April 5, 1973 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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April 5, 1973 |
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School's tennis
nding league
got off to a good start
vith Wins over North
Centralia in the first
7-5,6-1.
3rd singles, Wes Stockwell (S),
defeated Ken Jones 6-0, 6-4.
1st doubles, Galen Wickstron
and Scott Bodine (C) defeated
Jeff McGee and Paul Skipworth
3-6, 6-3, 6-3.
2nd doubles, Roger Bauer and
Gary Blosl (C) defeated Lincoln
Minor and Tom Evander 6-3, 7-5.
ay, March 27, the
to North
with a 3-2
took both
and Jack Frost
to provide the
Centralia came to
took another
time Shelton swept
dropped both
record now stands
only loss being a
with North
the Climbers will
top-ranked teams
e, Charles Wright
match will start at
the two matches"
WJack Frost (S)
illiams 6-4, 6-4.
Joe Pitt (NT)
apagna 6-2, 6-1.
Harvey (NT)
7-5, 7-5.
Jeff McGee and
defeated John
6-2, 7-6.
Paul Skipworth
(S), defeated
Kitsch 6-1,
Jack Frost (S),
6-2, 6-1.
Dale Campagna
Holman 3-6,
golf group of
start its 1973
4, Wednesday. It
ruzational meeting
formed.
i~¸ ~/: ::~
i ii' ii, i ii: i ii i/? i ii i ii i
JACK FROST, Shelton's number one singles player, works
on his serve in a practice match.
~s, general chairman,
'With the following
University of Oregon
Chairman, Ray
Tournament
wins Alderbrook tourney
ing; Handicap
; Team
Kerm Bacon;
Jack Warden;
e, Howard
annual best ball
be played on
Country
have been
and on May 20
ers will challenge
Players.
Eleven colleges entered the
third-annual Alderbrook
Intercollegiate Invitational Golf
Tournament held Monday and
Tuesday at the Alderbrook Golf
Course at Union.
The University of Oregon won
the tournament with a score of
1149; while the University of
Washington and Washington State
University were close behind tied
for second with scores of 1150.
Seattle University finished fourth
with a score of 1161.
Medalist for the tournament
was Craig Griswold of the
University of Oregon, while his
teammate, Peter Jacobson, was
the runner-up.
Other teams entered were
Oregon State, Eastern
Washington, Western Washington,
Simon Fraizer, University of
British Columbia and University
of Puget Sound.
Saturday, April 7 -- All Day
At Olympia High School -- Sponsored by Robinette Parents
thanks to all the Shelton business and professional people who
trophies for this occasion:
Washington State Representative Charles R. Savage- Perpetual Trophy
Simpson Timber Company, Shelton -- Perpetual Trophy
I.T.T. Rayonier, Inc., Shelton -- Perpetual Trophy
)tOrs Ed's Service Grant Lumber Co.
bbies & Toys Arnold & Smith Ins. Morgan Transfer Co.
:e Shop Effie's Beauty Salon . Evergreen Fuel
Insurance Grimes & McNeil Body Shop Warren's Jewelry
Center Olson Furniture Radio KMAS
A.T. Boswell, Jeweler Eells & Valley
Nita's Coffee Shop Lloyd's
Time Service Mason County Title Ins.
Western Farmers Assoc. Sound Lumber Co.
Ins. Co. Heinie's Broiler McComb's Business Serv.
E. Westman-Rawleigh Prod. Mason County Christmas
Mell Chevrolet Tree Co.
.bet Stylist B&R Sales Shelton Veterinary
Graystone of Shelton Hospital
Company Timber Bowl Himlie Realty, Inc.
