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Shelton Mason County Journal
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June 14, 2007     Shelton Mason County Journal
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June 14, 2007
 
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SHS 4 ;! i:!:: ¸ ..... ?; /: are state decathletes Four Highclimbers competed in the 36th annual Dennis McDonald Multi-Events State Champion- ships the weekend before last at Lake Stevens High School. Sophomore Erin Ranney, who made it to state in the pole vault earlier this spring, wound up sixth in the girls' decathlon with a point total of 3,327. She ran the 100-me- ter dash in 14.88 seconds, long- jumped 4.11 meters, shotputted 7.13 meters, high-jumped 1.25 me- ters, ran the 400 in 1:10.56, went 19.37 in the 100 hurdles, threw the discus 18.40 meters, pole- vaulted 2.10 meters, threw the javelin 23.91 meters and closed with a 6:46.97 performance in the 1500 meters. Tom Malysch, the Climbers' exchange student from Germany, racked up 3,846 points for 20th place overall in the boys' decath- lon. He went 13:06 in the 100, 5.43 meters in the long jump, 8.40 me- ters in the shot put, 1.45 meters in the high jump, 59.51 seconds in the 400 meters, 20.53 seconds in the 110-meter high hurdles, 20.09 meters in the discus toss, 3.45 me- ters in the pole vault, 35.60 meters in the javelin and 5:47.40 in the 1500. Junior veteran Huston Tsch- irhart wound up 24th overall in the 32-entry field with 3,574 points. He went 13.61 in the 100, 4.62 meters in the long jump, 7.09 meters in the shot put, 1.55 meters in the high jump, 58.89 seconds in the 400, 20.36 seconds in the high hurdles, 19.54 meters in the dis- cus toss, 3.30 meters in the pole vault, 29.90 meters in the javelin and 5:32.41 in the 1500 meters. Leading both of his boy team- mates when misfortune befell him in the competition was junior vet- eran Ian Hastings, who wound up bowing out after scoring on a pace for over 4,000 points through eight events. "He fell in the discus ring on his second attempt," advises Climber weight-events coach John Sells, "and peeled his thumbnail back on his right hand. It hurt quite a bit, but the biggest problem was he couldn't hold the pole for the pole vault, so he had to drop out. "It's too bad, because he's a strong second-day guy. He would have scored well." Ian went 12.24 in the 100, 5.62 meters in the long jump, 8.77 me- ters in the shot put, 1.65 meters in the high jump, 58.80 seconds in the 400, 17.21 seconds in the high hurdles, 16.24 meters in the dis- cus toss and 38.15 meters in the javelin. John's son Doug Sells, the Climbers' head coach and a prep All-American in the decathlon back in 1999, holds the Climber record in the ten-event competi- tion with 6,515 points. This year's state decathlon champs were Olympia's Casey Ste- vick (6,007 points) amoig the boys and Stanwood's Rachele Kloke (5,099) among the girls. Pacers running club re.forming Age-group track & field's Mason County Pacers club is re-forming, advises Climber cross-country coach Daryl White. "This time it will be a distance- running club," he says, noting that it will beast divisions for kids 6 and under all the way through adult and masters. The cost will be $20 per person, adds the coach, and it will be a club for 400-meter runners through 10,000-meter runners. The kids will need to get their USATF cards on-line for $20 and the adults will pay $30 for theirs, notes White. The first practice was at the high school track June 4 at 6 p.m. Members will train in the evenings with White and his Climber volunteer assistant of the past couple years, Peter O'Neil, and represent the Pacers in summer track meets locally and nationally. Interested? Give him a call at 426-9060, says Coach, or try O'Neil evenings at 898-0840. OWL TRACK & FIELD'S mainstays of '07 strike a pose at the Matlock