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Newspaper Archive of
Barnstable Patriot
Barnstable, Massachusetts
August 4, 2006     Barnstable Patriot
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August 4, 2006
 
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Hit the links for Independence House The first Liberty Golf Classic will be held Sept. 18 to benefit Independence House in Hyannis. The event, to be held at the Brookside Club in Bourne, includes a putting contest, shotgun start scramble, cocktail reception , and an awards banquet and luncheon. Registration is first come, first served and is limited to 144. For more information, call 508-771-6507 or visit www. independencehouse.org and clickon Upcom- ing Events. Benefit fore Charles Moore Arena The Charles Moore Arena Board of Direc- tors willhold a Golf Benefit Oct. 19.Admis- sionis$115per player.For moreinformation, call 508-255-5902 or 508-255-2971. Trackstertriumphs in summer event Brian Turnbull of Osterville won the 100 meters with a time of 11.8 and the 400 meter dash in a personal best of 55.1 in the 15-16-year-old class at the 2006 Needham YouthClassic on July 29. In addition, he led the winning team in the 4x100 meter relay and placed second in the 200 meter dash. Turnbull will be entering his senior year at Barnstable High School this fall. YMCA Youth Soccer registration Registration is open for Youth Soccer through Aug. 14. Registration forms can be picked up at the YMCA in West Barnstable or can be mailed upon request. The program is for children ages 4 through 7 and games will be played at the Barnstable Horace Mann Charter School in Marstons Mills or the YMCA Camp Lyndon in Sandwich.Vol- unteer coaches and assistant coaches are needed. The cost is $40 for members and $65 for non-members. For more information call Sue Winkfield at 508-362-6500, ext. 310. Team sponsorship is also available. Fish for theJimmy Fund The 13th annual Joe Cronin Memorial Jimmy Fund Fishing Tournament is sched- uled for Aug. 11. This event takes place at Nauticus Marina, Oyster Harbors Marina, and CrosbyBoat Yardin Osterville.For more information,contact Sarah Curtis at 617-632- 5091 or visit www.jimmyfund.org. Blaine's RunWalk Blaine'sRunWalkwillcelebrate its 12th an- niversaryon Aug. 13at 1p.m.with afive-mile walkthroughscenicOstervilletosupportrural missionwork inSouth Carolina,the Lois and Blaine Taylor Fellowship, and BigBrothers & Big Sisters of Cape Cod. No pre-registration is necessary and there is no entry fee. There will be food, t-shirts, door prizes and fellow- ship. For more information, call the United Methodist Church at 508-428-2811. Fitness for everyone TheYMCA Cape Cod isofferingfun classes this summer. Iyengar Yoga will take place on Tuesday and Thursday mornings at 8 through Aug. 26. Hatha Yogawill be offered Wednesday evenings at 7:30. Men'sBootcamp willtake place Saturday mornings through Aug. 26. Free weights, bench presses, pushups and abdominal strengthening are among the areas of fo- cus. Enjoy Pilates and an Exercise Ball Class Mondays from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. and Thurs- days from 6:15 to 7:15 p.m. through August 26. You can prepare for fall sports through the Youthand Teen Pre-sport Conditioning class that willmeet Monday and Wednesday from 4:30 until 5:30 p.m. for ages 10-12 and 5:45 until 6:45 for ages 13-16through August 17. For more information, call Dianne Fran- cis at 508-362-6500, ext. 106 or go to www. ymcacapecod.org. Hunt for the Cure The seventh annual Hunt for the Cure Walkto find acure for Parkinson'sDisease is comingto Osterville on Sept. 9. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. and the walk start s at 9. On the eveningof Sept. 8BreakingGrounds in Ostervillewillhost its second annual spa- ghetti dinner,withproceeds to benefit Hunt for the Cure. For more information,contact Janine Destremps at 508-888-3207. Last Gasp gets new date The 15th annual Last Gasp Bike, Boat 'n' Bake takes place Sept. 17 when partici- pants bike from Sandwich to Provincetown to raise funds for area non-profit agencies including Cape Cod Child Development, Champ Homes, Gosnold of Cape Cod, Ki- wanis Clubs of Hyannis and Sandwich and the Rehabilitation Hospital of the Cape and Islands. The bike ride begins at 8 a.m. fol- lowed by a cruise back to Sandwich where a clambake will be served at the American Legion. For details, visit www.thelastgasp. com or call 508-420-4030. Junior Lifeguard Program at Seashore The National Park Service offers ajunior lifeguard program at the Cape Cod National Seashore this summer for ages 12 through 15when participantswilllearn water safety, first aid, CPR, lifeguard training and more. The program runs Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. through Aug. 11. For information, call 508-349-3785. Program is free. Turn the tide against cancer This summer marks the 7th Annual Against The Tide one-mile swim, two-mile kayak and three-milefitness walkbenefiting the Massachusetts Breast Cancer Coalition. It willbe held Aug. 19at Nickerson StatePark in Brewster. Each participant should raise a minimum of $150. Sign up for one, two or all three events. Visit www.mbcc.org/swim or call 800-649-MBCC to sign up. Swim for Life Swimmers and paddlers are invited to converge on Cape Cod for the 19th annual Provincetown Harbor Swimfor Lifeand Pad- dler Flotilla, a community benefit for AIDS, Women's Health and Youth. The event will take place Sept. 9 at the Boatslip Resort , 161 Commercial St., and includes the Mer- maid Brunch, entertainment and awards ceremony. The Celebration of Life concert willbe held Friday evening and aPool Swim willbe held for the Harborly Challenged will be held along with the harbor swim at the Surfside Hotel and Suites pool. Beneficia- ries of the event include the AIDS Support Group of Cape Cod, Helping Our Women, Outer CapeHealth Services,Cape &Islands Gay/StraightAlliance,ProvincetownRescue Squad and Lower Cape Ambulance. For registration forms and information contact Swim for Life, PO Box 819, Provincetown, 02657 or call 508-487-1930 or visit www. swim4hfe.org. Chamber's September to remember There will be a September Member to Member golf event at Twin Brooks Golf Course at the Four Points Sheraton in Hyannis on Sept. 12. For more informa- tion, call 508-362-3225, ext. 513 or e-mail jane@capecodchamber.org. Golf with Susan Wornick On Aug. 7 the Boys & Girls Club of Cape Cod will host its annual Golf Tournament, Dinner and Auction at the Country Club of New Seabury. Susan Wornick of WCVB TV Channel 5 will be the celebrity auctioneer. Folks can enjoy a day of golf at the Ocean Course at the Country Club of New Seabury or reserve a seat for only the dinner and auction, which starts at 6 p.m. Items to be auctioned off include bats signed by every team on the Cape Cod Baseball League, a hand-carved bird by artist Dick Nelson, four days of golf at the Camelback Inn in Arizona, and a print of a painting of the sailboat Mya done by U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy. Tickets are $250 per person for the entire event, which includes golf, lunch, a cart, the dinner and auction. For just the dinner and auction,tickets are $50.Formore information, call 508-477-8845 or visit www. boysgirlsclubcapecod.org. CONTINUED FROM PAGE A:12 he'd hit ahome run inthe third. Unfortunately, after an umpire conference the ball was said to have one-hopped the fence rather than clearing it, leaving McGuire with a double. Tension became the name of the game then, as the situ- ation in the Met' dugout grew more heated than the air over the field , particularly when an ump singled out closing pitcher Daniel Latham for ejection, further taxing the lacking bullpen. Aaron Brown did his best to regain control and only allowed one unearned run in six innings. However, in the seventh things began to unravel. Sergio Miranda and Josh Horton of the Mariners netted RBIs against Brown, and Josh Donaldson singled in Harwich's final run against Mets reliever Adam Riefer. SeanO'Briendoubledhome the onlyrunfor Hyannisin the eighth, but no one else was able to cross the plate. Hyannis faces Bourne at home tonight and will play a final game against Cotuit tomorrow night at Lowell