Bob's Barber Shop B&J Mart
ree Byrne Building Supply Shelton Saw Shop
Saeger's Motors Knauf Realty
!nd J. Vercher - Shell Station ApeX Grocery
Rocky Hembroff Ins. j&j Service
Kay's Draperies Rex Floor Covering
Cut Rate Auto Parts Boon's Plumbing
y K. Ellingson Used Appliances & Heating
Pete Vanderwal's Garage A&W
~acy Certified Manufacturing The Hut
Shelton Lions Club Chris' Ice Cream Shop
rnett Dean's Studio Lumbermen's of Shelton
Capital Savings & Loan Shop Rite Grocery
Simpson Employees Fed. Arctic Circle
I~ank Credit Union Ronnie's Coiffures
~Sic Box Mann Real Estate Richert & Sons, Inc.
:)od House Prepp's Rexall Drugs Verle's Sporting Goods
Canal Court, Order
Ferguson Flowers of Amaranth
Jim Pauley Ford
n Wars Roland Shell Service H. Johnson Machine Shop
Miller's Elaine's Beauty Salon
IWA Local 3-38
Fraternal
Fraternal Order
Of Moose of Eagles
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Bowling News
Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
GUYS & DOLLS
Men's Hi Game: Bob Lanman 220
Men's Hi Series: Bob Lanman 639
Women's Hi Game: Mildred
Daniels 207
Women's Hi Series: Kathy
LeBresh 563
Diane Muneo bowled 101 pins
mp cs
By BILL BRADLEY
The Munich Olympics will be
remembered as the games of
terror. The interlocking circles of
the Olympic flag symbolizing the
over average, necessary interrelatedness of the
Standings: Woodchucks five continents, the Olympic
31-21, Unfortunates 31-21, Alley village providing a glimpse of the
Oops 30-22, Sandbaggers Zv-Z~,
Straf 29-23, Carpetbaggers 28-24,
Lovers 28-24, Morgan 26-26,
Bullheads 26-26, Outlaws 22-30,
Dippers 22-30. Splits 20-32.
Carpetbaggers 1, Mildred
Daniels 503; Alley Oops 3, Dick
Wood 532; Morgan 4, Bob
Lanman 639; Splits 0, Rand
Petersen 480; Lovers O, Dean
Perry 479; Dippers 4, Bob Finney
468; Unfortunates 1, Gene
Strozyk 489; Sandbaggers 3, L.C.
Leman 490; Outlaws 2, Floyd
Fuller 518; Bullheads 2, Bill
Fredson 572; Straf 0, Doug
Shelton 523; Woodchucks 4, Bob
Haselwood 569.
SIMPSON SWING SHIFT
Men's Hi Game: Mel McGee 220
Men's Hi Series: Scott Robertson
593
Standings: Hemlockers 37-15,
Chargers 31-21, Dry Shed 30-22,
Log Butts 30-22, Mill 3 29-23,
Mill 4 29-23, Guards 18-34.
Log Butts 3, Wiley Evans 564;
Mill 3 1, L.C. Leman 512; Mill 4
4, Gary Kunnanz 559; Chargers 0,
Scott Robertson 593; Guards 4,
Jim Harger 472; Dry Shed 1,
Harold Redman 491; Hemlockers
3, Mel McGee 574.
MEN'S COMMERCIAL
Men's Hi Game: L.C. Leman 248
Men's ,Hi Series: L.C. Leman 630
Standings: Morgan 41-15,
Airport 39-17, Verne's 35Vz-20Vz,
Gott 33-23, Dan's 32-24, Photo
28V2-27V2, Certified 24-32, B&R
Oil 23-33, Dunn 22-34, Sturgeon
22-34,18_38. Wolden 20-36,'\Foods
Photo 4, Lloyd Clark\548;
Foods 0, Bill Miller 470; B&R Oil
3, Joe Holt 537; Verne's 1, Lee
Schuffenheur 568; Airport 4, Joe
Anderson 606; Gott 0, L.C.
Leman 630; Dunn 0, Don Brown
559; Sturgeon 4, Tom Longacre
605; Dan's 4, Cecil Crow 591;
Wolden's 0, Ken Wolden 522;
Certified 3, Jim Hutchinson 472;
Morgan 1, Klaus Hoephner 469.