school. In front from left are Brittney Harris, Shelby Adsero, Emily Elliott, Teryssa Toppano and Brit Bowman. Second row: Nikko Lottermoser, Jeremy Prouty, Carlos Zambrano, Brian Evans and Louis Dearbone. Back: Jacob Sutherby, Timothy Diggle, Kevin Cook, Sean Brehmeyer, Eth/ Johnson, Tyler Thompson and Chad Greene. Not pictured . Shareese Willey, Cassy Willey, Doug Crane, Spencer RowlWa Nick Otto and Jimmy Kiliz. The Owls were coached by veter mentor Kitty Brehmeyer. Track's Owls peak at state Being trackless proved no ex- cuse for the 1B Owls of Mary M. Knight this spring. Not only did the Matlock high- schoolers turn out in droves for the sport ofthinclads, they did so with such success that no fewer than seven of them made it to the state 1B championships. Here's veteran coach Kitty Brehmeyer's report: "We had a terrific turnout this season. The high-school team boasted a membership of 27 ath- letes. Of those twenty-seven, 13 made it on to the district meet. "There the boys' and girls' teams both finished in second place for the meet. Those com- peting at district were Shareese Willey (high jump, 800, 1600, 4x200 relay), Brit Bowman (200, 4x200 relay, long jump and triple jump), Cassy Willey (long jump, 400, 4x200 relay), Brittney Harris (4x200 relay), Sean Brehmeyer (discus, 800, 1600), Kevin Cook (100, 200, 300 hurdles), Timothy Diggle (shot put), Ethan Johnson (800, 1600), Nikko Lottermoser (long jump, triple jump), Spencer Rowlands (high jump), Jacob Sutherby (100, shot put, jav- elin), Tyler Thompson (discus) and Carlos Zambrano (3200). "Finishing in first place at the district meet, seven of the Owl athletes qualified for the state meet in Cheney over the Memo- rial Day Weekend. Those were Shareese Willey (in all four of her events: high jump, 800, 1600 and 4x200 relay), Brittney Harris (4x200 relay), Brit Bow- man (200, 4x200 relay), Cassy Willey (long jump and 4x200 re- lay), Ethan Johnson (800), Car- los Zambrano (3200) and Sean Brehmeyer (1600 and discus). "All seven, of these athletes placed in the top eight at the state meet. Brit placed eighth in the 200; Shareese placed fourth in the high jump, eighth 800 and seventh in the Cassy took the second- medal in the long jump personal improvement inches; the three girls with Brittney Harris pl sixth for the 4x200 relay; Johnson ran a personal the 800 to place seventh; Zambrano finished the eighth place, and Sean Breh eyer finished strong in fottruJ place in both the discus and tJe 1600-meter run. "With only three graduati seniors, we look to be anotler great team next year." Drag renewals set for next men (Continued from page 21.) hundred-foot patch of concrete, other attractions - dozens of food ANOTHER EXCITING whatever and strippin' everything off that you could to make it go faster. "Or when the war got over they found these things called external fuel tanks for airplanes. And they looked like a little torpedo. And these guys would put wheels and tires, engines and transmissions in 'em - and run 'em down the run- way." He grinned. "And that's drag racing. You know, that's where it came from. That's the grass roots of the whole thing, "is makin' somethin' outta nuthin'..." SPEAKING OF ROOTS, there's no chance of any "of them pushing up through the asphalt out there - despite the fact that the aban- doned runway the association is using boasts considerably less measurable substance then origi- nally thought. "It's not the eight inches that they keep telling us," said Red- man, referring to the asphalt's purported depth. "It's actually two and a half inches thick.," The truth came to light just this past winter, advised Redman - when he and Myers and the rest of the association's all-volunteer crew cut up the old starting area and put concrete in its place for its superior traction and durability. "We poured 40 yards of con- crete," said Redman. "We did a Alderbrook Alderbrook's