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Harley-Davidson fans in HOG heaven at area rally
(Local News ~ 09/06/05)
The streets of Cape Girardeau will be invaded by Harleys Friday through Sunday when the Missouri Harley-Davidson Owners Group rides into town. More than 3,000 HOG members are expected to attend the 13th annual rally, which draws Harley riders from all over the country...
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Public schools required to observe Constitution Day
(Local News ~ 09/06/05)
A new federal law will add to teachers' lesson plans later this month in a move designed to better educate children about the U.S. Constitution. The law, enacted by Congress last year, requires public schools to observe Sept. 17 as Constitution Day. The date marks the signing of the U.S. Constitution in 1787...
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The bombing has begun
(Business ~ 09/06/05)
Don't tell a White Castle junkie that it's just another burger joint Suddenly, it's hip to be square. Last Tuesday, Cape Girardeau joined the offbeat world of White Castle, meaning the fast-food chain's almost cult-like following can now get their fix of those tiny two-and-a-half-inch-square, onion-topped belly bombers...
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New bankruptcy laws go into effect soon
(Local News ~ 09/06/05)
Come Oct. 17, taking the desperate financial plunge into bankruptcy will become even more frightening. That's when new rules take effect that are being called the biggest change in U.S. bankruptcy laws in nearly three decades. And the new laws, called the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention & Consumer Protection Act of 2005, are intended to make it more difficult for maxed-out borrowers to wipe away debt or even get debt relief...
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MDA telethon raises money for hurricane victims
(Entertainment ~ 09/06/05)
The Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon raised more than $3 million by late Sunday night in a unique edition of the annual event that benefits both the Muscular Dystrophy Association and victims of Hurricane Katrina. The telethon, which started at 6 p.m. Sunday, ended Monday afternoon...
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Connolly makes Jaguars' final cut
(College Sports ~ 09/06/05)
The former Southeast lineman survived the preseason after signing as a free agent. Dan Connolly always felt like he was snubbed regarding his football career, which simply pushed him to work that much harder. Connolly's persistence and determination have paid off with a job in the National Football League...
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Rice retires with 38 NFL records on his resume
(Professional Sports ~ 09/06/05)
DENVER -- The greatest receiver of all time realized he would be no better than the fourth receiver for the Denver Broncos. It was no way for Jerry Rice to end his career, so he called it quits after 20 sensational seasons. "I never thought I'd ever see this day," Rice said Monday during an emotional news conference at Broncos team headquarters...
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Bush, Clinton announce relief fund, visit Katrina's victims
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
The two ex-presidents raised $11 million for victims of last year's Asian tsunami. HOUSTON -- Former Presidents Bush and Clinton visited hundreds of hurricane victims in Houston's Astrodome and a nearby center Monday, sharing hugs, signing Bibles and listening to stories about the homes and lives that have been devastated...
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Communication woes hinder relief efforts by U.S. soldiers
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
GULFPORT, Miss. -- For some soldiers back from Iraq and now helping the Hurricane Katrina recovery effort, serving in the Middle East doesn't seem so bad after all. "We had it made in Iraq, absolutely had it made," said Col. Brad MacNealy of the Mississippi National Guard, who spent a year commanding the 185th Aviation Brigade's 134 helicopters there...
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Marquis throws complete game in win over Astros
(Professional Sports ~ 09/06/05)
HOUSTON -- Jason Marquis went more than a month without winning a game for the St. Louis Cardinals. He didn't trust his pitches and found himself on the mound waiting for the next bad thing to happen. The right-hander is feeling much better after consecutive complete-game victories...
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Software rock stars use computer tools to record tunes
(State News ~ 09/06/05)
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Tom Atwood, a 49-year-old documentary filmmaker, has been making music most of his life. He began writing songs on a guitar when he was just 17, then recording them on an old multitrack tape recorder in his closet. "No one would ever hear them," he says...
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Cardinals call up six from minors
(Professional Sports ~ 09/06/05)
ST. LOUIS -- The St. Louis Cardinals added six players to the roster for the final month of the season on Monday, including the son of pitching coach Dave Duncan. The Cardinals purchased the contract of first basesman Chris Duncan from Triple-A Memphis. They recalled outfielders Skip Schumaker and John Gall and pitchers Anthony Reyes, Randy Flores and Adam Wainwright...
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Debt nation
(Editorial ~ 09/06/05)
Survey after survey shows too many of the baby boomers approaching retirement age don't have the financial resources to stop working and maintain the lifestyles they have grown accustomed to. Not that it isn't possible. There are Americans who have put aside a portion of their earnings throughout their working lives. ...
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Agassi moves on in five sets
(Professional Sports ~ 09/06/05)
NEW YORK -- Andre Agassi was a 6-3, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 4-6, 6-2 winner on Monday over Xavier Malisse, making the 35-year-old American the oldest U.S. Open men's quarterfinalist since Jimmy Connors' legendary run at 39 to the semis in 1991. Age and balky back aside, Agassi suddenly is looking like a serious contender to go at least as far as Connors did that year. ...
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Slowdown in housing market could hurt vulnerable homeowners
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
WASHINGTON -- The nation's red-hot housing market may finally be nearing its peak, meaning the end of double-digit annual percentage price gains for homeowners and potential trouble for more recent purchasers who stretched to buy. That's the assessment of economists, who concede they have been forecasting a cooldown in housing for some time only to be confounded as sales and prices continued to boom...
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Business memo 09/06/05
(Business ~ 09/06/05)
Big River gets award from magazine Sage Software in Scottsdale, Ariz., recently announced that Big River Telephone Co. of Cape Girardeau won a 2005 Return on Investment award from Nucleus Research and CIO Decisions Magazine. Big River achieved a 1,139 percent return on investment, Nucleus Research determined, by using Sage's SalesLogix, which paid for itself in one month. ...
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People on the move 09/06/05
(Business ~ 09/06/05)
Cape doctor to lecture at conference in Austria Dr. Ed Masters is an invited lecturer at the 10th International Conference on Lyme Borreliosis and Other Tick-Borne Diseases, to be held in Vienna, Austria, Sept. 11 to 15. The international conference, held every three years, will be attended by hundreds of researchers from dozens of countries. ...
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Burger King, Wendy's reap financial benefit of small stores
(Business ~ 09/06/05)
The stores operate more efficiently and allow chains to stake their claim both in sparsely populated areas and urban areas. COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Fast food is slimming down. Two of the biggest burger chains -- Wendy's and Burger King -- are developing restaurants with smaller kitchens and seating areas that operate profitably in small towns, cost less to build and fit into cheaper parcels of land. ...
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The AIOs of teaching children to read
(Community ~ 09/06/05)
NEW YORK -- The ABCs of reading are more like the AIOs. When children are learning to read, it's best to teach them the easiest skills first, usually identifying the short sounds of vowels -- such as the A in cat, says Wendy Bronfin, vice president of product development for Hooked on Phonics...
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Savers seeing decent returns
(Business ~ 09/06/05)
Some experts say money market accounts may offer 5 percent interest by 2006 if the Federal Reserve stays on its current course. Unwelcome in some corners, higher interest rates have translated to good news for savers, who are seeing decent returns on cash held in money market mutual funds for the first time in several years...
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Out of the past 9/6/05
(Out of the Past ~ 09/06/05)
25 years ago: Sept. 6, 1980 U.S. Rep. Bill D. Burlison, in Cape Girardeau yesterday with his new campaign manager, Ronald B. Patterson, acknowledged that he is in a tough race with Republican Bill Emerson, who Burlison contends has the greater financial resources in the contest; Burlison said the current contest is his most difficult since 1970, when he defeated Cape Girardeau Republican Gary Rust by a slim margin...
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Births 9/6/05
(Births ~ 09/06/05)
Blaylock; King; Wren; Shoemaker; Hinman
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Lucy Medley
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
Lucy M. Medley, 94, of Jackson died Saturday, Sept. 3, 2005, at Jackson Manor Nursing Home. She was born Jan. 14, 1911, in Oak Ridge, daughter of Brown and Cora Ann Hartle Clippard. She was an assembly line worker at Florsheim Shoe Company in Cape Girardeau for over 46 years and married Paul B. Medley Jan. 19, 1930. He died Feb. 24, 1963...
