Meridian Source - November 2, 2023

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MERIDIAN SOURCE

Thursday, November 2, 2023

Ballet program in good company

Photo courtuesy of Tannis Baerg

The United Youth Ballet Company presented The Firebird and Cinderella at the Vic Juba Oct. 29. It was the first of three in their 2023-24 series. JEANNETTE BENOIT-LEIPERT STAFF WRITER

.................................. The United Youth Ballet Company (UYBC) has teamed up with the Vic Juba Community Theatre to bring a series of inspiring shows to

the Border City. The first of three performances in the series took place on Oct. 29. The Firebird, followed by Cinderella featured dancers from across the Lakeland area. “The mayor and his

wife got to attend,” said director and FAME Dance Studio owner Sarah Makins, speaking of Mayor Gerald Aalbers and his wife, Christine. “There are five different FAME Studio locations of kids that

joined: Lloyd, Bonnyville, Cold Lake, Elk Point and Goodsoil were all apprentices in this show. I invited community leaders—a mayor or council member from each place and we had some come from Bonnyville, Cold Lake and Lloyd.” Makins said when they started in September she wasn’t sure if the apprentices would be ready for the stage until the second or third shows of the series, but to her delight they were ready for this first performance. “They’ve done incredibly well. It’s also to include dancers that haven’t trained for six to 12 years, 10-20 hours a week, and to use them for corps de ballet parts, and they did so well! So proud of them,” Makins exclaimed. She said it’s also nice for the dancers to have an opportunity to perform outside of competition.

“Having a performance opportunity that doesn't have anything to do with a dance competition to show dancers that dance is not a sport, it’s an art form that is a large event,” said Makins. “Instead of just the odd performance here or there, it’s teaching them what it’s like to be in a dance company, on a proper stage.” Makins says the UYBC was born out of the need for three core values that she believes need to exist in the world of ballet. “The body-type stigma has been terrible. Everybody underweight, and a certain foot and a certain knee,” said Makins. “Just so very tired of that, and dancers of all ages working so hard, and then to have that said—where you can’t participate because you’re this size is ridiculous.” Another core belief

that Makins thinks is of utmost importance is to give back, and to be kind in general—in dance and in life. “That is very, very important to us. I always want to teach any dancer that I work with how to give back through dance. We would invite senior’s homes, we would invite the Bea Fisher Centre, school kids that worked really hard during the year and their teachers recommend them,” said Makins. “All kinds of different groups have been invited and the Vic Juba has invited many groups as well. There’s so many hard-working people that just deserve a little treat.” The next show in this series is just in time for the holiday season. The Nutcracker will hit the stage on Dec. 16, and next is Beauty and the Beast on Feb. 11. Tickets are available now at vicjubatheatre.ca

Innisfail RCMP recover stolen vehicle, lay trafficking charges

File Photo MERIDIAN SOURCE STAFF

..................................

On Oct. 30 at approximately 2:30 a.m. Innisfail RCMP was patrolling Penhold and located a truck driving erratically. The licence plate on the vehicle was confirmed as stolen out of Red Deer and police stopped the vehicle and arrested the driver and passenger. A search of the suspects and truck resulted in the seizure of methamphetamine, fentanyl, Xanax, non-taxed cig-

arettes and additional evidence of drug trafficking. Both suspects are known to police. Gary Auvigne, 48, a resident of Penhold, is charged with: - Possession for the purpose of trafficking Methamphetamine; - Possession of a controlled substance (x2) - Possession of property obtained by crime (x2) - Dangerous operation of a motor vehicle - Possession of nontax cigarettes.

Kyle Rasmussen, 33, a resident of Red Deer, is charged with: - Possession for the purpose of trafficking Methamphetamine - Possession of a controlled substance (x2) - Possession of property obtained by crime (x2). Judicial Interim Release hearings were held and both accused were released by a Justice of the Peace to attend the Alberta Court of Justice in Red Deer on Nov. 21.


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Articles inside

Sask green lights physician assistant training program

2min
pages 26, 28

Increased cancer coverage coming for fire fighters in Sask

2min
page 26

Recovering opioid-related health care costs

1min
page 25

Tristan Durovick receives LFGA scholarship Rotary gives love

2min
page 24

Trudeau punishing Albertans this Autumn: Op-Ed

1min
page 23

What is retirement any way?

3min
page 23

Ballet program in good company

4min
page 22

Weekend of ups and downs for Bandits

1min
page 21

Rustlers soccer wraps year as ACAC award winners

3min
page 20

Raiders to host Friday league final

2min
page 19

Buckingham named LFD chief

1min
page 18

St. Thomas celebrates a decade

1min
page 17

Psych support for HRHS athletes

3min
page 16

COPs fill Salvation Army coffers

2min
page 15

Pencils sharpened for math quiz

1min
page 14

Leeway from Lloyd: Time changes create chaos

3min
pages 11-12

Border Banter with Benoit-Leipert: Repair Café a sweet idea

5min
page 10

RCMP give update on crime at meeting

3min
pages 9-10

Comics inspire retiree to pen his own

3min
page 8

Young pins Sask Party bid on results

3min
page 7

Fixers unite at Lloyd’s Repair Cafe

1min
page 6

Seniors’ care society time travels

1min
page 5

Lloyd RCMP host town hall

0
page 4

Games led by familiar pacesetters

2min
page 3

‘ToT’ a big hit at Lloyd Ex

1min
page 2

Spooky fun for seniors

0
page 1
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