Family Series, that's a country practice. Seven foot and four. Well on earth. Here let's see what you've got. That's three, four, forty-six. Sydney professional Wayne Riley has a one stroke lead going into the final round of the Victorian PGA title at Warrnambool. Riley shot a two under par round of seventy today for a fifty four hole total of two hundred and three. The country's best sprinters taking the spotlight. The ampoule stakes brought together Epsom winner Riverdale and the champion Veet Shevall. Here are the closing stages. Trying to get a run back on the fence. Mr. Ironclad further out and further back. Show Moran at the four hundred Riverdale and keepers fighting it out for Mr. Ironclad. Veet Shevall has blocked in badly with nowhere to go. Riverdale and keepers fighting it out for Mr. Ironclad. Then Show Moran and Exemplify down the outside. It's Riverdale ahead in front of keepers with a hundred to go. I think he's going to get the big double. Yes Riverdale's in front of keepers and on the outside Exemplify and he's got there Riverdale. Riverdale's won the money about a half length to other Exemplify and close up keepers. A good win to Riverdale and he paid one dollar fifty and sixty five cents. Exemplify one dollar fifteen keepers paid one dollar ninety five for third. On the local scene the Queen's plate over a thousand metres was the main race on today's card at Ascot. Getting there was sent out at favourite at even money. Flatten for Hyman getting there in front Kemp went for the whip. Andrew Cole's coming down the outside the person fly trying to get to it and Jungle Movement getting up along the rail with Dark Chalice down the outside. It's getting there in front. Jungle Movement trying to get to it and down the outside Dark Chalice will tip them all out. Dark Chalice got up to win from Jungle Movement and getting there. Dark Chalice paid six dollars forty and one dollar thirty. Jungle Movement seven dollars fifty and getting there paid seventy cents. A look at the novelty betting at Ascot today. The forecast Quinella on race three at Ascot paid one hundred and eleven dollars twenty five for the numbers five and one. The Quartet on race five the numbers you wanted five eight six and four. Made the dividend wait for it twenty seven thousand three hundred and sixty five dollars and sixty cents. The Quinella on race six paid three dollars forty for the numbers three and six. The Daily Double number one Twit Echo and number fourteen Javu paid forty six dollars sixty five. And finally the Race Eight trifecta fourteen eight and three paid three hundred and ninety dollars sixty five. There was a fall in the last race when Sovereign Ghost came down in the straight. The jockey Greg Maker wasn't seriously hurt. The world's top ranked surfer South African Sean Thompson has been sensationally eliminated from the Tracer Wind and Waves Prime at Trigg Beach. Thompson was beaten in the first heat by 1984 Schoolboys champion Dean Whiteman from New South Wales. Thompson's shock defeat is a blow to the organisers of WA's richest board riding event but he was philosophical saying he didn't catch enough of the small waves that were out there. The other upset was the victory of local Greg McCauley over Wayne Rabbit Bartholomew. With those two champions now amongst the spectators Byron Bay surfer Shane Horan's chances of moving into the final and improving his world ranking from five to four are looking good. Horan using his winged fin board defeated West Australian Anthony Lynch today to move into the last twelve. Others to move into tomorrow's final round include Dave McCauley, the removed American Mike Parsons, Greg Day from New South Wales with a win over defending Tracer champion Stuart Bedford Brown, Barton Lynch and Kingsley Looker rated 24th in the world. All set for some great surfing tomorrow we'll have Erika with all the weather details next on Sevens Nightly News. The perfect office in between offices. If your idea of the perfect office is having peace, quiet and privacy in which to work and the kind of service that's seen but not heard. So you can make the most of every working minute. Join the club. TAA's Flight Deck Club. The friendly way of having an office in between offices. Yeah. Power. Superpower. A battery with mind lives. Super bounding with power that runs and runs and keeps on running. You can rely on EverReady Super for super power, super life, super heavy-duty batteries at a not so heavy price. You really don't have to put up with a lawn like this. Hell row would know the difference a good man can make. They should. They've been manufacturing and servicing them for 30 years. Most of the professionally used mowers in WA are made here by Elro. That's given us the experience to know what's best for you. Elro only stock mowers they can recommend and always give specialist after-sale service. So if you want a better cut lawn call and select a mower at Elro's huge showroom. Elro they're just under the Subiaco subway. Hello everyone it was a beautiful day in Perth today. I hope you managed to get along to the beach. Minimum was 12.4 at 5.35 this morning when