Dubbo Photo News 25.01.2018

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WEEKENDER: BIG NEED FOR LOCAL SPINAL CORD INJURY SUPPORT GROUP

PhotoNews DUBBO

JANUARY 25-31, 2018 | LOCALLY OWNED & INDEPENDENT | FREE!

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Rural leading the charge in land values COMMODITY prices being at a record high has driven a spike in land value in the Central West, with rural property values leading the rise. Figures released by

the NSW Valuer General show that the total land value for the region had increased by 14.8 per cent from July 2016 to July 2017. ❱❱ REPORT: PAGE 3

Queen’s Baton heading to INSIDE Wellington and Dubbo ❱❱ SPORT

CALL US with your news ideas 6885 4433 | EMAIL photos@dubbophotonews.com.au | VISIT US at 89 Wingewarra St, Dubbo


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January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

Because of her, we can!

DUBBO CITY LIFE Comment by YVETTE AUBUSSON-FOLEY

Zoning out at school

FORTY zones. They’re like trying to shave with a spoon. Torture. But good torture because they will help the 9000 school kids in Dubbo stay safe on their way to and from school each day, starting Monday. Five- to 19-year-olds make up around 22 per cent of Dubbo’s population and you can – should – assume the majority of these are heading to class from Monday, so the message is pretty simple: drive very carefully and be aware. Don’t drive like you’re leaving rubbish at Delroy Park Shopping Centre container deposit facility. That would be really clueless of you. A reader sent in a disturbing photo taken at the weekend of rubbish piling so high you can barely see the oversized poster at the Return and Earn facility which clearly states don’t litter. Trying the Victoria Park reverse vending machine for the first time on Sunday, it was a relief to see the same lack of awareness wasn’t being exercised there and access was reasonably tidy. There is definitely a design flaw in access for disabled or short people though, like kids, who ought to be encouraged to actively recycle so by the time they’re adults, it’s habit. Perhaps there’s an argument for a step for shorties, so you can see the instruction panel at least and alternative ways to view the control panel for wheelchair bound residents. (See our article on Spinal Cord Injury this week in the Dubbo Weekender section to learn how plenty of services are inaccessible if you’re in a wheelchair.) One great knock-on affect is the lack of returnable cans and bottles lying about on the street and that’s a plus for the cleanli-

In response to last week’s article in Dubbo Photo News on the Return and Earn reverse vending machines [“Residents return but don’t learn – yet�, January 18 edition], DPN reader Rod emailed this photo he took at 7am on Monday, January 22, at the Delroy Park reverse vending machines. The mess is appalling.

ness of Dubbo. Dubbo’s newest school will be opening for the first time this week. The Central West Leadership Academy is off to a great start with a ‘skills for the future’ approach to teaching and learning, and we wish them well. Of course, we’re celebrating Australia Day tomorrow... correction, some are celebrating, some are not. For some, Australia Day is symbolic of the concept that Australia was and still is believed to be terra nullius – belonging to no one. Fortunately, we know that was never the case but it will take some time to unpick the policies of an age when it was fashionable for men to wear high heeled buckled shoes, woollen stockings, powdered wigs and push non-Europeans to the brink of extinction as a matter of course.

Thankfully they didn’t succeed and, as a country, we can recognise the harm done and make up for it by striving for future thinking policy and attitudes. Do we need to change the date or the meaning of the date? You can’t rewrite history – except to include the truth – but there’s 364 other days to choose from and you could wager some atrocity against Aboriginal peoples can be pinned to every single one of them since 1788. What to do then? Debate the question? Yes! It’s offensive to some Australians and they deserve to be heard. A problem shared is a problem halved, as they say. Local barrister and councillor Stephen Lawrence shares his view in today’s Weekender section. Do we change the date? Write in and tell us your thoughts.

THE National NAIDOC Committee is encouraging everyone to acknowledge the contribution and talent of an outstanding Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander person who you may know, by nominating them for a National NAIDOC Award. There are ten categories which include art, education and training, sport, environment and leadership. Monday, February 5, is the closing date for the 2018 National NAIDOC Poster Competition for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander artists over 13 years. This year’s theme is “Because of her, we can!� and a cash prize of $10,000 is up for grabs, along with two tickets to the National NAIDOC Awards ceremony in Sydney on Friday, July 13. The winning poster will be recognised nationwide.

Healthy lunch box revolution

THE average school child eats more than 2500 lunches during their 13 years at school! The Cancer Council NSW has launched the Health Lunch Box website, encouraging the 93 per cent of children who don’t include vegetables in their diet to get started. Cancer Council research shows that one in three cases of cancer can be prevented by adopting a healthy lifestyle, which includes eating well. Cancer Council NSW runs a free nutrition program called “Eat it to Beat It� for parents of primary school-aged children, providing simple tools, information and support to get the whole family eating enough fruit and vegetables. feedback@dubbophotonews.com.au

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Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

PAGE 3 PROFILE Lorraine Scoble, community volunteer Growing up, I lived in West Wyalong. I loved playing tennis – my family and I would travel all around to Forbes, Parkes and Cowra to compete. I had a great childhood. I moved to Narromine and lived there for over 20 years and then moved to Dubbo where I’ve been for the past 23 years. I’m very involved in a lot of community groups. I’m a part of the Royal Flying Doctors Support Group, Meals on Wheels, Arthritis Support Group, Probus Mixed Group and I’m the social secretary for the Combined Pensioners Association (CPSA). I’ve also been volunteering with the Cancer Council for about 10 years and have given 29 blood donations over the years. I like being able to mix with people and give back to the community. I received the Senior Citizenship award two years ago and it was the highlight of my life – I was so shocked. I was also rewarded for my 25 years with Meals on Wheels last year, and with a Dubbo City Council Day award. I can’t believe what I’ve achieved since I’ve been in Dubbo. I’m looking forward to continuing to be a part of the groups this year, I’m not slowing down. I love the Dubbo community and what it has to offer, I’m busy all the time. I’m very happy with my life. – Interview and photo by Sarah Harvey

ECONOMY

Rural driving land values BY NATALIE HOLMES COMMODITY prices being at a record high has driven a spike in land value in the Central West, with rural property values leading the rise. Figures released by the NSW Valuer General Simon Gilkes this month show that the total land value for the region had increased by 14.8 per cent from July 2016 to July 2017. The greatest increase was in rural land values, which surged by a strong 18.4 per cent due to good seasonal conditions and high prices for livestock and wool. Dubbo agrifinance manager Steve Cowley confirmed that farmers have been riding high on the back of such solid figures. “They have been boosted by remarkably high stock prices for cattle, sheep, wool and cotton. There is more demand and the basic price for products has increased and has been at an all-time high for over a year,” he told Dubbo Photo News. “It’s been tremendous for the farmers. “It’s a substantial increase across the board at auctions and private treaty sales that we’ve not seen in this area before.”

Steve said it was unusual to see prices consistently high across all commodities. “All commodity prices are high at the same time. They are incredibly high value and returns have increased and therefore land prices have increased. “Obviously it depends on grazing, irrigation and cropping properties, but overall, the price of commodities has increased markedly.” While some rural landholders have cashed in on the rise, it’s a double-edged sword for others, with land rates also increasing as a result. “The rural land prices have increased markedly in the past two years which has increased rate prices,” Steve confirmed. “There are places on the market, it’s an enticement to sell. “People are also wanting to purchase properties and land is a good investment in the long run.” Describing it as ‘the perfect storm’, Steve said it was impossible to predict how long the price boom would last. “You would need a crystal ball,” he said. “The weather is a factor – a two-year drought, for example, will shorten prices across the board.”

Total land value for the Central West region Property type

01.07.2016 (millions)

01.07.2017 (millions)

% change

Property count

Residential

$3,569

$3,828

7.3%

46,364

Commercial

$328

$351

7.0%

2,266

Industrial

$221

$224

1.4%

1,352

Rural

$9,551

$11,310

18.4%

20,666

Other

$200

$214

7.1%

1,492

Total

$13,868

$15,927

14.8%

72,140

$ FIGURES ROUNDED TO NEAREST 000,000.

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January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

EDUCATION

U3A: University not just for the younger generation By SARAH HARVEY HAVE you ever thought about studying in your senior years? Whether you’re wanting to explore further into Art History, gain new skills in Digital Photography or learn how to play an instrument, the University of the Third Age (U3A) is the perfect group for you. Now in its 27th year, the University of the Third Age offers a unique learning experience to seniors in Dubbo and surrounding areas. The organisation is based in the Community Arts Centre of the Western Plains Cultural Centre and offers a friendly and informal environment with courses taking place in the form of lectures and discussion groups. Nola Younghusband is the president of the U3A and says she loves the opportunities it provides seniors. “People get a lot of opportunity to explore dif-

WHAT WHERE WHEN z U3A Dubbo Enrolment and Open Days z Friday, February 2, and Monday, February 5, 10am-12pm z Western Plains Cultural Centre Community Rooms z Details: 6884 3498 or www.dubbo.u3a. org.au

U3A Courses for 2018

The h classs off U3A 3A:: Co C mmit mm mit itteee memb mbers of o the he Uni he n veers r it ity of the Third th d ag ge re rece ceent n ly gat attheereed to oge geth ether therr to pl th p an n for the h ir upcom co oming enrrol o me ment ntt and n ope pen da pe days yyss. PH HOTO: HOTO: HO TO O: DU UBBO B PHOTO PHO NEWS

ferent ideas and elements of education that perhaps they haven’t done before, for example computers for seniors and so forth,” Nola told Dubbo Photo News. “I also think it’s an opportunity to widen your horizons as well as a very good social group. “I think the people who come to the U3A classes

benefit as much from the social things as they do from the intellectual. Enrolment is only $20 per year and members can go in as many courses as they want,” she said. With over 400 current members, the committee is looking to further their population at their upcoming enrolment and open

days set to be held on Friday, February 2, and Monday, February 5, between 10am and 12pm at the Western Plains Cultural Centre Community Rooms. To find out more information or to get in contact with the committee, visit their website www.dubbo. u3a.org.au or phone 6884 3498.

A history of Islam, in context Armchair Travel Art History Australian History Calligraphy Caring for the Environment Classical Word Studies Current Affairs Digital Photographer Endangered Species English Literature Gentle Exercise Modern History Looking at Art Painting for Pleasure Plants & other garden stuff Printmaking Recorder Classes Sing for Life Tai Chi Ukuleles for Fun Walk & Talk

Australia Day festivities planned for Victoria Park DUBBO Regional Council will host events in Dubbo and Wellington for Australia Day on Friday, January 26. The celebrations will begin at 7.30am in Dubbo at Victoria Park. A barbecue breakfast will be served by the Dubbo Macquarie Rotary Club from 7.30am and music played by the Dubbo District Concert Band before the official ceremony starts at 8.30am. A citizenship ceremony involving 12 people from six nations, the Mayoral and Australia Day ambassador addresses, and presentation of the Australia Day Awards will take place. The Dubbo Aquatic Leisure Centre will open with free entry from 11am to 1pm.

Police target school zones for start of term POLICE will be targeting school zones to ensure traffic obeys the 40km/h speed limit when school returns next week. “Motorists will need to pay extra attention as schools re-open as there will be more buses and cyclists on the roads and young pedestrians crossing the streets. Over the long summer break, it is easy to forget just how busy the areas around schools can get,” Dubbo Regional Council road officer Jayne Bleechmore said. IN most cases, the 40km/h school zones operate between 8am to 9.30am and 2.30pm to 4pm on school days – check the signage in each zone.

Financial Information Service free seminars Age Pension and your Choices Tuesday 6th February, 6pm - 8pm • Choices at Age Pension age

• Age Pension qualification and claim

• Income and assets tests

• Planning for retirement

Understanding Superannuation Wednesday 7th February, 6pm - 8pm • How superannuation works

• Fund choices and investment options

• Contribution and access rules

• Taxation of superannuation

Understanding Your Pension Monday 12th February, 10am - 12pm • Choices and consequences

• Making the most of your pension

• Centrelink assessment issues

• Rights and obligations

Accommodation Options in Retirement

Volunteer at Taronga Western Plains Zoo! Do you have a few hours or more to spare each fortnight and want to take an active role in conservation? Then become an Early Morning Walk Zoo Volunteer!*

Tuesday 20th February, 6pm - 8pm • Comparison of accommodation types

• Financial advantages and disadvantages

• Centrelink assessment

• Aged care fees and charges

Aged Care - Fees and Charges Tuesday 27th February, 6pm - 8pm • Determining aged care needs

• Fees and charges

• Options for the former home

• Pension and taxation implications

Register for our next Volunteer Information Session:

6:30am Early Morning Walk, then from 9:30am Zoo Friends Centre, Taronga Western Plains Zoo RSVP Jodie Kubski on jkubski@zoo.nsw.gov.au www.taronga.org.au/volunteer for more information Applications close Friday 23 February 2018 * As a volunteer you will be expected to undertake a series of formal and informal training courses Volunteers must be over 18 years of age

Venue for all seminars: Dubbo Service Centre 64 Wingewarra Street, Dubbo, 2830 Light refreshments provided. BOOKINGS ARE ESSENTIAL. Book your place now by calling 136 357 or emailing fis.seminar.bookings@humanservices.gov.au

0529HT

Saturday 3rd February 2018

humanservices.gov.au


AUSTRALIA

LIFESTYLE

RESOURCES

SACRIFICES

THE LAND

EARLY HISTORY

OUR LAND OF OPPORTUNITY & ACHIEVEMENT

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January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

TRIVIA TEST

Above left, Masonic Village leisure and lifestyle manager and volunteer coordinator Kerry Whiteman with Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre community visitors scheme (CVS) coordinator Lisa Johnston. Above right, Kerry Whiteman with resident Noel Piper.

1 2

How many squares are there on a chessboard?

3 4

Which sport originated in Melbourne in 1858?

5 6 7

Where is the annual World Series of Poker held?

8

What ball game did James Naismith invent in Springfield, Massachusetts?

NEIGHBOURS

Community minded volunteers needed for elderly and kids By YVETTE AUBUSSON-FOLEY WHEN Dubbo Masonic Village resident Elizabeth Barclay wakes up in her aged care facility it’s not uncommon to find volunteers dropping in during the day to keep her and other residents company or entertained. One support group which currently has around 40 volunteers working in Dubbo and Wellington, but is seeking many more, is the Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre’s Community Visitors Scheme (CVS). Working with the elderly, CVS volunteers visit the aged in facilities or at home for group activities or one-on-one social time with elderly who have been identified as lonely or isolated. “There are many reasons why an elderly person is living on their own or lonely. They may have moved to Dubbo with their partner, for example, and they have since passed. Our volunteers will sit and have a chat with them, to keep them company for a while,” said CVS coordinator Lisa Johnston. The visits do not involve taking the person shopping or to do doctor’s visits but to increase their general feeling of wellbeing, to feel cared for and reduce their isolation. Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre runs many community programs

Can you help? To participate in any of the Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre volunteer programs, please contact the DNC to receive a volunteer’s pack. Call Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre on 6882 2100.

Elizabeth Barclay lines up a shot during a round of the “Masonic Masters Open”, watched on with encouragement by volunteers Leah and Preston Wallace with Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre Community Visitors Scheme (CVS) coordinator, Lisa Johnson. PHOTOS: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS

which cannot run without the help of volunteers of all ages and walks of life. The Community Activities Program supports the aged with services and social events which keep them connected to community. The Safe Aboriginal Youth Night Patrol bus operates between 6pm and 10pm, helping children make their way home safely. Drivers and support workers are needed. Volunteers also play their part in the community transport program which picks people up from

their home to be taken shopping or to trips to see doctors for a fee starting at $6. The newest facility to open soon is the Wingewarra Activity Centre in the former CWA Hall on Wingewarra Street. From 5pm until 9pm, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, volunteers are needed to play games with the kids, help prepare and serve the children’s dinner or run the administration desk. Anyone interested in volunteering can pop in to see what it’s all

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Reprints of your fave photos Most photos published in Dubbo Photo News are available to buy as reprints for private use. Call us during office hours for more details: 6885 4433.

about. To become a volunteer you need to register and pass a police check. Up to 40 children drop in each evening, aged 5 years old and up. Social workers are also rostered on to connect with the children to be sure they have what they need. Lastly, the Winanggaay program, which means “to think, to know, to understand”, is an alternative for students from Years K to 6 who have been suspended from school. From Monday to Friday between 9am and 12.30pm, volunteers help teachers with reading support and cultural activities. Last year 544 students from Dubbo participated in the Winanggaay program.

Seniors activity community barbecue z A community barbecue for seniors will be held at the CWA Hall from 11.30am on Thursday, February 22, and include group activities. Volunteers needed.

Which painter painted more than 200 pictures of his garden at Giverny?

What 1942 naval engagement saw the sinking of four Japanese aircraft carriers?

What Pacific country includes the island of Espiritu Santo? Who pedalled his way to fame in Europe before becoming a government minister back in Australia?

9 What nationality was Chopin? many wives did Henry the 10 How Eighth have? TQ405. SEE THE TV+ GUIDE FOR ANSWERS.

Return and Earn scheme proving popular: CEO IF you’ve tried to recycle your bottles at Victoria Park or Delroy Park Shopping Centre through the Return and Earn machines and found them full, it’s probably because more than 40 million containers across NSW have been returned since collection points opened on December 1, 2017. “We expect the number of returns to continue to grow as more collection points open in the weeks to come,” NSW Environment Protection Authority Acting Chair and CEO Mark Gifford said. “Already we are hearing about people seeing less litter in their local parks and sports fields.”

Mobile govt services coming to rural NSW KANDOS, Coolah, Pilliga and Mungindi will be visited next week by the Golden Wattle mobile service centre. Mobile Service Centres provide personalised access to government services, delivering Centrelink, Medicare and Child Support services to rural Australians. Member for Parkes Mark Coulton said staff on board can help with a range of services, including lodging Centrelink claims, Medicare registrations, providing access to online services, and offering free hearing health checks. “A social worker will be available on board for the entire trip to provide residents with information, support, and short-term counselling,” Mr Coulton said.

MUSIC FOR YOUNG CHILDREN

Sing, shake, rattle, wriggle! Musicplay 2-3yrs Musicplay 4-5yrs Musicmakers 5-6yrs Fun weekly classes ENROL NOW! www.macqcon.org.au

Macquarie Conservatorium cnr Darling & Bultje Sts Dubbo info@macqcon.org.au 02 6884 6686


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8

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

COMPETITIVE

Titan Macquarie Mud Run passes to win THE Titan Macquarie Mud Run is back in March this year and Dubbo Photo News is giving you the chance to win one of five double passes for this year’s event. The Mud Run is an all-ages event with individuals as old as 80 taking part in the challenging, and incredibly slippery, obstacle course which offers a chance for groups to build team spirit in a fun environment.

HOW TO ENTER: Take a picture of yourself covered in mud (remember – be creative!) and send your picture to myentry@dubbophotonews.com.au. Be sure to include your name, address and daytime phone number so we can contact you if we need to.

Entries close on February 9 at 10am when our judges will select their favourite five entrants to win one double pass each. Entries may be published here in Dubbo Photo News over the next few weeks.

WHAT WHERE WHEN z Titan Macquarie Mud Run z Saturday, March 24, 2018 z Ollie Robbins Oval/Macquarie River z www.titanmacquariemudrun. com.au Pictured right: Heathy, muddyy fun! The 2018 Titan Macquarie Mud Run will be held on March 24. PHOTOS: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS

PHOT PH OTOG OT OG GRA RAPH PHY Y

Paterson’s curse catches a photographer’s eye Ph P hotoggrapher Peter Woodward took thi hs hi photo near Shibble Bridge, Macquarie River laate on Saturday afternoon. “I didn’t think a patcch of Paterson’s c rse could look good,” Peter commen cu nted. Taken on Canon 7D mk2, 100-400 Canon lens, 1/400th sec, ISO 250, F4.5, focal length 100 ml. We’re always on the lookout for great and interesting photos o by budding local photographers. Send yourss to photo t s@ dubbophotonews.com.au

IN BRIEF

Australian Day ambassadors for Dubbo and Wellington

AUSTRALIA DAY Ambassadors for Dubbo and Wellington have been announced. Paul Cronin will address Dubbo crowds on January 26. He is the director of a business solutions company for Australian, New Zealand and Asia Pacific customers. He is an inductee into the ICT Industry Hall of Fame, received the ‘Top 3 Most Influential Australia ICT’ award and has been NSW Government ICT Strategy board member. Terry O’Connell, who will be Wellington’s ambassador, is a 30-year veteran with NSW Police Service who has influenced the use of restorative practice around the world. He is a Churchill Fellowship, Order of Australia Medal and Paul Harris Fellowship recipient.

Top 10 movies s at the Aussie box office this week 1 Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle (pictured) 2 Pitch Perfect 3 3 The Greatest Showman n 4 The Post 5 Star Wars: The Last Jedi di 6 Darkest Hour 7 Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri 8 Coco 9 All The Money In The World 10 Ferdinand SOURCE: MPDAA. PHOTO: SONY PICTURES

IN BRIEF

$100 vouchers for sports registration ALL children aged 4.5 to 18-years-old who are enrolled in school from Kindergarten to Year 12, are home-schooled or enrolled in secondary school education at TAFE NSW are eligible to receive $100 per child each year for four years, thanks to a NSW Government initiative called Active Kids. The $100 voucher can be used for registration and participation costs for sport and fitness activities with the aim of reducing barriers to participation and help change the physical activity behaviours of children and young people in NSW. It will not be means tested.


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Lot 232A Magnolia Boulevard, Magnolia Estate • $339,000 This contemporary home will feature stylish kitchen with Smeg appliances, stone bench tops, walk in robe, powder room, undercover patio, zoned ducted air conditioning and low maintenance landscaping.

Own it from $317 per week*

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www.maasgroupfamilyproperties.com.au

28 Azure Avenue, Southlakes Estate • 6881 9364 • Open 7 Days 9am - 5pm Sales co-ordinators Bill Kelly 0429 159 116 and Maree Egan 0438 845 604


10

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News RURAL

WHAT KIDS SAY

Irrigators using solar to power water systems By JOHN RYAN

Chad Singh, almost 5 Favourite song? Daddy Daddy drive the motor car Favourite colour? Green and blue Favourite game? Puzzles Who is your best friend? Zac, Brooklyn, Olivia and Braithen What makes you laugh? When someone tickles me What makes you sad? When someone hurts me What are you afraid of? Monsters and elephants trying to stomp on me If you could change your name what would it be? Keckens What are you really good at? Cutting straight lines on paper Do you have any jokes to tell me? No What is your favourite thing to eat for lunch? Sandwiches What is your favourite fruit? Green and red apples What do you want to be when you grow up? A cop to stop all the naughty and bad people How old is grown up? 13 and 16 PHOTO & INTERVIEW: SARAH HARVEY

KARIN STARK has spent much of the past few years working on raising awareness about the improvements and efficiencies when it comes to irrigators powering their watering systems from solar energy. In 2015 she was a driving force behind an Australian-first field day demonstrating two 100kw systems near Narromine. Now, the second part of the project is imminent. “On behalf of Landcare group Macquarie 2100, I’ve organised an Info Day for solar pumping, 13th March in Narromine,” Ms Stark said. “The focus is on new information and an update on the two local 100kW systems that were installed in 2015.” The day will include a workshop on installing battery storage for residential solar, which means the day will cover a far broader mandate than the irrigation industry. The 2015 field day attracted about 140 people from across four states and more than 500 enquiries from across the nation from people who

couldn’t make it on the day. “People will hear how Andrew Gill and Ian Corderoy’s 100kW solar systems have performed,” Ms Stark told Dubbo Photo News. “They’ll also hear about their actual diesel savings, whether their expected pay-back have changed and find out what they would have done differently.” Power prices have been in a state of flux during the past two years and technology has advanced rapidly, with many of the region’s irrigators keen for an update. The field day will feature a number of speakers spotlighting different areas of the emerging industry including: z Macquarie River Food and Fibre presenting on the position of growers and the current energy market; z Jon Elder, local cotton grower, discussing his 500kW, 15meg solar pumping system – the largest in the state; z ReAqua Managing Director Ben Lee will discuss advances in solar forecasting technology, batteries and floating solar;

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z Cotton Australia discussing new policy and case studies; z Rural Financial Counsellor John Jones will discuss how low interest loans can help users; z Evan Darmanin from ChargeWorks will outline the case for residential battery storage – talking

ABOVE: About 140 people attended the first Narromine Solar Irrigator field day in 2015. PHOTO: SUPPLIED.


11

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

YOUR STARS ARIES: Whether or not you’re currently single, someone will make quite an impression on you this week. A birth in your family will be the source of great joy. TAURUS: You’ll expand your circle of friends. You’ll be especially vocal early in the week and will probably find yourself in the spotlight. This should help you settle an interesting deal. GEMINI: Before spending a lot of money on a single purchase, ask yourself if you really need it. You’ll be rewarded for your patience. CANCER: The coming week will be an emotional rollercoaster of sorts. You’ll need to spend a considerable amount of money on an unplanned expense. A pay raise or other financial break will ease your worries about retirement. LEO: Sometimes you need to take a few steps back to give yourself the momentum to accomplish something big. You’ll feel especially crea-

through information and tools to help users decide if batteries are right for their circumstances. z Director of Solar Pumping Solutions Steve Harding, a Tesla Powerwall Certified Installer based in Mudgee, will give the benefit of his experience during his time in the

industry. This project is supported by funding from the Australian Government. For more information contact Karin Stark on 04676 02 886 or kstark79@ hotmail.com. * John Ryan previously worked for the Macquarie 2100 group.

tive this week and might even whip up a masterpiece. VIRGO: Your friends will invite you on all kinds of fun outings this week. You’ll have a stroke of genius that’ll help you solve a good part of your financial troubles. LIBRA: You’ll be in charge of an event that will bring together a lot of people. At work, an emergency meeting that you’ll be leading could turn into a party. SCORPIO: You’ll feel endlessly inspired by a conversation with someone you’ve always underestimated. You’ll learn something new about yourself and might feel particularly spiritual. SAGITTARIUS: Tension is in the air, and this will lead you to seek a more active

social life to help you unwind. You’ll experience an illumination of sorts that will guide you toward new, exciting horizons. CAPRICORN: You have a big decision to make. Take your time, and be sure to consider every possible outcome. Some changes will be necessary for you to continue on the right path. AQUARIUS: You’ll be quite busy at work this week. You’ll need to surround yourself with the right people in order to get everything done. At home, you’ll take care of some long-overdue cleaning. PISCES: Your self-esteem will see a boost and you’ll feel more accomplished, both personally and professionally. You’ll have the opportunity to stand out and make an impression on your peers. The luckiest signs this week: Scorpio, Sagittarius and Capricorn.

IN BRIEF

IN BRIEF

Big Australia Day bash at the Dubbo RSL Club

Local Drug Action Teams rollout opportunity for Dubbo

BANGERS and mash, roast lamb, Aussie pizza, Aussie topper and pavlova are all on the menu at the Dubbo RSL Club on Australia Day. From 8am they’re running raffles, giveaways, a chance to win a summer holiday, a free show and activities for the kids. Bingo tickets go on sale from 8.30am. Arts and crafts kick off at 12 for the kids followed by “Blinky Bill the Movie” in the theatrette at 2pm. Hampers, seafood and meat trays will be raffled in the evening from 6pm, and the free Australian Beach Boys Show is at 7pm. You can also win an Aussie Grill.

THE Nationals-Liberal Government has said it is continuing to take action to combat the scourge of ice and other illicit drugs with more Local Drug Action Teams set to rollout across Australia. Applications are now open for the third round of the Local Drug Action Team (LDAT) program, which helps to bring the community together to develop local plans and activities to prevent and reduce the harm being caused by drugs and alcohol in their regions. LDAT members could include representatives from local councils, schools, police, youth services, primary health services and treatment services, community groups and non-government organisations. Applications close February 19, 2018.

BRISBANE

DUBBO

MELBOURNE

Essendon Airport

Celebrating


12

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

CAREER

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

Leeanne’s work change from courier truck to gatehouse By JOHN RYAN

UP until October last year, Leeanne Fisher was a subby courier delivering parcels around Dubbo. To find a change, she didn’t have to look very far, her search ending on the northern outskirts of the city. “I worked as a courier in my own business, delivering parcels and whatever else, and I just thought I’d come out here and give it a go,” Leeanne told Dubbo Photo News. “I was talking to one of my friends who worked out here (at Fletcher International) and she told me to come and put my name down, so I did and that’s why I’m here.” In just a few short months she’s settled down to her new duties in the gatehouse, helping workers with the formalities of coming on and going off shift. “I love it, it’s excellent, I’ve gotten to know quite a few. “I’m enjoying meeting all the different people, all the different personalities. I’m meeting people from all over the world and that’s something you don’t expect in Dubbo – I had no idea the number

Leeanne Fisher works in the gatehouse at Fletcher’s. She’s pictured passing work gear to Daniel Hupp as he starts his maintenance shift. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS.

of nationalities that worked out here. I’d love to learn to speak some other languages (because) communication is important,” she said. Leeanne said the change of job has been as good as a holiday. “To have a break from my sub-contracting is very good, the pressure was just relieved straightaway, and now I can just come to work, do my job and go home to relax and it’s awesome,” Leeanne said.

“One thing about being out here is not having the pressure of running my own business – GST for one – there’s an army of people out here so I don’t have to do any of that.” She’s also been amazed to see how the plant underpins so much economic activity in Dubbo, with deliveries of goods constantly coming in past her front door as well as so much processed sheepmeat going out. “This plant buys a lot of

services and goods in town so it props up the local business sector. As a former courier driver, I saw a bit of how much activity Fletchers generates, but seeing it up close on a daily basis, I had no idea,” Leeanne said. Above all, she relishes the way the company offers a new start to so many people from all over the world, and all walks of life. “Fletchers employs a lot of people – there’s jobs here and they’re available if people want them,” she added. Leeanne also believes the flexibility of working arrangements has big benefits. “If someone doesn’t like what they’re doing, all they have to do is talk to a supervisor and they’ll move them to try somewhere else,” she said.

learn

play

O

Jan 25: Ros Kelly, former Labor politician, 70. Kay Cottee, sailor, 64. Eric Abetz, politician, 60. Xavi, Spanish soccer player, 38. Alicia Keys, US singer, 37. Jan 26: Scott Glenn, US actor, 77. Kim Hughes, cricketer, 64. Ellen DeGeneres, US talk show host, 60. Li Cunxin, Chinese-Australian dancer, 57. Catherine Martin, costume and production designer, 53. Dominic Knight, radio host, 41. Jan 27: James Cromwell, US actor, 78. Nick Mason, Pink Floyd musician, 74. Mikhail Baryshnikov, Russian ballet dancer, 70. Doug Cameron, Labor politician, trade unionist, 67. Bridget Fonda, US actress, 54. Adam Brand, country singer, 48. Nic Testoni, actor, 46. Alicia Molik, tennis player, 37. Rosamund Pike, British actress, 39. Jan 28: Alan Alda, US actor, 82. Tim Flannery, environmentalist, 62. Nick Carter, US singer, Backstreet Boys, 38. Elijah Wood, US actor, 37. Libby Trickett, swimmer, 33. Mitchell Cornish, rugby league player, 25. Jan 29: Germaine Greer, feminist, author, 79. Rodney Rude, Bathurst-born comedian, 75. Ian “Molly” Meldrum, TV-music personality, 72. Lynne McGranger, Irene Roberts on Home and Away, 65. Oprah Winfrey, US TV personality, 64. Nick Xenophon, politician, 59. Adam Spencer, comedian, 49. Heather Graham, US actress, 48. Adam Lambert, singer, 36. Isabel Lucas, actress, 33. Jessica Marais, actress, 33. Stephanie Gilmore, surfer, 30. Kalifa Faifai Loa, rugby league player, 28. Jan 30: Gene Hackman, US actor, 88. Vanessa Redgrave, English actress, 81. Phil Collins, English singer, 67. Christian Bale, US actor, 44. Lance “Buddy” Franklin, Australian rules footballer, 31. Andrew McCullough, rugby league player, 28. Mitchell Starc, cricketer, 28 (below). Jan 31: Carol Channing, US actress, 97. KC (Harry Wayne Casey), of KC and the Sunshine Band, 67. John Lydon, aka Johnny Rotten, British singer, 62. Anthony LaPaglia, actor, 59. Minnie Driver, British actress, 48. Portia de Rossi, actress, 45. Wil Anderson, comedian, 44. Jackie O, radio host, 43. Justin Timberlake, US singer, 37.

sing

enjoy

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Cnr of Darling & Bultje Sts • PO Box 661 Dubbo NSW 2830 • Tel/fax 02 6884 6686 www.macqcon.org.au • info@macqcon.org.au


13

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018 BOOKS

This summer’s hottest reads By NATALIE HOLMES THE weather isn’t just scorching outside, there’s also a few sizzlers on the shelves inside, according to local bookseller Dave Pankhurst. Annuals, classics, history and philosophy is where buyers are putting their money when it comes to summer reading. “There is a huge interest each year we have a big demand for the Night Sky (2018) which is a comprehensive coverage of the sunrise and sunset cycles, and the moonrise and the format of the planet views and major stars,” Dave said. “It’s amazing the number of people we have that are interested in astronomy. Another really top annual is Martin Roth’s Top Stocks (2018). It’s been going for 24 years. It’s a share buyer’s guide to the leading Australian companies. It’s a fascinating study of progressiveness and share trends. “Another top book is the Australian Bird Guide by Peter Menkhorst and the CSIRO. It’s fully illustrated with maps and descriptions. It’s an excellent reference guide.” Dave said the history and classic sections of his book shop are always well-patronised. “Our Classics selection is so popular – from Jane Austen to Mark Twain. And philosophy is popular with young and old, a good cross-section of the community. “Our historical section is constantly browsed, as well as the ancient historians, and Greek and Roman classic writers. Australian history is popular, and conflicts in Korea and the Middle East is always being browsed. “For those that think books are going off the planet, we have Harper Lee’s Pulitzer prize-winning To Kill a Mockingbird. She died last year but the book has sold 30 million copies.” Dave said that television tie-ins are always good sellers too. “When there’s a TV series, it’s very popular – a good example of that is Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander and Margaret Attwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale.” With some readers time-poor but still interested in the world around them, Dave said the quarterly magazine Womankind features articles on pertinent issues such as activism. “It’s a collection of essays on the subject of the quarter,” he explained. “And the New Philosopher has an article on fake news. It’s good to see that people have got an intellectual appetite.” As for what’s popular in books this summer, Dave say that print books are still in favour and politics appears to be a hot topic. “I don’t see any fall-off. Paper format books are coming back,” he said. “I can’t predict what might be the next big thing but Trump’s Fire and Fury by Michael Wolff has a backorder of 140,000 copies.”

