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Tigers shoot down Kansas St.
(Professional Sports ~ 02/01/04)
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Thomas Gardner scored all but three of his 16 points in the second half, including three 3-pointers that spurred a long-range attack, helping lift Missouri to a 62-53 victory over Kansas State on Saturday. The Tigers were 1-for-11 from 3-point range in the first half but 6-for-11 the rest of the way. Missouri hit only 3-pointers, making six of them to go with four free throws, in a 16-minute stretch that ended on Arthur Johnson's shot from the baseline with 2:11 to go...
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Kerry, Edwards stump for support in Missouri
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Continuing to build on a string of big-name endorsements, John Kerry sought to broaden his message Saturday by arguing that his campaign is designed to "offer America hope and leadership." "Strip away the labels, strip away the partisanship," Kerry told a raucous crowd of about 700 at a downtown hotel. "People in America want real solutions."...
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Who's going to win the game? Who cares?
(Professional Sports ~ 02/01/04)
HOUSTON -- Today is Super Bowl Sunday, the nation's biggest unofficial holiday, an extravaganza of American revelry and indulgence that celebrates not so much football as America's ability to celebrate. "You take an event centered on TV, lubricated by beer and junk food, add the gambling element, drop it in a perfect spot on the calendar, and you've got the perfect American holiday," said Bob Thompson, professor of television and pop culture at Syracuse University...
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Panel details series of missteps, overlooked signals
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
WASHINGTON -- It's long been known that U.S. authorities had opportunities to stop at least some of the Sept. 11 hijackers. Now the extent of the government's failures is coming to light. At a two-day hearing this week, the federal commission investigating the attacks revealed U.S. authorities had numerous opportunities to stop the hijackers, including many face-to-face encounters...
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World briefs 10A
(Local News ~ 02/01/04)
Afghan president: 10 civilians killed in airstrike KABUL, Afghanistan -- The Afghan president on Saturday said a U.S. airstrike this month killed 10 civilians, including women and children, contradicting American military reports that claimed the casualties were Taliban militants. ...
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Fire destroys Cairo home
(Local News ~ 02/01/04)
CAIRO, Ill. -- A fire in Cairo Friday night destroyed a home but injured no one. A representative of the Cairo Fire Department said fire trucks were called at 9:58 p.m. to a one-story residence at 530 11th St. The building was a complete loss, and the cause is still under investigation...
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Nation briefs
(Local News ~ 02/01/04)
Medicare cost a highlight issue in election year WASHINGTON -- The much larger projected cost of the new Medicare law is giving an even more prominent place to an issue both parties already planned to highlight this election year. Democrats said the dramatically increased estimate -- from $395 billion to $534 billion over 10 years -- adds to a mountain of evidence that the law needs to be changed, even before much of it has gone into effect. ...
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Fire reports 02/01/04
(Police/Fire Report ~ 02/01/04)
Cape Girardeau Firefighters responded Friday to the following items: At 4:36 p.m., an emergency medical service at 200 West Park Mall. At 7:11 p.m., an emergency medical service at 1080 Linden, Apt. 18. At 7:26 p.m., an alarm sounding at 725 N. Pacific...
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Police report 02/01/04
(Police/Fire Report ~ 02/01/04)
Cape Girardeau The following items were released by the Cape Girardeau Police Department. Arrests do not imply guilt. DWIs Michael Flynn, 19, of 238 Greenbriar, St. Louis, was arrested Friday on suspicion of driving while intoxicated, speeding, no operator's license and false declaration...
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Jetton versus Holden
(Editorial ~ 02/01/04)
The fallout from state Rep. Rod Jetton's outburst during Gov. Bob Holden's State of the State speech overshadows far more crucial concerns. Born in DeSoto, Mo., Jetton's childhood involved moving frequently as his father, a Baptist minister, went from church to church. ...
