Terrace Bay Public Library Digital Collections

Terrace Bay News, 23 Jun 1971, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

BP ---------- MR, E, PERS BOX 375 - TERRACE B/Y Werrace Bay Fu lic Library _ TERRACE BAY NEWS Vol. 14 No. 25 Serving The District June 23, 1971 INTERNATIONAL LAKE SUPERIOR HIKE Terrace Bay will be the rendezvous location for an international Girl Scout-Girl Guide event. On July 22nd, and 23rd, 70 American Senior Girl Scouts and seven Canadian Girl Rangers will meet in Terrace Bay after completing a more than 50 mile hike from Hoveland, Minnesota, to Sault Ste. Marie Ontario. This event, the Lake Superior Hike, is offered by the Girl Scout Council of St. Croix Valley, of St. Paul, Minnesota. The hikers will be divided into seven patrols, each with its own counselor. They will hike approximately 75 mile laps of the route, carrying everything they need for their ten day trip in back- packs. Buses will take the hikers from St. Paul to the hike starting points on July 11th. On July 22nd, all seven patrols will rendezvous in Terrace Bay. Two of the patrols will hike in; the other five will be bused in from the ends of their hike routes. The girls will camp on the Kiwanis Beach. On July 23rd, the hikers will tour the Kimberly- Clark mill and have time for shopping and sight- seeing. From two to four o'clock that afternoon thers will be an open house on the beach, with the public invited. That evening, from 7:00 to 8:30, all residents of Terrace Bay are invited to a rendezvous campfire program. Speakers will include Dr. Jack Hood of the Interlocken Science Academy, Interlock en, Michigan, and Reeve Edward Cavanaugh of Terrace Bay. This is the ninth year that the Girl Scout Council of St. Croix Valley has offered the Lake Superior Hike, although it is the first time this back=-packing ; cont'd page 2 YOUTHEATRE SUMMER WORKSHOP The Northwestern Ontario Youtheatre Summer Workshop Programme is a provincial ly-sponsored plan to develop the theatrical potential of this region. This summer, from July 18 to August 28, interested young people from all over Northwestern Ontario will take part in an intensive series of wor shops devoted to providing them with a total theatre experience. These six weeks are to be the proving grounds for a plan which will ultimately operate on a' year-round basis. The idea is to provide the funds and resource personnel to allow those with the ability and poten- tial ability to come together and learn from each other and from professional specialists. The project will be funded by the Ontario Govern- ment through the Ontario Youtheatre - an organiza- tion working in conjunction with the Department of Youth and Recreation. The Northwestern Ontario operation is one of many similar regional develop- ments, all of which are beginning this summer for the first time. In order to reach a state of complete involvement, workshops will be conducted in all areas of the theatre - artistic, technical and administrative. This will allow those with talent in areas other than acting to develop their own special interests. Specialists, therefore, will conduct workshops in everything from acting to stage management, from mime to make-up to costuming. This way, partici- pants will have an almost unlimited choice in which to work. Besides the specialists, a full-time co-ordinating staff, consisting of an artistic and a technical dir- ecfor, and two assistant directors, will be on hand Continued on Page 2 eeveee Terrace Bey Public :

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy