<p>Police resumed their search Friday for a missing bride-to-be, but without the manpower that more than a hundred volunteers had provided the day before.</p><p>The search was centered on the same 5-mile radius around the woman's home that police searched Thursday, but this time authorities planned to focus on the wooded areas closer to the house of Jennifer Carol Wilbanks and her fiance, John Mason, both 32.</p><p>The couple was scheduled to wed Saturday. Mason reported to police that Wilbanks disappeared Tuesday after leaving the house for her nightly jog.</p><p>Two days of searching have yet to yield a solid clue, police said Friday.</p><p>However, police have taken three computers from the home and are examining e-mails to see if they can help solve Wilbanks' disappearance, police Chief Randy Belcher said.</p><p>Also, Mason initially volunteered to take a polygraph test, but then said he would decide by 1 p.m. Friday whether he would take the test, police said.</p><p>A clump of hair police found during their search Thursday likely is not Wilbanks', Belcher said. Several sweat shirts have been found and are being tested to see if there is any connection to the case, though the police chief seemed doubtful.</p><p>"We've picked up pieces of clothing all over," he said.</p><p>More than a hundred volunteers joined in a search for Wilbanks on Thursday amid questions over whether it was a case of foul play or cold feet. They searched miles into the woods and police brought in bloodhounds to try and pick up a scent.</p><p>Wilbanks was reported missing Tuesday night, five hours after her fiance said she went jogging through her neighborhood in this northeastern Atlanta suburb. Wilbanks is an avid runner, and once competed in the Chicago Marathon.</p><p>Police downplayed the five hours it took her fiance to report her missing, saying it was not unusual to wait that long to report a 32-year-old woman missing.</p><p>Wilbanks' friends and relatives have told police she seemed happy and was looking forward to Saturday's wedding. Her keys, cash, credit cards and identification were found in her home. Her fiance said she left with only her MP3 player and the clothes she had on.</p><p>"All of her friends and family said this is totally uncharacteristic of her," police Maj. Don Woodruff said Thursday after it was announced that police were treating her disappearance as a criminal investigation. "We don't believe it was a case of premarital jitters. She did not get cold feet."</p><p>But under questioning from reporters Thursday, Belcher later acknowledged: "It's a very real possibility she did get cold feet. I mean, how many husbands have gone out for a pack of cigarettes and not come back?"</p><p>Saturday's wedding was expected to be a big bash, with 600 invitations sent out and 14 bridesmaids and 14 groomsmen.</p><p>Her father, Harris Wilbanks, said Thursday night the wedding is still on.</p><p>Wilbanks, a nurse who works at an obstetrics and gynecology clinic in Gainesville, was a popular member of the community, according to friends. Many of those who routinely saw her jogging cannot remember if they saw her Tuesday, police said.</p><p>Wilbanks is described as 5-foot-8, 123 pounds, with shoulder-length dark brown hair. She was wearing a gray sweat shirt and blue sweat pants.</p>