WHERE ON GOOGLE EARTH ? Where in Dubbo is shown in this satellite image? Clues: A shearing shed across the road and fast food either side. ANSWER: SEE OUR TV+ GUIDE

IN BRIEF

Hottest five-year period a warning for region

Beverly Farne from The Book Connection in Dubbo, showing off some of the local bookstore’s best summer sellers.

Dave at The Book Connection’s recommendations International fiction new releases z JD Robb – Secrets in Death (Robb is a prolific crime writer) z Di Morrissey – The Red Coast z The Man Booker prize winner – George Saunders – Lincoln in the Bardo z David Baldacci – End Game z Robert Harris – Munich (previously a horror writer, this book relates to German activism) z Dean Koontz – The Whispering Room Dave’s personal favourite: z Ken Follet – The Pillars of the Earth – was the first in a series of three. The Column of Fire (third in the series) was released just before Christmas.

Best of the local authors: z Steve Hodder compiled Norb O’Reilly – a story of the settlement of the O’Reilly family. (His previous titles include Green Mountains and Cullenbenbong) z Nicholas Standish – Survival and Success (tells of his World War II conscription as a German luftwaffenhelfer) z Nicole Alexander – The Uncommon Woman (she started with The Bark Cutters, telling good rural stories) z Gerald Leahy – From Shirt Sleeves

Australia’s best titles: z Scott Pape – The Bare Foot Investor (has sold 430,000 copies) z Warren Mundine – In Black and White – he was a Dubbo councillor years ago and his impact continues today as being a very astute commentator. He launched the book here before Christmas, and it was very popular. It has been selling well.

To Shirt Sleeves – the history of his family acquiring rural grazing properties throughout NSW, which was conducted in the way of a developer. z The Coona Girl – Valerie Griffiths – It’s about early Australian pioneering and takes in the areas of Orange, Grenfell and Coonabarabran. The history of her family goes back to 1808. z Pat Clarke – Elvira and the Triplets – Pat is a very successful Dubbo author, who has just released her seventh children’s book. It’s very nicely presented.

z Jimmy Barnes – The Working Class Boy and The Working Class Man – they are top sellers. z Richard Fidler – ABC presenter and author of historical non-fiction. z Ghost Empire – the story of the city of Constantine from 300AD-1400AD. z Saga Land – the settlement of the Vikings of Iceland

Success for students at Scone Beef Bonanza DUBBO COLLEGE agriculture teachers Steph Colgan and Megan Mrowka, together with 16 students, carted 10 steers to last term’s Upper Hunter Beef Bonanza in Scone where more than 390 steers took part in the competition. Limousin steer “Dicko”, bred by Senior Campus and Nigel and Naomi White of Dubbo, took first place in the carcass competition and won reserve champion steer with a score of 92.59. Students Nash Rodda, Victoria

Prince, Laine Hall, Maree Pobje, Piper Dunlop and Kate Tucker placed in their heats for parading. Piper Dunlop was awarded second place in the 16 years age group. Year 8 student Ryan Maxwell was in the top ten students in his age group. Pictured, left, are Dubbo College students Nash Rodda, Victoria Prince, Laine Hall, Maree Pobje, Piper Dunlop and Kate Tucker with Dubbo College Yarrandale Limousin Stud bull ‘Henry’. PHOTO: DUBBO COLLEGE

A NEW Climate Council report called “2017: Another Record-breaking year for heat and extreme weather” shows temperature and extreme weather records toppled one after the other last year. Australian records have reached new heights in just 12 months, with more than 260 heat and low rainfall records smashed throughout one season (winter) alone. Seven of the ten hottest years on record in Australia have happened since 2005. Five of the seven have occurred the past five years, the report said. The Climate Council is calling on government to urgently transition to clean, affordable and reliable renewable energy and storage technology.

Dubbo couple win dream wedding worth $60,000 THE fairytale wedding for a Dubbo couple is now a reality after winning a Mudgee vineyard’s $60,000 luxe Mudgee Weekend Wedding Competition. Locals Tiffany Burton, 27, and her fiancé Ben Josephs, 28, were among couples across Australia booked to spend their special day at the vineyard to be eligible. Their prize includes a magnificent Wisteria Hall reception venue, food and beverages, and three nights at the property’s accommodation. “No-one wins a wedding! To start our married life like this... we’ve been blessed,” Tiffany said. The lucky couple will wed in October 2018.

HEX-A-NUMBER There are 13 black hexagons in the puzzle. Place the numbers 1 to 6 around each of them. No number can be repeated in any partial hexagon shape along the border of the puzzle.

#

ANSWER: SEE OUR TV+ GUIDE


14

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

COUNTRY TOP 10

LOVE YOUR WORK

TW | LW | TITLE | ARTIST 1 New Cream Of Country 2018 VARIOUS

2

1 What Makes You Country LUKE BRYAN

3 New CMAA Winners 2018 VARIOUS

4

2 Music For Cruizin’: Country To Coast

5

3 Ripcord

6

4 Greatest Hits

7

5 So Country 2017

VARIOUS KEITH URBAN SHANIA TWAIN VARIOUS

8 12 The Very Best Of Slim Dusty SLIM DUSTY

9 14 This One’s For You LUKE COMBS

10 16 The Rest Of Our Life TIM MCGRAW & FAITH HILL

IN BRIEF

Premiere Lane developers inviting investors to join their vision

PREMIERE Lane developers Ros and Kim Williams have issued a public invitation for like-minded investors to join their vision of transforming the northern end of Macquarie Street. Their official brochure was released earlier this month promoting the 20 two- and three-bedroom boutique apartments. They’re designed by architect and partner of a Sydney-based firm, Sam Rigoli, who has previously worked on the council administration building and the Dubbo Regional Theatre and Convention Centre (DRTCC). The existing lane beside the development will maintain access to the river parkland on Bligh Street. Sustainability initiatives are a feature of the project.

Can you, in eight moves, turn the top word into the bottom one? You may alter only one letter at a time to make another word. We have entered the centre word to keep you on the right track.

D

U

S

T

C

A

S

H

C

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Phoebe Farrell Age: 17 Status: Single What’s your job? I’m a cinema worker at Reading Cinemas Dubbo Best part of your job? Working with so many different personalities in such a supportive environment If I could master one skill I don’t have

now, it would be... the Roue Cyr Wheel What’s one of your worst habits? I fall over a lot! Best advice your mother gave you? Sit still, which was really for her benefit I guess If you could be invisible for one day, what would you do? Watch a whole movie with my feet on the seats (don’t do that!)

Favourite quote/saying? More espresso, less depresso Something you can’t live without? Definitely potato Naughtiest thing you did when you were a child? I ran away with Mum’s gold necklace in my nappy once Three words to describe me are... clumsy, sarcastic, asthmatic PHOTO: WENDY MERRICK

© australianwordgames.com.au 205

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15

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

OPINION, ANALYSIS, FEATURES, DEPTH.

Ramping up a Dubbo spinal cord injury support group Learning how to navigate home life is one challenge when you’re in a wheelchair, but venturing into the world which thinks it’s wheelchair- friendly – just because it has ramps – is another. As a full-time carer for her husband, Donna Flack has discovered challenges in everything from renting a home to public transport and toilets in Dubbo. YVETTE AUBUSSON-FOLEY reports. ONNA FLACK’S husband, Michael, is a paraplegic and he needs her support to navigate a world which thinks it’s wheelchair accessible when it’s far from it. The Flacks do travel and are as active as can be, but Donna has identified a real need in our region for a peer support group for the many who still live isolated at home or in limiting circumstances. She has successfully sought funding to get established and invites carers and the spinal cord injured to attend a free luncheon on January 31 to connect and share knowledge and experiences. The gathering will take place at the David Palmer Centre at the Old Lourdes Hospital which is well catered for wheelchair access and suitable bathrooms. “I’m hoping the meetings can be a monthly get together. Anyone is welcome. Not just people who are wheelchair bound. There are plenty of people with spinal cord injuries who can walk,” Donna told Dubbo Photo News. While a large number of spinal

D

133 Average number of days of stay in hospital for newly injured spinal cord injury patients

20,000 People in Australia living with spinal cord injury

$9.5 million The estimated lifetime care cost for quadriplegia in Australia

$80 Donation requested to provide essential wheelchair skills training to newly injured Aussies

84 per cent of reported traumatic spinal cord injuries are male.

15 to 24 Most common age bracket for SCI

5th NSW’s ranking for incidence. Northern Territory is number 1.

46 per cent SCI caused by motor vehicle accidents

28 per cent SCI caused by falls

21 per cent are non-traumatic SOURCE: SPINAL CORD INJURIES AUSTRALIA & AUSTRALIAN SPINAL INJURY ALLIANCE

cord injuries are the result of trauma, Michael Flack’s paraplegia resulted from an abscess on his spinal cord which developed into septicaemia eight years ago, leaving him wheelchair dependent “I saw in Sydney the support networks were there. When we were in Sydney for his treatment, people were coming to us to give us support, build up our morale. “When we came back to Dubbo however, nothing. I have friends who are in wheelchairs. The spinal cord coordinator in Lourdes Hospital is great. Spinal Cord Injuries Australia does have an office in Mudgee, but he’s one man for the whole of the western region. He can’t service everything and he certainly can’t visit every single person, every single week or month. “That’s why I felt setting up that peer support group is what’s going to help. Whether it works or not is going to be up to the people themselves, but I think it’s necessary,” Donna said. The journey to being ready to lead a support group however has been a long and expensive one. Aside from adjusting to life as a paraplegic for Michael and as a carer for Donna, there’s been the monetary cost. “When we first came back I had to sell my house because I had to give up my work to become a full-time carer,” Donna explained. “Even trying to rent a house in Dubbo was scary. We had to pay an extremely large rent initially for a house that had stairs so we had to add ramps to actually get in, but the rooms had to be big enough but for Michael to manoeuvre around. You had to go quite large. You had to get a house that had doors you could fit in. So for the first three years we were renting privately. “When we first rented, there was a house we were told was accessible and it had a ramp out the front and that was the accessibility, (but) the bathroom and toilets weren’t set up for wheelchairs.” Today the couple live in a small housing commission home which has been retrofitted to accommodate Michael’s chair and special needs in the bathroom and bedroom. He cannot, however, go out the back door to enjoy time in the backyard. “We had carpets on the floor so we had to have OTs (Occupational Therapists) in to get them

Donna Flack, pictured with husband Michael and friend Sakshyam Paudyal, is starting a peer support group for spinal cord injury launching on January 31 with a free luncheon. All welcome. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS

to change the floors to vinyl. They had a glass screen in the shower and they had to take that out. You can imagine all these things that you’re dealing with, and everyone’s dealing with, but there’s an assumption the people get insurance when they’re hurt. Michael had septicaemia, so there was no insurance involved. “We basically covered the cost of what we had to do. I ended up taking long service leave from work, initially thinking that Michael would eventually walk again. I was six months in Sydney, in and out of hospitals with him,

` You don’t think of the difficulty people in wheelchairs have. Even visiting your friends and family; the majority of doors aren’t wide enough to allow a wheelchair through... a

and then I had to come back and had no carers for the first year and a half. So I was doing it all, 24/7, and there was no way I could go back to work, so I had to hand in my notice.” Learning how to navigate home life is one challenge, but venturing into the world which thinks it’s wheelchair accessible – just because it has ramps – is another. “It doesn’t matter how big or small a city, you’re going to have access issues. It’s very difficult to find accommodation. We went to a motel in Port Macquarie which had told us it was wheelchair accessible. “We couldn’t get in. I told the man we’ll have to get you to refund the money. He pushed Michael through the chair, scraped the door, and I said, ‘Okay, you got him in, now how are we going to get him out?’ You can get some really good places and some really scary places.” The only vehicle access in Dubbo for Michael is through a taxi. “We do have some great taxis in town who do those bigger sized

wheelchairs. We don’t have buses that are wheelchair accessible. We had a situation where I was in hospital for a couple of weeks and Michael had to have respite in Wellington and he wanted to come and visit me. “He tried to get on the community bus and he called up and they said ‘yes we do have a ramp to get on’. He got there and they said ‘oh no not for you, you’re too big’. They could not take Michael’s electric wheelchair. “So for someone who’s a larger person, and when I say larger that’s anyone over 60 kilos, it’s no go. That includes their ability to lift the wheelchair as well.” As there are no guides on what and where truly accessible access points, transport or amenities are, it leaves people reluctant to ask. “Lots of people are scared. They don’t necessarily know what’s available. We know for example, that you can get on a train here. They do have ramps to get you onto a train to get you to Sydney if you want to. Sydney train stations do have some ramps. You just call ahead and they will set you up to get you off the trains.” There’s also the issue of using bathrooms. “The RSL has a button you can press to open the door. They’ve got great access toilets. Club Dubbo doesn’t have good access toilets at all. There’s a ramp to get into the club but he can’t access the toilet. “Some toilets are only accessible if you have your carer with you because the carer has to open the doors. Imagine trying to open a door and trying to get into the toilet, it’s quite tricky. There’s lots of things like that that you do find are difficult. “You don’t think of the difficulty people in wheelchairs have. Even visiting your friends and family, the majority of doors aren’t wide enough to allow a wheelchair through,” Donna said. Since the introduction of the National Disability Insurance Scheme, opportunities for all people living with disability has changed. Confusion over what it means is something Donna hopes to help clarify with her peer support group.

Dubbo Spinal Cord Injury Peer Support Group z Free luncheon: Wednesday, January 31 z RSVP: January 26 to Donna Flack 0458646361

For more information on Spinal Cord Injury z Spinal Cord Injuries Australia 1800 819 775 or scia.org.au z Australian Spinal Injury Alliance NSW (02) 8741 5627. www.paraquad.org.au


16

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

BIG ISSUE

Rod Hannifey: A truck driver’s view on reducing the road toll Dubbo-based road safety advocate Rod Hannifey has been pushing his message for decades, but despite carting such political luminaries as Tony Abbott, Brendan Nelson and Wendy Machin countless kilometres across Australia’s highways in his B-Double to show them first-hand what it’s like behind the wheel of a big-wheeler, so many simple measures which could improve road safety haven’t been acted on. After a holiday period of seemingly endless road tragedy and trauma, he hopes that, this time, the public has had enough to force the politicians and the bureaucrats to act.

T has been a tragic week for crashes and deaths on the road and unless any of us were involved in each of these incidents, we can only go on what we hear and learn from the press and others – and most of them were not there either. In the weeks, months or years after each serious road accident, there will be the completion of a crash inquiry and for those involving deaths, a Coroner’s Report, but that will not stop a crash tomorrow, and any recommendations are so far away we are unlikely to learn much to help now. Following a recent tanker crash, the CEO of Toll issued a letter to the Prime Minister and others from an operator’s perspective, saying we have had enough inquiries and that we must do something now – that was before the Dubbo crash last week which claimed two lives and injured several others. The Toll CEO said his company, as the nation’s largest heavy vehicle operator, must be included in any discussions. These are his six points taken from a copy sent to me from a third party: 1) Have one rule book for heavy vehicles and drivers across the country including a national approach to mandatory stationary rest times, speed limits and driver licensing. (abridged) 2) Introduce a national operator licensing system; 3) Enhance community understanding of how to drive around trucks, including through the graduated licensing system and education campaigns. 4) Incentivise and reward safe, modern fleets with life-saving technologies. 5) Make telematics mandatory for regulatory purposes. 6) Draw on private sector expertise from transport operators in any discussion on improving road safety outcomes pertaining to heavy vehicles. I applaud him for making the effort and he is far more likely to have the Prime Minister take note than he will of my list. I agree with points 1, 3 and 6 with the note that No.6 must also include those who live and work on the road, not just the big companies who are not there for us, as drivers. In point 1 he mentions mandatory stationary rest times, but completely fails to mention the lack of rest areas, penalties, or lack of flexibility. I have done a number of media interviews during the past week

I

and listened to many others. I do agree with the Australian Trucking Association’s call for better crash investigation and this has been asked for by others for many years – how can we change things if we do not have the unbiased and unemotional data from those who can do a complete investigation? Those involved at such sites have enough tragedy to deal with at the time, and later investigations can have a frenzied media pushing for someone to blame. In the media I said that there must be drivers involved with any of this, as I have for years. I have pushed to get better notice of industry requests for submissions towards better outcomes and my view is that those who make, implement and police our laws do not have to live by them. They have all their toilets, facilities and other needs close at hand. Contrast that with the typical truck driver’s ‘workplace’ on the road – there are not enough rest areas, let alone enough recognition of the job we do and the life we lead, feeding and clothing every Australian. So this is my list and I would welcome your thoughts. Driver education is the biggest issue. Car drivers sharing the road with trucks need to learn that 60plus tonne of B-double will not stop simply because you pulled out in front of it – often people find this out when it kills them and others, and that’s not the way drivers should be learning this lesson. We do not teach young people (who, like you and I, are all bulletproof when they get their license) about sharing the road with large trucks. If we included a video of the Truckies Top Ten Tips at time of licensing, that would help because it is visual and so will be retained by younger drivers. The video could be filmed from the truckie’s seat and so be accurate; surely 10 minutes at time of licensing as a safety investment towards the next 60 years on the road is not too much to give. There must also be better training of truck drivers, particularly those who come from overseas.

` I told them if there is a fatality there, I will hold them responsible as they knew but did nothing about it. I see this everywhere... a

Road safety advocate Rod Hannifey: “The impacts that our roads have on crashes is often overlooked.” PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS

All must be tested and capable, instead of just being given a license when they may never have driven trucks of the size we operate in Australia. A national licensing system with national standards can only come when we have suitable training. The impacts that our roads have on crashes is often overlooked. Yes, our roads are better than they were (in most places), but our maintenance is terrible. There is a section of the Cunningham Highway just south of Yelarbon that I have been asking to have fixed for over four years – it is dangerous. After threatening to make more noise, they got surveyors out who agree it is a problem, but they have no money to fix it, they say. I told them if there is a fatality there, I will hold them responsible as they knew but did nothing about it. I see this everywhere. Roads must be built and repaired to a safe standard, not patched each week, or have the patch make it worse. Road irregularities that cause impacts that are double the weight of the truck, because the surface is so bad, (and I can document and list these) will kill people. There must be a national road standard, so that I as a driver can show the authorities where there’s a problem that is likely to cause or contribute to a crash, and then have it fixed quickly – not in five years. There must also be some value in what we get for our money. Fifteen-million-dollar machines all idle while three blokes sweep a road – it’s not good value. There must be some warranty period so that they can’t just come back next week and charge again, for what was a lousy repair in the first place. Rest areas – there are simply not enough!

How can we manage our fatigue when there is no shade, and not enough room to get away from a noisy frig van or a smelly stock truck so that the driver can open their windows and bunk doors to get a good sleep. If a driver is lucky enough to have an icepack, then more space would allow them to get far enough away not to interrupt other drivers’ sleep. We need rest sites to encourage car drivers to stop, so they need to be clean and have toilets; we need enough for caravaners so they do not take up truckies’ spots; we need sites with all the facilities for all – we cannot afford, and never should have, separate sites for each. If well designed, such sites will suit all and with more cars stopped during the day and more trucks stopped at night, we will get the best utilisation and benefit for the money spent on them. Like the roads, do it once, but do it right. We need recognition that not all people or drivers are the same and that the fatigue regulations must have some flexibility for different people. Telematics for companies to monitor is fine, but micromanaging drivers to the minute and the metre will not stop crashes. Yes, we need rules, but a fine in the thousands of dollars because a driver went 15 minutes further to get a toilet, a shower or a better meal – and they are becoming harder to find – cannot be justified. Yes, we need national regula-

` Roads must be built and repaired to a safe standard, not patched each week, or have the patch make it worse... a

tions. We are closer now than we have ever been – this job must be completed now. And make sure it’s fair to all. If you help or subsidise big companies to adopt new technologies, how will the little bloke ever compete? In the aim of fairness, we should be helping the little bloke to be safer and more competitive and to give better service. There must be more truck driver input and understanding of the job by all. Yes, car drivers are on the road with us and, yes, they too have a right to have a say, but few of them have ever been in a truck and so how can they understand trucks, let alone tell us what to do? Our industry is so wide spread and diverse. We cover from one end of the country to the other and we have so many different parts: livestock, general, tippers, tankers, frig vans, oversize, etc, that we struggle to get together and agree on what we need. I cannot fix the problem, nor can you, but if we do recognise that those who do the job should have much of the input, I believe we will get a better response from drivers. Some of the media have recognised the improvements we have made, some did specify that the majority of car/truck fatal crashes are the fault of the car driver, but many did not know nor were they interested. One “expert” raised concerns about the safer B-doubles being involved in these crashes and that implied they were not as safe as told, but has he ever been in one? I could have taken far more space on each separate issue than this entire article. There are so many nuances and complexities, but this should help the layman understand some of the problems we’re facing.


17

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

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18

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

7 DAYS • ANALYSIS OF THE WEEK’S NEWS

Quick action on spot fires, and a house tourist hotspots so much easier by escaping the landlocked traffic, with no need to have the air-conditioning on.

John Ryan OPINION & ANALYSIS Send your news tips to john.ryan@panscott.com.au or 0429 452 245 txt is best

Escaping Dubbington proving impossible

Up in smoke I COUNTED at least five separate fires along Bunglegumbie Rd the other day and while small, that was only because a heap of local Rural Fire Service (RFS) tankers got onto them fairly quickly. Investigators are looking into the cause of these fires but haven’t come to a conclusion just yet. They may have been started by idiot firebigs, but superheated truck tyres or other faulty exhausts or the like could also be the culprit.

Heated house catches alight

LOCAL RFS crews also did well battling a blaze at a Brocklehurst house on Saturday after a fire broke out, apparently sparked by an air-conditioning issue. We had a few extra kids sleeping over the other night and I opened the doors of the granny flat just so they wouldn’t need the air-conditioner running all night, on the off-chance it could spark a fire, there’s always that danger. Luckily for the community that the crews were mopping up and monitoring that smouldering house because some idiots in Dubbo stole a car, drove it out past Brocklehurst a couple of kilometres down the Mogriguy Road, ran it into some scrub and torched it. This fire was also put out quickly but if all those volunteers hadn’t been just down the road it could have been a different story – there just are no words to describe the sort of losers who’d do something like that. “If we didn’t have crews at that house fire that scrub would’ve been a huge fire, it was very lucky they were there mopping up,” said

Pilliga burns while national media fiddles The Pilliga wildfire is approaching 50,000 hectares at the time of printing yet it’s so isolated that no national media seemed bothered enough to go up there and report on it. The fire has been mostly burning to the west of the Newell Highway between Coonabarabran and Narrabri. This huge fire-fighting aircraft, on loan from the Victoria State Government, is pictured being re-filled with fire retardant destined to be dropped on the Pilliga bushfire on the weekend. PHOTO: MEL POCKNALL.

Orana Rural Fire District superintendent Lyndon Wieland. I asked how many hours local volunteers had given up just this month so far. “It’d frighten you,” he said, “and it’s been a reasonably quiet year.” Supt Wieland wanted to thank the volunteers for their hard work in such hot weather. “The time the people are off work and protecting our community is a huge effort, and we’ve got people helping around Tamworth, Armidale and Uralla, and they’ve been loading the firefighting planes at Dubbo Regional Airport as well for the Pilliga blaze,” Supt Wieland said. “I’d also like to offer a big thankyou to the volunteers’ employers, or the ones who are self-employed – that’s costing them money as well.”

Australia is not in drought AUSTRALIA is not in drought, it is drying out – that was obvious on the flight back from Brisbane the other week I flew back to Dubbo from Bris-

One of the scrub fires being extinguished in the Bunglegumbie and Cooreena Road area. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS.

bane the other day and the country is not so much in drought as it is literally “drying out”. This is a distinction with a massive difference – drought is when it doesn’t rain for so long that the system shuts down, but our landscape handled that for millions of years until the first colonists arrived and began treating it to the good ‘ol European farming methods. Everything we did caused a loss of plants and biodiversity and things began collapsing right before their very eyes, but their lack of understanding meant they were unable to see what was happening. All the properties that my mate Peter Andrews has worked on with his Natural Sequence Farming (NSF) techniques are in much better shape, because they store water underground and it’s released slowly and naturally to keep the system alive when there’s not much rainfall about. It’s infuriating to have been doing stories and proving how NSF works for about 25 years, yet we still have vested interests and paper-pushers who don’t know soil from clay who think they know better, even though everything they’ve advised farmers and land managers to do in the past century has pretty much made things worse instead of better. If the Pilliga, for instance, was hit with a dose of this sort of regenerative common sense, the soil would be moist and the vegetation wouldn’t be tinder dry, and these wildfires couldn’t become wildfires in the first place. We used to have a continent where the Indigenous burn-offs were “cool burns”, nice and slow because things were dried out and desertified. “Australia has the longest hours of sunlight and our plants are the climate control mechanisms that moderate hot and cold temperature extremes, yet we’re destroying that biodiversity at a great rate of knots,” Mr Andrews said. “We’re not recognising that the science currently exists which shows how these mechanisms can benefit the world using Australian landscape as our practical laboratory.” Anyway, Pete Andrews will

be running workshops and field days in Dubbo and Wellington for Mid-Macquarie Landcare on February 11-15 across a range of landscapes and problems, so if anyone wants to attend or just know more, email llc@mml.org.au

Escaping the heat IT’S been so hot lately that a mate went out to his ute to find the tyre had literally exploded. Other mates have been a bit smarter, getting the hell out of Dubvegas while the thermometer climbed into the mid-forties. Heath Yeo nipped down to a mate’s beach house at Booti Booti just south of Forster on the midnorth coast, preferring a surfboard and stubby to the carpentry tools back home. Terry Mitchell took the family on their boat around Sydney Harbour, he found the access to

JUST when I thought the spectre of Dubbington had been erased from the haunting collective memory, it was rammed home to me once again that if something ever escapes into cyberspace, it’s there for the next four quadrillion years until the sun turns into a huge red giant and human life on earth will no longer be possible. My son showed me some online spoof videos where parts of former mayor Mathew Dickerson’s smash anti-council-amalgamation hit “No Dubbington” has been spliced into parodies utilising famous cartoons such as the Simpsons; another version is titled “Clockwork Dubbington”. If I’m travelling and anyone asks me if I’m from Dubbington, I’m going to smile and say “No, I’m from Wubbo”.

Sale ho, sale ho: OKAY, Christmas may have come and gone (it seemed in the blink of an eye) so now’s the time to work out all those necessities that you didn’t receive in your stocking, and take that list down to the Dubbo Men’s Shed giant Garage Sale. Kitchenware, electrical, household items such as ironing boards, vacuum cleaners, steam mops and mobility and disability aids, you name it, it may be there. If you need red or white paint for those handyman jobs thanks to a house full of relations over the break, look no further. And if you don’t need anything, call past and chuck them a gold coin donation because they’re a shed full of good blokes who are doing a lot for this community.

New Gross Pollutant Trap built on strong community foundations A piece of Dubbo’s history was recently unearthed when excavation work to install the newest Gross Pollutant Trap (GPT) uncovered a series of pylons which held up the old Bultje Street Bridge, the only way across the Macquarie River before the L.H. Ford Bridge was built.


19

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

7 DAYS • ANALYSIS OF THE WEEK’S NEWS

fire at Brocklehurst

Dubbo’s Rescue Squad needs help modifying their shipping containers Escaping the heat: Terry Mitchell, left, and Heath Yeo, right.

Saturday, February 3, from 9am-1pm, behind the Dubbo swimming pool, right near the new Return and Earn machine.

VRA up, up and away AFTER a spate of thefts in recent years, Dubbo’s Rescue Squad is getting more security conscious. It sucks that they have to, but that’s the reality of having the sort of people living among us who’d flog life-saving equipment from a group of volunteers who give up their time protecting the friends and families of these very scumbags.

Anyway, the squad is modifying their shipping containers by installing roller doors and they need a few more sized around the container gap (see picture at right). Please call 0437 331 735 if you can help.

Fighting Aussie: Johnny Famechon A DUBBO crew was in Melbourne on the weekend for the unveiling of a statue for legendary boxer Johnny Famechon. As a kid I remember just how big a deal his fights were when they came on the TV, and I didn’t

YOURE A WINNER

AT THE

come from a household with any more than a passing interest in boxing. Famechon is thought of as a real gentlemen when it comes to sport and life, and Brian Tink, Dubbo’s Commonwealth Games silver boxing medallist, said it was a great event. z Send your news tips to john.ryan@panscott.com.au or 0429 452 245 txt is best z Additional reporting by Dubbo Photo News staff. Note: John Ryan is also a councillor on Dubbo Regional Council. He writes here in his capacity as a journalist.

Scott Oriel, Jenny Johnstone, Rodney Tink, Johnny Famechon, Graham Hawke, Brian Tink, Adam Hawke. The Dubbo crew was in Melbourne on the weekend for the unveiling of a statue for legendary boxer Johnny Famechon.

