selkirk secondary
TuesDAY
anti-bullying
what’s up at the high school?
rally planned
November 6, 2012
Principal Clint Dolgopol sends along his monthly message.
An anti-bullying and suicide awareness rally is being planned.
See LOCAL NEWS page 4
See LOCAL NEWS page 5
The Bulletin
Proudly serving kimberley and area since 1932 | Vol. 79, Issue 213 | www.dailybulletin.ca
Weddings, Maternity, Newborn, Families and everything in between.
427-9833
studio by appointment
JODI L’HEUREUX PHOTOGRAPHY
1
$ 10 INCLUDES h.s.t.
visiting politico
Adrian Dix to visit Cranbrook C AROLYN GR ANT bulletin@cyberlink.ca
Kimberley residents are invited to make the drive down to Cranbrook this Friday for one, or both, of two events. NDP leader Adrian Dix will be in town for a fundraising evening at the Prestige Inn in Cranbrook. There are two events: the first is the Leader’s Reception which is a small reception at $100 a ticket beginning at 5:30. This event NDP leader Adrian Dix. is geared to business and community leaders with the guarantee that it will be small enough that every attendee will be able to speak directly with Dix.
Photo courtesy Selkirk Secondary
No, these Selkirk students aren’t at a rock concert. They were part of a delegation of Selkirk students attending a Free the Children, We Day youth movement event in Calgary in late October. Above, Annika Ackermann, Megan Strachan, and Katie Rogers.
See DIX , Page 5
Kimberley Summer Theatre
Summer Theatre has ambitious plans for 2013 C AROLYN GR ANT bulletin@cyberlink.ca
It has been an up and down few years for Kimberley Summer Theatre — they have produced some terrific shows to rave reviews, and they have also had to take a couple of hiatus seasons to regroup. One such season was last year, and it was a noticeably different in the Platzl without the live musical presentations, which draw
locals and tourists alike. However, the hiatus year allowed the KST Board to plan for the best possible season this coming summer, and they have come up with a formula that they hope will allow them to be sustainable. The issue of course, is funding. Mounting a summer-long theatre season featuring professional actors is hugely expensive. Through grants, gate receipts and the tireless fundraising efforts of the Board, KST
pulls it off every year. But it is difficult, and a few seasons have been cancelled. Another issue is that the gate from the relatively small Centre 64 theatre cannot in itself fund the season — even if it sold out every show. Kimberley does have a larger venue, the McKim Auditorium, but it is not as suited to theatrical productions as Centre 64 is. McKim has no green room, or much backstage area, which can be problematic with certain shows, especially those requiring
elaborate set changes. However, filling McKim for a few nights would go a long way to providing some needed gate receipts. The KST Board has come up with a solution for 2013; they will offer two shows, an eight-performance run of the Wizard of Oz at McKim Theatre, and a 22-performance run of another play, which will be named shortly, at Centre 64.
See SUMMER THEATRE, Page 5
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