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''tpedal-pushin'n bi "
page 20.) wheels. "And we play 'good
You just have 20
go.' He said,
done two sets
about it and,
not the kind of
quits; I don't like
I figured, 'Well, I
of this.'
days of Jer-
teaching thus
able to her,
to make it
mast when
g drafts-
rest-of-the-year
way of her own
L Weekly newspaper
makes her mor-
one would
it comes to an-
nosy reporters
t questions
a good, turn.
Baha'i rate
piring bicycle
of American auto-
d?
to roll her
lot gonna like
said, loosing
round of laughter,
tell you where I found
drivers• It
the Navajo Reserva-
eople acted like
human being
human being. And
move OVer for us all the
only two people
Were riding through
Reservation - a
of, uh, 200 miles,
more _ that didn't
of
was a lady
Lucia blurted
spite of her-
consistent
they drive in
eve
They're just
the Other was some-
from out of state.
both white. And we
'Teah, I
became
kind of a
'bad girl.'
I was very
angry and
I was very
sad."
"ruffles my feathers more than
when people say, 'Well, it's not
a fair world.'
" 'Well, excuse me! But if
this happens to YOU you're
recumbent/bad recumbent.'
"My wife doesn't compete, so
when somebody comes up be-
hind us - we're traveling 15,
16 miles an hour, which is
good for touring - they pass
her. And they're happy: 'Oh! I
caught the recumbent!' Ya
know? 'I'm faster than the
recumbent!!'
"See, we're a target. The re-
cumbents hold all the unas-
sisted land speed records for
bicycles. So everybody wants to
chase and prove that their
bike is faster than the recum-
bent."
Jerome snickered again, the
gleam in his eye growing by
the second. "Well," he said, "I
wait until they get about 25,
30 feet behind me, and then I
go from whatever speed I'm
doing to my cruising speed -
which is about 23 miles an
hour.
"And I know the mentality;
I know what they're thinking.
And I can see when they do a
jump to a sprint to catch me
and they have to get outta the
saddle a little bit.
"And I can see the head
tilt and everything else." He
grinned "I know all the moves.
I know all the body language.
I've been there."
AND DOES HE always
blow the guy outta the water?
You know, leave him with a
sprint of his own?
'qJmmm, if they're courteous
about passing," said Jerome,
"oh, I'm fine with that. That's
great. They're nice people.
We'll ride together and have
some fun.
"If they're not courteous-"
Comes that grin again. "Then,
'Well, let's rider"
not gonna be happy about it
either.' epitome of fighting back
"The thing that I've learned against some other driver s
from the Baha'i faith is to have stupid actions. And a sense of
a world.embracing view, which righteous indignation is at the
means your point of reference root of that.
is extended beyond yourself- "But, you know, there*s
or beyond your family, or certain guidelines. Ifyouwant
Climber senior Dale Fox be-
came Shelton's first-ever winner
of prep cross-country's prestigious
Salt Creek Invitational in Port
Angeles Saturday.
Further enhancing his presea-
son reputation as the top return-
ing high-school distance runner
in the entire state 4-A classifica-
tion, the Climber ace not only
outdueled defending 2-A state
runner-up Jake Itaskins with a
storybook finish in the 3.1-mile
road race but did so with a
14.59.01 clocking that's no less
than the fastest registered there
since former state champ Joey
Coor of Eastlake back in 1995.
BIDING HIS TIME off Has-
kins' shoulder most of the race,
Fox was about to make his move
after the last hill when he nearly
stumbled on a hidden tree root
and let his Port Townsend rival
open up about a 40-yard lead.
He cut the gap to about ten
yards going into the final
hundred yards of the race,
though, and then with a wither-
ing kick he passed Haskins with
about 40 yards to go and held him
off to the tape.
Haskins finished second, at
15:00.0.
NOT ONLY was Dale's victory
the first ever by a Climber in the
history of the much-heralded inv-
ite - which this year boasted a
field of about 200 in the boys' race
alone - but it marked a personal
improvement, timewise, of fully
31 seconds.
Impressive? Consider this:
Dale's 15:30.0 clocking over the
same course last year was already
the fastest ever by a Climber.
