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Bolstered by family ties , he showed some steel (PBP) 11-16-02 Page 1• HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL William T. Dwyer 11, Miami Edison 10 IN SPORTS MARLINS -ROCKIES TRADE Johnson, Hampton reportedly near deal IN SPORTS Saturday, November 16, 2002 Final Edition • Palm BeachPost.com `I missed cheerleaders the most.' MATT COUSINEAU, paralyzed Boca High football player who rejoined his team upon release from the hospital Staff photos by BOB SHANLEY Members of the Boca Raton High football team stuck a helmet on Matt Cousineau at halftime of their playoff game Friday and paraded him on the field. Player's body broken, not his spirit Matt Cousineau, who broke his neck Sept. 8, revels with teammates. By LONA O'CONNOR Palm Beach Past SYgff Writer HOLLYWOOD — It was a playoff game, but for one player it was homecoming, the biggest and best one of his life. Matt Cousineau shooed his mother away so he could roll his own wheelchair out onto the bumpy turf of the football field. His Boca Raton High School teammates yelped with delight as they caught sight of him, cheerleaders launched into an impromptu cheer and Cous- ineau, 18, was swept away in a sea of crayon -yellow jerseys. "I'll go in, I'll go in!" he joked from the sideline. TWo grueling months of recuperation were forgotten. He was back with his boys, chewing tobacco, swear- ing like a truck driver and grin- ning nonstop, jubilant. Jackson Memorial nurse Earline Campbell kisses Cousineau on the cheek while he's being discharged Friday after nearly two months in the hospital. It was Cousineau's first time back on a football field since a Sept. 8 water accident broke his neck and left him partially par- alyzed. "I missed cheerleaders the most," he told one teammate. He forced another one to stuff a thaw of tobacco In his cheek, since his own hands were not IN L.A. CELL, BOOKING FOR STARS In Room 7021, now occupied by Robert Blake, prisoners get beefsteak dinners and a view. By CHARLIE LeDUFF The New York Times LOS ANGELES—There is no question as to which is the most exclusive penthouse apartment in the City of Lights. Among the amenities there are soaps, conditioners, razors. A continental breakfast is of- fered; a picnic -style lunch and a warm beefsteak dinner. The pillows are feather, the compli- mentary slippers are canvas, the bed garments orange. There is a library and plenty of solitude. The suite occupies a comer lot, the view is unique, and the security is excellent The bellhops dress in green and Ceps W 2002 Film Pod VN. 33 NL 10.5 •etleLa Weather: Showers, storms likely High 81, low 62. FORECAST ON BACK PAGE OF SPORTS wear white gloves. All this at the very reason- able rate of $53.45 a night. Even so, leave your wallet at the front desk. Your money is no good here; taxpayers pick up the tab. Do not bother to call for reservations for Room 7021, for none are accepted. It is the do- micile reserved wholly for men whose reputations are drifting from famous to infamous and for a smaller circle of men whose actions are said to be so heinous even bad men despise them. Welcome to the LosAngeles See CELL, 8A ► DEAR ABBY 2D HOROSCOPE 20 BUSINESS lE LOTTERY 2A CLASSIFIED 2F PEOPLE 17A COMICS 10D SCORES 118 CROSSWORD 9D STOCKS 3E CROSSWORD 7F THEATERS 3D DEATHS loc TV LISTINGS 9D EDITORIALS 22A WEATHER 12B FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 561-8204663 cooperating. He has limited use of his hands and has learned to move his body weight with the strength of his arms. His long- term prognosis is unclear, since the healing process usually takes a year. Doctors and physical thera- pists praised his tenacity in quickly mastering the wheel- chair and dozens of other daily tasks with only partial use of his hands. His youth and athletic ability are his best friends in the ongoing process of recovery, therapists said. After nearly two months of slogging through rehabilitation therapy at Jackson Memorial Medical Center in Miami, Cousineau was discharged Fri- day afternoon. His prescription from Jackson neurologist Barth