Latest news with #Masingill


USA Today
02-07-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
Red numbers abound on opening day of Golfweek Pacific Northwest Senior Amateur
On a picturesque, if warm, day in Washington's wine country, players had to score to contend at the Golfweek Pacific Northwest Senior Amateur. Perhaps no one embodied that better than Scott Masingill, the Payette, Idaho, native who is co-leading the Super Senior division. Masingill's card prompts a double-take. In the opening round at Wine Valley Golf Club in Walla Walla, Washington, Masingill started his day with nine 3s – birdie, birdie, eagle, birdie. In fact, he made 3 on half the holes he played for his 4-under 68. This is unsurprising from Masingill, whose golf life in the Pacific Northwest has been highlighted by a stout junior and college career, including the 1971 Pac-8 individual title while playing for Oregon State. He made a quick foray into professional senior golf but has since returned to the amateur game. Masingill was inducted into the Idaho Golf Association's Hall of Fame inaugural class in 2024. In 2019, the IGA named the state amateur trophy after him. He has won that event nine times in his life. At Wine Valley, Masingill shares the Super Senior lead with another PNW legend, however. Pat O'Donnell, a Pacific Northwest Golf Association Hall of Famer, also fired an opening 68. Last year, O'Donnell opened this event with 67 for the lead. O'Donnell is familiar with Wine Valley through his good friend Jim Pliska, the course owner. Pliska, who is also in the field, is third in the Super Senior division after a 2-under 70. He had only one bogey for the day. Pliska runs Space Age Fuel, one of the largest independent fuel marketers in Oregon, and in addition to Wine Valley also owns Emerald Valley Golf Club in Creswell, Oregon. The latter course is home to the University of Oregon golf teams. Despite his busy work schedule, Pliska competes six or seven times a year and is constantly working on his game as he splits his time between the Pacific Northwest, Southern California and Las Vegas. 'My game, I can feel it's getting better but getting it consistently better,' Pliska told Golfweek this spring, 'it's still got work to be done.' Scores were also low in the Senior division, as co-leaders Donald Bidinger of Bainbridge Island, Washington, and Chris Brauner of Middleton, Wisconsin, used rounds of 3-under 69 to climb to the top of the leaderboard. They lead Juan Angel, of Colombia, by a shot. Angel is the No. 2-ranked player in the 55-and-over category according to the World Amateur Golf Ranking. He has competed in the Latin America Amateur Championship the past three years and won several senior events in Colombia. Behind Angel, four players are tied for fourth at 1 under: Greg Chianello, Craig Larson, Kevin VandenBerg and Trent Gregory. Dan Parkinson of Lehi, Utah, and Gerry Graham of Mesa, Arizona, are tied atop the Legends division after rounds of 2-over 74. Parkinson is ranked No. 6 in Golfweek's National Senior Amateur Ranking for Legends players.


Time Magazine
08-05-2025
- Health
- Time Magazine
Evan Masingill
Evan Masingill had been working at GenBioPro, a leading manufacturer of the medications used for abortion, for about a decade before he took on the role of CEO in 2022— two weeks before the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Leading the pharmaceutical company at that time only further solidified 'that I was doing exactly what I was supposed to do,' Masingill says. GenBioPro, which manufactures only the abortion medications mifepristone and misoprostol, has a 'North Star' that guides its work, Masingill says: reproductive freedom for all people. Masingill says the company's tagline since it was launched in 2012 is 'putting access into practice.' And GenBioPro has committed to that core value. In 2019, the company obtained approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to sell the first generic mifepristone tablet in the U.S., which GenBioPro said 'has helped stabilize supply and satisfy the rising demand among patients for medical abortion.' Medication abortion is the most common method of abortion in the U.S. and has become essential for people living in states where abortion is banned or restricted. GenBioPro is now fighting to protect access to its products. In February, GenBioPro asked a Texas court to include the company as a defendant in a lawsuit filed by state attorneys general from Missouri, Idaho, and Kansas that is seeking to roll back a series of FDA policies implemented during the Biden Administration that have facilitated access to medication abortion. One change the state attorneys general are seeking, for instance, is reinstating the requirement that mifepristone be dispensed in person rather than by mail. In October, GenBioPro urged a federal appeals court to side with it in a lawsuit it filed against West Virginia in 2023 over the state's near-total abortion ban, arguing that the FDA's approval of abortion pills supersedes the state's ban. Masingill says this work is necessary and that there will always be people in power who try to restrict access to care. 'Does it grind my gears or get me heated?' he says. 'Of course. Is it sad? Yeah. But that doesn't mean we can't do anything.'