Faster even than the time posted
there by Climber forebear Aaron
Taylor the year he went on to win
the state 3-A title.
OTHER CLIMBERS cele-
brated big days as well Saturday.
State-veteran junior Jamie
ABOUT TO SURGE to victory with the finish line in sight Saturday is
Climber Dale Fox (right).
Coughlin equaled her ninth-place
performance of a year ago, paring
five seconds off her '98 time with
a 19:05.0 clocking in the girls'
race - won by Newport sopho-
more Jodee Adams-Moore in
17:42.
Sophomore Vic Carpenter, the
Climbers' second finisher in the
boys' showdown, took 11 seconds
off his '98 clocking with a 16:33
and finished 43rd overall, 22
places ahead of last year.
Classmate Rick Goin improved
by a whopping 2:45 and 90 places,
claiming 83rd with a 17:05, or
three seconds ahead of senior
veteran Ben White.
IN THE JAYVEE race, Climb-
er senior James Carnahan scored
a moral victory of sorts - improv-
ing on his previous Salt Creek
best despite taking a midrace
ihll and partially separating his
shoulder. "Gutsy performance,"
said Climber assistant coach
Mike Fox.
And in the girls' jayvee race
Climber ninth-grader Katie Dunn
distinguished herself once again,
finishing llth overall in a field of
90 runners and with a 21:34
clocking that would have been
good for 62nd place among the
varsity girls.
CLIMBERS @ SALT CREEK
Boys
Dale Fox 14:59.1 for first, Vic Carpenter
16:33 for 43rd, Rick Goin 17:05 for 83rd,
Ben White 17:08 for 87th.
Jayvee - Spencer Burnfield 18:34 for
52nd, Tyler Thornbrue 19:41 for 96th, Levi
Blackburn 21:11 for 134th and Levi Sawyer
21:43 for 138th.
Girls
Jamle Coughlin 19:05.0 for ninth place .
(Liz White pulled out on account of illness).
Jayvee - Katie Dunn 21:34 for 11th
place.
Softball tourney for the homeless:
expected that when
the reservation we
k be putting up with
mpaired driving,
intoxication. But
at all."
DO Americans
rate from a bi-
I'd say that
Just not aware of
,Said Lucia, trying
o be tactful. "They
that they have
on the road as
or a truck.
Worst offenders?
in - what
cars. High-
Cad-
drivers and
are the ones that
sitive to the
vehicle on
SHE has what
calls a "warrior
Lucia, turning a
this sort of
isn't nec-
sy, even with her
sense of
lgs to be
SOmebody passes
car - or,
.s some other
like cutting
a tendency to
that grin
"she said,
beyond your relatives, or
beyond the members of your
church or even the members
of your town - to include all
people.
"And when you do that you
begin to relate to people from
your own experience. You be-
gin to see things a little differ-
ently - which pulls down those
walls of ignorance,.."
people to learn :about the
Baha'i faith it's kind of the
'Turn the other cheek' thing
that Jesus taught,
"You know, if somebody
comes up and does wrong to
you, it doesn't mean that you
turn around and do wrong to
them."
SHE AND JEROME were
about to start the return leg of
their latest trip; said Lucia,
oad rage? On our noting thatit startedin Febru-
Southern California friend
Jerome's part? ary and so far had included,
Nah, he's too busy getting a amazingly, only two rain.
kick outta everyone else's soaked days.
stress level.
"Oh yeah," intoned the
former racer, eyes a-twinkle. "I
have a rearview mirror; I can
tell they're back there." He let
out a snicker of pure delight.
"See, we have recumbents
nowJ he said, referring to the
• t
new breed of bicycle hat looks
a little like a lawn chair with
'Oh/
Absolutely.
far exceeded
added:
lik
they
Lucia, laughing anew.
this has taught me to
people.
/s love for
all people
good."
One Pitch suffices, again
Shelton's annual One Pitch for
the Homeless softball tournament
gave its fifth yearly shot in the
arm to the Mason County Shelter
the weekend before last at
MCRA.
Triumphing on the field -
again - were the men and women
Hey,
fast-
gals!
