thursday. Phone 0478 657 399 or info@sdsr.com.au Stanthorpe Cycling Club meets at Burton and Sons, High St, Stanthorpe every Sunday at 7am 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 Rangesamateur 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 9.30am. 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 The Warwick Men’s Shed is open Monday, Wednesday and Saturday from 8am to 12 noon. All men are welcome to attend for camaraderie, friendship and to learn new skills if desired. The address is 29 Activity Street, Warwick, and the contact phone number is 0490 170 569. Amateur Beekeeping Association Southern Downs: Meeting on the 3rd Monday evening each month (except January) in the QCWA Hall, 76 Grafton Street, Warwick, at 7pm. A practical field day is often held on the 3rd Saturday morning of the month. Beginners of any age or level of experience are welcome to attend. Flow hives covered. Contact John on 0431 188 139.
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FREE 0408 457 496 Incorporating the Southern Free Times A Star News Group Publication
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Anzac Day is this Sunday 25 April - with many commemorations planned across the region after cancellations due to Covid in 2020. The community is expected to turn out in strong numbers this year in our towns both large and small to remember the service and personal sacrifice of Australians in wartime - see inside for your guide to times and locations of Anzac Day services, and more ... Pages 8-9
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Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk visited town last week to announce a significant investment in “drought-proofing” Warwick and Stanthorpe. Early works on the proposed Toowoomba to Warwick pipeline will commence shortly and the state government will begin building the project’s business case, which should identify the most appropriate means of transporting water to Stanthorpe. Story pages 4-6
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The partner of a Brisbane man reported missing in Girraween National Park on the last weekend in March has expressed her gratitude for the “efforts and compassion” of local Granite Belt emergency services personnel and volunteers who conducted search efforts for Manfred Luck, with the search having been scaled back after a week of “massive effort”, local police said. Mr Luck, 71, has been described as a “fit and experienced” hiker - who loved Girraween above all other National Parts. More on page 3
, 2021
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EVERY WEEK
Thursday, 22 April, 2021
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On behalf of the Leukaemia Foundation Warwick & District Branch, we wish to thank all prize winners & supporters who supported our raffle. 1st Marion Skinner, 2nd Jacqueline Kooriman, 3rd Graham Shelley, 4th Sue White, 5th Debbie Bond.
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PAINTING & DECORATING Tony Hill QBCC Lic 715599
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PEST CONTROL Inspector Pest Control Warwick’s ONLY locally owned and operated Pest Control business
1300 139 313
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COOKE Adrian (John) Late of McGlew Street Passed away peacefully Friday 14th January 2022 Aged 82 years Dearly loved Husband of Pat. Much loved Father and Father-in-law of Sharon and David Gianini, Kathy and Alan Mewton, Ken and Stacey Cooke. Loving Grandpa and Great-Grandpa to their respective Families. Dear Brother and Brother-in-law of Fay and Doug McFarlane. Privately cremated Carnarvon Funerals ‘Gently Guiding You Through’ Stanthorpe ~ 4681 3121 www.carnarvonfunerals.com.au
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ENTERTAINMENT WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au
House of Gucci glam
Mini’s top classic shows to stream this month 1.Veronica Mars Here it is; my favourite show of all time. Though I maintain Veronica should have gone down the photojournalism route, and we pretend the new series and movie don’t exist, the first two seasons are impeccable. And the third season is okay. Growing up is realising Piz is actually probably the better choice. While I know what’s going to happen every time, the way they set up and slowly unravel a mystery never ceases to entertain me. You can watch all of Veronica Mars (yes, all of it, if you dare) on Stan. 2.The Office This show is a classic for a reason. It seems like everyone and their dog has watched it about twelve times, but it’s one of those shows that you can watch over and over again without getting bored. Watching Jim and Pam fall in love on repeat? Sign me up. You can find this one on Netflix. 3.Grey’s Anatomy Yeah, this one is a commitment. But it’s worth it. While previously seasons were scattered across streaming platforms, you can now find all 18 seasons on Disney+. Seeing as I started this show when I moved to Warwick and have almost seen it the whole way through, I’m a bit sentimental about this one. 4.Law & Order: SVU Is it weird to say that Law & Order: SVU is a comfort show for me? I feel like it is. But this is probably my most-binged show. My family is notorious for putting this on in the background, to the point where we facetime each other and dance along to the song when we hear it through the other person’s phone. This might be over-
By Emily-Rose Toohey Last week, Ridley Scott’s extravagant film ‘House of Gucci’ made its way to Warwick Twin Cinema. This is the renowned filmmaker’s second movie in 12 months, following the critical success of ‘The Last Duel’. However, unlike ‘The Last Duel’, ‘House of Gucci’ doesn’t quite live up to the expectations of its predecessor or its extremely talented cast. The stellar ensemble includes Lady Gaga, Adam Driver, Jared Leto, Al Pacino, Salma Hayek, and Jeremy Irons. It had promise: movie stars frolicking about Italy and acting out one of fashion’s most scandalise stories. Unfortunately, it didn’t live up to this promise. The film follows the real life story of the Gucci family and the iconic brand’s power rise. Lady Gaga portrays Patrizia Reggiani, a woman who marries into the Gucci family (Maurizio Gucci, Adam Driver’s character) and the elaborate ups and downs of their marriage. The result? Well, it ends with murder. Gaga’s character orchestrates the death of her ex-husband after their divorce – a crime for which she serves serious jail time. However, despite this intrigue, the film simply does not work. It has its fun moments, including a whacky soundtrack featuring George Michael’s ‘Faith’ playing as the lead couple gets married. It also has the Italian scenery, the explosive wardrobe changes, and the cast’s talent to match it.
