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Central football team faces toughest test of season
(High School Sports ~ 10/21/10)
Cape Central and Sikeston enter tonight's district football contest with identical 8-0 records.
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Gifted programs dealing with budget cuts
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
Emma McDougal loves school, loves to learn. The bright Cape Girardeau second-grader is a big reader and fond of working math problems in her spare time at home. She's enrolled in the Cape Girardeau School District's gifted student program, which, for elementary students, meets a half-day each week at Blanchard Elementary School...
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Isle of Capri casino proposal among three pitched to Missouri Gaming Commission
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- A $125 million casino in downtown Cape Girardeau would be a "game changer" for the community as well as generate more new state revenue than any of the other competitors for Missouri's 13th gaming license.
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Witch tree
(Submitted Photo ~ 10/21/10)
We saw a face in this tree and decided it looked like a witch!! Just in time for Halloween!!
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Fall reflections
(Submitted Photo ~ 10/21/10)
I shot this serene scene at Pink Rocks during our recent hike.
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HalloweenFest at First Baptist Church
(Submitted Story ~ 10/21/10)
First Baptist Church of Cape Girardeau, 1289 Lexington Ave., is again hosting it's October 31st HALLOWEENFEST in the church Activities Center from 5-7 on Halloween night. The event features a "walk-through" candy giveaway, games, and hotdogs/chili/soup. The community is invited...
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Appeals court conducts business in Scott County Courthouse
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
BENTON, Mo. -- History was in the making Tuesday in Scott County. All seven judges of the Missouri Court of Appeals, Southern District, were in session at the Scott County Courthouse to hear oral arguments for an appeal on a workers compensation case...
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Girardot Chapter Selects Executive of the Year
(Submitted Story ~ 10/21/10)
The Girardot Chapter of the International Association of Administrative Professionals held their annual Executive Night dinner on Tuesday, October 19. Members invited their executives to join them for dinner and entertainment and announcement of the Executive of the Year award...
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Chaffee farmer gets governor's award for corn production
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
CHAFFEE, Mo. -- Chaffee farmer Jerry Cox knows that generating high-yielding crops is a combination of old-fashioned hard work and embracing the latest technologies. He was presented Wednesday with the Governor's Award for Agricultural Achievement in corn production by Gov. Jay Nixon...
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Cardinal In The Dogwood
(Submitted Photo ~ 10/21/10)
Cardinal posing in a Dogwood tree.
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Quilt Guild Makes Pillowcases to ConKerr Cancer
(Submitted Story ~ 10/21/10)
The Golden Needle/Sewing Basket allowed the local River Heritage Quilt Guild to use their class space to make pillowcases for Children's Hospital as part of the ConKerr Cancer national pillowcase effort. Pillowcases were made by Darla Snider, Vickie Howard, Cheral Benthal, Joan Meyer, Kim Stueve, Joyce Holloway, and Linda Tansil...
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Harvest Moon
(Submitted Photo ~ 10/21/10)
Beautiful fall evening with the brilliant harvest moon illuminating the nighttime sky.
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Harvest Moon
(Submitted Photo ~ 10/21/10)
Cool and Crisp clear October evening allows a gorgeous view of the Harvest Moon rising as the sun still shines and casts a glow on the distant hillside.
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Actors in Jackson High School production of 'Our Town' say play's message has taught them life lessons
(Community ~ 10/21/10)
Taylor Poore is an active teen. She's Jackson High School's student body president, vice president of National Honor Society and is immersed in theater and debate. "I pretty much do everything around here because I love high school," Poore said. "I'm going to miss it so much."...
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870 come out for 'Fiddler on the Roof'
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
Wednesday's performance of "Fiddler on the Roof" at the Southeast Missouri State University River Campus drew a sold-out audience of 870 people. The current tour of "Fiddler on the Roof" is produced by Troika Entertainment. Large touring productions require a lot of behind-the-scenes coordination and work to bring the show to the stage, according to River Campus technical director Jeff Lovett. ...
