10
NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 2 (10 inn.) Chicago Cubs 6, Pittsburgh 3 Milwaukee 4, Houston 0 Florida 5, Philadelphia 4 (14 inn.) Atlanta 4, L.A. Dodgers 3 N.Y. Mets 6, Washington 3 Arizona 4, San Francisco 1 San Diego 7, Colorado 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE N.Y. Yankees 9, Toronto 3 Texas 11, Boston 4 Tampa Bay 8, Baltimore 1 Cleveland 9, Kansas City 6 L.A. Angels 4, Minnesota 1 Oakland 8, Seattle 5 Detroit 18, Chicago White Sox 2 SCOREBOARD AUTO RACING NASCAR race postponed With the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee bearing down on Georgia, NASCAR postponed its race at Atlanta Motor Speedway until 10 a.m. Tuesday. Officials hoped to get the race in as scheduled Sunday night, but outer bands of the massive storm brought light rain to the track late in the afternoon. Another burst of heavy showers ended any chance of beginning the race before midnight. CONTACT US Sports The Paducah Sun | Monday, September 5, 2011 | paducahsun.com Section B FOOTBALL: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall find NFL jobs. | 3B Sports................... 575-8665 [email protected] Steve Millizer ......... 575-8663 [email protected] Joey Fosko ............ 575-8661 [email protected] Dusty Luthy Shull ...575-8662 [email protected] ST. LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee Brewers again just to keep a sliver of hope alive. Rookie Juan Francisco capped a career-best four-hit day with the go-ahead single in the 10th inning and the Cincinnati Reds won 3-2 on Sunday to take two of three from a team desperately trying to stay in contention. The Cardinals swept a three- game series at Milwaukee right before the Reds came to town, but went 0 for 8 with runners in scoring position Sunday to fall 9½ games behind the NL Cen- tral leaders with 22 games to go. The Cardinals and Brewers have one last three-game set begin- ning Monday night in St. Louis. “If we had been able to win at least two out of three here it would have been a lot more com- pelling, I guess,” Lance Berk- man said. “If we can sweep them again, we can put ourselves at least within the realm of possibil- ity, I guess you could say.” Jon Jay homered and Daniel Descalso had an RBI triple for the Cardinals, who were only 2 for 20 with men on base and dropped their rst series at home against Cincinnati since a three- game sweep June 5-7, 2006. Berkman just missed a two- run homer in the rst on a ball caught at the right-eld wall and Bronson Arroyo robbed Rafael Furcal of a likely two- run single in the second, taking a liner off his leg but recovering to throw to rst. “To go scoreless like we did, it’s an aggravating, upsetting day,” manager Tony La Russa said. “We got zeros is what I’m looking at. The guys were not happy to get zeros.” Francisco Cordero went through the heart of St. Louis’ order for his 30th save in 35 chances and 13th in a row, also giving him seven 30-save sea- sons. Cards hopes fading BY R.B. FALLSTROM Associated Press NEW YORK — Lockout. There, we said it. Now forget that word for about a decade. Well, not quite. While the NFL and its players spent the offsea- son ensuring labor peace at the cost of just one exhibition game, the work stoppage could have a profound effect on the upcoming season, which kicks off Thursday when the last two Super Bowl champions, New Orleans and Green Bay, meet at Lambeau Field. Both teams emerged from the lockout without much damage, putting them among the early favorites to represent the NFC in the title game. The Saints are a veteran squad bolstered by free agency and the strong leadership of quarterback Drew Brees. No team had better attended offsea- son workouts while the league and players association were ne- gotiating through July. “We got a lot of young guys ahead of the curve during that process so that walking into camp, it’s not that big of a shock to them when they get the play- book and it’s that thick and they haven’t had a chance to really look at it,” Brees said. “I feel like we’ve been together because, in reality, we were to- gether,” Green Bay gets back a handful of players sidelined a year ago, enhancing a roster that went from sixth seed to champions without them. Most notable will be dynamic tight end Jermichael Finley and starting running back Ryan Grant, who provide even more help for Super Bowl MVP Aaron Rodgers. “The drive we’ve got in this locker room is amazing,” Finley said. “I think this is going to be a special team right here.” Yes, it’s back to football — real football — after months of labor talks, lawsuits and enough legal gobbledygook to last until 2021, when the new collective bargain- ing agreement runs out. To get to the regular season, though, the 32 teams had to sur- vive a frenzied post-lockout pe- riod featuring wild bidding wars for veteran free agents and com- pressed pursuits of undrafted rookies. Not to mention signing draftees, with many of the rst- rounders subject to a rookie wage scale for the rst time. Expecting big contributions from those rookies this year could be a reach, particularly at quarterback — that’s you, Cam Newton of the Panthers, and you, Blaine Gabbert of the Jaguars. The recent trend, fashioned by Ben Roethlisberger, Matt Ryan, Joe Flacco and Sam Bradford, has been to plunk the kid into the starting spot and let him grow. It worked well for those guys, all of them Offensive Rookie of the Year winners. But they had a full offseason of workouts, minicamps and learn- ing the playbook. These guys had none of that. “If you go into the season thinking that, ‘Man, it’s going to be a long season,’ well, I’ve never been on a losing team,” top over- all draft pick Newton said, “and I think it’s because of that (posi- tive) mentality that you start the season with.” Not starting the season, for the rst time in two decades, is Brett Favre. Also among the missing are Terrell Owens (unsigned and injured), Carson Palmer (unhap- py and unofcially retired) and Randy Moss. Sure, that eliminates some — make that lots of — intrigue, but there’s plenty more drama, some surrounding another all-time great quarterback. Peyton Manning had neck sur- gery in May and wasn’t activated by the Colts until September. His consecutive starts string of 227, including the playoffs, is the sec- ond longest in NFL history for quarterbacks behind Favre and could be in jeopardy. Donovan McNabb is starting anew (again) in Minnesota, Matt Hasselbeck has headed to Mu- sic City, Vince Young left Nash- ville for Philadelphia, where he will back up $100 million man Michael Vick, and Kevin Kolb, through the most impactful trade of the summer, is rst string in Arizona. Other new faces to watch in difference places include Reggie Bush in Miami, Chad Ochocinco in New England, and Nnamdi Asomugha, the grand prize of free agency in Philadelphia. Ah, free agency. The CBA set- tlement made more than 450 players unrestricted free agents, as the minimum to qualify went Lockout’s impact will linger in NFL BY BARRY WILNER Associated Press Associated Press Lambeau Field is seen before an NFL preseason football game between the Green Bay Packers and the Arizona Cardinals in Green Bay, Wis. New Orleans and Green Bay begin the new NFL season at Lambeau Field on Thursday. Football follows preseason of change Thursday New Orleans at Green Bay, 7:30 p.m. Sunday Pittsburgh at Baltimore, Noon Atlanta at Chicago, Noon Cincinnati at Cleveland, Noon Indianapolis at Houston, Noon Tennessee at Jacksonville, Noon Buffalo at Kansas City, Noon Philadelphia at St. Louis, Noon Detroit at Tampa Bay, Noon Carolina at Arizona, 3:15 p.m. Minnesota at San Diego, 3:15 p.m. Seattle at San Francisco, 3:15 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Washington, 3:15 p.m. Dallas at N.Y. Jets, 7:20 p.m. Monday, Sept. 12 New England at Miami, 6 p.m. Oakland at Denver, 9:15 p.m. NFL Week 1 schedule Please see FOOTBALL | 4B A At A A A A A A A A A lanta hoped outer b track la ended NEW YORK — Rafael Nadal rolled his head back, squeezed his eyes shut, covered his contorted face with his left arm and leaned awkwardly in the leather chair used by players during U.S. Open news conferences. Frozen by the leg cramps that simultaneously hit his right ham- string and thigh about two hours after he’d won his third-round match, Nadal stopped taking re- porters’ questions and paused between deep breaths to plead in Spanish, “Can you call a trainer for me, please?” Then slowly — and scarily to those watching, because it was unclear at that moment to anyone but Nadal himself exactly what was wrong — the defending cham- pion slithered out of the chair and went down to the ground, hidden from view by a table. Within min- utes, Nadal was sitting up, and then standing, after being given bags of ice to soothe his painful leg and bottles of water and Gatorade to drink. Even if it all amounted to noth- ing serious from a medical stand- point — as Nadal and his manager would later insist, chuckling — it was a bizarre scene, one at least as memorable as anything that took Nadal makes 4th round, feels the pain BY EDDIE PELLS Associated Press Associated Press Rafael Nadal reacts to pain during a news conference after his match against David Nalbandian at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York on Sunday. Nadal said the pain was caused by a leg cramp. Please see OPEN | 3B MEN’S SINGLES Third Round Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, def. David Nalbandian, Argentina, 7-6 (5), 6-1, 7-5. Gilles Muller, Luxembourg, def. Igor Kunitsyn, Russia, 6-1, 6-4, 6-4. David Ferrer (5), Spain, def. Florian Mayer (26), Germany, 6-1, 6-2, 7-6 (2). Andy Roddick (21), United States, def. Julien Ben- neteau, France, 6-1, 6-4, 7-6 (5). Donald Young, United States, def. Juan Ignacio Chela (24), Argentina, 7-5, 6-4, 6-3. Gilles Simon (12), France, def. Juan Martin del Potro (18), Argentina, 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-2, 7-6 (3). John Isner (28), United States, def. Alex Bogomo- lov Jr., United States, 7-6 (9), 6-4, 6-4. Andy Murray (4), Britain, def. Feliciano Lopez (25), Spain, 6-1, 6-4, 6-2. WOMEN’S SINGLES Fourth Round Angelique Kerber, Germany, def. Monica Nicules- cu, Romania, 6-4, 6-3. Flavia Pennetta (26), Italy, def. Peng Shuai (13), China, 6-4, 7-6 (6). Sunday’s U.S. Open results

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Page 1: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall ...assets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/FY38_090511b.pdf · LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 2 (10 inn.)Chicago Cubs 6, Pittsburgh 3Milwaukee 4, Houston 0Florida 5, Philadelphia 4 (14 inn.)Atlanta 4, L.A. Dodgers 3N.Y. Mets 6, Washington 3Arizona 4, San Francisco 1San Diego 7, Colorado 2

AMERICAN LEAGUE

N.Y. Yankees 9, Toronto 3Texas 11, Boston 4Tampa Bay 8, Baltimore 1Cleveland 9, Kansas City 6L.A. Angels 4, Minnesota 1Oakland 8, Seattle 5Detroit 18, Chicago White Sox 2

SCOREBOARD AUTO RACING

NASCAR race postponedWith the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee bearing

down on Georgia, NASCAR postponed its race at Atlanta Motor Speedway until 10 a.m. Tuesday. Officials hoped to get the race in as scheduled Sunday night, but outer bands of the massive storm brought light rain to the track late in the afternoon. Another burst of heavy showers ended any chance of beginning the race before midnight.

CONTACT US

SportsThe Paducah Sun | Monday, September 5, 2011 | paducahsun.com Section B

FOOTBALL: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall find NFL jobs. | 3B

Sports [email protected]

Steve Millizer [email protected]

Joey Fosko ............ [email protected]

Dusty Luthy Shull [email protected]

ST. LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee Brewers again just to keep a sliver of hope alive.

Rookie Juan Francisco capped a career-best four-hit day with the go-ahead single in the 10th inning and the Cincinnati Reds won 3-2 on Sunday to take two of three from a team desperately trying to stay in contention.

The Cardinals swept a three-game series at Milwaukee right before the Reds came to town, but went 0 for 8 with runners in scoring position Sunday to fall 9½ games behind the NL Cen-tral leaders with 22 games to go. The Cardinals and Brewers have one last three-game set begin-ning Monday night in St. Louis.

“If we had been able to win at least two out of three here it would have been a lot more com-pelling, I guess,” Lance Berk-man said. “If we can sweep them again, we can put ourselves at least within the realm of possibil-ity, I guess you could say.”

Jon Jay homered and Daniel Descalso had an RBI triple for the Cardinals, who were only 2 for 20 with men on base and dropped their fi rst series at home against Cincinnati since a three-game sweep June 5-7, 2006.

Berkman just missed a two-run homer in the fi rst on a ball caught at the right-fi eld wall and Bronson Arroyo robbed Rafael Furcal of a likely two-run single in the second, taking a liner off his leg but recovering to throw to fi rst.

“To go scoreless like we did, it’s an aggravating, upsetting day,” manager Tony La Russa said. “We got zeros is what I’m looking at. The guys were not happy to get zeros.”

Francisco Cordero went through the heart of St. Louis’ order for his 30th save in 35 chances and 13th in a row, also giving him seven 30-save sea-sons.

Cardshopesfading

BY R.B. FALLSTROMAssociated Press

NEW YORK — Lockout.There, we said it. Now forget

that word for about a decade.Well, not quite. While the NFL

and its players spent the offsea-son ensuring labor peace at the cost of just one exhibition game, the work stoppage could have a profound effect on the upcoming season, which kicks off Thursday when the last two Super Bowl champions, New Orleans and Green Bay, meet at Lambeau Field.

Both teams emerged from the lockout without much damage, putting them among the early favorites to represent the NFC in the title game. The Saints are a veteran squad bolstered by free agency and the strong leadership of quarterback Drew Brees. No team had better attended offsea-son workouts while the league and players association were ne-gotiating through July.

“We got a lot of young guys ahead of the curve during that process so that walking into camp, it’s not that big of a shock to them when they get the play-book and it’s that thick and they haven’t had a chance to really look at it,” Brees said.

“I feel like we’ve been together because, in reality, we were to-gether,”

Green Bay gets back a handful of players sidelined a year ago, enhancing a roster that went from sixth seed to champions without them. Most notable will be dynamic tight end Jermichael Finley and starting running back Ryan Grant, who provide even more help for Super Bowl MVP Aaron Rodgers.

“The drive we’ve got in this locker room is amazing,” Finley said. “I think this is going to be a special team right here.”

Yes, it’s back to football — real football — after months of labor talks, lawsuits and enough legal gobbledygook to last until 2021, when the new collective bargain-ing agreement runs out.

To get to the regular season, though, the 32 teams had to sur-vive a frenzied post-lockout pe-riod featuring wild bidding wars

for veteran free agents and com-pressed pursuits of undrafted rookies. Not to mention signing draftees, with many of the fi rst-rounders subject to a rookie wage scale for the fi rst time.

