News | DrumhellerMail - Page #2186
04252024Thu
Last updateThu, 25 Apr 2024 9am

Jensen officiating in WHL

jensens-in-action

    A Drumheller hockey official is rising through the ranks, and last week called his first major junior game.
    Tyler Jensen, son of Tammy and Mike, has been working his way up the officiating ladder and last week, he acted as a lineman in the WHL in a Calgary Hitmen game versus the Lethbridge Hurricanes. This was at the Scotiabank Saddledome.
    “It was an awesome experience,” Jensen told The Mail.
    The game was a blow out as the home team won 9-2.
    Jensen has been working hard to get to this point, he has been officiating since he was 14, starting at the minor hockey level and working his way up.
    “The last few years it has been really quick,” he says.
    In 2009, The Mail reported that at 19 he was refereeing Junior B and AAA Midget. Fast forward a couple years, he was right in the mix at AJHL games.  At this level, he is refereeing.
    In  few years he hopes to be actually refereeing in the WHL, a step up from lining.
    “Ultimately the dream is the big leagues, but it is a long way away still,” said Jensen.
    Jensen is still involved heavily in officiating at the local level, and has built his career with Drumheller as a home base. He says there are still many opportunities to get involved in refereeing in Drumheller.
    It is an opportunity to see the game at a different angle, get in shape, stay involved in the game and maybe earn some extra cash. He says there are still some clinics coming up that are nearby for those interested in getting involved.
    To register for a clinic go to www.czrc.ab.ca. For more information, contact Lemieux  at Lemieux.greg@gmail.com


Cenovus Thanks and Giving brings turkey and trimmings

WhoAreYou-Dusty-Sauder
 Cenovus Energy Inc. is bringing Thanksgiving dinner with all the trimmings to the Salvation Army Drumheller as part of the fifth annual Thanks & Giving campaign. Cenovus staff are kicking off the festive season by serving up a delicious holiday meal that is sure to tantalize the taste buds.
Each October, Cenovus holds a month-long campaign that encourages employees to plan their charitable donations for the year. Employees choose the registered charities that are meaningful to them and Cenovus matches their donations dollar for dollar, to a maximum of $25,000 per employee, per year. Staff will also be volunteering throughout the month in the communities where they live and work.
"We look forward to Thanks & Giving every year,” said Vicki Reid, Cenovus Director, Community Affairs. “We want the communities where we live and work to be better off as a result of us being there, and it’s inspiring to see the effort our staff put forward to make a positive difference. Supporting the charities that are important to our staff is one way Cenovus can recognize the work they’re doing.”
Since 2010, Cenovus and its employees have donated more than $8 million, volunteered over 1,200 hours, given more than 20,000 pounds of food and supported over 1,000 organizations during the Thanks & Giving campaign.

Recording history for Rumsey-Rowley area

rumsey-service-station-oct-2014

he Shepherds took over Rumsey’s  International Harvest dealership in 1936, and built this garage in Rumsey in 1945 to service the equipment. The garage is located on Rumsey’s main street.

    The recently formed Rumsey-Rowley Historical Foundation is compiling stories to publish in the third edition of the Rumsey-Rowley history book.
    “It’s been 32 years since we had a history book put out,” said Foundation president Dariel McNaughton.
    The book published in 1982 was Rumsey Pioneer Days Book 2, with the original history book for the area having been published in 1967.
    McNaughton said for the 1982 edition of the history book, the group was operating with no start-up funds and received loans and donations from community groups, businesses and individuals, to complete the book.
     This time round, McNaughton notes the Historical Foundation has a sizeable fund to begin the work on the history book project, and that work will include submitting applications for any eligible grants funding.
    The recent project started when the group called a meeting in May of this year for interested parties, then applied for a new historical society number.
    The old number for Rumsey's Historical Society had lapsed in the 1990s after completion of the second history book.
    Rumsey resident and Historical Foundation member Cindy Krywcun said it was a blow to the community when it lost its original train station and three grain elevators around the same time in the mid 1990s.     
    And just prior to that, the community school, for children in grades 1 to 8, closed down.
    Krywcun said the loss of those pieces of Rumsey history was a tough blow, but since then, the close-knit  community came to realize it is the residents that define and make up the community.
    Community interest has grown in the recent book project, said McNaughton, adding “We’re gaining people all the time, which is pretty nice.”
    The Rumsey and Rowley areas are also gaining people in another way  - younger people are moving back to the family farms in the area, including McNaughton’s two sons.
    McNaughton said a lot of the area’s adults were children when the second book was published, and now as adults, their own stories can be submitted for the new history book.
    She adds the Foundation will choose a firm cut-off deadline in the near future.
    The Rumsey-Rowley Historical Foundation would like residents and former residents to submit their stories and photos as soon as possible for the history book via email to rumseyhistorybook@hotmail.com. Dariel McNaughton can be contacted at 403-368-2120 for more information.


Subcategories

The Drumheller Mail encourages commenting on our stories but due to our harassment policy we must remove any comments that are offensive, or don’t meet the guidelines of our commenting policy.