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Josephine Fisher
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
Josephine C. Nenninger Fisher, 89, of Cape Girardeau died Sunday, Sept. 4, 2005, at Chateau Girardeau. She was born Nov. 11, 1915, in Glennon, Mo., daughter of the late William J. and Bertha Lenderink Nenninger. She volunteered with Meals on Wheels and was affiliated with St. Mary's Cathedral and the church's Quilting Ladies and Altar Society. She married Leonard F. Fisher. He died Dec. 12, 2002...
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Smith places fourth in 400 at DecaNation
(College Sports ~ 09/06/05)
Southeast Missouri State junior Miles Smith placed fourth in the 400-meters while running for the United States team at Saturday's DecaNation international track and field meet in Paris, France. Team USA placed third in the eight-nation meet. Smith, a member of Team USA's gold medal 1,600-meter relay team at the recent World Championships, timed 46.11 second to place fourth in France...
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Sports briefs 9/6/05
(Other Sports ~ 09/06/05)
Auto racing...
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Cuts are affecting Missouri families
(Letter to the Editor ~ 09/06/05)
To the editor: The latest reports from the Census Bureau show an increase of 9.1 percent of Missourians receiving food stamps in the last year. The number of people living in poverty is rising, while income levels are dropping. The economic recovery hasn't yet reached Missouri families...
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New arts group needed in Cape
(Letter to the Editor ~ 09/06/05)
To the editor: I am writing this because I feel I should have the right to respond, since my name was mentioned. I am a local filmmaker and the founder of the Cape Filmmakers Cooperative. I was, until recently, the chairman of our film group. I have been removed from an organization I created because I have been a vocal critic of the Arts Council of Southeast Missouri and a chief proponent of the formation of a new arts group, the Cape Artists Council...
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Speak Out 9/6/05
(Speak Out ~ 09/06/05)
Let's be tolerant; Feeling rich; Greed over decency; Plenty of warning; In love with hair; Lovely young lady; Wait for the check; Quick response; Use your brain; Too little too late; Monitoring gouging; Drain, not boon; Values lesson; Making the grade
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Loraine Aldrich
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
Loraine S. Aldrich, 81, of Cape Girardeau died Saturday, Sept. 3, 2005, at Southeast Missouri Hospital. She was born April 13, 1924, in Haverhill, Mass., the daughter of the late Ralph S. and Florence Hamel Osgood. She married Kenneth E. Aldrich Nov. ...
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Adelbert Louis
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
Adelbert Louis, 82, of Cape Girardeau died Monday, Sept. 5, 2005, at his residence. Funeral arrangements are pending with Ford and Sons Funeral Home.
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Tamara Green
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
CAIRO, Ill. -- Tamara L. "Tammy" Green, 36, of Cairo died Saturday, Sept. 3, 2005, at St. Louis University Hospital. She was employed by Galaxy Cable TV in Wickliffe, Ill., until she became disabled. Green attended Mighty Rivers Regional Worship Center in Cairo...
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Allie Taylor
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
Allie "Maisie" Taylor, 75, of Cape Girardeau, died Sunday, Sept. 4, 2005, at The Lutheran Home in Cape Girardeau. She was born Saturday, Jan. 18, 1930, in Robbsville, Ill., to the late William Esco and Peggy Virginia Smith Trammel. She and Emmet Taylor were married Aug. 18, 1972, in Benton, Mo. He died in November of 1993. Maisie worked at Ely Walker in Scott City for 20-plus years and at Thorngate in Cape for seven years as a seamstress...
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Modean Hahs
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
Modean Bollinger Hahs, 78, of Jackson died Sunday, Sept. 4, 2005, at Saint Francis Medical Center. She was born July 30, 1927, in Cape Girardeau County, daughter of William and Josephine Ates Welker. She married Lee Bollinger Aug. 24, 1946. He died April 3, 1983. In July of 1989, she married Wilson Hahs. He survives...