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20

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

OPINION & ANALYSIS THE TOONS’ VIEWS

LETTERS & FEEDBACK

Recycling is thinking of others The Editor We have a unique opportunity at present, now that drink Container Deposits have been reinstated. Why have we been without them for so many decades? A huge number of beverage containers with deposits are going into household and commercial bins or council street bins. How many hotels and clubs are contributing to the Return and Earn scheme? The choked areas of drink containers in our beautiful Macquarie River is a sad reminder of the problem. If you don’t need the deposit money, it could be donated to needy charities. You soon have a fair few dollars’ worth. Could we, as a community, break this cycle? Instead of throwing the deposits away, how about Retain, Return and Earn. The reserve vending machines donation choices are Cancer Council, Vinnies, Planet Ark and Surf Lifesaving. With some thought, there are so many worthy causes that could be funded. For example, we could have a plastic bag in the car or truck and a cardboard box at home. The notable term “The Power of Humanity” is used by the Red Cross. People power could give the charities mentioned above the boost they need. We need to think of those less fortunate than ourselves. If we don’t, I feel we could end up with a lost opportunity, after it is buried at Whylandra, resulting in more unnecessary waste and spongy rubbish dumps. It’s possible, that over the next two years, we could lose something like $200,000 to the tip face. What have we got left as a society if we don’t care about each other? Dubbo could double the charity dollars for these vital groups. How about it? Don Graham, Dubbo

Threat to National Parks and Wildlife Service The Editor Since 1967, the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) has looked after our National Parks, their precious wildlife, worked for the conservation of native and threatened species, educated generations of school children and played host to countless camping holidays and bushwalks. Their ability to perform these essential public services is now under threat from a restructure by the NSW Liberal/National Government, which will result in a series of cuts and job cuts and loss of expertise. We love our national parks. They receive more than 40 million visits in NSW each year, and an overwhelming 94 per cent of visitors describe themselves as satisfied or very satisfied with their experience. Parks like Sappa Bulga National Park and Mogriguy National Park are an important part of the community, environment and public space. If the NPWS restructure goes ahead, the NSW community will soon notice the consequences of the Government’s reckless approach to parks management. Fewer rangers, closed tracks, less maintenance of visitor facilities and encroaching invasive species will become the unfortunate norm. There will be a knock-on effect on local jobs, tourism and the local economy. I urge readers to contact the NSW Government and ask them to stop their war on National Parks and treat rangers and all staff with the respect they deserve. Dr Mehreen Faruqi MLC, Greens NSW MP and Environment Spokesperson z HAVE YOUR SAY feedback@dubbophotonews.com.au 89 Wingewarra St, Dubbo 2830

Tradition doesn’t support January 26 as our day Stephen Lawrence OPINION

ONE thing should be said at the beginning of any debate about changing the date of Australia Day. This discussion is not about whether to celebrate Australia, it is about when to celebrate Australia. Anniversaries matter. You celebrate your marriage on the day of your wedding, not some other day. Our national day should also be non-controversial, unifying and historically accurate. Why then are people so attached to January 26 as our national day? On that day in 1788 the epic journey of the First Fleet concluded at Sydney. The penal colony of New South Wales was established. A significant moment in history, not least for the Aboriginal peoples of this land. But a national day? I do not think so. It was on January 1, 1901, that we became a nation. That nation

drew together the various colonies of the continent, including those established well after 1788. Tradition does not support the current date. January 26 was not our national day until 1994. Before that, various dates were celebrated at different times in different places. True it is that Governor Macquarie declared the day as a NSW public holiday on the thirtieth anniversary, but that was not consistently followed thereafter. The beginning of the penal colony is not the anniversary of modern multicultural Australia. It is the anniversary of the coming of the white man and a flawed British colonial rule that ended with federation. It is also the anniversary of the beginning of the long conflict over land that led to massacres, reserves, the theft of children and much more. Facile arguments about the meaning of “invasion” or the merits of western civilisation cannot disguise historical facts. The Mabo judgment of the High Court did not just legally end the

fiction that this land belonged to no one prior to January 26, 1788. It also formally documented the brutalities that marked the colonial era. British colonial rule no longer exists, but Aboriginal people do, so does native title over land, now recognised by Australian law. They are the true survivors of January 26, 1788. The arguments in favour of the retention of the current date have included some contributions from politicians who seem to think they can govern how people think. We are told by the Prime Minister that “above all on Australia

` Those so strongly against changing the date need to explain persuasively why January 26 is the best day for our national day. I do not think they can win the argument... a

Day we recognise and we celebrate our achievements as Australians”. That sounds fantastic, except not all Australians want to do it on the current date. The Prime Minister cannot just wish that away. Locally our Mayor takes a similar position, telling us the debate “is confusing”, because, “we all have the opportunity to celebrate” on Australia Day. Sure, except for those who do not find it a day to celebrate. The debate needs to be turned around. Accepting we all love Australia and want a day to celebrate it, those so strongly against changing the date need to explain persuasively why January 26 is the best day for our national day. I do not think they can win the argument. Most politicians will not even try and win the argument. They will engage in banality and cliché instead. They will also keep wrongly suggesting that opposing the current date is about not wanting to celebrate Australia. As Joey Williams was quoted recently saying, “I keep saying it to people. We want to celebrate

how great a country Australia is with everyone but we can’t do it on January 26. For a lot of our people that date signifies invasion, attempts to wipe our people out. How would people feel today if someone landed here, changed the laws, changed the language, stole children. Would it be accepted? Would people just move on?” The fact is, you cannot make people unify around this date. As much as anyone might wish to. Which raises the question of what other date is best? In my view Australia Day should be January 1, the true anniversary of the birth of the Australian nation. A public holiday should be granted later in January and official celebrations could occur on that day. If the Australian people then vote for a change to a republican system of government the national day should become Australia Day, the anniversary of the declaration of the Australian Republic. z Stephen Lawrence is Barrister, and current serving councillor on Dubbo Regional Council.


21

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

COUNCIL WATCH

Dubbo Photo News’s independent reporting on and analysis of Dubbo Regional Council activities

Resistance to council amending Local Environment Plan for Maas Group By YVETTE AUBUSSON-FOLEY AMENDMENTS to Dubbo’s Local Environment Plan 2011 (Dubbo LEP) came under scrutiny at an extraordinary meeting of Dubbo Regional Council on Friday, January 19. The Maas Properties Group was seeking changes to the LEP to allow for the rezoning of low-density residential to general residential, a change to density and location of public open space/ stormwater systems, and the rezoning of 19,500m2 of land along the future Boundary Road extension to B1 Neighbourhood Centre to facilitate a future supermarket and speciality stores to serve the needs of future residents. Steve Gooley, the general manager of Orana Mall owner Bachrach Naumburger Group, said during the public forum session at the meeting that the proposal “undermines council’s commercial areas development strategy (which was) developed to guide planning, zoning and development decisions for business usages within Dubbo”. “Council has invested considerable resources into the Urban Areas Strategy, the Commercial Areas Strategy, and the current LEP that sits over Dubbo now – including extensive consultation with the general business community and the community – and investment decisions have been made on these strategies,” Mr Gooley said. “Orana Mall spent $40 million-plus in 2012, 13, 14 and 15, and I absolutely, and my company absolutely, relied on those planning policies in Dubbo to remain consistent during the timeline of those policies. “The council report acknowledges the proposal is outside the Commercial Areas Development Strategy. If Dubbo wishes to attract long-term investment and

COUNCIL NEWS... IN BRIEF Web streaming of council meetings soon to go live LIVE streaming of council meetings were tested during an extraordinary meeting held on Friday, January 19. Three cameras have been installed in council chambers which will provide a broad view of the counsellors seating. Except for several seats in the public gallery, the majority are not included in the viewpoints of cameras, protecting the privacy of attendees. The cameras do not zoom on individuals but provide live vision with an audio feed from councillors’ personal microphones and the public gallery microphone. Staff said the initial test went

employment, it’s important that the business community of Dubbo is provided with a clear direction and certainty through council decisions. “This spot rezoning for the neighbourhood centre creates uncertainty and definitely undermines the business confidence especially in the CBD.” Mr Gooley went on to describe the LEP as a joke. Councillor Kevin Parker who is also a business owner in the CBD made this comment: “During my 10 or 15 years as an employer and manager in the CBD area I’ve witnessed businesses come and businesses close, and the same thing can be said for the Orana Mall, businesses come and close. It’s all about competition and I don’t think we should be too concerned about that. well, viewable only internally by council staff who will provide feedback. The first committee meeting of council will be held on Monday, February 19, when the public will be able to listen to council proceedings online for the first time. The business papers for each meeting are available from the council web page.

Gumley satisfied small lot sizes at Southlakes not a problem CR Dayne Gumley requested Mayor Ben Shields hold an extraordinary meeting eting of council on Friday, January ary 19, after he asked for a deferment late last year to consider housing densityy and the potential for social cial problems in the nextt decade. The requestt related to development in the a. Southlakes area. “Initially I feltt there were genuine risks sks associated with this his

Cr Parker pointed to population growth expected over the next few years, brought on by initiatives such as the railway repair shop, growth in the health industry, and the possibility of the Toongi mine going ahead. He believed the rezoning pro-

` Orana Mall spent $40 million-plus in 2012, 13, 14 and 15, and I absolutely, and my company absolutely, relied on those planning policies in Dubbo to remain consistent during the timeline of those policies... a – Steve Gooley, Orana Mall application, particularly in relation to the request to reduce the minimum lot size arrangement in the relevant parcel of land, and accordingly I moved to defer consideration of the application,” Cr Gumley (pictured below) said. He added that he had received a significant amount of support from ratepayers for his request. “Many people... also wanted to ensure that we weren’t making the same planning mistakes of the past and we were moving in a direction where we might be causing social problems for the community in the next decade,” he said. “However, “Howev the reality is, there is a market in Dubbo and we as decision-makers have a responsibility to alr low fo for that smaller marimportantly to have ket, im foresight to consider the for of such develthe impacts imp opments down the track. “I am satisfied that can support this I ca application.”

posal would better service areas including Keswick, Southlakes, Macquarie View and the Old Dubbo Road, adding that “I think the proposal has merit and I’ll be supporting it”. Maas Group Properties manager Wes Maas addressed council and reiterated the group had been in consultation with council and relevant agencies for over three years with unanimous support. “We need to plan for the future. The southeast growth area including the SouthLakes Estate, Magnolia Estates, Marryvale, Holmwood, Macquarie View and the Keswick estates will house over 5000 homes. There’ll certainly be a demand and the reports show this,” Mr Maas said. The planning proposal (R165) Southlakes Estates, Dubbo, report dated January 16, 2018, and put before council by Strategic Planning Services manager Steven Jennings recommended the LEP amendments be adopted. He confirmed council did have the ability to consider changes to the Local Environmental Plan which may be outside the adopted strategy subject to the correct justification. Council did remove some growth restrictions from the LEP Dubbo 2011 which were attached between the CBD and Orana Mall and the neighbourhood centres. They’ve since had further development allowed to occur, he said. Council adopted Planning Proposal R16-5-Southlakes Estate, Dubbo, which will facilitate an amendment to the Dubbo Local Environmental Plan, 2011. “It is important to understand that this is a land zoning application only, and before any development can occur in this area, a Development Application is required which will then the examined by Council,” Mayor Shields said.

Mayor puts pen to paper to change ward system MAYOR Ben Shields has written to the Minister for Local Government Gabrielle Upton in an effort to reverse the ward system that was introduced as part of the State Government’s changes to local government in 2016 which saw the former Wellington and Dubbo City council’s merged. “During the September 2017 election period, it came to Council’s attention that electors experienced significant confusion regarding the process for voting in a ward system and it was subject to a fair degree of criticism,” Cr Shields said. “While Council believes that appropriate representation of all residents in the LGA is important, it also feels that the current ward system imposed at the time of the merger is not appropriate for this Council. “In the letter, I have requested that consideration be given to

QUESTIONS FOR COUNCIL Do you have a question for Dubbo Regional Council? Send it to Dubbo Photo News and we will put your question to council then publish their response here. Email feedback@dubbophotonews.com. au, post to our office, or phone Dubbo Photo News on 6885 4433

••• I would like to know if we can have a 240-litre red bin instead of a 140-litre one. And, if council says we can’t then I’d like to see, in writing, the law that says we can have a 240-litre green bin and a 240-litre yellow bin but not a 240-litre red bin. The reason for the question is, if we can have a 240-litre red bin then there won’t be any need for the green bin and we can cut it up and stick it in the yellow bin. Council responds: Council determined in December that the Mixed Waste service include an option to provide a weekly 240-litre bin service with guidelines to be developed to manage the provision of this service.

••• The following questions are currently with council and we are waiting on their response: z Is it possible to remove the line markings west bound on Cobra Street which indicate traffic should merge into one lane just before the Palmer Street left hand turn off, so traffic turning left can do so legally without feeling like it has to merge first into the traffic flow, only to then immediately leave it again to turn left? It’s an ideal tributary to get to the Dubbo College South Campus to take traffic away from the Cobra and Fitzroy Street roundabout which is jammed with traffic. z Is council so bad they need a watchdog (ombudsman)? (Dubbo Photo News understands this question is in relation to the decision at the ordinary council meeting on Monday, December 18, where Dubbo Regional Council “resolved to add the role of an Internal Ombudsman to the current organisational structure”.)

the feasibility and appropriateness of amending the Local Government Act to allow a process for the creation of two wards for Dubbo Regional Council, one being the former Wellington Council area, electing two councillors, and the other being the former Dubbo City Council area electing eight Councillors,” he said. An amendment to the Local Government Act would apply across the state so Council is seeking the support of the Member for Dubbo. “I have included the Member for Dubbo Troy Grant in the correspondence as our local representative to seek his support to drive this change in parliament and back changes that will see the community’s concerns remedied,” Cr Shields said. “Dubbo Regional Council has also determined to move a motion at the 2018 Local Government Conference in regards to this request to obtain support from other councils and the Association.”


22

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

IN FOCUS THE THUMBS Thumbs up to PRP & Imaging. I was very impressed with your professional approach. Great job from a very happy customer.

Thumbs up to Blues & Butchery. I’m a first-time customer and you’ve got me for life. PS, try their veggie rissoles!

& Thumbs up to Orana Radiology. Thanks for be-

ing so kind and considerate towards your clients.

&

Thumbs up to the person who kindly deposited my Commonwealth Bank deposit envelope for me after I lost it in the street. The cheque was one of my employee’s wages and I was shocked when I found out the money made it into their bank account. A huge thank you to whoever you are, it’s great to see that there are still honest people in the world. Thumbs up to & Picton Brothers for re-

pairing my patio cheerfully and at no cost.

$800 excess. I hope karma serves you well. Thumbs up to three & incredible strangers who have recently helped me out of the kindness in their heart. Firstly, I was at the mall before Christmas in a bad way when a man from The Coffee Club noticed and came and sat down with me. I explained that I didn’t have any money to pay my bill, let alone buy Christmas gifts. He went away and came back with $50. Then, I was short of money to get a taxi home and one of the cleaners gave me $20, but then I ran into a friend who offered to drive me home and tried to give the $20 back to the cleaner but they declined and told me I may need it. Lastly, I was at an appointment and didn’t have enough change to pay for a taxi home so a lady gave me $10. I want to thank each of these people so much. I haven’t been in Dubbo very long but I’m grateful for their generosity. Sincerely, Paula Gray.

YOUR PHOTOS, YOUR NEWS send your contributions to photos@dubbophotonews.com.au mail 89 Wingewarra St, Dubbo NSW 2830 phone 6885 4433 fax 6885 4434

Callum’s Australia Day bushwalk to help Can Assist Contributed by PRUE THOMPSON YOUNG Dubbo resident Callum McCulloch is embarking on a fund-raising walk of 45km across the Blue Mountains on the Australia Day weekend. Callum and his group will traverse the winding Six Foot Track from Katoomba to the Jenolan Caves. Callum’s wife, Samantha, had a cancer scare in 2017, and with rising costs of treatment in Sydney, they cast their minds to other Dubbo residents who were being financially stretched by their diagnoses. And so came the idea to walk, and to raise funds for the Dubbo and district branch of Can Assist. A Go Fund Me page has been established, and is already taking donations. Callum has

been generously supported by his employers, ARB. The donated money will be used specifically for Dubbo patients requiring help with accommodation and transport costs. These funds can be accessed through their health

Thumbs up to Jackie & Thumbs up to the & and the wonderful staff lovely couple who helped at Pinecrest Kennels for taking such amazing care of all our animals over the Christmas and New Year break. Thank you Jackie, we really appreciate it.

' Thumbs down to Weeds Weeds Weeds

– weeds in the streets, on the verges, parks, reserves, residents front lawns, everywhere. Dubbo Regional Council, what are they going to do about it?

'

Thumbs down to those who ruin the safety of our city with loud vehicles, bikes, driving too fast in built up areas, etc – at any time of the night or day. Where are the Highway Patrol and the council – no one wants to hear this noise from vehicles and bikes tearing up and down our streets.

'

Thumbs down to the low life who hit my Ford Focus car on Christmas Eve in the mall car park and didn’t leave a note. I’m now up for a

IT’S set to be a day full of fun and laughter at the Dubbo Golf Club on January 26 as the club celebrates Australia Day on the course. Kicking off at 7.30am, guests can enjoy a hearty Aussie Brekkie before having a go at the thong-throwing competition. At 8.30am players will take to the fairways to compete in the 18-hole 2-person Ambrose competition ($23 per player, includes great Aussie breakfast). Be

Thumbs up to Jen & Cowley. She used to give us a good laugh when she wrote for the Weekender, it would be great if she came back.

'

Thumbs down to the RSPCA bin that’s missing from Coles. I used to donate regularly to our furry friends and would like to know where it’s gone.

'

)

•••

Send your Thumbs up or Thumbs Down via email to photos@dubbophotonews.com.au, mail to 89 Wingewarra Street Dubbo NSW 2830, phone 6885 4433 or fax 6885 4434.

Managing Director Tim Pankhurst

Chief Journalist Yvette Aubusson -Foley

Journalist John Ryan

Sales Consultant Frances Rowley

Sales Consultant Kathy McAneney

Sales Consultant Donna Falconer

Above: Callum McCulloch with Prue Thompson representing Can Assist. The organisation will benefit from Callum’s 45km trek across the Blue Mountains. PHOTO: SUPPLIED.

Dubbo Golf Club ready for Australia Day on course

my husband after he had a fall in the Mitre 10 car park last Saturday. I hope your kindness will be rewarded. Thank you.

Thumbs down to businesses that leave rubbish lying around. It’s a bad look for residents living nearby.

professionals. Callum’s wife is still receiving treatment, but is well on the way to recovery. For more information on how you can help, contact the Dubbo Photo News office during normal business hours.

sure to bring your Australia Day decorations with you as there will be prizes for best dressed buggy or cart up for grabs along with numerous other prizes. The Dubbo Golf Club would like to extend a thank you to their major sponsor, Discovery Parks, for helping make this year’s celebrations a reality. Dubbo Golf Club general manager Rod Archer with Discovery Parks Dubbo managers Allan and Deidre Kernahan.

Star Wars meets Lego WHAT do you get when you combine Star Wars with Lego? The world’s largest Millennium Falcon made completely from Lego. Some DPN readers were in Melbourne earlier this month and went to LegoLand where visitors were being invited to construct small parts that would help make up this huge model.

Journalist Natalie Holmes

Photographer Sarah Harvey

Sports “Mann” Geoff Mann

Sports Photographer Mel Pocknall

Designer Danielle Crum

Photographer Wendy Merrick

Photographer Brenda Hutchins

Graphic Designer Sarah Head

Reception/Photographer Darcee Nixon

Published by Panscott Media Pty Ltd (ABN 94 080 152 021) General disclaimer: The publisher accepts no responsibility for letters, notices and other material contributed for publication. The submitter accepts full responsibility for material, warrants that it is accurate, and indemnifies the publisher against any claim or action that may arise from its publication. All advertisers, including those placing display, classified or advertorial material, warrant that such material is true and accurate and meets all applicable laws and indemnifies the publisher against all liabilities that may arise from the publication of such material. Whilst every care is taken in preparing this publication, we cannot be held responsible for errors or omissions. Opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the publisher. The editor, Tim Pankhurst, accepts responsibility for election comment. Articles contain information of a general nature – readers should always seek professional advice relevant to their particular circumstances. Complaints: Panscott Media has a policy of correcting mistakes promptly. If you have a complaint about published material, contact us in writing. If the matter remains unresolved, you may wish to contact the Australian Press Council. © Copyright 2018 Panscott Media Pty Ltd. Copyright in all material – including photographs and advertisements – is held by Panscott Media Pty Ltd or its providers and must not be reproduced in any form without prior written permission from the Publisher.


23

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

WELLINGTON NEWS

wellington@dubbophotonews.com.au

ADVERTORIAL

Sydney Hotshots coming to the Soldiers Club MEET the Sydney Hotshots: toned, fit, washboard abs, cheeky twinkles in the eye – and coming to Wellington! The Sydney Hotshots offer the best party and go-to option for a good old-fashioned Girls’ Night Out, Hen’s Party or birthday party. These multi-talented men tear off their fantasy costumes and whisk willing audience members onto the stage for the time of their lives! Girls will blush, women will scream, and husbands will be left at home... With performers from London, Vegas, Rio, Barcelona and Sydney – all trained at the Hotshots headquarters at The Vegas Lounge in the heart of Sydney – these guys are undeniably the most captivating performers you’ll see this year. Their brand-new show “Secret Fantasies” is a two-hour, non-stop, exciting male caba-

ret show, which will be touring across Australia and New Zealand for four months. It features chart-topping music of all genres performed in group and solo routines. It’s an exciting, interactive spectacular: highly regarded by women who appreciate charismatic performers! The Sydney Hotshots are renowned for their high-powered dance routines, spectacular lighting, unique costumes and blend of sex appeal, humour, games and BIG personalities. Their drop-dead gorgeous physiques and warm personalities have made the Hotshots favourites as guests for television appearances, including the Midday Show, Sunrise, Good Morning New Zealand and countless radio programmes and newspapers all over Australia and New Zealand. Expect all-new choreography, competi-

tions, a wide range of hit music and classic cameos from their Hot as Hell Fireman, the sensual and sensitive Officer and a Gentleman, the “Lock Me Up” policeman, the Special Forces SWAT Team, the Seven Seas of Seduction Sailor, a Rule-Breaking Gangster, the Maverick Soldier, the Personal Doctor, Spartan the Gladiator, the Mile High Pilot and the Incorrigible Cowboy. Everything you have come to love about a Sydney Hotshots Ladies’ Night Show! Enjoy a memorable range of entertainment during the two-hour show, plus some up close and personal attention on stage with the boys to experience just why the Sydney Hotshots has been the leading male venue show in Australia for 20 years! They’ll be at the Wellington Soldiers Memorial Club on Wednesday, February 7.

PHOTO: SUPPLIED

Enjoying the holidays at the Soldiers Club By COLIN ROUSE PHOTO NEWS caught up with Wellington folk enjoying a night out at Wellington Soldiers Memorial Club on Friday, January 5. Don’t forget, if you would like our Wellington photographer to cover your community or social event for free, give us a call on 6885 4433 or email the details to wellington@dubbophotonews. com.au

Fiona Groves and Sonya Berryman. Fiona is from Sydney and was visiting her sister Sonya who lives in Wellington

Julie Pooley and grandson Ryan Giddins who was excited to be visiting with his Nan in Wellington

Jordan and Jessica Berryman, brother and sister from Wellington. Jordan just finished his HSC and received a great result and Jessica is home on holidays from Uni.

Alan Pattison, Anita Pagden, Helen Rowney and Len Rowney. Alan and Anita are visiting with their Wellington friends Helen and Len.

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Jann Seagrove, Janette McNeill, Karolyn Howe... Wello folk enjoying themselves at Meat Tray night at the club

Nelson Smith, Louise Cross, Bernadette Darney, Philip O’Brien, Anne O’Brien.

www: wel-


24

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

The Book Connection

THE PLAY PAGE PHOTO NEWS SUDOKU

178 Macquarie Street, Dubbo • OPEN 7 DAYS

CROSSWORD TIME ACROSS

HOW TO PLAY: Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box GRID634 contains the numbers 1 through 9 only once. Each 3x3 box is outlined with a darker line. You already have a few numbers to get you started. Remember: You must not repeat the numbers 1 through 9 in the same line, column, or 3x3 box.

1. Pronoun 4. Dog’s foot 7. After second 12. Spanish cheer 13. Crude copper 14. Television sound 15. Tries 17. Made holy 18. Suit parts 20. Leg part 21. Loosen 24. Beyond 26. Leading ladies 30. Cools a drink 33. Haggard novel 34. Metallic sound 35. Crow’s call 36. Earl Grey,

e.g. 37. Greeting grasp 39. Earth’s satellite 41. Bar beverages 42. Sudden notion 44. Phantom 48. Jack rabbits 50. Arrived 54. Isolated 55. King topper 56. Mariner’s yes 57. Anxious 58. Gusto 59. Cathedral bench

DOWN 1. Cultivator 2. Fairy

FIND THE WORDS

3. Ump’s kin 4. Ponder 5. Abilities 6. Sunset direction 7. Betting agency 8. Unwieldy ships 9. Same 10. Come up 11. Indulge 16. Cricket bowling stint 19. Consume 21. Sunrise direction 22. Yearn for 23. Pressing need: 2 wds. 25. Begs 27. Yodelling sound 28. Informal language

29. Sermon subject 31. Bar of soap 32. Lambs’ mums 38. Despise 40. Harbingers 42. Which thing? 43. ... and hearty 45. Mound 46. ... in a lifetime 47. Process part 49. Date regularly 51. Kind of music 52. Check out 53. Early drops

PUZZ901

WUMO

This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have completed the puzzle, there will be 14 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.

Capital attractions

agog beat Bondi Beach Botany Bay Bronte busy Central Circular Quay Coogee Darling Harbour Dee Why Dolls Point Double Bay Edgecliff ferry idea inquire Kings Cross look Long Reef lost Manly

by Wulff & Morgenthaler

ocean Opera House parks rush Seaforth shop strange steps stalls tour train Windsor Woolloomooloo

INSANITY STREAK

by Tony Lopes

© AUSTRALIANWORDGAMES.COM.AU 992

BAKER’S DOZEN TRIVIA TEST 1. LITERATURE: Which 18th-century statesman and inventor sometimes used the pen name “Silence Dogood” in his writings? 2. GEOGRAPHY: How many emirates make up the United Arab Emirates? 3. AUTOS: What does the name Volkswagen mean in German? 4. POLITICAL HISTORY: Who was Premier of NSW prior to Neville Wran’s appointment in May 1976? 5. ARCHITECTURE: What is the location of the Pitti Palace, built mainly during the Renaissance? 6. MOVIES: What was the name of the monkey in the Disney movie “Aladdin” (pictured)? 7. LAW: How many people sit on a jury in most criminal trials in NSW?

8. MUSIC: In the song “The Twelve Days of Christmas”, what was the gift on the seventh day? 9. ISLANDS: After Tasmania, which is Australia’s largest island by land area? 10. HISTORY: What Greek statesman was considered the greatest of all orators? 11. FLASHBACK: Name the group whose second album was “Colour by Numbers”. 12. SPORT: Who was the last women’s tennis player to reach the singles finals at Wimbledon at age 37 before Venus Williams did it in 2017? 13. LYRICS: Name the song that contains this lyric: “ I don’t know how but I suddenly lose control; There’s a fire within my soul; Just one look and I can hear a bell ring...”

OUT ON A LIMB

by Gary Kopervas

SOLUTIONS: Are in the TV+ Guide

There’s nothing like a

good book

to bring families together!

The Book Connection 178 Macquarie Street, Dubbo • OPEN 7 DAYS


25

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

PAPARAZZI

email your photos to photos@dubbophotonews.com.au instagram dubbophotonews facebook.com/dubbophotonews

Narromine flyover: Thanks to Andrew Pearce, the President of Narromine Aero Club, for this photo taken above Narromine Aerodrome. Andrew tells us that club members are always conducting some sort of flying activities and getting a sky-high view of our part of the region.

ABOVE | “An East Dubbo morning”. That’s the caption that Sarah O’Neill emailed to our office along with this very eye-catching photo. Kinda makes you wonder what the cat is thinking about, doesn’t it!

RIGHT | Ahhh, the memories! Who else remembers the four faces featured on this old board game spotted in a second-hand store over the holiday break? Can you name all four – they were big names on the telly, back when the telly still had some great personalities!

BELOW | Natural recovery: Paparazzi was sent this photo taken about 40km from Dunedoo on the road to Merriwa, showing how the landscape has recovered since the devastating Sir Ivan bushfire nearly 12 months ago. There’s been enough rain to bring back green on the ground and regrowth on some of the trees.

The thunderbox mailbox: We featured some of Michael Pearce’s very clever mailbox and garden ornament creations here last week. Michael’s wife has since sent another photo which made us Laugh Out Loud. It’s a mailbox in the form of a thunderbox – how Aussie is that!? A great Paparazzi treat for Australia Day.

5 STARS FOR ADVENTURE!

We have a wide range of tours, that suit every taste! “Absolutely brilliant way to see the sights of Dubbo, Peter has heaps of information ^Y VV cY_ SX YX ._LLY”. KARYN & PETER GLOVER, 5 STAR FACEBOOK REVIEW

FOR MORE INFORMATION PHONE PETER: 1300 874 537


26

HATCHES

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

Photos by Wendy Merrick Photography Dubbo | www.wendymphotography.com.au Contribute your baby photo to photos@dubbophotonews.com.au

(BOY) BUCKLEY Born 17/01/18 Weight 3660g Parents Genevieve Smith and Karl Buckley of North Bourke Siblings Amelia (3yrs)

Ruby Therese SCHNEIDER Born 17/01/18 Weight 3440g Parents Kirby and Warrick Schneider of Dubbo Siblings Ethan (11yrs), Connor (9yrs) Grandparents Donna and Wayne Schneider of Dubbo, Gayle and Jim Stinson of Taree

Emilia Treesa Ajaie Born 16/01/18 Weight 2960g Parents Jofril and Ajaie Siblings Aiden (4yrs) Grandparents Anthony and Alia

Harper Maxine WALKER-CAIN Born 18/01/18 Weight 3440g Parent Tara Walker Siblings First child Grandparents Stephen, Stacey, Debbie

Ruan Ricky Rudolph JACOBS Born 18/01/18 Weight 3200g Parents Tegan and Mo Jacobs of Coonamble Siblings Theuns (7yrs), Adelyn (4yrs) Grandparents Tony Ryan, Christelle Jacobs, Keith and Janette Boan

Carter Louise Georgia BUSH Born 18/01/18 Weight 2835g Parents Kym Dawson and Darren Bush of Dubbo Siblings Millah (10yrs), Elijah (8yrs), Alithea (14yrs), Charlotte (8yrs) Grandparents Debbie and George Bush, Sharon Dawson, Eric Dawson

YOUTH CHORUS 10-16 YRS

Do you love to sing? Places available now in this choir for boys & girls

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Come and Try Sessions Mon 29 Jan 5pm Mon 5 Feb 5pm Macquarie Conservatorium cnr Darling & Bultje Sts Dubbo info@macqcon.org.au 02 6884 6686

New students welcome www.macqcon.org.au


27

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

HATCHES

Gage Jennifer Kerry BOYD Born 5/1/2018 Weight 2930 grams Parents Adam Boyd & Michelle Smith of Nevertire Siblings Eliza (17yrs), Mackenzie (11yrs) and Ledger (8yrs) Grandparents Billy & Kerry Boyd of Warren, Paul Spradbrow & Jenny Smith of Wellington, Ralph & Lorriane Smith of Warren Great grandparents Sumi Boyd of Warren, Mick & Eileen Smith of Warren, Gwen Hazel of Nevertire

George Lionel CAMPBELL Born 16/01/18 Weight 3950g Parents Eve and Brett Campbell of Wellington Siblings Lawson (2 1/2 yrs) Grandparents David and Jill Pullen, Cheryl Royal, all of Wellington, John Campbell of Dubbo

Luca William OSBORNE Born 18/01/18 Weight 3480g Parents Jenna and Rhys Osborne of Dubbo Siblings First child Grandparents Phil and Kerrie Osborne of Dubbo, Steve and Diana McNabb of Ballina

PHOTO: CONTRIBUTED BY MICHELLE SMITH

Hazel SCOTT-MIDDLETON Born 16/01/18 Weight 3130g Parents Kianne Kopec and Danny Scott-Middleton of Gulargambone Siblings First child Grandparents Louise, Fiona, Mick

Bryleigh Claire Carlton Siblings Faith Carlton Born 11/12/2017 Weight 3660g Parents Ella Short & Brett Carlton from Dubbo Grandparents Glenn & Trish Short of Narromine, and Jo & Greg Carlton of Dubbo. PHOTO: BRYLEIGH & FAITH CARLTON PHOTO BY ELLA SHORT. CONTRIBUTED BY JO CARLTON.