you're out for that early morning jog. Maximum got up to 23 and that was at 11.20 this morning and I'd be inclined to head for the beach again tomorrow. If we look at the surface chart the northeastern Kimberley had a few seasonal thunderstorms today and there were a few showers reported along the south coast but it's all heading to the east. The northern Kimberley will continue with its thunderstorms but tomorrow should be fine day throughout the state. A little bit of drizzle tonight in the Euclid area but apart from that the high is centered around about Esperance tomorrow and we're going to have a lovely fine easterly airflow across the state that'll give the farmers chance to dry up their hay. The temperature on the way up as I said to on Monday more northwesterly northeasterly winds rather so it'll be even hotter. Tuesday we may be in for a slight change but it'll still be up around the early 20s. Around WA tomorrow temperatures as I mentioned will be up a couple of degrees right around the coast in fact. The highest reported maximum in the state today was 43 up at Derby. Actually they're going for 43 again tomorrow. The highest reported maximum was 20 down at Albany and as you can see a couple of degrees up for them tomorrow too. Six o'clock in the city temperature was 20.8. Barometer at 1022.6 it was falling and the humidity was 63%. Coastal waters forecast perfect day tomorrow during beta mangera easterly winds 12 to 18 knots developing tonight but they should ease off in the morning before shifting to a southwesterly sea breeze 10 to 15 knots and that'll be early in the afternoon. Sea should be mainly slight on a low swirl. In Perth and the metropolitan area the forecast for tomorrow continuing fine with easterly winds and that afternoon sea breeze. Minimum tonight 13 and the maximum tomorrow 26 maybe a little bit warmer and the fire danger is moderate. Good night everyone. Good night Alison. Good night Erica. Well they were the main stories from the Channel 7 newsroom. I'll be back at 7.30 with the latest news headlines. Until then good night. Take a magic carpet ride around the coast of Australia in Pelicans Progress. That's next on 7. You've nibbled Cornetto's crunchy hazelnuts. You've tasted the smooth creaminess of Street's Blue Ribbon ice cream. You know about that bigger hidden chock tip in Cornetto's crispiest cone ever. But have you discovered the new Street's boysenberry ripple Cornetto? Ah yes. When it comes to the crunch new boysenberry ripple Cornetto is in a class of its own. Here's a special favorite Arnett's chocolate dessert cream biscuits. A crunchy chocolate flavored biscuit filled with luscious chocolate cream. The most powerful Australian built four-cylinder family sedan ever released in this country. Toyota Corona Avanti is hot. Now Toyota's top-selling Australian built fours. Australia's most powerful super responsive fuel injected 2.4 high power performance. Toyota Corona Avanti. Style and luxury like you've never seen and now leading the best-selling Corona range of family fours. Wouldn't it be great if your children could have their own Kangaroo Creek Gang. Yes now you can buy beautiful soft cuddly characters like Kevin Kangaroo, War Wombat, Tiddles Tiger Snake and Redmond Rabbit for your kids. They offer hours of fun and come beautifully boxed with this free cutout poster. This is a first release of the Kangaroo Creek Gang toys to the public so be quick and buy for Christmas. Available at all leading pharmacies and the Sunday Times shop. Hello I'm Elise Platt. I'd like to say thank you very much for having me here for the Perth Telethon. It's been fantastic and congratulations on a marvelous effort but now the funds all over with we'd like you to get down to serious business and get your money in as soon as possible. By donating to Telethon you automatically become eligible to win one of these magnificent prizes. Prize number one a Toyota Corolla S sedan kindly donated by Big Rock Toyota. Prize number two a junior Hawaiian fiberglass pool from Paul Sapphire Leisure Centers. Prize number three a trip for two to Dunk Island kindly donated by TAA. One of these magnificent prizes could be yours just by sending your donations to your nearest branch of the R&I Bank WA. An impressive lineup of top-name players will contest the National Panasonic Women's Classic in Brisbane beginning 8 a.m. Monday 7 summer of tennis. In this series we're going to take you on a voyage of discovery that has no precedent an aerial circumnavigation of the entire continent of Australia and that's as far as from Sydney to London. So remote and inaccessible as some parts of our coastline that very few people have ever seen them and certainly never filmed them. This is because there are no roads you can't get anywhere by car you can't get near them by sea because the coast is too treacherous and of course if you fly over them in a civil aircraft you don't see anything. The only way to explore these areas is to fly very low and quite slowly as we did in our float planes. We use float planes because once you get away from the major cities on the coastline there are very few