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Podcast No. 87: Amy Schulte

Amy (Ostermiller) Schulte has only been in Butte for a relatively short period of time. She has, however, already left her mark on her new hometown.
Schulte is an assistant coach with the Butte High track program. She brings the knowledge that helped her win three Class B State championships while competing for Shepard High School.
Amy won the discus in 2009. As a senior, she won the discus and shot put, breaking school records that stood for 30 years.
Amy competed in track at Montana State before graduating with degrees in marketing and economics. She owns a couple of businesses Moonlight Marketing and Events, and White Lavender.
The latter is a store that is an online store that is perfect for anyone looking to have some fun at a bachelorette party.
She also founded Graceful Gowns, which she calls her “passion project.”
Graceful Gowns has collected around 600 dresses for area high school girls to check out and rent for free so, as Amy says, they can feel beautiful when they go to their dances.
She said she did that as an outlet as she came to terms with her diagnosis with alopecia, a disease that led to her losing her hair.
Today’s conversation took place at the Coaches Corner at Metals Sports Bar & Grill. Listen in to hear Amy talk about her passion project and the rise in awareness of alopecia. Listen to her talk about her love of track and how working with young athletes is her daily vacation during the track season.
Listen as she talks about meeting her husband, Luke Schulte, on Tinder and the crazy happenings at her wedding reception.
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Podcast No. 86: Mark Beckman

For 18 years, Mark Beckman was a fair-and-steady hand guiding the Montana High School Association. He retired after a 25-year career at the MHSA and 40 years in education last June.
During his years at the MHSA, Beckman oversaw the addition of high school baseball and girls’ high school wrestling in Montana. Those are two great additions that will open doors for boys and girls for years to come.
He also navigated Montana sports through the COVID-19 pandemic and Hurricane Beckman. That is what I call the 2011 tornado that ripped the roof off the Billings Metra and wreaked havoc on the Montana’s sports schedule.
Through it all, though, we knew Beckman as a Butte guy.
He coached youth basketball in grade school and junior high in butte before becoming head coach at Butte Central. He led the Maroons from 1987 through 1991. His 1991 team went 19-6.
Beckman moved to Anaconda after the 1991 season, and then watched from afar as the Maroons went 20-4 and won the state championship.
After a nice run in the Smelter City, where he coached girls’ basketball and American Legion Baseball, Beckman moved to Helena for a job with the MHSA.
In 2004, he was named a replacement for the great Jim Haugen as the executive director.
Yesterday, I met with Beckman at the 51 Below Speakeasy for a fun conversation.
Listen in as he talks about getting into coaching under Butte greats like Oakie O’Connor, Mike Parent an Tom Lester.
Listen as he talks about the tough decision to leave Butte Central and how he was still very happy to see the Maroons win the year after he left.
Listen as he talks about his career and legacy at the MHSA.
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Podcast No. 85: Pam Parvinen

You will not see Pam Parvinen’s name in the newspaper or on television very often, if at all.
Pam, though, proves that you do not have to be famous to have a great story to tell.
A 1987 graduate of Anaconda High School, Pam has been through a lot. She is one of four daughters and two sons raised in Anaconda by Ray and Gloria Rostad. Like so many people of Butte and Anaconda, the Rostad family suffered through hard times after Ray lost his job when the mines and Smelter closed in the early 1980s.
Complicating those difficult economic times, Pam’s younger sister, Julie, was very sick. She went through a pair of kidney transplants before turning to dialysis. Sadly, Julie passed away at the age of 38.
After Julie began battling a hereditary kidney disorder, Pam and her sister Launa also became sick. When kidney transplants did not work, the sisters turned to dialysis.
Pam has not missed a day in more than 20 years. Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning, she goes through a nearly 3-hour dialysis process that keeps her alive.
In between all this, Pam and her husband Kevin raised their son and daughter, Logan and Lindsey.
Kevin is well known in Butte. He won a pair of individual state titles while participating in three Butte High team wrestling titles in the 1980s. He also coached the Bulldogs for years as an assistant and then head coach. He worked with Butte Central’s wrestlers as well.
Pam has remained behind the scenes. But she has some stories to tell.
Listen in as Pam talks about growing up in Anaconda during the toughest of times. Listen in how she and her siblings felt rich when they were given used bikes to get around town. Listen to how the kids all knew to behave when they went to eat at the Haufbrau.
Listen as she talks about her big family and how close they are. Listen to her describe undergoing kidney dialysis as if it is just taking a couple of pills.
Listen in to hear one tough Anaconda girl.
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Heroes aren’t just the ones who make the big shot