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Neighborhood nostalgia
(Community ~ 02/01/04)
There was a time in America when the neighborhood was the center of American life. Relatives and friends lived there. Kids walked to their neighborhood school. It was like one big, extended family. It's still that way in a few neighborhoods. One of them surrounds the house at 2513 Albert Rasche. Many people in this neighborhood have lived here all their lives, and have stayed to raise their own children here...
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Tiger swimmers make 2 state cuts at Springfield Invitational
(High School Sports ~ 02/01/04)
Central's boys swimming team made the most of a long trip to Springfield, Mo., posting two state-qualifying times and finishing seventh Saturday at the 21-team Springfield Invitational. Sam Maguire finished second in the 50 free with a time of 22.9 seconds to qualify for state. Central's 200 medley relay team also qualified with a time of 1:48.12. The team consisted of Maguire, Clay Schermann, Alex Heddle and Jason Mercer...
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Otahkians track team grabs second place at Illinois meet
(College Sports ~ 02/01/04)
Southeast Missouri State University's track team won six individual events and got a second-place finish from the women at the Illini Classic at the University of Illinois on Saturday. Central graduate Heather Jenkins won two events, the shot put (47 feet 4 3/4 inches) and the weight throw (59-11 1/4). Brooke Woodruff won the 800 meters (2:13.73), Jackson graduate Lindsey Meyr won the long jump (18-3 1/4), Michele Jett won the pole vault (10-11 3/4) and Jay Heddell won the shot put (47-5 3/4)...
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Rep. Jetton puts own interests over constituents
(Letter to the Editor ~ 02/01/04)
To the editor: State Rep. Rod Jetton's interruption of Gov. Bob Holden was embarrassing to the people he represents and unprofessional. Jetton is in office to advance his own ego, not to represent the people of the 156th District. Our representatives should listen to the governor's address and disagree with it after it is over...
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Demetra Westrich
(Obituary ~ 02/01/04)
BENTON, Mo. -- Demetra Westrich, 34, of Benton died Friday, Jan. 30, 2004, at the home of her mother in Morehouse, Mo. She was born July 6, 1969, in Sikeston, Mo., daughter of Jeremiah "Pete" and Jo Anne Beck Dial. She and Clyde Westrich were married June 12, 1987, at Benton...
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Ethan Rivers
(Obituary ~ 02/01/04)
Ethan Lee Rivers of Cape Girardeau died Friday, Jan. 30, 2004, at Southeast Missouri Hospital. He was born Jan. 30, 2004, at Cape Girardeau, son of Michael Lee and Misty Summer Massa Rivers. Survivors include his parents; maternal grandparents, Clinton and Debbie Massa Jr. ...
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Kerry holds advantage on brink of Tuesday's seven-state primary
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
WASHINGTON -- John Kerry looks tough to beat in five Democratic presidential contests Tuesday, party strategists say, with dreams of a decisive sweep hinging on two states -- South Carolina and Oklahoma. The results of those two races may determine whether Kerry delivers a knockout punch or a glancing blow. He would like to chase Wesley Clark and John Edwards from the race Tuesday, then finish off a staggering Howard Dean four days later in Michigan...
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Illinois judges, others tested for TB after suspect dies
(State News ~ 02/01/04)
BENTON, Ill. -- Dozens of workers at the Franklin County courthouse and the county jail were tested for tuberculosis after a robbery suspect became unresponsive while in custody and later died after apparently contracting the disease, authorities said...
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Army veteran's remains find new home in cemetery
(State News ~ 02/01/04)
ST. LOUIS -- After Richard Winters' death eight years ago, the Army veteran's cremated remains were left in a St. Louis storage locker by a relative who left town. The remains finally have found a far more befitting home, thanks to two men who never knew him...
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Mysterious Sudanese affliction terrifies locals, baffles exper
(International News ~ 02/01/04)
KACNGUAN, Sudan -- Martha Halim lives in fear. She is terrified of the moon's phases, afraid of eating and fearful of fires, rivers and ponds. She is stricken with mysterious seizures that frighten her from eating. Her parents have tried everything. She's been to a hospital, she's seen a Western doctor and she's taken anti-epileptic drugs...
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White House ponders intell probe over Iraq
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
WASHINGTON -- The White House is considering endorsing the creation of an independent commission that would investigate whether the United States used faulty intelligence information when it decided to go to war in Iraq, government sources said Saturday...
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Bush budget sets 2009 to halve deficit
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
WASHINGTON -- President Bush's $2.4 trillion budget for 2005 would ease away from tax breaks for energy and business favored by Republicans while cutting spending on programs from environment to community development, GOP officials said Saturday. Bush's election-year fiscal plan, which he plans to ship to Congress on Monday, also envisions cutting spending on agriculture, natural resources and energy, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity. ...
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Attacking violence against women
(Local News ~ 02/01/04)
They used fists, knives and sometimes guns to hurt the people closest to them, usually women. Many offenders were convicted but some weren't. Cape Girardeau police recorded 598 domestic assaults between January 2002 and December 2003. That's essentially a new case every 29.3 hours...
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Wife remains missing in Wis. abduction case
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
WIND LAKE, Wis. -- Hours after a woman called 911 saying her ex-husband had tied her up and put her in the back of his truck, police Saturday found the man and their two young daughters, but not his former wife. The ex-husband had been seen towing the woman's car, which later turned up in Milwaukee, sheriff's officials said...
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Desegregation case makes history again
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
She's been helping organize Black History Month events for 25 years, but Sylvia Cyrus-Albritton has noticed something a little different about this February: an intensely personal response to the celebration's theme. The topic, the 50th anniversary of the Supreme Court's landmark Brown v. Board of Education desegregation decision, has generated an outpouring of enthusiasm and a flood of events planned this month by schools, libraries and other organizations...
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Ariz. inmate holding guard hostage seen with weapon
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
BUCKEYE, Ariz. -- One of two inmates holding a corrections officer hostage in a prison tower walked on the roof carrying what appeared to be a shotgun or rifle Saturday, the first time in the two-week standoff that either of the inmates had shown a weapon...
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Matrix database divides states over privacy concerns
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
NEW YORK -- Although privacy worries led several states to pull out of a federally funded crime and terrorism database project, others are actively considering joining and thereby sharing information on their citizens, The Associated Press has learned...
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Palestinians angered by U.S. opposition to hearing on West Bank
(International News ~ 02/01/04)
JERUSALEM -- A top Palestinian official told a visiting U.S. envoy Saturday that Palestinians were angered over Washington's opposition to an international court hearing on the Israeli barrier to seal off the West Bank. The expansive complex of trenches, fences, walls and razor wire, has become one of the most contentious issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and both sides see the upcoming hearing as important to determining the project's fate...
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Top Saudi religious authority blasts terrorists as hajj peaks
(International News ~ 02/01/04)
MOUNT ARAFAT, Saudi Arabia -- Saudi Arabia's top cleric called on Muslims around the world Saturday to forsake terrorism, saying those who claim to be holy warriors were an affront to the faith. In a sermon that was remarkable not only for its strong language but also its timing -- at the peak of the annual hajj -- Sheik Abdul Aziz al-Sheik told 2 million pilgrims that terrorists were giving their enemies an excuse to criticize Muslim nations...
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Car bomb kills 9 Iraqi police; 3 U.S. troops killed by roadside
(International News ~ 02/01/04)
MOSUL, Iraq -- A bomb-laden car plowed through a razor wire fence and exploded outside a police station in the north of the country Saturday, killing nine Iraqis and injuring 45. It was unclear if the attack was a suicide bombing or the driver fled before the explosion. U.S. officials have said recent vehicle bombings and suicide attacks in Iraq bear the mark of al-Qaida...
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Khatami calls off Cabinet meeting due to illness Khatami confi
(International News ~ 02/01/04)
TEHRAN, Iran -- President Mohammad Khatami, suffering severe back pain, called off an emergency Cabinet meeting Saturday that was to deal with Iran's deepening crisis over parliamentary elections. Earlier in the day, the pro-reform president had suggested his government would not go ahead with the Feb. 20 vote, which he called undemocratic because hard-line Islamic clerics have disqualified more than 2,400 liberal candidates...
