10 Dallas Post Dallas, PA Thursday, June 27, 2002 ~_] BMT Ball (continued from page 9) fan six for the Indians. Rangers 7, Orioles 3 Matt Ruch struck out 15 Ori- oles in addition to blasting a two-run homer and a single. Josh Backes added two doubles for the Rangers. Eric Tucker swatted a three-run homer for the Orioles. Tucker and Steve Meskers combined to fan eleven Rangers. Yankees 12, Orioles 2 Henry Messinger was the win- ning pitcher, striking out three and allowing only one hit. Thomas McGrath led the Yan- kees with two singles and a dou- ble. Michael McHutchinson and Scott Skammer each had two hits for the winners, including a McHutchinson double. Eric Tucker doubled for the Orioles. Cardinals 9, Dodgers 8 Pat Murray got the victory as the Cardinals nipped the Dodgers 9-8 in eight innings. Ryan Phillips led the Cardinal offense with a triple and a dou- ble. Aaron Cusma added a dou- ble and a single for the winners while teammate Joe Murray contributed a double. For the Dodgers, David Luksh, Tommy Oswalt and Mike Sesson each had two hits, including a Sesson double. Yankees 11, Rangers 1 Myer Messinger was the win- ning pitcher, striking out nine and allowing just one hit in three innings on the mound. Joe Collini led the Yankees with a double and two singles. Thomas McGrath and Michael McHutchinson each added two hits for the winners, including a McGrath double. Henry Messinger contributed a double for the Yankees. For the Rangers, Matt Ruch ripped a home run and a single while teammates Kevin Engler and Mike Supczenski each doubled. Giants 8, Phillies 6 Cody Kustrin paced the Gi- ants with a double and a single. James Sutton added two singles and Dylan Cleaves had a double for the winners. Cleaves, Eric Cannon and Chris Daly com- bined to strike out five batters for the Giants. For the Phillies, Chuck Youngman and Mitchell Artsma combined to fan four batters. Cardinals 16, Phillies 6 Ryan Phillips and Pat Murray each belted a double and a sin- gle to lead the Cardinals, who finished in third place in the Na- tional League with a record of 13-6. Joe Murray was the win- ning pitcher. For the Phillies, Hunter Englehardt and Mitchell Artsma each had two hits. Billy Holena fanned seven in a losing cause. The Cardinals are man- aged by Joe Phillips, who is as- sisted by coaches John Murray and Dr. John Prater. Astros 13, Dodgers 2 Mike Eckman and T. J. Brandt led the Astros with three hits apiece, including an Eck- man double. Jeremy Fike and Mike Lipski each contributed two hits for the winners, includ- ing a Fike triple. Dan Taroli added a double for the Astros. Winning pitcher Eckman struck out five. Tommy Oswalt had a double and a single for the Dodgers. Reds 9, Astros 7 Tom Perry belted four hits and Mike Prater added three hits as the Reds prevailed in a show- down between the National League's top two teams. Jordan Jiunta added a double for the winners. Prater fanned seven POST PHOTO/JIM PHILLIPS Matt Ruch was on the Mound for the Rangers last week. Astros. Reds 7, Giants 3 Mike Prater and Tom Perry each smacked four hits while teammates Joe Bevevino and Nick Latosek had three hits apiece as the Reds won the Na- tional League regular season championship with a recoed of 16-3. Joe Bevevino got the win, striking out three. Joe Olsick saved several runs for the Reds with his superb defense in cen- ter field. For the Giants, Doug Harding and Sam Davidowitz each had two singles while Bob- by Peron added a double. The Reds are managed by Dr. Juan DeRojas, who is assisted by coaches Dr. Frank Olshemski and Dr. James Jiunta. Indians 10, Tigers 6 The Indians snapped a 6-6 tie with four runs in their last in- ning at the plate. Dave Fetchko, Kevin Pierce and Darius Fetchko each had two hits for the Indi- ans while teammate Jordy Thi- mot added a double. Dave Fetchko picked up the complete game victory, striking out seven. For the Tigers, Chris Klaiss smacked a home run and two singles. Rich Wengrzynek slugged a triple for the losers. Klaiss and P. J. Precone com- bined to strike out six Indians. Red Sox 12, Rangers 2 Joe Kaiser ripped a double and two singles to power the Red Sox. Kevin Little and John Bailey added two hits apiece to the attack, including a Bailey double. Cody Plesnar and Dave Zurek