One day last spring, Butte Central’s softball team was playing in Frenchtown.
A younger brother of a BC player went to a nearby park to shoot hoops instead of watching his sister play softball.
Some younger boys noticed the boy was wearing a Butte Central Maroons shirt as he dribbled and shot.
“Do you know Dougie Peoples,” one of the young boys asked excitedly, as if he was talking about Michael Jordan, LeBron James or Patrick Mahomes.
Less than two months earlier, Peoples had become a household name across the state after he sank a 27-foot shot at the buzzer to lift Butte Central to 61-58 win over Lewistown in the Class A State championship game in Missoula.
To so many people in Butte, Peoples had become a local sports hero. To so many kids paying attention, he was simply a hero.
While the shot went viral with the dozens of videos of the game-winner circulating around the internet, that is not why Peoples’ performance was so legendary.
Really, that game-winning shot was just another play in one of the best performances we have ever seen. It wasn’t even his best play of the game.
That he made that shot was not even remotely surprising to the people who watched the Maroons play all year. Peoples hit long shots all the time.
Peoples also had a late steal for a bucket and foul that changed the temperature of that thrilling game. He scored 37 points in an effort that BC coach Brodie Kelly called “super human.”
To me, Peoples is also super human off the court. Hopefully everyone, young and old, is paying attention to this remarkable young man.
Late last week, Peoples learned he was one of 19 recipients of the 2023 Mariah’s Challenge Scholarship.
Leo McCarthy started Mariah’s Challenge after his 14-year-old daughter Mariah was killed by an underage drunk driver in October of 2007. The movement encourages students to never drink and drive or get into a car with someone who has been drinking.
There is no way to calculate how many lives Mariah’s Challenge has saved since its inception, but I’m pretty sure mine was one of them. I am proud to say that I was one of the first to accept the Challenge, and I haven’t had a drop of alcohol since the night Mariah passed away.
In March, Mariah would have turned 30 years old. The boys and girls who knew her are all grown men and women, many with families of their own.
Mariah, as her dad says, is forever 14.
With so much time passed, I worried that Mariah’s message might be fading away. Generational amnesia has taken away the sting of that horrible tragedy that shook our community to its core.
Then, Leo sent me the essay Peoples wrote about Mariah’s Challenge. The essay, which was part of the scholarship application, showed me that the message is still going strong.
“Mariah’s Challenge has guided my life into a favorable direction,” Peoples wrote. “I have learned many lessons that will be crucial for my future. My choice to be alcohol and drug free have caused me to be a better student, athlete, and human. Mariah’s Challenge has made me a better person and I am eternally grateful for the organization.”
Sure, anyone can say that, especially when they are trying to get a scholarship. When you get further into the essay, though, you can see that Peoples is 100 percent genuine.
He writes about feeling left out because of his decision to live by the ideals of Mariah’s Challenge. He would look on Snapchat and see his friends were out having fun without him.
That would be devastating to anybody, but Peoples would not let it sink him. Instead, he did what he knows best. He shot baskets at the Maroon Activities Center.
He took his feelings out on the court, shooting thousands of shots that helped turn him into the player that he is today. That player, by the way, is the Montana Gatorade Player of the Year and a signee with defending NAIA national champion College of Idaho.
He is one of the best high school basketball players the Mining City has ever produced, and he is still getting better.
“Unknowingly, it prepared me for my future and molded me into the person I am today,” Peoples wrote of Mariah’s Challenge.
Peoples’ struggle is a story his 18 fellow Mariah’s Challenge Scholarship winners can certainly relate to. They all must know what it feels like to be left out.
Yet, they persevered and stayed true to themselves. They are heading toward high school graduation and onto college, and the world is now theirs.