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Tracy, Wissman hope to fill spot being vacated by longtime Cape Girardeau County presiding commissioner
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
On Nov. 2 Cape Girardeau County voters will elect a new presiding commissioner for the first time since the 1990s. Republican Clint Tracy and Democrat Pat Wissman are the two candidates vying for the position being vacated by Gerald Jones' retirement at the end of the year.
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Central senior finds home at wide receiver
(High School Sports ~ 10/21/10)
Central football coach Rich Payne remembers watching Christian Cavaness and Andrew Williams embrace on the sideline after Cavaness tossed a touchdown pass to Williams during last year's Seckman game. So much for a quarterback controversy. Williams settled into a new position while Cavaness gained valuable experience under center late last season. Both players credit some of this year's offensive success to the change made during last year's winless campaign...
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neXt up 10/22/10
(Community ~ 10/21/10)
What's happening this weekend
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Be true to your school spirit
(Column ~ 10/21/10)
A friend once told me that the amount of school spirit I had made up for the lack of it in the rest of our group. I suppose this is true. After all, I wear the red-and-black Jackson colors every Friday when there's a home game. I attend all the home football games. I go to the parades as often as I can. I try to go band and choir concerts. I'm in several clubs, and I cheer as loud as I can for my school at all of these events...
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Jackson junior gets in touch with sad side for 'Our Town' role
(Community ~ 10/21/10)
The 22-member cast of Jackson High School's production of "Our Town" is ready to bring the people of Grover's Corner, N.H., to life. The play takes the stage Friday and Saturday evening at the Jackson High School Auditorium. In this neXt Web extra, Caleb Newcomer, a 17-year-old junior who plays the part of small-town boy George Gibbs, talked about how he prepares for the loss of his stage wife, Emily Webb Gibbs, in "Our Town's" powerful third act. ...
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Fort Hood gunman had nearly 200 rounds of ammunition
(National News ~ 10/21/10)
FORT HOOD, Texas -- An Army psychiatrist who went on a shooting rampage at Fort Hood still had nearly 200 rounds of ammunition and a second gun in his pockets when he was shot by police, a military court heard Wednesday. The gunman had already fired nearly 150 rounds inside a crowded medical building Nov. ...
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After upset in Alaska primary, missteps cost tea party candidate
(National News ~ 10/21/10)
JUNEAU, Alaska -- Since his defeat of Sen. Lisa Murkowski in the Republican primary, tea party favorite Joe Miller has suffered a series of potentially crippling missteps that have helped turn the Alaska Senate campaign into a highly competitive race...
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Calif.'s Crystal Cathedral teeters on financial edge
(National News ~ 10/21/10)
GARDEN GROVE, Calif. -- Capitalizing on the emerging car culture of Southern California in the 1950s, the Rev. Robert H. Schuller started a drive-in church and built it into an international televangelist empire, symbolized by the soaring glass Crystal Cathedral and its weekly "Hour of Power" show...
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H&R Block lawsuit may signal sunset of advances on tax refunds
(National News ~ 10/21/10)
NEW YORK -- H&R Block Inc.'s allegations that HSBC Bank USA is trying to back out of funding its tax refund loan program signals both a potential blow to the nation's largest tax preparer and an indication that the controversial loans may be disappearing...
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U.K. stakes its future on plan to restore finances
(International News ~ 10/21/10)
LONDON -- Fighting record debt, the British government on Wednesday outlined the largest cuts to public spending since World War II -- slashing benefits and thousands of public sector jobs with an austerity plan aimed at restoring the nation's finances...
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Karachi death toll rises to 52 in four days of violence
(International News ~ 10/21/10)
KARACHI, Pakistan -- The death toll from four days of violence sparked by a contentious local election in Pakistan's largest city rose to 52 on Wednesday when at least one person was shot and killed despite efforts to restore order. Security forces patrolled the southern city of Karachi to prevent fresh violence and in many neighborhoods, businesses shut down while public transportation was scarce...
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Blast in Gaza Hamas compound injures more than a dozen people
(International News ~ 10/21/10)
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip -- A huge blast Wednesday at a Hamas military base in southern Gaza lightly injured more than a dozen people, including children, Hamas officials said. It appeared the explosion was accidental. Hamas did not say what caused the blast in a crowded neighborhood in the town of Rafah and the Israeli military said it wasn't involved. Israeli warplanes often target Hamas weapons facilities, but Israel usually confirms those attacks...