Expecting big contributions from those rookies this year could be a reach, particularly at quarterback — that’s you, Cam Newton of the Panthers, and you, Blaine Gabbert of the Jaguars. The recent trend, fashioned by Ben Roethlisberger, Matt Ryan, Joe Flacco and Sam Bradford, has been to plunk the kid into the starting spot and let him grow. It worked well for those guys, all of them Offensive Rookie of the Year winners.

But they had a full offseason of workouts, minicamps and learn-ing the playbook. These guys had none of that.

“If you go into the season thinking that, ‘Man, it’s going to be a long season,’ well, I’ve never been on a losing team,” top over-all draft pick Newton said, “and I think it’s because of that (posi-tive) mentality that you start the season with.”

Not starting the season, for the fi rst time in two decades, is Brett Favre. Also among the missing are Terrell Owens (unsigned and injured), Carson Palmer (unhap-py and unoffi cially retired) and Randy Moss.

Sure, that eliminates some —

make that lots of — intrigue, but there’s plenty more drama, some surrounding another all-time great quarterback.

Peyton Manning had neck sur-gery in May and wasn’t activated by the Colts until September. His consecutive starts string of 227, including the playoffs, is the sec-ond longest in NFL history for quarterbacks behind Favre and could be in jeopardy.

Donovan McNabb is starting anew (again) in Minnesota, Matt Hasselbeck has headed to Mu-sic City, Vince Young left Nash-ville for Philadelphia, where he will back up $100 million man Michael Vick, and Kevin Kolb, through the most impactful trade of the summer, is fi rst string in Arizona.

Other new faces to watch in difference places include Reggie Bush in Miami, Chad Ochocinco in New England, and Nnamdi Asomugha, the grand prize of free agency in Philadelphia.

Ah, free agency. The CBA set-tlement made more than 450 players unrestricted free agents, as the minimum to qualify went

Lockout’s impact will linger in NFL

BY BARRY WILNERAssociated Press

Associated Press

Lambeau Field is seen before an NFL preseason football game between the Green Bay Packers and the Arizona Cardinals in Green Bay, Wis. New Orleans and Green Bay begin the new NFL season at Lambeau Field on Thursday.

Football follows preseason of change

Thursday

New Orleans at Green Bay, 7:30 p.m.

Sunday

Pittsburgh at Baltimore, NoonAtlanta at Chicago, NoonCincinnati at Cleveland, NoonIndianapolis at Houston, NoonTennessee at Jacksonville, NoonBuffalo at Kansas City, NoonPhiladelphia at St. Louis, Noon

Detroit at Tampa Bay, NoonCarolina at Arizona, 3:15 p.m.Minnesota at San Diego, 3:15 p.m.Seattle at San Francisco, 3:15 p.m.N.Y. Giants at Washington, 3:15 p.m.Dallas at N.Y. Jets, 7:20 p.m.

Monday, Sept. 12

New England at Miami, 6 p.m.Oakland at Denver, 9:15 p.m.

NFL Week 1 schedule

Please see FOOTBALL | 4B

AAtAAAAAAAAA lantahoped outer btrack laended

NEW YORK — Rafael Nadal rolled his head back, squeezed his eyes shut, covered his contorted face with his left arm and leaned awkwardly in the leather chair used by players during U.S. Open news conferences.

Frozen by the leg cramps that simultaneously hit his right ham-string and thigh about two hours after he’d won his third-round match, Nadal stopped taking re-porters’ questions and paused between deep breaths to plead in Spanish, “Can you call a trainer for me, please?”

Then slowly — and scarily to those watching, because it was unclear at that moment to anyone

but Nadal himself exactly what was wrong — the defending cham-pion slithered out of the chair and went down to the ground, hidden from view by a table. Within min-utes, Nadal was sitting up, and then standing, after being given bags of ice to soothe his painful leg and bottles of water and Gatorade

to drink.Even if it all amounted to noth-

ing serious from a medical stand-point — as Nadal and his manager would later insist, chuckling — it was a bizarre scene, one at least as memorable as anything that took

Nadal makes 4th round, feels the painBY EDDIE PELLS

Associated Press

Associated Press

Rafael Nadal reacts to pain during a news conference after his match against David Nalbandian at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York on Sunday. Nadal said the pain was caused by a leg cramp.Please see OPEN | 3B

MEN’S SINGLESThird Round

Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, def. David Nalbandian, Argentina, 7-6 (5), 6-1, 7-5.

Gilles Muller, Luxembourg, def. Igor Kunitsyn, Russia, 6-1, 6-4, 6-4.

David Ferrer (5), Spain, def. Florian Mayer (26), Germany, 6-1, 6-2, 7-6 (2).

Andy Roddick (21), United States, def. Julien Ben-neteau, France, 6-1, 6-4, 7-6 (5).

Donald Young, United States, def. Juan Ignacio Chela (24), Argentina, 7-5, 6-4, 6-3.

Gilles Simon (12), France, def. Juan Martin del Potro (18), Argentina, 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-2, 7-6 (3).

John Isner (28), United States, def. Alex Bogomo-lov Jr., United States, 7-6 (9), 6-4, 6-4.

Andy Murray (4), Britain, def. Feliciano Lopez (25), Spain, 6-1, 6-4, 6-2.

WOMEN’S SINGLESFourth Round

Angelique Kerber, Germany, def. Monica Nicules-cu, Romania, 6-4, 6-3.

Flavia Pennetta (26), Italy, def. Peng Shuai (13), China, 6-4, 7-6 (6).

Sunday’s U.S. Open results

Page 2: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall ...assets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/FY38_090511b.pdf · LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee

On television

TODAYMAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Noon – Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees or Texas at Tam-pa Bay (MLB)

1:10 p.m. – Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs (WGN)6 – Atlanta at Philadelphia or N.Y. Mets at Florida

(MLB)COLLEGE FOOTBALL

7 p.m. – Miami at Maryland (ESPN)GOLF

11 a.m. – PGA: Deutsche Bank Championship, fi -nal (TGC)

1 p.m. – PGA: Deutsche Bank Championship, fi nal (WPSD-6)

AUTO RACING11 a.m. – NHRA, U.S. Nationals,  tape (ESPN2)

PREP FOOTBALL11 a.m. – Camden County, Ga. vs. Cleveland Glen-

ville, Ohio (ESPN)1 p.m. – Skyline, Texas vs. Cocoa, Fla. (Sports

South)3 – Dwyer, Fla. at Glades Central, Fla. (ESPN)4 – Frederick A. Douglass, Okla. vs. DeSoto, Texas

(Sports South)TENNIS

10 a.m. – U.S. Open fourth round (KFVS-12)6 p.m. – U.S. Open fourth round (ESPN2) 

TUESDAYMAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

6 p.m. – Atlanta at Philadelphia or L.A. Dodgers at Washington (MLB)

SOCCER1:30 p.m. – Exhibition, U.S. vs. Belgium (ESPN)

TENNIS9 a.m. – U.S. Open men and women (ESPN2)5 p.m. – U.S. Open, men and women (EPSN2)

Local sports

TUESDAYHIGH SCHOOL SOCCER – Doubleheaders: Lone

Oak at Heath, Calloway County at Mayfi eld. Boys: Paducah Tilghman at Community Christian, Marshall County at St. Mary, Trigg County at Reidland, Fort Campbell at Lyon County. Girls: Reidland at Mur-ray, St. Mary at Ballard Memorial, Hopkinsville at Marshall County, Fort Campbell at Caldwell County, Hopkins Central at Crittenden County, Lyon County at Trigg County.

VOLLEYBALL – Heath at Reidland, Paducah Tilgh-man at Marshall County, Mayfi eld at Ballard Memo-rial, Calloway County at Community Christian, Fulton County at Hickman County, Hopkins Central at Crit-tenden County, Union County at Livingston Central.

HIGH SCHOOL GOLF – Murray, Reidland at May-fi eld (Mayfi eld-Graves C.C.); Heath at Calloway Coun-ty (Oaks C.C.); Marshall County at St. Mary (C.C. of Paducah); Carlisle County at Hickman County (Oakh-ill C.C.); Community Christian, Lone Oak at Graves County (South Highland C.C.), Carterville at Massac County.

WEDNESDAYHIGH SCHOOL GOLF – Ballard Memorial at Hick-

man County (Oakhill C.C.); Mayfi eld, Community Christian at Fulton County (Hickman C.C.).

Coming up

GOLF: Openings are still available for Thorns and Roses couples tournament at Hickman County Club on Saturday and Sunday. Entry fee is $100 a couple, and entry information is available by calling 236-9128.

The Rules: Please send your submissions for Purchase sidelines to [email protected], or fax to 270-442-7859, or mail to Sports, The Paducah Sun, Box 2300, Paducah, Ky., 42003-2300.

Purchase memos

Todayvs. Milwaukeeat St. Louis

Time: 3:15 p.m.TV: Fox Midwest

 

Tuesdayvs. Milwaukeeat St. Louis

Time: 7:15 p.m.TV: Fox Midwest

*Note: Many Fox Sports Midwest broadcasts not shown in television listings are available on Comcast Channel 17, but not all. Radio: Listen to the St. Louis Cardinals on WGKY FM-95.9, WYMC AM-1430, WCBL FM-99.1 (or AM-1290), WREZ FM-105.5. Hear Chicago Cubs games on WMOK AM-920.

2B • Monday, September 5, 2011 • The Paducah Sun Morning Update paducahsun.com

Today Tue.

Athens 89 72 s 90 74 sBeijing 84 62 pc 81 59 sBerlin 71 51 r 69 57 pcBuenos Aires 65 52 s 62 51 sCairo 96 74 s 97 74 sHong Kong 91 77 pc 90 77 pcJerusalem 81 63 s 82 63 sLondon 64 55 pc 63 52 rManila 85 80 t 81 77 rMexico City 73 52 t 70 51 shMoscow 59 44 pc 60 44 pcParis 71 54 pc 72 58 pcRome 84 64 t 86 66 pcSeoul 83 61 s 81 59 sSydney 72 56 pc 73 55 pcTokyo 84 73 sh 84 70 shWarsaw 79 64 pc 69 52 pcZurich 63 46 r 68 46 pc

02

5 63

Five-Day Forecast for PaducahShown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Almanac

UV Index Today

Sun and Moon

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.

0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.

River and Lake Levels

Ohio River

Full Pool

Regional WeatherCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

World Cities

National CitiesCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Regional Cities

The Region

St. Louis

Cape Girardeau

Paducah

Owensboro

Cadiz

Union City

Nashville

MemphisPulaski

Blytheville

Evansville

City Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

Carbondale

Clarksville

Jackson

Elevation 24 hr. Chg

Precipitation

Temperature

Flood stageMississippi River

Stage 24 hr. Chg

National Weather

TODAY TONIGHT TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY

71/52

72/55

72/54

74/56

72/55

72/55

71/56

73/58

72/56

72/59

74/57

74/63

71/56

72/54Mostly cloudy,

breezy and cooler

High 74°

Mostly cloudy and breezy

Low 56°

Clouds and sun, a t-storm; breezy

High72°

Low55°

Partly sunny

High75°

Low56°

Sunny and pleasant

High75°

Low57°

Clouds and sun; showers at night

High76°

Low57°

Paducah through 2 p.m. yesterday

Full Last New First

Sept 12 Sept 20 Sept 27 Oct 3

Sunrise today ................................. 6:28 a.m.Sunset tonight ................................ 7:18 p.m.Moonrise today ............................... 2:56 p.m.Moonset today ...................................... none

24 hours ending 2 p.m. yest. .................. 0.14”Month to date ......................................... 0.14”Normal month to date ............................ 0.41”Year to date .......................................... 50.32”Last year to date .................................. 25.20”Normal year to date ............................. 32.89”

High/low .............................................. 78°/71°Normal high/low ................................. 86°/62°Record high ............................... 102° in 1954Record low .................................. 48° in 1997

Through 7 a.m. yesterday (in feet)

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2011

Kentucky: Cooler today with a thunderstorm, but dry in the west. Rain tonight, except dry in the north and west.

Illinois: Sun and some clouds today. Cooler in the south and eastern parts; pleasant in the north and west.

Indiana: Cooler today with clouds and sun; a pass-ing shower in the south and near Lake Michigan.

Missouri: Partly sunny and cooler in the south today; partly sunny in the east. Plenty of sunshine elsewhere.

Arkansas: Partly sunny and windy today; a shower or thunderstorm around in the east.

Tennessee: Mostly cloudy and cooler today. A shower or thunderstorm, except dry in the west; humid in the east.

Today Tue. Today Tue.

Albuquerque 83 65 t 84 63 pcAtlanta 78 70 t 78 64 rBaltimore 83 62 t 73 62 rBillings 86 57 s 86 53 sBoise 86 61 s 89 60 sBoston 83 67 t 74 59 rCharleston, SC 89 75 t 89 76 tCharleston, WV 73 60 t 69 57 rChicago 70 51 c 71 54 sCleveland 67 54 c 67 56 pcDenver 85 56 pc 81 53 pcDes Moines 69 48 s 70 51 sDetroit 67 51 c 70 55 sEl Paso 84 65 s 90 67 sFairbanks 65 46 pc 60 45 cHonolulu 88 73 s 87 73 shHouston 87 61 pc 87 62 sIndianapolis 69 51 pc 72 54 pcJacksonville 92 78 t 92 76 t

Las Vegas 99 79 pc 97 83 sLos Angeles 85 66 pc 92 67 sMiami 91 81 t 92 79 tMilwaukee 68 50 c 67 52 sMinneapolis 70 50 s 72 54 sNew Orleans 81 65 r 80 65 tNew York City 82 66 t 74 62 rOklahoma City 75 51 s 79 54 sOmaha 69 51 s 71 53 pcOrlando 92 78 t 94 75 tPhiladelphia 84 64 t 74 64 rPhoenix 108 87 pc 102 86 pcPittsburgh 69 54 sh 67 56 pcSalt Lake City 88 60 pc 78 59 pcSan Diego 75 69 pc 83 71 pcSan Francisco 70 54 pc 81 56 sSeattle 80 52 s 78 53 sTucson 101 77 t 97 78 pcWashington, DC 82 65 t 73 64 r

Today Tue.