The Shelton Girls Fastpitch
Association reports it will hold
tryouts this Saturday in Callanan
Park.
Prospects 12 years and young-
er will go from 10 to noon, those
trying out for the 14-and-under
and 16-and-under squads from
of Hoodsport Winery• Second
through fourth were Hood Canal
Communications, let Street Pub
and Lisa's Hair First. The sports-
manship award went to Endeavor
Resources.
Tourney all-stars included the
Winery's Bonita Allen and Ed
Walker, HC Corn's Jennifer Obli-
zalo and John Ronald, 1st Street's
Jennifer Beierle and Josh John-
son, Lisa's Lisa Rinard and Mike
Rose, Endeavor's Amanda Glaser
and Ben Waylett, Double Vision's
Sue LeDoux and Mike Simmons,
PCFCU's Jessica Cuzick and
James Lix, First Place Awards'
Jen Deyette and Brad Smother-
man, Brady Nursery's Shannon
Arndt and Denny Phipps and the
Fuddpuckers' DeAnn Smith and
Floyd Smith.
Chad Sweitzer of 1st Street
Pub won the home-run-hitting
contest - and donated his $100
prize (which had been donated by
Olympic Motors) back to the shel-
ter.
Special non-player "MVP" hen-
ors were shared by Bob Lee, who
donated the labor, materials and
processing of photos for the award
plaques, and Teresa Smith, who
took care of the fields throughout
the tourney.
Volunteer umpires included
Denny Temple, Skip Conklin,
Mike Wheaten, Cody May, Roy
Beierle, Mike Marshall, Matt,
Deemer, Tim Sheedy and Chuck
Robertson along with several em-
ph)yees of Double Vision.
First Place Awards donated
free engraving plus a discount on
the awards themselves, and Black
Star donated free T-shirt screen-
ing for volunteers.
Alderbrook
Alderbrook's ladies yielded the
following the past week:
September 14, "Cries-Cross"
Div. A - Elaine Puetz and Maddie Over-
by tied for first.
Div. B - Gayle Freitas first.
Div. C - Joan Pope first.
Nine-holers - Michelle Hinton first, Gwen
Wethem second and Mary Kingston third.
September 16, "two-ball best ball"
First - Patricia Smith, Karen Aumend,
June Casper & Pat Noble, 134.
Second - Betty Olson, Sandra Stoffel,
Betty Guisness & Maddie Overby, 140.
Nine-holers - opted not to play.
Bayshore
Bayshore's ladies played "Beat
the Pro" Tuesday, and two of 'era
did just that. To wit:
Marian Spence 68, Lois Norton 71, Pro
Brian Jackson 76, Alice Chapman 76.
First division - Marian Spence 6t, P, ose
Quimby and Wanda Fosdick 79.
Second division - Lola Norton 71, Alice
Chapman 76.
Third division - Anita Kimbel 78, Joann
McComb 81.
Fourth division - Ruth Wotton 79, Pat
Oltman 80.
Nine-holers - Chloe Scoles first and Pat
Kieburtz second,
Birdies - Wands Fosdick (3rd hole) and
Janice Biggs (12th}.
Chip-in - Arlene Van Wey (9th hole)•
Yeah:Mean. spiritual n°Qnuteilti2onPsCallSGFAspokes - golfers win
spirited. '." woman Karen Hunter at 427-SHS
the pedal, : , !' 8762.
tqhaaitiwei: th at G°d Aerobics,
HATEFUL. "Its only I,,
Downright within us. tta th
spirituale< : anyone? two on ree
hatefuL' . "
Shelton Parks and Recreation
drub Timberline
ter can't stop Soccerettes
ber varsity soccer
Tuesday, brav-
egree swelter to
4-1•
s just unbear-
coach Brian
the girls did
there), the win saw Shelton score
in the 23rd minute (Lauren Whit-
ing, assist Katrina Hale), the
30th (Amber Langon, assist Whit-
ing), the 53rd (Whiting, assist Au-
brey Metzger) and the 55th
(Stephanie Neurer, assist Jackie
Harvey). The Blazers didn't get
on the board until the 57th
minute, blasting in a direct kick
on a penalty shot earned against
largely Climber reserves.