Warwick Twin Cinema. But then it falls face first into the biopic trope: a bland re-telling of the lives of it’s actually exciting real life people. There are other, more serious problems with it too. Firstly, there’s the Italian accents which are all over the place. The inconsistencies are rife, with Gaga committing to her accent and Adam Driver’s accent being barely present. Aside from this offence, without a doubt the worst part of this film is Jared Leto’s performance as Aldo Gucci. He plays the role as a caricature or a cartoon, and is not even close to the real life man in both performance and obvious prosthetic make-up. While this movie certainly does a lot, this particular instance is simply too much. Despite its flaws, the film itself has its fun moments, but as a whole it’s an extremely mixed bag. Nonetheless, it is still worth the watch, if only to form your own opinion of this divisive production. ‘House of Gucci’ is showing now at local cinemas.
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THULIMBAH 99 Gangemi Road. Household, shed and garden items. Sat ADVERTISERS, in this sec22nd January from 8am to tion are qualified practitioners and offer non5pm. sexual services.
LOUNGE SUITE 3 seater & 2 single seaters, light brown/white material, clean, GC. $350. 0409 439 272
MOBILITY SCOOTER, converts to golf buggy in minutes. Basket, bag, canopy, charger, hand book, 180kg capacity. Good range, good condition. Phone Jim 0499 997 507. $1,950 negotiable
UTE STOCK CRATE Professionally made. Fits 2400 x 1800 deck, 1500 high, 50 x 50 mesh. $950 ono. Phone Peter 0428 973 665. V
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Grass, tractor slasher operator with public liability cover. To maintain 1.5 acres, New England Highway, Severnlea. Genuine worker only need apply
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WANTED Native Bees Will pay $$$ in logs or boxes. Contact Russell at Hatton Vale on
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Leon Bruggemann, Mobile Travel Advisor m: 0437 344 312 e: lbruggemann@mtatravel.com.au www.mtatravel.com.au/lbruggemann
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RECEPTIONIST
Tuition
Mobile Youth Tutor & Mentor (20+ years of teaching and youth work) Tutoring - students in school and home-schooled Assisting parents with home-school program Mentoring / Life Coach / Leadership Training $30 / hour (not including travel fee Warwick and surrounding area) Travis Bradach 0493 267 529 info@thrustoflight.com
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Positions Vacant
We are looking for a friendly, outgoing person to join our team. The position will be full time or part time negotiable with the successful applicant. The successful applicant will be well presented and have good communication and computer skills. They will be part of the administration team, perform all office duties and will liaise with clients and accountants. They will be able to work in a team, be responsible and trustworthy and be able to meet deadlines. Application and resume to be forwarded by Friday 11 February, 2022 to: The Office Manager PO Box 313 STANTHORPE QLD 4380 admin@caaccountants.net.au
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RIDE-ON MOWER Murray Sentinel, 12.5HP Briggs motor. 38" cut. Good condition. $1,300 ono. Phone Peter 0428 973 665.
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0404 892 139 PIANO John Broadwood & Sons. England upright. Good condition. All genuine offers considered, schools considered favorably. Phone Peter 0428 973 665.
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ROOMS, clean, comfortable, at O'Mahony's Hotel, Warwick. Budget accommodation from $180 per week. Includes use of kitchen and laundry. Linen supplied. Ph: 4661 1146.
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BED beautiful King Single electric bed as new never slept in. Lift head & feet up down plus zero gravity R & S brand paid over $2000 sell $1100. Call Maggie 0434 531 768
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sharing. Anyways, you can find seasons 1 to 13, and seasons 15 and 16 on Amazon Prime. 5.Gilmore Girls I know we love to pick apart this show nowadays, but I still love it. While some argue Rory was boring in the beginning, and that’s definitely why they made her go crazy later on, I found her somewhat relatable in her boringness growing up. Its fast-paced dialogue makes it super bingeable, and I stick by my statement that Jumpers and Jazz in July would totally be something I could see happening in Stars Hollow. Judging Rory’s love interests is also a pastime I thoroughly enjoy. You can find it on Netflix.
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DISCRIMINATION IN ADVERTISING IS UNLAWFUL The Queensland Anti-Discrimination Act 1991 makes it unlawful for an advertiser to show any intention to discriminate on the basis of sex, pregnancy, race, age, marital status, political or religious belief or physical features, disability, lawful sexual activity/ sexual orientation, HIV/AIDS status or on the basis of being associated with a person with one of the above characteristics, unless covered by an exception under the Act. As Network Classifieds could be legally liable if an unlawful advertisement is printed, Network Classifieds will not accept advertisements that appear to break the law. For more information about discrimination in advertising, contact your legal advisers or the Queensland Human Rights Commission (QHRC).
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Caravans & Trailers
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Motor Vehicles
CARAVAN 2012 Regent Barossa. 18ft, as new. Many extras. $42,000. Phone 0407 570 321 NOVA VITA 2008 Caravan. 20ft, as new. Many extras. $43,000. Please phone: 0427 835 284
HOLDEN Rodeo 2008 4wd camper. 4cyl turbo diesel, 5 spd, low km, 3 months reg. 979KWD. $29,500. Call 0401 944 820.