ladies yielded the following the past week: June 5, Blind Holes First division - Rebecca Danielson low gross (43); net: Renee Youngs 35.5, Shirley Swenson 36. Second division - Pat Johnson low gross (52); net: Anne Gilbert 32, Linda McMullin 35, Nine-holers- net: Bebe Silvey 13.5, Lana Clausen 14. June 7, SetecUve Nine First division - Asue Barnes low gross (34); net: Pat Johnson 24 and Kendra Warner and Shirley Swenson tied at 29. Second division - Laverna O'Neil low gross (40); net: Leona Klein 23.5 and Sharon Darling and Janice Lapinski tied at 25. Nine-holers - net: Lane Clausen 35. Bayshore Bayshore's men staged their Page 24 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, June 14, 2007 and it's two and a half inches thick. Two of 'em - one for each lane - a hundred feet long and 12 feet wide." THE ORIGINAL PLAN was the make each concrete patch 20 feet wide and 735 feet long, but that got scuttled for the time being by delays in the Port of Shelton's approval process, said Redman. "If you hav>a track that's a half-track centre" tetrack," he said, "then it's up to 'ziational' stan- dards, if you wanna have a nation- al event here in the future - where you could have 30 or 40ithousand people in a weelcend. Okay?" He let that sink in. "For the rest of the classes it's not nearly as critical," he re- sumed, "but it does make for a bet- ter track. And we want to be able to build the best track we can." LEADING OFF THE second weekend of racing next month will be yet another Northwest first - a scheduled rendezvous on the part of the North American Mustang Club. "So we'll have like three to five hundred Ford Mustangs here on Friday the 13th," said Redman. "And they'll have coverage from all over the country here: maga- zines and all kinds o' stuff." And then of course there'll be more drag racing Saturday and Sunday, as usual. That and all the and display venues, another car show, even a fund-raising dunk tank featuring the cheerleaders at Shelton High School. AND OF COURSE there's the biggest attraction of all, as the drivers themselves would have it, reminded Redman: Speed, pure and simple. And you don't have to go 300 miles per hour to appreciate it, as- sured the organizer. "I haven't gone 300, but" I can tell you about 175," he said, grin- ning. "You know, when you see, oh, like Gone in Sixty Seconds, where they hit the nitrous oxide and ev- erything gets all blurry out here" - he gestures to his sides - "but everything in front is in focus like it is in the movies. That's really what it's like." H d a huge rush? ! It is, said Redman. "It is." He grinned anew. "Ever gone on a rollercoastor and gone down that speed part? Well, there ya go." "Even 90 miles an hour in a quarter mile is a rush," put in Myers. "Been in a V8 car and mashed the throttle? - or a pickup truck or somethin'," rejoined Redman, "and it sets you back in the seat - and you get that little smile on your face?" He flashed a reasonable facsim- ile thereof. pect, if not as immediate, simple math, reminded who figures next month's lists will boast in the hood of 400 cars and almost assuredly will year's eight-thousand count. "Here's a statistic for ya,  said, quoting what he says are tional community-impact es for such events. "They say t sort of"ehing brings in $65 per for every man, woman and in the county. Every man, and child. "And that's money that's sl t outside the track." DO THE MATH, said man. If the Port okays Austin's plan to have race here a minimum of 12 year, that'll mean $65 a day be pumped into the for every one of the 31,000 residents. ' So by the time you re saia ,t done," he said, "you've got a,t $3.2 million that would be sl ° - in the first year. "And these numbers have ing to do with how much the non-profits are gonna - you know, whether it be fro high-school cheerleaders to Kiwanis or whatever. You that's above and beyond. . "Because the