Belleville, IL 72 52 pc 73 51 pcBowling Gn., KY 75 56 t 74 58 tBristol, TN 74 62 t 70 60 rC. Girardeau, MO 72 55 c 73 53 pcCarbondale, IL 72 54 c 74 52 pcCharleston, WV 73 60 t 69 57 rChattanooga, TN 75 64 t 72 63 rClarksville, TN 72 56 t 72 57 tColumbia, MO 70 48 pc 71 52 sEvansville, IN 72 54 c 75 56 pcFt. Smith, AR 77 52 s 82 53 sHopkinsville, KY 72 55 t 71 55 tIndianapolis, IN 69 51 pc 72 54 pcJackson, KY 70 56 t 69 56 tJackson, TN 74 57 t 73 56 tJoplin, MO 71 50 s 76 52 sKansas City, MO 71 52 s 71 53 sKnoxville, TN 74 62 t 73 63 rLexington, KY 70 54 t 71 56 cLittle Rock, AR 77 56 pc 79 56 pcLondon, KY 71 58 t 70 57 tLouisville, KY 72 57 c 74 57 cMemphis, TN 72 59 t 76 60 tNashville, TN 73 58 t 70 58 tPeoria, IL 68 49 pc 71 52 sSt. Louis, MO 71 52 pc 73 53 pcSpringfield, IL 71 47 pc 73 50 sSpringfield, MO 70 49 s 72 51 sTerre Haute, IN 69 50 pc 74 50 pc

National Summary: Moisture riding along a frontal boundary will bring unsettled weather to much of the East today. Periods of rain and thunderstorms will affect cities and towns from New England through the Tennessee Valley. The remnants of Lee will continue to produce heavy show-ers and thunderstorms across the Gulf Coast region.

Cairo 40 19.88 -0.57

Paducah 39 16.07 -0.06Owensboro 38 10.90 +0.10

Lake Barkley 356.7 356.20 -0.05Kentucky Lake 356.7 356.38 none

LEELEELEE

WashingtonWashington82/6582/65

New YorkNew York82/6682/66

MiamiMiami91/8191/81

AtlantaAtlanta78/7078/70

DetroitDetroit67/5167/51

HoustonHouston87/6187/61

ChicagoChicago70/5170/51

MinneapolisMinneapolis70/5070/50

Kansas CityKansas City71/5271/52

El PasoEl Paso84/6584/65

DenverDenver85/5685/56

BillingsBillings86/5786/57

Los AngelesLos Angeles85/6685/66

San FranciscoSan Francisco70/5470/54

SeattleSeattle80/5280/52

Washington82/65

New York82/66

Miami91/81

Atlanta78/70

Detroit67/51

Houston87/61

Chicago70/51

Minneapolis70/50

Kansas City71/52

El Paso84/65

Denver85/56

Billings86/57

Los Angeles85/66

San Francisco70/54

Seattle80/52

Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

Page 3: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall ...assets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/FY38_090511b.pdf · LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee

paducahsun.com Sports The Paducah Sun • Monday, September 5, 2011 • 3B

Sports briefs

Talley leads, Hack in top 30 at AJGA final

Lone Oak’s Anna Hack climbed the leaderboard and Princeton’s Emma Talley held on to her lead heading into today’s final round of the American Junior Golf Association’s Girls Championship in Greenville, S.C.

Talley shot a 1-under 71 on Sunday at the Furman Country Club to hold to maintain her two-shot edge over Annie Park of Levittown, N.J. Talley has a 6-under par 138 after two days, while Park and Rinko Mitsu-naga of Roswell, Ga., are tied at 140. Park shot a 71 and Mitsunaga a 69 on Sunday.

Hack shot a 1-over 73 to climb into a tie for 26th on the 78-player leaderboard. Her wild round included an eagle, three birdies and six bogeys. Talley had four birdies and three bogeys on Sunday after scoring seven birdies in her opening round of 67.

Ravens sign Cantwell, Hall to practice squad

Paducah Tilghman products Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall were signed to the Baltimore Ravens’ prac-tice squad on Sunday, one day after both were among the team’s final preseason cuts.

Cantwell, a quarterback who played collegiately at Louisville, has been on the practice squad for much of his two-year NFL career, with the Carolina Panthers in 2009 and the Ravens last season. Hall, a defen-sive tackle, was signed by the Ravens as an undraft-ed free agent after playing at Arkansas State.

First UK game to feature new scoreboards

LEXINGTON — Kentucky football fans won’t have any trouble seeing the score at the team’s first home game on Saturday.

That’s because the new Daktronics HD-X score-board system will be up and running. The system in-cludes two video boards that measure about 37 feet high by 80 feet wide.

UK said the system gives Commonwealth Stadium the 15th-largest scoreboard in college football.

In addition to the new scoreboard, the school is making changes to improve sound within the stadium, cell phone service and how concessions are paid for, UK event manager Kevin Saal said.

Racers play to draw against South Florida

Murray State goalkeeper Yi Du picked up her sec-ond shutout of the season, coming up big in the final minutes against South Florida as the Racers held off the Bulls for a 0-0 draw in the final match of the Dafeldecker Classic in Tampa, Fla., on Sunday.

Tested for much of the game, Du went to her left, stopping a penalty kick off the foot of Noelle Pineiro with six seconds remaining in the second and final overtime session to preserve the tie for MSU. She ended the match with nine saves.

South Florida (2-2-2) outshot Murray State (1-4-1) 24-9.

BALTIMORE — Will Power wrapped his hand around a big bottle of champagne, shook it up, let the bubbly fl y and took a long drink.

What better way to cel-ebrate an absolutely perfect weekend?

Power put on a masterful performance Sunday over a diffi cult street course to win the inaugural Baltimore Grand Prix. The Austra-lian deftly negotiated hair-pin turns and confi dently gripped the wheel over bumpy roads to earn his sec-ond straight win and career-high sixth of the season.

Power had the best time in Friday’s practice session,

captured the pole Saturday, then led in 70 of the 75 laps to earn the $35,000 top prize.

“I’m just exhausted,” Power said, “but that was a championship run.”

Spain’s Oriol Servia fi n-ished second, 10.2096 sec-onds back, and Tony Kanaan of Brazil was third. Kanaan lost his brakes during a prac-tice run Sunday morning, soared over Helio Castro-neves’ car and had to drive a backup.

Power lost the lead early in the race to Graham Rahal, quickly gained it back and trailed only briefl y thereafter after making a pit stop.

“It feels like one of my best wins,” said Power.

The victory moved him within fi ve points of Izod In-dyCar leader Dino Franchit-ti, who took fourth.

Scott Dixon was fi fth and Danica Patrick took sixth. Patrick has three races left after this one before dedicat-ing her entire efforts toward stock car racing.

The fi rst street race in Bal-timore featured several tight turns, uneven terrain, both-ersome chicane and narrow pit lanes situated in front of Oriole Park at Camden Yards. The word most often used to describe the 2.04-mile course was “challeng-ing,” and it was certainly that.

There were no crashes, but the race was not without in-cident.

During practice sessions and qualifying, the drivers expressed concern about the perilous turns that left little margin for error.

Sure enough, the biggest mishap of the afternoon came on Turn 3 at the mid-point of the race. Seeking to turn on the inside, Ryan Briscoe clipped Ryan Hunt-er-Reay, whose car spun out upon contact. That created a logjam of 11 cars that forced rookie James Jakes out of the race.

“It was just a big mess,” Jakes said. “There’s nothing you really could do.”

Briscoe was penalized for avoidable contact and sent to the back of the pack for the restart.

Power caps big weekend with IndyCar winAssociated Press

NORTON, Mass. — Even after three wins over the last 15 months, Bubba Wat-son still gets nervous going into the fi nal round with a chance to win. At least he has some company at the Deutsche Bank Champion-ship.

