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Last updateTue, 24 Dec 2024 1pm

Sharp skates make safe skaters

    Keeping your sports equipment maintained is important for performance and safety. This year at the Sports Room it also helped to raise funds for concussion awareness.
    The Drumheller Sports Room Source for Sports, along with participating Source for Sports stores across the country, participated in Skate Sharpening Day on November 5. This year, the company linked up with www.stopconcussions.com and nationwide sharpened more than 1,000 pairs of skates and raised more than $19,500 for concussion awareness. The Drumheller store contributed about $220.
    Dave Powell of the Drumheller Sports Room Source for Sports said they have been holding the skate sharpening day for a number of years; what is new is teaming up with www.stopconcussions.com. The danger of concussions in hockey has come to the forefront in light of NHL star Sidney Crosby missing nearly a year of hockey with concussion symptoms.
    “It opened a lot of eyes,” said Powell.
    He says good maintenance of equipment is important for safety. The Sport Room this year has also been helping skaters properly fit helmets to help prevent injuries.
    Led by Keith Primeau, former Philadelphia Flyers Captain, the goal of stopconcussions.com is to educate players, coaches, trainers and parents involved in any sport, about concussion prevention, identification and proper treatment, says a release. Primeau suffers from post concussion syndrome, and has been a vocal proponent of making the public aware of the seriousness of concussions.
    Learn more about concussion awareness and prevention at www.stopconcussions.com or visit your local Source For Sports.


Say, isn’t that…

    A Drumheller man has put his mug on the line, in hopes that it is similar enough to one of Canada’s top comics.
    Justin Bolin has entered the Calgary Sun Celebrity Look-alike contest, and he is looking for support to put him over the top. His celebrity look-alike is Russell Peters.
  Bolin was among dozens of entries to the contest and he made the initial top 20 cut along with another local face, Nigel Tchir. From there, he has survived two more cuts down to ten finalists, and now three.
    “I’m pretty surprised he made top three,” said his wife Dawn, who has been helping to spread the word to all their friends.
    “He gets it a lot every time we go somewhere or are in an airport, people are asking if he is Russell Peters, it is quite funny.”
    He is up against a Carrie Underwood look-alike and a Katie Perry look-alike.
    If he wins, he is on his way to Los Angeles, where he will be put up in a four-star property in Hollywood, be treated to a movie star home tour and receive $500 spending cash.
    To help Bolin win, you need to vote for him. Voting closes today (Friday). Go to http://www.calgarysun.com/rewards-and-contests and Click on “Celebrity Look-alikes.”

International program enhances student experience at DVSS

    DVSS principal Curtis LaPierre has just returned from an overseas trip to meet with potential students and parents as well as spread the word of the International Program at the school.
    LaPierre left for China, on November 4 for an eight-day trip, which included a visit to Hong Kong. While recruitment and promotion were a big part of the trip, another was discussion on curriculum.
    “I went to a high school and sat down with the administration there and talked to them about why Chinese students are challenged by English 30 and Social 30, and what they could do to better prepare their students for coming to Canada,” said LaPierre. Math and sciences are no problem, but social and English are real problems.”
    The trip also took him to Hong Kong to meet with agents who arrange international study opportunities for students. In fact, three students registered on the spot to come to Drumheller.
    LaPierre also met with the parents of current students at DVSS as well as the parents of incoming students while he was in Hong Kong.
    While the Golden Hills International Program was a pioneer in Alberta and enjoyed strong success in terms of numbers early on, it has seen incoming students drop as economic conditions worsened.
    “In the school division overall, we are down to about 170 international students. We used to run about 260,” said LaPierre. “That is simply because of economics.”
    Another reason for the drop is other schools in Alberta have seen the success of this model.
    “When we started seven years ago, there used to be three school divisions in the whole province, now there are 30 that are actively marketing for international students, so the competition side has gone up significantly.
    “Like any venture the landscape is always changing.”
    While numbers fluctuate, the program has been a success.
    He says the main goal of the international program when it was brought in was to utilize the dormitories, diversify the students' international experience here in the valley, provide international students with the Canadian experience, and maintain programs for Drumheller students. He said if it weren’t for the International Program, DVSS would have three less full time teachers.
    “It has really been a positive thing, and the kids are well accepted not just by the school community, but by the community at large,” said LaPierre.


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