Show Herald Before you pitch that old computer Cl Veterans Memorial dedicated at USU — A3 iVoll94Jol3'l 6M Wednesday! November!) 2J2003 Bridgerland Daily Newspaper Logan! Utah© 2003 1 $30 Voathor 5 Coat on coat fe’ off coat on — Page A10 Wfcyi&vmflBRI & Update lit £t sv v Communications Home-cellula- r phone number switching OK’d WASHINGTON (AP) — Con- sumers will be able to switch their home phone numbers to cellular phones later this month thanks to new federal rulesallowing them to drop conventional service and go wireless without the hassle of get- ting a new number The Federal Communications Commission rules released Monday 1i also 'will allow a limited number of M AtSS& wireless customers to keep their Mitch MascaroHerakJ Journal- — was light Arid there Beams of light break through' the cloud cover over the Wellsville Mountains on Tuesday afteipoori ' frorn Hyde Park v as seen - -- prison 'fNichoIjs flexibility and it pro-i- g further competitive stimulus to i remorse for murdering his father thaii he did during sentencing Mon telephone industry competition Commissioner Michael Copps srid!MMThis makes' it a n situation j®8 g'We weren't really disappointed or anything” Boudrero said Tuesday g'for consumers and businesses during a phone interview with The' Journal ”1 jusf thought if he I (ion consumers' Herald mi as 7 inany was as I WMWi cell phones exclusively Jeff sorry as everyone was telling fiis that he was that ire would have MAzal' research director for The apologized to the family because 'Group!! an We Management Network ' I 'we’re the ones he should be sorry toll Park g coriimu-d Pyerland nations consulting firm said 'ah additional 19 million consumers aie1$ drop their landlines for cel' now that theycan keep their IWpbones home or business phone numbers-sought-afte- r f lvides yi - win-wi- gMalike& gAs f e ’ Kan-base- :dayVt-f-pleaded guilty td jNichois-4? (Magainsthli father ex-wi- fe count of capital aggravated murder in the shooting death of Logan lect on an insurance policy taken outs mng plumber Mike Boudrer6NichoJs confessed to shOoting Boudrero once on Mike Boudrero by his fourth exHp Rhinehartjvcurrently being heldj in the chest and once in the back wife Tkmra Rhinehart Nicholls said’ caliber a '32 “WeTigured he was the shooter op handgun jfwith July Boudrero saidThey (police) told Rafter luring him to' an unfinished " i that he was most likely the shooi home iri North LoganThe murder arid that she did most of the plan-- : was parried out in order to help col : f M:lly Quick —road — Definition — —— 'fW'-'r- — Lr WeekA - closer look at words in the news - r - ii j7 NEW YORK (AP) Pfc Jessica-Lynch said Tuesday she is disturbed by Js I military reports that dramatized her k rescue by US troops and falsely said she went down shooting in an Iraqi ambush “That wasn’t me! I wasn't about to take credit for something I didn’t do” she told The Associated Press! “I’m not that person” v The former Army supand weary one ply clerk — twig-thi-n crutch close at hand — described her ordeal in a Veterans Day interview seven months after the rescue itiade her a national hero She was also in a national television interview aired last night On ABC Reports circulated by the US mili- tary early in the war said Lynch waged a fierce gunbattle with Iraqi fighters who ambushed her 507th Maintenance Company on March 23 at Nasiriyah She has since said her rifle jammed and she did not get off a shot And yideo shot by die Americans who rescued her nine days later at an Iraqi hospital suggested they encountered resistance in a daring raid Old Ephraim reminded them of bears North :Star brought' images of a buffet or a Salt Lake drive-i- n to mind Mead- - ' pw prompted thoughts of pas- hires and cow pies By processof elimination lengthy discus- sion and a unanimous vote the v Logan Gty School District Board of Education chose the V - ld docudrama n a fictionalized dramatization for television of an actual event : or about real people — na uit pwif i wiw wono ' in m WCTwnoy Third CoMga EdWon fea-tur-ed : ! Pooplolndos FoSowtng art some of the local names that appear in today's Herald Journal: Richard Jensen (A3) ferry Nielsen (A3) Kely Uishman (A9) Robert Low (Afl) Amber Tracy (B1) Melissa agpalay (B2) Charts Hams (B2) Paul Cotta (B4) Ally Clegg (B4) Kie Rshar (Cl) Matthew Syma (Cl) Paul Schmidt (CIO) Julie Sue Morrill (CIO) Comics Mwriet — Ufc “We think it's S A4 —CIO Sports— — All Opinion-- Lynch’s new book says hospital staff ' did riot resist arid even offered US troops akey “It disturbed me” Lynch said “I knew that it wasn't the truth” : Still the of war from rural West Virginia took pains to say tiiat she does not care why the military may have exaggerated her story and that she considers the soldiers who res cued her April to be heroes “No matler what it was the point is that they got iri there they rescued me and they took riie home safe” she ' said who has fair skin and fine Lynch blond hair that falls to her shoulders physically recoils when she recounts 1 ' Sec JESSICA on A5 JrJj lopcnncxi- n nonnwcst “This is like naming a L0San-somethin- g child” Board President Ann Geary said in a work session before Tuesday’s board meet- ing “I fed like we’ye been in labor for five years with this ” Geary who served on the committee that narrowed 103 names nominated by members of the community down ! See SCHOOL on A16 Valley mayors want uniformity in RAPZ funding By Obtfuaries-—A- Pfc Jessica Lynch said in an interview Tuesday in New York that she is 'disturbed by military reports that ifalsely said she went down shooting jn an Iraqi ambush and dra- matized her rescue by US troops That wasn't me I wasn't about to take credit for I dkfcl do' she fcid The Associated Press A group of Cache Valley mayors want the Cache County Council to adopt uniform guidelines for distributing the money collected from the Recreation Arts Pufcs and Zoos or RAPZ tax The local Mayor’s Association is ' a more reasonable way” said Providence Mayor' Alma Leonhardt ' Voten approved a 01 percent sales tax last year that would be used to improve recreation arts parks and zoo facilities in the county The : tax is expected to generate about SI million a year State law gives only basic guidelines on how the tax money gets As it reads now the council 'any way it dis-tribu- lo fund CSSTAfttL&aUECOFr ' The first year’s worth of money won't be distributed until next sun' nier The county has been discussing how it should distribute the RAPZ money for the past year and recently decided to stick to the proposal ft made to the voters to give 45 percent of the money to recreation and paries projects 45 percent to cultural and botanical projects and the remaining 10 percent to Willow Pat Zoo how mnch money the council will deride to give to which arts or how much each city should receive for park improve- ments Original recommendations included bnsing die derisions oo population numbers and the size of ’ die budgets of the organizations making the request - The County Council is considering appointing a committee to review applications for the money Thai committee would then make otgani-zatio- See RAPZ ns ! n Alt ' jai j'n |