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Local baseball player to represent Alberta at Canada Cup

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(Submitted photo)

A young Rowley resident will be heading to Saskatchewan next week to represent Alberta.

Quentin Kopjar, 17, will be part of Team Alberta at the 2015 Baseball Canada Cup U17 Championship in Saskatoon from August 5-10. 

“I went for a tryout in Okotoks. There were two cuts, the second one was in Edmonton. They emailed us (the week before) and told me that I made the second tryouts. I went there and then a couple days later I went down to Missouri for a baseball trip and they phoned me and told me I made the team.”

The tournament will have players from all over Canada participating and Kopjar said it feels “good” to be representing his province.

Kopjar said he tried out last year and, “got cut because I was young and they usually take the older guys.” 

But that didn’t stop him, he said it, “gave me more drive to make the team” so he then decided this year he would go back and try again, and this time had success. Currently he is playing for the Midget AAA Okotoks Dawgs in his first year. 

The team’s first game will be Wednesday, August 5 at 10 a.m.


Passion play completes Gospel of John cycle

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The Canadian Badlands Passion Play wrapped its cycle of the Gospel of John on Sunday, and is celebrating the success of the season and pinnacle of the 5-year run.

“You are talking about a very historic year, it was the fifth year of a five year run of a script,” said executive director Vance Neudorf. “We had 42 performances of John. We lost two of them; one last year and one this year due to rain. We had over 60,000 people in attendance over that run.”

This season the Passion Play, while losing one performance, was shy of its projection of attendance, by only about 800 patrons. 

“The economy and weather definitely played a role this year,” he said. “We were down  similar to what the Calgary Stampede was, so we were seeing what people are telling is happening out there province-wide.”

This was the second year they added an extra weekend.  He sees some positive results.

“We originally planned to try it for one year, and in that year, we saw that it definitely did some really good things for us as a company.  By opening up the third weekend, we didn’t improve our market share, but yet it may have saved our bacon, in the sense that the third weekend accounted for a third of the revenue. Of that, 75 per cent of the people who came said that was the only weekend they could have come. That is the kind of data we are going off, and we’ll be examining our data again this year.”

There is a spin off for the rest of the community.

“It is definitely doing good things for Drumheller, it has spread that activity out. Now there are three full weekends instead of two. In town, it allows everyone a little more reaction time to work with the people that are coming through. I think it is a positive step for everybody, now it is just a matter of us seeing how it is going to work in future years.”

The Passion Play doesn’t see itself as a lone wolf, doing things for its own purposes. From the outset we see ourselves as a community player in the area of tourism and how we can be a part of everything,” he said.

With this in mind, he foresees there could be some challenges coming up with the next season, especially when they are embarking on a new script and all it entails. They are busy with a number of other events that support its efforts.

“There’s Tom Cochrane coming up, there is the Chamber Music Festival and Shakespeare. There are all kinds of things happening, and it’s all good. It is just a matter of arranging things so you can pull off what you need to do next year.”

Student uses summer to explore medicine in Bolivia

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nt used his summer to explore a career path working in medicine in a developing nation.

About this time of year, readers might be used to hearing about Sam Brown, Grade 12 student at DVSS, taking on a marathon or a triathlon. This summer he just returned home from Bolivia after spending two weeks there seeing doctors in action and learning more about the county’s culture and medical system.

The educational and volunteer program was through Projects Abroad.  He was part of an international team of eight youth. They were based in the city of Cochabamba.

“It was a special medical program for high school kids my age. We lived in a house together with a host family,” said Brown.

“We went to a lot of places. We did workshops in the offices of Projects Abroad, we spent time at a hospital, and then another for children burn victims,” he said.

It was a powerful experience for him to work with some of the young burn victims, assisting with their treatment. At the main hospital, they were able to observe the operating room, which he found fascinating.

“I learned a lot about medicine and alternative medicine because they don’t have nearly as many medical materials as we do here,” he said. “I gained an appreciation of how systems work in a hospital and how complicated it can be. In addition, we learned about Bolivian Culture. It was a trip where we still had fun, but at the same time it had great education and volunteer value.”

He worked all year raising the funds needed for this excursion and learned about Projects Abroad on the Internet.   

“I have always wanted to work with Doctors Without Borders, or some sort of organization that have doctors like the United Nations or Red Cross,” he said. “This experience was a lot like that because it was in a developing country.”

Sam plans to study medicine after he finishes high school.


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