money's g°t  help the internal infrastructure this community..." annual Clambake Tourney last weekend. Sixty players braved the weather and had a great time, reports club pro Brian Davis. The results: First Division (0-14 handicaps) Gross - Justin Lanman 148 and Dale Southwick and Brent Armstrong tied at 157. Net - Jeff Jeffries 136, Lynn Spilseth 137, Jim Lanman 142, Dean Medcalf and Nick Whittleton tied at 145 and Keith Smith, Bill O'Banion and John Price tied at 146. Second Division (15-and-over handicaps) Gross - Gary Morgan 169, George Ad- ams 171 and Gene Dunbar 175. Net - Chuck Jones 138, Jon Armstrong 142, Steve Johansson and Frank Schmidt tied at 146, Paul Johansson 147, Darrell Tidd tied at 148 with Jim Johansen and Brian Dun- bar. KP Wlnnem Saturday - Jeff Jeffries 4-1 on #3, Jim Lanman 3-8 on #7, Jeff Jeffries 4-61/4 on #12 and Mike Fussel115-11 on #16. Sunday - Dale Southwlok 8-01 on #3, Glenn Dunbar 5-10/2 on #7, Shannon Fran- cisco 7-1 on #12 and Keith Smith 22-51/2 on #16. Bayshore's ladies, meanwhile, waged gross/net competition Tues- day. The results: First division - Eeva Kissick low gross and Toni Stevens low net. Second division - Billie Elms low gross and Chadeen Wallitner low net. Nine-holers - Pat Oltman low gross and Ruth Wotton low net. Fewest putts - Toni Stevens (28) among the 18-holers and Kaye Knudsen (unspeci- fied) among the nine-holers. Chip-in - Bilile Elms (I lth hole). Cushman Lake Cushman's women waged medal-play competition June 6, to these ends: First division - Kathy Johnson Iow net: Evie Campbell first and Wynne '"" second. division - Sharon Bennett,, Second gross; net: Vickie Brazil first and RubY' ,=,v cson second. Third division - Doreen Berard low net: Vickie World first and Gall end. Chip-ins - LaRue Muller Palmer (6th), Jerene Smart (11th), son (1 lth) and Gall Collyer (1 lth). The club's "Lady Niners," e': while, yielded the following: June 5, Low Net First division - Gall Collyer first  Sund and Wynne Wright Second division - Gwen GadberrY and Missy Scupine second. :: Birdie - Wynne Wright. Chip-ins - Linda Sund and Vicld Wo' SHS 4 ;! i:!:: ¸ ..... ?; /: are state decathletes Four Highclimbers competed in the 36th annual Dennis McDonald Multi-Events State Champion- ships the weekend before last at Lake Stevens High School. Sophomore Erin Ranney, who made it to state in the pole vault earlier this spring, wound up sixth in the girls' decathlon with a point total of 3,327. She ran the 100-me- ter dash in 14.88 seconds, long- jumped 4.11 meters, shotputted 7.13 meters, high-jumped 1.25 me- ters, ran the 400 in 1:10.56, went 19.37 in the 100 hurdles, threw the discus 18.40 meters, pole- vaulted 2.10 meters, threw the javelin 23.91 meters and closed with a 6:46.97 performance in the 1500 meters. Tom Malysch, the Climbers' exchange student from Germany, racked up 3,846 points for 20th place overall in the boys' decath- lon. He went 13:06 in the 100, 5.43 meters in the long jump, 8.40 me- ters in the shot put, 1.45 meters in the high jump, 59.51 seconds in the 400 meters, 20.53 seconds in the 110-meter high hurdles, 20.09 meters in the discus toss, 3.45 me- ters in the pole vault, 35.60 meters in the javelin and 5:47.40 in the 1500. Junior veteran Huston Tsch- irhart wound up 24th overall in the 32-entry field with 3,574 points. He went 13.61 in the 100, 4.62 meters in the long jump, 7.09 meters in the shot put, 1.55 meters in the high jump, 58.89 seconds in the 400, 20.36 seconds in the high hurdles, 19.54 meters in the dis- cus toss, 3.30 meters in the pole vault, 29.90 meters in the javelin and 5:32.41 in the 1500 meters. Leading both of his boy team- mates when misfortune befell him in the competition was junior vet- eran Ian Hastings, who wound up bowing out after scoring on a pace for over 4,000 points through eight events. "He fell in the discus ring on his second attempt," advises Climber