A lot of company.Right when Watson

looked as though he might

pull away Sunday at the TPC Boston, the wind became strong enough to make him think twice about the shots he wanted to hit. Three of them didn’t turn out real well and led to bogeys. He at least managed one more birdie for a 1-under 70 and the lead going into the last round.

Watson was one shot ahead of fi ve players. An-

other fi ve players were two shots behind. Seven other players were three shots be-hind. And even Phil Mickel-son, who started the round 11 shots behind, suddenly was only four back.

“Anybody has a chance,” Watson said.

Watson likes his chances just a little bit better. De-spite the wind causing some indecision on the back nine,

he still rifl ed a 3-iron into the fairway and a wedge to 8 feet for birdie on the 17th to get some separation, even it was just a single shot.

Adam Scott (71) and Ja-son Day (67) were among fi ve players in a tie for sec-ond. Luke Donald, the No. 1 player in the world, and Jim Furyk were in the large group just two shots be-hind.

Watson manages nerves for Deutsche Bank leadAssociated Press

Staff, AP reports

place on court Sunday at the year’s last Grand Slam tournament.

“It’s bad luck it hap-pened here,” Nadal said, “and not in the locker room.”

His point was that ten-nis players often deal with cramps, particularly after competing in the sort of conditions Nadal did while beating 2002 Wimbledon runner-up David Nalban-dian 7-6 (5), 6-1, 7-5 on a muggy afternoon with the temperature in the 80s.

“It’s just something that happens. It’s just unfortunate it happened in front of you all,” 2003 U.S. Open champion Andy Roddick told reporters af-ter a straight-set victory over Julien Benneteau to get to the fourth round.

“Every single player in there has had that hap-pen before. Every single one. What we do — we run around, run miles and miles and miles and miles on the tennis court in nas-ty weather — (and) you throw nerves in there. I mean, it happens. As long as it doesn’t happen dur-ing a match, you’re fi ne.”

Roddick continued: “Cramps are fi ne. It’s not an injury. A cramp is a cramp. When you go to bed and your foot cramps, it’s the same thing.”

With No. 28 John Is-ner and unseeded Don-ald Young also winning Sunday, and No. 8 Mardy Fish advancing Saturday, Roddick is part of the fi rst quartet of American men to reach the U.S. Open’s fourth round since 2003.

Others moving on in-cluded 2008 runner-up

Andy Murray, who beat No. 25 Feliciano Lopez 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 at night; No. 5 David Ferrer, Rod-dick’s next opponent; No. 12 Gilles Simon, who got past 2009 champion Juan Martin del Potro 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-2, 7-6 (3); and un-seeded Gilles Muller, who will face Nadal for a quar-terfi nal berth.

Nadal wasn’t the only player who appeared to be bothered by Sunday’s heat and humidity: No. 26 Flavia Pennetta of Italy felt as though she needed to throw up right out there on court during her 6-4, 7-6 (6) victory over No. 13 Peng Shuai of China.

“It was a bunch of things: the heat, the ten-sion,” said Pennetta, who knocked off three-time major champion Maria Sharapova in the third round. “It’s not normal, but it happens.”

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

OPEN: Leg cramps strike Nadal

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Geno Smith threw two fi rst-half touchdown pass-es, Tavon Austin returned a kickoff for a score and No. 24 West Virginia beat Mar-shall 34-13 on Sunday night in a game that was stopped early in the fourth quarter because of lightning.

Smith completed 26 of 35 passes for 249 yards. De-spite diffi culty running the ball, West Virginia improved to 11-0 against its cross-state foe, including six wins since the series resumed in 2006.

Marshall was limited to 13 fi rst downs, 187 total yards and no offensive touch-downs.

The game was fi rst halted with 5 minutes left in the third quarter due to severe storms and play didn’t re-sume for three hours.

Play was stopped again with 14:36 left. But another hour went by before the game was called off, giving new West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen a soggy, successful debut.

The game was delayed a total of 4 hours, 22 minutes and was the latest plagued

by lightning and severe storms on the fi rst weekend of the season.

Texas A&M 46, SMU 14

At College Station, Texas, Cyrus Gray and Christine Michael ran for two touch-downs apiece and Ryan Tannehill threw for two more scores to help No. 8

Texas A&M beat SMU.The Aggies were anxious

to get on the fi eld and bring the focus back to football instead of the school’s de-cision to leave the Big 12. They got things going early, intercepting quarterback Kyle Padron’s passes on SMU’s fi rst two possessions to jump out to a 14-0 lead.

SMU coach June Jones

replaced Padron with back-up J.J. McDermott after the early miscues and he helped the Mustangs cut it to 20-14 in the second quarter.

But the Mustangs couldn’t do much offensively after that and the Aggies scored 26 straight points the rest of the way to secure the win.

Gray fi nished with 132 yards rushing.

Weather slows West Virginia march Associated Press

Associated Press

West Virginia’s Vernard Roberts dives into the end zone against Marshall during the fourth quarter of their game in Morgantown, W. Va., on Sunday. The game was called early due to lightning in the fourth quarter, as West Virginia beat Marshall 34-13.

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Page 4: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall ...assets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/FY38_090511b.pdf · LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee

back to four years; it was six in 2010, an uncapped year. The salary cap was set at about $123 million, then the frenzy began.

Philadelphia, already a solid Super Bowl contender, retooled its roster and has been declared the cham-pion of free agency, for what that’s worth. The Eagles added cornerback Aso-mugha, defensive linemen Cullen Jenkins and Jason Babin to their defense, re-ceiver Steve Smith, running back Ronnie Brown and Young to their offense.

“Whatever it takes to try to get there, that’s what we’re going to do,” team president Joe Banner said of the Eagles’ Super Bowl-or-bust mentality. “I want the players to feel like that’s the goal. If we fall short of that, then we didn’t hit the goal. It’s really that simple. I’m glad that the mindset is that we have a real shot to do that. ... The expectations are high internally as well as externally, and I think that’s a good place to be.”

A tough place to be is anywhere that new coaches are trying to install their systems, learn about their players and, somehow, win games following a wasted spring and half of summer. Ron Rivera in Carolina might have the biggest chal-lenge as he takes over the NFL’s worst team of 2010 and tries to get Newton in-doctrinated quickly — all under a glaring spotlight.

It won’t be easy for Jim Harbaugh in San Francisco, Pat Shurmur in Cleveland, Mike Munchak in Tennes-see, Hue Jackson in Oak-land, John Fox in Denver, Jason Garrett in Dallas and Leslie Frazier in Minnesota. At least Garrett and Frazier got in some time as interim

head coaches a year ago.Their jobs seem secure for

at least one season, barring an 0-16 debacle. Veteran coaches under the most pressure to produce in 2011 will be Tom Coughlin with the Giants, Jack Del Rio with the Jaguars, Gary Ku-biak with the Texans and Tony Sparano with the Dol-phins.

Many of those coaches spent an inordinate amount of time — because they had an inordinate amount of time available from March until mid-July — examining rules changes.

Most notable is the deci-sion to move kickoffs up 5 yards to the 35 and limit coverage teams to a 5-yard run-up before the kick. The reason for the change: play-er safety.

The reaction thus far: bring back the kickoff re-turn. Through three weeks of the preseason, touch-backs had just about dou-bled to 38.8 percent of all kickoffs.

