Evening. Quiet old Adensfield. I ate anonymous tips, but we can't afford to ignore them. Check him out, Lord. But who really knows what's going on? Sergeant, I'm a perfectly respectable shopkeeper. Behind closed doors. Perfect. I simply don't believe in condemning a man purely on the strength of rumors. It's up to Nick to sort through the gossip and uncover the truth. You knew I wouldn't hurt you. Heartbeat, 7.30 Saturday, followed by the bill. The parents were overjoyed when their daughters were born. Adorable, identical twins. But there was something terribly wrong. And there I was shy. And they're not, you know, not speaking. They were totally expressionless. You spoke to them, they didn't react. Had stopped eating, she'd stopped moving. For years, they played a strange and silent game with terrifying consequences. I burned it down today. We opened all the cans of petrol and spread it everywhere. On True Stories, the silent twin, 8.30 Sunday, ABC. They drive tractors, harvest, do the books and run the household. They've been called the invisible farmers, and without them, many a property or family farm would fail. They're the women of the land. And from ABC Radio's Rural Woman of the Year Award comes a collection of stories from many of the women involved. Stories of great achievement, of hardship, hope and courage. Women of the Land, on audio tape or as a book, is available now from ABC shops, ABC centres and other retailers. The courage of Eddie Marmos spawned the Native Title Act. It was to deliver the promised land, reconcile blacks and whites, but was the euphoria misplaced? How do you feel about having a mine on your land? Great. Charismatic leader Noel Pearson's dream of a black nation is under challenge. Communities are divided. Land claims remain elusive. Blacks are fighting blacks. Marbo could fail. It's a time, so I curse the fact that we have Marbo. On Four Corners, Title Fight, 8.30 Monday. Next week at 7.30, Perth's population boom pushes our dumps to the limit. We really have to change. Land radiation orphans, 50 years on. Who did it? Why was I left like this? Are these the victims of a deadly British experiment? That's next week at 7.30. Good evening. Carmen Lawrence described as extraordinary the closing address of council assisting the Eastern Royal Commission. Dr Lawrence said Anne Vanstone appears to have ignored or glossed over much of the evidence. This year's Nobel Prize for Literature has been awarded to Irish poet Seamus Heaney. The committee praised his work for its lyrical beauty and ethical depth. Wildcat's coach Adrian Hurley says Perth must restrict North Melbourne's Darryl MacDonald in tomorrow's opening game of the grand final series. MacDonald guided the Giants to a semi-final win last night. Showers from the Kimberley to the South Coast. There'll be more news in those editions. Good night. I thought we should start with your pregnancy. I can't pin it down in terms of how many drinks. It wasn't like that. She drank to forget. Just tell me what can be done for it. Now all she can do is remember. Tama McIntosh and Tina Bursall guest star in a compelling episode of GP. 8.30 Tuesday. ABC Radio presents the appeal for the Royal Flying Doctor Service. This year the service looked after 135,000 Australians and flew over 9 million kilometres. Keep the Flying Doctor flying. Call this number toll free this weekend and follow the airwaves appeal on your local ABC Radio. The Royal Flying Doctor Service and ABC Radio, always there. Flyves going all out to make the right impression. I always thought it was important to age gracefully. Check it out in a postcard from Los Angeles, 9.30 Saturday. Saturday. Don't you think he is the most beautiful man you've ever seen? A lonely spinster looking for love. You consider my behaviour improper. A dashing Romeo. No. Their story of forbidden romance. She will be immensely rich. Yes, she will. The father. Is he upstairs in my bed? The daughter. Oh, I can do anything, my dear. The lover. You're everything I've ever yearned for in a woman. But is he really the handsome suitor? The fact that I'm poor. Or cold digger. What are you living on now? Your John Hyde movie classic. Oh, I love music more. The Heiress, 10.20 Saturday, ABC. A battle between good and evil, tomorrow night. 7.30, the unexpected on heartbeat. Hey, you've got to arrest them. Who? Who? Them two con artists. They've just taken me for every penny I've got. 8.30, the bill. They asked for a police friend game. Sit down! Alright, ladies, get your kit on, please. Holly. Friendship put to the test. I learn not to judge, Holly. I have to. It's my job. Then Clive's in LA. How are you feeling? A little bit nervous. I'm not absolutely certain what I'm doing here, actually. You're kidding? I know what you're doing here. I mean, there's no way you're going to make it here in Hollywood looking this way. And John Hyde presents the Heiress. I would have liked you to say to me, if my father doesn't think well of you, what does it matter? Oh, but it would matter. I could never say that. Don't miss an outstanding episode of The Bill tomorrow night. Yes, hello, everyone. Welcome to Club Buggering. I believe this car could have been very, very competitive at the mountain last weekend. I believe it could have won. I believe it could have thrashed the perk. Do you agree with me on this, Roy? I certainly