weight-events coach John Sells, "and peeled his thumbnail back on his right hand. It hurt quite a bit, but the biggest problem was he couldn't hold the pole for the pole vault, so he had to drop out. "It's too bad, because he's a strong second-day guy. He would have scored well." Ian went 12.24 in the 100, 5.62 meters in the long jump, 8.77 me- ters in the shot put, 1.65 meters in the high jump, 58.80 seconds in the 400, 17.21 seconds in the high hurdles, 16.24 meters in the dis- cus toss and 38.15 meters in the javelin. John's son Doug Sells, the Climbers' head coach and a prep All-American in the decathlon back in 1999, holds the Climber record in the ten-event competi- tion with 6,515 points. This year's state decathlon champs were Olympia's Casey Ste- vick (6,007 points) amoig the boys and Stanwood's Rachele Kloke (5,099) among the girls. Pacers running club re.forming Age-group track & field's Mason County Pacers club is re-forming, advises Climber cross-country coach Daryl White. "This time it will be a distance- running club," he says, noting that it will beast divisions for kids 6 and under all the way through adult and masters. The cost will be $20 per person, adds the coach, and it will be a club for 400-meter runners through 10,000-meter runners. The kids will need to get their USATF cards on-line for $20 and the adults will pay $30 for theirs, notes White. The first practice was at the high school track June 4 at 6 p.m. Members will train in the evenings with White and his Climber volunteer assistant of the past couple years, Peter O'Neil, and represent the Pacers in summer track meets locally and nationally. Interested? Give him a call at 426-9060, says Coach, or try O'Neil evenings at 898-0840. OWL TRACK & FIELD'S mainstays of '07 strike a pose at the Matlock school. In front from left are Brittney Harris, Shelby Adsero, Emily Elliott, Teryssa Toppano and Brit Bowman. Second row: Nikko Lottermoser, Jeremy Prouty, Carlos Zambrano, Brian Evans and Louis Dearbone. Back: Jacob Sutherby, Timothy Diggle, Kevin Cook, Sean Brehmeyer, Eth/ Johnson, Tyler Thompson and Chad Greene. Not pictured . Shareese Willey, Cassy Willey, Doug Crane, Spencer RowlWa Nick Otto and Jimmy Kiliz. The Owls were coached by veter mentor Kitty Brehmeyer. Track's Owls peak at state Being trackless proved no ex- cuse for the 1B Owls of Mary M. Knight this spring. Not only did the Matlock high- schoolers turn out in droves for the sport ofthinclads, they did so with such success that no fewer than seven of them made it to the state 1B championships. Here's veteran coach Kitty Brehmeyer's report: "We had a terrific turnout this season. The high-school team boasted a membership of 27 ath- letes. Of those twenty-seven, 13 made it on to the district meet. "There the boys' and girls' teams both finished in second place for the meet. Those com- peting at district were Shareese Willey (high jump, 800, 1600, 4x200 relay), Brit Bowman (200, 4x200 relay, long jump and triple jump), Cassy Willey (long jump, 400, 4x200 relay), Brittney Harris (4x200 relay), Sean Brehmeyer (discus, 800, 1600), Kevin Cook (100, 200, 300 hurdles), Timothy Diggle (shot put), Ethan Johnson (800, 1600), Nikko Lottermoser (long jump, triple jump), Spencer Rowlands (high jump), Jacob Sutherby (100, shot put, jav- elin), Tyler Thompson (discus) and Carlos Zambrano (3200). "Finishing in first place at the district meet, seven of the Owl athletes qualified for the state meet in Cheney over the Memo- rial Day Weekend. Those were Shareese Willey (in all four of her events: high jump, 800, 1600 and 4x200 relay), Brittney Harris (4x200 relay), Brit Bow- man (200, 4x200 relay), Cassy Willey (long jump and 4x200 re- lay), Ethan Johnson (800), Car- los Zambrano (3200) and Sean Brehmeyer (1600 and discus). "All seven, of these athletes placed in the top eight at the state meet. Brit placed eighth in the 