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Local fire department issues no-burn order
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
The Cape Girardeau Fire Department issued a no-burn order Monday with the order to remain in affect until further notice. Due to high winds, Cape Girardeau residents would not be allowed to burn limbs, leaves and other yard waste that is typically allowed. The order was to remain in affect until further notice from the fire department...
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Cape school board OKs committees to develop strategic plan
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
A new comprehensive plan for the Cape Girardeau public schools will focus on five areas: at-risk students, parental involvement, facilities and finance, school climate and student achievement. The board of education Monday night instructed superintendent Dr. David Scala to appoint five committees, one for each topic...
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Sheriff's department issues warning about lottery scam
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
The Scott County Sheriff's Department warned residents Monday of a mail and phone scam used to obtain personal bank information. At least one Scott County resident has received a letter from Rockaway Processing of Montreal claiming to offer prizes from an international mega lottery drawing, a news release from the Scott County Sheriff's Department stated...
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Park shelter damaged by fire
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
A small fire at a Cape Girardeau County Park shelter caused about $500 in damages, but no one was hurt. The wooden trash can kept under shelter No. 5 in the park caught fire around 1:30 p.m., according to fire Capt. Brad Dillow. Responding firefighters extinguished the blaze in a matter of minutes, leaving the scene around 2:15 p.m., he said...
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Teenage girls borrow fashion from each other
(Column ~ 02/28/06)
When it comes to teenage girls, there's never enough clothes. Becca has a ton of clothing. But that doesn't stop her from wearing some of her girlfriends' attire. Our teenage daughter and her friends regularly borrow from each other. Guys wouldn't even think about doing something like that. But girls seem to enjoy it...
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E-mail about releasing cell numbers is a hoax
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
There's still one way that telemarketers can't annoy you -- through your cell phones. That's despite an e-mail circulating across cyberspace that warns that it's just a matter of days until telemarketing companies get their hands on our cell phone digits...
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Scott County sees decreased inmate medical demand after refusing to pay
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
Stop paying the inmates' bills, and they'll stop requesting visits to the hospital. That's what happened at the Scott County Jail when Sheriff Rick Walter implemented a policy after he took office on Jan. 1, 2005. Cape Girardeau County Sheriff John Jordan said the same change will yield the same results in his county. He decided recently that the jail would no longer pay for doctor visits...
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Delta boys stay alive in thriller
(High School Sports ~ 02/28/06)
Delta used a second-half comeback and a 3-pointer in the last second to pull off a mild upset of Leopold, winning 66-64 in the first round of the Class 1 District 2 boys basketball tournament Monday at Oak Ridge. Fourth-seeded Leopold led 32-23 at halftime, but No. 5 Delta (8-17) came out with a 30-18 advantage in the third quarter. Terrence Below drained a 3 with less than a second remaining to give the Bobcats the victory...
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Race for NASCAR Hall of Fame not exactly wide open
(Professional Sports ~ 02/28/06)
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- The race for the rights to NASCAR's Hall of Fame is in its closing laps, and chairman Brian France remains insistent that three cities are still in contention. Technically, that's true. In reality, the stock car racing shrine is Charlotte's to lose...
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India has mixed feelings about close ties with U.S.
(International News ~ 02/28/06)
NEW DELHI -- With India and the United States struggling to work out a nuclear pact before President Bush arrives this week, India's prime minister pledged Monday not to compromise the country's security to seal the deal. During his visit beginning Wednesday, Bush is likely to find excitement over Indian-U.S. ties mixed with ambivalence about sidling up to a nation many see as the world's bully...
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Colombian rebels kill eight town councilors in midday attack
(International News ~ 02/28/06)
BOGOTA, Colombia -- Rebels burst into a hotel in southern Colombia where local government officials were meeting Monday and killed eight town councilors, authorities said. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia rebels arrived in a truck disguised as police, walked into the hotel and opened fire while the officials were having a working lunch, said Gilberto Toro, head of the Colombian Federation of Municipalities...