VISCOUNT Endeavour, 1995, pop top, 16'6", Gas stove, 3 way fridge/freezer, DB island bed, porta loo, 12 volts & 240 volts, 2 gas bottles and 2 batteries, reg until 02/22. $14,000. 0428 807 444. V
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TRACTOR Diesel, Massey Harris 55, with hydraulics, with plough, grader blade, lifting arm, harrows, other spares. $5,000 the lot. Phone 0409 937 978.
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The Spin
SPORT
Casey O’Connor
Week makes a difference A week in sport as in life can be a very long time – just ask the English cricketers and their fans or perhaps the Joker (Djokovic) may have an opinion. It’s been quite some week. Unprecedented scenes in Hobart as the Ashes series wrapped up and the Tennis – well that was simply a fiasco from start to final point before a set was played on Rod Laver Arena. The performance of the Australian cricketers on and off the field throughout the series was fantastic. The Poms performance earning of the wrath and disappointment of their fans and some of their greats. Lord ‘Beefy’ Botham less than impressed and not backward in giving his views on that farcical final session of play in Hobart. Judging by the performance of some of the Poms batting down the order you could be forgiven for thinking they may have been in a hurry to join the Joker on that outbound flight to Dubai. The Scott Boland fairytale continued and Pat Cummins stature in the game as a bowler and now captain continues to grow. In what must have been a difficult decision Travis Head got the nod as the Player of the Series; an award that could have been tossed to a number of Aussies and not raised an eyebrow. While this was happening the Novak, Novax circus played out. With game set and match called on Sunday, Novak is now home in the hands of his family after his harrowing experience which included a red eye flight to Dubai with his entourage at the pointy end of the Emirates plane. Not sure the English cricketers will enjoy the same experience on their flight home after what has been a truly harrowing experience at the hands of the Australians. Some may never recover. With all that behind us, there little to do now other than sit back and enjoy some sport. The Women’s Ashes series begins today. The Aussies have not played a lot of cricket recently, but this is sure to be a great series. The English team have a bit to prove to their male counterparts and the Aussie girls a lot to live up to. We can also sit back and listen to the thwack, thwack (not of egg landing on the faces of the Tennis Australia officials) of Ash Barty and some in-form and yet to be recognised Aussie’s serving it up on court. The tennis court that is. Bring on another Barty Party Casey
AUST DAY CARNIVAL GETS THE GO AHEAD There were some nervous moments for organisers of the Warwick Australia Day Cricket Carnival at the weekend as they postponed the Friday night draw to discuss whether the carnival could safely proceed given the rising number of Covid cases across the community. The 2022 carnival will proceed but of course everyone involved from players to supporters and officials will be required to adhere to strict CVOID guidelines. This could mean the closure of the Warwick Clubhouse at Slade Oval over the weekend, however a decision on that and the location and format of the presentations following the Carnival are yet to be decided. With 30 teams nominated for the two-day Carnival the draw was finalised on Sunday afternoon and once again a raft of familiar teams will take their places alongside some newcomers in both the Main and Social competition. Games on Saturday will begin at the following times at all venues:- 8.30am; 11.30am and 2.30pm. The Day Two Draw (Sunday 23 Jan) for both competitions will be released on Saturday night following the completion of play on Day One.
The attractive hats and specially minted T Shirts were a dead give away this group had something to celebrate.They were part of a group of 40 celebrating their 21st Warwick Golf Classic l/r John Preston, Cam Haddow, Shane Downer, Gary ‘Gazza’ McClymont, Nick McClymont and Nick Graham.
EIGHT RACE CARD AT ALLMAN PARK There was excellent support for Saturday’s Warwick Turf Club meeting from owners, trainers and jockeys from across Southern Queensland. Unfortunately for organisers there was not the same level of support from local racegoers with disappointing crowd numbers. The members area however proved very popular with patrons as the temperature soared. Over the eight race card, 95 runners faced the starter with the Allman Park track turned out in fine condition for the Warwick Rugby League , annual race day. Training and riding honours belonged to Matt Kropp and Isabella Rabjones. The pair’s affinity for Warwick continued with a back-toback races double while Rabjones grabbed a treble . They combined to win the third race, the Carey Brothers Abattoir Benchmark 70 handicap with four-year-old mare Cold Hard Facts . Starting favourite the mare put the writing on the wall at her last on New Year’s Eve with a win in a Class Three at Ipswich over the 1350m distance. Rabjones was happy to take a sit before making her move as the field swept towards the home straight. Locally trained Grandioso looked to have pinched a winning break in the straight but under hard riding from Rabjones, the Matt Kropp galloper got the upper hand on the line to clinch a narrow win. Delaney’s Girl from the Kropp stable was the well supported favourite in the next the 1200m Alexia Fraser QTIS Three-Year-Old Maiden handicap. Rabjones showed patience on the filly who was having only her fourth race start and her first run since November. She took a sit back in the field, off the pace and moved nicely into the race coming to the home turn. When the field straightened Delaney’s Girl shot to the lead going on to win by a half-length from stable mate Chosen Distance (who may not be far from a win) and Sharni Award. There was a drama in the opening race when top weight Jaqen H’Ghar, who drew the inside alley, bucked shortly after the start throwing jockey Nathan Fazackerley. Noriyuki Masuda had his hands full when his mount Hyperion Angel drawn in the two barrier followed suit and also bucked. Masuda also suffered quite a heavy fall. Apprentice Nathan Fazackerley was taken to hospital following the incident while Noriyuki Masuda was quickly to his feet and appeared to suffer no injury. Stewards advised trainers Wayne Nugent (Jaqen H’Ghar) and Scott Baker (Hyperion Angel) both horses must trialled before they race again.