combined to strike out seven batters. Josh Backes led the Rangers with two hits. Back- es, Kevin Engler and Michael Gross combined to fan four Sox. Junior League North Wilkes-Barre 1 9, Back Mt. Braves 8 North Wilkes-Barre rallied for eight runs in the sixth inning to claim the victory. Justin Orlan- dini, Chris Parrish and Jake Stryjewski each had two hits for the Braves, including an Orlan- dini triple. Back Mt. Braves 10, Jenkins Twp./Pittston 3 Jake Stryjewski fanned 13 en route to capturing the victory. Chris Parrish and Matt Shum- bris each had three hits for the Braves while teammates Stry- jewski and Justin Orlandini had two hits apiece. Back Mt. Indians 11, Back Mt. Pirates 6 Ryan Konopki and Alan Sheri- dan combined to fan eleven for the Indians. Konopki and Matt Wentzel each had two hits for the winners while teammates Scott Henry and Greg Jerzak each doubled. Brad Fagula and Greg Harris each had two hits for the Pirates. Back Mt. Indians 14, Back Mt. Cardinals 7 Alan Sheridan and Ryan Konopki each smacked three hits for the Indians, including a Sheridan double. Joe Bailey added two hits of his own. Sheridan and Konopki fanned five batters for the winners. Mike Zaleskas led the Cardinals with a double and two singles. David Harding added two dou- bles. Zaleskas and Harding com- bined to strike out eight Indians. Back Mt. Indians 9, Heights Cardinals 3 Alan Sheridan, Ryan Konopki and Greg Jerzak combined to toss a one-hitter, striking out ten. Jerzak, David Hanadel and Joe Bailey each had two hits for the Indians. Wyoming Exterminators 12, Back Mt. Indians 5 Ryan Konopki and Greg Jerzak combined to fan eight Exterminators. Joe Bailey led the Indians with two hits. Back Mt. Indians 14, Back Mt. Rockies 5 D. J. Anderson, who struck out eight batters in four innings, combined with Greg Jerzak and Andrew Stout to throw a three- hitter for the Indians. Scott Hen- ry went three-for-three to lead the Indians offensively while teammates Alan Sheridan, Greg Jerzak, Joe Bailey and Ryan Konopki each contributed two hits. Jon Janerich slugged a triple for the Rockies. Back Mt. Cardinals 13, Back Mt. Pirates 5 David Harding powered the Cardinal offense with a double and two singles. Andrew Hanadel and John Giampietro each contributed two hits for the winners while teammate Mike Pelleschi smacked a three-run triple. Dylan Seeley and Harding combined to strike out ten for the Cardinals. For the Pirates, Nick Samanas and Greg Harris had two hits apiece. Brad Fagu- la added a triple and Adam Taminini stroked a double in a Victory Run (continued from page 9) er me too much during the race,” he said. “It doesn't hurt too much right now. But it will hurt later." Smith was awarded a diamond ring for capturing male overall honors. This article appeared in origi- nal form in the Times Leader. Harveys Lake 8.1-mile Victory Run Top Local Finishers 7. Brad Baird, town, 46:45 Age Group Winners: 18 & Under: 3. Brad Baird, Shavertown, 46:45. Top Females 1. Amy Aston-Rome, 35, Dal- las, 49:44 Kids Half Mile Fun Run —First —Boy to Finish: Shae Adamshick, 14, Harveys Lake. 17, Shaver- BMT Travel soccer tryouts The Back Mountain Youth Soccer Travel Program has scheduled tryouts for some of their travel teams, if you have any questions, call the respective coach for the team you wish to try out for. U-15 boys, 10 a.m., Saturday, June 29 at Cabbage Patch, Forty Fort. Coach John Gyory, 288-5075. : losing cause. Brandon Rice and Nick Oschman combined to strike out four Cardinals. Back Mt. Cardinals 9, Avoca/Dupont 4 Mike Zaleskas led the Cardi- nals with two hits. Dylan Seeley and David Harding combined to strike out ten batters. Back Mt. Cardinals 5, Jenkins Twp./Pittston 4 David Harding struck out sev- en batters and Mike Zaleskas fanned one as they combined to hold Jenkins/Pittston in check throughout a close battle. Stephen Cornia had two hits for the Cardinals and Dylan Seeley added a double. Major League Softball White Sox 16, Bob Horlacher 6 Shauna Phillips singled twice for the White Sox while Eliza- beth Dymond contributed a double. Ellen Arnaud fanned three in registering the victory and Caitlyn Kennedy made a great catch in the field. For Hor- lacher, Denise Neroczi had two hits. Sara Szczucki struck out three in a