Fairbrother touted the play of
Metzger and Whiting up front, re-
serve Erin Haertel in the mid-
field, upstart fresh Stacy Ozga in
goal and Elena Smith, Amanda
McClary, Marie Clarke and
Brooke Sande on defense.
The Climbers play host to un-
beaten and top-ranked Centralia
tonight in Highclimber Stadium.
of a cancellation
here with
.d for October 4
is offering a fall aerobics session
starting Wednesday, September
29.
Classes meet Mondays, Wed-
nesdays and Fridays from 5:30 to
6:30 p.m. at the Shelton Gymna-
sium ("brown gym") on Ninth
Street next to the Angle Educa-
tion Center.
The fee for six weeks of classes
is $24, and drop-ins are welcome
at $2 a session.
The classes, taught by Shelly
Wistie, incorporate step, floor and
kick-boxing exercises. The high-
energy class is set to music and
provides warm-up, exercise and
cool-down periods.
Register at the rec office week-
days at 122 South Third Street
downtown. For more information
call 426-9731.
The Climber varsity golf boys
won two of three matches the
past week, downing Chehalis and
Aberdeen but bowing by seven
strokes to league-favorite Black
Hills and state title contender
Shane Prante.
SHELTON 202, CHEHALIS 232
Shelton - Warren Ayers 37, Chris Lang
39, Jonathan Ssgai 40, Scan Burleson 43,
Will Harris 43, Eddie Haigh 50.
Chehalis - Ben McCullough 42, Kevtn
Cox 42, Justin Kruger 47, Josh Aselton 50,
John Cole 51, Derek Bluhm 59.
Jayvees - Climbers won 229-249 behind
Mike Davies' 43, Curtis Snyder's 44, Owen
Bacon's 45, Trent Dorwart's 47, Eric Eagle's
50 and Angelo Fantozzl's 59.
SHELTON 198, BLACK HILLS 191
Shelton - Warren Ayers 38, Jonathan
Segai 38, Owen Bacon 40, Chris Lang 41,
Scan Burleson 41, Will Harris 47,
Black Hills -Shane Prante 34, Trevin
Williams 37, Colin Gold 39, Mike Blaksley
40, Leif Backstrom 41, Rich Sartain 41.
Jayvees - Climbers won behind Mike
Davies' 39, Curtis Snyder's 42, Jake Pogre-
ba's 47 and Eddie Haigh's 48.
SHELTON 200, ABERDEEN 216
Shelton - Chris Lang 37, Warren Ayers
39, Scan Burleson 41, Will Harris 41, Jon-
athan Segat 42, Owen Bacon 42
Aberdeen - Greg Isaacson 36, P, yan
Kellogg 43, Drew Wandell 45, Aaron Ketola
46, Ray Wasson 46, Nathan Pearson 46.
Jayvees - Climbers lost by one stroke
behind Jake Pogreba's 43, Ken Hattori's 44,
Curtis Snyder's 48, Eric Eagle's 50, Angelo
Fantozzi's 53 and Trent Dorwart's 53.
ti * ,i:: !
Cushman
Lake Cushman's lady 18-holers
played "Bingo, Bango, Bongo"
September 15. The results:
Jerene Smart first, Win Ferguson tied for
second with Betty Byerley and Marian Han-
ley, Evle Campbell fifth and May Wigton tied
for sixth with Kathy Johnson, Marilyn
Schmid and Izzy Hobson.
Birdies - Jerene Smart (7th hole) and
Win Ferguson (12th).
Chip-ins - Sally Ganter (1st hole) and
Roz Battson (2nd).
Limerick
Lake Limerick's ladies waged
low-putts competition September
15, to these ends:
First division - Betty Dean 28 md Pat
Plancich and Gerry Wilson tied at 30.
Second division - Barb Eberhardt 33,
Yvonne Osborn and Rosetta ,Jones tied at
34 and J'Anne Wagner 35.
Third division - Pat Wass 31, Marie Bier-
ward and Martha Fairbanks tied at 33 and
Gwen Ball 34.
Chip-in - Marian Nolan (6th hole).