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28 y LOVIN’ LOCAL SHOPPING NEWS | DEALS | DISCOUNTS | DISCOVERIES | NEWS FROM OUR ADVERTISERS

LOVIN’ LOCAL

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

Shopping hopping NNews | Business News | Deals | Discounts | Discoveries To feature here phone 6885 4433 5.

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Australia Da Day aayy Make the most of your long weekend ekend and celebrate Australia Day in style yle with these Aussie essentials.

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Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

LOVIN’ LOCAL SHOPPING NEWS | DEALS | DISCOUNTS | DISCOVERIES | NEWS FROM OUR ADVERTISERS y 29

MEET THE BOSS Vincent Gordon, City of Dubbo Turf Club Position: General Manager I got involved in business... in the early ‘80s when I opened my own business – Condobolin Sports and Equestrian Centre Our bestselling product is... quality racing and training facilities My role in the business is... Generally Manager – “Jack of all Trades” I manage... a great team, who are great to manage According to my staff, working for me is... a dream! I spend my down time... with family and my rugby mates I’m inspired by... the All Blacks and Winx On my bedside table is... my alarm clock In my opinion, the biggest issue facing small business is... political correctness My secret to success is... hard work and a friendly outlook I’m most proud of... family If I could, I’d tell my 20-year-old self to... get a trade, work hard and success will come The best piece of career advice I can offer is... don’t burn your bridges And if I wasn’t in my current role, I’d... be running the Australian Rugby Union PHOTO: WENDY MERRICK

School rewards program promises great start to 2018 By YVETTE AUBUSSON-FOLEY IN 2017, Orana Mall launched the inaugural School Rewards program encouraging all shoppers to collect their receipts from any store in the mall to convert into points which could be allocated to a chosen school or schools. Wongarbon Public School were the very fortunate first prize winners last year. On the day of the presentation of their prize, the school was treated to a breakfast cooked by the Dubbo Rescue Squad, given Yogurtland yogurts, had entertainment by Jase and Juelz from Star FM, and was presented a cheque from JB Hi Fi. This year’s event offers all schools across the region a chance to share in $12,000 worth of prizes including first prize of $8000 in products from

JB Hi-Fi Home, second prize $3000 in products and Gift Cards from Orana Mall, and third prize $1000 in products and Gift Cards ards from Orana Mall. Shoppers who o participate also have the chance to win in $1000 worth of groceries from Woolworths olworths Orana Mall. Nice one! Participating is easy. Simply shop at Orana Mall and d collect your receipts. Then open the Orana Mall rewards App or website and follow the link so you can earn points oints for your school! Receipts dated ed from Wednesday, January 17, to 5.30pm, Wednesday, March 7, 2018, are all valid to be entered for your favourite school, so be sure to get shopping opping and help your school win somee fabulous prizes from Orana Mall.


30

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

CPSA January meeting welcomes mayor By SARAH HARVEY MEMBERS of the Orana Combined Pensioners and Superannuants Association gathered at the Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre on Friday, January 12, for their monthly meeting. Members enjoyed a cuppa before welcoming guest speaker Mayor Ben Shields.

CPSA members with Mayor Ben Shields

Joan Teale and Wilma Ryan

Lorraine Merriman, Gail Elvidge and Helen Bone

Arthur McCumstie, Mavis Clarke, Bill Clarke and Jack Munro

Celebrate. Share the dream. QUEEN’S BATON RELAY Join in a community celebration to mark the arrival of the Queen’s Baton Relay on 30 January 2018. The Relay will visit our

region on its way to the Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast. Be sure to witness what will be a historic event and join in the free celebrations planned.

Free sausage sizzle, drinks and fresh fruit.

TO: Rotunda, Cameron Park 2.00pm

Celebrations: 5.00pm – 7.00pm, Victoria Park Showcase of sporting organisations, interactive activities and live entertainment. Free sausage sizzle, drinks and fresh fruit. Free entry to Dubbo Aquatic Leisure Centre from 6.30pm.

DARLING ST

FROM: Macquarie Regional Library 1.50pm

MACQUARIE ST

TALBRAGAR ST

BULTJE ST

TO: Victoria Park, 5.30pm WINGEWARRA ST

›› Darling Street, Dubbo will be closed for the Baton Relay from 4.15pm to 6.30pm. Parking options include: surrounding streets, Victoria Park No 1, 2 & 3 precinct (access via Talbragar St) and Western Plains Cultural Centre.

KOKODA PL

Celebrations: 1.00pm – 2.00pm, Cameron Park

THE BATON WILL TRAVEL FROM APEX OVAL TO VICTORIA PARK 4.40PM TO 5.30PM DEPARTING DUBBO AT 6.00PM

UN ST

THE BATON WILL TRAVEL THROUGH CAMERON PARK: 1.50PM TO 2.00PM

Dubbo

HOPETO

Wellington

FROM: Apex Oval 4.40pm


31

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

RSL Friday fun By GENEVA ISENBERT FRIDAY nights at the Dubbo RSL is the place to be. Many people celebrating, wining and dining when Dubbo Photo News dropped in on Friday, January 19.

Front, Lachlan, Anthony and Alyssa O’Leary, back, Karen, Lorraine and Vince O’Leary.

Judith Horder and Martha Stecina

John Monaghan, Margaret Monaghan and Jim Moon

Kerry Girdler and Margaret Kable

Shirley and Peter Johnson


32

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

Holiday Smiles: Week 3 THANKS to everyone who has sent photos in over the past week for the Dubbo Photo News 2018 Holiday Smiles les photo comp. We’re seeing lots of fun, smiling photos s– me and there’s still time to enter. Remember, there’s some great prizes up for grabs – all the details on how to enter are below. No matter what you’ve been up to this summer holidays, ys, d it if you have a photo that will make us smile, then send in! Or grab your camera and start capturing the smiles les and fun of summertime! Here’s a selection of your latest estt entries. All entries will go into the final draw.

Pic of the Week

Matilda Day caught her ďŹ rst ďŹ sh on her pink rod she got for Christmas.

“My son Angus Bailey loving the beach.� Taken at Valla Beach by Elisha Bailey

Elisha Bailey’s daughters Eve and Addison Bailey are pictured running from the waves at Valla Beach, NSW.

“Skimboard – the best Christmas present this year. Gave my husband Wes and daughter Addison lots of smiles,� Elisha Bailey said about this photo taken at Horseshoe Bay at South West Rocks.

‘Ice-cream!� That’s Beth Stanley’s caption for this entry to our Holiday Smiles entry.

SEND IN YOUR HOLIDAY SMILES photos for a chance to win!

The Dubbo Photo News Holiday Smiles photo competition is on again. So grab your camera and start snapping photos of you, your mates, your family, or even your favourite pet enjoying your holiday in Australia (or anywhere else in the world). Categories are: best holiday smiles and best holiday action photo

We’ll publish a selection of your photos over the next three weeks with our choice for ‘Pic of the Week’ winning a double movie pass to see one of the great

summertime movies showing at Reading Cinemas Dubbo. At the end of the competition, all entries will then have a chance to win this year’s 2 main prizes – $150 gift card to RB Sellars, now located in Dubbo.

Entries close Fri, Feb 2, 201 Our ďŹ nal selection of photos and the winners will be announced in Dubbo Photo News on Feb 8, 201 .

Email your entries to photos@dubbophotonews.com.au or drop them into our office at 89 Wingewarra St, Dubbo. Original jpeg images from your camera work best, so try not to let your OS downsize the image!

FIRST PRIZE: RB Sellars 2X $150 gift cards


33

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

Holiday Smiles: Week 3

Ainslie Tegart is pictured during a family holiday visiting her grandmother Bev Tegart in Orange

Joanne Tegart sent in lots of happy moments from her family holidays at Waverton, Sydney, and in South Australia including Vivonne Bay on the south coast of Kangaroo Island, Port Noarlunga, and the Adelaide Botanic Gardens. The photos feature Joanne along with Ainslie and Claudia Tegart (sisters), and Joanne’s partner Ian Morley.

Shaun, Lana, Lucy and Maddy Eather on holiday to the Twelve Apostles. Thanks to Lana Eather for sending this fun photo in for our Holiday Smiles comp.

LEARN GUITAR & UKULELE BEGINNER GROUP CLASSES Guitar Kids 8-12 yrs: Tue 5pm, Wed 4pm, Thu 4pm Guitar Adults & Teens: Tue 6.15pm, Wed 6.15pm

Eve and Angus Bailey are all smiles in the holiday spirit. Thanks to Elisha Bailey for this photo entry.

Ros Roche has entered this photo of her two nephews Calam Cowper, 9, and Seth Cowper, 5, enjoying a swim in the pool last week while on holidays from Newcastle.

3 for $360 CHEESE & BACON PIE + COKE CAN VARIETY $5

WHITE, WHOLEMEAL OR GRAIN SLICED BREAD $1.29

Ukulele Kids 7-12yrs: Mon 4pm Ukulele Adults & Teens: Mon 6pm Plus classes for other skill levels

ENROL NOW

www.macqcon.org.au

Macquarie Conservatorium cnr Darling & Bultje Sts Dubbo info@macqcon.org.au 02 6884 6686

113a Darling Street, Dubbo | Phone: 02 6884 5454 | www.villagebakerycafe.com.au | facebook.com/villagebakerycafedubbo


34

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

Ashley’s happy 21st By GENEVA ISENBERT FAMILY and friends came together to celebrate Ashley Thomas’s 21st birthday on Friday, January 19. With Ashley standing out in a gorgeous red dress, she was certainly hard to miss on her day. Parents Colin and Michelle Thomas threw Ashley this party and gave some special gifts. Ashley Thomas and Josh Lake

Jedda Walford and Michelle Thomas

Nick Rodgers, Nathan Thomas and Blaire Goodwin

Caitlin Collins, Ainslie Sekaran and Kirrily Bloink

Ross Harris, Leonie Bunyan, Les Bunyan and Karl Buckley

Kye McNaughton and Tamika McNaughton

Ashley Thomas and Jedda Walford

Ian and Kath Clark, Megan and Michael Firth

Nathan Thomas, Ashley Thomas, Michelle Thomas and Colin Thomas

Amelia Lundholm, Michelle Williams, Loraine Garraway, Serena Prout and Teagan Williams

Matty Morgan, Ashley Thomas, Jedda Walford, Josh Lake, Justine Lake, Bronwyn Lake

Back, Ian Clark, Kath Clark, Michael Firth, front, Rachael James, Cheryl Ellis, Megan Firth and Matt James

Vicki Harris, Amanda Harris and Jordy Burgess (baby)

Fiona Rayner, Michelle Thomas, Tamika McNaughton, Min Bayliss, Ashley Thomas, Mikala Ryan, Sharna Smith and Hannah Smith.


35

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

Daryl Braithwaite rides the horses at the Mac Inn By GENEVA ISENBERT PEOPLE travelled far and wide to watch Aussie pop legend Daryl Braithwaite perform live at the Macquarie Inn on Friday night, January 19, with the crowd favourite song “The Horses” loved by the many eager fans. Before the show, patrons enjoyed a beer or a meal whilst waiting for Braithwaite to play. Erol Collings, Gerard White and Lisa White

Cherie Thompson and Julie Daniels

Sharon Hickey, Julie McCauley, Rachael Hickey and Rodney McCauley

Ben Townsend, Tom Delange and Brent Bolam

Narelle Lindner and Jono Lindner, Roxie and Chris Meguyer

Mason Anderson

John and Gale Bernard

Gabby Marks, Sophie Dalton, Lyndy Peters, Kate McCosker, Sarah Wiegold, Kate Butler and Emilie Taylor (+ Wal in background)

Brenden Hocking, Lauren Hocking, Belinda Bell and Mathew Bell

Chris McDougall and Adam Wallace

Megan Boshell and Ali Van-Der-Lin-Den

Rob Thompson

Phil O’Pharrell and Mark Cuthell

Pauline Kuhner, Barbara Malcolm and Debbie Rogers

Becky Holland and Kat O’Sullivan

Justine Kuhner


36

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

School holiday fun at Kidzoo By GENEVA ISENBERT KIDZOO was jam-packed with kids enjoying their days off school on Friday, January 19, playing in the indoor playground out of the heat. Playing in the air-con seemed like the best holiday activity.

Julia and Elizabeth Perry

Skylah Millgate

James Condon, Chad Condon, Mariana Slade and Kahlee Slade

Archie McGroder and Darcy Callinan

William Perry

Anais Fraser

Archie Callinan

Sage Etcell

Darcy Callinan

Arianna Wright


37

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

21st birthday party for Christopher Contributed by VICKI BUDDEN CHRISTOPHER BUDDEN enjoyed his 21st birthday party at the RSL Roof Top Terrace on Saturday, November 25. Christopher is Manager of the Dubbo Specsavers store. Guest travelled from Mudgee, Sydney, Newcastle, Canberra and Queensland to join with local family and friends with a great night had by all in attendance

The whole crowd!

With School and Uni friends

Beccy, Christopher, Sharon, Samantha, Rob, Jodie and Zac

Christopher with his siblings Andrew and Olivia

Christopher with his parents, Craig and Vicki

Christopher with the Specsavers Team

Andrew, Sam, Olivia, Bec, Peter and Christopher

Craig, Kate, Tim, Mary and Vicki enjoying the party

Craig, Christopher and Andrew Budden

Grandma Bev McKechnie, Christopher and Grandma Nance Budden

Anne, Christopher and Lawrence (Godparents)


38

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

classiďŹ eds P O S I T I O N S VA C A N T

6885 4433 classies@dubbophotonews.com.au CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING CLOSES AT MIDDAY EACH TUESDAY

PUBLIC NOTICES

CARPENTERS/BUILDERS (LICENCED) Continuous sub-contract work Wall cladding, patios etc. Excellent rates - potentially $2,000 p/wk Phone Brent 6884 0899 • www.panelspan.com.au

PUBLIC NOTICES

Dubbo Antiques & Collectables

ALL STOCK AT DISCOUNTED PRICES! 4 Depot Road Ph 6885 4400

dĆŒÄ‚ĹśĆ?Ä?ĞŜĚĞŜƚĂů DĞĚĹ?ƚĂĆ&#x;ŽŜ ^Ĺ?žƉůĞ͕ EÄ‚ĆšĆľĆŒÄ‚ĹŻÍ• ÄŤĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹŻÄžĆ?Ć?͘ Ç€Ĺ?ĚĞŜÄ?ÄžͲÄ?Ä‚Ć?ĞĚ ĞŜĞĎƚĆ?͘ David McLennan ÄžĆŒĆ&#x;ĎĞĚ dD dĞĂÄ?ĹšÄžĆŒ &ĆŒÄžÄž /ĹśĆšĆŒĹ˝ÄšĆľÄ?ĆšĹ˝ĆŒÇ‡ dÄ‚ĹŻĹŹĆ?

0424 252 834

www.tm.org.au/dubbo

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

PETS & LIVESTOCK

TRADES & SERVICES

DOG TRAINING

ALBY’S EVAP COOLER REPAIRS

0428 822 826 or 6882 4606 www.learnersonlead.com.au

TRADES & SERVICES

Phone 0417 420 880

FOR SALE

GET THE BEST OUT OF YOUR UNIT PO Box 1760 Dubbo | Lic No: 121828

Ph Alby: 0419 479 249

CURTAIN MAKING BY SUE GRISINGER ~ All soft furnishings and blinds ~ 20 years experience ~ Workroom is in my home in Dubbo ~ Professional free quotes

Phone 0428 880 439

MAGS School Uniforms

(All sizes) Available to view from 9am on Friday, January 26 & Saturday, January 27 135 Fitzroy Street, Dubbo

Evaporative Air Conditioning Service & repairs

AR PROTECTION SERVICES PL

City Service Centre Under new management • Authorised Inspection Station • Servicing • Tuning • Mechanical Repairs M.V.R.I Lic. No 54641

David Healey Ph 6882 1144 • cityservicecentre140@gmail.com

SECURITY AND RISK MANAGEMENT Experts in protecting YOUR Business and Assets • School fetes • Gun shows • Car shows

• Hotels • Concerts • Businesses of all types

PH 0413 261 877 E: arsecu25@yahoo.com.au

M/L 409149046

Dinning table antique design - $195 6 fabric/timber chairs (all 6) - $45 Aqua water cold/cool unit as new - $45 Bird cage H 1.000 x L .820 x W .540 on stand - $85 Lounge light cream 3 seater + 2 recliners - $195

UPCOMING TOURS

Tullamore Irish Festival 31st March

Accessible Outback Experience 8th-15th June

Canowindra Balloon Festival 28th April

Spectacular South Coast 13th-20th August

Stay Put in Armidale 4th-9th May Historic Glen Davis 12th-13th May

Great Ocean Road and Silo Art 1st-8th September

Bygone Ballarat 23rd-28th May

Stay Put in Canberra 5th-9th November

2018 Brochure Out Now! langleyscoaches.com.au PH: 6882 8977

:H VHOO DQWLTXH IXUQLWXUH FKLQD FDVW LURQ ZDUH ROG WRROV DQG FROOHFWDEOHV

NICK RYAN REMOVALS DUBBO

HAIR & BEAUTY

HAIR SPECIALS Âť Pensioner perms $90 Âť 1/2 head of foils or all over colour package from $100 Âť Packages include treatment, cut & straighten Âť More specials available! Call Kelly for an appointment

0431 200 466 Working from Sharon Fardell’s Hair Studio at 39 Bultje St

Classic Beauty Makeup Artistry Dubbo

Manicure • Pedicure • Massage

'XEER $QWLTXHV &ROOHFWDEOHV

STOP! DON’T MAKE A MOVE UNTIL YOU CALL

Phone 0407 753 232

Phone Mary to book today! 0400 121 808 classicbeauty.makeupartistry@yahoo.com

Monday – Friday 9am – 5pm Saturday 9am – 12noon 90 Victoria St Dubbo

6885 4753

sales@poolhut.com.au visit us at www.poolhut.com.au

S Sunstopper Blinds & Awnings

! " #$% & " '

15% Off All Furniture

'HSRW 5RDG 'XEER _ 3KRQH

HAND PICKED IMPORTS

Awaken your inner hippie!

79 Macqaurie Street

Mindful movement, breathing, ing, relaxation and stillness for health, healing & wellbeing Ph: 0429 851 993

Book us to photograph your next event!

nickryanremovals@hotmail.com

COL THOMAS Plastering

PHONE FOR A FREE QUOTE

0421 812 063

Get Plastered With Thomo

GARAGE SALE?

Find me on Facebook

Ç‚Ç–ĆŹ$ ĆšÇ?ĆŹÇ–Ç•* É­ODĘ˝HÉĄ ʨLĘƒÉ“ +ɰȾʑɚ

0448 878 320

- PLASTER RENOVATIONS - NEW WORK - RENOVATIONS & EXTENSIONS - INSURANCE CLAIMS

H E A LT H & F I T N E S S 23(1 0RQ 7KXUV )UL DP SP 6DW 6XQ DP SP &/26(' 7XHV :HG

• Affordable prices • Cartons for sale • Trading 7 days • Local and interstate

ORANA HEADSTONES & MONUMENTS SERVICING THE CENTRAL WEST

Full graves & lawn cemeteries. Accessories & Plaques. Free Quotes. Restoration work. Competitive Pricing. Ph/Fax 6888 1015 Mob 0439 881 014

“Operating out of Dubbo�

FORGOT TO ADVERTISE? Call us by Tuesday 10am for our Thursday paper!


39

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

TRADES & SERVICES

TRADES & SERVICES

TRADES & SERVICES HOCKING IRRIGATION & TRENCHING

Marks Budget Tree Service Mobile: 0418 638 299 Fax: 6884 7334 Email: cowboy46@bigpond.com

Layton Allen

Sprinkler Systems

Stump Grinding | Tree Removal Mulching Cherry Picker Will travel | Qualified Insured | Free Quotes Pensioner-Rates

• Domestic and rural pump repairs, new pump installations including solar pumps • Domestic and rural irrigation systems including stock water and garden sprinkler systems • Trenching and post hole digging • Free quotes

Terry: 0428 816 577 | ABN 90 797 749 250

Rob 0435 956 877

0419 150 051

laytonallenss@outlook.com

FOR ALL YOUR WATERING NEEDS ABN: 338 971 049 01

Great service! Best picture!

Ian Brooks

TV Antenna Services

• Domestic irrigation & repairs • Mulch, large & small areas • Small tractor with backhoe & front end loader

AVAILABLE 7 DAYS - WILL TRAVEL Digital Antenna Installs Meter Testing & Tuning TV Wall Mounting 27 Doncaster Ave

Servicing Dubbo and Narromine

Boosters & Accessories Extra Outlets Cable Concealing

0427 487 768

Call Dudley: 0417 467 330 dudley@wpli.com.au

TRADES & SERVICES

HRG

Plumbing & Gas Fitting

Peter “Pistol” Edwards

0488 263 012

• All commercial and residential jobs • No jobs too small • Special pensioner rate • Servicing Dubbo and surrounding areas

License no. 275861C

OUTBACK VAC GUTTER CLEANING OutBack Vac specialises in gutter cleaning, the removal of Cellulose Insulation and cleaning of Roof Cavities.

CALL NOW to discuss your needs with Mick on 0448 680 845

LOCALLY OWNED

STS AUTO ELECTRICS

AND COMMUNICATIONS

DAVE ALLAN’S ELECTRICAL SERVICE HOT WATER REPAIRS

Improve your mobile phone coverage with a cel-fi go signal booster. We supply & install.

0418 636 155 daveallanelectrical@bigpond.com ABN: 75 463 168 378

40 COBRA ST Lic no: MVRL48964 • RTA no: AU32536

Nominate now for

PAGE 3 PROFILE

Buy it. Tell it. Sell it SAVE 50% when you book a 12 week campaign Book your classified by 10am Tuesday for that week’s publication classies@dubbophotonews.com.au or 6885 4433


40

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

THE DIARY EVENT Orana Writers’ Hub Outback Writers’ Centre Will be held on Saturday, 3rd February at 10am in the Board Room of the WPCC. Commencing with a 30-60 minute workshop on grammar and punctuation. The presenter will be Natalie Holmes, journalist and editor. 300 word challenge is Bosses or Workers. Bring 12 copies of your own writing or come to discuss the work of others. Morning tea with gold coin donation. Railway History Railway History Enthusiasts want to form a group who would meet regularly. Phone Mike on 0499 995 267 to register your interest. Orana Country Association The Orana Country Association holds their monthly muster on the last Sunday of the month at the Dubbo RSL from 2pm till 6pm. Next muster is on Thursday, February 25. Contact Barry 0439 344 349. Diners Club Women on their own are welcome to enjoy dining out in a friendly atmosphere. Will meet on Saturday, February 3 at the Royal India Restobar at 7pm. Contact: Chris 6884 1179. Laurel Club Our ďŹ rst 2018 meeting and luncheon is on Monday, February 5 at 11.45am at the RSL Club. All widows of ex-servicemen are very welcome. For catering purposes please ring Mary on 6882 5636 by 1pm on Friday, February. University of the Third Age The University of the Third Age will hold Enrolment Days in Community Rooms at Western Plains Cultural Centre from 10.00am – 12.00pm February 2 and 5. $20 annual fee. AGM on February 5 at 12.30pm. Nomination forms per 6884 3498. Neami National Suicide Prevention Optimal Health Program Seeking referrals. Our goal is to run this free Optimal Health Program in Dubbo aimed at people who have have been impacted around the subject of suicide. Contact CJ on 0434 331 299 or cassandrawills@neaminational.org.au.

THURSDAY Walking Group 8am, meet corner Macquarie and Tamworth Streets. Contact: May 6882 4371. Clothesline Clothing Pool 9am-11am, fortnightly. Supported by Clothesline and Freemasons. 151 Fitzroy Street, Dubbo. Free and low-cost clothing. Contact: 6882 9503. Coffee and Craft 9.30am-12 Noon. Craft and morning tea group, at the Gospel Chapel, 74 Boundary Rd (corner of Taylor Street). Contact: Beth, 6885 3153. Dubbo CWA 9.30am for 10am, ďŹ rst Thursday of the month, at Sporties, Erskine Street. New members welcome. Contact: Marion 6884 2957. CWA Wongarbon

Send your community event info to diary@dubbophotonews.com.au or phone 6885 4433

10am, ďŹ rst Thursday of the month, at Wongarbon CWA rooms. Contact: Marjorie 6884 5558. Sugarcraft 10am-1pm, ďŹ rst and third Thursdays of the month, at the Art and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Classes also Sunday and Monday. See day listings below. Contact: Shirley 6887 3150. Dubbo Orana RSL Day Club 10am-2pm, at the Country Club. $5 includes morning tea, card playing, games and light lunch followed by Bingo. Transport can be arranged for $2. Contact: Ailsa 6882 0036. Dubbo War Widows Guild 11am, fourth Thursday of the month. Please register your attendance or apology by 12pm the Wednesday before. Contact: Avis 6882 5710. South Dubbo Veteran’s & Community Men’s Shed Bingo 11am-12.30pm, West Dubbo Bowling Club. New players welcome. Contact: May, 6882 4371. Dubbo Support Group of Arthritis NSW 12 noon, fourth Thursday of the month. Join us for our social luncheons at Sporties, 101 Erskine St. Contact: Heather on 6887 2359 or 0431 583 128. Dubbo Community Men’s Shed 1pm-5pm. Small joining fee and annual membership fee after three visits. “All men are welcomeâ€?. Also open Monday and Saturdays. Contact: 6881 6987. Conversational English in Dubbo 2pm-3pm, at Wesley Community Hall, corner of Church St and Carrington Ave. Attendance is free. All welcome. Contact: Chris, 6884 0407. Line Dancing 6.30pm-9pm, at Carrington Ave RSL Hall Clubhouse. Contact: Kathy, 6888 5287. Woodturning and Carving Evening 6pm-9pm, at Art and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Contact: Phil, 6887 3257. Dubbo City Croquet Club PLAY on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday commencing at 8.15am. Twilight croquet is played on Wednesday evening commencing 6pm. New players of any age are welcome, where men and women compete on equal terms. The club is located at the rear of the City Bowling Club, Wingewarra Street. Contact: Elizabeth 0408 682 968.

FRIDAY CPSA Meeting 10am, second Friday of the month, at Neighbourhood Centre. Guest speaker and morning tea provided. Visitors welcome to attend. Contact Ken 6885 2676. Tai Chi at U3A 10am, at the Community Arts Centre, Western Plains Cultural Centre, 76 Wingewarra Street, Dubbo. Contact: Richard, 6888 5656. Spinning and Weaving 10am, at the Art and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street, Dubbo. Contact: Jo, 6885 6875. Western Plains Trefoil Guild 10.30am, second Friday of each month, at Dubbo West Guide Hall. Everyone welcome. Please con-

Diary entries need to be 40 words or less (approximately three lines), and placement will be at the editor’s discretion subject to content availability. Please include your daytime phone number and/or address. Entries close 10am Tuesday for that Thursday’s edition.

ďŹ rm meeting will be on. Contact: Dorothy, 6884 6646. Dubbo Parkinson’s Support Group 11am, ďŹ rst Friday of each month, at the David Palmer Centre, old Lourdes. People with Parkinson’s and their carers welcome. Contact: Lorna, 0416 240 626. Central West Makers Place 12 noon-6pm, at South Dubbo Veterans and Community Men’s Shed, corner of Palmer and High Sts, Dubbo. Activities include 3D printing, basic electronics, robotics, silk screening and pottery. Contact: Adam, 0431 038 866. Alzheimer’s & Dementia Support Group 2pm, ďŹ rst Friday of the month. Contact: Kath 6881 3704. Smart Recovery 3pm, Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre. Assists individuals with changing problematic behaviour, including alcohol and drugs, gambling, food, shopping, internet, and others.

SATURDAY Farmers Markets 8am, ďŹ rst and third Saturday of the month. Lions Park adjacent to Visitors Centre, Bligh Street Dubbo. www.dubbofarmersmarket.org.au. Contact: Market coordinator, 0488 685 006 or enquiries@dubbofarmersmarket.org.au. Dubbo City Croquet Club 8.15am, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. News players of all ages welcome. A game of skill and strategy where women and men compete on equal terms. Lawns are behind the City Bowling Club, Wingewarra St. Contact Jenny 0400 645 516 or Charles 0400 570 888. CWA Gilgandra Market 9am – 1pm, ďŹ rst Saturday of the month. Cakes, fruit, pickles, plants and more! New stall holders welcome. $5 per stall, proceeds to CWA. Phone Hilda: 6847 1270. Dubbo Patchwork and Quilters Group 9am, second and last Saturday of the month, at the South Dubbo Guide Hall, Boundary Rd. Members are always ready to support novices so if you feel you would like to give this traditional craft a try. Contact: Meg, 0427 471 868. Ladies Lawn Bowls 9.15am for 10am start, at Sporties, Dubbo. Also Saturdays. Sporties membership not required unless you wish to progress competitively. Coaching available. Contact: Bowls coordinator Nic Gannon, 6884 2044. Dubbo and District Kennel Club 9.30am, obedience training at the Big Shed, Dubbo Show Ground. No puppies under 14 weeks, must bring up to date vaccination certiďŹ cates, $5 to join and $5 per session. Contact: Michael, 0419 274 632. Seventh-day Adventist Church 9.30am, small group bible study (Sabbath School) and children’s / youth Sabbath School. Corner Cobra and Sterling Streets. Contact: http:// dubbo.adventist.org.au

Seventh-day Adventist Church 11am, Divine Service. Corner Cobra and Sterling Streets. Contact: http://dubbo.adventist.org.au Sit ‘n Knit 11am-1pm, ďŹ rst Saturday of the month. All ages welcome. Macquarie Regional Library, Macquarie Street. Contact: 6801 4510. R.S.L. Tennis Club 12.45pm, at the RSL Park Street courts for enjoyable social tennis. All welcome. Contact: 0428 825 480. Dubbo Slot Car Racing Club Seniors (15+) 4pm, ďŹ rst and third Saturday of the month, at 147 Birch Avenue. Contact: Terry, 0408 260 965. Narcotics Anonymous 6pm, at St Brigid’s Church, in the old building, entry via Brisbane Street. IdentiďŹ cation (ID) meeting. Contact: Linda, 0419 588 086. Old Time/New Vogue Dance – Dubbo 7.30pm, second Saturday of the month, at the Masonic Hall in Church Street. $10. BYO supper to share, tea and coffee provided. Contact: Graham, 6888 5603. Old Time/New Vogue Dance – Eumungerie 7.30pm-11.30pm, ďŹ rst and third Saturday of the month, Eumungerie RSL Hall, Railway Street. BYO supper, tea/coffee provided. $10 admission. Music by Tony. Caravan Park with powered sites for travellers across the road. Contact: Tony, 0427 472 142 or 6847 2142.

SUNDAY Bicycle User Group Social Ride 9am, at Wahroonga Park. Contact: Mick, 0437 136 169; Andrew, 0476 764 659; dubbobug.org.au. Orana Pistol Club 9am, Hyandra Lane, Dubbo. Contact, Sundays only, after 9am: 6887 3704. Traditional Catholic Latin Mass – Rawsonville 9am, second Sunday of the month, at the Rawsonville Soldier’s Memorial Hall, Rawsonville Road. Contact: 0429 872 241 or 6887 2241. Orana K9 Training Club INC. 9.45am for a 10am start, at the Dubbo Showground (the big shed). Dog Obedience training, must have current vaccinations certiďŹ cate plus treats. $15.00 membership, $5 per session. Contact Reg Parker 6884 9877 or 0428 849 877. Hope Christian Fellowship Dubbo 10am, at the Girl Guides Hall, Dianne A’Beckett Place, Dubbo. Contact: 6884 6287. Transcendental Meditation (TM) 2pm, Maharishi Foundation Australia and Dubbo Transcendental Meditation Centre provide free introductory talks on the scientiďŹ cally proven beneďŹ ts of TM. Contact: David, 0424 252 834 or www.tm.org.au. Dubbo Country Music Hoedown 2pm-6pm, second Sunday of the month, RSL Entertainment Lounge, 2-6pm. All ages welcome. Contact: Shane, 0407 022 999. Orana Country Music Inc. 2pm-6pm, last Sunday of the month, at the

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Contact the Team on 02 6882 2100 or email hmms@dnc.org.au


41

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo RSL Club, DUBBO RSL Club. “Walk up muster”, all welcome. Contact: 6885 4995. Dubbo Folk Club 2.30pm-6pm, second Sunday of the month, at the Western Star Hotel. Come and enjoy an afternoon of all types of acoustic music. Pleasant surroundings and friendly people, sit and sing along or bring and instrument and join in. Contact: Dawn, 6889 4427. Sugarcraft 1pm-4pm, first Sunday of every month, at the Art and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Also, fourth Monday, first and third Thursday. Contact: Shirley 6887 3150.