2022 WARWICK AUSTRALIA DAY CRICKET CARNIVAL MAIN COMPETITION DRAW DAY 1 - SATURDAY JANUARY 22
GROUNDS
GAME 1 (Teams 1v2) 8.30am
GAME 2 (Teams 2v3) 11.30am
GAME 3 (Teams 1v3) 2.30pm
TEAM 1
TEAM 2
TEAM 3
Slade Park
Stunned Mullets
Bazdy’s Bandits
Goomeri Giants
Briggs Oval
Summer’s XI
Max’s XI
Average Joes
Queen Park Turf
Ring Inns
Rosewool icemen
Doc’s XI
Mayhew Oval
Condy Sports
Bear’s/Smalls XI
Marbucks XI
Dunning Oval
Jonesy’s XI
Scots PGC
Ross’ XI
Yangan
Mitch’s XI
Hulk’s XI
Past Student XI SBH XI
SOCIAL COMPETITION DRAW DAY 1 - SATURDAY JANUARY 22
GROUNDS
GAME 1 (Teams 1v2) 8.30am
GAME 2 (Teams 2v3) 11.30am
GAME 3 (Teams 1v3) 2.30pm
TEAM 1
TEAM 2
TEAM 3
Queens Park Synthetic
Rettke’s XI
Persimmons
Annie’s Xi
Hamilton Oval
Sel’s X1
Diggler’s
Dale’s XI
Allora
Hurricane’s Elite
Muzza’s Men
Rudders
Greymare
Greymare
Bailey’s XI
Palace Cows
The race, the 21st Annual Warwick Golf Classic was won by short-priced favourite Pennyworth ($1.95) from the Toowoomba stable of Rex Lipp and Nicholas Hahn. The second event was won by the Sunshine Coast trained Mr Vista, making it a worthwhile trip for connections. Starting at $12, apprentice Montana Philpot found the quickest way home on the Show a Heart gelding cornering nicely and securing the inside running in the straight and won by more than two lengths ahead of second placed Construction master
($19) and early leader Publican’s Purse ($18). Ego Dancer ($7.50) won the next, the 1500m Warwick Freight Lines Benchmark 55 and was well ridden by apprentice Zac Lloyd. Following the pattern of earlier racing, Lloyd had his mount back in the field in the early stages and improved his position before the turn skipping away in the straight. Under hard riding the Toowoomba galloper held off a late charge from favourite Got the Lot ($4.80) and Super Rocker ($7). Continued page 30 Thursday, 20 January, 2022 TODAY 29
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The Spin From Page 29 Isabella Rabjones had bookmakers cheering when she made it a winning treble guiding the locally owned and bred Golden Treasure ($19) to a win for Charleville trainer Shane Iverson. Iverson said after the win it was very pleasing as Golden Treasure is the only galloper he has in work at the moment. Things did not go to plan for the Matt Kropp trained favourite Yamumza in the seventh event, the Green Building Ranbuild Warwick handicap over 1100m. Sent out a short priced favourite at $2.10, the last start winner finished towards the tail of the field after suffering midrace interference. Zac Lloyd had no such problems on the winner Gold Coast galloper Lord Markel ($6) giving the young apprentice a race day double. The eight-race programme wrapped up with a win for the connections of Chinchilla galloper Not Liable ($12) who was well ridden by apprentice Jasmine Cornish. The Warwick Turf Club have meetings scheduled for Thursday 3 February and Saturday 26 March.
FUNNY HATS; T SHIRTS; ANNIVERSARY When you come across a bunch of blokes at the races dressed in funny hats and specially minted T shirts you know there has to be a story. And there was. The first race at Warwick on Saturday, the 21st Annual Warwick Golf Classic. That was been a clue. The race sponsored by said gentlemen in funny hats. Spokesman for the group, John Preston shared their story. Twenty-one years ago a group of mates were enjoying a drink at the bar following their round of golf at the Samford Club and someone had the great idea they should go away for a weekend. An off-the-cuff comment from one of the bar staff began a yearly tradition when it was suggested the group try the Warwick Golf Club because they had a great stay and play deal going. The rest as they say in the classics is history. The group gather from not just Brisbane but around the country (some from Perth normally attend but not this year – COVID etc). they now number 40. They descend on Warwick on Thursday evening and follow a program, of Golf, Pool, Lawn Bowls, Races and home on Sunday. Their tried and true program was disrupted this year when they found the Bowls club had their green out of action, but I am guessing they found plenty to fill the gap in the schedule. The group estimates over the 21 years they have contributed at least $500k to $800k to the local economy and a fair bit to the bookies over the years. To celebrate turning 21 the group decided it was time to sponsor a race. Not many were keen to share if they backed the winner Pennyworth. Hope they make it back to celebrate their 22nd and beyond.