Thursday, September 23, 1999- Shelton-Mason County Journal- Page 21
''tpedal-pushin'n bi "
page 20.) wheels. "And we play 'good
You just have 20
go.' He said,
done two sets
about it and,
not the kind of
quits; I don't like
I figured, 'Well, I
of this.'
days of Jer-
teaching thus
able to her,
to make it
mast when
g drafts-
rest-of-the-year
way of her own
L Weekly newspaper
makes her mor-
one would
it comes to an-
nosy reporters
t questions
a good, turn.
Baha'i rate
piring bicycle
of American auto-
d?
to roll her
lot gonna like
said, loosing
round of laughter,
tell you where I found
drivers• It
the Navajo Reserva-
eople acted like
human being
human being. And
move OVer for us all the
only two people
Were riding through
Reservation - a
of, uh, 200 miles,
more _ that didn't
of
was a lady
Lucia blurted
spite of her-
consistent
they drive in
eve
They're just
the Other was some-
from out of state.
both white. And we
'Teah, I
became
kind of a
'bad girl.'
I was very
angry and
I was very
sad."
"ruffles my feathers more than
when people say, 'Well, it's not
a fair world.'
" 'Well, excuse me! But if
this happens to YO U you're
recumbent/bad recumbent.'
"My wife doesn't compete, so
when somebody comes up be-
hind us - we're traveling 15,
16 miles an hour, which is
good for touring - they pass
her. And they're happy: 'Oh! I
caught the recumbent!' Ya
know? 'I'm faster than the
recumbent!!'
"See, we're a target. The re-
cumbents hold all the unas-
sisted land speed records for
bicycles. So everybody wants to
chase and prove that their
bike is faster than the recum-
bent."
Jerome snickered again, the
gleam in his eye growing by
the second. "Well," he said, "I
wait until they get about 25,
30 feet behind me, and then I
go from whatever speed I'm
doing to my cruising speed -
which is about 23 miles an
hour.
"And I know the mentality;
I know what they're thinking.
And I can see when they do a
jump to a sprint to catch me
and they have to get outta the
saddle a little bit.
"And I can see the head
tilt and everything else." He
grinned "I know all the moves.
I know all the body language.
I've been there."
AND DOES HE always
blow the guy outta the water?
You know, leave him with a
sprint of his own?
'qJmmm, if they're courteous
about passing," said Jerome,
"oh, I'm fine with that. That's
great. They're nice people.
We'll ride together and have
some fun.
"If they're not courteous-"
Comes that grin again. "Then,
'Well, let's rider"
not gonna be happy about it
either.' epitome of fighting back
"The thing that I've learned against some other driver s
from the Baha'i faith is to have stupid actions. And a sense of
a world.embracing view, which righteous indignation is at the
means your point of reference root of that.
is extended beyond yourself- "But, you know, there*s
or beyond your family, or certain guidelines. Ifyouwant
Climber senior Dale Fox be-
came Shelton's first-ever winner
of prep cross-country's prestigious
Salt Creek Invitational in Port
Angeles Saturday.
Further enhancing his presea-
son reputation as the top return-
ing high-school distance runner
in the entire state 4-A classifica-
tion, the Climber ace not only
outdueled defending 2-A state
runner-up Jake Itaskins with a
storybook finish in the 3.1-mile
road race but did so with a
14.59.01 clocking that's no less
than the fastest registered there
since former state champ Joey
Coor of Eastlake back in 1995.
BIDING HIS TIME off Has-
kins' shoulder most of the race,
Fox was about to make his move
after the last hill when he nearly
stumbled on a hidden tree root
and let his Port Townsend rival
open up about a 40-yard lead.
He cut the gap to about ten
yards going into the final
hundred yards of the race,
though, and then with a wither-
ing kick he passed Haskins with
about 40 yards to go and held him
off to the tape.
Haskins finished second, at
15:00.0.
NOT ONLY was Dale's victory
the first ever by a Climber in the
history of the much-heralded inv-
ite - which this year boasted a
field of about 200 in the boys' race
alone - but it marked a personal
improvement, timewise, of fully
31 seconds.
Impressive? Consider this:
Dale's 15:30.0 clocking over the
same course last year was already
the fastest ever by a Climber.