MONDAY Dubbo Multicultural Women’s Group 10am, third Monday of the month, at Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre. All women from non-English speaking backgrounds most welcome. Contact: 6882 2100. Cake decorating 10am, first Monday of the month, at the Art & Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Contact: Shirley 6887 3150. Old Time Dance Will resume first Monday of Feburary, 2018 from 10am – 12pm, at Orana Gardens Country Club. Come and enjoy some old time dance. Contact: Jean on 6882 8867. Sugarcraft 10am-1pm, first and third Thursdays. 1pm-4pm, first Sunday of every month, first and third Thursdays of the month and the fourth Monday of the month, at the Art & Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Contact: Shirley 6887 3150. Patchwork 10am-3pm, at Art & Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. Contact: June 6882 4677. Monday Cards 1pm, fourth Monday of the month, at Club Dubbo, 82 Whylandra Street. Come along and enjoy an afternoon of cards. Peace and Healing Meditations 1pm – 2pm, at the Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre 1/80 Gipps St. By donation, beginners welcome. Presented by Wellington Buddhist Centre. Contact: 6845 4661. Anglican Women’s Association 5.30pm, at Holy Trinity. Contact: Dorothy 6884 4990. RFDS Support Group 6pm, first Monday of the month, at the RFDS Base Dubbo Airport. Contact: Terry Clark 0407 444 690 (except P/H). Australian Air Force Cadets 6pm – 9.30pm, at Army Barracks (cnr Kokoda Pl and Wingewarra St). NOW recruiting 13 to 18-year-olds prepared

for a challenge and to undertake fun & rewarding activities. Come down to your local unit, 313 “City of Dubbo” Squadron. Contact: Michael 0437 997 708. Rotary Club of Dubbo 6pm – 8pm, at the Westside Hotel, Whylandra Street, West Dubbo. Our President Sandy Birkett can be contacted on nap64@yahoo.com or 0412 158 940. Alcoholics Anonymous 6pm, at St Brigid’s Church, Brisbane St. Contact: Sally 0475 126 301. Dubbo Euchre Club 6.30pm, at the Dubbo City Bowling Club. Everyone is welcome to come along. $5 entry, prizes are won throughout the night. Trivia Night 7pm, at South Dubbo Tavern. Dubbo Camera Club 7.30pm, every second and fourth Monday, at Dubbo Arts and Crafts Cottage, 137 Cobra St (rear shed). Camera Club is open to anyone who wants to improve their digital camera skills in a friendly, relaxed setting. Contact: Col 0429 689 158. Sing Australia Dubbo Choir 7.30-9.30pm, at Bridge Club, Bultje Street. NO auditions, no requirements to read music and no singing experience necessary. Contact: 0428 680 775.

TUESDAY Seniors Exercise Group Notice of change. Exercise classes will begin again on Tuesday, March 6 and Thursday, March 8, 2018 at St Bridges Hall from 1.30pm – 2.30pm. Same days and times will continue each week throughout the year. $2 donation includes a cuppa after exercise. Contact: Richard and Elva 6888 5656. Golf Croquet 8.30am, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, at Dubbo City Croquet Club (located behind the Dubbo City Bowling Club). Contact: Beth 6884 3015. South Dubbo Veteran’s & Community Men’s Shed 9am – 12pm, at Cnr of High and Palmer Street. New members welcome. Ladies Lawn Bowls 9.15am, Tuesday and Saturday, at Sporties Dubbo. Learn the game of bowls. Coaching is available and can be arranged by contacting the Bowls Coordinator, Nic Gannon on 6884 2044. Experienced bowlers are also welcome to join our ranks. Dubbo Embroiderer’s 9.30am – 3pm, second and fourth Tuesday of the month, at Dubbo Bridge Club, Elston Park. All welcome. Contact: Isobel Morgan 6882 3889. For Saturday group information contact Ruth 6882 7336.

AllAbilitiesDanz 9.45am, at Dubbo RSL Memorial Club. Classes are low impact, work on heart health, flexibility, mobility, coordination and strength. Call Tracy 0416 010 748 for a free trial or to join the free class. Probus Mens 10am, first Tuesday of the month at Masonic Village Hall, Darby Close, Dubbo. Fellowship and friendship. Morning tea and guest speaker. Contact: Ken 6885 2676. Dubbo City Ladies Probus 10am – 12pm, at the Masonic Village Hall, Darby Close (off White Street) Dubbo. All enquires to Liz 6885 3542 or Nora 6882 0707. Depression Recovery Group 10.30am, at the Department of Mental Health, 41 Bultje Street Dubbo. Contact: Norm 6882 6081, Brian 6885 6547 or Bill 6882 9826. NALAG Centre 10am, MEN’S morning tea the first Tuesday of the month, WOMEN’S morning tea the third Wednesday of the month. Contact: 6882 9222. Rotary Club of Dubbo Macquarie Meets 12.30pm – 2pm, at Westside Hotel. Contact: Lorna 0408 827 526. Heart Support Walking Group 12.30pm, Tuesdays and Thursdays, meet at Ollie Robbins Oval, cnr of Bligh Street. Supports gentle exercise promoting healthy hearts and friendship. All Welcome. Contact: Ray 0437 541 942. Bingo 1.30pm-3.30pm, at Sporties. Contact: Margaret 6882 4737 or Barb 6882 5893. Book Club 2pm, at Macquarie Regional Library, Macquarie St, Dubbo. Dubbo City Physie and Dance 5.15pm – 7.30pm (classes vary), Monday and Tuesday, at South Dubbo Guide Hall. Physie is fun and affordable dance for girls and ladies, 4 years and up, of all fitness levels. Contact: 0438 582 015. Rotary Club of Dubbo South 6pm, at South Dubbo Tavern, Cnr Boundary Rd and Fitzroy St Dubbo. Girls Brigade 6pm – 8pm, each Tuesday during school term, at Orana Baptist Church, 4 Palmer St. For all school aged girls. Enjoy craft, games, camps, stories, songs, cooking and much more. Contact: Julie 6882 4369. Swing Dancing Classes 6.30pm, at Charles Sturt University. Come for a dance for great fun and fitness. No need to bring a partner. All ages welcome. $5. For more details check out www.facebook.com/swingdancingdubbo or call 0401 928 998. Dubbo and District Computer Club

PUZZLE EXTRA GO FIGURE

7pm, at Akela Place Hall Dubbo. Contact: Daryl 0408 284 300. Lions Club of Dubbo Inc 7pm, at Club Dubbo. Contact: Bob 6882 8746 or 0408 636 953, Hugh 0429 151 348. Toastmasters Club 7pm-9pm, first and third Tuesday of the month, at Dubbo RSL Club, Brisbane St. Visit the club to gain confidence in speaking and leading skills. There are club, area and district competitions to participate in. Contact Sharon Allan 0408 156 015 or email sallan@rhdubbo.com.au. Badminton 7.30pm-9.30pm, at Delroy High School Auditorium, East Street, West Dubbo. $5 to play ($3 for school students) $22 yearly insurance ($15 for school students). All welcome, great fun and exercise. Contact: Chris 6887 3413.

WEDNESDAY Community JP Desk JP Desk Will start again on Wednesday, February 7, 2018. Dubbo Woodturning & Woodcraft Club 8am – 12pm, at rear of Arts and Crafts Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. New comers welcome. Contact: Paul Nolan 6882 1485. Dubbo City Croquet Club 8.15am, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, at rear of City Bowling Club, Wingewarra St. Twilight croquet is played on Wednesday evening commencing 6pm. New players are welcome of any age, where men and women compete on equal terms. Contact: Elizabeth 0408 682 968. Geurie Craft Group 9am – 2pm, at Geurie Bowling Club. Everyone welcome. Contact: Thelma 6887 1103. Line Dancing 9.30am – 12pm and Thursdays, 6.309pm, at Carrington Ave RSL Hall Clubhouse. Contact: Kathy 6888 5287. Card & Social Group 9.30am – 2pm, at Community Activities Room, Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre 1/80 Gipps Street. $5 includes morning tea, cuppa, bingo and raffle. Please bring own lunch. New members of all ages welcome. If you need transport call Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre. Contact: Muriel on 6882 5145 or Jan 6884 6080. Secret Garden Café Mums & Bubs Playgroup 10am, at the Secret Garden Café, 10am. Group for parents and grandparents to come and socialise, meet new friends and find support from like-minded people. All welcome. Contact: 6884 4489 or find us on Facebook. Dundullimal Dubbo Support Crew Inc

MEGA MAZE

10am, fourth Wednesday of each month, Dundullimal Homestead. We support the operations at the Homestead, guiding, tours, gardening, helping in café. Great fun, and friendship, you learn as you go! Come to our next meeting or ring 6884 9984 or email dundullimal@nationaltrust. com.au The Dubbo Garden Club 10am, first Wednesday of every month. Each month with a new garden or guest speaker. Come along and enjoy whatever is arranged. New members are most welcome with an application form available on request. Contact: Kay 0428 821 538, Marie 6881 6443 or Colleen 6882 2825. Art and Craft Cottage 10am – 4pm, at 137 Cobra Street. A large range of handcrafted gifts made by members available. Shop local and support Dubbo’s very own independent Art and Craft Cottage. Contact: 6881 6410. AllAbilitiesDanz 10.30am, at West Dubbo Primary Community Centre. KIDS 0 to 5, an interactive class with music, props and movement. Only a gold coin donation per family. Akela Playgroup 10:30am and Thursdays 9:30am, at Scout Hall, 4 Akela St. Contact: Sharna 0438 693 789. Blood Cancer Support Group 10.30pm – 12pm, first Wednesday of each month. Venue changes each month, contact Louise or Emma on 0412 706 785. Cancer Support Group 12pm, at David Palmer Centre, Lourdes Hospital. Contact: Genelle 6841 8513. West Dubbo Rotary 6pm, at the West Dubbo Bowling Club, Whylandra Street Dubbo. Zumba Kids 4.15pm, at West Dubbo Primary Community Centre. A FUN dynamic class that keeps young bodies active, for kids aged 5 to 12, only a gold coin donation per family. Overeaters Anonymous 5.30pm, at St Brigid’s Church, in the old building, entry via Brisbane Street. Speaker/Identification Meeting. Contact: Rachel 0476 002 928. Above Board Gamers 6pm, second and fourth Wednesday of the month, at Pipe Band Hall. GET involved in the fastest growing hobby in the world, board gaming. Bring a board game or borrow from the extensive library. No experience needed. Free. Contact: Alan 0432 278 235 or Andrew 0400 014 342.

SPOT THE DIFFERENCE

SUDOKU EXTRA

The idea of Go Figure is to arrive at the figures given at the bottom and right-hand columns of the diagram by following the arithmetic signs in the order they are given (that is, from left to right and top to bottom). Use only the numbers below the diagram to complete its blank squares and use each of the nine numbers only once.

Place a number in the empty boxes in such a way that each row across, each column down and each small 9-box square contains all of the numbers from one to nine.

EXTRA SOLUTIONS: See the TV+ Guide


42

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

TV+

Friday January 26 ABC

PRIME7

6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 Australia Day: Flag Raising And Citizenship Ceremony. (CC) 10.15 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 11.00 Classic Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 1.00 Australian Of The Year 2018. (R, CC) 2.15 One Plus One. (R, CC) 2.45 To Be Advised. 2.55 Dream Gardens. (R, CC) 3.25 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 4.15 Pointless. (R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.30 Summer Drum. (CC) (Final) 5.55 Classic Countdown: 1982. (PG, R, CC) 6.55 Governor-General’s Australia Day Address. (CC) An address to the nation from Governor-General Sir Peter Cosgrove to commemorate Australia Day. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Presents the latest news stories, with coverage of events as they unfold, interviews and analysis from expert guests. 7.30 Gardening Australia. (CC) (Series return) Jane explores the garden of Dame Nellie Melba. Meet indigenous author and historian Bruce Pascoe. Mil 8.30 The Best Of Back Roads. (PG, CC) Heather Ewart returns to communities whose good humour and inventiveness inspires and uplifts. 9.30 The Wake Of The May Queen. (CC) Takes a look at the SV May Queen, which at 150 is Australia’s oldest sail trading vessel still afloat. 10.35 Paul Kelly Live At Sydney Opera House. (M, R, CC) A performance by Paul Kelly. 12.35 Rage. (MA15+) Continuous music programming.

ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.05 Ben And Holly. (R, CC) 7.20 Shaun The Sheep. (R, CC) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Gruen XL. (M, R, CC) (Final) 9.15 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. (M, CC) 9.45 Episodes. (M, CC) 10.45 Buzzcocks. 11.20 The Office. 11.40 30 Rock. 12.00 Parks And Recreation. 12.20 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 12.50 Buzzcocks. 1.20 The Office. 1.40 30 Rock. 2.00 Parks And Recreation. 2.25 News Update. 2.30 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 5.35 Dragons: Race To The Edge. (PG) 5.55 Dennis & Gnasher: Unleashed! (R, CC) 6.10 Nowhere Boys: Two Moons Rising. (PG, R, CC) 6.35 Tomorrow When The War Began. (PG, R, CC) 7.20 Deadly 60. (R, CC) 7.50 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 8.35 Horrible Histories. (R, CC) 9.05 Trip For Biscuits. (PG, R, CC) 9.15 Degrassi: The Next Generation. (PG, R, CC) 9.35 Close. 5.00 Grojband. (R, CC) 5.20 The Legend Of Korra. (PG, R, CC) 5.45 Children’s Programs.

ABC NEWS 6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 Australia Day: Flag Raising And Citizenship Ceremony. (CC) 10.15 ABC News. (CC) 6.25 Summer Drum. (R, CC) 6.55 Governor-General’s Australia Day Address. (CC) 7.00 ABC News National. 8.00 ABC News. 9.30 Women’s Work. (R, CC) (Final) 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. (CC) 11.30 Summer Drum. (R, CC) (Final) 12.00 ABC Late News. 12.30 One Plus One. (R, CC) 1.00 BBC Impact. 1.30 Hear Me Out. (R, CC) 2.00 Al Jazeera. 3.00 BBC World. 3.30 Late Programs.

NINE

WIN

Dubbo’s TV Guide

SBS

6.00 Sunrise. (CC) 10.00 Better Homes And Gardens Summer. (R, CC) 11.30 Seven Morning News. (CC) 12.00 MOVIE: Volcano: Fire On The Mountain. (PG, R, CC) (1997) Dan Cortese. 2.00 The Chase. (R, CC) 3.00 Tennis. (CC) Australian Open. Day 12. Women’s doubles final. 5.30 The Chase Australia. (R, CC)

6.00 Today. (CC) 10.00 Today Extra. (PG, CC) Presented by David Campbell and Sonia Kruger. 11.30 Morning News. (CC) 12.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, CC) Variety show. 1.00 Extra. (CC) Entertainment news program. 1.30 Cricket. (CC) One-Day International Series. Australia v England. Game 4. Afternoon session. From Adelaide Oval.

6.00 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 6.30 Family Feud. (R, CC) 7.00 Ent. Tonight. (R, CC) 7.30 WIN News. (R, CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 The Living Room: Summer Edition. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. (CC) 2.30 Neighbours. (R, CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 4.00 The Cook’s Pantry With Matt Sinclair. (R, CC) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)

6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Sunrise Ceremony. 7.30 Wugulora Morning Ceremony. 8.35 Ningla A-Na. (PG, R) 10.00 Anthem Sessions. (PG, R) 10.30 Songlines. (PG, R) 11.25 Anthem Sessions. (R) 12.00 Sunrise Ceremony. (R) 1.00 Songlines. (PG, R) 2.00 Anthem Sessions. (R) 2.35 Lousy Little Sixpence. (PG, R) 3.30 Vote Yes For Aborigines. (R, CC) 4.35 Ngarritj. (R) 4.55 Made In Italy With Silvia Colloca. (R, CC) 5.25 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)

6.00 PRIME7 News. (CC) 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) 7.00 Tennis. (CC) Australian Open. Night 12. Men’s singles semi-final. From Melbourne Park. 10.30 MOVIE: The Boy Next Door. (MA15+, R, CC) (2015) A high-school teacher who is still reeling from the news her husband cheated on her begins an affair with a student who has moved in next door, only to have the relationship turn into a dangerous obsession. Jennifer Lopez, Ryan Guzman, Kristin Chenoweth.

6.00 Nine News. (CC) 6.30 Cricket. (CC) One-Day International Series. Australia v England. Game 4. Evening session. From Adelaide Oval. Commentary from Mark Nicholas, Mark Taylor and Michael Slater. 10.30 MOVIE: Fun With Dick And Jane. (M, R, CC) (2005) When a corporation’s newly promoted vice president loses his job, suburban home, luxury cars and status-conscious friends after being framed for a financial scandal, he embarks on a life of crime with his wife. Jim Carrey, Téa Leoni, Alec Baldwin.

6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) Join the hosts for a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 Australia Day Concert. (CC) Christine Anu, Anthony Callea and Marcia Hines perform live from the Sydney Opera House. 9.30 The Graham Norton Show. (M, R, CC) Irish comedian Graham Norton chats with actor Jane Fonda, stars of the The Killing of a Sacred Deer, Nicole Kidman and Colin Farrell, Bryan Cranston who is performing at the National Theatre, and comedian Matt Lucas. Niall Horan performs Too Much To Ask. 10.30 Cram! (M, R, CC) Two teams of comedians and celebrities test their memories across a series of general knowledge categories. 11.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC)

6.00 Food Safari. (R, CC) Maeve explores the delicious and complex world of Jewish food, full of age-old traditions and customs. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 Human Planet: Grasslands – The Roots Of Power. (R, CC) Explores how humans have adapted to a wide range of conflicting environments. 8.30 MOVIE: Hunt For The Wilderpeople. (PG, CC) (2016) A national manhunt is launched to find a rebellious kid and his foster uncle after they go on the run. Sam Neill, Julian Dennison, Rima Te Wiata. 10.25 Six. (MA15+, CC) (Final) The team comes face-to-face with Michael. 11.15 SBS World News Late Edition. (CC) 11.50 MOVIE: Only Lovers Left Alive. (M, R, CC) (2013) An ancient couple reunite. Tilda Swinton, Tom Hiddleston.

12.30 Home Shopping. (R)

12.30 My Surf TV. (R, CC) 1.00 Extra. (R, CC) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.00 Rizzoli & Isles. (M, R, CC) 3.00 The Avengers. (PG, R) 4.00 Global Shop. 4.30 The Baron. (PG, R) 5.30 Good Morning America. (CC)

12.30 The Project. (R, CC) A look at the day’s news. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) Hosted by Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Home Shopping. (R)

2.00 Vikings. (MA15+, R, CC) 4.50 Poh & Co. Bitesize. (R, CC) 4.55 Luke Nguyen’s United Kingdom Bitesize. (R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News. (CC)

7TWO

9GO!

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Better Homes. (R, CC) 1.00 Catch Phrase. (R) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 Medical Rookies. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. (PG, R) 4.30 The Great Outdoors. (R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 7.30 Great Gardens Of The World. (R, CC) 8.30 Selling Houses Aust. (R, CC) 10.30 To Build Or Not To Build. (R) 11.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 12.30 Late Programs.

7MATE

ONE

6.00 Children’s Programs. 11.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 BattleBots. (PG, R) 1.00 Dawson’s Creek. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Children’s Programs. 5.35 First Flight. 5.45 MOVIE: Aliens In The Attic. (PG, R, CC) (2009) 7.30 MOVIE: 17 Again. (PG, R, CC) (2009) 9.30 MOVIE: Easy A. (M, R) (2010) 11.30 WWE Smackdown. (MA15+) 12.30 Total Divas. (M) 1.30 Uncle Grandpa. (PG, R) 2.00 Regular Show. (PG, R) 2.30 Pokémon The Series: Sun & Moon. (R) 3.00 Green Lantern. (PG, R) 3.30 Children’s Programs.

9GEM

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 NFL This Week. 11.00 Charlie’s Angels. (PG, R) 12.00 Aussie Barbecue Heroes. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 The Big Adventure. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Mountain Men. (PG, R) 4.00 What Went Down. (PG, R) 4.30 Mountain Men. (PG, R) 5.30 Tennis. (CC) Australian Open. Day 12. Women’s doubles final. 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Prospectors. (PG, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Rising Sun. (M, R) (1993) Sean Connery. 11.10 Ultimate Factories. (PG, R) 12.10 Late Programs.

7FLIX

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 TV Shop. (R) 10.30 Harry. (PG, CC) 11.30 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 12.00 MOVIE: We Of The Never Never. (R, CC) (1982) 2.45 Colin & Justin’s Home Heist. (PG) 3.55 Airport 24/7: Miami. (PG, R, CC) 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. (PG) 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, CC) 7.00 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 7.30 Clash Of The Collectables. 8.30 MOVIE: The Game. (M, R, CC) (1997) Michael Douglas. 11.10 Southern Justice. (M, R) 12.05 Late Programs.

9LIFE

6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Austin & Ally. (R, CC) 8.30 I Didn’t Do It. (R, CC) 9.00 Match It. (R, CC) 10.00 James Robison. (PG) 10.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Once Upon A Time. (PG, R) 3.00 Star Wars Rebels. (PG, R) 4.00 The Muppets. (R, CC) 5.00 MOVIE: Winnie The Pooh. (R, CC) (2011) 6.30 MOVIE: Mighty Joe Young. (PG, R, CC) (1998) 8.45 MOVIE: Father Of The Bride Part II. (R, CC) (1995) Steve Martin. 11.00 MOVIE: Fatal Honeymoon. (M, R, CC) (2012) 1.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 House Hunters Reno. (R) 1.00 Ready, Set, Reno. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Ready, Set, Reno. (R, CC) 2.00 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 3.00 The Block. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 Texas Flip And Move. (R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. 7.30 Stone House Revival. 8.30 Barnwood Builders. 9.30 Log Cabin Living. 10.30 Maine Cabin Masters. (PG) 11.30 Keeping Up With The Kardashians. (MA15+) 12.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Cricket. (CC) Big Bash League. Perth Scorchers v Adelaide Strikers. Replay. 12.00 Happy Days. (PG, R) 1.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 2.00 Star Trek. (PG, R) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 6.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) Hogan tries to rescue an underground leader. 6.30 Happy Days. (PG, R) 7.30 MacGyver. (PG, R) 8.30 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) A Buddhist student helps the Rangers investigate the kidnapping of his mother. 10.30 MOVIE: Once Upon A Time In Brooklyn. (MA15+, R) (2013) 1.00 Shopping. (R) 2.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 3.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) 5.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R)

ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Littlest Petshop. (R) 6.30 Mako: Island Of Secrets. (R, CC) 7.05 Pokémon. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G: NEXT. 8.00 Totally Wild. (C, R, CC) 8.35 Bob The Builder. (R) 9.00 Super Wings. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Dr Quinn. (PG, R) 11.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (M) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Family Feud. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (CC) 7.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Will & Grace. (PG, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Alex & Eve. (M) (2015) 10.30 Will & Grace. (PG, R) 11.30 James Corden. (M) 12.30 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 JAG. (PG, R) 4.30 Dr Quinn. (PG, R) 5.30 Shopping. (R)

SBS VICELAND 6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 MOVIE: Anne Of Green Gables. (PG) (2016) 1.35 Does America. (PG) 2.00 365. 2.05 Dara Ó Briain: School Of Hard Sums. 3.00 SBS On-Demand Staff Picks. (PG) 3.05 Full Frontal. (PG) 4.00 The Mindy Project. (PG) 4.30 The War On Kids. (PG) 5.00 Soccer. W-League. Round 13. Melbourne Victory v Sydney FC. 7.20 Batman. (PG, R) 8.20 Fashionista. 8.30 Adam Looking For Eve: Finland. (MA15+) 9.20 Harlots. (MA15+) (New Series) 11.15 Late Programs.

SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Bizarre Foods. (R) 10.30 Far Eastern Odyssey. (R) 11.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 12.00 Food: Fact Or Fiction. (R) 12.30 Dinner At Tiffani’s. (R) 1.00 Restaurant: Impossible. (PG, R) 2.00 Food Lab. (PG, R) 2.30 The Naked Chef. (PG, R) 3.00 Siba’s Table. (R) 3.30 Bondi Harvest. (PG, R) 5.30 Surfing The Menu. (PG, R) 7.30 Man Fire Food. 9.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 10.30 Food: Fact Or Fiction. (R) 11.00 Restaurant: Impossible. (PG, R) 12.00 Late Programs.

NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Anthem Sessions. (PG, R) 10.30 Songlines. (R) 11.25 Anthem Sessions. (R) 12.00 Sunrise Ceremony. (R) 1.00 Songlines. (R) 2.05 Anthem Sessions. (R) 2.35 Lousy Little Sixpence. (PG, R) 3.35 Vote Yes For Aborigines. (R, CC) 4.35 Ngarritj. (R) 5.00 MOVIE: Jedda. (PG, R) (1955) 6.30 The Big Wet. (R) 7.30 Zach’s Ceremony. 9.00 NITV News. (R) 9.30 Sunrise Ceremony. (R) 10.30 Yabun Festival. (PG, R) 11.30 Keeping The Language. (PG, R) 12.00 Volumz. (PG)

CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.

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43

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

TV+

Saturday January 27 ABC

PRIME7

6.00 Rage. (PG, CC) 10.00 Rage: Retro Month. (PG, CC) 11.00 Girt By Sea. (R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 12.30 Grantchester. (PG, R, CC) 1.15 The Best Of Back Roads. (PG, R, CC) 2.20 Great Expectations: Karta The OrangUtan’s Story. (PG, R, CC) 3.05 Redesign My Brain With Todd Sampson. (PG, R, CC) 4.05 David Attenborough’s Galapagos. (R, CC) 4.55 QI. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Antiques Roadshow. (PG, CC) 6.30 A Taste Of Landline. (CC) Hosted by Pip Courtney. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Presents the latest news stories, with coverage of events as they unfold, interviews and analysis from expert guests. 7.30 Grantchester. (M, R, CC) (Final) A missing child strikes fear into the heart of the village and it is up to Sidney to rally the community. 8.20 Father Brown. (M, R, CC) (Final) A voodoo priest summons the spirit of Baron Samdi to take revenge on a man who stole his girlfriend. 9.05 Broadchurch. (M, R, CC) Important pieces of evidence come to light against key suspects in the case. 9.55 Silent Witness. (MA15+, R, CC) When an ex-convict is killed in his home, suspicion falls on a recently released child killer. 10.55 Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries. (M, R, CC) A gang leader is murdered. 11.50 Rage: Retro Month. (MA15+) Classic clips from the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s. 5.00 Rage. (PG, CC) Continuous music programming.

ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.50 Andy’s Prehistoric Adventures. (R, CC) 7.05 Ben And Holly. (R, CC) 7.20 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Would I Lie To You? (R, CC) 8.30 Live At The Apollo. (M, R, CC) 9.15 Comedy Next Gen. (M, CC) 10.15 The Best Of Fresh Blood 2017. (MA15+, R, CC) 10.45 Ill Behaviour. 11.15 Inside Amy Schumer. 11.35 Asian Provocateur. 12.10 The Trip. 12.40 Episodes. 1.40 Live At The Apollo. 2.25 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.45 Get Blake! (Series return) 7.55 Children’s Programs. 5.55 Dennis & Gnasher: Unleashed! (R, CC) (Final) 6.10 Nowhere Boys: Two Moons Rising. (PG, R, CC) (Final) 6.35 Tomorrow When The War Began. (PG, R, CC) 7.20 Deadly 60. (R, CC) 8.45 Horrible Histories. (R, CC) 9.15 Trip For Biscuits. (PG, R, CC) 9.25 Degrassi: The Next Generation. (PG, R, CC) 9.45 Close. 5.00 Grojband. (R, CC) 5.20 The Legend Of Korra. (PG, R) 5.45 Children’s Programs.

ABC NEWS 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 ABC News. 1.30 Planet America. 2.00 ABC News. 2.30 Boiling Point: The NT’s Fracking Dilemma. 3.00 ABC News. 3.30 The Breakfast Couch. 4.00 ABC News. 4.30 The Drum Weekly. 5.00 ABC News. 5.30 One Plus One. 6.00 ABC News Weekend. 6.30 The Breakfast Couch. 7.00 ABC News Weekend. 7.30 Back Roads. (PG) 8.00 ABC News Weekend. 8.30 Foreign Corre. (R, CC) 9.00 ABC News Weekend. 9.30 World This Week. 10.00 ABC News. 10.30 Late Programs.

NINE

WIN

Dubbo’s TV Guide

SBS

6.00 Home Shopping. (R) 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. (CC) 10.00 Berett’s Tour De Cure. (PG, CC) 11.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 11.30 The Phantom Of The Opera At The Royal Albert Hall. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 MOVIE: Bewitched. (PG, R, CC) (2005) Nicole Kidman. 5.00 Seven News At 5. (CC) 5.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R, CC)

6.00 Good Morning America. (CC) 7.00 Weekend Today. (CC) 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG, CC) 12.00 Cybershack. (PG, CC) 12.30 Bangkok Airport. (R, CC) 1.30 MOVIE: Getting Even With Dad. (PG, R, CC) (1994) 3.30 Living The Dream. (PG, CC) 4.30 Dream Job. (CC) (New Series) 5.00 News: First At Five. (CC) 5.30 Customs. (PG, R, CC)

6.00 A Taste Of Travel. (R, CC) 6.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R, CC) 7.00 RPM: Summer Series. (R, CC) 7.30 Good Chef Bad Chef. (R, CC) 8.00 Family Feud. (R, CC) 8.30 Weekend Feast. (R, CC) 9.30 Studio 10: Saturday. (PG, CC) 12.00 Cricket. (CC) Women’s Big Bash League. Melbourne Stars v Hobart Hurricanes. 3.05 Cricket. (CC) Big Bash League. Melbourne Stars v Hobart Hurricanes.

6.00 WorldWatch. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS News. (R, CC) 2.00 Small Business Secrets Summer Encore. (R, CC) 2.30 Figure Skating. (CC) ISU European Championships. Men’s and Ice Dance competitions. 3.55 Destination Flavour Down Under. (R, CC) 4.30 Greece With Simon Reeve. (PG, R, CC) 5.35 The Supervet. (CC) (Series return)

6.00 Seven News. (CC) 6.30 Tennis. (CC) Australian Open. Night 13. Women’s singles final and men’s doubles final. From Melbourne Park. With the 2015 addition of Margaret Court Arena as a third retractableroof stadium at Melbourne Park, the Australian Open is the only Grand Slam in the world with three retractable-roof venues, making it a truly weatherproof tournament. 10.30 MOVIE: Layer Cake. (MA15+, R, CC) (2004) A successful drug dealer, on the verge of retirement, is dragged back into the criminal underworld after he is ordered to settle a sour deal and find a crime lord’s missing daughter. Daniel Craig, Sienna Miller, Tom Hardy.

6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 MOVIE: Grease. (PG, R, CC) (1978) A naive schoolgirl and a teenage rebel, who had a summer romance, reunite at a California high school. John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John, Stockard Channing. 9.15 MOVIE: Saturday Night Fever. (MA15+, R, CC) (1977) An uneducated teenager from Brooklyn in New York City escapes his boring job and demanding family, by hitting the local disco on the weekends where he is king of the dance floor. John Travolta, Karen Lynne Gorney, Barry Miller. 11.45 MOVIE: American Gigolo. (M, R, CC) (1980) A Beverly Hills’ escort, who mostly caters to an older female clientele, finds his world falling apart after he is falsely accused of murdering one of his clients. Richard Gere, Lauren Hutton, Hector Elizondo.