do, HGN. Someone's going to win this next week. Someone in this club. But tonight on the club, Sigrid Thornton, Jack Thompson, in the car, up the back. Be there. Talk in cinema. Good evening. Indira Naidu with ABC National News. Leading late edition, the standoff between the board of retailer Coles Meyer and its biggest investors. Shareholders who control one-fifth of the company say they've waited too long for changes to the board. But the board today rejected demands to replace its chairman and key directors. Pressure has been building since last month's news of the so-called Yannan transaction involving interests associated with the company's chairman, Solomon Liu. The institutions want Mr. Liu replaced along with his deputy, Will Bailey, and executive board members. But late today, a statement from the chairman made it clear the company won't rush any changes. He says the board is considering a range of views. While major investors are important, they're not necessarily representative of the entire share register. And arbitrary timeframes won't serve shareholders' interests. Solomon Liu refers specifically to smaller shareholders who may hold a different view. However, certainly some of those smaller shareholders want the same changes at Coles Meyer as the big investors. The main problems that concern our members are the potential for conflict of interest arising out of the related party transactions. And they see that the solution to that would be to have an independent chairman and a greater number of independent directors. Two finance now and another dull day on the share market as investors wait on new economic data from the US. The all-ordinary slipping just four and a half points. The overseas Japanese shares rallied with the Nikkei showing a solid rise. But Hong Kong shares dipped a little on the Hang Seng in line with a slight fall in the Dow. The dollar also losing a little against the currencies of Australia's major trading partners. Bosnia's warring parties have open talks in Rome with representatives of eight Western nations and Russia on how to rebuild their homeland shattered by four years of war. The news of the new war came soon after an announcement of a conditional ceasefire for 60 days from next Tuesday. There have been many Bosnian ceasefires and this one hasn't quite filtered through to the battlefields of northwest Bosnia as yet. Bosnian Serb forces continue to try to regain lost ground. The Muslims continue to try to hold on to their gains. The nations are met and the ceasefire comes into effect next week. Peace talks are planned for the US two weeks later with an international conference to follow in Paris. In Papayeta about a thousand people have staged a torchlight protest in the first public demonstration since France's second nuclear test. And in Australia, French Ambassador Dominique Girard again justified his country's weapons testing program in the South Pacific. At a foreign correspondence lunch in Sydney, he was forced to defend the seizure of two Greenpeace vessels. The international organization claims are being held illegally. The ambassador tried to ignore the protester but eventually replied when the Greenpeace representative approached his table. It's absolutely untrue. All the process of the seizure of the ships has been supervised by the and organized by the French justice according to the French law and along the French legal procedures. The ambassador then left the lunch refusing to answer any more questions. Demonstrators took their message to Sydney's French consulate calling for a nuclear free and independent Pacific. While in Tahiti's capital Papayeta, more than a thousand people staged a torchlit rally demanding an end to the nuclear tests. Wallaby's coach Bob Dwyer who brought home the 1991 World Cup has been sacked by the Australian Rugby Union. His position has been filled by New South Wales coach Greg Smith who defeated three other candidates including Dwyer. Residents along Florida's Panhandle are cleaning up after a pounding overnight from Hurricane Opal. It's the third time this season a hurricane has struck the US mainland. In its way across five states Opal left 11 people dead destroying homes for 200 kilometers from Pensacola to Panama City. Howling winds and seas up to six meters left much of the region rearranged. Boats left high and dry on city streets. This holiday house swept 300 meters out to sea. The damage to property estimated at two billion dollars and the storm season's not over yet. Just named Hurricane Pablo is forming in the Atlantic east of the Bahamas. Now the national weather for the start of the weekend. A few showers for Melbourne, Hobart and Darwin mainly fine in Canberra, Adelaide and Perth and fine in Sydney and Brisbane. That's Late Edition. I'm Indira and I do. Stay with us now for Roy in HG. Hi, hi. Oh where's the bow when you need it? It is an emergency darling. Look at this place. Look, look this is an emergency darling. Look at this, look. Baby spew. Baby spew darling. And it's enough to push a woman over the edge sweetie. Mommy. She was so anely retentive she couldn't sit down for fear of sucking up the furniture. A maternal crisis. Absolutely fabulous sweetie. 9.30 Monday. I'd like the world to know. Tensions are rising at home and abroad. Corp you'll kill him. Be cruel to us. Lipstick on your collar. 9.30 Sunday.