200; Shareese placed fourth in the high jump, eighth 800 and seventh in the Cassy took the second- medal in the long jump personal improvement inches; the three girls with Brittney Harris pl sixth for the 4x200 relay; Johnson ran a personal the 800 to place seventh; Zambrano finished the eighth place, and Sean Breh eyer finished strong in fottruJ place in both the discus and tJe 1600-meter run. "With only three graduati seniors, we look to be anotler great team next year." Drag renewals set for next men (Continued from page 21.) hundred-foot patch of concrete, other attractions - dozens of food ANOTHER EXCITING whatever and strippin' everything off that you could to make it go faster. "Or when the war got over they found these things called external fuel tanks for airplanes. And they looked like a little torpedo. And these guys would put wheels and tires, engines and transmissions in 'em - and run 'em down the run- way." He grinned. "And that's drag racing. You know, that's where it came from. That's the grass roots of the whole thing, "is makin' somethin' outta nuthin'..." SPEAKING OF ROOTS, there's no chance of any "of them pushing up through the asphalt out there - despite the fact that the aban- doned runway the association is using boasts considerably less measurable substance then origi- nally thought. "It's not the eight inches that they keep telling us," said Red- man, referring to the asphalt's purported depth. "It's actually two and a half inches thick.," The truth came to light just this past winter, advised Redman - when he and Myers and the rest of the association's all-volunteer crew cut up the old starting area and put concrete in its place for its superior traction and durability. "We poured 40 yards of con- crete," said Redman. "We did a Alderbrook Alderbrook's ladies yielded the following the past week: June 5, Blind Holes First division - Rebecca Danielson low gross (43); net: Renee Youngs 35.5, Shirley Swenson 36. Second division - Pat Johnson low gross (52); net: Anne Gilbert 32, Linda McMullin 35, Nine-holers- net: Bebe Silvey 13.5, Lana Clausen 14. June 7, SetecUve Nine First division - Asue Barnes low gross (34); net: Pat Johnson 24 and Kendra Warner and Shirley Swenson tied at 29. Second division - Laverna O'Neil low gross (40); net: Leona Klein 23.5 and Sharon Darling and Janice Lapinski tied at 25. Nine-holers - net: Lane Clausen 35. Bayshore Bayshore's men staged their Page 24 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, June 14, 2007 and it's two and a half inches thick. Two of 'em - one for each lane - a hundred feet long and 12 feet wide." THE ORIGINAL PLAN was the make each concrete patch 20 feet wide and 735 feet long, but that got scuttled for the time being by delays in the Port of Shelton's approval process, said Redman. "If you hav>a track that's a half-track centre" tetrack," he said, "then it's up to 'ziational' stan- dards, if you wanna have a nation- al event here in the future - where you could have 30 or 40ithousand people in a weelcend. Okay?" He let that sink in. "For the rest of the classes it's not nearly as critical," he re- sumed, "but it does make for a bet- ter track. And we want to be able to build the best track we can." LEADING OFF THE second weekend of racing next month will be yet another Northwest first - a scheduled rendezvous on the part of the North American Mustang Club. "So we'll have like three to five hundred Ford Mustangs here on Friday the 13th," said Redman. "And they'll have coverage from all over the country here: maga- zines and all kinds o' stuff." And then of course there'll be more drag racing Saturday and Sunday, as usual. That and all the and display venues, another car show, even a fund-raising dunk tank featuring the cheerleaders at Shelton High School. AND OF COURSE there's the biggest attraction of all, as the drivers themselves would have it, reminded