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Shortage forces Guard soldiers into MP training
(State News ~ 02/01/04)
FORT LEONARD WOOD, Mo. -- Spc. Jason Vazquez is a National Guard artillery soldier, but he hopes someday to become a Chicago police officer. Thanks to the Army's crying need for military policeman, he's getting the kind of on-the-job training that will speed his way toward that goal...
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Ozarks getting visit from Ugandan children's choir
(State News ~ 02/01/04)
SPRINGFIELD, Kan. -- The voices of 18 children changed Brent and Teresa Smith's life. Five years ago, the Smiths heard the Watoto Children's Choir -- 18 Ugandan orphans -- sing praises to God and tell stories of how their lives were transformed by a ministry called Watoto. Since then, the Smiths have worked to support and promote the ministry...
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State digest 02/01/04
(State News ~ 02/01/04)
Father in death of foster child gets 15 years SPRINGFIELD, Mo. -- A foster father spent his first full night behind bars Friday in the death of 2-year-old Dominic James. John Wesley Dilley, 36, was sentenced to 15 years in prison on charges of abuse resulting in death and assault. ...
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Ida Bush
(Obituary ~ 02/01/04)
CAIRO, Ill. -- Ida Mae Bush, 83, of Cairo died Thursday, Jan. 29, 2004, at St. Francis Medical Center in Cape Girardeau. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Heavenly Gates Funeral Home and after noon Friday at Mount Moriah Missionary Baptist Church in Cairo...
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Out of the past 2/1/04
(Out of the Past ~ 02/01/04)
10 years ago: Feb. 1, 1994 Cape Girardeau Board of Education hopes to replace old buildings with new elementary classrooms, setting aside for now idea of middle school; at work session yesterday, board discussed building new elementary school and addition to Jefferson Elementary...
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Take it to the bank - Patriots in a squeaker
(Sports Column ~ 02/01/04)
Today's Super Bowl figures to be intriguing for a variety of reasons. You've got two teams who at various points of the season never figured to get this far. Sure, the Patriots were highly regarded entering the campaign. But after releasing star defender Lawyer Milloy in a controversial move before the opener and then getting drubbed at Buffalo 31-0, New England seemed like a team in turmoil...
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Wills are married 70 years
(Anniversary ~ 02/01/04)
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wills of Millersville celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary with a luncheon reception Dec. 20, 2003, at Delmonico's in Jackson. The event was hosted by their family. Guests attended from Cape Girardeau, Jackson, Oak Ridge, Millersville and Marquand, Mo...
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Patricks to mark 50 years
(Anniversary ~ 02/01/04)
KARNAK, Ill. -- Mr. and Mrs. Carl Patrick of Karnak will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary with a reception Feb. 15 at Boaz Pentecostal Church. Patrick and Flo Williams were married Feb. 15, 1954, in Corinth, Miss. The couple's children and spouses are Ricky and Linda Patrick and Charlotte and Walter Horn, all of Grand Chain, Ill. Another daughter, Barbara Vines, is deceased...
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Super Bowl ad winks at music 'sharing'
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
LOS ANGELES -- Downloading music online from rogue file-sharing networks got 14-year-old Annie Leith sued for thousands of dollars. Now it has landed her a leading spot on a national ad that will debut during the Super Bowl. Leith and her 17-year-old sister downloaded 960 songs over a three-year period using the popular Kazaa program. But the free music binge got Leith ensnared in the legal dragnet cast by the Recording Industry Association of America in September...
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Patriots have edge in chess match
(Professional Sports ~ 02/01/04)
HOUSTON -- If the Carolina Panthers win the Super Bowl, it will be with power. If the New England Patriots win, it will be with finesse, deception, intimidation and experience. So while today's NFL championship game may not feature football's biggest stars, it could be a fascinating chess match between two of the game's headiest coaches -- accomplished grandmaster Bill Belichick of New England and Carolina's quickly ascending John Fox...