7.15 Cricket. (CC) Big Bash League. Brisbane Heat v Melbourne Renegades. From the Gabba, Brisbane. Commentary from Roz Kelly, Mark Howard, Damien Fleming, Andrew Symonds and Roger Oldridge. 11.00 Cram! (M, R, CC) Two teams of comedians and celebrities test their memories across a series of general knowledge categories. Hosted by Peter Helliar, with team captains Dilruk Jayasinha and Virginia Gay.

6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.35 Mars. (CC) The psychological pressures of life on Mars reveal themselves when the crew becomes trapped inside the habitat during a dust storm that has lasted for months. Documentary footage includes a look at how scientists are studying the effects of extreme isolation. 9.30 MOVIE: Brooklyn. (M, CC) (2015) After moving to America during the ’50s, an Irish immigrant falls for a local. However, when her past catches up with her, she must choose between the two countries and the lives they both represent. Saoirse Ronan, Domhnall Gleeson=. 11.30 MOVIE: Drive. (MA15+, R, CC) (2011) A Hollywood stunt driver moonlights as a getaway driver for the criminal underworld. Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan, Bryan Cranston.

2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 MOVIE: The Darkest Hour. (M, R, CC) (2011) 4.00 Plonk. (M, R, CC) 4.30 Global Shop. 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Wesley Impact. (R)

12.00 48 Hours: Live To Tell – Sophia’s Secret. (M, R, CC) A look at the story of Sophia Putney-Wilcox. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 The Table. 5.00 Hour Of Power With Bobby Schuller.

1.25 MOVIE: We Are The Night. (MA15+, R) (2010) 3.15 MOVIE: Rock The Casbah. (MA15+, R) (2012) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News. (CC)

1.00 Home Shopping. (R)

7TWO 6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 The Great Outdoors. (R, CC) 1.00 Out Of The Blue. (R, CC) 1.30 SA Weekender. (R, CC) 2.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. (PG) 2.30 Vasili’s Garden. (R) 3.00 Creek To Coast. (R, CC) 4.00 Qld Weekender. (R, CC) 4.30 The Great Outdoors. (R, CC) 5.30 To Build Or Not To Build. (R) 6.30 Life On The Edge. (PG, R) 7.30 The Yorkshire Vet In Autumn. (PG) 8.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 10.30 Escape To The Continent. (R) 11.45 Creek To Coast. (R, CC) 12.15 Late Programs.

7MATE 6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 Bull Riding. PBR Australia. 2017 National Finals. 12.00 Motor Racing. 400 Thunder Drag Racing Series. 1.00 Blokesworld. (PG) 1.30 Prospectors. (PG, R) 2.30 Mountain Men. (PG, R) 3.30 To Be Advised. 4.00 Screaming Reels. (PG) 4.30 Big Angry Fish. (PG) 5.30 Wicked Tuna. (M, R) 6.30 Wicked Tuna. (PG) 7.30 Wicked Tuna. (M) 8.30 Hardliners. (M, R) 9.00 MOVIE: Sphere. (M, R) (1998) 11.45 Hardcore Pawn. (M, R) 12.15 Late Programs.

7FLIX 6.00 It’s Academic. (R, CC) 7.00 Penn Zero: Part-Time Hero. (R) 7.30 Kickin’ It. (R, CC) 8.00 Dog With A Blog. (R) 8.30 Liv And Maddie. (R) 9.00 Mighty Med. (PG, R) 10.00 Match It. (R, CC) 11.00 Celebrity Splash. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 I Didn’t Do It. (R) 3.00 Jessie. (R) 4.00 Dog With A Blog. (R) 5.30 MOVIE: The Makeover. (PG, R, CC) (2013) 7.30 Castle. (M, R, CC) 8.30 Bones. (M, R, CC) 11.20 MOVIE: Now Is Good. (M, R, CC) (2012) 1.30 The Happenings. (M, R, CC) 2.40 Late Programs.

9GO! 6.00 Children’s Programs. 5.00 Hammy’s Boomerang Adventure. (R) 5.05 Far Far Away Idol. (PG, R) 5.15 MOVIE: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret Of The Ooze. (1991) 7.00 MOVIE: Shrek. (PG, R, CC) (2001) 8.45 MOVIE: The Hunger Games. (M, R, CC) (2012) 11.30 Balls Of Steel Australia. (MA15+, R) 12.00 Adult Swim. (MA15+, R) 12.30 Titan Maximum. (MA15+, R) 1.00 Science Of Stupid. (M, R, CC) 3.00 Yo-Kai. (PG, R) 3.30 Young Justice. (PG, R) 4.00 Children’s Programs.

9GEM 6.00 Rainbow Country. (R) 6.30 Skippy. (R) 7.00 TV Shop. (R) 8.00 Danoz. 8.30 TV Shop. (R) 10.00 River Cottage Veg Every Day. (PG, R) 11.05 MOVIE: Bonnie Prince Charlie. (R, CC) (1948) 1.35 MOVIE: Charade. (PG, R) (1963) 3.35 MOVIE: Out Of Africa. (PG, R, CC) (1985) 7.00 MOVIE: Shane. (R) (1953) 9.25 MOVIE: The Gauntlet. (M, R, CC) (1977) Clint Eastwood. 11.35 Cold Case. (M, R, CC) 12.35 Four In A Bed. (PG, R) 1.00 Call And Win. (M) 3.00 Late Programs.

9LIFE 6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 House Hunters. (R) 11.00 Postcards Summer. (PG, R, CC) 11.30 Getaway. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Barnwood Builders. (R) 1.00 Log Cabin Living. (R) 2.00 Colin & Justin’s Home Heist. (PG, R) 3.00 Maine Cabin Masters. (PG, R) 4.00 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 5.00 Million Dollar Listing. (PG, R) 6.00 Stone House Revival. (R) 6.30 Ready, Set, Reno. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 House Hunters. 8.30 House Hunters International. 9.30 House Hunters Reno. 10.30 Island Hunters. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.

ONE

SBS VICELAND

6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 9.00 Get Smart. (PG, R) 10.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 11.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 12.00 All 4 Adventure. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 1.30 Escape Fishing. (R, CC) 2.00 Monster Jam. 3.00 Happy Days. (PG, R) 4.00 MacGyver. (PG, R) 5.00 Operation Repo. (PG, R) 5.30 iFish Summer. (CC) 6.00 Attenborough’s The Life Of Mammals. (R, CC) 7.00 Football: Just For Kicks. 7.40 Soccer. A-League. Round 18. Central Coast Mariners v Brisbane Roar. 10.00 Homicide: Hours To Kill. (M, R) 11.00 48 Hours. (M, R, CC) 1.00 Cricket. (CC) Women’s Big Bash League. Melbourne Stars v Hobart Hurricanes. Replay. 4.30 RPM: Summer Series. (R, CC) 5.00 Operation Repo. (PG, R) 5.30 Whacked Out Sports. (PG, R)

ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Littlest Petshop. (R) 6.30 Mako: Island Of Secrets. (R, CC) 7.00 Lexi And Lottie: Trusty Twin Detectives. (C, R, CC) 7.30 Mako: Island Of Secrets. (C, R, CC) 8.00 Totally Wild. (C, CC) 8.30 Scope. (C, CC) 9.05 The Loop. (PG) 11.35 Crash The Bash. 12.05 Australia Day Concert. (R, CC) 2.35 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 3.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 4.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.30 The Loop. (PG, R) Hosted by Scott Tweedie and Olivia Phyland. 9.00 Will & Grace. (PG, R) Will and Jack awake in the same bed. 11.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 12.30 Charmed. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 3.30 Strawberry Shortcake: Berry Bitty Adventures. (R) 5.00 Shopping. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Mind Versus Body. (R, CC) 1.00 Forever Young. (PG, R) 1.30 Vs Arashi. (PG, R) 2.25 365. (PG) 2.30 Phone Shop Idol. (R) 3.05 Woman With Gloria Steinem. (PG, R) 3.35 SBS On-Demand Staff Picks. (PG, R) 3.40 Jungletown. (PG, R) 4.30 Cyberwar. (PG, R) 5.00 Aussie Jokers. (PG, R) 5.30 Basketball. NBL. Round 16. Brisbane Bullets v Adelaide 36ers. 7.30 RAW Comedy Festival. (M, R) 9.10 MOVIE: X+Y. (M, R, CC) (2014) 11.10 Late Programs.

SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 11.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 12.00 Food: Fact Or Fiction. (R) 12.30 Bondi Harvest. (PG, R) 1.00 Restaurant: Impossible. (PG, R) 2.00 Surfing The Menu. (R) 3.00 Bondi Harvest. (PG, R) 3.30 Man Fire Food. (R) 4.30 NZ With Nick Honeyman. (R) 6.30 Food Paradise International. (PG, R) 7.30 Big Bad BBQ Brawl. (PG) 8.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 9.30 Bondi Harvest. (PG, R) 10.30 Born To Cook: Jack Stein Down Under. (R) 11.30 NZ With Nick Honeyman. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.

NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.30 Anthem Sessions. (PG, R) 2.00 Ngarritj. (R) 2.30 Keeping The Language. (PG, R) 3.00 Yabun Festival. (PG, R) 4.00 On The Edge. (PG, R) 4.30 Noongar Dandjoo. (PG, R) 5.00 Sacred Ground. (PG, R) 6.00 Maori TV’s Native Affairs Summer. (R) 6.30 One With Nature. (R) 7.00 City Slickers Rodeo. (R) 7.30 The Collard Family Vs The State Of WA. (M, R) 8.30 Football. NTFL. Darwin Buffaloes v St Mary’s. 10.30 Late Programs.

CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.

• FOR ALL YOUR WINDOW TREATMENTS • TO INSULATE – CUT HEATING & COOLING COSTS • NEW HOMES – BRING IN YOUR PLANS FOR A QUOTE • RENOVATING, NO JOB TOO BIG OR SMALL • BUILDERS & COMMERCIAL WORK MOST WELCOME NOW DOING FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY!

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44

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

TV+

Sunday January 28 ABC

PRIME7

NINE

WIN

Dubbo’s TV Guide

SBS

6.00 Rage. (PG, CC) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. (CC) 10.00 Offsiders: Summer Edition. (CC) 10.30 The World This Week. (R, CC) 11.00 Compass. (PG, R, CC) 11.30 Songs Of Praise. (R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 12.30 Golden Guitar Awards. 1.30 Gardening Australia. (R, CC) 2.30 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery. (PG, R, CC) 3.10 Father Brown. (PG, R, CC) (Final) 4.00 Antiques Roadshow. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 QI. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Whitlam: The Power And The Passion. (PG, R, CC)

6.00 Home Shopping. (R) 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. (CC) 10.00 Cycling. (CC) Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race. Elite women’s race. Highlights. From Victoria. 11.00 Cycling. (CC) Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race. Elite men’s race. From Victoria. 4.00 Tennis. (CC) Australian Open. Day 14. Mixed doubles final. From Melbourne Park.

6.00 Good Morning America: Sunday. (CC) 7.00 Weekend Today. (CC) 10.00 My Surf TV. (CC) 10.30 Patriot Games. (PG, R, CC) 11.30 Kevin Can Wait. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 World’s Best Beaches. (R, CC) 1.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. (PG, CC) 1.30 Cricket. (CC) One-Day International Series. Australia v England. Game 5. Afternoon session.

6.00 Mass. (CC) 6.30 Hillsong. (CC) 7.00 Fishing Aust. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 8.00 GCBC. (R, CC) 8.30 Everyday Gourmet. (R, CC) 9.00 Places We Go. (R, CC) 9.30 St10. (PG, CC) 12.00 The Offroad Adventure Show. (CC) 1.00 All 4 Adventure. (CC) 2.00 Weekend Feast. (R, CC) 3.00 Ben’s Menu. (R, CC) 3.30 The 48 Hour Destination. (R, CC) 4.00 A Taste Of Travel. (CC) 4.30 RPM: Summer Series. (CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)

6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.00 Small Business Secrets Summer Encore. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 Speedweek. (CC) 3.00 Basketball. (CC) NBL. Round 16. Sydney Kings v Melbourne United. From Qudos Bank Arena, Sydney. 5.00 Small Business Secrets Summer Encore. (R, CC) 5.25 Hitler And Paris: The Untold Story. (CC)

6.30 The House With Annabel Crabb. (PG, R, CC) Annabel Crabb explores the Senate, presided over by Senate President Stephen Parry. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. (CC) Coverage of news, sports and weather. 7.40 Attenborough At 90: Behind The Lens. (R, CC) Takes a look at the life and career of legendary English broadcaster and naturalist Sir David Attenborough. 8.30 Midsomer Murders. (M, R, CC) (Final) DCI Barnaby and DS Winter investigate when the winner of a music award is murdered and his violin stolen. 10.00 The Super-Rich And Us. (R, CC) Part 2 of 2. 10.55 Our Girl. (M, R, CC) Molly is sent to Afghanistan as a medic on one of the British army’s final deployments. 11.55 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) The Sontarans activate their master plan.

6.00 Seven News. (CC) 6.30 Tennis. (CC) Australian Open. Night 14. Men’s final. From Melbourne Park. 10.30 The Good Doctor. (M, R, CC) The surgical team is initially impressed with a charming young doctor, but his true character puts one of them in an awkward position. Dr Glassman feels Shaun needs more support with his personal life. 11.30 The Goldbergs. (PG, R, CC) Disappointed with her unenthusiastic family during the holidays, Beverly creates “Super Hanukkah” to get them into the spirit. Adam is annoyed that Barry is more interested in hanging with Lainey than him, so he triple-dog dares his brother with results neither one see coming.

6.00 Nine News. (CC) 6.30 Cricket. (CC) One-Day International Series. Australia v England. Game 5. Evening session. From Optus Stadium, Perth. Commentary from Mark Nicolas, Mark Taylor and Michael Clark. 10.30 60 Minutes. (CC) Current affairs program, investigating, analysing and uncovering the issues affecting all Australians. Featuring reports from Liz Hayes, Allison Langdon, Tara Brown, Charles Wooley, Ross Coulthart and Liam Bartlett. 11.30 House. (M, R, CC) House believes a patient’s seizure was caused by an infection. However, when the man suffers a heart attack, the team scrambles to organise a transplant. House suspects Wilson of cheating on his wife.

6.00 Family Feud: Sunday. (CC) Two families try to win big prizes by guessing the most popular responses to a survey of the public. 6.30 The Sunday Project. (CC) 7.30 I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! (CC) (Series return) Ten celebrity contestants’ identities are unveiled as they enter the jungle campsite. 9.00 SEAL Team. (CC) (New Series) The members of an elite US Navy SEAL team must navigate their professional and personal lives as they train, plan and execute the most dangerous, high stakes missions their country can ask of them. 10.00 SEAL Team. (CC) Jason and the team find innocent civilians in desperate need of rescue while on a mission in Syria. 11.00 To Be Advised.

6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 Secrets Of Tutankhamun’s Treasures. (CC) Part 3 of 3. Although many have claimed he was a frail king, riddled with diseases and weakened by inbreeding, recent discoveries related to the treasures discovered in his tomb may offer more concrete evidence. 8.30 MOVIE: Scientology: Going Clear. (M, R, CC) (2015) An in-depth look at the inner workings of the Church of Scientology, a religion whose prominent adherents include many A-list Hollywood celebrities, through the experiences of eight former members. Lawrence Wright, Mike Rinder. 10.40 Last Days Of Solitary. (CC) An exploration of the controversial practice of solitary confinement, in the the US prison system.

12.40 1.50 2.50 3.50 4.20 5.05

12.00 MOVIE: Total Stranger. (M, R, CC) (1999) A woman rents a room to a stranger. Lindsay Crouse, Zoe McLellan. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Sunrise. (CC)

12.30 The Mysteries Of Laura. (M, R, CC) 1.30 Bad Robots. (M, R) 2.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 The Baron. (PG, R) 4.00 Good Morning America: Sunday. (CC) 5.00 News. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)

12.00 48 Hours: Death On Valentine’s Day. (M, R, CC) An interview with Curtis Lovelace. 1.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC) Morning news and talk show.

12.40 Full Frontal With Samantha Bee. (M, R) 1.10 MOVIE: Attila Marcel. (M, R) (2013) 3.00 The Unknown Known. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News. (CC)

Rage. (MA15+) Our Girl. (M, R, CC) Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) The Bill. (M, R, CC) Murder, She Wrote. (PG, R, CC) The Bill. (PG, R, CC)

ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.05 Ben And Holly. (R, CC) 7.20 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (R, CC) 8.00 Michael McIntyre’s Comedy Roadshow. (M, R, CC) 8.45 Ricky Gervais Live: Animals. (M, R, CC) 10.00 Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled. (M, R, CC) 10.50 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 11.30 Red Dwarf. 12.05 The League Of Gentlemen. 12.35 Murder In Successville. 1.10 Michael McIntyre’s Comedy Roadshow. 1.55 Dirty Laundry. 2.30 News Update. 2.35 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.45 Get Blake! (PG) 7.55 Children’s Programs. 6.00 MOVIE: The New Legends Of Monkey: The Telemovie. (PG, CC) (2018) 7.10 Officially Amazing. (R) 7.25 Kung Fu Panda. (R) 7.50 Danger Mouse. (R) 8.00 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.25 Fangbone! (R, CC) 8.35 Almost Naked Animals. (R, CC) 8.45 Dr Dimensionpants. (R) 9.10 Odd Squad. (R) 9.30 Strange Hill High. (R, CC) 9.55 Detentionaire. (R, CC) 10.15 Rage. (PG, R) 2.20 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

ABC NEWS 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 ABC News. 1.30 The Mix. 2.00 ABC News. 2.30 The Breakfast Couch. 3.00 ABC News. 3.30 A Taste Of Landline. 4.00 ABC News. 4.30 Offsiders: Summer Edition. (Final) 5.00 ABC News. 5.30 Compass. 6.00 ABC News Weekend. 6.30 Boiling Point: The NT’s Fracking Dilemma. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC News Hour. 8.00 The Best Of Back Roads. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 ABC News Weekend. 9.30 One Plus One. (R, CC) 10.00 ABC News. 10.30 Late Programs.

7TWO

9GO!

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 10.15 Travel Oz. (R, CC) 11.00 NBC Today. (R, CC) 12.00 Home And Away. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 The Real Seachange. (R, CC) 3.15 Escape To The Continent. (R) 4.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Dog Patrol. (PG) 7.00 Motorway Patrol. (PG, R) 7.30 Border Security: Int. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R, CC) 9.30 Brit Cops. (M) 10.30 Border Security: Int. (PG, R, CC) 11.30 Border Security. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Late Programs.

ONE

6.00 Children’s Programs. 5.30 MOVIE: Valiant. (2005) 7.00 MOVIE: Legally Blonde 2: Red, White And Blonde. (PG, R, CC) (2003) 9.00 MOVIE: The DUFF. (M, R, CC) (2015) 11.00 The Rich Kids Of Social Media. (M, R, CC) 12.00 Adult Swim. (MA15+) 12.30 Titan Maximum. (MA15+) 1.00 Top Gear. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Yo-Kai. (PG, R) 3.30 Young Justice. (PG, R) 4.00 Yu-Gi-Oh! (PG, R) 4.30 We Bare Bears. (PG, R) 4.50 Wild Kratts. (R) 5.10 Regal Academy. (R) 5.30 Children’s Programs.

7MATE

9GEM

6.00 Morning Programs. 7.30 Shopping. (R) 9.30 Adventure Angler. (PG) 10.00 Screaming Reels. (PG, R) 10.30 Tenpin Bowling. Rolling Thunder. 11.30 The Fishing Show. (PG) 12.30 Motor Racing. Night Thunder. 1.30 Swamp Men. (PG, R) 2.30 Big Australia. (R, CC) 3.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 6.30 MOVIE: Hellboy. (PG, R) (2004) 8.50 MOVIE: On Deadly Ground. (M, R) (1994) Steven Seagal. 10.55 MOVIE: Attack The Block. (MA15+, R) (2011) 12.40 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 Avengers. (PG, R) 11.30 Great Getaways. (PG, R, CC) 12.30 Clash Of The Collectables. (R) 1.30 MOVIE: A Countess From Hong Kong. (PG, R) (1967) 3.45 MOVIE: A Time To Love And A Time To Die. (PG, R) (1958) 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) 7.00 Weather Gone Viral. (PG) 8.00 The Secret Life Of The Zoo. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 Netball. International Quad Series. New Zealand Silver Ferns v Australian Diamonds. 11.00 The Closer. (M, R, CC) 12.00 Late Programs.

7FLIX

9LIFE

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Liv And Maddie. (R) 10.00 Mighty Med. (PG, R) 11.00 Zumbo’s Just Desserts. (PG, R, CC) 1.45 The Amazing Race Australia V New Zealand. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Benson. (PG, R) 3.30 Diff’rent Strokes. (PG, R) 4.30 Who’s The Boss? (PG, R, CC) 5.00 Just Shoot Me! (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.30 MOVIE: Daddy Day Care. (R, CC) (2003) 8.30 MOVIE: 28 Days. (M, R, CC) (2000) Sandra Bullock. 10.45 Blindspot. (M, R, CC) 1.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Postcards Summer. (PG, CC) 10.00 Maine Cabin Masters. (PG, R) 11.00 Dream Job. (R, CC) 11.30 House Hunters. (R) 12.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 1.30 Million Dollar Rooms. (PG, R) 2.30 Stone House Revival. (R) 3.30 Island Hunters. (R) 4.30 Ready, Set, Reno. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Flipping Out. (PG, R) 6.30 Texas Flip And Move. 7.30 Restored. 8.30 Fixer Upper. (PG) 9.30 Good Bones. (PG) 10.30 Dear Genevieve. (PG) 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND

6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Cricket. (CC) Women’s Big Bash League. Melbourne Stars v Hobart Hurricanes. Replay. 11.30 Cricket. (CC) Big Bash League. Melbourne Stars v Hobart Hurricanes. Replay. 3.30 Whacked Out Sports. (PG, R) 4.00 Operation Repo. (PG, R) 4.30 A Taste Of Travel. (R, CC) 5.00 Places We Go. (R, CC) 5.30 iFish Summer. (CC) 6.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 6.30 Scorpion. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Attenborough’s The Life Of Mammals. (R, CC) 8.30 Gold Coast Cops. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 MOVIE: The Gambler. (MA15+, R) (2014) 11.20 Car Crash Global: Caught On Camera. (M, R) 12.20 When We Go To War. (M, R) 1.25 RPM: Summer Series. (R, CC) 1.55 Outrun Cancer. (PG, R) 2.30 Operation Repo. (PG, R) 4.00 Monster Jam. (R) 5.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 5.30 Whacked Out Sports. (PG, R)

ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Littlest Petshop. (R) 6.30 Mako: Island Of Secrets. (R, CC) 7.05 Pokémon. (R) 7.35 Get Ace. (R, CC) 8.05 Sam Fox: Extreme Adventures. (R, CC) 8.30 Treasure Island. (R) 9.00 TMNT. (R) 10.00 Sherazade: The Untold Stories. (C, CC) 10.30 TMNT. (R) 11.00 Charmed. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 2.00 Rules Of Engagement. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.30 MOVIE: Capture The Flag. (PG, R) (2015) Carme Calvell, Dani Rovira. 8.30 The Graham Norton Show. (M, R, CC) Graham Norton chats with Hugh Grant. 9.30 Sex And The City. (M, R) Samantha receives shocking news. 10.30 Will & Grace. (PG, R) 12.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 TMNT. (R) 2.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 3.30 TMNT. (R) 5.00 Shopping. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.00 PopAsia. (PG) 10.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Insight. (R, CC) 1.00 Front Up. (PG, R) 1.30 Huang’s World. (PG, R, CC) 3.10 Cyberwar. (PG, R, CC) 3.40 MythBusters. (PG, R, CC) 4.40 States Of Undress. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Soccer. W-League. Round 13. Adelaide United v Brisbane Roar. 8.00 Full Frontal. (M, R, CC) 8.35 24 Hours In Police Custody. (PG, R, CC) 9.30 RuPaul’s Drag Race. 11.20 Bobby And Harriet Get Married. (New Series) 1.10 Late Programs.

SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Big Bad BBQ Brawl. (PG) 10.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 11.30 Bondi Harvest. (PG, R) 12.30 Born To Cook: Jack Stein Down Under. (R) 1.30 NZ With Nick Honeyman. (R) 2.30 Food Paradise International. (PG, R) 3.30 NZ With Nick Honeyman. (R) 6.30 Bizarre Foods. (R) 7.30 Bizarre Foods. (PG, R) 8.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 9.30 No Reservations. (PG, R) 10.30 Far Eastern Odyssey. (R) 11.30 NZ With Nick Honeyman. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.

NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.40 Football. NTFL. Darwin Buffaloes v St Mary’s. 3.30 Rugby League. Koori Knockout. Men’s Final. Newcastle Yowies v Griffith Three Ways United. 5.00 Te Kaea. 5.30 Maori TV’s Native Affairs Summer. (R) 6.00 On The Edge. (PG, R) 6.30 Designing Africa. (R) 7.00 Matauranga. (R) 7.30 One With Nature. (R) 8.30 MOVIE: Salute. (PG, R) (2008) 10.00 We Shall Remain. (PG, R) 11.25 Richard Cardinal: Cry From A Diary Of A Metis Child. (M, R) 12.00 Volumz. (PG, R)

CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.

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45

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

TV+

Monday January 29 ABC

PRIME7

NINE

WIN

Dubbo’s TV Guide

SBS

6.00 News Breakfast. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 10.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) 11.00 Classic Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 1.00 Midsomer Murders. (M, R, CC) (Final) 2.35 The Super-Rich And Us. (R, CC) 3.25 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 4.15 Pointless. (R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.10 The Drum. (CC) (Series return)

6.00 Sunrise. (CC) News, sport and weather. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG, CC) The latest news and views. 11.30 The 60th Annual Grammy Awards. (PG, CC) Hosted by James Corden. 3.00 The Chase. (CC) Contestants race to answer quiz questions correctly to avoid being caught by The Chaser. 4.00 Seven News At 4. (CC) 5.00 The Chase Australia. (CC) Hosted by Andrew O’Keefe.

6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00 1.00

Today. (CC) Today Extra. (PG, CC) Morning News. (CC) The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, CC) MOVIE: Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None. (PG, R, CC) (1974) Strangers at a hotel are stalked by a killer. Oliver Reed. 3.00 News Now. (CC) 4.00 Afternoon News. (CC) 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. (CC)

6.00 Alive And Cooking. (CC) 6.30 Family Feud. (R, CC) 7.00 Ent. Tonight. (R, CC) 7.30 WIN News. (R, CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 Neighbours. (R, CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R, CC) 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. (CC) (Series return) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)

6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 Al Jazeera News. (CC) 2.00 Max Raabe: Tonight Or Never. (R, CC) 3.00 Predict My Future: The Science Of Us. (PG, R, CC) 3.50 Chinese New Year: Biggest Celebration On Earth. (R, CC) 4.55 Living Black. (R, CC) 5.25 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)

6.00 Classic Countdown: 1983. (PG, R, CC) Narrated by Pat Wilson. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Presents the latest news stories. 7.30 7.30. (CC) Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Back Roads: Violet Town. (PG, CC) (Final) Presented by Heather Ewart. 8.30 Foreign Correspondent. (CC) (Final) International affairs program featuring in-depth stories from the ABCs network of foreign correspondents. 9.00 David Stratton’s Stories Of Australian Cinema: Family. (MA15+, R, CC) Part 3 of 3. 10.00 Stephen Fry In Central America: Costa Rica To Panama. (PG, R, CC) Part 4 of 4. 10.50 ABC Late News. (CC) 11.20 The Business. (CC) 11.35 Golf. (CC) PGA Tour. Farmers Insurance Open. Highlights.

6.00 PRIME7 News. (CC) 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) 7.00 Home And Away. (PG, CC) (Series return) Tori worries Justin will help a grief-stricken Ash get revenge on Robbo. Ben searches for a missing Maggie. 7.30 My Kitchen Rules. (PG, CC) (Series return) A new batch of amateur cooks takes turns transforming a home into a restaurant. 9.00 The Good Doctor. (M, CC) (Series return) Overwhelmed by Dr Aaron Glassman’s efforts to have him meet with a therapist and the demands at work, Dr Shaun Murphy takes an impromptu trip with his friend Lea and leaves everything behind. 10.00 The 60th Annual Grammy Awards. (PG, R, CC) Hosted by James Corden, from Madison Square Garden, New York City.

6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 A Current Affair. (CC) 7.30 Married At First Sight. (M, CC) (Series return) Follows a social “experiment” in which 10 couples, who meet for the first time at their wedding, go on their honeymoon and begin their lives together. Two pairs walk down the aisle. Narrated by Georgie Gardner. 9.10 Travel Guides. (PG, CC) (Series return) Ordinary Australians become travel critics. 10.10 Better Late Than Never. (CC) (Series return) Henry Winkler, William Shatner, Terry Bradshaw and George Foreman head to Munich, Germany. 11.10 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. (M, R, CC) A hit-and-run takes an unexpected twist for the team after they discover the victim had already been wounded.

6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) Join the hosts for a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! (CC) On their second day in the jungle, the celebrities are settling into their surroundings. Julia Morris and Dr Chris Brown check in with the campmates and deliver the news of who will face the next trial. 9.00 Law & Order: SVU. (M, CC) (Series return) Benson discloses some close held secrets as she tries to help a woman. 10.00 Law & Order: SVU. (M, R, CC) The team investigates allegations of a student being assaulted. 11.00 The Project. (R, CC) Join the hosts for a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics.

6.00 Food Safari. (R, CC) Maeve explores Darwin’s diverse cuisine. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 River Cottage Australia. (CC) Paul takes his food truck for a test run at the local farmers markets, but he is a little unprepared. 8.30 Michael Mosley: Trust Me, I’m A Doctor. (R, CC) Part 4 of 4. Michael Mosley and his team go behind the headlines to give the definitive answers to health questions. 9.40 24 Hours In Emergency: My Guiding Star. (M, CC) An elderly man is rushed into St George’s. 10.35 SBS World News Late Edition. (CC) 11.05 The World Game. (CC) Soccer news, features and match results. 11.35 MOVIE: Hero. (M, R) (2002) A warrior explains how he defeated three assassins. Jet Li, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai.

12.30 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 1.15 Rage. (MA15+) 2.25 Stephen Fry In Central America. (PG, R, CC) 3.15 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) 4.20 Murder, She Wrote. (PG, R, CC) 5.05 The Bill. (PG, R, CC)

1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Sunrise. (CC) David Koch and Samantha Armytage present the news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.

12.05 Law & Order. (M, R, CC) 1.00 Postcards Summer. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 2.00 Extra. (CC) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. (R) 3.30 Good Morning America. (CC) 5.00 News. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)

12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC) 1.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) Hosted by Stephen Colbert. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC)

1.25 Atlanta. (M, R, CC) 2.25 Masters Of Sex. (MA15+, R, CC) 4.30 Food Lovers’ Guide To Australia. (R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News. (CC)

ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.20 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Upper Middle Bogan. (M, R, CC) 9.00 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. (M, CC) 9.30 Ill Behaviour. (M, CC) 10.00 Inside Amy Schumer. (MA15+, CC) 10.25 Buzzcocks. 10.55 The Office. 11.15 30 Rock. 11.35 Parks And Recreation. 12.00 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 12.30 Buzzcocks. 1.00 The Office. 1.20 30 Rock. 1.45 Parks And Recreation. 2.05 News Update. 2.10 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.45 Get Blake! 7.55 Children’s Programs. 6.00 The New Legends Of Monkey. (PG, CC) (New Series) 6.25 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 7.10 BtN Newsbreak. (CC) 7.20 Kung Fu Panda. (R) 7.45 Danger Mouse. (R) 7.55 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.20 Fangbone! (R, CC) 8.30 Almost Naked Animals. (R, CC) 8.45 Dr Dimensionpants. (R) 9.05 Odd Squad. (R) 9.30 Strange Hill High. (R, CC) 9.50 Detentionaire. (R, CC) 10.15 Rage. (PG, R) 11.15 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

ABC NEWS 6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 12.00 ABC News. (CC) 6.10 Drum. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC News National. 8.00 ABC News. 9.00 Matter Of Fact: This Week. (New Series) 9.45 The Business. (CC) 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. (CC) 12.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 12.30 7.30. (R, CC) 1.00 ABC News. 1.15 Matter Of Fact: This Week. (R) 2.00 ABC News. 2.15 Drum. (R, CC) 3.00 The World. (R) 4.00 BBC Global. 4.30 7.30. (R, CC) 5.00 Deutsche Welle.