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Iraqi security forces announce capture of senior insurgent
(International News ~ 02/28/06)
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Iraqi security forces announced on Monday the capture of a senior al-Qaida figure, and the U.S. ambassador said the risk of civil war from last week's sectarian violence was over. Violence throughout Iraq killed 36 people Monday, as fierce fighting broke out between Iraqi commandos and insurgents southeast of the capital. ...
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Senator misses session as governor
(State News ~ 02/28/06)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- Senate President Pro Tem Michael Gibbons on Monday could not preside over the chamber because he was filling another role -- as governor. Gibbons, R-Kirkwood, was given the powers of the governor last week, when Gov. Matt Blunt left the state to attend a governors' meeting and Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder also was out of state. The Senate leader is third in the line of succession...
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Robin Carnahan to undergo treatment for breast cancer
(State News ~ 02/28/06)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- Secretary of State Robin Carnahan said Monday that she has breast cancer but will continue to work, as much as she can, while she undergoes treatment. Carnahan, 44, issued a written statement saying she was recently diagnosed and is talking with doctors and family members to develop a treatment plan...
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ACLU files lawsuit in Ga. school gay club case
(State News ~ 02/28/06)
ATLANTA -- The American Civil Liberties Union filed a federal lawsuit Monday against a northern Georgia school district, saying it is unfairly preventing a gay support club from meeting at a high school. The ACLU said it asked the federal court in Gainesville to issue a preliminary injunction requiring the White County school district to let all noncurricular student groups begin meeting again immediately...
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College film fan clubs faced with rights fees for movies
(State News ~ 02/28/06)
CHICAGO -- Organizers of a film club at Chicago's Columbia College want to be able to show avant-garde, foreign or other independent movies as a way to expose students to more than just mainline cinema, but their plans have stalled because it could cost hundreds of dollars to show a film...
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New home-video releases include 'Monty Python,' 'The Avengers'
(Entertainment ~ 02/28/06)
TV shows released on DVD this week: "Ellen: Season 3" -- Bookstore owner Ellen DeGeneres and friends return with such guest stars as Martha Stewart, Carrie Fisher and Mary Tyler Moore. The third season's 25 episodes come in a three-disc set. (A&E)...
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Second victim dies after Detroit church shootings
(National News ~ 02/28/06)
DETROIT -- A second victim died Monday after a man opened fire during a Sunday church service, sending frightened parishioners ducking under the pews for safety. The gunman later killed himself. The victim who died Monday, identified only as a man in his 50s, was shot while trying to protect his wife from a carjacking attempt outside the church...
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Illinois woman receives probation for forgery
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
A 19-year-old woman was sentenced Monday to five years probation on a suspended execution for a single count of forgery. Circuit Judge Benjamin Lewis handed down the sentence for Ashley N. Freeman, 19, of Jonesboro, Ill., who pleaded guilty to a single count of forgery. ...
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Big 12 scrambles for spots at Dance
(Professional Sports ~ 02/28/06)
AUSTIN, Texas -- Texas, Kansas and Oklahoma are slam dunks for the NCAA tournament. How about the rest of the Big 12? With only a week left in the regular season before the conference tournament, teams like Colorado and Texas A&M must make a big push if they hope to earn an at-large bid...
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Sentencing postponed for Barton coach
(Professional Sports ~ 02/28/06)
WICHITA, Kan. -- Sentencing for former Barton County Community College basketball coach Ryan Wolf has been postponed until May 1 to give him time to testify against his colleagues in a widespread investigation into financial aid for athletes. Wolf's indictment in December 2004 was the first in a scandal that has resulted in charges against seven coaches and the athletic director and led to the firing of its president at the beleaguered central Kansas college...
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Farms and tourists
(Editorial ~ 02/28/06)
At first glance, a conference to promote agritourism sounds like an event that could only be dreamed up by government bureaucracy. But at today's third annual Agriculture Tourism Conference (5 p.m. at the Clinton Building in Sikeston, Mo.) there will be several examples of how farms already are boosting the local economy thanks to tourism...
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Sports briefs 2/28/06
(Other Sports ~ 02/28/06)
High school...