Green: "Get back with your friends." And so, barely an hour after arriving home in Delray Beach, Cousineau, along with his pan ents, 'Ibm and Lori, piled back into the car and headed south to Hollywood, where the Boca Bobcats were in a playoff game against McArthur High School. At halftime of the game Bo- ca eventually lost 27-22, his teammates stuck a helmet on his head and paraded him the length of the field. A hero's re- ward, though Cousineau, a sen - See PLAYER, 15A ► SUPER SOAPS WEEKEND 35 gorgeous stars! Thousands of screaming fans! IN ACCENT 50 cents kills 12 Gunmen in the mostly Palestinian city target settlers returning from prayer and soldiers guarding them. HEBRON, West Bank — Palestinian gunman ambushed Jewish settlers and soldiers here Fri- day night, killing at least 12 Israelis and wound- ing 15. The attack in the divided and notoriously volatile West Bank city was likely to prompt a stiff Israeli military reaction and perhaps a new cycle of violence. The attack occurred about 7 p.m., when Jewish settlers near Hebron were walking from Sabbath prayers in a heavily guarded corridor through the predominantly Palestinian city. Hebron, with about 130,000 Palestinians, also is home to about 6,000 Jewish settlers, 450 of whom live in its downtown area. The settlers were reportedly walking along "worshipers' lane" from the 'Ibmb of the Patriarchs, holy to both Muslims and Jews as the location of the tomb of Abraham. They were headed from the nearly 900 -year- old towering stone structure to the settlement of Kiryat Arba, adjacent to the city. The attack appeared to be a coordinated ambush that brought gunfire and grenades on the settlers and the soldiers escorting them. See MIDEAST, 11A ► States doing little to upgrade security after FBI warning By ELISABETH BUMILLER and JODI WILGOREN The New Yon* 7irws WASHINGTON — White House officials said on Friday that they were taking extra precautions to protect the nation's most critical facilities from terrorist assault after an FBI warning that A]- Qaeda may be planning "spectacular attacks" with mass casualties in the United States. "A lot is being done to bring additional pro- tective measures, particularly to critical infra- structure," said Condoleezza Rice, President Bush's national security adviser, in a briefing with reporters. White House officials said that by 44 critical infrastructure, Rice meant nuclear plants, chemical plants, oil refineries, airports, railroads and bridges, among other potential targets. Despite the alert, however, domestic security chiefs from several states said on Friday that they had done little more this week than pass the warning on to local law enforctm"t agencies. SO TERROR, 9A ► POLITICAL PROFILE State Sen. -elect Jeff Atwater Bolstered by family ties, `he showed soltlt�steel' By GEORGE BENNETT Palm Beach Past SWf Writer NORTH PALM BEACH — New state Senator and Republican rising star Jeff Atwater's politi- cal blood comes from his mother. Patricia Atwater is the granddaughter of former Democratic Gov. Napoleon Bonaparte Broward, the second cousin of ■ Atwater's former Democratic Gov. Cary political Hardee and the daughter of New pedigree, 10A Deal -era Democratic National Committeewoman Enid Brow- ard Hardee. But her Old Florida Democratic heritage goes only a little ways toward explaining her Republican son. When she talks tennis, one understands a bit more. At 76, Patricia Atwater still cuts an athletic figure and looks capable of zipping a forehand ground stroke past anyone who underestimates her. She was a tennis pro until a few years ago when her late husband became ill. See ATWATER,10A ► sf� Malvo won't get better treatment For latest developments in the sniper case, visit Palm BeachPost.com Jeff Atwater sits in front of family photos in the living roulu v+ 1 , <<„i:+ur S401 Beach house with sister, Patti Unruh (left), and mother, Patricia Hardee A Iraq inspections start accelerated Viewing of alleged weapons sites expected to start Nov. 27. Story, 3A County has first West Nile victim Officials believe a mao 49, caught the diseasr from a mosquito. Local, 1C 4 i