HOT CONDITIONS; HOT SCORE Conditions were hot and humid on the Warwick Golf course on Saturday as a big field teed off in the Stoke event sponsored by King Street Mechanical. The course was playing well and the scores at the end of the round were hot too. Dave Duroux blitzed the field of 72 starters with a sizzling 63 net. Playing off his 20 handicap Dave scored a three shot victory over Geoff Hinze. Duroux also won the pro pin on 13 and the NTP on the 11th hole which shows just how well he was playing his irons. Geoff Hinze recorded his best score in a sometime returning 72 off the stick for a 66 net and collected the runner’s up voucher but not before a countback from Peter Farrell and Neil Moore. Sam McLennan, another single figure golfer also had a great round returning one over off the stick for a net 67 as did Brian Beard and Michael Hoskin who looks to be returning to his better form. Peter Hynes and Mitch McLennan both scored 68 net while Jay Roberts, Eddie Kemp and Michael Watt all recorded a net 69. Charlie Morrison (net 70) and Justin Sneath (net 71) rounded out the run down. Dave Duroux won six balls from the pro pin. Other to collect were Peter Hynes (5), 30 TODAY Thursday, 20 January, 2022
Gold Coast connections of Lord Markel, winner of the Green Homes/Ranbuild Warwick seventh race at Warwick, were pleased they made the trip from the Coast. Geoff Hinze (4), Ross Kannar (3) balls and John Magarry (1). Sam McLennan was on song at the fifth collecting the NTP while Geoff Hinze rounded out a good day picking up the Pin shot at the seventh. Chris Hynes was successful at the ninth, Dave Duroux at the 11th and Peter Millard the 16th. This Saturday members will be playing a single stableford event sponsored by BNW Accountants. A reminder that the Warwick Golf Club Opening Day is not far away. The event sponsored By Sam Eaves is scheduled for Sunday 30 January. The 4BBB medley event is a shotgun start commencing at 12.30pm.
GOOD ROLL UP AT SUMMIT There was a good roll up for afternoon of social bowls at the Summit Bowls club on Saturday afternoon. Members welcomed visiting Inglewood bowler Trudy Elder who joined the group for the afternoon competition. One of the club’s popular members Zel Zamprogno was also welcomed back after a few months break. It was great to see Zel back on the green again. Three games of Tripes were played as players return to the green following the holiday break. Brian Brown, Paul Zamprogno and Brian Wilmot had a comfortable 14-9 win over Cliff Jones, Michael Sweeney and Mick O’Leary. Phil Davis, Barry Murphy and Adrian “Jacko” Jackson scored the biggest winning margin of the day defeating Margaret Harvey, Zel Zamprogno and Darren “Banger” Stanley 24-9. In the final game Keith Mungall, Carl Sutherland and Jamie Zamprogno played Trudy Elder, Rod Newlands and Frank Taylor scoring a nice 21-16 victory. Upcoming Events: Sat, Jan 22 - Social Bowls at The Summit Sat Jan 22 /Sun - Tenterfield Australia Day Carnival - Open Three Bowl Pairs Sat Jan 29 - 2022 SDMDBA Fours Sun Jan 30 - 2022 SDMDBA Fours Sun Feb 20 - The Summit Open Two Bowl Triples Carnival
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LADIES QUICK OFF THE MARK IN 2022 The Warwick Women’s Golf Club 2022 program got off to a great start with a big field contesting the first event of the year, the January Monthly Medal played on Saturday 8 January. Trish Roberts had a shaky start to her round and was two over her handicap after only four holes however it was a minor hiccup. Things fell into place during her round and she fin-
ished, and she finished the last five holes, often considered some of the hardest on the course, four under her handicap for an unbeatable 65 nett. Runner up was Carole Brandon, who returned 71 nett. Unlike Roberts, she played the last five holes with double bogies and worse. Brandon has spent a stint in Tasmania, and many believe it won’t be long before she is back to her best. The Division One medal went the way of Judy Lester who returned a steady 72 nett, helped along by a great 44 gross on the back nine. Danielle Seibel was the runner-up with a solid 73 nett. Sponsor of the Monthly Medal, the Condamine Club Hawker Road Function Centre, are back on board in 2022 and generously added to the value of the winners and runners-up vouchers. In addition, they have donated a voucher for the best first nine. This month’s winner was Majella Kahler with 20 pts. The best putters were Gwen Mills and Dian Macdonald, with 28 putts apiece. The return of graded approach shots was appreciated by the winners, Marg Adcock, Lyn McKillop and Maria Carey. The Pro Pin on 11 was shared by Gwen Mills, Lisa Weatherley, Marg Adcock and Joely Singleton. The first mid-week game of the 2022 season also attracted a reasonable field.24 players took out cards for the single Stableford event sponsored by the Cherry Tree and Dining. Carole Brandon picked up from where she left off in the medal competition taking advantage of those few extra handicap strokes gained in the heavy atmosphere of Tassie. She made excellent use of the Par Threes to accumulate a very handy 17 pts and went on to score 39 pts, with a wash. She was also the first player to put a spot on the Gobbles chart in 2022. Majella Kahler also scored 39 pts on the back of some good putting. There is no doubt you gain confidence after starting the round with four three pointers. A good birdie on the 16th did no harm but it was not enough to catch Carole in the countback. Balls in the run down went the way of Anne Lyons (37), Sharron Cooper (36), Judy Lester (35) and Gwen Mills (34). Anna won the front nine voucher with 19 pts and the Pro Pin on seventh was shared by Judy Lester, Mel McLennan, Wendy Rhea and Anna Cox. In last Saturday’s field of 27 Trish Roberts backed up her performance in the opening round of 2022 and again broke the hundred mark to score 39 stab points and win the Cherry Tree and Dining voucher. Fortunately, Trish paid her Shoot-Out fees after her previous good round so this round will give her a good start on the board. Two great four pointers made up for two washes.