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United Way success is combined effort
(Letter to the Editor ~ 02/28/06)
To the editor: Now that the 2005 United Way campaign is officially complete, I would like to congratulate the staff of the United Way of Southeast Missouri, the many volunteers who assisted in this program and the many donors who made this campaign such an overwhelming success...
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Photo ID for voting makes good sense
(Letter to the Editor ~ 02/28/06)
To the editor: Regarding the Feb. 24 op-ed column ("Don't put Missouri seniors' right to vote at risk") by Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan: Early in the piece, she mentions that "voters are already required to identify themselves at the polls with a drivers license, ... ...
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Pope John would condemn research
(Letter to the Editor ~ 02/28/06)
To the editor: Former U.S. senator Thomas F. Eagleton says in his Feb. 26 op-ed column that he is a Pope John XXIII Roman Catholic, the inference being that Pope John would have supported fetal stem-cell research. In 1961 Pope John wrote, "The transmission of human life is entrusted by nature to a personal and conscious act. ...
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Speak Out 2/28/06
(Speak Out ~ 02/28/06)
Cut the bias; Golf and catfish; Doesn't make sense; Complex understanding; Crisis issue; Driving oddities; Out of touch; A better city; Military heroes; Mardi Gras revenue; Fattening the coffers; Speeding in Chaffee; Gentle bull terriers; Political feedback
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Milton Shrum
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
Milton Rayford Shrum, 86, of Cape Girardeau died Sunday, Feb. 26, 2006, at Missouri Veterans Home. He was born Jan. 6, 1920, in Cape Girardeau County, son of Joseph and Nora Hahn Shrum. He and Virginia Ridings were married Jan. 10, 1942, in Marquand, Mo. She preceded him in death Jan. 2, 1997...
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Margaret Mollenhour
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
Born Feb. 1, 1928, in Caruthersville, Mo., to Harry and Lissie Ridgley, Margaret Nell Ridgley Mollenhour passed away in her home Saturday, Feb. 25, 2006. She is survived by a sister, Grace Nasci of Reno, Nev.; three children and spouses, Bill and Angie Mollenhour of Harrisonville, Mo., Ann Miller-Pack and Rick Pack of Lees Summit, Mo., Janet and Larry Minkler of Shawnee, Kan. ...
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Out of the past 2/28/06
(Out of the Past ~ 02/28/06)
25 years ago: Feb. 28, 1981 The 10th Congressional District Republican Committee has selected Madison County Republican chairman John M. Counts and Dunklin County chairman B. Neil Lewis as candidates for the state legislative redistricting committee...
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Elmer Taylor
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
PERRYVILLE, Mo. -- Elmer F. Taylor Sr., 81, of Perryville died Saturday, Feb. 25, 2006, at his home. He was born Aug. 28, 1924, at Silver Lake, Mo., son of Henry Joseph and Mary Matilda Taylor. He and Mary Ann McDowell were married Sept. 25, 1945. Taylor was employed for 22 years as a mechanic at Sabreliner. ...
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Lisa LaRose
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
PERRYVILLE, Mo. -- Lisa K. LaRose, 43, of Perryville died Sunday, Feb. 26, 2006, at Southeast Missouri Hospital in Cape Girardeau. She was born Dec. 7, 1962, in Perryville, daughter of John M. and Sharolyn K. Ochs LaRose. LaRose was a former marketing director with Mid America Farm Publication. She bred and raised national show horses and American saddle bred horses...
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Gladys Clayton
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
Lillian Gladys Clayton, 96, of Cape Girardeau died Sunday, Feb. 26, 2006, at Fountainbleau Lodge. She was born Feb. 12, 1910, in Cullman, Ala., daughter of Talmer Alphus and Harriet Abercrombie Barfoot. She and Joseph W. Clayton were married Jan. 18, 1927, at Parma, Mo. He died Oct. 4, 1970...
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Ralph Bowerman
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
MCCLURE, Ill. -- Ralph W. Bowerman, 86, of McClure died Monday, Feb. 27, 2006, at his home. Lorberg Memorial Funeral Chapel in Cape Girardeau is in charge of arrangements.