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Indians reeling on road
(College Sports ~ 02/01/04)
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Nothing Samford did Saturday surprised Southeast Missouri State University. But the Bulldogs did things so well, there was apparently nothing the Indians could do about it. The result was a relatively easy 70-58 Samford victory that concluded a nightmarish four-game road swing for Southeast, which fell to 9-10 overall and 2-6 in Ohio Valley Conference play...
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Otahkians end trip with win
(College Sports ~ 02/01/04)
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Southeast Missouri State University found the perfect opponent to cure its recent ills. The Otahkians, losers of three straight games including Thursday's blowout at Jacksonville State, wrapped up their Alabama road trip Saturday by routing Samford 71-43...
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Proposal to turn SEMO into EMU axed
(State News ~ 02/01/04)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- Although they didn't know it, senators last week had an opportunity to provide a logical solution to the flap over Southeast Missouri State University's Indian and Otahkian nicknames. During debate on a bill to drop the regional designation from the name of Southwest Missouri State University in Springfield, an amendment was offered to also rename Southeast, changing it to Eastern Missouri University...
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Concepts to streamline state judiciary proposed
(State News ~ 02/01/04)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- In an effort to streamline operations and save money, the judicial branch of state government could soon face its first major overhaul in decades. Like other parts of government, the judiciary has had to engage in its share of belt tightening in recent years. But with 90 percent of its budget dedicated to personnel costs, there is concern that deep cuts could hamper the swift administration of justice...
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American soldiers in Iraq gear up for Super Bowl
(International News ~ 02/01/04)
TIKRIT, Iraq -- The Super Bowl parties for U.S. troops in Iraq will start hours before dawn, and there won't be any beer. But at least in Tikrit, soldiers have a lavish venue: They'll be watching a cinema-sized screen in a former palace of Saddam Hussein...
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Local high school football coaches can admire the work of Fox
(Community Sports ~ 02/01/04)
While Super Bowl XXXVIII may lack star power, it has plenty of brain power. New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick is lauded as a defensive genius, having thwarted the high-powered St. Louis Rams in the Super Bowl two years ago. Carolina Panthers coach John Fox, whose coaching background also is on the defensive side of the ball, has earned credit for taking a team that was 1-15 in 2001 to the brink of the championship...
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China announces new SARS case
(International News ~ 02/01/04)
BEIJING -- China announced its fourth confirmed SARS case of the season Saturday, saying the patient had already left the hospital after "total recovery" -- a disclosure that prompted a strongly worded statement from the World Health Organization urging an urgent investigation...
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Big battles over terrorism, security await Supreme Court
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
WASHINGTON -- Sometimes the work of the Supreme Court befits the court's image as a stolid place. Quiet, plodding, even boring. Not this year. With the justices on their midwinter break and about half the term behind them, they already have signed off on a vast rewrite of the laws that govern money in politics. ...
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Essner-Heuring
(Wedding ~ 02/01/04)
NEW HAMBURG, Mo. -- St. Lawrence Catholic Church was the setting Oct. 4, 2003, for the wedding of Leonna Danielle Essner and Dean Patrick Heuring. Monsignor Philip Bucher of Branson, Mo., great-uncle of the bride, performed the ceremony. The Rev. Normand Varone assisted...
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Finding a wedding dress to flatter your figure
(Community ~ 02/01/04)
Full hips. A-line skirts are best bets for women who are bottom-heavy. You might also play up other areas -- like a lovely bustline or shoulders and a small waist -- to take attention away from full hips. Less-than-perfect arms. Don't cover them up; go strapless, some designers say, because sleeves or straps sometimes draw more attention to the area. In particular, avoid cap or band sleeves, which cut the upper arm at its widest spot...