They are also providing a great example for the rest of us.
Whether you are 8, 18 or 38, everyone needs good role models. You need not look further than the latest class of Mariah’s Messengers.
They are Isaiah Bergren, Parker Brownback, Payton Clary, Tyler Duffy, Olivia Kohn, Aunika LeProwse, Gianna Liva, Chesney Lowe, Riley Lubick, Gabriella McPeek, Emma Meadow, Miranda Murray, Jasmine Richards, Jacob Sawyer, Madison Seaholm, Jonas Sherman, Ryan Tomich, Alex Watson and Peoples.
Some are also athletes. Some are not. Murray and Peoples are from Butte Central, and Lowe is from Thompson Falls. The rest will graduate from Butte High.
They all have good grades. They can be anything they want to be, and Mariah’s Challenge has helped pave their road to success.
“By staying alcohol and drug free throughout high school, I have gained a mature outlook on situations,” Peoples wrote. “I have begun to understand the impact relationships have on life, and value and cherish them. I wish younger me could have seen into the vision of the path my life would take.
“Thankfully, I do see my vision now, and I am the conductor of my own life. I can guide my own path in the direction I want it to go. When other people declare their opinions onto me, I have the satisfaction of knowing it does not matter. I believe my life is on a path toward success, and Mariah’s Challenge played a large role in driving my success. It has taught me I do not
need to be like everyone else. Mariah’s Challenge has given me a different perspective that being different is not a bad thing.
“In reality, being different from others is something that deserves to be celebrated. You cannot be great if you stay hidden in the pack.”
That last sentence should be on T-shirts. It should be plastered on posters in every school in the world. They should be words that we all live by.
They are words that should be especially driven home to high school, middle school and elementary school students.
If you follow the crowd and worry about what others think of you, you are not truly living your own life. You are letting others live it for you.
Dougie Peoples and the other 18 Mariah’s Messengers are clearly strong enough to live their own lives. They are strong enough to be themselves, and they are thriving.
So, here’s to the newest Mariah’s Messengers. Thank you for restoring my faith that Mariah’s message is as strong as ever.
Thank you for showing us all that you don’t have to hit that big shot to be a hero.
— Bill Foley, who has never been accused of being super human, can be reached at foles74@gmail.com. Follow him at twitter.com/Foles74. Listen to the ButteCast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you find your favorite podcasts.
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Podcast No. 84: Mike “Skinny” Foley

Almost everyone in town knows Skinny. Some even know to call in Mike.
Most, though, probably don’t know his real first name is George. He is named after his father, who was my grandpa Bill’s brother.
That makes Skinny my cousin. Sometimes we even admit to as much.
Skinny has officiated youth sports in Butte and around the state for more than four decades. He is good at it, too. He knows the rule book inside and out, backward and forward.
Nobody knows the rule book better than Skinny, and nobody loves to argue more than him.
Since Skinny is a fan of the Lakers, Packers and Dodgers, we argue a lot. We don’t always argue about sports, either. Skinny would argue that the sky is not blue, and he would never back down or admit defeat.
Our biggest argument, which has literally gone on for decades, is about Roger Maris. I say Maris belongs in the Baseball Hall of Fame. Skinny incorrectly says he does not.
We talked about debating that on this podcast. Since, I know it is impossible to beat Skinny in an argument — even if, as in this case, he is 100 percent wrong — I decided we’d focus on other issues.
So, we talked about the shortage of referees and the fact that we can’t get new officials to step up because people are afraid to get yelled at. We talked about Aaron Rodger’s divorce with the Packers, and we talked about how Skinny is never in doubt when making an argument.
We also talked a little bit about Roger Maris.