“There’s no truth that we are looking to eliminate the kickoff return,” said Ray Anderson, the league’s chief disciplinarian and a member of the competition committee. “That has been presented to the commit-tee and didn’t ever have any support.

“We understand it’s an ex-citing play and that it should remain in the game — with tweaks to make it safer.”

Players who run back kicks see it as more than a tweak.

“Nothing I can say in public,” offered Seahawks special teams star Leon Washington. “You have to understand with the NFL, safety is their priority. So, I defi nitely understand that part. But for teams like us, Chicago, Arizona, Cleve-land, it’s a big deal to win

the fi eld position battle with special teams, and now, they’re taking that part of the game away from us.”

The league is making all scoring plays reviewable by replay, but in the preseason, only a handful have led to lengthy delays.

It’s also promising to ramp up discipline for il-legal hits, including hand-ing suspensions to repeat offenders — and to anyone else whose illegal hit is trou-blesome enough to warrant being sat down.

“Let me make it very clear, particularly in regard to re-peat offenders,” Anderson said, “that egregious acts will be subject to suspen-sion. We will not feel the need to hesitate in this re-gard.”

Following the opener at Lambeau Field, the NFL will stage remembrances at all of its games of the terrorist attacks of 2001. With that in mind, the Giants are sched-uled to play at the Redskins, the Jets are hosting the Cow-boys, and the Steelers are at the Ravens, covering teams with ties to areas where the impact of the attacks was felt immediately.

The league and the play-ers’ union have pledged $1 million in donations to three Sept. 11 memorials and two charities.

For months, there was some doubt if games would even be played as scheduled. Instead, the only victim of the longest work stoppage in NFL history was the ex-hibition Hall of Fame game.

The lockout seems to have whetted the appetites of fans even more. Expec-tations are for TV ratings to continue to outdo every-thing else, and for the NFL, even in the wake of one of its ugliest periods, to re-main the king of American sports.

4B • Monday, September 5, 2011 • The Paducah Sun Sports paducahsun.com

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

FOOTBALL: League cites player safety for kickoff change

DAEGU, South Korea — In one whirlwind week, Usain Bolt turned the big-gest disappointment of his career into another golden show capped with a world record even he believed was not within him this year.

After opening with a false start in 100 fi nal last Sun-day, Usain Bolt again pro-duced the amazing in his closing race of the world championships — anchoring Jamaica to a world record in the 4x100-meter relay.

When the fi rst three run-ners passed the baton, Bolt seized the moment.

“I said, ‘Why not give my all.’ I kept saying: ‘I can do this. I can do this,’” he said.

And when Bolt is con-vinced, the clock usually obliges.

Fittingly, Jamaica’s yel-low-green-and-black fl ag was the last one rising into the night over Daegu Sta-dium, and Bolt spread his giant arms wide to soak in the occasion.

“For me, it was just to go out there fast,” Bolt said. “We did just that.”

One day after winning gold in the 200, Bolt was devastating down the home stretch of the relay and threw his yellow-clad chest across the line for a time of 37.04 seconds — the only world record in nine days of competition.

“This record was a great achievement,” Bolt said. “I fi nished the championships on a good note so I’m proud of myself.”

There was none of the performance anxiety that pushed him into a false start in the 100, only a sheer re-lease of power as he coasted down the stretch for an over-

whelming win over France and Saint Kitts and Nevis.

He came looking for the same three gold medals he won at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and 2009 world championships but left with only two and a world record.

The United States was out of it because of a botched exchange, but no one could have gotten close to a Jamai-can team anchored by Bolt.

Ahead of the race, Bolt was already slapping the “JAM” on his bib in pride, and in a season where he was far from his best, he came through with a world record.

He got all the help he needed from his three team-mates — a lightning start from Nesta Carter and a good handover to Michael Frater before Jamaica’s golden duo was up. Yohan

Blake, the 100 champion in Bolt’s absence, powered through the fi nal bend, with Bolt already getting his giant stride going before he took the baton.

Even Carter had no idea the team could do it.

“We weren’t really going out to break the world re-cord,” he said.

Without the injured Asafa Powell, Bolt anchored the team for the fi rst time in a major competition since he took the world by storm at the Beijing Olympics three years ago.

Running with the deter-mination of a record beater, he gritted his teeth over the fi nal meters, crossed the line and threw the glittering purple baton high in the air once he realized the team’s 3-year-old record of 37.10 was gone.

Bolt, Jamaicans ‘can do’ recordBY RAF CASERT

Associated Press

The fi rst college football Saturday of the year was not even a day old and Boise State had already ensured that yet another season would be dominat-ed by bickering about the Broncos.

Championship contend-er? Or pretender?

Here we go again.The latest statement by

coach Chris Petersen’s team had to feel extra special to Broncos fans.

No matter how many times Boise State knocks off big name teams from elite conferences, some fans dis-miss the accomplishment because the Broncos play so few games against topfl ight opponents.

Southeastern Conference fans have been particularly adamant about putting Boi-se State at the kiddie table.

It is an indisputable fact that Boise State, even now that it has switched from the Western Athletic Con-ference to the Mountain West, does not play a sched-ule with as many potential pitfalls as most teams in the SEC, Big Ten, Pac-12 and maybe even the watered-down Big 12.

Mississippi State of the SEC, for example, has a schedule featuring six teams that started the sea-son ranked. Georgia is one of two teams on Boise State’s schedule that were in the preseason poll. Which is why so many looked at the Broncos’ playing the Bull-dogs 70 miles away from their Athens, Ga., campus as Boise State’s toughest test of the season.

But it’s getting harder and harder to argue this Boise State program is not one of the very best in the country.

This is the third straight season impeccable quar-terback Kellen Moore and the Broncos have started by beating a ranked team. Georgia joined Oregon and Virginia Tech as Broncos’ conquests.

“I love playing early in the season in games like this. It sets the tone for the rest of the season. It’s a taste of what a big bowl game can be like with this type of atmosphere,” Boise State’s Byron Hout told the Idaho Statesmen. “If you can do the right thing you can fi nd yourself in another event like this at the end of the season.”

Fact is, the Broncos might have already peaked — and that’s what ticks off Boise State supporters. They’ll be favored — often huge favorites — in their remaining 11 games. Their lopsided victories will be greeted with a shrug by most poll voters and those big margins don’t even reg-ister in the BCS computer rankings, which are pro-grammed more to pay lip service to sportsmanship more than to determine the best teams.

What Boise State needs to reach the BCS title game — in addition to going un-beaten — is for Georgia to right itself and reach the SEC title game, TCU to avoid another loss and maybe for Nevada, Fresno State or Air Force to pull off an upset or two — just not against the Broncos.

Boise State fuelspoll debate again

BY RALPH D. RUSSOAssociated Press

Associated Press

Jamaica’s (clockwise, from left top) Nest Carter, Usain Bolt, Yohan Blake and Michael Frater pose with the scoreboard recording their world record in the 4x100-meter relay at the World Athletics Championships in Daegu, South Korea, on Sunday.

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Page 5: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall ...assets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/FY38_090511b.pdf · LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee

Associated Press

Josh Duhamel shakes hands with Owen Hanson as Tasha Hanson (second from left) and Olivia Hanson look on at the North Dakota State Fairgrounds in Mi-not, N.D., on Saturday.

paducahsun.com People The Paducah Sun • Monday, September 5, 2011 • 5B

LOS ANGELES — It’s the year of the strong woman for network television.