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Chic brides
(Community ~ 02/01/04)
NEW YORK Style-conscious brides-to-be have even more reasons to cheer this year. Wedding dresses, which until the 1990s were often fussy and rigid and anything but sophisticated, are more stylish than ever. "This is the best season we have seen in several seasons," says Millie Martini Bratten, editor-in-chief of Bride's magazine. ...
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Pennington-Boyd
(Engagement ~ 02/01/04)
McCLURE, Ill. -- The Rev. Steve and Patsy Pennington of McClure announce the engagement of their daughter, Keri Sharee Pennington, to Aaron Ray Boyd. He is the son of the Rev. Mark and Belynda Boyd of McClure. Pennington is a senior at Shawnee High School in Wolf Lake, Ill...
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Swick-Chamberlain
(Engagement ~ 02/01/04)
Jim and April Swick of West Lafayette, Ind., announce the engagement of their daughter, Angela Nichol Swick, to Eric Scott Chamberlain. He is the son of Scott and Stephanie Chamberlain of Jackson. Swick is a 1999 graduate of Harrison High School in West Lafayette. She received a bachelor's degree in elementary education from Purdue University in 2003...
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Leach-Cooley
(Engagement ~ 02/01/04)
Teresa Neumeyer and Jerry Cooley of Cape Girardeau announce the engagement of their son, Nathan Cooley, to Tracey Leach. She is the daughter of Betty Belt of Springfield, Mo., and Richard Leach of Willard, Mo. Leach is a 1995 graduate of Willard High School. She received a bachelor of science degree in biology from Southeast Missouri State University in 1999. She is employed at Sunny Hill Pet Center...
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Sports letter to editor 2/1/04
(Community Sports ~ 02/01/04)
Saddened by coverage How saddened I was to read your front page story on the Jan. 28 sports page about Central High School's triumph over Doniphan. Don't misunderstand, I'm not upset that Central posted a victory. What I find so distasteful is Jeremy Joffray's exploitation of the poor judgement exhibited by certain players on Central's team. ...
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Speak Out 02/01/04
(Speak Out ~ 02/01/04)
Economic ship ACCORDING TO the Department of Labor, there have been approximately 2.3 million folks who have lost jobs since 9-11. The other side of that coin is that nearly 1.8 million individuals are no longer collecting unemployment. That leaves a net loss of about 500,000. ...
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Sports briefs 2/1/04
(Other Sports ~ 02/01/04)
Baseball The Detroit Tigers and Ivan Rodriguez moved closer to finalizing their $40 million, four-year contract, and the deal could be announced Monday afternoon. The sides were faxing language Saturday aimed at finishing off the agreement, a baseball source said. The goal was to complete the deal in time for a news conference Monday in Detroit, the source said...
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FanSpeak 2/1/04
(Other Sports ~ 02/01/04)
Critique of coverage I AM an avid, maybe too avid, sports fan from the area. I know the teams that everyone expects to be competitive year in and year out. Saxony Lutheran is not one of those teams. Your coverage of Saxony Lutheran is almost sickening. ...
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Physicians pack seminar in search of tort reforms
(State News ~ 02/01/04)
ST. LOUIS -- Gov. Bob Holden and the two candidates vying to defeat his re-election bid told hundreds of doctors here they support meaningful reform for lawsuits related to alleged malpractice. Holden, fellow Democrat and State Auditor Claire McCaskill, and Secretary of State Matt Blunt, a Republican, were responding to the frustration and anger of 600 doctors who packed a daylong political-action seminar Friday in St. Louis...
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Revered founder of Pakistan's nuclear program fired
(International News ~ 02/01/04)
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- In the first action from Pakistan's probe into allegations of nuclear proliferation, the government on Saturday fired the revered founder of the country's atomic program from his job as a top adviser and confined him to his home...
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Scoring volleyball with children
(Local News ~ 02/01/04)
For Southeast Missouri State University volleyball players, Saturday was back to basics: calling the ball, spiking, hitting, passing and service. The main service was to the community, as 62 youths came to the Osage Community Centre for lessons on volleyball fundamentals from Otahkian assistant coaches Julie Brandmeyer and Renata Nowacki, along with seven players from the team. ...