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John Livingston
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
CHAFFEE, Mo. -- John Marion Livingston, 71, of Chaffee died Saturday, Sept. 3, 2005, at Chaffee Nursing Center. He was born Sept. 22, 1933, in Swinton, Mo., son of Marion and Eldora Ellen Elledge Livingston. He and Evelyn Terrell were married in 1953. She died March 21, 1958. He and Christine Jenkins were married Jan. 29, 1960. She died Nov. 17, 1974...
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Ivis Waddle
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
Ivis L. Waddle, 80, of Delta died Sunday, Sept. 4, 2005, at the Missouri Veterans Home in Cape Girardeau. He was born July 6, 1925, in Delta, son of the late Jake Waddle and Mabel Sullinger. He retired as a heavy equipment operator with Local 513 in St. ...
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Thomas Herter
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
Thomas Eugene Herter Sr., 81, of Lafayette, La., formerly of Cape Girardeau, died on Friday, Sept. 2, 2005, at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Lafayette, La. He was born on Friday, Dec. 21, 1923, in Golden Eagle, Ill., son of the late Paul C. and Jessie Jane Sherman Herter...
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Maurice Grimes
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
MARBLE HILL, Mo. -- Maurice Raymond Grimes, 91, died Saturday, Sept. 3, 2005, at Southeast Missouri Hospital. Maurice was born Dec. 17, 1913, in North Bend, Neb., to Harry David and Hazel Fern Williams Grimes. He grew up in North Bend and Madison, Neb., and moved with the family to Kearney, Neb., in 1927, where his father was the depot agent for Union Pacific...
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Robert Glastetter
(Obituary ~ 09/06/05)
CHAFFEE, Mo. -- Robert Michael Glastetter, 51, of Chaffee, Mo., died Sunday, Sept. 4, 2005, at his home. He was born Sept. 2, 1954, near New Hamburg, Mo., son of the late Al and Beatrice Evylin Mock Glastetter. He was a retired welder and worker at Wheeler Truck Trailer Equipment Company in Morley, Mo. He was a member of VFW Post No. 3127...
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Bush chooses Roberts for chief justice
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
The President did not expect to name a replacement candidate for O'Connor this week. WASHINGTON -- Seven weeks after he was nominated to the Supreme Court, John Roberts returned to the White House on Monday for a big promotion -- to be chief justice of the United States and leader of an often-divided Supreme Court...
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New Orleans water recedes; death estimate rises to 10,000
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
Residents in some communities allowed to return home to salvage what's left. NEW ORLEANS -- A week after Hurricane Katrina, engineers plugged the levee break that swamped much of the city and floodwaters began to recede, but along with the good news came the mayor's direst prediction yet: As many as 10,000 dead...
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Cape Girardeau City Council agenda 9/6/05
(Local News ~ 09/06/05)
Presentations ** n Presentation by Mary Burton of the American Red Cross. * Presentation by assistant fire chief Mark Hasheider regarding 911 improvements. Public Hearings * A public hearing to consider an addition to the zoning ordinance. * A public hearing regarding the request of Sherman and Syvilla Swan and Frank and Rebecca Stinnett for a special-use permit for a day-care center at 1200 Ranney Ave...
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Florida police scramble to change questionable Miranda warnings
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- Gorman Roberts' manslaughter conviction was overturned because of a single word. Roberts, now 20, was convicted of pushing 5-year-old Jordan Payne in February 2002 into a Pompano Beach canal, where he drowned. But his conviction and three-year prison sentence were thrown out in May 2004 when an appeals court ruled the Miranda rights warning he got from Broward Sheriff's Office investigators was incomplete...
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Labor Day: Work for good jobs
(Letter to the Editor ~ 09/06/05)
To the editor: This Labor Day, where have all the good jobs gone? We need jobs with family-supporting wages, good benefits, respect for workers' rights and opportunities for workplace advancement. Our nation's middle class is built on jobs like these...
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Scientists: Observations show dramatic changes in Saturn's rings
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
LOS ANGELES -- New observations by the international Cassini spacecraft reveal that Saturn's trademark shimmering rings, which have dazzled astronomers since Galileo's time, have dramatically changed over just the past 25 years. Among the most surprising findings is that parts of Saturn's innermost ring -- the D ring -- have grown dimmer since the Voyager spacecraft flew by the planet in 1981, and a piece of the D ring has moved 125 miles inward toward Saturn...