losing cause. White Sox 23, Harvey's Lake 5 Ellen Arnaud blasted a home run, triple and two singles to power the White Sox. Stephanie Ashley also homered. Erica Mor- gan added to hits for the win- ners while teammates Leah Kaiser, Elizabeth Dymond and Shauna Phillips each con- tributed a double. Kaiser was the winning pitcher, striking out one. For Harvey's Lake, Rachel Litchman and Katy Martin each -had two hits. Dodgers 12, Yankees 3 Rachel Miller struck out 15 batters to collect the win. Miller also belted a homer and a dou- ble. Katie Pelleschi and Kathleen Paley each contributed two hits to the winning attack, including a Pelleschi double. Nicole Redin- ski also had a double. For the Yankees, Molly Grossman fanned twelve Dodgers. Jill Spring led the losers with two hits. : CAREER Super Crossword _cHoces ACROSS 51 Wrinkly dog 100 Horde of 3 Part of 42 Directional 86 Traveler's 1 From the 52 Diva humpbacks HOMES suffix aid top Destinn 101 Not that 4 Cleanse 43 Calligraphy 87 Maestro de 5 Pride of the 53 Halloween 102 Oil 5 Excuses supply Waart pumped-up happening apparatus 6 Tom of 45 Highest 88 Grate stuff 9 St. Louis 54 Raptor 103 Least light- “Baretta” point 89 Ryan or team feature hearted 7 Computer ~~ 46 Pantyhose Foster 13 Dirty 57 Texas 104 Wet language problem 91 Knot it! 19 118 Across’ landmark blanket 8 Thin strip 47 Soup 92 — and mistress © 59 Out of 106 Address 9 Dislodgment veggie outs 20 Way off gas abbr. 10 Isolated 48 Gibbon or 93 NCO base? 60 —NaNa 107 —wu 11 Ho Chi — gorilla 96 Dondi and 21 Director 63 Scold and 109 He became 12 Literary 49 Vulgar Annie Kazan scold an electri- pen name 55 Comic 97 “Ars longa, 22 Agenda 64 Bolted the cian 13 Poet Sothern — brevis” item beans because . . . Heaney 56 Woodwork- 98 Protests 23 Emcee’s 65 Formerly 116 — out 14 Senator ing tool 99 “There site 67 Dispel (aided) Hatch 57 From —Z oughta 24 Melodious ~~ 70 He became 118 Hammett 15 Jeremy of ~~ 58 Boxing be —!" McEntire an explorer hound “Waterland” blows 101 Exchanges 25 Monastery because ... 119 Small busi- 16 Praise 59 Neutral tone 104 Contradict dweller 75 Get wind of nessman? 17 USNA 60 “Quiet!” 105 61 Down 26 Kindle 76 Cad 120 Vociferate grad 61 TV's “— host 27 He became 77 Watching 122 Elevated 18 HST’s suc- Haw” 106 Play boy? a Realtor machines? 123 Author Uris cessor 62 Bestowed 107 D.D. Emmett because... 78 Season 124 “— She 28 Schipa solo 64 Reference tune 31 Form a firewood Sweet” 29 Writer volumes 108 Happening cylinder 79 Rock's — ('27 song) Paretsky 66 “— of Love” 109 They're 32 Broad st. Leppard 125 Cooper's 30 With ('64 smash) sometimes 33 Savage sorts 80 Formal tool diffidence ~~ 68 Grand — hugged? 34 Alarm ceremony 126 Size up 34 “For Opry 110 Auction 38 It may be 82 Backslide 127 Drops the shame!” 69 Mistaken ~~ 111 — friendly strapless 84 Exhausted ball 35 Palindromic 71 Historian ~~ 112 Act like an 39 Emulates 86 Euripidean 128 Family cry Durant antelope Simon tragedy members, 36 “Fantasia” 72 Oracle site 113 Basra’s 41 Hibiscus 88 Lhasa — to many frame 73 “— had it!" locale arland 89 Clarke or 129 Part of 37 Nabagnat 74 Rock's — at 114 Pianist Lupu 44 She became West Q.E.D. 38 Plead Work 115 Signor aphama- 90 Model Carre 39 Exercise 81 — kwon do Ferrari cist because 94 Simpson of DOWN expert 83 Neighbor of 116 Herd word “ate fashion 1 Clause Richard Ger. 117 Oerter and 48 — squash 95 She became connector 40 Cashew kin 84 Dejected Unser 50 Tropical a baker 2 Wordy 41 Couldn't 85 Soybean 121 TV's “Father tree because . . . Webster stand product -’ 1 12:13 714 5 “16 {7+ 18 9 10 111 12 13 [14 [15 (16 [17 [18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 | 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 |35 |36 |37 38 39 [40 41 [42 143 44 45 |46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 |55 |56 57 |58 59 60 [61 [62 63 64 65 66 67 68 |69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 [87 88 89 90 [91 (92 (93 94 95 96 [97 98 |99 100 101 102 103 104 [105 106 107 [108 109 110 [111 112 113 [114 [115 116 (117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 4 v The DYB Fifth Grade Travel Team won the DYB tournament in April. The team won four games with no losses. First row, from left kneeling: Leah Kaiser, Carli Mensel, Jess Fla- herty, Hillary