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The Orlando Sentinel from Orlando, Florida • A1

Location:
Orlando, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
A1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Orlando Sentinel: PRODUCT: OS DESK: ASEC DATE: 02-01-2006 EDITION: FLA ZONE: FLA PAGE: A1.0 DEADLINE: 22.57 OP: carmstrong COMPOSETIME: 23.41 CMYK Orlando Sentinel WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2006 CENTRAL FLORIDA EDITION ORLANDOSENTINEL.COM FOUNDED 1876 OSCAR NOMINATIONS, A2 STATE OF THE UNION 'Before history is written down in books, it is written in courage. Like MEdir' mer 'xcam before us, we will show that courage, and we will finish welV Jennifer Kesse (left) of Orlando has been missing for 9 days. In 2005, 641 adults in unincorporated Orange County disappeared for at least 24 hours. Statewide, there were 4,952 missing-persons cases as of Tuesday. Nationwide, there were 1 7,200 cases of missing adults.

SOURCES: Florida Department of Law Enforcement; National Crime Information Center A chilly start today. Forecast, B26 ccO CLEAR 8 P.M. 62 8 A.M. 44 NOON 69 4 P.M. 71 'America is addicted to oil Bush warns Gov.

Bush proposes slashing taxes The $1.5 billion cut drew surprising support from some Democrats and would put $1 55 in the pockets of average homeowners. B1 Where are they? Attention varies for the missing By HENRY PIERSON CURTIS and JEANNETTE RIVERA-LYLES SENTINEL STAFF WRITERS yyyyi i i jH 9 Bv tit Federal Reserve raises interest rates In Chairman Alan Greenspan's last day on the job, it was a signal that the rate-tightening cycle is nearing an end. D1 More downtown condos on the rise? The $500 million Orlando City Place would top any residential development in downtown's history, a city architect says. D1 There were no search parties on horseback or TV coverage when Michael Green disappeared last June. No forensic tests were done when his car turned up in Titusville, miles from his east Orange County home.

Green, 27, is one of more than 800 adults who disappeared in Orange County in 2005, and the majority aren't the mystery that the Jennifer Kesse case is. Whether it is a history of depression, as Green had, or alcohol or drug abuse, or just anger at other family members, police say they can usually guess why most adults are missing. "I have resigned myself to the fact that they're only going to call if they find his body," said Eileen Null, Green's mother. The pain is just as real for those left behind, but for police and the media cases such as Green's don't get as much attention as the disappearance of someone such as Kesse, who vanished from her Orlando home a week ago without warning. PLEASE SEE MISSING, A10 PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAISAGENCE FRANCE-PRESSEGETTY IMAGES Heart tests may be unclear for women Researchers say an angiogram can't show all signs of heart disease the No.

1 killer of women. A3 Shooter kills 5 at postal facility A former employee went on a rampage, then killed herself, authorities say. A3 Vice President Dick Cheney (left) and House Speaker Dennis Hasten applaud Tuesday as President Bush delivers his annual State of the Union speech. The president called for increased federal research into alternative fuels. Break dependence on Mideast, president says U.N.

agency: Iran has nuke drawings By GEORGE JAHN and ALI AKBAR DAREINI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cook it yourself, with a little help No time to think about dinner? No problem. Companies in Central Florida will do it for you. E3 By TERENCE HUNT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON A politically weakened President Bush declared Tuesday night that America must break its long dependence on Middle East oil and rebuked critics of his stay-the-course strategy for the unpopular war in Iraq. "America is addicted to oil, which is often imported from unstable parts of the world," Bush said as he sought to drive the election-year agenda in his annual State of the Union address. Rejecting calls for the withdrawal of troops from Iraq, Bush said, "There is no peace in retreat." He also slapped at those who complain he took the country to war on the erroneous grounds that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.

"Hindsight alone is not wisdom," Bush said. "And second-guessing is not a strategy." In an unscripted moment, anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan, the mother of a fallen soldier in Iraq, was taken into custody by police in the House gallery just before Bush spoke to a joint session of Congress. She was es- PLEASESEE UNION, A8 VIENNA, Austria The U.N. nuclear-watchdog agency said Tuesday that Iran obtained documents and drawings on the black market that serve no other purpose than to make an atomic warhead. Tehran warned of an "end of diplomacy" if plans to refer it to the U.N.

Security Council are carried out. The report by the agency, ahead of a meeting of its 35-member board Thursday, also confirmed information recently provided by diplomats familiar with the Iran probe that Tehran has not started small-scale uranium enrichment since announcing earlier in January that it would. Nevertheless, the findings added to the pressure to refer Tehran to the Security Council within days. Such a move, Iran said, would lead to a halt in surprise U.N. inspections beginning Saturday and prompt it to resume frozen nuclear activities.

PLEASE SEE IRAN, A9 EVAN VUCCITHE ASSOCIATED PRESS National Signing Day for recruits Boone High's Gerald Poke committed to FAMU on the eve of today's football frenzy. Follow the action at OrlandoSentinel.com recruiting. Justices attend Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas (from left), Stephen Breyer and their newest colleague, Samuel A. Alito gather before President Bush's State of the Union address. Alito was confirmed Tuesday.

Story, A3 CORETTA SCOn KING: At your request The crossword is restored to its original size on the games page, El 1, and Marketwatch has returned to the front of the business section. 'First lady of civil-rights movement' dies who co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference with her husband in 1957. Coretta Scott King was partially paralyzed and suffering from advanced ovarian cancer when she arrived Thursday under an assumed name at the Santa Monica Health Institute about 16 miles south of San Diego. Doctors at the alternative-medicine clinic said the cause of death was respiratory failure, related to a stroke she suffered about three months ago and the cancer diagnosed last year. By JEFF KUNERTH SENTINEL STAFF WRITER The widow of the civil-rights martyr was remembered Tuesday as the melding of style and strength, dignity and determination, grace and toughness.

Coretta Scott King died early Tuesday in her sleep at a health-clinic facility in Mexico. At 78, she lived twice as long as her husband, the Rev. Martin Luther King who was killed 37 years ago at the age of 39. "She wore her grief with grace. She exerted her leadership with dignity," said the Rev.

Joseph Lowery, Comics E12 Deaths B24 Good Grief! E2 Lottery A2 Movies E8 NBA C4 Opinion A12 TV Grid Games Ell PLEASE SEE KING, All The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and wife Coretta leave the Montgomery, Courthouse on March 23, 1 956. AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE FILE 2006 Orlando Sentinel Communications Company 7 4953850500 6.

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Pages Available:
4,732,750
Years Available:
1913-2024