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Last updateFri, 17 May 2024 12pm

Kaleidoscope’s ‘For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again’ evokes true emotion

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Geraldine Lee, left, and Aaron Redditt embrace during the final moments of the performance For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again. The play runs from Nov. 9 to 11, 15 to 17, and a matinee performance on Nov. 12 at 2:00 p.m. mailphotos by Terri Huxley

 

For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again pulls on heartstrings without you even realizing it.
It’s a heartfelt one-act play that makes one think a bit deeper and about the meaning of life and death with absolute subtlety.
Using minimal props and engagement in an extravagant imagination, the dialog brings this play to life.
Geraldine Lee and Aaron Redditt work in harmony to deliver a story of a mother and son’s relationship throughout the years.
This play was written by French Canadian Playwright Michel Tremblay. Carol Todor directed the play that will be featured in the Valley.
The hour and a half performance is a direct reflection of life in Montreal, shedding a light on the 1950’s women’s working class and heavily religious foundation.
For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again runs from November 9 to 11 and then the 15 to 17. There will be a matinee on November 12 at 2 p.m. All shows start at 7:30 p.m.

Here is a sneak peek of the performance:

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mailphoto by Terri Huxley - Drumheller - For the pleasure of seeing her again

mailphoto by Terri Huxley - Drumheller - For the pleasure of seeing her again

mailphoto by Terri Huxley - Drumheller - For the pleasure of seeing her again


Cenovus selling Palliser Block for $1.3 Billion

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 Cenovus operations in the area may soon be sold for cash proceeds of $1.3 Billion.  
    The company announced on October 19 that it has reached an agreement to sell its crude oil and natural gas assets in the Palliser Block to Torxen Energy and Schlumberger. According to a press release from Cenovus, the proceeds from the sale will be used to deleverage the company’s balance sheet.
    “Our strategy to optimize our portfolio by selling non-core assets and using the proceeds to pay down debt is firmly on track,” said Brian Ferguson, President & Chief Executive Officer. “We continue to target between $4 billion and $5 billion in announced asset sale agreements by the end of the year, and we remain committed to returning to our long-term debt ratio target.”
    The Mail reported in December of last year that Cenovus was planning to invest $160 million of growth capital and had identified about 700 attractive drilling opportunities.
    The Palliser Block surrounds Brooks at the southern end and extends towards Drumheller at its northernmost point. It has a current production of 54,000 Barrels of oil equivalent per day.
    This deal comes about a month after the company announced an agreement to sell its crude and natural gas operations in the Suffield block to International Petroleum Corporation for $512 Million.
    Both deals are expected to close in the fourth quarter of this year, subject to customary conditions.
    “We continue to expect that the Palliser sale will close before the end of the year,” said Brett Harris, manager  external communications, for Cenovus. “Once the transaction has closed the operations will transfer to the new owners.”

Drivers stay safe through winter storm

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    The valley was transformed into a winter wonderland Friday morning, but by Friday evening, residents began to wonder whether it was ever going to stop.
    Residents woke up to a blanket of snow covering the valley on November 3. However as, the day progressed the snow continued to fall, with areas seeing more than a foot of accumulations.
 Despite the snow, Staff Sergeant Kevin Charles says that no one in the area was seriously injured on the roadways.
    “People I think are slowly starting to realize that winter has hit with its full vengeance and are reverting back to their proper winter driving habits, which means slowing down and taking your time,” said Charles.
    He says the RCMP responded to a number of fender benders and minor collisions throughout the day, the most serious was on the South Hill where a truck and trailer veered off the road.
 Overall, he said it wasn’t a very busy weekend as police received overall about 28 calls.
    If residents weren’t digging out their sidewalks, they were digging their neighbours’ vehicles. Social media brought many Good Samaritan stories of people pitching in where they could to support those affected by the weather.
    The town and Carillion, the highway maintenance contractor, worked together to clear main roadways and access points stretching all the way from Nacmine to East Coulee.
    Carillion takes care of any major highways that run to and through Drumheller.
    “They do all of the highway stuff through town so 9, 56, 838, 575, 10, and 10X but they also have a whole region right,” said Drumheller CAO Darryl Drohomerski.     
    For the town, the snow removal policy was updated on February 15 of this year.
    “We have priority streets we do so for instance there are some that are zero tolerance like the downtown area where we plow or clean snow no matter if we had one centimeter or ten or twenty,” said Drohomerski. “Then there’s others that we do based on the amount of snow we get.”
    Once those roads are cleared, the crews direct their attention to troubled residential streets. This can be seen as a large snow drift or an obstacle that is interrupting the flow of traffic.
    “The idea of the snow route policy was to be able to give everybody a way out of their area so we do main streets and collector streets basically,” said Drohomerski.
    Carillion was not able to clear the roadways leading to East Coulee and Wayne areas until Saturday, which ultimately held back Town plows from reaching those areas as well.
    “So you can’t go to clean East Coulee on Friday if you can’t actually get to East Coulee,” Drohomerski reiterated.
    Environment Canada predicted about five centimetres total in Drumheller.
    “No one predicted this snow on Friday,” Drohomerski said. “I know I had a phone call at five o’clock on Friday from Environment Canada and the guy asked me how much snow we had because they had no idea.”
    “It was one of those things that kind of surprised everybody,” said Drohomerski.


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