Maria Carey made up for a couple of ordinary starts when she returned 35 pts to win the runner-up voucher. Molly Seibel (20pts) took home the front nine voucher. Judy Lester, Sam Hinze, Joely Singleton and Anna Cox shared the pin on 16, all inside one metre. It was good to see Vonnie Pinington giving her new heart its first run over 18 holes. Marlene Vincent also returned after a lengthy break. Justine Washbourne is another who was spotted having a hit on the weekend and rumour has it that she is keen to return to golf. There are several events in coming weeks that Ladies should have noted in their golfing diaries. They include the Big W sponsored 4BBB Stableford this Saturday 22 Jan. This event was originally cancelled due to rain at the end of 2021, so players probably have partners organised. A reminder to your names on the timesheet. The Medal of Medals is another significant event that was cancelled toward the end of 2021 due to conditions. For those who are eligible, it has been rescheduled to Saturday 29 January. On Sunday 30 January, the Club celebrates a yearly tradition with Opening Day, a medley 4BBB Stableford to get the 2022 season underway. Sam Eaves has once again agreed to sponsor the event and there are sure to be some fabulous prizes on offer. Congratulation to Sam Eaves finished a very creditable 17th place in last weekend’s Australian PGA played at Royal Queensland. A fantastic result for a Club Pro and especially Warwick’s own club Pro. Eaves finished five under after rounds of 70, 70, 70 and 69 - for a total of 279. I am told Women’s Golf Warwick is extremely proud of Sam’s achievement as are we all.
STANTHORPE BOWLERS RETURN As the holiday season draws to an end many of the holidaying members of the Stanthorpe Bowls club were back in action for the Triples games on Wednesday (12/1). Robyn Smith, Jack Bell and Len Girgenti took the prize scoring a 21-14 win over R Smith, Luisa Girgenti and David Rose in the opening game. Greg Hammond, Tom Hodgson and Peter Smith proved too strong for their opponents Rocky Thompson, Mark Wicks and Gary Trevena scoring a 21-10 win. There was a pleasing roll up for the three bowl pairs social comepitition on Saturday. Visiting players are always made very welcome at the Stanthorpe club and Hellen Cashman from the Enoggera Club joined the group on Saturday. She partnered Jack Bell in a game against joined Polly-Anna Lay and Gary Trevena and scored a 20-14 win. It was also an opportunity for members to welcome there newest member Polly-Anna Lay. Dot Rankin and David Rose combined well to outscore Greg Hammond and Mark Wicks 20-16. The 2021 Club selected Fours championship was not played last year due to a variety of circumstances. The first round of the deferred competition was also played on Saturday. Robyn Rose, Ernie Jones, Peter Smith and Brian Brown played and of Robyn Smith, Rocky Thompson, Tom Hodgson and Len Girgenti. In a game which saw the lead chopping and changing throughout the game it was Robyn Rose Ernie Jones Peter Smith and Brian Brown who finished the game with a 24-17 win. Other first round games will be scheduled in coming weeks. The members and committee extend their thanks Peter Hawkins for the donation of a finely made wooden burl shield which will become the Stanthorpe Bowls Club permanent trophy for the Ladies Singles Championship. This gesture is greatly appreciated, and the Shield will no doubt be a keenly sought after trophy. The club’s featured sponsor this week are Stephen and Taya Michalski the new proprietors of Hot Copper. and we thank them for their continuing support Members of the club wish to extend their sympathy to Cathy and Bruno Stefanon following their recent family loss.
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Casey O’Connor the 12th. Fiona Kelly played skilfully around the greens and claimed the pin shots on the 5/14th and the 17th.
EARLY CONDITIONS BEST ON RANGE Numbers for the weekly shoot at the Risdon range were excellent at the weekend with shooters taking advantage of the good conditions early in the competition. As the morning progressed conditions at the 500-yard mound became far more challenging. Shooters had to contend with not only a tricky wind tricky wind that picked up but also a mirage. Richard McKillop once again led the way in the F Open class shooting a brilliant 126.15. Daryl Reck won the F Standard Class with a score of 112.0 . Overall, it was a morning where were a number of competitors scored personal bests. You have to be leased with that. Results F Open 500 yards Richard McKillop (126.15), Greg Wilson (125.9); Neil Sexton (123.6), Murray Reck (119.5), Craig Montgomery (117.6), Kate Sexton (116.7), Abe Basson (113.4), Charlie Montgomery (112.4). F Standard Daryl Reck (112.0), Ian Games (95.1) This Sunday the action will be at the 600 yard mound with sign on scheduled or 7.30 am for 8.00 am start . To obtain further information please contact Margaret on 4666 1018.