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Afghanistan annuls nearly a quarter of Sept. ballots
(International News ~ 10/21/10)
KABUL, Afghanistan -- Afghanistan has thrown out nearly a quarter of ballots cast in last month's parliamentary elections because of fraud, according to full preliminary results released Wednesday. The findings, which confirmed earlier reports, indicated that cheating was pervasive in the Sept. 18 vote that many hoped would show the Afghan government's commitment to reforming its corrupt bureaucracy...
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French rioters rampage as protesters block airports
(International News ~ 10/21/10)
PARIS -- Workers opposed to a higher retirement age blocked roads to airports around France on Wednesday, leaving passengers in Paris dragging suitcases on foot along an emergency breakdown lane. Outside the capital, hooded youths smashed store windows amid clouds of tear gas...
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Bid for execution delayed until at least next year
(State News ~ 10/21/10)
ST. LOUIS -- Missouri's bid to execute a man condemned in the 1989 stabbing death of a Kansas City girl stalled Wednesday at least into next year to accommodate appeals before the state Supreme Court. Prosecutors sought to put Roderick Nunley to death as early as 12:01 a.m. Wednesday but could not get a federal appeals court or the U.S. Supreme Court to lift a stay issued Monday on Nunley's behalf by a federal judge in Kansas City...
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Astronomers say they've found oldest galaxy ever discovered
(National News ~ 10/21/10)
WASHINGTON -- Astronomers believe they've found the oldest thing they've ever seen in the universe: It's a galaxy far, far away from a time long, long ago. Hidden in a Hubble Space Telescope photo released earlier this year is a small smudge of light that European astronomers now calculate is a galaxy from 13.1 billion years ago. That's a time when the universe was young, just shy of 600 million years old. That would make it the earliest and most distant galaxy seen so far...
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Football weekend
(Editorial ~ 10/21/10)
Football in Southeast Missouri has been exciting this year. The Southeast Missouri State football team's win against Austin Peay Saturday night propelled the Redhawks to No. 13 in two national polls released this week. The Redhawks look to continue their winning streak into Saturday's 1 p.m. home game against Eastern Kentucky...
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Article appreciated
(Letter to the Editor ~ 10/21/10)
I appreciate the nice article in the Southeast Missourian by Melissa Miller in Monday's Talking Shop section. Photographer Fred Lynch certainly has not lost his touch by making me look younger in the picture. I believe it is now time for Gary Rust to update his college picture that he regularly uses in his weekly column...
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Gambling: The cost is too great
(Letter to the Editor ~ 10/21/10)
Gambling has been repackaged, sanitized, glorified, down-marketed and ubiquitous. People gamble for reasons that are mostly obscure and which resist all rationality. Robert Goodman, author of "The Luck Business," and John Kindt of the University of Illinois have done research that suggests that the costs of gambling are greater than the benefits. ...
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Cape vs. St. Charles
(Letter to the Editor ~ 10/21/10)
Has anyone else noticed that most of the opponents to the proposed casino already have decent jobs or are retired? To me, these people have a very narrow view concerning the welfare of others that are not as fortunate. Have they considered going up to St. ...
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Billy McGuire Jr.
(Obituary ~ 10/21/10)
Billy F. McGuire Jr., 62, of Jackson passed away Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2010. He was born May 31, 1948, in Cape Girardeau, son of Billy Fred and Eleanor Seabaugh McGuire. He was preceded in death by his parents. A graveside memorial service will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Russell Heights Cemetery in Jackson...
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Speak Out 10/21/10
(Speak Out ~ 10/21/10)
PRESIDENT Obama would have done more if he had a filibusterproof Congress. However, he does not. Therefore, he had to scale back some of his ideas and focus on the stimulus, health care, Wall Street reform and consumer protection. Other things he had to forget...