Redman: Speed, pure and simple. And you don't have to go 300 miles per hour to appreciate it, as- sured the organizer. "I haven't gone 300, but" I can tell you about 175," he said, grin- ning. "You know, when you see, oh, like Gone in Sixty Seconds, where they hit the nitrous oxide and ev- erything gets all blurry out here" - he gestures to his sides - "but everything in front is in focus like it is in the movies. That's really what it's like." H d a huge rush? ! It is, said Redman. "It is." He grinned anew. "Ever gone on a rollercoastor and gone down that speed part? Well, there ya go." "Even 90 miles an hour in a quarter mile is a rush," put in Myers. "Been in a V8 car and mashed the throttle? - or a pickup truck or somethin'," rejoined Redman, "and it sets you back in the seat - and you get that little smile on your face?" He flashed a reasonable facsim- ile thereof. pect, if not as immediate, simple math, reminded who figures next month's lists will boast in the hood of 400 cars and almost assuredly will year's eight-thousand count. "Here's a statistic for ya,  said, quoting what he says are tional community-impact es for such events. "They say t sort of"ehing brings in $65 per for every man, woman and in the county. Every man, and child. "And that's money that's sl t outside the track." DO THE MATH, said man. If the Port okays Austin's plan to have race here a minimum of 12 year, that'll mean $65 a day be pumped into the for every one of the 31,000 residents. ' So by the time you re saia ,t done," he said, "you've got a,t $3.2 million that would be sl ° - in the first year. "And these numbers have ing to do with how much the non-profits are gonna - you know, whether it be fro high-school cheerleaders to Kiwanis or whatever. You that's above and beyond. . "Because the money's g°t  help the internal infrastructure this community..." annual Clambake Tourney last weekend. Sixty players braved the weather and had a great time, reports club pro Brian Davis. The results: First Division (0-14 handicaps) Gross - Justin Lanman 148 and Dale Southwick and Brent Armstrong tied at 157. Net - Jeff Jeffries 136, Lynn Spilseth 137, Jim Lanman 142, Dean Medcalf and Nick Whittleton tied at 145 and Keith Smith, Bill O'Banion and John Price tied at 146. Second Division (15-and-over handicaps) Gross - Gary Morgan 169, George Ad- ams 171 and Gene Dunbar 175. Net - Chuck Jones 138, Jon Armstrong 142, Steve Johansson and Frank Schmidt tied at 146, Paul Johansson 147, Darrell Tidd tied at 148 with Jim Johansen and Brian Dun- bar. KP Wlnnem Saturday - Jeff Jeffries 4-1 on #3, Jim Lanman 3-8 on #7, Jeff Jeffries 4-61/4 on #12 and Mike Fussel115-11 on #16. Sunday - Dale Southwlok 8-01 on #3, Glenn Dunbar 5-10/2 on #7, Shannon Fran- cisco 7-1 on #12 and Keith Smith 22-51/2 on #16. Bayshore's ladies, meanwhile, waged gross/net competition Tues- day. The results: First division - Eeva Kissick low gross and Toni Stevens low net. Second division - Billie Elms low gross and Chadeen Wallitner low net. Nine-holers - Pat Oltman low gross and Ruth Wotton low net. Fewest putts - Toni Stevens (28) among the 18-holers and Kaye Knudsen (unspeci- fied) among the nine-holers. Chip-in - Bilile Elms (I lth hole). Cushman Lake Cushman's women waged medal-play competition June 6, to these ends: First division - Kathy Johnson Iow net: Evie Campbell first and Wynne '"" second. division - Sharon Bennett,, Second gross; net: Vickie Brazil first and RubY' ,=,v cson second. Third division - Doreen Berard low net: Vickie World first and Gall end. Chip-ins - LaRue Muller Palmer (6th), Jerene Smart (11th), son (1 lth) and Gall Collyer (1 lth). The club's "Lady Niners," e': while, yielded the following: June 5, Low Net First division - Gall Collyer first  Sund and Wynne Wright Second division - Gwen GadberrY and Missy Scupine second. :: Birdie - Wynne Wright. Chip-ins - Linda Sund and Vicld Wo'