An empty bucket is released from a helicopter after its contents, hundreds of golf balls, were dropped onto the 10th fairway at Auburn Golf Course Friday afternoon. It was all part of fundraising golf ball drop put on by the Kiwanis Club of the Valley, Auburn.  - Mark Klaas/Reporter
Mark Klaas/Reporter
An empty bucket is released from a helicopter after its contents, hundreds of golf balls, were dropped onto the 10th fairway at Auburn Golf Course Friday afternoon. It was all part of fundraising golf ball drop put on by the Kiwanis Club of the Valley, Auburn.

Raining golf balls – fundraising airdrop aids Auburn programs

By MARK KLAAS
Auburn Reporter Editor
August 14, 2009 · Updated 4:46 PM 

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Auburn's gray skies briefly rained hundreds of golf balls Friday afternoon – all for the sake of supporting community service projects for children and families.

A helicopter, courtesy of Auburn-based Airwork LLC., swooped in over the municipal course's par-5 10th hole to scatter 1,000 donated and pledged golf balls over a makeshift pin placed in the middle of the fairway.

Buckets of balls were deposited in separate, carefully-orchestrated drops in a closest-to-the-pin contest put on by the Kiwanis Club of the Valley, Auburn.

Two balls actually found the cup – Nos. 0788 and 2166, belonging to Barb Pitney and Heather Holte, respectively. They will split the $1,000 first-place prize and each will receive a free helicopter ride from Airwork.

The golf ball drop was part of a fundraising effort, "Helping Kids Out of the Rough," for the community service-oriented Kiwanians, who held its 24th annual tournament at the Auburn Golf Course.

Proceeds from the tournament and ball drop will go to the club's community service fund, a program that traditionally has given an estimated $20,000 to the Auburn community each year. The service club's mission is to "make a difference, one child and one community at a time."

According to Cara Rudd, former Miss Auburn and golf tournament chairperson for Kiwanis, the event will go a long way in closing a gap in the organization's community service fund.

"We lost $15,000 in sponsorships this year and we had to make it up," Rudd said.

The Kiwanis Club solicited donations to make it happen. Each donor purchased a ball for $5.

The Auburn Riverside High School Key Club assisted in numbering the balls.

Contact Auburn Reporter Editor Mark Klaas at mklaas@auburn-reporter.com or 253-833-0218, ext. 5050.

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