BACK TO IDEAL CONDITIONS
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MALLET PLAYERS BACK Play resumed at the Stanthorpe Mallet club last week after the greens were rested for four weeks after undergoing some much need maintenance. Shirley Page and Liz Ellway were the first players to to test the green. The Pair played a game of Golf Croquet last Wednesday (12 Jan). Shirley Page scored eight hoops against opponent Liz Ellway, who scored a hole in one during the game. Five of the Gateball group were eager to return to the greens after their extended break and they were back in action on Friday. While some players seemed to take a while to warm up to their usual standard of play it was not the case for Joy Newman who barely missed a hoop or a ball during the morning’s play. Les Williams partnered Sharyn Roser won the toss and elected to play white balls in the first two games leaving the red balls for Joy Newman, Heather Widderick and Grace Howard. In the first half of the opening game both teams struggled to get all their balls into play. Whites trailed for most of the game, before evening the scores. In the final five minutes of play, reds pulled ahead after scoring hoop three and Agari to claim a 10-7. The second game was a much closer however Whites made some tactical errors; meanwhile Newman was playing accurate long shots. Reds scored two Agaris in their 15-12 win. Following the break Newman and Widderick played the white balls with Williams, Roser and Howard playing the reds. Reds got off to a flying start as Whites struggled to put their balls into play. They went on to dominate the game scoring a comfortable 16-8 win. In the final game Red again took an early lead with Whites again slow to put all balls on the court. The eight ball only coming into play on the last shot of the game to a big cheer from all the players. After dominating again Reds scored another win by the comfortable 17-7 margin.
GETTING BACK ON THE GREEN AT THE WARWICK BOWLS CLUB After the Warwick Bowls Club took the opportunity to complete some maintenance on the green members of the club will be pleased to hear play will re-commence on Saturday 29 January. Play will commence at 1.00pm and bowlers intending to play are asked to submit their names between midday and 12.30pm or put their names on thee Notice board. Play will be sponsored by KFC who kindly continue their sponsorship and support of the club in 2022.
Winner of the 2022 Stanthorpe Men’s Foundation Cup John Green (l) pictured with Club President Len Leigh. Bowlers are reminded that Nominations are currently being called for Open Singles Championship. Those wishing to nominate are asked to add their names to the list located on the outside Notice Board or at the Office window. What to look forward to in January and early February: Sat 29 Jan: KFC Sponsored bowls. Mon 31Jan: Management Meeting at 10am. Coming Events for February: Tues 1 Feb: Monthly Triples - play at 10 am. Sat 5 Feb: Warwick Bowls Club’s Annual General Meeting commencing 1pm. Wed 9 Feb: Jackpot Pairs Evening Bowls play commences 6pm (names to be submitted between 5pm - to 5.30 pm. or names of Notice Board.) Sat 12 Feb: Social bowls commencing 1pm (submit names midday to 12.30 or names on Notice Board. )
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SCENIC ROUTE Stanthorpe Sporters were out and about early Sunday morning following the savage overnight storm. Fortunately, it had little or no effect on playing conditions on the front nine which was in play on Sunday. Good scores were expected as the field teed off however for some the scenic route seemed appealing, and many headed off the fairways and into the longer grass. Nikki Waterworth played a very steady round and finishing with a birdie at the final hole was helpful as she returned a winning score of nett 22. Dick Hilton was another who had a steady round. Two double bogies proved costly, but he held on to secure the runner’s up spot with nett 26. Ivan Juriss returned the Best gross score of the round. He needed only 38 strokes for the round. It was a turnaround from the previous day’s competition where he was unable to complete the round. There was only one pin shot on offer on the front nine, and that was at the third hole. It took until the last group before someone landed and held the green. Terry Roser, the one to take the ball on offer. The three-putt tin had a good workout after the game with quite a few coins being dropped into the pool for errant putts. Sporters will be back on course on Sunday with the back nine in play and an open invitation to all to come and play. Tee off from 7.30 to 8am in the morning.
BELL REVELS IN CONDITIONS A small group of ladies enjoyed close to perfect golfing conditions for the ladies Midweek RSL comepitition in Stanthorpe. Mei Bell revelled in the conditions and played a brilliant game returning 35 points to win the Single Stableford competition four points clear of runner up Lis Stuart (31). Helen Jones won the run down with 29 points. Neta Thouard claimed the pin shot on
After the pre-Christmas weather disruptions Warwick Croquet players enjoyed a return to ideal conditions on the court for the games played during the past week. On Tuesday (11/1) an enthusiastic group enjoyed games Ricochet. Marian Cirson and Lesley Grayson defeated Dorothy Gartery and Julie Grayson (12-8) Dorothy Gartery and Marian Cirson had a 14-7 win over Julie Grayson Last Thursday the Golf Croquet group were on the lawn for their weekly games Joyce Mahony and Marian Cirson (7) v Lyn Treadwell and Heather Guymer (5) Beth Schottelius and Rhyl Dearden (7) v Sue Stanley Harris and Dani Logan (3) Meredith Thornton (7) Carol Ryan (6) Barb Morrison (5) Beth Schottelius and Marian Cirson (7) v Barb Morrison and Meredith Thornton (6) Lyn Treadwell and Dani Logan (7) v Heather Guymer and Carol Ryan (6). Joyce Mahony (7) Sue Stanley Harris (4), Rhyl Dearden (3) Barb Morrison and Marian Cirson (7) v Joyce Mahony and Lyn Treadwell (6) Heather Guymer and Meredith Thornton (7) v Sue Stanley Harris and Rhyl Dearden (4) Beth Schottelius (6) v Carol Ryan (6)