Field. Mets... Kettleers... CONTINUED FROM PAGE A:12 though theteamwasunable to muster further offense against Hargrove, Duncan managed to hold off the As and keep Cotuit in the lead. With this win, Cotuit can- not finish out the season any worse than one point ahead of the team that finishes in second place, aposition being battled for by Wareham and Falmouth. The win comes on the heels of Cotuit'sloss to the current second-place holders , the Gatemen, on Monday night. Warehampounced onCotuit starter Graham Godfrey, as the first Wareham batter , Brandon Glover, sent the ball sailing for his first homer of the season. With the Gatemen ahead, Cotuit entered the sixth down by three runs. Josh Hula led off the inning with a walk, followed by another from Eric Farris,whichput aCotuit run- ner in scoring position for the first time during the match. Smoak then singled, load- ing the bases. A walk from Reese Havens brought in a run that cut Wareham's lead to one. Although the Gate- men switched pitchers in an attempt to stop the charge, the reliever hit Matt Angle to tie things up. Wareham refused to go down quietly, rallying for four runs that earned Shane Matthews his first loss of the season. Fortunately the loss wasn't enough to bump Cotuit from'" the top spot , a position they, can now savor as they head into the playoffs. The Kettleers face Orleans tonight and the HyannisMgfc& at Lowell field tomorrow, when the Patriot Cup will be awarded to the Cotuit team. Digging deep The Hyannis Mets' Matt Mangini prepares for a scoop during fielding practice prior to the All Star game Saturday. i ¦ K| & *i*A lhe ' PresUatfplayed 4 ^ ^S^ M k^ 7* i f < "! P^ * ^ ^ ^* 1* ¦ ! * Coll Uub MM EsAl| Mondav, Oct 16 2006 JJ ¦ ¦ B^^ l l ' ' ^ ^H I ™ »S m. >*¦ A Benefit lor the M *i* 8 . I; I Kenned> fi m. Hyannis Museum Foundation i r *KffJft ^^ — 7F .£15"W«i 508.7y0.3077 f\ f f jfkmuseumC0 hyannis com ^mumm%-- . » I , «? < Zyv/r PltT vT6y ^ ^ ~WL{7t/.f/ HOLBY MARINE — BOATS 17' - 24' NEW ENGLAND ALL MODELS IN STOCK BUILT _ CLASSICDESIGN QUALITY NEW & PRE-OWNED BOATS ra CHQSBYYACHTYAHIINC. -jT 72 Crosby Circle, Osterville, MA 02655 gfaj Tel. 508-428-6900 www.crosbyyacht.com / Remodeliiij 1 ^ t ~' T% aimaiverizonM /| ^. . Eldtedge & Sons.cim Subscribe Todifl ¦ J8 ) 771-14jB The Buick Open The Buick Open has been Tournament Results Corey Pavin got out to an early record- B Defending- Viiay Sinqh an °"^ n <>-m tournament champion: Corey Pavin breaking lead and never relinquished il ToUl Puree- $4 800 000 on lhe PGA Jai " slnce Purse: $720 000 The 46-year-old captured his first PGA Yards- 7 127 195B The inaugural event 2nd Place: Jerry Kelly Tour title in 10 years on Sunday, clos- par 72 l°ok place in 1958 as lhe purs0: $432 000 in9 wim a 3 u nder 67 lor a two-stroke I Buick Open Invitational with 3rd Place: Jeff Sluman victory in the U S Bank Championship Billy Casper defeating Arnold Palmer by one stroke There was Purse: $272 000 at Milwaukee With the win . he became no tournament from 1970 through 1976 as the evenl was in a I ' the eighth two-time champion of the state of flux Once the tournament resumed in 1977 il has been tournament and received $720 000 His last win at Milwaukee was 20 years a constant fixture on the PGA Tour Last year Vi|ay Singh won ago Pavin also set a PGA Tour nine-hole scoring record last Thursday by his second consecutive Buick Open and captured his lourth PGA delivering a 26 on the Irani nine at the U S Bank Championship Pavin broke TOUR victory of the season With the win he also became the the earlier record of 27 held by four other players including Andy North and first three-time winner in the tournament' s history Robert Gamez In second place was Jerry Kelly who closed with a 67 Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday What golferreplaced Tiger Woods a/ the top ' Wilhmostof us in lhework force VJieV -^tiJs VM* %M / of the Oficml World GotRankingstn 2004? fy g BdifficuH to have lhelime to put . ^ H RF s t f K . -^oF*r -r^&!\t a) TomWatson c) ToddHamilton / A intopracticewhat is necessaryto g~^5n g ^ ft. 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