WOMEN'S COMMERCIAL
Women's Hi Game: Marge
Witcraft 195
Women's Hi Series: Marge
Witcraft 533
Standings: Eell's 37V2-18Vz,
Brown's 37-19, Kelly's 37-19,
Ming 34-22, Ogden's 32Vv23V2,
Fuller's 31-25, Lamp Post
24V2-31Vz, Certified 32Vz-23V2,
Harrison's 20zk-35V2, Pauley's
19-37, Fir Lane 16-40.
6-7-10 split, Muggs Ogden
Lamp Post 1, Dion Strozyk
459; Pauley's 3, Barb Strickland
463; Fir Lane 1, Tar Johnson
410; Fuller's 3, Virginia Fuller
463; Certified 3, Pat Boad 494;
Ming 1, Kathy Motherwell 487;
Brown's 1, Pat Brown 457;
Lumbermen's 3, Debi Harvey
441; Kelly's 0, Merrilee Stewart
462; Eell's 4, Louise Clary 487;
Harrison 1, Jeannie Nelson 469;
Ogden's 3, Marge Witcraft 533.
EVERGREEN TRAVELETTES
Women's Hi Game a.m.: Donna
Coleman 213
Women's Hi Series a.m.: Marge
Witcraft 558
Women's Hi Game p.m.: Colleen
Yorke 213
Women's Hi Series p.m.: Colleen
Yorke 560
Final Standings: Harbor Bowl,
champions. Harbor Bowl 45-19,
Timber Bowl 44-20, Aberdeen
Rec. 36-26, Harbor Lanes
33V2-30V2, Lima Lanes 31Vv32V2,
Tumwater Lanes 27-37, South
Bend Lanes 24-40, Coles Bowl
13-51.
JUNIOR
Men's Hi Game: Dave Hanson 209
Men's Hi Series: Dave Hanson 582
Women's Hi Game: Debbie
Coleman 196
Women's Hi Series: Debbie
Coleman 477
Standings:Hembroff 39-13,
Bob's Shoe 29-23, VFW 25-27,
Merv's 22Vv29Vz, Castle 21-31,
Timber Jacks 30~k-21~/z, Hut
26-26, Joslin 23Vz-28qz, Arctic
Circle 22V2-29V2, MHIo's 21-31.
VFW 0, Rusty Pleines 391;
Arctic Circle 4, Gene Landman
363; Hembroff 1, Terry Knight
495; Bob's Shoe 3, Kerry Miljour
448; Castle 0, Debbie Coleman
477; Timber Jacks 4, Mike Nolan
514; Merv's 1, Arnie Warnes 434;
Hut 3, Scott Manke 399; Millo's
0, Terry Clausen 399; Joslin's 4,
Dave Hanson 582
FALSEHOOD IS never so
successful as when she baits her
hook with truth, and no opinions
so falsely mislead us as those that
are not wholly wrong, as no
watches so effectually deceive the
wearer as those that are
sometimes right.
Charles Caleb Colton
world's potential harmony, and
the athletes bestowing their
ultimate loyalty to an ideal of
competition higher than
nationalism; each was part of an
Olympic vision, a belief in the
great collective good of mankind.
Each became an abject failure in
the wake of terrorists' bullets and
insensitive officials at Munich.
Many people have called for
the abolition of the Olympics,
claiming that they have become
too expensive, too political and
too dangerous. I believe that the
Olympics should be continued,
but only with drastic
modification.
First, the Olympics should be
open to everyone. The only
eligibility requirement should be a
man's skill. Amateurism is
impossible to interpret or to
enforce with uniformity. It means
different things in England,
Czechoslovakia and the US. In
England an amateur may receive
nothing, not even the equivalent
of an athletic scholarship. In
Czechoslovakia an amateur may
receive an apartment, a car, and a
well-paying jot?. In the US an
amateur may receive an athletic
scholarship but no compensation
for the playing, coaching or
promoting of his sport.