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FOUNDATION CUP WINNERS DECIDED The second and final round of the Stanthorpe Golf Club Foundation Cups was played on Saturday and the leaders at the end of the first first round (played the previous week) are often a good indicator of where the overall winners might come from as low scorers take a distinct advantage into the final day’s play. It certainly proved the case this year. John Green held a slender lead in the Men’s division after the first round and went on to a convincing win. Likewise, in the Ladies event where Lisa Stuart held a small margin after round one and after another good round on Saturday claimed the ladies’ Cup. Congratulations to both players who have added their names to the Foundation Cups as 2022 winners. In the Saturday’s stroke event, John Green finished a clear winner with nett 63. It was back to back wins for Green who won the single event the previous week. Keith Allen had one of his better rounds finishing with nett 68 to take the runner’s up spot. The ladies’ single stroke saw a reversal of fortunes for the previous week’s winner and runner up. Both Mei Bell and Lisa Stuart are in excellent form and this week it was Mei taking the win from Lisa, with scores nett 76 to nett 77. The Men’s pin shots were this week shared. Brad Silver collecting at three, Aaron Simmers at 12 and Viv Thouard at 17. Nikki Waterworth collected the ladies pin shots at three and 12 and Lisa Stuart picked up the remaining at 17. Pro-pins went to Matt Waterworth at 1/10, Barry Jones at 5/14 and Barry Hughes at 9/18. The birdies nest at eight was shared between Matt Waterworth and Scott Constable, both with a birdie on the hole. Bad luck for Viv Thouard who thought he had the birdies nest after a good birdie on the hole, but the second time around on the 17th hole. Thanks to club President Len Leigh who sponsored the day and provided the prizes and also to Pauline Leigh who provided the big field with tasty treats at the end of the day’s play. The club has a busy schedule in coming weeks beginning this Saturday with an individual stableford sponsored by Jason Lawer. On Wednesday 26 January, the club is hosting an Australia Day themed single stableford event sponsored by Andersen’s Carpets. It is a shotgun start at 8.30 am and I hear a strong rumour that there could be prizes for the most appropriately dressed player(s) and decorated buggies so time to get your Aussie, Aussie, Aussie. Oi, Oi, Oi on.
There are time sheets for both events on the board at the clubhouse.
BUSY WEEKEND FOR CRICKETERS It was a busy weekend for Stanthorpe cricketers with two games of fixtures played on Saturday and the Davis and Mitchell shield teams in action in Warwick on Sunday. Valley and RSL went head to head on Sheehan Oval on Saturday. Valleys won the toss sending RSL in to bat in the hot and humid conditions. It was a shaky start for RSL. Their handy top order back in the clubhouse with the score at 3/8. It was again left to father son duo Luke and Rohan Brady to rescue the innings. The pair took the score to 4/111 before Luke was caught by Wallis off a Stefanon delivery for 42. Ryan Hines joined Rohan at the crease and the pair added 19 before Hines (8) was run out. Brady was out shortly after for 52 and the score 6/136. The tail wagged a little adding important runs. With the help of 31 extras RSL were all out for 161 midway through the final over. Damien Anderson and Steven Martin each taking three wickets for Valleys. 162 to win was not a huge ask but like RSL, Valleys started badly and were 4/71 before a blistering 55 from 55 deliveries from the captain Damien Anderson. Anderson’s knock came to an end when he was bowled by youngster Ethan Mackenzie. The score 7/96 in the 26th over. It was the first of three wickets for the youngster who cleaned up the tail claiming the wickets of Sweet and Stefanon. He finished with figures of 3/10 off six overs and bowled two maidens. Not a bad day with the ball. The Mackenzie brothers Noah and Ethan caused the Valleys batting line up plenty of headaches. Between them they took six wickets. Noah’s figures 3/24 off 7.2 and included one maiden. He knocked over both opener and top order bat, David Marino. The pair helping RSL to a win in the 37th over. Valleys all out for 118. On the CF White Souths played Wanderers and after winning the toss Souths put their opponents in. Wanderers began disastrously when opener Kye Rashleigh was dismissed for a duck and things did not improve. Not one batsman reaching double figures. Extras contributing the most runs, 23 to the total 56. Will Sheather was the main destroyer taking four wickets. His figures 4/15 from four overs. Furness grabbed three wickets and Burgess a pair. Souths lost two wickets, Tom Bonner (14) and Mccatter (1) before Jordan Lanza (11) moved himself up the order and he and Lachie Pill (27) knocked off the remaining runs in the 14th over to claim the points.
STANTHORPE DOMINANT IN LOCAL DERBY It was the local derby in the Mitchell Shield as Warwick hosted Stanthorpe at Slade oval on Sunday. Warwick were searching for their first win in the Mitchell Shield this season and after losing the toss Stanthorpe has no hesitation in asking the home side to bat first. The top order batsmen Allison (1), Lowney (2) and Morgan Bourke (2) were out cheaply as Warwick slumped to be 3/11. Damian Anderson and Liam Lanza doing the early damage. The experienced Michael Bourke (18), John Cleary (19) and Steve Grogan (42) and Mitch Darton (10) added some respectability to the score but with a score of only 119 Warwick looked under the pump. Chasing 120 for the win Warwick got an early break through when Sam Dowie was caught by Mitch Darton off a John Cleary delivery for just four runs. His opening partner Lachie Pill was joined by Charlie Moncada. Pill (26) was caught by Morgan Bourke but Moncada was busy dominating the bowling. He and Jordan Lanza took the score to within 11 runs of the required total before Moncada was denied a half century caught off a delivery from Michael Bourke for 47. Jordie Lanza was out with the score at 116 and the final handful of runs were added by Williams and Liam Lanza. Stanthorpe home in the 29th over for a very comfortable victory. Warwick left searching for a Mitchell Shield win. Thursday, 20 January, 2022 TODAY 31
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