landing strips but with our floats we can land on rivers, lakes, harbours, estuaries even on the open sea. Of course the first man to sail right around Australia was Matthew Flinders in 1802. He went anti-clockwise and that's the way we're going and in fact we're starting where Flinders started at Cape Lewin in Western Australia. We turn first of all this wild and stormy corner to Albany and then along the southern coast to Esperance where we take a trip to some of the islands of the Ruchesh Archipelago. Then we turn up into the Great Australian Bight and along the mighty wall of cliffs at the edge of the Nullarbor Plain. We finish this leg at Eucla, the little ghost town nestling among the sand hills near the head of the Bight. Ford Care is caring for you Ford, caring for you budget too. 21-point holiday safety check $15 new front disc pads $65 engine tune-up $48 air conditioning service $36 Ford Care is caring for you Ford, caring for you budget too. Holiday safety check front disc pads engine tune-up air conditioning service. Book in now at your Ford dealer offer closes November 30. When you book to London with British Airways we don't just book your flight. We can have a rented car ready for you from just $19 a day, a hotel in London from just $16 a night and we'll even give you a return ticket to any one of eight European cities including Paris absolutely free. It's all in the world's favorite holiday book at your travel agents. British Airways, the world's favorite airline. This is the very southwest corner of Australia, the blunt boughs of the continent forever batting into the long swells that roll up from the Southern Ocean driven by the ceaseless winds of the roaring forties. This is where our story and the European history of Australia begins. This is where the Dutch and Portuguese navigators outward bound around the Cape first made land for before turning north towards their colonies in the East Indies. The Dutch named this coast Lewin's land in honor of the ship Lewin whose captain sighted the Cape in 1622. Today Cape Lewin is a national park. It's only permanent inhabitants the families of the lighthouse keepers. Not long after Cape Lewin was first sighted a Dutch ship named the Zee-Pard under Peter Newts almost missed its landfall and found itself here below Cape Lewin heading east. The Zee-Pard's crew were thus the first Europeans to turn this corner of the continent and sail along the then completely unknown southern coastline. They were to sail right across the Great Australian Bight before hastening back around Cape Lewin to Batavia. For nearly 200 years no one attempted to follow them. Today the southwest corner is very nearly as deserted as it was then. The only settlement anywhere near Cape Lewin is the little township of Augusta at the mouth of the Blackwood River. This region drenched continually by the rain laden westerlies is one of the wettest parts of the continent. It rains here for an average of 187 days of the year one day in every two. The southwest corner also has its mysteries like these conical grass covered hills rising from the swampy plain so perfectly shaped and so out of character with the landscape. They look man-made but surely can't be. What natural forces could shape them like this then clothe them in vegetation? I can find no explanation. Nearly 200 years after the Dutch ship Zee-Pard first passed this way Matthew Flinders began in 1801 from this same stretch of coast his great circumnavigation of the continent heading east in his little ship the investigator. Flinders started from here because like the Dutch before him this was where he made his landfall after sailing from Europe. For Flinders the coast stretching away endlessly to the east was still unknown. On the existing maps of Australia there was a huge gap between this western corner and Van Diemen's land. It was Flinders mission to fill in the map. Flinders observed in his log that by day he tried to stay close enough to the land so that breaking water should always be visible from the ship's deck in order that no river or opening could escape being seen. But at night he hauled off to a safe distance and it's not hard to understand why. At last the rocky coastline eases the landscape becomes gentle. We come across the first sign of human occupation an open-air cattle sale near Walpole. Behind the hills the Franklin River winds back into the Carey forest of the Walpole Nornalup National Park. The surviving pocket in what was once the most densely forested part of Western Australia. And still the forested area shrinks. Now it's clear felling for the export woodchip industry. The very first exploitation of the natural resources of the southwest however took place off the coast. Whaling was you might say our first primary industry. Whales were hunted from the moment the first fleet arrived in 1788. By 1840 off this very coast as many as 300 whaling ships from Nantucket and New Bedford were chasing the sperm and humpback whales for their oil and whale ban. Australia was among the last of the whaling nations keeping it going until 1978. But now the sole remaining whaling station