The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 191, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 5, 2001 Page: 3 of 10
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Tuesday, June 4,2001
The Baytown Sun
June 5,20)1
McVeigh
FAA
Obituaries
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FLORIS
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BRUCE
Attention To All Members:
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Bingaman, D-N.M., who will
chair the Energy and Natural
Resources Committee.
U.S. Chamber of Commerce
President Tom Donohue said
that while the Democrats’
ascendancy won’t change any
votes in the’ Senate, Daschle’s
ability to control the agenda will
be the most telling change.
“The real challenges are
going to be on health care and
energy” as far as business es
“I think what we’re hoping we
can accomplish with Juan
Garza’s case is to just somehow
be heard above all of this sound
and fury and white noise that’s
Surrounding the McVeigh case,”
defense attorney Gregory
Wiercioch said. “That case is
really overshadowing some seri-
ous systemic problems with the
federal death penalty system.”
Among those problems,
Wiercioch and other death
penalty opponents say, is
Garza’s ethnicity: Garza, who is
Hispanic, is one of 17 minori-
ties out of the 20 men currently
on federal death row.
Rather than relying on
untested new technology to
completely overhaul the air
traffic control system, the
FAA proposal calls for:
• Using satellites, rather than
radar, to track airplanes.
• Giving pilots and con-
trollers more freedom to route
planes through the sky, rather
than following fixed paths.
• Using newer equipment
that will allow airports to
detect storms earlier, giving
officials more time to reroute
airplanes and reducing weath-
ar-related delays.
• Allowing planes to fly
(Located in Cedar Crest Cemetery)
3010 Ferry Rd, Baytown
281-427'2123
Regular business hours will
resume on Wednesday.
281-427-7374
301 West Texas Avenue
Downtown Baytown
Keep up
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IANUGUAGF
FREE DELIVERY
to any funeral home in the area.
The Baytown Teachers
Credit Union will be closed today,
Tuesday, June 5th.
THE SUBTLE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
VARILUX PROGRESSIVE LENSES
AND BIFOCALS
children.
Visitation will be from 6 to 8
p.m. today, June 5, 2001, at
Navarre Funeral Home.
Funeral services will be at
10 a.m. Wednesday, June 6,
2001 at Navarre Funeral
Home. Burial will follow at
Tilton Cemetery.
Pallbearers are WO. Wallace
Sr., Michael Graham, Allen
Ueckert, Buster Williams,
Stanton Williams and Thayne
Williams.
Services are under the direc-
tions of Navarre Funeral
Home, 2444 Rollingbrook,
Baytown, (281) 422-8111.
“The problems with evacuat-
ing huge numbers of people
will be compounded if they get
caught in the Houston rush
hour traffic,” he said. “That’s
why we tell people to take
about a day’s worth of food,
water, medications and food for
pets because the usual two-
hour drive to someplace like
College Station may take 16
hours in times of evacuation.”
Lufkin has been designated
as the host community for
Baytown residents in the eVent
of an evacuation, Olive said.
“Planning for families should
include arranging with friends
and family to evacuate to their
residence outside the danger
zone,” he said.
Hurricane preparedness
information is available at the
city’s Emergency Operations
Center, 220 W. Defee; at
Sterling Municipal Library; or
by calling (281) 420-6556.
Contact M.A. Bengtson by e-
mail at ma.bengtson@
baytownsun.com or by phone
at.(281) 425-8023.
Continued from Page 1
Daschle, D-S.D., who will
become majority leader, has
said the Senate will first com-
plete its woik on a bipartisan
education bill backed by Bush.
After that, it will turn to a bill
expanding patients’ rights
cosponsored by Democrats and
Republican Sen. John McCain
of Arizona. ■
Democrats will also craft their
own energy legislation, focusing
4735 Tri-City Beach Road
We have Restaurant & RV Park
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Continued from Page 1
sentatives from Home Depot,
Pasadena Amateur Radio Club,
State Farm Insurance, Tamlin &
Sons, Baytown Health Depa-
rtment and Harris County Off-
ice of Emergency Management.
In addition, a panel discus-
sion will be held and panelists
will answer questions from the
audience.
Panelists include Bob Leiper,
assistant city manager/fire
chief; Bernard Olive, director
of emergency management;
Police Capt. Gary Cochran,
director of community ser-
vices; and Keith Gray, Reliant
Energy.
Don Rogers of the DPS Office
of Emergency Management in
Austin released information stat-
ing that because of the influx of
people to the Gulf Coast in the
last decade, state officials are
predicting that a hurricane evac-
uation will take 36 to 48 hours.
“Early planning is critical,”
Olive said. “If a storm threat-
ens, the best plan is to evacuate
well before the winds and rain
reach our area.
Continued from Page 1
Carr said. “This is pretty
much front and center on
everyone’s mind.”
One in every four flights
was delayed or canceled last
year, and airline flights are
projected to rise from almost
26 million in 2000 to 36 mil-
lion in 2012.