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Lottery money to buy high-life headstone
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
PRINCE GEORGE, British Columbia -- Lottery winner Phil Lee is taking his irreverent sense of humor to his grave. The former construction worker in his 60s says he'll use some of the nearly $76,000 he won in the lottery to buy a hedonistic headstone. ...
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Soldier phones home minutes before child is born
(National News ~ 02/01/04)
BRISTOL, Tenn. -- Chad Sproles phoned home just in time. Stationed in Iraq, the 23-year-old Army private had a sudden urge to check on his pregnant wife, Dana. He tried to reach family members on their cell phones Wednesday. No luck. When his time at a pay phone was up, he ran a mile to the next nearest telephone and began dialing numbers...
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Hardin-Brown
(Wedding ~ 02/01/04)
Kendra Jean Hardin and Shaun Robert Brown were married May 23, 2003, at Trinity Lutheran Church in St. Louis. The Rev. David Marth performed the ceremony. Organist and soloist was Wes Kassulke of St. Louis. Readers were Joe Brown of Cape Girardeau, uncle of the groom, and Chet Klingbeil of Kansas City, Mo., uncle of the bride...
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Jannin-Kneezle
(Wedding ~ 02/01/04)
BENTON, Mo. -- Lana Jannin and Kyle Kneezle were united in marriage Sept. 27, 2003, at Unity Baptist Church in Benton. The Rev. Dennis Lowe performed the ceremony. The bride is the daughter of JoAnn Jannin of Perryville, Mo., and the late Dennis Jannin. Don and Arleen Kneezle of Benton are parents of the groom...
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Rauls-Zimmerman
(Wedding ~ 02/01/04)
Diane Michelle Rauls and Joshua Abraham Zimmerman were united in marriage Nov. 8, 2003, at St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church in Fredericktown, Mo. Monsignor William Stanton performed the ceremony. Organist was Brenda Kuhn and vocalist was Marlene Glenn...
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Cauble-Sanford
(Wedding ~ 02/01/04)
Lacy Jae Cauble and Michael William Sanford exchanged vows Oct. 18, 2003, at Eisleben Lutheran Church in Scott City. The Rev. Robert Azinger performed the ceremony. Pianist was Shane Steck of Cape Girardeau. Vocalists were Mark and Lana Cook of Cape Girardeau and Stacey Cobb of Pittsburg, Ill...
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Marrs-Rice
(Wedding ~ 02/01/04)
Erin Ashley Marrs and Justin Michael Rice exchanged vows Dec. 27, 2003, at Smith Avenue Church of God in Sikeston, Mo. Bishop Ira Sandafar performed the ceremony. Organist was Christy Shinn of Gordonville. Soloist was David Rice, father of the groom. A duet was comprised of Justin Tanner of Memphis, Tenn., cousin of the groom, and Judy Tanner of Sikeston, aunt of the groom. Also singing as a group were Kelli Niswonger, Natalie Rafferty, Elizabeth Baugh and Roni Hayden, all of Jackson...
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Estes-Keller
(Engagement ~ 02/01/04)
Alan and Nancy Estes of Jackson announce the engagement of their daughter, Ashley Nichole Estes, to Jason D. Keller. He is the son of Larry and Deanna Keller of Jackson. Estes is a 2002 graduate of Jackson High School, and a 1999 graduate of Barbizon Modeling School in St. Louis. She is employed at Heartland Plastic and Hand Surgery in Cape Girardeau...
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Comfort, luxury coexist in spring lingerie
(Community ~ 02/01/04)
NEW YORK -- Spring lingerie collections promise more colors, more frills and more luxurious fabrics as vintage-inspired, romantic garments fill the racks. And for those who have been suffering through the heyday of the thong and waiting for roomier panties to come back, the wait is over...
Stories from Sunday, February 1, 2004
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