in the southern hemisphere is at last deserted. Its huge ramp bare of carcasses. In the nearby town there are mixed feelings about what some see is the loss of a local industry. But the townspeople will no doubt get over it. Whaling will become just another part of the history of this the oldest white settlement in Western Australia. It was founded in 1826 by a party of troops and convicts from New South Wales and was first known as Frederick's town after Frederick Duke of York and Albany. Today as its 13,000 odd residents will keep reminding you it's called Albany. Dulux creates a spectrum of hundreds of colors. Colors that can make a room cool. Colors that can make a room warm and welcoming. Dulux lets you transform a room hundreds of exciting ways. Transform your home with color. Transform your home with Dulux color. Kelvinator challenges all who build refrigerators down to a price. Cabinets formed from one sheet of steel. Shielded against rust. Expensive copper tubing. Interiors molded in one piece. Others cut corners. Stain-resistant coating others conveniently leave out. And the Kelvinator customer protection plan. Challenge met and won because Kelvinator is built up to a standard not down to a price. Benefit from our huge reserves of natural gas. Start the change to an all gas home by changing to natural gas for cheaper hot water. Changes in technology have produced a whole new range of high-efficiency hot water heaters. Both instantaneous and storage models now use less gas. Change now and get an endless supply of hot water day and night. Change to natural gas unless you've got money to burn. Telmec announces a beautifully recorded collection Australia the Poem celebrating our heroes. There was movement at the station for the word our characters. I had written him a letter which I had for want of better. Our colors. I love a sunburned country. And when you buy Australia the Poems for only $9.99 we'll give you completely free Australia the Songs. 20 colorful Australian bush ballads. Australia the Poems and Australia the Songs featuring paintings by Pro Heart both for just $9.99. We now present the results of tonight's Slot-A-Draw. Flying off Esperance is the largest group of islands on the Australian coastline, the Recherche Archipelago. Numbering just on a hundred and spread some 200 kilometers along the coast the islands of the Recherche were first sighted by Peter Newts in the Zee Pad in 1627 on that first accidental excursion. The islands were not sighted again for nearly 200 years until Admiral Don Tricasto came along. Eventually the whole archipelago was named after his flagship La Recherche. All the islands remain uninhabited and many have never even been landed on. They're all sizes and shapes, some steep and rugged, others low and rounded, but they're all solid knobs of granite. One island has an extraordinary feature. By some chance a large permanent lake has come into existence only a few meters above sea level. Even more remarkable is the color of the water, a delicate but pronounced pink. There are pink lakes on the nearby mainland where the color is produced by salt in the water, so presumably a long period of evaporation has raised the salt concentration in this lake above that in the surrounding ocean. The islands of the Recherche are worth a closer look and it's now possible to inspect those near Esperance on a day trip run by Don Mackenzie and his sons, the local tugboat operators. From close by it's not hard to see why many of these wave washed granite outcrops have never been landed on and why the area is such a haven for wildlife. But as much as the fur seals are at home in these waters, they're painfully vulnerable on the rocks where they like to spend their time, a fact not lost on the early visitors to this country. Seal skins and seal oil were among our first exports within 10 years of the first settlement at Sydney Cove. At the height of the trade tens of thousands of seal skins a week were brought to Sydney for treatment and export, but by about 1830 it was all over. The fur seals had been hunted to the edge of extinction. Today small colonies like this are steadily rebuilding all along our southern coastline. These waters support many kinds of life including some that travel wherever the currents take them by hitching a ride, in this case on the float from a Japanese fishing net. These are goose barnacles, a type of crustacean that attaches itself to any floating object by a foot at the end of its strong muscular stalk. Although barnacles look a lot like shellfish, they're closely related to crabs, prawns and crayfish. This is shown by their feeding habits. The animals in the shells have six pairs of jointed feathery legs which they extend into the sea to gather food as other crustaceans do. When friend has passed through these islands he remarked on the wealth of bird life, especially the large and handsome Pacific gulls. The majestic albatross was of course a bird of great omen to sailors. The osprey is a fish-eating eagle found along coastlines all over the world. The Mackenzie's with lumps of fish have trained this one to demonstrate