“Air travelers are experienc-
ing increasing flight delays
and cancellations from a grow-
ing imbalance between their
demand and the ability of the
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1000 E. James Ave., Baytown
CALL 281-422-8477
909 Decker Drive • Baytown 77520
281-427-6602
TEXAS STATE
OPTICAL
OF BAYTOWN *
April 23,24 & 25
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Knights of Columbus Hall
3418 Preston
Pasadena, TX
Walk-ins Welcome
Sponsored by Baron & Budd, P.C
Principal office Dallas TX
Barbara Shoemaker
Donahoe
Barbara Shoemaker Donah-
oe, 59, a longtime resident of
Baytown and formerly of
Lufkin, passed away, Monday,
June 4,2001, in Webster.
She was bom May 12, 1942
in Kingsville to Thomas K.
and Esther (Brewer) Shoe-
maker.
Mrs. Donahoe was preceded
in death by her husband,
Carlos.
She is survived by her
daughter, Donna Drescher and
husband Mike of Bayfield,
Colo.; sons, Carson Donahoe
and wife Karen of LaPorte;
Jerry Donahoe of Seabrook;
sisters, Billie Donahoe of
Buffalo, Tx.; Merle Lovell of
Texarkana, Ark.; Margie Pruitt
of Lufkin; brothers, Hany
Shoemaker of Las Vegas;
Johnny Shoemaker of Culver
City, Calif.; grandchildren,
Ashley and Matthew Donahoe.
Visitation will begin at 9
a.m. Wednesday, June 6,2001,
at the Funeral Home.
Funeral services will be at
10:30 a.m. Thursday, June 7,
2001, at Paul U. Lee Chapel
with Rev. L.J. Adams officiat-
ing.
We engrave
death dates and
deliver monuments
■e to all cemeteries.
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Katie Ingre Williams
Katie Ingre Williams, 100,
of Chambers County, passed
away, Sunday, June 3,2001, in
a LaPorte nursing home.
Ingre was bom on July 11,
1900, in Cove, Texas, just east
of the present Barbers Hill
Middle School.
Just two months after her
birth, the hurricane of 1900
that created so much damage
at Galveston, passed over their
home.
The family sought shelter in
their bam since it was more
sturdy.
Her grandfather Stubbs
roped a wild horse and trained
it to be her “school bus” when
she entered the first grade.
She lived in parts of three
centuries and the development
of scientific and medical
advancements like no other in
history.
She and her husband, Ross,
operated a general store in
MontBelvieu.
She saw to the needs of
those who were needy.
She was a charter member of
at least four congregations of
the Church of Christ in this
area.
Her death closes the chapter
on a generation of pioneers
There’s nothing fine about the line bifocals force you to live
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near, far and in between through a single set of lenses with no
distracting bifocal line in the way.
Continued from Page 1
may have been “intentionally
destroyed” or not documented.
In his brief, Connelly said
McVeigh could not receive a new
trial unless he had strong evi-
dence of his innocence that is
based on the anti-terrorism law
under which he was convicted.
McVeigh has identified nine
items he claims could have
helped his defense, but none
prove his innocence, Connelly
said.
“Rather than answer for his
own proven and admitted mur-
derous conduct, McVeigh would
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Continued from Page 1
McVeigh’s execution for the
Oklahoma City bombing is set
for June 11, though his attor-
neys are seeking a stay based on
newly revealed FBI documents
withheld during the trial.
If McVeigh’s execution is
delayed, Garza would be the
first federal prisoner put to
death since 1963.
Garza’s attorneys have filed a
plea for clemency, citing cases
involving similar crimes,
including the murder case of a
mob hit man in New York,
where federal prosecutors never
pursued the death penalty.
Senate
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like to put the federal government
on trial,” he wrote.
McVeigh was convicted of
murder and sentenced to die for
the April 1995 bombing of the
Alfred P. Murrah Federal
Building, which killed 168 peo-
ple and injured hundreds more.
McVeigh, at the federal prison
in Terre Haute, Ind., had dropped
appeals and faced lethal injection
May 16. But six days before, the
Justice Department began turn-
ing over more than 4,400 pages
and 11 CDs of FBI material that
should have been given to
McVeigh’s, defense before his system to handle the air traf- i
1997trial. — fiej”-said the FAA report, - _ _ HR|
scheduled to be released closer together than the cur-
Wednesday. rent 2,000 feet.
Hurricane
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Monuments
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Joseph Miller
• Statuary
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Open 9:00-5:30,
Closed Wed Sat @ 1 pm
04 ;; OU OFF & CONTACTS
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that helped develop Chambers 3 p.m. Thursday, lune 7,2001,, ,ing conservation, energy effi- Marking Daschle’s new clout,
County into the economic and at Fielder’s Cemetery in ciency and short-term help for he and Bush planned to have
residential attraction of so Lufkin, Texas. consumers. ” dinner at the White House on
many today. Arrangements are under the “ There will still be some pro- Thursday, said a senior White
She is survived by her sons direction of Paul U. Lee-La duction incentives, but'it won’t House official and a Daschle
and daughters-in-law, Paul and porte Funeral Home, 201 be so dominant,” said Sen. Jeff aide.
Susie Williams and Doug and South Third Street, La Ported------------------------------------
Bethul Williams all of Mont (281)471-0123.
Belvieu; daughters-in-law,
Doris Williams of Houston;
Maydell Williams of Baytown;
Jo Foots of Midland; 11 grand-
children; and 24 great-grand-
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Cash, Wanda Garner. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 191, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 5, 2001, newspaper, June 5, 2001; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1176145/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.