Faster even than the time posted
there by Climber forebear Aaron
Taylor the year he went on to win
the state 3-A title.
OTHER CLIMBERS cele-
brated big days as well Saturday.
State-veteran junior Jamie
ABOUT TO SURGE to victory with the finish line in sight Saturday is
Climber Dale Fox (right).
Coughlin equaled her ninth-place
performance of a year ago, paring
five seconds off her '98 time with
a 19:05.0 clocking in the girls'
race - won by Newport sopho-
more Jodee Adams-Moore in
17:42.
Sophomore Vic Carpenter, the
Climbers' second finisher in the
boys' showdown, took 11 seconds
off his '98 clocking with a 16:33
and finished 43rd overall, 22
places ahead of last year.
Classmate Rick Goin improved
by a whopping 2:45 and 90 places,
claiming 83rd with a 17:05, or
three seconds ahead of senior
veteran Ben White.
IN THE JAYVEE race, Climb-
er senior James Carnahan scored
a moral victory of sorts - improv-
ing on his previous Salt Creek
best despite taking a midrace
ihll and partially separating his
shoulder. "Gutsy performance,"
said Climber assistant coach
Mike Fox.
And in the girls' jayvee race
Climber ninth-grader Katie Dunn
distinguished herself once again,
finishing llth overall in a field of
90 runners and with a 21:34
clocking that would have been
good for 62nd place among the
varsity girls.
CLIMBERS @ SALT CREEK
Boys
Dale Fox 14:59.1 for first, Vic Carpenter
16:33 for 43rd, Rick Goin 17:05 for 83rd,
Ben White 17:08 for 87th.
Jayvee - Spencer Burnfield 18:34 for
52nd, Tyler Thornbrue 19:41 for 96th, Levi
Blackburn 21:11 for 134th and Levi Sawyer
21:43 for 138th.
Girls
Jamle Coughlin 19:05.0 for ninth place .
(Liz White pulled out on account of illness).
Jayvee - Katie Dunn 21:34 for 11th
place.
Softball tourney for the homeless:
expected that when
the reservation we
k be putting up with
mpaired driving,
intoxication. But
at all."
DO Americans
rate from a bi-
I'd say that
Just not aware of
,Said Lucia, trying
o be tactful. "They
that they have
on the road as
or a truck.
Worst offenders?
in - what
cars. High-
Cad-
drivers and
are the ones that
sitive to the
vehicle on
SHE has what
calls a "warrior
Lucia, turning a
this sort of
isn't nec-
sy, even with her
sense of
lgs to be
SOmebody passes
car - or,
.s some other
like cutting
a tendency to
that grin
"she said,
beyond your relatives, or
beyond the members of your
church or even the members
of your town - to include all
people.
"And when you do that you
begin to relate to people from
your own experience. You be-
gin to see things a little differ-
ently - which pulls down those
walls of ignorance,.."
people to learn :about the
Baha'i faith it's kind of the
'Turn the other cheek' thing
that Jesus taught,
"You know, if somebody
comes up and does wrong to
you, it doesn't mean that you
turn around and do wrong to
them."
SHE AND JEROME were
about to start the return leg of
their latest trip; said Lucia,
oad rage? On our noting thatit startedin Febru-
Southern California friend
Jerome's part? ary and so far had included,
Nah, he's too busy getting a amazingly, only two rain.
kick outta everyone else's soaked days.
stress level.
"Oh yeah," intoned the
former racer, eyes a-twinkle. "I
have a rearview mirror; I can
tell they're back there." He let
out a snicker of pure delight.
"See, we have recumbents
nowJ he said, referring to the
• t
new breed of bicycle hat looks
a little like a lawn chair with
'Oh/
Absolutely.
far exceeded
added:
lik
they
Lucia, laughing anew.
this has taught me to
people.
/s love for
all people
good."
One Pitch suffices, again
Shelton's annual One Pitch for
the Homeless softball tournament
gave its fifth yearly shot in the
arm to the Mason County Shelter
the weekend before last at
MCRA.
Triumphing on the field -
again - were the men and women
Hey,
fast-
gals!