its technique on cue. Some of these solid ground of domes are quite thickly vegetated even in places with patches of soft green grass and here you may see that solemn dignified bird the Cape barren goose. Like the seals the geese had a hard time until recently because not only are they plump and good to eat but they eat grass and therefore compete with sheep. Although their numbers have been down to a few thousand pairs little colonies are now building up again on remote islands like this where they're protected not only by law but by the difficulty of landing. The islands of the research are now all reserves administered by the State Fisheries and Fauna Department but the Mackenzie's have obtained permission to take visitors ashore on this one aptly named Woody Island. In the early days before it was known how to improve the coastal pastures settlers around Esperance tried hard to establish sheep and even cattle on some of these offshore islands but the problems of access proved too much for them. Today the islands of the research have reverted to their natural state and probably stand now much as they did when first the French and then Flinders and his men came ashore to explore these green and pleasant oases along an otherwise inhospitable coast. All this can be found in only half an hour's cruising from Esperance. It's a reminder that despite nearly 200 years of settlement a vast stretch of our coastline facing the Southern Ocean remains just as it has always been and let's hope always will be. The warm sensitive vocal style of Anne Murray has endeared her to audiences the world over. Now here's an excellent new album of her favorite songs the Anne Murray collection. Beautiful songs beautifully performed 16 great tracks on the Anne Murray collection out now. More Australians will choose this pillow above all others for one very simple reason quality, tontine quality. Sleep on it. It's Australia's top-selling pillow. East of Esperance where the archipelago of the research ends the coastline flattens out. The last echo of the geological events that produced the offshore islands is the granite knob of Cape Arid. Ahead now lies the great Australian Bight. While we're still in the high rainfall zone lakes gleam like silver on the coastal plain before shriveling into patterns of salt pans. But once the coastline begins to arch upwards into the Bight we pass into the rain shadow of the southwest corner and the climate becomes increasingly arid. Heaped and piled by the winds the sand forms a weird moonscape of ridges and hollows, razorbacks and flows that hold their shape like whipped cream. Amazingly in some hollows behind the beach there are pools of fresh rainwater and even when this sinks into the sand it floats on top of the underlying salt water which is denser. This fact saved the life of John Eyre when in 1841 he stumbled down to these dunes at Point Culver after a nightmare journey across the desert fringing the Bight. Eyre found fresh water in the hollows just below the surface and lived to be the first white explorer to make the overland crossing from South Australia to the west. These pools are the last surface water we shall see for more than a thousand kilometres until we're halfway across the continent. Quite suddenly the sand dunes give way to cliffs that rise abruptly from the ocean. They mark the beginning of one of the most awesome feats of this or any other continent. This mighty rampart extending in an unbroken wall to the far horizon and beyond is the edge of a vast ancient limestone seabed. It was laid down more than 20 million years ago and the ocean had encroached far inland in this part of Australia. Later the seas retreated, the land rose and the seafloor became a coastal plain uplifted high above sea level. And where the ocean is now slowly eating its way back into the soft underbelly of the continent you can clearly see the limestone layers of the original seafloor made of the skeletons of uncountable billions of marine organisms. There are no breaks in this wall and to Flinders as he sailed past it was baffling not to know what lay behind him. He thought there might be an interior sea but there was nowhere to land and climb up, no way to see over the top, not in those days. What lies beyond the cliffs is the largest level piece of land on the planet, the ancient limestone seafloor that we now call the Nullarbor plain. This is classified as desert, little bit salt bush and other low shrubs grow on the surface which is too porous to hold water after the sparse rains. But it's not strictly true to say that there are no trees on the Nullarbor. In places especially in shallow depressions where soil collects there are drought resistant trees although they never go very high. Perhaps only from a height is it possible to appreciate the way the Nullarbor with a single upward step so perfectly matches the ultimate flatness of the ocean. On so vast a canvas it seems inevitable that someone has created the world's largest advertisement. It must be at least 10 kilometres long and was made with bulldozers by the men building the new air highway across the