7TWO

9GO!

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 NBC Press. (R, CC) 11.30 The Real Seachange. (R, CC) 1.00 Cities Of The Underworld. (PG, R) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 ICU. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Room For Improvement. (R, CC) 4.30 The Great Outdoors. (R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG) 7.30 Rosemary & Thyme. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Lewis. (M, R) 10.30 Cities Of The Underworld. (PG, R) 11.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 12.30 Late Programs.

7MATE

ONE

6.00 Children’s Programs. 11.00 Top Gear. (PG, R, CC) 12.30 World’s Funniest Videos Top 10 Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 Dawson’s Creek. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 The Middle. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 American Ninja Warrior. (PG, CC) 9.30 MOVIE: Rambo: First Blood. (M, R) (1982) 11.30 Best Ink. (M) 12.30 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Uncle Grandpa. (PG, R) 2.00 Regular Show. (PG, R) 2.30 Pokémon The Series: Sun & Moon. (R) 3.00 Children’s Programs.

9GEM

6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 What Went Down. (PG, R) 11.30 The Big Adventure. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 Swamp Men. (PG, R) 2.00 Aussie Barbecue Heroes. (PG, R, CC) 4.30 What Went Down. (PG, R) 5.00 Swamp People. (PG, R) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 American Pickers. (PG) 8.30 World’s Most Amazing Videos. (M) 9.30 Goldfathers. (PG, R) 10.30 Zoltan, The WolfMan. (PG) (New Series) 11.30 American Hoggers. (M) 12.00 Late Programs.

7FLIX

6.00 Morning Programs. 7.30 TV Shop. 8.00 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 TV Shop. (R) 9.30 Danoz. 10.30 Harry. (PG, CC) 11.30 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 12.10 MOVIE: Three Hats For Lisa. (R, CC) (1966) 2.15 Colin & Justin’s Home Heist. (PG) 3.25 Weather Gone Viral. (PG, R) 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 7.30 To Be Advised. 8.30 Live PD. (M) 11.15 Miniseries: The Widower. (M, R) 12.20 Late Programs.

9LIFE

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Match It. (R, CC) 10.00 James Robison. (PG) 10.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Once Upon A Time. (PG, R) 3.00 Black-ish. (PG, R) 3.30 Grandfathered. (PG, R) 4.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 4.30 I Dream Of Jeannie. (R, CC) 5.00 Just Shoot Me! (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Dr. Ken. (PG) 8.30 MOVIE: The House Bunny. (M, R, CC) (2008) Anna Faris. 10.30 MOVIE: Going The Distance. (MA15+, R) (2010) 12.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Ready, Set, Reno. (PG, R, CC) 10.30 Restored. (R) 11.30 Dear Genevieve. (PG, R) 12.30 Postcards Summer. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 Texas Flip And Move. (R) 2.00 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 3.00 The Block. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. 7.30 Wife Swap US. (PG) 8.30 Untying The Knot. (M) 9.30 Second Wives Club. (M) 10.30 Hoarders. (M) 11.30 Keeping Up With The Kardashians. (MA15+) 12.30 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND

6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Cricket. (CC) Big Bash League. Brisbane Heat v Melbourne Renegades. Replay. 12.00 RPM: Summer Series. (R, CC) 12.30 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 1.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 2.00 Star Trek. (PG, R) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 6.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 6.30 Happy Days. (PG, R) 7.30 Hawaii Five-0. (M, R, CC) (Final) A nuclear bomb is smuggled onto the island. 8.30 NCIS. (M, R, CC) Tony goes undercover. 10.30 Elementary. (M, R, CC) Sherlock and Joan investigate a woman’s death. 12.30 Shopping. (R) 2.00 Get Smart. (PG, R) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R)

ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Littlest Petshop. (R) 6.30 Mako: Island Of Secrets. (R, CC) 7.05 Pokémon. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G: NEXT. 8.00 Kuu Kuu Harajuku. (C, R, CC) 8.35 Bob The Builder. (R) 9.00 Super Wings. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Dr Quinn. (PG, R) 11.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (M) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (CC) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Family Feud. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (CC) 7.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Will & Grace. (PG, R) 8.30 Supernatural. (MA15+) 10.30 Medium. (M, R, CC) 11.30 James Corden. (M) 12.30 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 JAG. (PG, R) 4.30 Dr Quinn. (PG, R) 5.30 Shopping. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 MOVIE: Apart Together. (PG, R) (2010) 1.45 Rebel Music. (PG, R) 2.10 Dara Ó Briain: School Of Hard Sums. (PG, R) 3.05 Vs Arashi. (R) 4.00 The Mindy Project. (PG, R) 4.30 Cyberwar. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 News. 5.25 If You Are The One. (PG, R) 6.40 MythBusters. (PG, R, CC) 7.35 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: Lovelace. (MA15+, R) (2013) 10.10 MOVIE: 24 Hour Party People. (MA15+, R, CC) (2002) 12.15 Untitled Action Bronson Show. 1.10 Late Programs.

SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Far Eastern Odyssey. (R) 2.00 Bizarre Foods. (R) 3.00 Siba’s Table: Fast Feasts. (R) 3.30 Barefoot Contessa. (R) 4.00 5 Ingredient Fix. (R) 4.30 Dinner At Tiffani’s. (R) 5.00 Pati’s Mexican Table. (R) 5.30 Secret Meat Business. (R) 6.00 Food Lab. (PG, R) 6.30 Bizarre Foods. (R) 7.00 The Naked Chef. (PG) 7.30 Bondi Harvest. (PG) 8.30 Cake Wars. (R) 9.30 Mystery Diners. (R) 10.30 Food: Fact Or Fiction. (PG, R) 11.00 Late Programs.

NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.30 Matauranga. 2.00 On The Edge. (PG) 2.30 Designing Africa. 3.00 Waabiny Time. 3.25 Yarramundi Kids. 3.50 Finding My Magic. 3.55 Musomagic. 4.20 Grounded. 4.45 The Time Compass. (PG) 5.00 Cafe Niugini. 5.30 In The Frame. 6.00 Surviving. (R) 6.30 Real Pasifik. (PG, R) 7.00 Our Stories. (R) 7.20 Aroha Bridge. 7.25 News. 7.30 The Prophets. (PG, R) 8.00 Lousy Little Sixpence. (PG, R) 9.00 Survive Aotearoa. (PG, R) 10.00 Sivummut. (PG, R) 10.30 Late Programs.

CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.

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46

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

TV+

Tuesday January 30 ABC

PRIME7

NINE

6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 10.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) 11.00 Classic Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 12.30 National Press Club Address. (CC) 1.30 Women’s Work. (R, CC) (Final) 2.00 Pulse. (M, R, CC) (Final) 2.55 Ask The Doctor. (PG, R, CC) 3.25 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 4.15 Pointless. (R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.10 The Drum. (CC)

6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00 1.30

6.00 Classic Countdown: 1984. (PG, R, CC) Narrated by Grace Knight. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) 7.30 7.30. (CC) Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 The Checkout. (PG, CC) (Series return) A no-holds-barred, irreverent and entertaining look at consumer affairs. 8.30 Catalyst: The Secret To Making Better Decisions. (CC) (Series return) Lily Serna looks at how the logic of mathematics can help people make better, smarter decisions. 9.30 Surviving School: My Year 7 Life. (PG, CC) Explores the major themes experienced by the 16 Australian students and their parents as they adjust to high school. 10.30 ABC Late News. (CC) 11.00 The Business. (R, CC) The day’s business and finance news. 11.15 MOVIE: Dior And I. (M, R, CC) (2014)

6.00 PRIME7 News. (CC) 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) 7.00 Home And Away. (PG, CC) Hunter breaks down following Olivia’s rejection. Justin and Ash track Robbo down. 7.30 My Kitchen Rules. (PG, CC) The competition travels to Miami on the Gold Coast where loved up hospitality couple Alex and Emily are aiming to raise the bar. However, just as the party gets started, it threatens to all come crashing down. 9.00 The Good Doctor. (M, CC) Dr Shaun Murphy returns to the hospital after his trip with Lea and decides he needs a more permanent change and gives Dr Aaron Glassman his two weeks’ notice. 10.00 Grey’s Anatomy. (M, CC) (Series return) Meredith and the team are focused on helping Owen’s sister after her shocking return.

12.45 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 MOVIE: Dior And I. (M, R, CC) (2014) Christian Dior. 3.20 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) 4.20 Murder, She Wrote. (PG, R, CC) 5.05 The Bill. (PG, R, CC)

12.00 Time After Time. (M, CC) (New Series) A young H.G. Wells travels through the centuries using a time machine in pursuit of Jack the Ripper. 12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Sunrise. (CC) News, sport and weather.

ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.05 Ben And Holly. (R, CC) 7.20 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Black Comedy. (M, R, CC) 9.00 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. (M, CC) 9.30 Red Dwarf. (PG, CC) 10.00 The League Of Gentlemen. (M, CC) 10.30 Buzzcocks. 11.05 The Office. 11.30 30 Rock. 11.50 Parks And Recreation. 12.10 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 12.40 Buzzcocks. 1.15 The Office. 1.45 30 Rock. 2.05 Parks And Recreation. 2.25 News Update. 2.30 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

ABC ME

2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00

Sunrise. (CC) The Morning Show. (PG, CC) Seven Morning News. (CC) To Be Advised. Highway Cops. (PG, R, CC) A motorist dances on their car. The Daily Edition. (CC) The hottest issues from the day’s news. The Chase. (CC) Seven News At 4. (CC) The Chase Australia. (CC)

6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00 1.00 1.30 3.00 4.00 5.00

7TWO 6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 NBC Today. (R, CC) 12.00 Harry’s Practice. (R, CC) 12.30 House Calls To The Rescue. (R, CC) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 ICU. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Room For Improvement. (R, CC) 4.30 The Great Outdoors. (R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG) 7.30 Pie In The Sky. (PG, R) 8.30 Inspector Morse. (M, R, CC) 10.30 Brit Cops. (M, R) 11.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 12.30 Late Programs.

6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 12.00 ABC News. (CC) 12.30 Press Club. (CC) 1.30 ABC News. 6.10 Drum. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC News National. 8.00 ABC News. 9.00 Matter Of Fact: This Week. 9.45 The Business. (CC) 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. (CC) 12.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 12.30 7.30. (R, CC) 1.00 ABC News. 1.15 Matter Of Fact: This Week. (R) 2.00 ABC News. 2.15 Drum. (R, CC) 3.00 The World. (R) 4.00 BBC Global. 4.30 7.30. (R, CC) 5.00 Deutsche Welle.

12.20 20/20. (CC) 1.20 Patriot Games. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Extra. (R, CC) 3.30 Good Morning America. (CC) 5.00 News Early Edition. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)

6.00 Children’s Programs. 11.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 BattleBots. (PG, R) 1.00 Dawson’s Creek. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 The Middle. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 American Ninja Warrior. (PG, CC) 9.30 MOVIE: Rambo: First Blood Part II. (M, R) (1985) 11.30 Jail: Big Texas. (M) 12.00 The Crew. (PG, R, CC) 12.30 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Uncle Grandpa. (PG, R) 2.00 Regular Show. (PG, R) 2.30 Pokémon The Series: Sun & Moon. (R) 3.00 Children’s Programs.

9GEM

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 American Hoggers. (M, R) 12.30 World’s Most Amazing Videos. (M, R) 1.30 Swamp People. (PG, R) 2.30 The Big Adventure. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 American Pickers. (PG, R) 4.30 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 Goldfathers. (PG, R) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Highway Patrol. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Counting Cars. (PG, R) 9.00 Counting Cars. (M, R) 9.30 Ice Road Truckers. (M) 11.30 Ultimate Factories. (PG, R) 12.30 Late Programs.

7FLIX

ABC NEWS

6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 A Current Affair. (CC) 7.30 Married At First Sight. (M, CC) As the “experiment” continues, two brides and a nervous groom take part in fairytale nuptials. 9.15 One Night With My Ex. (CC) (New Series) Former couples are reunited for 24 hours, delving into the heart of their broken romance. 10.15 Beauty And The Beach. (M, CC) (Series return) Follows people who are determined to change their lives. Experience the exciting, bewildering, painful, exhilarating and ultimately liberating journey of plastic surgery in paradise. 11.25 Cold Case. (M, R, CC) The 2000 murder of an actor is reopened after a gun is found in a dresser that was a prop in the play.

9GO!

7MATE

6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.45 Get Blake! 7.55 Children’s Programs. 6.00 The New Legends Of Monkey. (PG, CC) 6.25 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 7.10 BtN Newsbreak. (CC) 7.20 Kung Fu Panda. (R) 7.45 Danger Mouse. (R) 7.55 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.20 Fangbone! (R, CC) 8.30 Almost Naked Animals. (R, CC) 8.45 Dr Dimensionpants. (R) 9.05 Odd Squad. (R) 9.30 Strange Hill High. (R, CC) 9.50 Detentionaire. (R, CC) 10.15 Rage. (PG, R) 11.15 Close. 5.00 Grojband. (R, CC) 5.20 Children’s Programs.

Today. (CC) Today Extra. (PG, CC) Morning News. (CC) The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, CC) Extra. (CC) Entertainment news program. Married At First Sight. (PG, R, CC) Narrated by Georgie Gardner. News Now. (CC) Afternoon News. (CC) Millionaire Hot Seat. (CC)

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 TV Shop. (R) 9.30 Danoz. 10.30 Harry. (PG, CC) 11.30 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 12.10 MOVIE: Angels One Five. (R, CC) (1952) 2.15 Colin & Justin’s Home Heist. (PG) 3.25 To Be Advised. 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 7.30 New Tricks. (M, R) 8.40 Midsomer Murders. (M, R, CC) 10.50 Major Crimes. (M, R, CC) 11.50 New Tricks. (M, R) 1.00 Late Programs.

9LIFE

6.00 Morning Programs. 7.30 Sofia The First. (R) 8.00 Austin & Ally. (R, CC) 8.30 I Didn’t Do It. (R, CC) 9.00 Match It. (R, CC) 10.00 James Robison. (PG) 10.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Once Upon A Time. (PG, R) 4.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 4.30 I Dream Of Jeannie. (R, CC) 5.00 Just Shoot Me! (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 The Amazing Race. (PG, CC) 9.30 MOVIE: Donnie Brasco. (MA15+, R, CC) (1997) 12.10 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 10.30 House Hunters. (R) 11.00 Flip Or Flop. (R) 12.00 Good Bones. (PG, R) 1.00 Wife Swap US. (PG, R) 2.00 Flipping Out. (PG, R) 3.00 The Block. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 Stone House Revival. (R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. 7.30 The Bachelor. 9.30 90 Day Fiance. (PG) 10.30 Bridezillas. (M) 11.30 Keeping Up With The Kardashians. (MA15+) 12.30 Late Programs.

WIN

Dubbo’s TV Guide

SBS

6.00 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 6.30 Family Feud. (R, CC) 7.00 Ent. Tonight. (CC) 7.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (R, CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 Neighbours. (R, CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R, CC) 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. (CC) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)

6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.00 BBC News. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (CC) 2.00 Conchita: Unstoppable. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Kylie Kwong: Heart And Soul. (R, CC) 3.30 Rise Of The Machines. (R, CC) 4.30 Secrets Of The Lost Graveyard. (PG, R, CC) 5.25 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)

6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) Join the hosts for a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! (CC) On day three, the celebrities’ tastebuds are tested with the infamous Tucker Chewsday challenge. 8.30 Hughesy, We Have a Problem. (CC) (New Series) Dave Hughes is joined by guest problem solvers and comedians Harley Breen, Anne Edmonds, Nazeem Hussain and Julia Morris to discuss solutions to common problems experienced in modern Australian life. 9.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. (M, CC) The NCIS team tracks a highly skilled assailant determined to avenge her father’s death by killing a Brazilian diplomat. 10.30 To Be Advised. 11.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC)

6.00 Food Safari. (R, CC) Maeve O’Meara takes a look at Peruvian cuisine and its “infiltration” into Australian culture. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 Who Do You Think You Are? Ricky Tomlinson. (CC) Ricky Tomlinson traces his roots and discovers that he comes from generations of carters. 8.40 Best Of Insight. (CC) Highlights of some of the best stories and forums from the 2017 season of Insight. 9.40 One Born Every Minute UK. (M, CC) Being unable to control her labour heightens a first-time mum’s anxiety, while another couple who have struggled to conceive, prepare for their second baby. 10.35 SBS World News Late Edition. (CC) 11.05 Spin. (M) With the president in a coma, Gabrielle Tackichieff and Simon Kapita decide to keep his health issues a secret.

12.30 The Project. (R, CC) A look at the day’s news. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) 2.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC)

12.00 Spin. (M) 1.05 MOVIE: A Better Life. (M, R, CC) (2011) 3.05 MOVIE: Dirty Wolves. (MA15+, R) (2015) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News. (CC)

ONE

SBS VICELAND

6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Get Smart. (PG, R) 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 10.00 Reel Action. (R) 10.30 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 11.30 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 12.00 Happy Days. (PG, R) 1.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 2.00 Star Trek. (PG, R) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 6.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 6.30 Happy Days. (PG, R) 7.30 48 Hours: All-American Murder. (CC) 8.30 Homicide: Hours To Kill: Shotgun Sinner. (M) A look at the final 24 hours in a murder victim’s life. 9.30 48 Hours. (M, R, CC) 10.30 Highlander. (M, R) 11.30 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 12.00 Shopping. (R) 2.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 4.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 5.00 Highlander. (M, R)

ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Littlest Petshop. (R) 6.30 Mako: Island Of Secrets. (R, CC) 7.05 Pokémon. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G: NEXT. 8.00 Totally Wild. (C, CC) 8.35 Bob The Builder. (R) 9.00 Super Wings. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Dr Quinn. (PG, R) 11.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (M) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Family Feud. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (CC) 7.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Will & Grace. (PG, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Kingpin. (M, R) (1996) 10.55 Will & Grace. (PG, R) 11.25 James Corden. (M) 12.25 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 JAG. (PG, R) 4.30 Dr Quinn. (PG, R) 5.30 Shopping. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Gameplay: The Story Of The Video Game Revolution. (PG, R, CC) 1.40 Rebel Music. (PG, R) 2.10 Dara Ó Briain: School Of Hard Sums. (PG, R) 3.05 Huang’s World. (R, CC) 3.55 365. (PG) 4.00 The Mindy Project. (PG, R) 4.30 Tattoo Age. (PG, R) 5.00 News. 5.25 If You Are The One. (PG, R) 6.40 MythBusters. (PG, R, CC) 7.35 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Hamilton’s Pharmacopeia. (MA15+, CC) 9.20 Epicly Later’d. (CC) 10.10 Vikings. (R) 11.05 Late Programs.

SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Restaurant: Impossible. (PG) 2.00 Food Lab. (PG) 2.30 The Naked Chef. (PG) 3.00 Siba’s Table: Fast Feasts. 3.30 Barefoot Contessa. 4.00 5 Ingredient Fix. 4.30 Dinner At Tiffani’s. 5.00 Pati’s Mexican Table. 5.30 Secret Meat Business. 6.00 Food Lab. (PG, R) 6.30 Bizarre Foods. (R) 7.00 The Naked Chef. (PG) 7.30 Miguel’s Tropical Kitchen. (PG) 8.00 Drive Thru Australia. (PG) 8.30 No Reservations. (PG) 9.30 Mystery Diners. (R) 10.30 Late Programs.

NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.30 Uluit: Champions Of The North. 2.00 Paddocks Alight. 2.30 Surviving. 3.00 Waabiny Time. 3.25 Yarramundi Kids. 3.50 Finding My Magic. 3.55 Musomagic. 4.20 Grounded. 4.45 The Time Compass. 5.00 Cafe Niugini. 5.30 In The Frame. 6.00 Campfire. 6.30 Real Pasifik. 7.00 Our Stories. (PG) 7.20 Aroha Bridge. 7.25 News. 7.30 Treetime Stories. 8.00 Torres To The Thames. (PG) 9.00 Broke Ass Game Show. (M, R) 10.00 Survive Aotearoa. (M) 11.00 Late Programs.

CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.

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47

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

TV+

Wednesday January 31 ABC

PRIME7

NINE

6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 10.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) 11.00 Classic Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 12.30 National Press Club Address. (CC) 1.30 Foreign Correspondent. (R, CC) (Final) 2.00 Newton’s Law. (M, R, CC) 3.00 The Cook And The Chef. (R, CC) 3.30 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 4.15 Pointless. (R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.10 The Drum. (CC)

6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00 1.30

6.00 Classic Countdown: 1985. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Presents the latest news stories. 7.30 7.30. (CC) Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 QI. (M, CC) Hosted by Sandi Toksvig. 8.30 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (M, CC) (Series return) Host Shaun Micallef presents a round-up of important news stories of the week. 9.00 300 Years Of French And Saunders. (M, CC) Comedy team Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders reunite for the first time in ten years. 9.50 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (CC) (Series return) UK-based panel show. 10.30 Shock Horror Aunty. (MA15+, R, CC) 11.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 11.30 The Business. (R, CC) The day’s business and finance news. 11.50 Foreign Correspondent. (R, CC) (Final)

6.00 PRIME7 News. (CC) 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) 7.00 Home And Away. (PG, CC) Justin and Willow may have finally got their act together. Olivia and Axel go on an adventure. 7.30 My Kitchen Rules. (PG, CC) The competition travels to Melbourne. 9.00 Surveillance Oz: Australia’s Dumbest Criminals. (PG, CC) Documents the antics of dumb criminals. 10.00 Grammy’s Greatest Stories: A 60th Anniversary Special. (M, CC) A retrospective of the most epic moments of the past 59 years of Grammy history, featuring archival footage, exclusive interviews and special appearances by a number of awardwinning artists.

12.20 1.00 1.45 3.15 4.20 5.05

12.00 Powerless. (M) (New Series) A young woman begins her first day at work for Wayne Security. 12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Sunrise. (CC) News, sport and weather.

Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (R, CC) Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) Rage. (MA15+) Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) Murder, She Wrote. (PG, R, CC) The Bill. (PG, R, CC)

ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 The Agony Of Modern Manners. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 The Agony Of Modern Manners. (M, R, CC) 9.00 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. (M, CC) 9.30 Asian Provocateur. (M, CC) 10.00 The Trip. 10.30 Buzzcocks. 11.00 The Office. 11.20 30 Rock. 11.40 Parks And Recreation. 12.05 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 12.35 Buzzcocks. 1.05 The Office. 1.25 30 Rock. 1.50 Parks And Recreation. 2.10 News Update. 2.15 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.45 Get Blake! 7.55 Children’s Programs. 6.00 The New Legends Of Monkey. (PG, CC) 6.25 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 7.10 BtN Newsbreak. (CC) 7.20 Kung Fu Panda. (R) 7.45 Danger Mouse. (R) 7.55 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.20 Fangbone! (R, CC) 8.30 Almost Naked Animals. (R, CC) 8.45 Dr Dimensionpants. (R) 9.05 Odd Squad. (R) 9.30 Strange Hill High. (R, CC) 9.50 Detentionaire. (R, CC) 10.15 Rage. (PG, R) 11.15 Close. 5.00 Grojband. (R, CC) 5.20 Children’s Programs.

ABC NEWS 6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 12.00 ABC News. (CC) 12.30 Press Club. (CC) 1.30 ABC News. 6.10 Drum. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC News National. 8.00 ABC News. 9.00 Matter Of Fact: This Week. 9.45 The Business. (CC) 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. (CC) 12.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 12.30 7.30. (R, CC) 1.00 ABC News. 1.15 Matter Of Fact: This Week. (R) 2.00 ABC News. 2.15 Drum. (R, CC) 3.00 The World. (R) 4.00 BBC Global. 4.30 7.30. (R, CC) 5.00 Deutsche Welle.

2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00

Sunrise. (CC) The Morning Show. (PG, CC) Seven Morning News. (CC) To Be Advised. Highway Cops. (PG, R, CC) A flying ute is spotted in Marton. The Daily Edition. (CC) The hottest issues from the day’s news. The Chase. (CC) Seven News At 4. (CC) The Chase Australia. (CC)

7TWO

6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00

WIN

Today. (CC) Today Extra. (PG, CC) Morning News. (CC) The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, CC) Variety show. Married At First Sight. (PG, R, CC) Narrated by Georgie Gardner. News Now. (CC) Afternoon News. (CC) Millionaire Hot Seat. (CC) Hosted by Eddie McGuire.

7MATE

6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.00 BBC News. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (CC) 1.55 Who Do You Think You Are? (CC) 3.00 Heston’s Gourmet Tour. (R, CC) 3.30 Best Of Insight. (R, CC) 4.30 Cycling. (CC) Herald Sun Tour. Women’s Road Race. Highlights. From Victoria. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)

6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 A Current Affair. (CC) 7.30 Married At First Sight. (M, CC) Follows a social “experiment” in which couples, who meet for the first time at their wedding, go on their honeymoon and begin their lives together. A bride has to pass a test posed by her mother-in-law before getting married. Narrated by Georgie Gardner. 9.10 MOVIE: Sisters. (MA15+, CC) (2015) Two sisters try to recapture their glory days by throwing a house party before their parents sell their family home. Over of the course of the party both women work out their own life issues. Amy Poehler, Tina Fey, Maya Rudolph. 11.30 Movie Juice. (CC) A look inside the world of movies, from new releases to interviews and the latest looks on the red carpet.

6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) Join the hosts for a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! (CC) Julia and Dr Chris spring a new trial on the chosen celebrities, Boulder Dash. As they try to make their way up a mountainous channel and earn meals for the camp, they will have to negotiate giant boulders rolling down towards them by ducking into small cavities in the walls. 9.00 To Be Advised. 10.00 To Be Advised. 11.00 The Project. (R, CC) Join the hosts for a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics.

6.00 Food Safari. (R, CC) Maeve O’Meara explores Cypriot food, dishes which are often based on a mere handful of key ingredients. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 World’s Greatest Bridges: The Millau Viaduct. (CC) Rob Bell recounts the story of the construction of the Millau Viaduct, over the Tarn gorge, in southern France. 8.30 Simon Reeve In Russia. (CC) Part 1 of 3. Simon Reeve embarks on an epic journey across the largest country in the world, Russia. 9.40 Vikings. (MA15+, CC) (Final) As the defeated army flees in the face of the victors, a legendary warrior makes his way home. 10.35 Berlin Station. (M, CC) Daniel inches closer to the truth. 11.35 SBS World News Late Edition. (CC)

12.00 CSI: NY. (M, R, CC) 2.00 Extra. (CC) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. (R) 3.30 Good Morning America. (CC) 5.00 News Early Edition. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)

12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC) 1.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) Hosted by Stephen Colbert. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC)

12.05 MOVIE: The Idol. (M) (2015) 1.55 MOVIE: Tangerines. (MA15+, R) (2013) 3.30 Sex And The West. (M, R, CC) 4.30 Food Lovers’ Guide To Australia. (R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle. (CC)

1.00 3.00 4.00 5.00

ONE

6.00 Children’s Programs. 11.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 BattleBots. (PG, R) 1.00 Dawson’s Creek. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 The Middle. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 American Ninja Warrior. (PG, CC) 9.30 MOVIE: Rambo III. (M, R) (1988) 11.30 Two And A Half Men. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 The Crew. (PG, R, CC) 12.30 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Uncle Grandpa. (PG, R) 2.00 Regular Show. (PG, R) 2.30 Pokémon The Series: Sun & Moon. (R) 3.00 Children’s Programs.

9GEM

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Screaming Reels. (PG, R) 10.00 A Football Life. (PG, R) 11.00 Charlie’s Angels. (PG, R) 12.00 Counting Cars. (M, R) 12.30 Ice Road Truckers. (M, R) 2.30 American Pickers. (PG, R) 3.30 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Highway Patrol. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 Ultimate Factories. (PG, R) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 The Grand Tour. (M, R, CC) 9.00 MOVIE: Robin Hood. (M, R, CC) (2010) 11.50 Ultimate Factories. (PG, R) 1.00 Late Programs.

7FLIX

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 TV Shop. (R) 10.30 Harry. (PG, CC) 11.30 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 12.10 MOVIE: The Day The Earth Caught Fire. (PG, R, CC) (1961) 2.15 Colin & Justin’s Home Heist. (PG) 3.25 In Their Footsteps. (PG, R, CC) 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 7.40 Poirot. (PG, R) 9.40 Silent Witness. (MA15+, R) 10.50 The Bletchley Circle. (M, R) 11.55 Cold Case. (M, R, CC) 1.00 Late Programs.

9LIFE

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Morning Programs. 12.10 Bride And Prejudice: The Forbidden Weddings. (M, R, CC) 1.20 Bride And Prejudice: The Forbidden Weddings. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 Black-ish. (PG, R) 3.30 Grandfathered. (PG, R) 4.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 4.30 I Dream Of Jeannie. (R, CC) 5.00 Just Shoot Me! (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Castle. (M, R, CC) 8.30 Bones. (M, R, CC) 11.20 Scrubs. (PG, R) 12.20 Late Programs.

SBS

6.00 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 6.30 Family Feud. (R, CC) 7.00 Ent. Tonight. (CC) 7.30 WIN News. (R, CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. (CC) 2.30 Neighbours. (R, CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R, CC) 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. (CC) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)

9GO!

6.00 Morning Programs. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 9.30 NBC Today. (R, CC) 12.00 The Travel Bug. (PG, R) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 ICU. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Room For Improvement. (R, CC) 4.30 The Great Outdoors. (R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG) 7.30 Pie In The Sky. (PG, R) 8.30 A Touch Of Frost. (PG, R, CC) 10.30 Brit Cops. (M, R) 11.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 12.30 Late Programs.

Dubbo’s TV Guide

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 House Hunters. (R) 11.00 Colin & Justin’s Home Heist. (PG, R) 12.00 Million Dollar Listing. (PG, R) 1.00 Island Hunters. (R) 2.30 Dream Job. (R, CC) 3.00 The Block. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 Restored. (R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. 7.30 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 8.30 Flip Or Flop. (R) 9.30 Say Yes To The Dress: Atlanta. (PG) (New Series) 10.30 Flipping Out. (M) 11.30 Keeping Up With The Kardashians. (MA15+) 12.30 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND

6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Get Smart. (PG, R) 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 10.00 Reel Action. (R) 10.30 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 11.30 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 12.00 Happy Days. (PG, R) 1.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 2.00 Star Trek. (PG, R) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 6.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 6.30 Happy Days. (PG, R) 7.30 Attenborough’s Nature’s Great Events. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: True Story. (M) (2015) A killer assumes the identity of a reporter. Jonah Hill. 10.30 Homicide: Hours To Kill. (M, R) 11.30 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 12.00 Shopping. (R) 2.00 Happy Days. (PG, R) 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R)

ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Littlest Petshop. (R) 6.30 Mako: Island Of Secrets. (R, CC) 7.05 Pokémon. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G: NEXT. 8.00 Scope. (C, R, CC) 8.35 Bob The Builder. (R) 9.00 Super Wings. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Dr Quinn. (PG, R) 11.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (M) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Family Feud. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (CC) 7.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Will & Grace. (PG, R) 8.30 The Graham Norton Show. (M, R, CC) 9.30 Dating Naked. (MA15+, R) 10.30 Duckman. (M, R) 11.30 James Corden. (M) 12.30 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 JAG. (PG, R) 4.30 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 MOVIE: A Brony Tale. (PG, R) (2014) 1.25 Noisey. (PG, R) 2.15 Superstar DJs With Annie Mac. (PG, R) 2.40 Dara Ó Briain: School Of Hard Sums. (PG, R) 3.30 Des Bishop: Breaking China. (PG, R) 4.00 The Mindy Project. (PG, R) 4.30 Dead Set On Life. (PG, R) 5.00 News. 5.25 If You Are The One. (PG, R) 6.40 MythBusters. (PG, R, CC) 7.35 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: Wer. (MA15+) (2013) 10.15 MOVIE: Wolf. (M, R) (1994) 12.30 News. 1.00 Late Programs.

SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Restaurant: Impossible. (PG) 2.00 Food Lab. (PG) 2.30 The Naked Chef. (PG) 3.00 Siba’s Table: Fast Feasts. 3.30 Barefoot Contessa. 4.00 5 Ingredient Fix. 4.30 Dinner At Tiffani’s. 5.00 Pati’s Mexican Table. 5.30 Secret Meat Business. 6.00 Food Lab. (PG, R) 6.30 Bizarre Foods. (R) 7.00 The Naked Chef. (PG) 7.30 Food Paradise International. (PG) 8.30 Born To Cook: Jack Stein Down Under. (PG, R) 9.30 Mystery Diners. (R) 10.30 Late Programs.

NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.20 Alice And Kevin. 1.35 Treading Water. (PG) 2.30 Campfire. 3.00 Waabiny Time. 3.25 Yarramundi Kids. 3.50 Finding My Magic. 3.55 Musomagic. 4.20 Grounded. 4.45 The Time Compass. 5.00 Cafe Niugini. 5.30 In The Frame. 6.00 Desperate Measures. (PG, R) 6.30 Designing Africa. (R) 7.00 Our Stories. (R) 7.20 Aroha Bridge. 7.25 News. 7.30 Africa On A Plate. (PG) 8.00 Rise. (PG, R) 9.00 Living Black. 9.30 Ninth Floor. (PG, R) 11.00 Late Programs.

CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.

SOLUTIONS & ANSWERS

CROSSWORD TIME PUZZ901

PHOTO NEWS SUDOKU GRID634

Baker’s Dozen Trivia Test. 1. Spain. 2. Amphibian. 3. 1936-1939. 4. A peahen. 5. Seven: red, yellow, orange, green, blue, indigo and violet. 6. Jasmine. 7. 119 km/h. 8. Dodge. 9. William McMahon. 10. Mary Reibey and Reverend John Flynn. 11. Jackie DeShannon, in 1969. SUDOKU EXTRA

Annie Lennox and Al Green covered the song in 1988 for the film “Scrooged”. 12. Bernhard Langer (2017) and Jack Nicklaus (1991). 13. “Kokomo”, by the Beach Boys, in 1988. The group recorded the song just in time for the release of the film “Cocktail” and it was included in the soundtrack. “Kokomo” was nominated for a Grammy that year.

TRIVIA TEST ANSWERS #405 1 64, 2 Monet, 3 Australian Rules Football, 4 The Battle of Midway, 5 Las Vegas, 6 Vanuatu, 7 Hubert Opperman, 8 basketball, 9 Polish, 10 six. Matchmaker solution 205 Dust, must, mast, mash, cash, cast, cost, colt, coat.

HEX-ANUMBER

FIND THE WORDS solution 992 Never forgotten GO FIGURE

Where on Google Earth: McDonald’s on Cobra Street, Dubbo, with the Shearing Shed Motor Inn on the opposite side of the road.

problem solved!


48

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

TV+

Thursday February 1 ABC

PRIME7

NINE

6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 10.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) 11.00 Classic Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 1.00 QI. (M, R, CC) 1.30 Hannah Gadsby’s OZ. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Newton’s Law. (M, R, CC) 3.00 The Cook And The Chef. (R, CC) (Final) 3.25 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 4.15 Pointless. (R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.10 The Drum. (CC)

6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00

6.00 Classic Countdown: 1986. (PG, R, CC) Narrated by Deb Conway. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Presents the latest news stories. 7.30 7.30. (CC) Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? (PG, CC) Hosted by Rob Brydon. 8.30 Call The Midwife. (M, R, CC) Dr Turner shares his excitement about the release of the contraceptive pill. 9.30 The Good Karma Hospital. (M, R, CC) Tensions mount when Ruby questions Gabriel’s professional conduct. A mystery man washes ashore. 10.20 ABC Late News. (CC) 10.45 The Business. (R, CC) The day’s business and finance news. 11.05 The Halcyon. (M, R, CC) (Final) The Halcyon celebrates its anniversary. 11.50 Would I Lie To You? (PG, R, CC) Hosted by Rob Brydon.

6.00 PRIME7 News. (CC) 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) 7.00 Home And Away. (PG, CC) A terrified Maggie tries to keep her biopsy a secret from Ziggy and Coco. Tori tries to bring the mysterious woman who collided with Kat out of her coma. 9.00 MOVIE: The Bodyguard. (M, R, CC) (1992) A former secret service agent turned professional bodyguard agrees to care for a pop star. In the course of protecting the woman from a homicidal fan, they develop a trust and love that is rare for both. Kevin Costner, Whitney Houston, Gary Kemp. 11.45 The Goldbergs. (PG, R, CC) Adam and Barry form a rap supergroup, the Tasty Boys. After Murray refuses to remodel the kitchen, Beverly devises a plan to do the work herself, but messes up on purpose so Murray is forced to fix it.

12.20 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 1.05 Good Karma Hospital. (M, R, CC) 1.55 Rage. (MA15+) 2.25 Golf. (CC) PGA Tour. Farmers Insurance Open. Highlights. 3.20 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) 4.20 Murder, She Wrote. (PG, R, CC) 5.05 The Bill. (PG, R, CC)

12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Sunrise. (CC) David Koch and Samantha Armytage present the news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.

ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.20 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 The Moodys. (M, R, CC) 9.00 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. (M, CC) 9.30 The Best Of Fresh Blood 2017. (M, CC) 10.00 Murder In Successville. (M, CC) 10.30 Buzzcocks. 11.00 The Office. 11.20 30 Rock. 11.40 Parks And Recreation. 12.05 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 12.35 Buzzcocks. 1.05 The Office. 1.30 30 Rock. 1.50 Parks And Recreation. 2.10 News Update. 2.15 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.

ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.45 Get Blake! 7.55 Children’s Programs. 6.00 The New Legends Of Monkey. (PG, CC) 6.25 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 7.10 BtN Newsbreak. (CC) 7.20 Kung Fu Panda. (R) 7.45 Danger Mouse. (R) 7.55 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.20 Fangbone! (R, CC) 8.30 Almost Naked Animals. (R, CC) 8.45 Dr Dimensionpants. (R) 9.05 Odd Squad. (R) 9.30 Strange Hill High. (R, CC) 9.50 Detentionaire. (R, CC) 10.15 Rage. (PG, R) 11.15 Close. 5.00 Grojband. (R, CC) 5.20 Children’s Programs.

ABC NEWS 6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 12.00 ABC News. (CC) 6.10 Drum. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC News National. 8.00 ABC News. 9.00 Matter Of Fact: This Week. 9.45 The Business. (CC) 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. (CC) 12.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 12.30 7.30. (R, CC) 1.00 ABC News. 1.15 Matter Of Fact: This Week. (R) 2.00 ABC News. 2.15 Drum. (R, CC) 3.00 The World. (R) 4.00 BBC Global. 4.30 7.30. (R, CC) 5.00 Deutsche Welle.

2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00

Sunrise. (CC) The Morning Show. (PG, CC) Seven Morning News. (CC) MOVIE: The Perfect Teacher. (M, R, CC) (2010) Megan Park. The Daily Edition. (CC) The hottest issues from the day’s news. The Chase. (CC) Hosted by Bradley Walsh. Seven News At 4. (CC) The Chase Australia. (CC)

7TWO

6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00 1.00

WIN

Today. (CC) Today Extra. (PG, CC) Morning News. (CC) The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, CC) Extra. (R, CC) Entertainment news program. Married At First Sight. (PG, R, CC) Narrated by Georgie Gardner. News Now. (CC) Afternoon News. (CC) Millionaire Hot Seat. (CC)

7MATE

6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Soccer. EPL. Tottenham Hotspur v Manchester United. 9.15 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS News. (CC) 1.55 Living Black. (CC) 2.25 Soccer. (CC) EPL. Tottenham Hotspur v Manchester United. Replay. 4.30 Cycling. (CC) Herald Sun Tour. Prologue. Individual time trial. Alexandra Gardens to Queensbridge Square. 1.6km. From Melbourne. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)

6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 A Current Affair. (CC) 7.30 Married At First Sight. (M, CC) Follows a social “experiment” in which couples, who meet for the first time at their wedding, begin their lives together. Narrated by Georgie Gardner. 9.00 MOVIE: Bride Wars. (PG, R, CC) (2009) Two best friends become enemies after they realise they have scheduled their respective weddings for the same day. Kate Hudson, Anne Hathaway. 10.50 Mom. (M, R, CC) Christy and Bonnie face temptation when Bonnie is prescribed pain medication for a back injury. 11.20 A.D. Kingdom And Empire. (M, R, CC) Caligula decides to return to Rome, but not before he demands his statue be placed in the Temple.

6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) Join the hosts for a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. With the 2015 addition of Margaret Court Arena as a third retractable-roof stadium at Melbourne Park, the Australian Open is the only Grand Slam in the world with three retractable-roof venues, making it a truly weatherproof tournament. 7.30 Cricket. (CC) Big Bash League. First semi-final. 11.10 Blue Bloods. (M, R, CC) Erin and Anthony investigate the death of a prisoner, after the cause of death is found to be inconsistent with injuries he sustained during a car accident. Jamie shoots a mugger who turns out to be a cop’s son.

6.00 Food Safari. (R, CC) Maeve O’Meara explores Filipino cuisine. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 Great British Railway Journeys: Spalding To Grimsby. (PG, CC) Michael Portillo travels from the market town of Spalding in Lincolnshire to Grimsby in the country’s north east. 8.05 Shane Delia’s Recipe For Life. (CC) Shane introduces new plants and herbs to the school garden and hires two new staff. 8.35 Knightfall. (MA15+, CC) (New Series) A member of the Knights Templar is forced to take up arms once more after his leader is murdered. 10.20 Ride Upon The Storm. (M, CC) August starts working as a street pastor. Elisabeth takes a break from her relationship with Johannes. 11.30 SBS World News Late Edition. (CC)

12.15 The Closer. (M, R, CC) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.00 Extra. (R, CC) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. (R) 3.30 Good Morning America. (CC) 5.00 News Early Edition. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)

12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC) 1.00 The Project. (R, CC) 2.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC)

12.00 MOVIE: The Other Son. (M, R) (2012) 2.00 One Born Every Minute UK. (M) 4.55 Poh & Co. Bitesize. (R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News. (CC)

1.30 3.00 4.00 5.00

ONE

6.00 Children’s Programs. 11.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 BattleBots. (PG, R) 1.00 World’s Funniest Videos Top 10 Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Movie Juice. (R, CC) 2.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 The Middle. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Robot Wars. (PG) 8.30 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 9.30 MOVIE: Rambo. (MA15+, R, CC) (2008) 11.15 WWE Raw. (MA15+) 12.15 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 1.15 Mike Tyson Mysteries. (MA15+, R) 1.30 Children’s Programs.

9GEM

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Ultimate Factories. (PG, R) 1.00 The Big Adventure. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 What Went Down. (PG, R) 3.30 American Pickers. (PG, R) 4.30 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 Ultimate Factories. (PG, R) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Family Guy. (M, R) 8.00 American Dad! (M, R) 8.30 Family Guy. (M, R) 9.00 American Dad! (M, R) 9.30 MOVIE: Old School. (MA15+, R) (2003) 11.30 Hardcore Pawn. (M, R) 12.00 Late Programs.

7FLIX

6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 Harry. (PG, CC) 11.30 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 12.10 MOVIE: The Divided Heart. (PG, R, CC) (1954) 2.05 Colin & Justin’s Home Heist. (PG) 3.15 The Secret Life Of Growing Up. (PG, R, CC) 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Are You Being Served? (PG, R) 7.30 Death In Paradise. (M, R) 8.40 The Commander. (MA15+, CC) 10.15 Filthy Rich. (M, CC) 11.15 Death In Paradise. (M, R) 12.25 Late Programs.

9LIFE

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Spit It Out. (R, CC) 10.00 James Robison. (PG) 10.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 11.15 Kiss Bang Love. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 3.30 Grandfathered. (PG, R) 4.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 4.30 I Dream Of Jeannie. (R, CC) 5.00 Just Shoot Me! (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders. (M, CC) 8.30 Criminal Minds. (M, CC) 11.30 The Blacklist. (M, R, CC) 12.30 Late Programs.

SBS

6.00 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 6.30 Family Feud. (R, CC) 7.00 Ent. Tonight. (R, CC) 7.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (M, CC) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 Neighbours. (R, CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R, CC) 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. (CC) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)

9GO!

6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 NBC Today. (R, CC) 12.00 Life On The Edge. (PG, R) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Last Chance Learners. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 ICU. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Room For Improvement. (R, CC) 4.30 The Great Outdoors. (R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG) 7.30 Border Security: Int. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Murdoch Mysteries. (M, R) 10.30 Houdini & Doyle. (M) 11.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 12.30 Late Programs.

Dubbo’s TV Guide

6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 1.00 Colin & Justin’s Home Heist. (PG) 2.00 Say Yes To The Dress: Atlanta. (PG, R) 3.00 The Block. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.30 Dance Moms. (PG) 8.30 Housewives Of Beverly Hills. (M) 9.30 Vanderpump Rules. (M) 10.30 Vanderpump Rules After Show. (M) 11.00 To Be Advised. 11.30 Talking Married. (New Series) 12.00 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND

6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Get Smart. (PG, R) 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. (PG, R) 10.00 Reel Action. (R) 10.30 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 11.30 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 12.00 Happy Days. (PG, R) 1.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 2.00 Star Trek. (PG, R) 3.00 Cricket. (CC) Women’s Big Bash League. First semi-final. 6.30 Happy Days. (PG, R) 7.30 Car Crash Global: Caught On Camera. (PG, R) 8.30 Gold Coast Cops. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 MOVIE: Bloodsport. (MA15+, R) (1988) A soldier competes in an illegal kickboxing competition. Jean-Claude Van Damme. 11.00 To Be Advised. 1.00 Shopping. (R) 2.00 Get Smart. (PG, R) 2.30 Happy Days. (PG, R) 3.30 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 4.00 Muscle Car Masters. (R) 5.00 Muscle Car Masters. (R)

ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Littlest Petshop. (R) 6.30 Mako: Island Of Secrets. (R, CC) 7.05 Pokémon. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G: NEXT. 8.00 Totally Wild. (C, CC) 8.35 Bob The Builder. (R) 9.00 Super Wings. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Dr Quinn. (PG, R) 11.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (M) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (R, CC) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.00 King Of Queens. (R) 4.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Family Feud. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (CC) 7.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Will & Grace. (PG, R) 8.30 Sex And The City. (MA15+, R) 9.05 Sex And The City. (M, R) 10.55 Sex And The City. (MA15+, R) 11.30 James Corden. (M) 12.30 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 JAG. (PG, R) 4.30 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Battle For Money. (PG, R) 1.35 SBS On-Demand Staff Picks. (PG, R) 1.40 Gaycation. (PG, R) 2.30 Dara Ó Briain: School Of Hard Sums. (R) 3.30 Des Bishop: Breaking China. (PG, R) 4.00 The Mindy Project. (PG, R) 4.25 VICE. (PG, R) 5.00 News. 5.25 If You Are The One. (R) 6.40 MythBusters. (PG, R, CC) 7.35 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Full Frontal. (M, CC) 9.00 The Trixie & Katya Show. (MA15+, CC) 9.30 The Girlfriend Experience. (CC) 10.30 Late Programs.

SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Restaurant: Impossible. (PG, R) 2.00 Food Lab. (PG, R) 2.30 The Naked Chef. (PG, R) 3.00 Siba’s Table: Fast Feasts. (R) 3.30 Barefoot Contessa. (R) 4.00 5 Ingredient Fix. (R) 4.30 Dinner At Tiffani’s. (R) 5.00 Pati’s Mexican Table. (R) 5.30 Secret Meat Business. (R) 6.00 Food Lab. (PG, R) 6.30 Bizarre Foods. (R) 7.00 The Naked Chef. (PG) 7.30 Bizarre Foods. (PG, R) 8.30 Far Eastern Odyssey. (R) 9.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 10.30 Late Programs.

NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.30 Hollow Water. 2.30 Africa On A Plate. 3.00 Waabiny Time. 3.25 Yarramundi Kids. 3.50 Finding My Magic. 3.55 Musomagic. 4.20 Grounded. 4.45 The Time Compass. 5.00 Cafe Niugini. 5.30 In The Frame. 6.00 Our Footprint. 6.30 Antonio Carluccio’s 6 Seasons. (PG) 7.00 Our Stories. 7.20 Aroha Bridge. 7.25 News. 7.30 Flying Fox: The Wings Of The Night. 8.30 Haunted: The Other Side. (PG, R) 9.00 MOVIE: Rosewood. (MA15+, R) (1997) 11.30 Late Programs.

CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.

ODDS, ENDS & INSPIRATION STRANGE BUT TRUE

overkill for a scraped elbow, I imagine. z You’ve probably been to a z At weddings here in Australia, restaurant with a dessert called it is common for the bride to toss Death by Chocolate, but the real- her bouquet to determine who life event is less appetising. After will be the next to be married. At falling into a vat of boiling choco- weddings in Finland the cuslate in New Jersey, USA a man tom is a bit different, though the died before his co-workers were outcome is the same: There, the able to pull him out. bride traditionally wears a golden z Colgate toothpaste is good for crown, and at the reception she more than just cleaning those is blindfolded and spun around. pearly whites, evidently. Domestic Then all the single girls in attendscientists claim that it’s also great ance dance around her while the for cleaning piano keys and rebride, still blindfolded, tries to moving scratches from glass. place the crown on one of them. z It’s not known why there’s a It’s believed that the lucky girl New Jersey, USA law banning the who ends up wearing the crown sale of cabbage on Sunday. will be the next to wed. z The first Band-Aid brand band- z Thought for the Day: “Where age didn’t exactly look like the it is a duty to worship the sun, Band-Aids we’re familiar with it is pretty sure to be a crime to today. For instance, it was 7.5cm examine the laws of heat.” – John wide and 45cm long. A bit of Morley

NOW HERE’S A TIP z January Sales Items: Get great deals on leftover holiday decorations and cards, appliances and furniture, as well as linens, towels and other “white sale” items. z Keep a few fabric-softener sheets in the linen closet. It will keep the towels smelling fresh. If you have lots of extra bedsheets, it keeps them fresh-smelling, too. z “Whenever I have a casserole pan that has baked-on, hard-toremove bits left behind, I fill it with water, add a little dish soap and stick it back in the warm oven. I let it sit for several hours – even overnight – and the gunk just slides off the next day. Elbow grease is getting harder and harder to come

by these days, so I try not to waste it.” – contributed by I.S. z “Have a budding artist? Mine has just gone through a crayonon-the-wall period. I tried all kinds of things to get it off, and then a neighbour told me to use a damp rag dipped in baking soda. It’s great, and the crayon came right off.” – G.L. z Substitutions: 1 cup of sugar dissolved in 1/4 cup of hot water can stand in for 1 cup of corn syrup. z “If you live alone, always take your mobile phone with you when you go outside or in the garage; in case of an accident, you can contact someone.” – K.P z Send your tips to now-heres-a-tip@ dubbophotonews. com.au

WISE & INSPIRING WORDS It was Australian-born British author P.L. Travers, best known for her series of books about Mary Poppins, who made the following sage observation: “A writer is, after all, only half his book. The other half is the reader, and from the reader the writer learns.”


49

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

SPORT

Send your Sport news to Contact our Sports photographer geoff.mann@dubbophotonews.com.au mel.pocknall@dubbophotonews.com.au

CRICKET

Night lights provide some relief for cricketers Story by GEOFF MANN Photos by MEL POCKNALL LAST week’s double-header was warm enough for the four teams involved but nothing compared to what they faced on Saturday afternoon.

James O’Brien puts everything into this slog sweep

South Dubbo Castlereagh Hornets 4/118 defeated Rugby Liberty OneSteelers 3/148 with Will Wolter (50 not out) and Mitch Bower (55) leading the way in the early game, and Bob Berry RSL Colts Blasters too strong for Newtown Amaroo Hotel Tigers under

lights. The Blasters racked up 144 from their 20 overs with Aaron Morris (44) and all-rounder Greg Buckley (34) the main contributors before Ben Semmler (2/11) and leg-spinner Darrell Williams turned the lights out on the Tigers for just

Wes Giddings (hat) and Greg Buckley looking for a drink

108. The McDonalds Megahit continues on Australia Day with plenty of big hitting and fan involvement assured. Umpire Phil Leonard was a picture of elegance as always on Friday night however succumbed to

Nathan Munro swings high and hard on his way to 28

the exploding thermometer on Saturday afternoon and had to be taken to the trees and rehydrated. No doubt, the former Apex opener will display his dogged determination and head back to the crease this week, hydrated, painted up with cream and his big hat!

Now this is the way to watch the big game!

Great spot to see all the action – radio on in the background

Best way to avoid the bouncing ball Munro drives on the up

Jason Ryan departs for 2

Angus Norton (6no) in his matching helmet and face-cream flicks one square of the wicket

Bob Berry skipper Greg Buckley

Henry Railz lets one fly NSW Bush Blues opener Jordan Moran back in action for the OneSteelers

‘Where did it go” – keeper and batsmen both bamboozled

Nathan Munro sends this one packing to the angst of the Hornets

MORE MATCH PHOTOS: NEXT PAGE ❱❱


50

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

Jacob Hill looks disappointed as he heads for the sheds. No need – he made a brilliant 63 to share a formidable opening partnership with Jordan Moran (45)

Rugby batsman Jacob Hill a little late on this delivery as keeper McDean waits to strike Souths bowler Bart Goodman has “the evil look in his eye” as Dwayne Kent (6) runs into position

Hill turns one to square

Right: Colts batsman Darrell Williams run out 4

Souths keeper McDean perfectly poised as Jacob Hill defends

McDean pounces but Hill’s foot has not moved

Keeper Campbell Rose underarms but can’t beat the quick run by Will Wolter

Rugby Liberty Onesteelers’ bowler James O’Brien went for 30 from his 4 overs

Jason Ryan cuts

Castlereagh’s Will Wolter on his way to an unbeaten 50

Jacob Hill plays a swashbuckling drive

Bob Berry Blasters’ English leg-spinning all-rounder Darrell Williams is no slouch with the bat!

Wolter takes in H2O


51

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

Cricket double header under lights at Victoria Park (continued)

Jacob Hill guides this to point in front of keeper McDean

Wolter on the run

Thanks fellas!

Will Wolter all concentration

A circumspect Adam Wells on his way – run out for 10

Wolter gets another drink...

And the “holy water” revitalises him as he places another one to leg!

No need for artificial lights for the first game!

Up-andcoming keeper Campbell Rose has his eyes perfectly focussed It’s all over in game one – The OneSteelers congratulate Castlereagh Hornets on their win

James “Obie” O’Brien

“Thanks Phil”

Greg Buckley blasts one to the fence for Bob Berry

Henry Railz claimed 1/28 for the Hornets and picked up 28 with the bat!

“Obie” wants a six!

Wes Giddings exerts full pressure on the tongue as he reaches for this one wide outside off


52

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

TRIBUTE

“Chang-a-lang-a-lang-a-lang”: a forgettable tune but an unforgettable champion! By GEOFF MANN

ONE of the Rugby League’s greatest, the fifth Immortal, passed away after a long illness on the weekend but his deeds will live on forever. Graeme “Changa” Langlands has been praised by champions including original Immortals Bob Fulton and Johnny Raper as the finest fullback of any generation. Chang was a country boy from Wollongong who terrorised the city boys as a teenager in an era when Country-City was a real contest, before signing with the mighty St George Dragons in 1963 to share in the last four of their record-making 11 straight premierships. Along the way Langlands’ legendary sidestep, his tough last line defence and dependable boot earned him 45 test caps, 33 NSW guernseys and numerous Country and City honours. He toured Great Britain with the brilliant 1963 Kangaroos, scoring 20 points in the famous 50-12 win over the old enemy at Swinton. In 1967 he competed with brilliant fullbacks Les Johns and Ken Thornett and proved adaptable as a centre or on the wing. Chang also led the Kangaroos to Great Britain for the 1970 and

‘72 World Cups and was captain-coach in 1973 and again in 1975 when the Aussies retained the Ashes and were unbeaten throughout his final World Cup series. Chang’s sidestep was incredible. He could dummy to the touch judge or ball boy, put out his long leg and bamboozle defenders who would almost crash-tackle the hapless “recipient” of the phantom pass. He was tough, cool and had a brilliant rugby league brain. A little known fact is that former Coonamble star Keith Hemsworth, father of all-round sportsman and current Western Zone Under-16s cricket coach Trent, was understudy to the great man in the late ‘70s. Better known is that Canowindra’s tackling dynamo Peter Fitzgerald, Nyngan’s rugby union Wallaby convert Dennis O’Callaghan, Gilgandra flyer Johnny King and Eugowra legends Ian Walsh and Barry Beath shared the sheds with “the greatest fullback of all time” during their fabulous run through the ‘60s until his retirement in the mid-’70s. Earl Harrison from Gular was five-eighth in the famous 1963 Kangaroos. Langlands and his centre partner Reg Gasnier for

that tour – Thornett was the fullback – told me on a visit to Dubbo many years ago that he was “the perfect link man”. “Chang The Magic Dragon”, the tune penned and “sung” by televi-

sion personality Jimmy Hannan, was a very ordinary attempt to capture the brilliance of a radiant star; Changa Langlands, the rugby league champion was extraordinary – a genuine Immortal!

Graeme Langlands, second from right, pictured during a Legends Of League visit to Dubbo in 2008. With “Changa” in the photo are Don Parish, Ian Walsh and Ron Bennett. PHOTO: WENDY MERRICK/FILE

SWIMMING RUGBY LEAGUE

Ducks on road to Narromine

AFTER a couple of swims in the home pond, the Dubbo flock headed west last Sunday. It is becoming an annual pilgrimage as the local Diggers Club spread their wings to embrace the Jets. 21 of the Dubbo swimmers enjoyed the outdoor facility and the hospitality was “as always, most appreciated”, according to Nicole Johnston. “The mini-bus trip allowed for unabashed banter and the usual ribbing. It was embellished by tales of Christmas/New Year exploits,” Nicole said. “One of our youngest Ducks is really a fish,” she laughed. “Little Lucas Salmon swam the 30m races in fine style and is improving each week. Everyone in our club is proud of his inspirational efforts.” The Ducks enjoyed lunch together back at home in the Dubbo RSL where they were joined by life-time supporters, Don and Betty Attenborough, and many of the spouses. Nicole says preparations for the Western Districts Carnival are steaming ahead. “All of our members are keen for this annual chance to test themselves against swimmers from like-minded splashers from Nyngan, Wellington, Narromine, Orange and other Diggers’ groups. We are also very keen for newcomers to join in the fun,” Nicole added. The Dubbo Ducks swim each Sunday morning at the local RSL Health and Aquatic Centre. Is there a better place to be than in the pool first thing on a Sunday?

Dubbo Ducks vice-chairperson Henry Willcockson and president Gail Braybon presented a cheque for $730 to member of Legacy Ivor John Trapman on Monday, January 22. The money was raised during the recent Clive Roots Memorial carnival. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/SARAH HARVEY

Dubbo Ducks Results 21.01.2018 30m freestyle – 1st Ron Everett, 2nd Brett Schloeffel, 3rd Greg Salmon 50m freestyle – 1st Greg Jankowski, 2nd Nicole Johnstone, 3rd Reg Ferguson 100m freestyle – 1st John Wherritt, 2nd Brett Schloeffel, 3rd Roger Mackay December point score – 1st Ian Henderson, 2nd Dave Sparkes, 3rd Nicole Johnstone

Mudgee to host Dragons and Rabbitohs in just over a month CAN’T wait for the week when St George Illawarra and South Sydney bring their unparalleled rivalry to the west on Saturday, February 24! Whilst all will remember the greats from the past, new champions will be on show for modern day lovers of the great game. Both clubs boast Test and State of Origin stars and Test players from all over the world, but it will be “the new breed” that 10,000-plus youngsters will flock to Willow Glen to watch. The Charity Shield kicks off at 7.30, preceded by a mouth-watering Indigenous Under-16s match where future NRL stars from NSW will tackle the Maroons from Queensland. Rylee Blackhall from the Wellington Cowboys and Jack Hartwig (Forbes) will be aiming to catch the eyes of talent scouts when they run out for the Blues. Tickets are on sale through Ticketek.


53

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

SPORT

Send your Sport news to geoff.mann@dubbophotonews.com.au

Sports editor

Sports photography

GEOFF MANN

MEL POCKNALL

COMMONWEALTH GAMES

Queen’s Baton in Wellington and Dubbo for 21st Games By GEOFF MANN THE countdown is on for the most anticipated sporting event in Australia for years. With the Commonwealth Games to explode into action at the Gold Coast on April 4, we get the chance to “feel” it next week when some privileged citizens from our communities pass on the treasured baton that has touched almost every continent. By the time multiple Olympian swimmer Ben Austen carries the baton through his hometown of Wellington on January 30, the relay will have been to Africa through Sierra Leone, Ghana, Rwanda, Uganda, Cameroon, Nigeria, Kenya, Seychelles, Tanzania, Malawi, Mauritius, Zambia, Botswana, Namibia, Mozambique, Swaziland, into the Caribbean islands of Lesotho, Trinidad and Tobago, Grenada, St Vincent, The Grenadines, Saint Lucia, Barbados, Antigua, Bermuda, Dominica, Montserrat, St Kitts, Nevis, Anguilla, British Virgin Islands, Turks and Cocos and the Caymans; into The Bahamas, Canada, Belize, Falkland Islands at the bottom of South America, and then to the British Isles – Scotland, England, Northern Ireland, the Isle of Man, Guernsey, Jersey, Gibraltar, Malta, Cyprus across to Asia – Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Brunei and Singapore then into Oceania – Nauru, Kiribati, Niue, Cook

Islands, Tonga, Fiji, Samoa, Tuvalu, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Norfolk Island, and New Zealand before ‘crossing the ditch’ to Australia. 1976 Olympic boxer Brian Tink and 1978 Commonwealth Games Gold Medallist Katrina Morrow (Gibbs) head a line-up of 19 very proud Dubvegans who will take their turn before the city comes together to celebrate at Victoria Park at 5pm. The baton bearers include athletes, business people, community volunteers in a true cross-section of ages. Tanya Andersen, Daniel Andersen, Dubbo Rhinos stalwart Ian Burns, Xanthie Chatfield, Colin Harper, Karen James, Annette McMillan, Sue Nuttall, Brian Palmer (Geurie), Joan Rheinberger, Ernie Sluiter, Bella Tipping, Bonnie Tratt and Hugh Treloar will be joined by Pat Lummis and Sandy McGrath (Gilgandra) and Brett Robinson (Drummoyne). Dubbo Photo News will be on hand to capture the colour and excitement of a gala occasion which is sure to live long in the memory of our region. I, for one, will never forget the chill down the spine as the Olympic Torch flared into Apex Oval ahead of the Sydney Games in 2000. When Brian Tink dipped the light into the replica cauldron, the amphitheatre was united as one in a cacophonous outpouring of pride.

Prince Charles and wife Camilla with the Queen’s Commonwealth Baton earlier in its journey last year. PHOTO: REUTERS/EDGAR SU

Commonwealth Games Gold Medallist Katrina Morrow (nee Gibbs) will carry the baton on January 30. PHOTO: MEL POCKNALL

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Dubbo’s own champion boxer Brian Tink is pictured (right) with legendary Ghanaian professional boxer Azumah Nelson. Brian was part of a group of Dubbo locals who travelled to Melbourne last weekend for the unveiling of a statue dedicated to another boxing legend, Johnny Famechon. Brian is another selected to carry the baton when it visits our region.

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54

January 25-31, 2018 Dubbo Photo News

SPORT TAKE THAT! The sting of a Hornets bat! STORY, PHOTOS: INSIDE

PHOTO: MEL POCKNALL


55

Dubbo Photo News January 25-31, 2018

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