The Shelton Girls Fastpitch
Association reports it will hold
tryouts this Saturday in Callanan
Park.
Prospects 12 years and young-
er will go from 10 to noon, those
trying out for the 14-and-under
and 16-and-under squads from
of Hoodsport Winery• Second
through fourth were Hood Canal
Communications, let Street Pub
and Lisa's Hair First. The sports-
manship award went to Endeavor
Resources.
Tourney all-stars included the
Winery's Bonita Allen and Ed
Walker, HC Corn's Jennifer Obli-
zalo and John Ronald, 1st Street's
Jennifer Beierle and Josh John-
son, Lisa's Lisa Rinard and Mike
Rose, Endeavor's Amanda Glaser
and Ben Waylett, Double Vision's
Sue LeDoux and Mike Simmons,
PCFCU's Jessica Cuzick and
James Lix, First Place Awards'
Jen Deyette and Brad Smother-
man, Brady Nursery's Shannon
Arndt and Denny Phipps and the
Fuddpuckers' DeAnn Smith and
Floyd Smith.
Chad Sweitzer of 1st Street
Pub won the home-run-hitting
contest - and donated his $100
prize (which had been donated by
Olympic Motors) back to the shel-
ter.
Special non-player "MVP" hen-
ors were shared by Bob Lee, who
donated the labor, materials and
processing of photos for the award
plaques, and Teresa Smith, who
took care of the fields throughout
the tourney.
Volunteer umpires included
Denny Temple, Skip Conklin,
Mike Wheaten, Cody May, Roy
Beierle, Mike Marshall, Matt,
Deemer, Tim Sheedy and Chuck
Robertson along with several em-
ph)yees of Double Vision.
First Place Awards donated
free engraving plus a discount on
the awards themselves, and Black
Star donated free T-shirt screen-
ing for volunteers.
Alderbrook
Alderbrook's ladies yielded the
following the past week:
September 14, "Cries-Cross"
Div. A - Elaine Puetz and Maddie Over-
by tied for first.
Div. B - Gayle Freitas first.
Div. C - Joan Pope first.
Nine-holers - Michelle Hinton first, Gwen
Wethem second and Mary Kingston third.
September 16, "two-ball best ball"
First - Patricia Smith, Karen Aumend,
June Casper & Pat Noble, 134.
Second - Betty Olson, Sandra Stoffel,
Betty Guisness & Maddie Overby, 140.
Nine-holers - opted not to play.
Bayshore
Bayshore's ladies played "Beat
the Pro" Tuesday, and two of 'era
did just that. To wit:
Marian Spence 68, Lois Norton 71, Pro
Brian Jackson 76, Alice Chapman 76.
First division - Marian Spence 6t, P, ose
Quimby and Wanda Fosdick 79.
Second division - Lola Norton 71, Alice
Chapman 76.
Third division - Anita Kimbel 78, Joann
McComb 81.
Fourth division - Ruth Wotton 79, Pat
Oltman 80.
Nine-holers - Chloe Scoles first and Pat
Kieburtz second,
Birdies - Wands Fosdick (3rd hole) and
Janice Biggs (12th}.
Chip-in - Arlene Van Wey (9th hole)•
Yeah:Mean. spiritual n°Qnuteilti2onPsCallSGFAspokes - golfers win
spirited. '." woman Karen Hunter at 427-SHS
the pedal, : , !' 8762.
tqhaaitiwei: th at G°d Aerobics,
HATEFUL. "Its only I,,
Downright within us. tta th
spirituale< : anyone? two on ree
hatefuL' . "
Shelton Parks and Recreation
drub Timberline
ter can't stop Soccerettes
ber varsity soccer
Tuesday, brav-
egree swelter to
4-1•
s just unbear-
coach Brian
the girls did
there), the win saw Shelton score
in the 23rd minute (Lauren Whit-
ing, assist Katrina Hale), the
30th (Amber Langon, assist Whit-
ing), the 53rd (Whiting, assist Au-
brey Metzger) and the 55th
(Stephanie Neurer, assist Jackie
Harvey). The Blazers didn't get
on the board until the 57th
minute, blasting in a direct kick
on a penalty shot earned against
largely Climber reserves.