Nullarbor. Producing an afternoon newspaper is not an easy job. There are a few minor headaches along the way. Deadlines to meet, deliveries to make. But Daily News makes it every weekday come rain or shine. In fact the stories broken by the Daily News have led to no less than five real-life government inquiries and you get all of this for just 25 cents a day with home delivery at no additional charge. But Daily News it's what a real newspaper is all about. Palace family video. Boys and girls welcome to the world of strawberry shortcake on Palace family video. That's strawberry shortcake you can tell by her snore. That's casted her calico cat on the floor. We'll let them both sleep but just a dream more. That's the peculiar purple piman of Porcupine Peak. He's nasty and evil with a really mean streak. Palace family video invites you to meet strawberry shortcake and the friends from her street. Palace has lots of fun cat sets for you to view and here are more of our friends to take home too. The Care Bears are now on video. Come along enjoy the show. Just ask for Palace family video. At last aspirin in easy to take capsule form. Windspreen from Winthrop. For many years aspirin has effectively helped to relieve headache pain and fever. Now aspirin is available in convenient easy to swallow capsules. Windspreen capsules from Winthrop. Blister packed for your protection. Windspreen should be used only as directed and your doctor consulted if pain persists. Windspreen aspirin in a capsule from Winthrop. Our power came free from the wind. Solar Heart give you hot water power free from the Sun and like our wing keel, Solar Heart have broken through with yet another incredible design first. The Black Chrome Miracle. Black Chrome collectors perform all year round and heat water faster. They said our wind was a miracle. I say this Solar Heart is a hot water miracle. The new Solar Heart Black Chrome Miracle. It has my stamp of approval. Solar Heart. Australian technology at its best. The old road was unsealed an endless punishing stretch of dust-filled potholes and sand roads with hundreds of kilometers between service stations and no one to call in case of breakdown. Now it's a breeze. The sealed highway was finally completed in 1976. But where crossing the Nullarbor was once an adventure with time to look around it now seems to be a matter of getting it over as quickly as possible. The old road was some way inland but the new highway runs much closer to the coast. This at least may encourage more travelers to get out of their cars and walk to the edge of the world. After more than 150 kilometers the cliffs give way to Twilight Cove. Here a small basin in the cliffs is kept filled with water by seepage and suddenly there's life in the desert. These beautiful parrots are Major Mitchell's cockatoos. They're among the least known of our cockatoos since they live only in the most arid region. They're here at Twilight Cove only because the desert zone extends right to the coast across the Nullarbor. Although the cliffs disappear eastwards from Twilight Cove there's still no bay, inlet or any sheltered water where our seaplanes can safely land to refuel. So we head inland across the Nullarbor to Kaiguna, a service station on the air highway where we can use our wheels normally kept tucked up inside the flights. In the last election Bob Hawke promised to put Australia on the road to recovery. Let's see if he kept his promises. Under the Liberals Australia's economy was stalled. We now have the fastest growing economy in the world. The whole thrust of our policy is to attack the twin evils of unemployment and inflation together. Over a quarter of a million new jobs have been created. Inflation has been more than halved. Everything we do as a government will have the one great goal to reunite this great community of ours to bring out the best we are truly capable of together as a nation and bring Australia together. Bob Hawke has started the job. Let's keep things going. Put Australia first. Summertime is white linen time. Estee Lauder's white linen. The crisp refreshing fragrance to live in all year long. White linen by Estee Lauder. Available at Myer. If the demands of handling your money matters get you down then we suggest you drop into your local Commonwealth Bank and exchange all your problems for a key card which can handle all your banking, pick up your salary, get your cash outside banking hours and soon can be used at garages and supermarkets. The Commonwealth Bank key card making money come to terms with people. Even after John Eyre had pioneered the way along the rim of the Great Australian Bight, it remained an almost insurmountable barrier because of scarcity of water and the extreme summer temperatures. The construction of the Overland Telegraph between Adelaide and Albany eventually completed in 1870 was a desperate struggle. The hardships can easily be imagined as we follow the track of the old line where it clicked the news to the eastern states from the English newspapers which arrived in Albany by sea. The Telegraph has finally closed down half a century ago and the Air Repeater