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Museum curators seek personal, family photos of World War II era
(Community ~ 09/06/05)
When Michelle Delaney started to research World War II photography two years ago, she discovered a hole in the National Museum of American History's archives. There were hundreds of pictures by well-known photojournalists such as Life's Margaret Bourke-White and Robert Capa and thousands from official military cameramen, but fewer than 50 photographs taken by soldiers and their families...
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Study: Preschoolers at play mimic parents' smoking, drinking habits
(State News ~ 09/06/05)
CHICAGO -- Preschoolers pretending to shop for a Barbie doll's social evening were more likely to choose cigarettes if their parents smoked, and wine or beer if their parents drank, a study found. Researchers observing the children's play found that the ones who watched PG-13 or R-rated movies also were more likely to choose alcohol for Barbie...
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At home in the dome: Retired stadium offers scattered traces of normalcy
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
HOUSTON -- Some lessons learned by the new inhabitants of the Astrodome: * It is pointless to wait for the stark stadium lights to go out at lights out. (Or, for that matter, to expect one's neighbors to cease sobbing, giggling, gabbing or wailing during the wee hours.)...
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States struggle to process hundreds of thousands of Katrina's refugees
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
HOUSTON -- With a shattered New Orleans all but emptied out, an unprecedented refugee crisis unfolded across the country this weekend, as governors and emergency officials rushed to feed, clothe and shelter more than a half-million people dispossessed by Hurricane Katrina...
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Dutch suspect in Holloway case leaves Aruba as leader vows investigation 'will not cease'
(International News ~ 09/06/05)
ORANJESTAD, Aruba -- A Dutch suspect in the disappearance of an Alabama teenager left Aruba to attend college Monday, while the country's leader pledged the investigation "will not cease" despite the release of the three suspects. One of them, Joran van der Sloot, a Dutch youth who has acknowledged spending the evening with Natalee Holloway before her disappearance but denied any wrongdoing, left the island to attend college in Holland...
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Jackson City Council agenda 9/6/05
(Local News ~ 09/06/05)
7:30 p.m. today, city hall ** Public Hearings * A public hearing to consider the voluntary annexation petition submitted by Carolyn Little for 76.2 acres of property along Zschille Road (known as future Cold Creek Estates and Brookside Estates Subdivisions.)...
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Birthday bash set for Bigs and Littles
(Local News ~ 09/06/05)
Big Brothers Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri celebrates five years of service in area. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri will celebrate five years of service in Cape Girardeau County beginning with a guest appearance of the organization's float in the Southeast Missouri District Fair parade Monday. The float's theme, "Be A Role Model," will feature current Big Brother and Big Sister volunteers and their Little Brothers and Little Sisters participating in the parade...
- Boley completes Navy basic training (Local News ~ 09/06/05)
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U.S. Open Tennis results
(Professional Sports ~ 09/06/05)
U.S. Open Results At the USTA National Tennis Center, New York; Purse: $18.3 million (Grand Slam); Surface: Hard-Outdoor Monday Men Fourth Round Guillermo Coria (8), Argentina, def. Nicolas Massu, Chile, 6-4, 2-6, 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-2. Andre Agassi (7), United States, def. Xavier Malisse, Belgium, 6-3, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 4-6, 6-2...
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OVC Football standings 9/6/05
(College Sports ~ 09/06/05)
OVC Standings Conference Overall Team W-L Pct. W-L Pct. Eastern Ill. 0-0 .000 1-0 1.000 Samford 0-0 .000 1-0 1.000 Tenn.-Martin 0-0 .000 1-0 1.000 SE MISSOURI 0-0 .000 0-1 .000 Eastern Ky. 0-0 .000 0-1 .000 Jacksonville St. 0-0 .000 0-1 .000...
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Cape/Jackson fire reports 9/6/05
(Police/Fire Report ~ 09/06/05)
Cape Girardeau Firefighters responded to the following call Saturday: * At 10:19 p.m., a smoke investigation at the intersection of Lexington Avenue and Kingshighway. Firefighters responded to the following calls Sunday: * At 1:11 a.m., an emergency medical service at the 93 mile marker of Interstate 55...