Fairbrother touted the play of
Metzger and Whiting up front, re-
serve Erin Haertel in the mid-
field, upstart fresh Stacy Ozga in
goal and Elena Smith, Amanda
McClary, Marie Clarke and
Brooke Sande on defense.
The Climbers play host to un-
beaten and top-ranked Centralia
tonight in Highclimber Stadium.
of a cancellation
here with
.d for October 4
is offering a fall aerobics session
starting Wednesday, September
29.
Classes meet Mondays, Wed-
nesdays and Fridays from 5:30 to
6:30 p.m. at the Shelton Gymna-
sium ("brown gym") on Ninth
Street next to the Angle Educa-
tion Center.
The fee for six weeks of classes
is $24, and drop-ins are welcome
at $2 a session.
The classes, taught by Shelly
Wistie, incorporate step, floor and
kick-boxing exercises. The high-
energy class is set to music and
provides warm-up, exercise and
cool-down periods.
Register at the rec office week-
days at 122 South Third Street
downtown. For more information
call 426-9731.
The Climber varsity golf boys
won two of three matches the
past week, downing Chehalis and
Aberdeen but bowing by seven
strokes to league-favorite Black
Hills and state title contender
Shane Prante.
SHELTON 202, CHEHALIS 232
Shelton - Warren Ayers 37, Chris Lang
39, Jonathan Ssgai 40, Scan Burleson 43,
Will Harris 43, Eddie Haigh 50.
Chehalis - Ben McCullough 42, Kevtn
Cox 42, Justin Kruger 47, Josh Aselton 50,
John Cole 51, Derek Bluhm 59.
Jayvees - Climbers won 229-249 behind
Mike Davies' 43, Curtis Snyder's 44, Owen
Bacon's 45, Trent Dorwart's 47, Eric Eagle's
50 and Angelo Fantozzl's 59.
SHELTON 198, BLACK HILLS 191
Shelton - Warren Ayers 38, Jonathan
Segai 38, Owen Bacon 40, Chris Lang 41,
Scan Burleson 41, Will Harris 47,
Black Hills - Shane Prante 34, Trevin
Williams 37, Colin Gold 39, Mike Blaksley
40, Leif Backstrom 41, Rich Sartain 41.
Jayvees - Climbers won behind Mike
Davies' 39, Curtis Snyder's 42, Jake Pogre-
ba's 47 and Eddie Haigh's 48.
SHELTON 200, ABERDEEN 216
Shelton - Chris Lang 37, Warren Ayers
39, Scan Burleson 41, Will Harris 41, Jon-
athan Segat 42, Owen Bacon 42
Aberdeen - Greg Isaacson 36, P, yan
Kellogg 43, Drew Wandell 45, Aaron Ketola
46, Ray Wasson 46, Nathan Pearson 46.
Jayvees - Climbers lost by one stroke
behind Jake Pogreba's 43, Ken Hattori's 44,
Curtis Snyder's 48, Eric Eagle's 50, Angelo
Fantozzi's 53 and Trent Dorwart's 53.
ti * ,i:: !
Cushman
Lake Cushman's lady 18-holers
played "Bingo, Bango, Bongo"
September 15. The results:
Jerene Smart first, Win Ferguson tied for
second with Betty Byerley and Marian Han-
ley, Evle Campbell fifth and May Wigton tied
for sixth with Kathy Johnson, Marilyn
Schmid and Izzy Hobson.
Birdies - Jerene Smart (7th hole) and
Win Ferguson (12th).
Chip-ins - Sally Ganter (1st hole) and
Roz Battson (2nd).
Limerick
Lake Limerick's ladies waged
low-putts competition September
15, to these ends:
First division - Betty Dean 28 md Pat
Plancich and Gerry Wilson tied at 30.
Second division - Barb Eberhardt 33,
Yvonne Osborn and Rosetta ,Jones tied at
34 and J'Anne Wagner 35.
Third division - Pat Wass 31, Marie Bier-
ward and Martha Fairbanks tied at 33 and
Gwen Ball 34.
Chip-in - Marian Nolan (6th hole).
Thursday, September 23, 1999- Shelton-Mason County Journal- Page 21