Station, named after the explorer, is now a ruin amid the encroaching dunes. Today the news, as well as television programmes and thousands of simultaneous phone calls, are flung across the Nullarbor by microwave via the totem poles of the electronic age. East of air, the coastal plain widens a little and here is laid out the whole story of the struggle to establish a foothold on this coast. Here, at a place they called Euclid, they built a jetty and began a regular supply service by sailing ship and steamer. In 1885 they proclaimed it a township, although someone did say he didn't think that all the building blocks would be needed for a century or so. In its heyday Euclid had 60 permanent inhabitants, with a customs office as well as the most imposing building, the Telegraph office. But eventually a new direct automatic system bypassed Euclid's team of Telegraph operators. The coastal line was closed in 1927 and that was the end of Euclid. But even before that the inhabitants had unwittingly doomed the town. In the early days they brought in camels to help explore the interior, then they brought in goats for milk and finally the rabbits arrived with no help from anyone. Between them these animals denuded the coastal dunes around Euclid of their vegetation and the sand began to move inland. First it engulfed Euclid itself, then the coast road and it's still advancing across the coastal plain. To the east it's even sweeping over the escarpment like breaking surf. To escape the advancing sand the main highway has been diverted onto higher ground and so have the buildings of the new Euclid, a handful of motels and service stations. This escarpment is in fact an ancient shoreline where the seas once broke against the edge of the Nullarbor before retreating millions of years ago. East of Euclid, across the border with South Australia, the road and the old shoreline swing close to the present coast. Here you can see how the ocean is steadily eating its way back again towards that ancient shoreline. I'd like to give you a closer look at Toyota's distinctive new Corona Abati. But Alfredo won't stop. The new styling, luxury interior, the dash of performance and Abati's 2.4 litre super responsive engine with electronic fuel injection. But Abati can also stop brilliantly with four wheel discs. What do you think? It's beautiful but why is Avanti spelled that way? Abati! Mr Businessman, directory advertising is no longer a one horse race. The home and business directory has arrived in Perth at last. The HBD will be delivered free of charge to every business house and every home in the metro area plus Rockingham, Northam and St. Andrew. Advertising costs are almost half of what you're paying now. So give us a call on 386 8744. The home and business directory, excellent results at a better rate. This is Ethiopia. A thousand people are dying every day. Seven and a half million people, one third of the population is threatened by starvation. They need food to live. World Vision is distributing food and medicine under the direction of Australian doctor Tony Atkins. He says the Ethiopian crisis is the worst he's ever seen. World Vision needs your help to continue this life saving work. Call now, 008 331 337 from anywhere in Australia and give. Where the sea has actually reached the old shoreline, new cliffs are coming into existence as the waves carve away the foot of the slope. And finally, the cliffs raise themselves again into another mighty wall, even higher than the water. The reason there are no breaks, gorges or inlets in the cliffs of the Nullar Bore is that there are no rivers to cut them. The rain sinks so rapidly into the porous limestone that surface flows never develop. But below the surface, it's a different story. This huge hole, nearly a hundred metres across, is where the roof of a vast underground cave has fallen in. Such caves, which exist all over the Nullar Bore, are formed by rainwater percolating down through the limestone and dissolving it. When the roof of such a cave becomes too thin to support itself, it collapses to form a sinkhole, as this is done. From the floor of this cave, called Kunalda, a water-worn passage leads at a steep angle downwards into a mighty underground cavern. Kunalda is difficult to enter and plunged into perpetual gloom. And so it came as a startling shock to anthropologists when it was discovered in 1956 that early man had used this cave. He came here, it seems, to obtain lumps of flint which fall from the walls of the cavern. From this flint, he struck the cutting edges which were the basic tools of his times. But the men who came here did more than collect flints. At the extreme depths of the cave, in total darkness, they made strange markings with hands and sticks on the soft, powdery limestone walls, signs that have been preserved by the unchanging atmosphere of Kunalda Cave. Radio carbon dating of bits of charcoal from abandoned torches and fire sticks shows these markings to be at least 20,000 years old. This puts them among the earliest art of man anywhere in the world. Strangely enough, there's no evidence of any use or occupation of the