Schaub, Abby Mulhern, Shauna Phillips. Standing: Coach Bob Schaub, Samantha Backes, Adria Eckert, Elena Haber- - sky, Brittany Kneal, Jill Jackson, Nicki Redinski, Coach Pat Flaher- ty and Coach Joe Phillips. Snakes alive!! Pennsylvania Game Commis- sion Field Notes, May 2002 : I've been turkey hunting for 26 years. During that time, I've learned many things. This past season was no exception. I was taught some very alarming, but little-known facts about .rat- tlesnakes. I was hunting on SGL 57 with IES Tim Conway and Dominic Anastasi, one of our ra- dio dispatchers from the region office. I'm sure looking back on the whole thing, Dominic wishes now he never mentioned that he was afraid of snakes. As we climbed to the top of the mountain, I was more intent upon what lay before us rather than at our feet. We had just about reached the summit when a very excited Dominic yelled, “Yo! Big snake!” I looked back, and sure enough, a very large rattler lay coiled within three feet of where I had just stepped. It lay there, carefully contem- plating its next move. As rat- tlesnakes go, it was a beautiful specimen. It was very black and about as big around as a coke can. We estimated his length to be five feet. Not having seen one in Pennsylvania before, Tim and I wanted to see what this snake challeng was made of. I grabbed a stick ~ and began to taunt it, trying “® get him to strike. We were rewarded in two ways. The snake began a vigor- ous rattling display, which worked well because Dominic became very rattled. He danced around us giving that advice only those who are deathly afraid of snakes can give. “Don’t do that! He's gonna charge!” and “We gotta get outta here! They @) travel in packs and the rest of them are probably around here someplace!” were two pieces of sage advice Dominic warned. His head swiveled this way and that as he frantically searched for the packs that were closing in. Because yelling sage advice at the top of your lungs tends to work against you when turkey hunting, we were forced to leave. We had an adventure-filled de- scent as we spent the rest of the morning dodging packs of charg- ing rattle snakes. As I said be- fore, looking back on the whole thing, I'm sure Dominic wishes he never mentioned he was afraid of snakes. NORTHEAST REGIONAL OF- FICE, DALLAS — (Law Enforce- ment Supervisor, Richard Larn- erd) CROSSWORD CORNER & r ® THE INTERNATIONAL CROSSNUMBER GAME DIRECTIONS: By LC A Fill each square with a number, one through nine. f Ar] Lui » Horizontal squares should add to totals on right (©) * Vertical squares should add to totais on bottom. < « Diagonal squares through center should add to o total in upper and lower right. : =z THERE MAY BE MORE O THAN ONE SOLUTION g Today's Challenge Hi Time J Minutes = 2 Seconds g Your Working <C Time Minutes Seconds ©2002 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved. ing Crossword 1 Previous T 2 BB « BG 6 7 8 [9 [10 [11 nights 5 Succumb to 12 13 14 gravity 8 Sorcerer 15 16 17 12 Entertainment 18 19 20 Tonight” ex- host 21 22 23 13 Judge Lance 14 Follow orders [24 [25 [28 27 28 |. 15 In the neigh- [33 32 33 34 borhood 16 Time limit 35 36 37 38 18 Each 20 Ross and CB 49 41 Rigg 42 [43 44 45 46 [47 [48 21 Heartfelt 23 X-ray alterna- [49 50 51 tive 24 Wrestling hold [> 53 54 28 Command to (55 56 57 Rover 31 Bush spokes- : man Fleischer, 53 Sun. speech 32 Carta lead-in 54 Advantage 9 From the start 30 Chatter away (Lat.) 33 Spanish port 34 George's 55 “Piggies” 10 Actress city brother 56 Demure Rowlands 36 “Seven - for 35 Dagwood’s 57 “Vaya con-" 11 Does surveil- Seven Brothers” neighbor lance on 38 Lay in wait 37 Tie DOWN 17 1-it 40 Wet wiggler 39 Opposite of 1 Sicilian 19 Tranquil 42 At the drop of - post- spouter 22 Fibber of old 43 Letter-man 41 Wall paint 2 Cheney's radio rival shade address 24 “| don't 44 Frisbee, for 42 In union 3 Actor Morales believe you!” one 45 Mr. Miyagi’s 4 Perceptive 25 Anteceding 46 “The King -” teaching 5 Detour, per- 26 O'Hare vehi- 47 Take-out 49 Banner haps cle phrase 51 Recognize 6 Noshed 27 Slaughter- 48 Rams’ 52 Boleyn or 7 Egg on : house ma’ams Bancroft 8 Some teeth 29 Circle portion 50 Ultra-modemist © 2002 King Features Synd., Inc. ~ ® |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers