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Jun 23, 2006 - 02:09:16 CDT
Auto Racing

Dacotah Speedway Standings

Hobby Stock

Brad Hanson 265. Ron Joern 260. Devin Keigley 256. Paul Schuh 241. Matt Brendel 239. Bryan Bohrer 228. James Lawson 225. Chad Hausauer 219. Jamie Hanson 213. Ryan Mikkelson 209. Eugene Halverson 207. Amanda Serr 173. Nick Howe 169. Curtis Schneider 163. Kyle Emmel 143. Scott Gartner 140. Craig Ohlhauser 117. Danny Gunderson 96. Ryan Kleinknecht 81. Nick Geiger 78. Ryan Geiger 76. Chad Rowe 69. John Sommerfeld 53. Justin Decker 51. Wayne Jahner 44. Jeremy Gunderson 42. Wes Keller 40. Zach Frederick 40. Chad Keller 39. Nate Joern 35. Mark Frohlich 34.

Legends

Robert Huettl 573. Bill Hultberg 547. Glen Huettl 547. Steven Kuntz 545. Ivan Sailer 499. Spencer Wilson 476. Gregg Pelton 465. Brian Backes 454. Tom Wagner 441. Pete Kvien 428. Glen Hellebust 427. Cam Schafer 401. Tracy Domagala 396. Nathan Speten 355. John Schoon 333. Dylan Barnhardt 310. Paul Huettl 293. Dave Aberle 280. Dave Schafer 209. Lisa Schafer 208. James Weber 197. Wes Doepke 178. Al Kraft 164. Rod Schlafman 128. Mike Taszarek 72. Anthony Kopp 66. Brad Brimer 61.

IMCA Modifieds

Marlyn Seidler 226. Mark Dahl 212. Wyatt Olson 209. Shawn Strand 209. Troy Butz 206. Jeremy Keller 202. Daryn Schuler 189. Herb Bargmann 180. Darrell Bauer 158. Troy Kittler 138. Varion Hetle 111. Kenny Klaudt 96. Paul Schulz 95. Drew Christianson 74. Jeff Decker 71. Fran Martin 65. Davin Emmel 64. Troy Heupel 61. Troy Wohlik 61. Nick Fuchs 53. Hank Berry 37. Troy Hollinger 34. Joren Boyce 31. Dennis Knudson 31. Brent Schlafman 30. Wayne Johnson 30. Gene Hellebust 29. Jess Anderson 29. Chris Welk 28. Eric Folstad 26. Randy Sandvick 24. Kirk Wojahn 24. Jedd Boyce 23. Robert Hellebust 23. Rusty Corneilusen 21.

WISSOTAStreet Stocks

David Rohweder 320. Randy Meyer 303. Rusty Kollman 296. Spencer Johnson 292. Kelly Hagel 291. Dave Weigum 287. John Feist 274. Barrett Berg 261. Eric Anderson 251. David Falkenstein 250. Scott Bintz 196. Chris Michaelson 188. Durwin Power 157. Carrie Muldahl 114. Garry Flifet 112. Eric Paul 97. Don Kuntz 86. Casey Stangeland 83. Ben Hunt 68. Luke Nelson 52. Randy Emter 39. Pat Stoltz 34.

Thunder Fours

Kyle Hagen 317. Nate Keena 304. Wes Schmidt 293. Matt Gross 287. Corey Lang 278. Terry Davenport 278. Cody Arth 268. James Hellman 261. Cody Motl 256. Richard Feist 252. Nick Keena 250. Genesis Huus 228. Nathan Mundahl 223. Mathew Olson 218. Travis Humphrey 171. Shawn Keena 170. Wendy Davenport 144. Shawn Volk 140. Donavon Hagerott 139. Erika Tuntland 138. Brian Davenport 52. Joseph Huus, Jr. 42. Josh Gerhardt 31.

Men's Basketball

New assistant named

GRAND FORKS (AP) - New University of North Dakota men's basketball coach Brian Jones has filled out his coaching staff.

Jones said Thursday that Ryan Moody, a high school coach in Peculiar, Missouri, has been hired as an assistant. From 1997 to 2001, Moody was an assistant at Nebraska-Omaha, where he coached with Jones for two seasons.

Jones said Moody's hiring fills out a staff that also includes second-year assistant Chris Johnson and second-year graduate assistant Jayden Olson.

Jones was hired May 19 as the 18th head coach in UND history, and just the third in the last 36 years. He succeeds Rich Glas, who coached the Sioux for 18 seasons but resigned in April to become the top assistant at Northern Iowa.

Jones had been an assistant at the University of Iowa for seven seasons.

College football

NDSU to play Iowa State in 2009

FARGO (AP) - North Dakota State says its football team will play Big 12 member Iowa State in three years.

The first-ever gridiron matchup between the two schools is scheduled for Sept. 5, 2009, in Ames, Iowa.

The Bison are 0-2-1 against current Big 12 members, having lost to Missouri in 1956, tied Texas Tech in 1934 and lost to Kansas State in 1931.

NDSU just completed its third year in a five-year reclassification from NCAA Division II to Division I.

LEGIONBASEBALL

Worth CWS Tournament

OMAHA, Neb. - Andrew Pettinger led off the bottom of the seventh with a triple and later scored on a wild pitch to give the Deeb (Omaha) Mustangs a 4-3 win over the Bismarck Governors on Tuesday.

Pettinger also worked a scoreless top of the seventh in relief to earn the win. The Mustangs scored the tying run in the bottom of the sixth.

Tim Jallen had two of Bismarck's seven hits.

The Governors will take on Littleton, Col., this morning.

Bismarck 002 001 0 - 3 7 3

Deeb 000 021 1 - 4 8 0

Matt Kranzler and Justin Connell. Matt McCann, Andrew Pettinger (7) and Ben Byers. W - Pettinger. L - Kranzler. HR - None.

Highlights: Bismarck - Tim Jallen 2-for-4, RBI. Deeb - Chris Schumann 2-for-4, 2B, Pettinger 2-for-4, 3B, 2 R. Nolan Koehn 1-for-3, 2B, RBI.

Harvey 8-7, Bismarck Reps 6-8

Harvey 8, Bismarck Reps 6

Harvey 214 000 1 - 8 12 2

Bismarck 230 000 1 - 6 4 4

Tanner Lorenz, Kevin Buxa (2), Scott Tweed (7), Bryan Krahler (7) and Mark Wack. Nate Schlosser, Justin Dauenhauer (6) and Drew Eichele. W - Buxa. L - Schlosser. S - Krahler. HR - None.

Highlights: Harvey - Krahler 2-for-3, 2 RBIs. Buxa 3-for-4. Adam Schaan 2-for-4, 2B, 2 R. Bismarck - Schlosser 2B, 2 RBIs. Drew Hausauer 2-for-3, R, RBI.

Bismarck Reps 8, Harvey 7

Harvey 112 03 - 7 6 4

Bismarck 420 11 - 8 9 3

Scott Tweed and Cody Haux. Chris Wellin and Drew Hausauer. W - Wellin. L - Tweed. HR - None.

Highlights: Harvey - Casey Frantz 2-for-2. Bismarck - Hausauer 3-for-3, 3 RBIs. D.J. Schmitz 2-for-3, game-hitting hit in the fifth. Darron Olson 2B, 2 R. Drew Eichele 2B, 2 RBIs.

Softball

Classification meeting

The Bismarck Slowpitch Softball Association classification meeting will be held Monday at 7 p.m. at the Amvets Club, located at 2402 Railroad Ave.

All men's managers are invited to attend. Copies of rosters will be available at the meeting, or can be picked up at the Bismarck Parks and Recreation office. The state tournament fee of $130 is due on Monday and can be paid at the meeting or at the Parks and Recreation office.

For more information, call Roger at 258-0011.
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Area sports
Comments

Craig Scott Aberle wrote on Jun 23, 2006 3:52 PM:

" ( The winds of war or a probable peace ) The extended forecast for the Middle East is complicated with dual fronts: either gentle breezes calling for a world summit are heard and realized and cooperatively engaged, or the storms of war will be visible on the radar. The region has no low pressures present. If the latter, we shall see turbulence from Israel or the U.S. strike, or if Iran anticipates an immediate danger, it may launch an initial first blow, more than likely one that will affect the entire West and the vital oil fields in the nearby regions. With the aid of the new Iranian torpedoes and low-flying aircraft, this will help level out the balance of power and reduce the American advantage. Attacks that can be launched from within Iran are more probable. In addition, I foresee direct hits on oil tankers nearing the Straits of Hormuz, which will bottle up naval as well as commercial shipping and transport, denying passage if possible in and out of the Gulf. These actions could inflict irreparable damage to the European, Japanese, and western economies. Turkey may be enough of a dissuader to both Syrian and Kurdish ambitions toward exploiting the growing conflict because of their military power. If Syria does find itself seeking a direct role, it would be mainly to antagonize the Israelis. I believe that it would be dangerous and unwise for Syria to seek direct conflict with the U.S. Iranian armor and ground forces could seek to cross the Iraqi frontier and go directly into engagement. If it were a focused assault, Iran would more than likely be trying to penetrate into the Green Zone to support and encourage the insurgents. This is possible given the lack of a sizeable American presence. Afghanistan will also change as a theater of operations for both sides. I believe the fight will be more visibly joined by remaining Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives. The American plans will depend on whether there is a defensive or offensive mode of thought coming from the White House. We have all seen prior campaigns. However, if the Pentagon sways toward engagement, this round will be larger and more tumultuous than recent conflicts and will present far more complexities. Some essential points would be air strikes on air defense systems, the power grid, communications, primary missile systems, targets on both garrisons and caches, nuclear facilities, and naval facilities near the Gulf. Weapons of choice on the part of the Americans would be bunker busters, precision-guided bombs, very heavy munitions, long range bombers, and fighter bombers. The Americans will probably try to focus on an air campaign, due to a lack of ground forces. The American ground force insufficiency, in my opinion, is a grave disadvantage. Even though the Americans possess the great technical advantage, this may become a decisive factor. Our tactics and strategies for ground force engagement aided by direct air assaults create a lethal combination. A world summit for Middle East peace, if convened in our very near future, could address withdrawal by all foreign occupiers, as well as water rights, nuclear arms, the establishment of a nuclear-free zone, and the civilian use of nuclear energy as a power source. These issues need to be addressed: the Israeli-Palestinian issue and a mechanism to scale down the fear factor that exacerbates the arms race. This would negate this likely war. Too often, we have treated regional symptoms rather than the root of the problems. My gravest concern is that these matters will not be addressed and that the coming conflict will denigrate into the incorporation of other nations to the point of escalating into another world war. I belive if Russia or China would host such a summit.Perhaps if this summit were jointly hosted by these two great nations the world community would understand the gravity of our current situation, the Middle East lacks a BALANCE OF POWER! ________________________________ ( The Israeli regional nuclear arms monopoly ) Why is Israel not being held accountable for their nuclear toy box, while Iran is under the international microscope for their nuclear ambitions? For example, look at Israel's avoidance of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty and other international agreements on matters of nuclear energy, technology, materials, facilities, and weapons, and at the same time, is proceeding forward in her pursuit for development and acquisition of materials by any means necessary for the purpose of weapons development. She has surpassed other members of the nuclear club, both in capability and volume, and in sophistication in her varied weapons systems, both in the range of these delivery systems as well as lethality of their yield potential. These devices number more than several hundred, the most ominous being her neutron bombs, a developing nuclear submarine fleet, the Nautalis and Thell Laser Systems, and atomic mines and cannons. That does not even include Israel's other programs in the biological and chemical arenas. Much has been authored on these matters from very reliable sources from inside the Israeli nuclear and defense lair. The contradiction between the international community's positions on the Iranian nuclear ambitions and Israel's policy of nuclear ambiguity is reckless and obsolete. It is perceived as an arrogant posture, and is counter-productive to peace. Unfortunately Israel is a nuclear state. Partiality shown toward one state over others in the international realm amongst the great powers has become a game of favors and privilege and is similar to the child's game of "Mother, May I". Israel has slipped through the net of the International Atomic Energy Agency's inspections and scrutiny due to the influence of those nations having mutual objectives. Pressures are truly rising in the Middle East. The stakes are very high, yet the international community lacks the political maturity to meet these issues with real solutions, even though the risks in not doing so, more than likely will result in a war, economic or ecological crisis or all three. The stakes are too high to ignore the situation. If it is not addressed, there will be catastrophic reverbations. The answer should be the establishment of a nuclear-free zone from north Africa to the Pakistani frontier with the inclusion of Israel under a NATO umbrella of protection and eventual incorporation as a full partner. There should be an inventory taken of the nuclear assets of the Israeli program. Command and control should be dually managed by both Israeli and NATO personnel until the arsenal is scaled down to point 0. A verifiable regional cooperation treaty on such matters should be established. ( American and Coalition transfer of Iraqi security and training ) Given the political stale mate in the gulf region over Iraq and its occupation by American and coalition forces and the counter by various factions internal and external insurgents/fighters both religious and political there is a possible mechanism for altering this quagmire. Shortly after the coming installment of the new coalition government this mechanism should be implemented. The process would be carried out by Coalition forces having a phased withdrawal by various numbers being equaled by an introduction of local Arab forces into Iraq. For example, 20,000-50,000 troops being withdrawn by American forces, that being matched by the introduction of local regional Arab forces into the American role over an agreed time frame to the point where there would be no longer any American or allied forces in Iraq. This process would be best negotiated through the Arab league and regional powers; Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and other gulf states. This would bring greater coorperation amongst the Arab peoples and it would accelerate political normalization within Iraq and the region. Deployment of troops would be determined by tactical officers. The process when completed would be a true test of the newly erected Iraqi infrastructure and political frame work. In concluding the process it would give the Iraqi people the opportunity to demonstrate a new collective national resolve and fulfillment of their aspiration. This would allow the American people to begin to have closure over this very contentious time. ( The Israeli Palestinian compromise ) After giving this much thought, and after examining this complex issue from all conceivable angles, these are my conclusions and suggestions. Given the recent warming in relations and voting in the Israeli Parliament or Knesset toward the eventual withdrawal of forces from the occupied territories, there are issues that would further the peace process. The primary concern of the Israelis is security, given the recent negative vote in the world court at The Hague on the Israeli security fence. There is a counter to that position. In areas where the wall has been erected, the acts of violence and bombing have shown a dramatic reduction in occurrences. The Israelis should be allowed to complete the security wall, and in exchange, the Palestinians should be allowed to have a secure overland egress similar to a walled expressway connecting the West Bank to the Gaza Strip. I would like to recommend that the Gaza Strips access point should begin at Bayt, continuing through Israel, and ending at Idriah on the West Bank. The access could be segmented into sections of underground tunnels and walled, above-ground overpasses, much like our modern day freeways. The walls denying visibility will offer greater security and ease on both sides of the issue. The segments of underground tunnels and above ground over passes will give variation so this project will not physically or topographically sever Israel into portions, North and South, but rather become only slight interruptions. This would also heighten mutual security for both states. The length of segments from tunnel to raised, walled highway could be determined by the concerned parties, technical, military and political, etc. This plan would not entirely disrupt the overall land expanse from border to border of the Gaza Strip to the West Bank. The distance from Bayt Gaza to Idriah on the West Bank is approximately twenty-five miles or forty kilometers. Professional advisors must give qualified opinions and decisions, which should be based on sound judgment for all the parties' benefit. This would be the beginning of meeting physical realities in a practical way. NATO should be brought in as a security umbrella over Israel and Palestine, depressurizing the Golan Heights, which Israel presently occupies. If NATO forces were to be placed along the Lebanese and Syrian frontiers after an Israeli pullout, then the Golan Heights could be overseen by a regional super-national water and irrigation authority, preferably chaired by a neutral nation such as Finland, or Sweden, etc. The majority of land area could be considered a land reserve or trust, as this is a primary water source as well a strategic military vantage. Given the turbulent past and the contention between the three major area religions, the future of Jerusalem should be decided by referendum, sponsored by the UN General Assembly, and to ensure fairness, international observers should be on the ground to oversee the vote. The heart of the issue is sovereignty, who shall govern, and how Jerusalem shall be ruled. All sides want to control and possess Jerusalem; the matter should be decided by the ballot. One option for the residents would be dual citizenship based on native culture, either Palestinian or Israeli. Both peoples want Jerusalem as their capital; Jerusalem itself could become a confederated municipality of both Israel and Palestine with a unique status. Its governmental structure could also be dually managed. Perhaps Jerusalem's populace could choose independence and opt for full membership in the UN General Assembly as an international municipality as a city-state, similar to other small nations and entities. NATO could be a stabilizing force politically as well as militarily. Given the apprehensions of the numerically superior Arabs and the advanced and highly capable Israeli IDF, NATO's inclusion of Israel and Palestine would stabilize both the internal and external insecurities. Due to the geographical proximity of these two states, their economies and security are interdependent. Water resources are a vital matter. A prime example of two former adversaries becoming equal partners in NATO has been demonstrated by Turkey and Greece, as they both have proven to be strong contributors to the NATO mission. If NATO were to come in, and conduct a inventory of the nuclear facility in the Negev Desert at Dimona and at other military facilities in Israel, as well as becoming a full partner in the day-to-day management, command, and control there, it would greatly lessen Pan-Arab anxieties in the area and could lead to disarmament. It would demonstrate Israel's regional goodwill and would lessen the argument for the nuclear option regionally. This could have a far-reaching effect in countering increasing militarism in Southwest Asia. It could also lead to a greater international peace and a new direction for NATO. I believe lives can be saved and enriched. Our origins are from a common root and our destinies will be shared, as we are members of the same extended family of man, and are children of the one true God! Thank you for your consideration. Respectfully, Craig Scott Aberle Tel-(763)428-3988 craigaberle@yahoo.com P.O. Box #49 Dayton, MN 55327, USA. PS. Please respond to these concepts. Although my occupation is primarily in labor, I am an amateur enthusiast and student of various kindred antiquarian subjects such as Heraldry, Vexillology, World History, Genealogy,as follows in my paternal lineage Craig Scott ABERLE, son of Kenneth Eugene ABERLE, son of Erwin Bassett ABERLE, son of Jesse Herbert ABERLE, son of Matthias ABERLE, son of Matthias ABERLE, son of Johannes ABERLE, son of Johann Georg ABERLE, son of Christian ABERLIN, son of Michael ABERLIN, son of Hans ABERLIN, son of Christian ABERLIN, born at Hornberg, Baden, in the year 1605. Into the family of Aberlin, of the tribal or stem Duchy of Swabia,Schwaben,Suebi,Suevi,Suevic, Tribe Aesar, clan Suevi),Aes,Trojan,Troi,Thracian,Thirasian,Tarusha.Biblical lineage Ti'ras, son of Ja'pheth, son of No'ah, son of La'mech, son of Ma-th'u-sala, son of E'noch, son of Ja'red, son of Ma-le'le-el, son of Ca-i'nan, son of E'nos, son of Seth, son of Ad'am. Ethnography, Ethno History, Biblical Historical Geography, Cultural Geography, and Political Science, These subjects have captured my interest for over twenty-five years. My Wife Katherine Mary Bonar was raised in the Jamestown area the daughther of David and Connie Bonar. Katherine and I exchanged our vows at the International Peace Gardens back on May 10th 1986 and have two Daughter Allett and Kaitlyn. "

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