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Quit teaching to the tests
(Letter to the Editor ~ 10/21/10)
I've read several letters to the editor and Speak Out comments from teachers indicating that the amount of time necessary to teach the MAP tests is taking time away from teaching the coursework. About five years ago, a former Cape Girardeau school superintendent issued a challenge to the community for some adults to take an abbreviated version of the math, science and English sections of the MAP test. ...
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Cindy Poole
(Obituary ~ 10/21/10)
Cindy M. Poole, 52, of Jackson, beloved mother of Rachal Learue and Joey Poole, passed away Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2010, in Wayne County, Mo., as a result of a fatal vehicle accident. She was born Oct. 1, 1958, in Cape Girardeau, to Herman John and Neva M. Fredrick Vetter...
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Ida Thompson
(Obituary ~ 10/21/10)
FREDERICKTOWN, Mo. -- Ida Agnes Thompson, 83, of Fredericktown passed away Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2010, at Stockhoff Nursing Home in Fredericktown. She was born Jan. 31, 1927, at Bessville, Mo., daughter of Loyd Daniel and Martha Ann Cureton Masters. She and William Edward Thompson were married Aug. 1, 1968. He passed away Feb. 8, 2008...
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Vernetta Hitt
(Obituary ~ 10/21/10)
Vernetta Maxine "Babe" Hitt, 84, of Scott City died Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2010, at the Lutheran Home in Cape Girardeau. She was born Nov. 15, 1925, in Yates, Ill., to Noble and Maude Boucherie Vaughan. She married Roby William Hitt Jan. 26, 1947, in Pattonville, Mo. He preceded her in death Nov. 13, 2005...
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Clara Bray
(Obituary ~ 10/21/10)
Clara Mae Edmonds Bray, 97, of Kansas City, Mo., formerly of Scott City, died Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2010, at Timberlake Care Center in Kansas City. A graveside service will be held at 4 p.m. Saturday at Cape County Memorial Park, with the family officiating...
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Velma Dobbs
(Obituary ~ 10/21/10)
CHAFFEE, Mo. — Velma Edith Dobbs, 90, of Chaffee died Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2010, at the home of a daughter in Memphis, Tenn. Arrangements are incomplete at Amick-Burnett Funeral Chapel in Chaffee.
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Out of the past 10/21/10
(Out of the Past ~ 10/21/10)
Stressing a theme of "leadership, commitment and cooperation," Cape Girardeau City Council member Loretta Schneider makes her mayoral candidacy official, announcing at a news conference that she will seek to become the city's first female mayor. A permanent exhibit room at the River Heritage Museum will be unveiled at a formal opening Thursday at the museum in old Fire Station One; the room, recently refurbished with new carpeting and display cases, will feature Cape Girardeau area memorabilia...
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Births 10/21/10
(Births ~ 10/21/10)
Daughter to Jacob and Alisha Balzer of Fayetteville, N.C., 5:17 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 10, 2010. Name, Jaelynn James. Weight, 6 pounds, 8 ounces. First child. Mrs. Balzer is the former Alisha Kluesner, formerly of Cape Girardeau. Balzer is stationed with the U.S. Army at Fort Bragg, N.C...
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Some people
(Column ~ 10/21/10)
Oct. 21, 2010 Dear Patty, I was living in California and elsewhere when the notorious SPANK parties were held here from the late '70s through the '80s. On visits home, those who had attended one spoke of debauchery and live music and party games remembered as if in a dream...
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Sowers the best choice
(Paid Letter ~ 10/21/10)
After attending the first October debate, I'm convinced that Tommy Sowers is the best choice for Congressional District 8 voters on Nov. 2. His Green Beret service and experience, in my opinion, make his character, integrity, honesty and honor unquestionable. ...
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Following the money
(Paid Letter ~ 10/21/10)
In Tuesday's paper Jo Ann Emerson and her campaign asked us to "follow the money." We did that, and here's what we found (www.opensecrets.org):Emerson has taken $628,179 from Wall Street and financial special interest PACs. She rewarded these same banks with a $700,000,000,000 bailout and then voted against regulating them to prevent another crisis. How's that for a return on their investment?...