cave since that time, well back into the last ice age. Thus, the cave art of Kunalda, its meaning and the identity of the people who made it, are among the great mysteries of our continent. Kunalda is of world as well as national significance and has rightly been reserved by the South Australian Government for future study. Now, somewhere ahead over the misty horizon, lies the head of the bite, and beyond that a dramatic change from the endless cliffs that seem so forbidding. To us no less than to air, to Flinders, the Dutch ship Zeepard and Peter Newts, or the coastal And yet the dramatic scene of confrontation here between sea and land underlines the fleeting instant of time that has passed since man first came to this continent and reminds us of how infinitesimal a mark we've made on this great southern coastline. two Be sure not to miss Channel 7's new summer series, The Two of Us. This week Brentwood receives a real education in American teenage customs as he copes with the chaos of a teenage slumber party. Next on 7, Automan assumes the identity of a revenge-seeking vigilante cop. Matthew Starr must use his superpowers to help free his imprisoned friend charged with the murder he didn't commit, the powers of Matthew Starr. 7.35 on 7. We'd like to remind everyone that some of the programs to follow are possibly not suitable for children. So from all of us at Channel 7, it's good night girls and boys, and sweet dreams. Fixing a tired old engine could cost more than it's worth. Prosser Power will fit a fully remanufactured complete motor from just $5 a week. Call Prosser Power now. Tonight's news headlines are brought to you by the Lottery Commission of Western Australia. Good evening again. Australia has made a disastrous start to their first innings in the first cricket test against the West Indies at the Waka. Chasing the West Indians' first innings score of 416, Australia is 3 for 36 at Stumps, with Alan Bordernot out for 8 and Kim Hughes on 2. When Gardner and Gomes left the crease after 2, the latter making his highest test score against Australia, the tourists had completed a most remarkable transformation. The first five wickets fell for just 104, the last five added 312. Australia's reply was disastrous. Dyson went for a duck with the score on 1, and Graham Wood followed after he'd scored just 6 to leave the Windies with their tails in the air. And the third batsman's art was Kepler Wessels who was dismissed for 13 to a brilliant catch by Michael Holding in the gully off Gardner. In South Australia, angry residents in the opal mining town of Andamooka are tonight threatening to use force to shift a group of anti-uranium demonstrators. Feelings are running high among the residents who want the 24 Roxby Downs protesters to move away from their township. Extra police have been rushed to the area in case of violence. And in Victoria, a rail strike due to begin from midnight tomorrow could be a forerunner of a nationwide industrial dispute. The strike will stop all trains in Victoria, but union executives will meet again next week to consider an Australia-wide stoppage. Back in WA and the winning numbers in tonight's lotto were 21, 20, 1, 12, 38, 6, and the supplementary number was 40. Weather and today's sunny, fine conditions are expected to be repeated tomorrow, with easterly winds before an afternoon sea breeze. The maximum should be 26 degrees after an overnight low of 13. Well that's it from the Channel 7 newsroom. I'll be back tomorrow night at 6 o'clock. Thanks for joining us. Good night. Behind the silver panels of your next $1 instant lottery ticket, there could be a fortune in cash waiting for you to simply match. Simply match three prizes. Simply match three prizes. Simply match. Up to $10,000. Superdraw $50,000. Simply match your instant lottery tickets now. The feeling is this child was going through sheer hell for several days before he died. Monday night investigations into the death of a child reveal a horrifying nightmare. What they do to the kids up there is criminal. And he gets away with it. Gets away with murder. Quincy takes matters into his own hands to have the place shut down. But you should see the way they treat their kids in there. They put them in cages like wild animals. This isn't a group home. It's a concentration camp. But a personal involvement spells disaster for Quincy. 850 Monday night on 7. George Papad and a small band of army misfits on a suicide mission in search of Cordova's cannon. 835 Sunday night on 7. doing what he likes best, fighting crime in the streets. You see, Walter's a policeman. Unfortunately, the chief doesn't want Walter on the streets. Captain, get back to your cage, boy. Now! So Walter must fight crime in his own way, in the computer room. That's where he's an expert. Fortunately for me, Walter's advanced knowledge of electronics led him to experiment with what is called a hologram. That's a very fancy word for a three-dimensional picture that when perfected can be made to look real, sound real. As a matter of fact, given enough power, it can even be made to feel real. That's kind of what got me into this world.