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Last updateTue, 29 Oct 2024 3pm

Drumheller Valley Secondary School runs for cancer

    On Wednesday, September 28 staff and students from DVSS participated in the Terry Fox National School Run Day 2011.
    The goal of the event is to raise both awareness and money for cancer research.
    The day began with an assembly in the gym where staff and students listened to moving stories from Principal Curtis LaPierre and guest speaker, Mrs. Barb Travis.
    Travis, who some students know as a substitute teacher, described her experience with cancer.
    Just five months after receiving a mammogram, Travis found a lump on her chest and pulled out of her first bodybuilding competition.
    She had the lump removed by a cancer specialist, although the doctor she initially saw wanted to wait and observe.
    The cancer persisted.
    In April 2007, Travis was diagnosed with stage one breast cancer.  
    With surgery and sixteen radiation treatments the cancer was beaten.
    Two months later,  she competed in her first bodybuilding competition and will compete in the national championships in two weeks.
    Travis ended with a poem composed by her daughter entitled C Stands for Courage.
    Students then braved the damp weather and began the run, which lasted until they ran eight laps around the road that encircles the DVSS.
    Afterwards, everyone enjoyed a barbecue provided by Maryam Asef, owner of the Drumheller Fas Gas.
    Associate Principal Brad Treske and teacher Ryan Hatch put their hair on the line to encourage students to reach their fundraising goal.
    If students raise $3000, Mr. Teske will wax his legs. At $5000 Hatch will undergo the painful process of waxing his chest.
    Student Sam Brown has made a considerable effort to see that the two will soon be sans hair. Brown has raised over $650.
    The fundraiser ends today, but the search for a cure continues.


Pledge forms available for Cuts For Cancer

    The seventh annual Cuts For Cancer will be held on February 3 and already a few have made the commitment to put their locks on the block to support the Drumheller Area Health Foundation.
    The annual fundraiser was originally dedicated to the memory of Cathy Morse’s mother. It has grown into a premier fundraising event generating thousands of dollars to purchase needed equipment for the Drumheller Health Centre and to support patients and families.
    This year, Morse has received a commitment from Ken Schinnour at Allied Distributors to shave his locks to raise funds.
    She also confirms that a legend will be falling. Even people that don’t know Dave Lee, will recognize his moustache. Yep, it too will be shorn for the right price.
    “He’s had it since I think he was 14,” said Morse. “He’s got a big old handlebar moustache, so that could be a big draw.”
    To get the ball rolling, Cuts For Cancer  hosted a barbecue featuring the Cat County Cougar Hunters. Cathy’s daughter Courtney even joined up with the band for a few numbers at the Road House Saloon last Saturday in Rosedale. They raised about $630 at the event. All the funds are being directed to the Drumheller Area Health Foundation.
    Morse says they could always use more community members to step forward to get in the barber’s chair for a good cause. This year, pledge forms are only available at the Chop Shop.

Leonhardt returns to roots

    Ron Leonhardt had a once in a lifetime chance to visit part of his heritage this summer when he travelled to the last spot his family inhabited in Europe.
    Leonhardt was part of a mission trip “Returning the Gift” from Grace Lutheran Church to the Ukraine. At the conclusion of his trip, he and his daughter, Lynn Hemming, took a side journey before returning home. This was to a tiny village in Russia.
    His journey was a journey through history. He explains that when Catherine the Great ruled Russia, she attempted to develop the south of Russia and encouraged settlers to come to the area.
    “I guess it was sort of like Canada where the homesteaders would get a special deal to develop the country. But this was longer ago, it was in the 1760s,” said Leonhardt.
    His family was among those settlers from Germany and they built the village of Grimm in 1767. There were 179 people who established village.
    “They lived there and they could practice their own language and religion and didn’t have to serve in the military,” said Leonhardt. “It attracted a lot people from southern Europe.”
    This continued for more than 100 years until political tides began to shift. It was about this time many families began to leave.
    The Leonhardt family left in 1907. Over the next year, Leonhardt’s grandparents, their four sons and two daughters came to the new world. They initially landed in Chicago, and then learned of homesteads in Canada and came to Alberta.
    Five of the six children came to Alberta and one sister married in Chicago and remained.
    There was no future for the village. By 1941, most German families were banished under Stalin. Leonhardt said men were shipped away to the army or camps. The icons were destroyed, records were burned, leaving virtually no sign that the German settled village ever existed.
    Russians were relocated to populate the village.
    Today a very different village stands. Hemming said it is an agrarian village and fairly poor. They saw virtually no sign of its interesting history. That was until they were wandering through a graveyard, and came upon a tombstone. On it was the name Catherine Elizabeth Leonhardt, born in 1786.
    “How we found that tombstone, I don’t know, we wandered around the cemetery for a while and all we could find were Russian names, but we had heard there was one tombstone there with a German name on it,” said Leonhardt. “It was pretty neat.”
    Leonhardt said that to his knowledge, he is the first from the family to go back to the village to see it.
    “I often heard my dad and his brother talk about the old country and about what it was like to live there. I guess I just wanted to see where we came from. It didn’t really resemble what they talked about… it seems to be all gone.”
    Hemming felt a connection to her family in the village.
    “It was really cool to go there and see that this us where our roots are,” said Hemming.
    She and her father remarked that the landscape was very much like where the Leonhardt’s came to Alberta to homestead.


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