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Cape police report 9/6/05
(Police/Fire Report ~ 09/06/05)
Cape Girardeau...
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Camps help victims who own only what they carry in bags
(Local News ~ 09/06/05)
Go home. Try to fit your most valuable possessions in a trash bag and leave everything else behind for good. That's what David Hitt suggested when asked about his experience helping unload hurricane victims Sunday night in Kennett, Mo. "That's all they had, just whatever they could lug in a trash bag and some didn't even have that," said Hitt, Cape Girardeau County emergency management coordinator. "I've seen a lot in life, was in Vietnam. But I've never seen anything like that."...
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Seven injured in weekend crashes
(Local News ~ 09/06/05)
The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported seven people injured in three different vehicle crashes Saturday and Sunday in Cape Girardeau and Scott counties. Diane Prater of Jackson was taken by ambulance to Saint Francis Medical Center with moderate injuries Saturday night after her 2003 Chevrolet Tahoe struck the rear of a 1982 Ford F150 truck that was being towed by a 1985 Peterbilt truck...
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Poplar Bluff wins ND Softballfest
(High School Sports ~ 09/06/05)
The Notre Dame softball team suffered its first loss of the season late Saturday evening in the championship game of its own Softballfest, falling 2-1 to Poplar Bluff. The Bulldogs took a perfect 7-0 record into the championship game, including a 3-0 mark in pool play. Beth Schnurbush had capped the Bulldogs perfect run through pool play earlier on Saturday by throwing a no-hitter against Park Hills. Notre Dame had beaten the Rebels 12-0 in five innings to reach the final...
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Jackson, Central have tough time in tourney
(High School Sports ~ 09/06/05)
It was a long weekend for the Jackson and Central softball teams in the 12th annual Cor Jesu Charger Invitational in St. Louis County. The two teams combined for just one victory in eight games. Jackson finished sixth out of the eight teams, while Central was the only team without a victory...
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Browne ends win drought on PGA Tour
(Professional Sports ~ 09/06/05)
Despite failing to keep his PGA Tour card the last two years, Olin Browne never doubted he could still compete with the best players. Now he has a victory to show for it, closing with a 4-under 67 on Monday to win the Deutsche Bank Classic in Norton, Mass...
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Picture for the Chase gets clearer with the help of the Sony HD 500
(Professional Sports ~ 09/06/05)
FONTANA, Calif. -- Matt Kenseth and Jamie McMurray are in. Ryan Newman, Jeff Gordon and Elliott Sadler are out -- for the moment. The Nextel Cup race in Richmond, Va., on Saturday night is all that remains before the start of the 10-race Chase for the championship, and the last two positions in the 10-man title battle remain up for grabs among those five drivers...
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'Hawks recover from first loss
(College Sports ~ 09/06/05)
Southeast posted a 3-0 victory over SIU-Edwardsville. After Southeast Missouri State played an emotional game Friday against St. Louis University -- and suffered its first loss of the season -- coach Heather Nelson was anxious to see how her team would respond...
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Texas Roadhouse to open next week
(Column ~ 09/06/05)
Last Tuesday, Brian Judd got into town from Jefferson, Ind., to make some last-minute preparations. He's checking on the new building. Following up with the contractor. Getting the new employees trained and the decorations up. "Really just making sure everything is buttoned down," Judd said...
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Out of the dog house: Maligned hot dog preservative being turned into potential therapy
(National News ~ 09/06/05)
WASHINGTON -- Could the salt that preserves hot dogs also preserve your health? Scientists at the National Institutes of Health think so. They've begun infusing sodium nitrite into volunteers in hopes that it could prove a cheap but potent treatment for sickle cell anemia, heart attacks, brain aneurysms, even an illness that suffocates babies...
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Pujols launches Cards past Cubs
(Professional Sports ~ 09/06/05)
The St. Louis first baseman broke a 2-2 tie with a three-run home run in the eighth inning. ST. LOUIS -- Injuries to four regulars have eroded Albert Pujols' protection in the batting order for much of the season and forced the Cardinals' star to perhaps chase more pitches than usual...
Stories from Tuesday, September 6, 2005
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