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W.O. Mitchell’s The Kite on stage at Rosebud until August 31

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There is still time to take in Rosebud theatre’s retelling of W.O. Mitchell’s Canadiana classic The Kite.
    This is Rosebud Theatre’s summer production, retelling the story of a CBC journalist trying to secure an interview with Daddy Sherry, Canada’s oldest man, on the eve of a surprise birthday party.
    Rosebud has staged the play before, more than a decade ago. One connection to that production is Nathan Schmidt, who is back playing the lead as Daddy Sherry.
    “Nathan Schmidt’s performance as Daddy Sherry over a decade ago is one of the most talked-about comedic performances on our stage. When I read the script again, I laughed out loud! I think that if W.O. Mitchell lived to be 117, he’d be as cantankerous as Daddy Sherry, said Rosebud’s artistic director Morris Ertman.
    The play runs Wednesday through Saturday for the rest of August at the Rosebud Opera House.
    After that, Rosebud Theatre shifts gears for its fall performance called the Mountaintop by American playwright Katori Hall.
    This a fictionalized depiction of Martin Luther King’s last night on earth in his hotel room. There, he is joined by Camae, an angel disguised as a maid who reveals she is there to collect King and bring him to heaven.
    “I have been obsessed with the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. since college. And this fiction about an encounter with an angel the night before he is shot is so powerful. It contextualizes a person whose life inspired so many, including this storyteller,” said Ertman.
    The Mountaintop opens on Friday, September 13.


Drumheller library funding put on hold by province

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A provincial freeze on half the regular funding for public libraries will see a significant amount of money on hold for the Drumheller Public Library, but services and staffing will not be affected.
    About $22,000 in provincial funding will be withheld from the Drumheller library as the new conservative government reviews the spending of the former NDP government, with budget finalization expected in late October.
    Library services director Emily Hollingshead says the Drumheller library is in a fortunate situation as only 15 per cent of their budget comes from provincial funds.The library is also financially supported by the Town of Drumheller and the library society, which helps raise funds for library initiatives.
    “At this time we have no plans to cut programming or existing staff members’ hours or compensation,” she said.
    “For now this is simply a matter of waiting for a new government to develop their budget, which isn’t unusual.”
    The NDP government reviewed library funding in 2015, distributing 75 per cent of existing funds and the other quarter once the budget was finalized. While it’s unclear now if the UCP government will slash budgets and lower the amount given to libraries, and Premier Jason Kenney has been vocal about his government’s desire to reduce public spending, the library will wait to see if their funding will be reduced this fall.
    Hollingshead says the library board will be joining other libraries in advocating for funding and the importance of libraries in Alberta communities.
    “We’ll be more conservative in our spending than we might be otherwise just in case… If cuts are required down the road, the Library Board, management, and staff will work together to determine how best to make our available resources stretch.”

Institution lockdown ends, murder investigation continues

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    The Drumheller Institution ended lockdown protocol Tuesday, ten days after it was initiated on August 4. 

    A contraband search of the medium security unit has ended and the institution has resumed normal operations, Corrections Service Canada said in a release.

    “It’s protocol to lockdown after an incident and search all the buildings and look for any contraband,” said assistant warden Maureen Quintal. Due to security protocols she could not confirm if any contraband was found.

    The institution was locked down on August 4 after the death of Jason Claude Tremblay, a 42-year-old inmate who had been serving a nearly five year sentence for drug trafficking offences. Tremblay was arrested in 2014 in Medicine Hat and police there said they seized approximately 800 fentanyl pills in that investigation. 

    On August 7, Corrections Service Canada said Tremblay had been stabbed by two other inmates, Giovanni James Alexis (24) and Richard George Paul (23). Both have been charged with first-degree murder. 

The RCMP are currently handling the investigation but Quintal said Corrections Services Canada will be sending a team to provide an internal investigation of the incident.


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