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Dorothy Halter
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
Dorothy Halter, 75, of Pensacola, Fla., formerly of Scott City, died Monday, Feb. 27, 2006, at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis. Lorberg Memorial Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements.
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Scott Cornman
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
Scott Lee Cornman, 37, of Cape Girardeau died Friday, Feb. 24, 2006. He was born Dec. 18, 1968, in Cape Girardeau, son of Darrell Lee and Sandra Sue Kirkpatrick Cornman. Cornman was in management with Southwestern Bell Communications in Cape Girardeau. He was of the Missionary Baptist belief...
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Goldie Green
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
Goldie M. Green, 76, of Jackson died Sunday, Feb. 26, 2006, at Saint Francis Medical Center in Cape Girardeau. She was born Sept. 3, 1929, in Friedheim, daughter of Herman and Letha Harris Dickman. She married Ancel Medlock, who died in January 1948. She later married Jerry Green, who died in February 1994...
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Helen Trantham
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
Helen Augusta Dunn Trantham was born Aug. 6, 1921, on the family farm near Buchanon, Mo., to Elmer and Mildred Haddock Dunn. She grew up in Lowndes, Mo. The family moved to Cape Girardeau in 1933. She attended Campus High School, graduating in 1939. She received a bachelor of science in home economics from Southeast Missouri State University in 1942. She taught school in Cobden, III., and Morley, Mo. She and Capt. Archie Peyton Trantham, USAF, were married in Gulfport, Miss., Aug. 28, 1943...
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Guilty plea given in drug case
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
A Sikeston, Mo., man pleaded guilty in federal court Monday to one count of distribution of cocaine base. Before U.S. District Judge Jean C. Hamilton, Michael S. Sheron, 32, entered the plea, a release from U.S. Attorney Catherine L. Hanaway stated. On July 25, Sheron sold 16.3 grams of crack cocaine to a confidential informant for $450. Sheron was scheduled to be sentenced May 22, and he could face up to 40 years imprisonment and a $2 million fine...
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Lillian Ballard
(Obituary ~ 02/28/06)
ANNA, Ill. -- Lillian Elizabeth Ballard, 95, of Melbourne, Fla., died Monday, Jan. 9, 2006, at the home of her son. She was born Jan. 8, 1911, in Anna, daughter of Walter J. and Ara R. Rendleman Lamer. She and Royal Lee Ballard were married May 19, 1945, in Anna. He died March 25, 2000...
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Coroner: Nothing unusual in autopsy
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
An autopsy on a 37-year-old man found dead near his home was inconclusive and pending toxicological studies. Scott Cornman was reported missing after being last seen Feb. 21 following a night out at the Pilot House, a restaurant and bar at 3532 Perryville Road near Cape Girardeau...
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Don't forget to flush
(Column ~ 02/28/06)
A recent disaster involving the water pump at our house has left me and my family with limited aquatic resources. For reasons unknown, we can only turn it on when we really need water, otherwise it may explode and cause a neighborhood apocalypse. Much like the electricity going off, this kind of predicament leaves me with a feeling of helplessness and has me realizing how much water I actually need for various activities...
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Learning briefs 2/28/06
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
Tenholder achieves dean's list ranking; Jackson South Elem. Honor Rolls; Local students win MathCounts contest
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Info 2 Go 2/28/06
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
Four things teens should know about life and all that other stuff: Video game gets attention A debate is raging between some gamers and law enforcement over "25 to Life," a video game released Jan. 17 that involves cop-killing as part of the plot. ...
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Authorities arrest nine people at Scott County nightclub
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
Nine people were arrested and charged over the weekend for peace disturbance and assault at a nightclub near Sikeston, Mo. Around 12:35 a.m. Sunday, a Scott County sheriff's sergeant was checking on a large gathering at Mr. C's Night Club, on U.S. 61 north of Sikeston, according to a Scott County Sheriff's Department news release...