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Larry Bill is the leader we need
(Paid Letter ~ 10/21/10)
I hope everyone had a chance to hear at least one of the debates among the four candidates for U.S. representative for the 8th District. Larry Bill was very knowledgeable and showed great respect for our Constitution and the people of this district. While Jo Ann and Tommy argue over what makes a good leader, Larry exudes leadership just by his nature and his integrity...
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Sowers is not a rubber stamp
(Paid Letter ~ 10/21/10)
Tommy Sowers served our country as a Green Beret in Iraq. On multiple deployments in Iraq and Kosovo, he put his life on the line to keep us safe. Now Tommy is home, running for Congress. After hearing him speak, I met with him personally, and I learned this: Tommy Sowers is nobody's rubber stamp. ...
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Debate reaction
(Paid Letter ~ 10/21/10)
I would like to thank my fellow candidates for Congress for joining me at the four debates that took place across the 8th District last week. Thanks also to Southeast Missouri State University, Three Rivers Community College, Missouri S&T, and Mineral Area College for hosting these forums. The debates provided voters the opportunity to see firsthand the very real differences between the candidates, and I appreciate my opponents accepting my invitation for these discussions...
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Vote for the district
(Paid Letter ~ 10/21/10)
Roy Blunt divorced his wife of 30 years to marry Ms. Perlmann because he lusted after money and younger women. His wife couldn't trust him, the GOP can't trust him, so how can voters trust him? When Roy received Jack Abramoff's wedding gift, he wouldn't reveal what it was. ...
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Ready to serve
(Paid Letter ~ 10/21/10)
As we candidates went through the debate process, I concluded this about our American society: we Americans are willing to acknowledge our difficulties and shortcomings. We recognize our earlier mistakes and truthfully describe the magnitude of our problems. We brainstorm ideas and allow the expression of several different solutions unafraid that our suggestions will endanger us...
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Prayer 10/21/10
(Prayer ~ 10/21/10)
Thank you, O Lord, that you give us the desires of our hearts. Amen.
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Court keeps military's policy on gays for now
(National News ~ 10/21/10)
SAN FRANCISCO -- A federal appeals court Wednesday temporarily granted the U.S. government's request for a freeze on a judge's order requiring the military to allow openly gay troops. A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals instructed lawyers for the gay rights group that brought the lawsuit challenging the "don't ask, don't tell" policy to file arguments in response by Monday...
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Bridge in Stoddard County to close for repairs
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
Work to replace the Route PP bridge over Goose Pond Ditch in Stoddard County is expected to begin Nov. 1, weather permitting. The roadway will remain closed from Highway 51 to Route M as construction continues. Completion is anticipated by late December. Signs and warning devices will be in place. Motorists are urged to use caution while traveling near the area. For more information, contact the Missouri Department of Transportation at 888-275-6636...
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Market rebounds as dollar falls; Dow up 129
(National News ~ 10/21/10)
NEW YORK -- A decline in the dollar helped fuel a market rebound Wednesday that nearly erased a big-sell off the day before brought on by fears of a slowdown in China. Stocks had fallen more than 1 percent Tuesday after a surprise interest rate increase in China, the first time the country had raised rates in nearly three years. That made some traders concerned that slower growth in China might put a drag on the global economy...
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Cairo bridge to be reduced to one lane Thursday
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet plans to restrict traffic to one lane on the U.S. 51 Ohio River bridge at Cairo, Ill., today. The lane restriction is expected to be in place from approximately 8 a.m. to noon. The lane restriction is to allow an annual walk-through inspection of the deck and pier caps. ...
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Farmers market in Jackson to be open Saturday through Dec. 18
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
The Jackson farmers market, which takes place every Tuesday afternoon during the summer, is now operating from 9 a.m. to noon every Saturday until Dec. 18 at the First Presbyterian Church in Jackson.
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who's neXt 10/21/10
(Community ~ 10/21/10)
Honors, achievements -- From staff reports ...
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Hooked on Science: Spooky fog
(Community ~ 10/21/10)
Did you know you can use science to create the spookiest Halloween ever at your house? STEP 2: Put the gloves on and place a piece of the dry ice into the water and observe. When you placed the dry ice into the warm water a cloud formed above the bowl. ...
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Cape Girardeau fire report 10/21/10
(Police/Fire Report ~ 10/21/10)
Firefighters responded to the following calls Tuesday:...
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Cape trolley tracks uncovered
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
BOB MILLER ~ bmiller@semissourian.com Workers from Dutch Enterprises uncovered old trolley tracks Wednesday while working on a private sewer project on Broadway Street. ...
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Cape Girardeau police report 10/21/10
(Police/Fire Report ~ 10/21/10)
The Cape Girardeau Police Department released the following items. Arrests do not imply guilt. Arrests...
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Jackson police/fire report 10/21/10
(Police/Fire Report ~ 10/21/10)
The Jackson Police Department released the following items. Arrests do not imply guilt. DWI...
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Court of appeals holding Cape session Oct. 28
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
The Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District will hear arguments in eight cases, including two from the Cape Girardeau County Circuit Court, when it's in session Oct. 28 at the Southeast Missouri State University Glenn Auditorium. The hearings at 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. are open to the public and Southeast students and staff. They'll have the chance to hear arguments in criminal, juvenile, civil and divorce cases...
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Madison emerges as force on Tigers' line
(College Sports ~ 10/21/10)
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Aldon Smith's bad break was Brad Madison's big break. Madison had three sacks last week, keeping the pass rush humming for No. 18 Missouri. Smith, who is recovering from a fracture of the fibula, set a school record with 11.5 sacks as a freshman and is expected back for a matchup of unbeatens Saturday night when the Tigers (6-0, 2-0) take on No. ...
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Southeast women's basketball team eager to cash in on last season
(College Sports ~ 10/21/10)
The Redhawks return a lot of experience this year
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Bell City grad hopeful about playing for Redhawks men's basketball team this year
(College Sports ~ 10/21/10)
Southeast Missouri State junior shooting guard Nick Niemczyk is as surprised as anybody by his remarkable recovery. Niemczyk, a former Bell City High School standout who played at Three Rivers Community College, had surgery to repair a torn ACL in mid-April...
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High school roundup: Jackson shuts out Notre Dame 2-0 in boys soccer
(High School Sports ~ 10/21/10)
All the scores from Wednesday that were reported to the Southeast Missourian.
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Nutt to lean on House, Brister to make impact with Redhawks men's basketball team
(College Sports ~ 10/21/10)
Southeast Missouri State second-year men's basketball coach Dickey Nutt felt the Redhawks' two biggest needs for this season were a point guard and an inside presence. Nutt believes he solved those by signing 7-foot, 255-pound center Zach House and 6-4, 215-pound point guard Marcus Brister...
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Rams receiver Alexander achieves goal of playing in the NFL
(Professional Sports ~ 10/21/10)
ST. LOUIS -- A backflip in the trainer's room was conclusive evidence to the St. Louis Rams that Danario Alexander was ready to play. His NFL debut should have them doing cartwheels. The former Missouri star was considered a long-term project while rehabbing from a fourth knee operation until last week, when Mark Clayton was placed on injured reserve. ...
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Highway 91 in Stoddard County reduced for pavement repairs
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
Highway 91 between county roads 383 and 357 in Stoddard County will be reduced to one lane Friday while Missouri Department of Transportation crews patch the roadway. Weather permitting, the work will be done from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. The work zone will be marked with signs. Motorists are urged to use caution while traveling near the area. For more information, contact MoDOT's Customer Service Center at 888-275-6636...
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Route C in Stoddard County reduced for pavement repairs
(Local News ~ 10/21/10)
Route C between County Road 211 and Highway 91 in Stoddard County will be reduced to one lane Friday while Missouri Department of Transportation crews patch the roadway. Weather permitting, the work will take place from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. The work zone will be marked with signs. Motorists are urged to use caution while traveling near the area. For more information, contact MoDOT's Customer Service Center at 888-275-6636...
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Federal Reserve survey points to uneven growth across U.S.
(National News ~ 10/21/10)
WASHINGTON -- The U.S. economy grew unevenly in early fall, with more than half the regions of the country expanding modestly while others are struggling to grow. A survey by the Federal Reserve released Wednesday found that seven of the Fed's 12 regions reported moderate improvements in business activity. ...
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