As a member of the US
basketball team in 1964, I won a
gold medal at Tokyo. We defeated
the Russian Olympic team in the
finals. Two years later I
commuted from Oxford to Milan,
where I played with an Italian
club-team twice a month. The
Italians and I played the Russian
Army Club in the semi-finals of
the European cup that year. Man
for man, the Russian starting five
was the same as the Olympic
team. The army pays them to
play basketball, but by Olympic
standards they were amateurs.
Such rulings give athletes from
socialist countries an advantage.
.The amateurism of Avery
Brundage eliminates the lower
and middle classes of capitalist
countries from competition.
Without some form of
subsidization they cannot afford
to compete against wealthier
athletes. Since compensation for
athletic services violates Olympic
rules, officials often find less
obvious ways to reward poorer
participants. Therefore, in order
to qualify under the present
eligibility rules, many athletes
must be dishonest about their
compensation. I believe it is time
for the hypocrisy to cease and the
outdated rules to be modified, by
allowing open competition.
Second, team sports should be
eliminated from the Olympics.
Each team sport should have a
separate world tournament. It
would reduce the number of
athletes physically present at the
games, and it would allow several
places in the world to share the
prestige of hosting a world cup in
a particular sport.
Team sports emphasize
nationalism, and the thrust of a
purified Olympics is away from
nationalism. "Two teams met in
friendly combat," the newspaper
headline reads. They are surrogate
armies contesting for national
prestige. The Hungarian-USSR
water polo match of 1956, the
Czech-Russian hockey game of
1968, the Indian-Pakistani field
hockey game; each simulates war
and involves national interest.
Participants represent their
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country more than themselves.
Most of the team competition
has been added since 1896 at the
request of specific countries. The
chauvinistic world press
applauded each addition. They
knew war games were good copy.
When a coach plans his strategy
for a team game, it suddenly
becomes more believable that one
plays for national honor and not
just for the joy of competition.
The individual as envisioned by
most Olympic propaganda is the
central figure of the Olympics.
With team sports he gets lost
among the team regimen, national
transference, and group pressures.
The process is toward conformity
and representation. Spontaneity is
lost. The elimination of team
sports will begin to diffuse the
unnatural national emotions
surrounding the games.
Third, athletes should have
representation on the
International Olympics
Committee and on national
Olympic committees. One of the
biggest problems with the ruling
body on international
competition is that it has lost
touch w th the times.
Disqualifying Collette and
Matthews, the two American
runners who slouched on the
victory stand, is the action of old
men, unwilling to understand.
Athletes know the issues which
most concern their fellow
athletes. If athletes were allowed
to formulate policy, they would
add a different perspective to the
planning and execution of the
games.
Fourth, the US Olympic
Committee should democratize its
election of officials and coaches
and it should open its financial
records to public scrutiny. At
times in the past, there have been
high officials in the USOC whose
only qualification was seniority.
The criteria for selecting officials
should be competence and
interest, not influence. Most
violations of Olympic rules begin
with an official who makes
payoffs to athletes. One suspects
that the same official might make
a payoff to advance in the USOC.
The USOC should eliminate those
who bend rules discreetly and
replace them with men who carl
administer and unify our national
Olympic effort. The officials of
the Olympic movement should
not select their successors. They
should be selected at an impartial,
open forum so that all segments
of our society can have a chance.
Selection of coaches should be
more open also. The selection
committee often overlooks the
best coach because of a conflict in
style with an official on the
USOC. The men who choose the
coaches should be known and the
method of selection should be
publicized.
Contributions provide almost
the exclusive support of the US
Olympic movement. The US
Olympic effort is not a
monopoly, a conglomerate or a
closed corporation. It is a
broad-based movement of
thousands of people, all of whom
share the joys of winning and feel
the shock of loss. Anyone should
have the right to examine the
USOC's financial records. In fact,
a public accounting should be
delivered to each contributor.