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Veterans face cuts in '08; Bush camp says numbers could change
(National News ~ 02/28/06)
WASHINGTON -- At least tens of thousands of veterans with noncritical medical issues could be denied care or could see their care delayed in coming years if the White House is serious about its proposed budget and President Bush's promise of cutting the deficit in half...
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Teen sought in Cape shooting surrenders
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
A teenager sought in the Cape Girardeau shooting of a 23-year-old man turned himself over to authorities Monday. George A. Henry, 18, turned himself in with his attorney at the Cape Girardeau County Sheriff's Office, according to Cape Girardeau police spokesman Jason Selzer. ...
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Catholic priest removed over sexual abuse allegation
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
From staff and wire reports A former Cape Girardeau priest has been dismissed from his post in the Springfield-Cape Girardeau Catholic Diocese following an investigation of sexual misconduct allegations. The diocese said in a news release Monday that Monsignor Stephen Schneider violated the diocese's standards of conduct for alleged sexual misconduct with a minor and that he will no longer function as a priest...
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Senators opt for target, instead of mandate, on renewable energy
(State News ~ 02/28/06)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- The Republican-led Senate shot down a proposed mandate that electric utilities make more use of renewable energy sources, instead endorsing a bill Monday that would set goals for only certain utilities to try to meet. Democrats and Republicans alike this year are touting the need to tap into renewable energy sources, such as the sun, wind, water and agricultural products. ...
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Cape fire reports 2/28/06
(Police/Fire Report ~ 02/28/06)
Cape Girardeau...
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Cape police reports 2/28/06
(Police/Fire Report ~ 02/28/06)
Cape Girardeau...
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GOP governors: Missteps by Bush administration taking toll back home
(National News ~ 02/28/06)
WASHINGTON -- Republican governors are openly worrying that the Bush administration's latest stumbles -- from the natural disaster of Hurricane Katrina to prescription drugs and ports security -- are taking an election-year toll on the party back home...
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Documents: Red Cross warned internal disputes could hurt disaster response
(National News ~ 02/28/06)
WASHINGTON -- The American Red Cross was warned years before Katrina hit to resolve its internal disputes or risk a repeat of snafus that plagued the Sept. 11, 2001, relief effort, according to internal documents made public by a Senate panel Monday...
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Nation briefs 2/28/06
(National News ~ 02/28/06)
Texas redistricting issue goes to Supreme Court; Document: Coast Guard had doubts on ports deal; White House rejects call for special counsel on NSA
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Births 2/28/06
(Births ~ 02/28/06)
Vassalli; O'Neil; Trunzo; Brandon
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Miss America endorses higher penalties for retail outlets that sell beer to minors
(State News ~ 02/28/06)
OKLAHOMA CITY -- As an 18-year-old high school student, Jennifer Berry went on sting operations with the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office to uncover retail outlets that illegally sold her beer. As Miss America, Berry is taking her campaign against underage drinking to a national audience as she travels around the country focusing attention on the dangers of underage drinking and driving...
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Saudi security forces kill five suspected militants, arrest a sixth in raids in Riyadh
(International News ~ 02/28/06)
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia -- Security officers fought an intense gunbattle with suspected al-Qaida militants Monday, killing five people sought in last week's brazen attempt to blow up a huge oil-processing complex with car bombs. A sixth suspect was arrested uninjured during a simultaneous pre-dawn raid in the same part of the capital, the Interior Ministry said in a statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency...
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World briefs 2/28/06
(International News ~ 02/28/06)
EU grants Palestinians $143 million urgent aid; IAEA: Iran determined to expand enrichment; After heist, revised audit shows $92 million missing
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Gold-medal heroes must return to their jobs
(Professional Sports ~ 02/28/06)
Mats Sundin partied in Sweden with the rest of his Olympic teammates at a gold-medal celebration in Stockholm on Monday. Today, Sundin has to go back to his real job as Toronto Maple Leafs captain. So do the rest of the NHL Olympians who played in Turin, Italy...
