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Wednesday, August 03, 2005

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Ohio Battalion Loses 20

Marines in 2 Days

AP National News
By CONNIE MABINAssociated Press Writer
August 3, 2005, 4:52 PM EDT

BROOK PARK, Ohio -- The rash of violence in Iraq this week has taken an especially brutal toll on a Marine battalion based in this working-class town: Twenty members from the unit were killed over two days. Grief and anger shook the town as families and residents anxiously awaited answers after learning that 14 Marine reservists were killed Wednesday by a roadside bomb -- one of the heaviest blows suffered by a single unit in the war. Two days earlier, six others from the battalion were killed while on sniper duty.

The sorrow in Brook Park, a Cleveland suburb of 21,000 people, was painfully clear Wednesday among the line of customers sipping their morning coffee at the counter of a doughnut shop down the street from the battalion's headquarters.

Nearly everyone at the counter said they knew someone who was connected to the battalion.

"You never know who it could be. It could be your best friend. It could be your husband -- it could be anyone from here," Eleanor Matelski, 69, said as she angrily tore up a paper cup that had held her coffee.

"Tell Bush to get our soldiers out of there now before any more of our soldiers die.

This is getting to be ridiculous," she said.

A few steps away, near the gates of the 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines, residents piled red roses, American flags, handwritten notes of condolences and white crosses for the victims.

Names of the Marines killed Wednesday were not immediately released, but nine of them came from a smaller Columbus-based company of the battalion, said Master Sgt. Stephen Walter, a spokesman for the company.

The battalion was activated in January and went to Iraq in March. Military officials told the family of Lance Cpl. Edward Schroeder, 23, of Cleveland, that he was one of the Marines who died Wednesday.

His mother, Rosemary Palmer, said he joined the military in 2002 despite her opposition; she wouldn't even let her son play with toy guns while he was growing up.

Pat Wilsox, who said some of the reserves from the battalion frequent the doughnut shop he manages, threw her hand over her heart when she heard the news that the unit had suffered more losses.

"Oh my God," she said softly. "I'm all for protection but this is getting a little bit ridiculous.

" Rex Lott's son, Cpl. Billy Lott, serves with the battalion's weapons company out of Akron.

He said the last 24 hours have been rough, waiting for any word, hoping his son is all right. He left work early Wednesday to go to the reserve center.

"They expressed that they hadn't heard anything yet," said Lott, 53.

"No news is good news as far as they're concerned." Bob Fekete, manager of a tire shop near the battalion, said the losses weighed heavily on him.

He has done auto work for some of the headquarters' Marines.

"It especially hits home because all these gentlemen were from this battalion," Fekete said in the shop's lobby decorated with American flags and a box filled with toys being collected for a Marine charity.

Fekete, who served with the Marines during Vietnam, did not express the anger some of his neighbors did. "It's just one of those things. It's part of the game," he said. The risk that the same geographical area will suffer multiple casualties has been heightened in Iraq because reserve troops train and fight together -- unlike in Vietnam, where reserve units were split up and sent to the various active duty units.

The 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines, was first activated on May 1, 1943, and fought in several battles in World War II. It helped capture a key airfield at the Battle of Iwo Jima in the Pacific.

Before this week's dead, the unit's Web site listed 25 of its Marines had been killed this year.

The battalion has units in Brook Park, Columbus, Akron, Moundsville, W.Va., and Buffalo, N.Y. The West Virginia unit said it had none of the casualties. * __

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1 Comments:

Blogger Christy said...

UMMMm Rossi...

If ohio was rigged in 2004 then WE did not put bush back in power.

It has to be either or..

Either Ohio was rigged OR he was LEGALLY voted back in

4/8/05 7:53 AM  

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