Until such disclosures take place,
there can be no cost effectiveness
in the Olympic movement. One
can only assume that the next
Olympics will be more expensive
and that the past Olympics was
well-budgeted. Without
disclosure, the rumors of lucrative
expense accounts will persist and
well-intentioned officials will
continue to respond with
righteous indignation alone.
Fifth, I believe that the US
Government should help subsidize
the Olympic movement. The
federal funds should aid beginning
sports and create training
facilities. With adequate funds
and open competition, Olympic
officials will be freed from
undesirable compromises with
commercial sources. Assuring
adequate facilities for all citizens
will give everyone the same
chance to excel.
Sixth, 1 believe that
international organizations like
the UN or the World Bank should
help to underwrite the expense of
the host nation. A revised
Olympics could be a step toward
peace. If we can translate that
universal appeal into a sharing of
the financial risks and rewards of
all the nations of the world, it
could have lasting, practical
impact. The exact formula would
be negotiated between host
country and international
organizations, but the offer would
make it feasible for many nations
to be potential hosts.
Seventh, I believe that the
Olympic Games should be more
participant oriented. The athlete
has gotten lost amid the
multi-million-dollar construction
projects, TV cameras and hordes
of tourists. The Olympics
originally were to be a world
youth festival. I would like to see
them become more festival and
less floating bond issue.
Everything should aim toward
providing the participant with a
unique experience, not with
providing the TV viewers with a
few minutes of vicarious
excitement.
The games themselves could
be staggered over a longer period
of time, thereby allowing the
athletes to actually live in the
Olympic village for as long as
perhaps four months. The idea of
community would intensify, and
friendships would multiply. The
unreal situation of two and a half
pressurized weeks of competition
would give way to the easier,
truer bonds of neighbors. The
pressure from the outside world
would decrease, for there would
be no bronze or silver medals. The
gold medal would be given only
when the Olympic record was
broken. Thus, the athletes would
compete against a standard and
not against each other or against
another's nation. The obsession
with "one's event" would
decrease and TV might in a truer
sense report on a "global village."
Those who run the games now
look only to a glorification of the
body and nation. They champion
the fastest, the strongest and the
most agile among us. Why not
also recognize creativity,
spirituality and tolarence. A film
festival, poetry reading, concerts,
cultural shows and athletic events
might even run simultaneously at
an expanded Olympics. The
whole person might be the theme
of the festival and the stress
would lay not on the rewards to
be taken home but on the
experience of living for four
months in a microcosm of the
world.
It seems to me, after the
tragedy of Munich, that the need
for world understanding is
greater, not less. The Olympics
with the proper modification can
provide a basis for the beginnings
of understanding. It requires
planners who are bold, to make
Montreal into a true global village.
It requires the willingness to share
the financial burden by hundreds
of nations. It requires a revision
of the existing rules, procedures
and personnel which govern the
Olympic movement. It requires
the belief on the part of all of us
that peace can prevail and that
even in the moments of our
darkest despair there lies a ray of
hope.
(Bill Bradley was a member of
the gold-medalist basketball team
at the 1964 Olympic Games. A
graduate of Princeton University,
he turned down a $400,000
professional basketball
scholarship to study at Oxford
University as a Rhodes Scholar. He
is now a member of the New York
Knickerbockers team.)
EVERY ADVANCE in
civilization has been denounced as
unnatural while it was recent.
Bertrand Russell
Mason County
VFW No.
1 694 meets
1st and 3rd
Fridays.
Memorial
Bldg., 2nd and Franklin.
Commander: Wayne Robinson,
426-4167. Service officer:
Eugene Hyatt, 426-8662.
Jackie Eichhorn, Helene Redman, Pat Tinker, Allene Stepper, Mary Lou Wicken.
I1116
II
Good luck to our team at
Women's International Bowling
27th State Tournament
Walla Walla - April 7th & 8th
COLONEL SANDERS' RECIPE
t~ tc~:
1st and Harvard, Shelton
Thursday, April 5, 1973 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 11