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Final Bird joins flock as Rincon arrives
(Professional Sports ~ 02/28/06)
JUPITER, Fla. -- Ricardo Rincon finally made it to the St. Louis Cardinals' spring training camp Monday, and immediately began throwing live batting practice. The 35-year-old left-handed reliever, signed to a two-year, $2.9 million free-agent contract in December, had been a no-show, fighting visa problems in his native Mexico. Rincon wasted little time in meeting with manager Tony La Russa to smooth any hard feelings...
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Agassi says he will skip French Open to prepare for Wimbledon
(Professional Sports ~ 02/28/06)
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- Andre Agassi will skip the entire ATP clay-court season, including the French Open, to improve his chances of playing at Wimbledon. Agassi, 35, said cortisone injections are helping him stay on the court after sustaining a lower back strain and a sprained left ankle in the last few months...
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Seniors lead the charge into postseason
(College Sports ~ 02/28/06)
At the heart of a successful season lies six seniors. By MARTY MISHOW Southeast Missourian While a few underclassmen have made solid contributions this season, there is no doubt Southeast Missouri State's heart and soul lies with its six seniors. Now, having already helped the Redhawks make history by tying for the program's first Ohio Valley Conference regular-season championship, those six -- four of them starters, the others key reserves -- plan to reserve their place in school lore one more time.. ...
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First-grade presidents and authors
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
Six-year-old Christina McGee wants a makeover for the White House. She thinks it needs a new paint job. "I would paint the White House hot pink," she wrote. If she were president for a day, she'd also be a pop star. "I'd also have enough money for 100 pets," she wrote...
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Redhawks open quest for OVC's spot in NCAA tournament
(College Sports ~ 02/28/06)
Southeast Missouri State defeated Murray State fairly handily twice this season. But Southeast coach B.J. Smith believes that won't count for much tonight when his team begins Ohio Valley Conference tournament play against the Racers in a 7 p.m. tipoff at the Show Me Center...
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Schools could get millions for students forced out by hurricanes
(State News ~ 02/28/06)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- Missouri schools could receive up to $6 million from the federal government to help cover their costs for educating students displaced by the Gulf Coast hurricanes last fall, state education officials said Monday. The state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education said schools -- public and private -- are to receive up to $6,000 per student they took on because of the hurricanes, under a federal bill meant to help with hurricane recovery efforts. ...
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Hall opens doors to first female, 16 others from a black heritage
(Professional Sports ~ 02/28/06)
TAMPA, Fla. -- Effa Manley became the first woman elected to the baseball Hall of Fame when the former Newark Eagles executive was among 17 people from the Negro Leagues and pre-Negro Leagues chosen Monday by a special committee. This year's Hall class -- 18, including former reliever Bruce Sutter -- is by far the biggest in history. The previous record was 11 in 1946...
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Koby Clemens takes Dad deep at Astros' minor league camp
(Professional Sports ~ 02/28/06)
KISSIMMEE, Fla. -- Roger Clemens' son took dad deep on the Rocket's first pitch of spring training, crushing a trademark fastball over the left-field fence Monday. "That was probably one of the harder fastballs I cut loose," Roger Clemens said after throwing to Koby and other Houston Astros minor-leaguers. "He got my attention."...
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O'Neil handles rejection with class
(Professional Sports ~ 02/28/06)
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Men and women dabbed at their eyes. People hugged quietly and ducked into little private spaces to speak in hushed tones. The news hit the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum like a bomb. What was supposed to be a grand celebration of the life of one of this town's most beloved citizens now had the feel of a funeral...
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From encyclopedia to best seller
(Local News ~ 02/28/06)
As a child, Robert Hicks was given volumes of Encyclopedia Britannica or Bartlett's Familiar Quotations to keep him company when he was sick. Those books, along with a few others, served the now best-selling author well. Hicks -- who wrote the book selected for Cape Girardeau's 2006 United We Read program -- will be at Central High School this week to share his insights with local students and others...
- Welcome to the Gulf Coast (Editorial Cartoon ~ 02/28/06)
Stories from Tuesday, February 28, 2006
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