ABC, CBS, CW Network, Fox and NBC have turned to a variety of tough and smart females — doctors, evil twins, ghostly appari-tions, beautiful detectives, waitresses and even a wick-ed queen — to attract view-ers to their 2011-12 televi-sion schedules.

Fifteen of the 26 new pro-grams — both comedies and dramas — will feature wom-en as the driving force. That number gets higher if you consider returning mid-sea-son replacement programs like “Harry’s Law” and “Body of Proof” that also have strong females at the core.

The networks have never shied away from programs with strong female leads. But this season marks one of the most dominating TV classes for women.

“We are known for cre-ating storytelling with em-powered women. Empow-ered women is defi nitely a theme of the network,” says ABC Entertainment Presi-dent Paul Lee.

There’s also a push by the networks to fi nd the next great comedy. There are 10 comedies on the new schedules. The CW Network continues as the lone funny holdout with no comedies in the lineup.

How well the new shows do will factor into which network becomes ratings champs. Here’s a closer look at how the network lineups will stack up each night of the week.

Monday

Don’t expect too many fi reworks as ABC and CBS have done little adjustment to their schedules. No net-work has added more than one new program to their lineup for the night.

■ New shows: 4.■ Keep an eye on: CBS

needs “Two and a Half Men” with Ashton Kutch-er taking over for Charlie Sheen to do well. If the show falters, the entire CBS Monday could collapse.

■ They did what?: NBC is sending “Chuck” to Fridays for its fi fth and fi nal season.

■ Biggest battle: Fox is looking for success from “Terra Nova,” one of the biggest series it’s ever tackled. It’ll be tough lur-ing viewers from “Dancing With the Stars.”

Tuesday

NBC is the only network that won’t make a change on the night, returning with “The Biggest Loser” and “Parenthood.” How well NBC does depends on whether there is still some ratings meat on the “Big-gest Loser’s” bones and if “Parenthood” fi nally can

attract an audience.■ New shows: 5■ Keep an eye on: This is a

very pivotal year for “Glee.” With the feature fi lm bomb-ing and “The Glee Project” a ratings failure, “Glee” needs to show the sparkle hasn’t gone from this gem.

■ They did what?: ABC is trying to launch two new comedies — “The Last Man Standing” and “Man Up” — without any support from returning comedies. It’s a dangerous move.

■ Biggest battle: CBS opt-ed not to air “Ringer” and sent it off to the CW, where the tale of twin sisters (Sarah Michelle Gellar) is a better fi t. It doesn’t matter how well it fi ts if everyone is watching the other networks.

Wednesday

No other night of the week is such a mishmash of pro-gramming. Out of the 13 hours, 4½ are reality shows, four hours are new programs and the rest is returning shows. It really is a shotgun attempt to lure viewers.

■ New shows: 7■ Keep an eye on: CBS

has moved “CSI” from its 9 p.m. Thursdays time slot to 10 p.m. Wednesdays. It’s do or die time.

■ They did what?: The CW’s “H8R” brings togeth-er celebrities and the peo-ple who hate them. There’s no chance of the show win-ning the “Feel Good Hit” of the year award.

■ Biggest battle: The 8 p.m. hour is comedies or reality shows. Look for the reality shows — “Survivor: South Pacifi c” and “The X-Factor” — to rule.

Thursday

Once the most stable night, this night lost its strength when NBC’s “must see” com-edy lineup became “nothing else is on” shows. Even the solid CBS has replaced half its lineup, including moving former ratings force “CSI” out of the 9 p.m. time slot. There could be a real shift in power with the Fox tandem of “The X-Factor Results Show” and “Bones.”

■ New shows: 6■ Keep an eye on: NBC

needs a good comedy and “Whitney” is the best hope. “Community” is OK but “Parks and Recreation” is as funny as a cold sore and “The Offi ce” will suffer from the departure of Steve Carell.

■ They did what?: CBS shows great faith in “Per-son of Interest,” giving it the 9 p.m. time slot. If it fails, it would have a ripple effect on ratings for “The Mentalist.”

■ Biggest battle: The pro-gram that wins the 7 p.m. showdown will set the tem-po for the whole night: Big Bang Theory (CBS), Com-munity (NBC), The X-Fac-tor (Results Show) (Fox), Charlie’s Angels (ABC) and The Vampire Diaries (CW).

Friday

The night’s been a dump-ing ground for the networks for years. No one expected much because it’s date night. But, Friday has become the home for some of the

best shows on TV: “Fringe,” ‘‘Grimm,” ‘‘Chuck,” ‘‘Blue Bloods,” ‘‘Nikita” and “Su-pernatural.”

■ New shows: 2■ Keep an eye on: Fox has

overworked Chef Gordon Ramsay and that could shut down “Kitchen Nightmares.”

■ They did what?: ABC’s taken a big gamble moving “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition” from Sundays. Family programming, like “Friday Night Lights,” has not done so well in this time slot.

■ Biggest battle: NBC’s “Grimm” and Fox’s “Fringe” will appeal to the same audience. Thank goodness for DVR.

Saturday

The networks continue to treat the night like a giant wasteland. The biggest use for the night will be to show repeats of programs that aired earlier in the week in case you missed it. Ap-parently no one at the net-works has heard of a DVR.

■ New shows: 0■ Keep an eye on: Fox

will repeat “Terra Nova” in the 9 p.m. time slot. It will be interesting to see if it gets better ratings than the original Monday airing.

■ They did what?: CBS moved “Rules of Engage-ment” to Saturdays. This will be new shows and not repeats. It’s the fi rst time CBS has scheduled a come-dy to air on Saturdays since “The Five Mrs. Buchanans” and “Hearts Alive” in 1994.

■ Biggest battle: To stay awake.

Sunday

This will be a make-or-break night for ABC as it will look to a pair of new shows — “Once Upon a Time” and “Pan Am” — plus a show facing its last season in “Desperate Housewives.” If they don’t attract viewers, that sets a bad tone for the rest of the week.

■ New shows: 3■ Keep an eye on: This

is the last season for “Des-perate Housewives.” Early ratings will show if viewers care or have left early.

■ They did what?: CBS shifted “The Good Wife” to Sundays against “Desper-ate Housewives.” There’s really no comparison in writing quality so “The Good Wife” will do fi ne.

■ Biggest battle: “Once Upon a Time” throws its complicated fairytale plot against a popular real-ity show in “The Amazing Race” and NFL games on NBC. It will need real magic to survive.

Rick Bentley writes for the The Fresno (Calif.) Bee.

Fall TV features strong womenBY RICK BENTLEY

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Winners■ Woody Allen — Forty-five years into his filmmak-

ing career, the 75-year-old director hit the heights with “Midnight in Paris,” his biggest success ever.

■ Kathryn Stockett — Oscar nominations for the film version of the Southern writer’s first novel, “The Help,” are a foregone conclusion.

■ CGI simians — “Rise of the Planet of the Apes,” an intelligent reboot of a classic franchise, the film proved that summer popcorn flicks don’t have to be dumb to draw big audiences.

Losers

■ Terrence Malick — Even though reviews were solid for “The Tree of Life”, audiences were put off by the film’s refusal to employ a traditional narrative arc.

■ Pooh Bear — Open “Winnie the Pooh” the same weekend as the final “Harry Potter” film? That’s like scheduling a high school team against the Yankees.

■ Genre mashups — Pairing alien invaders and 19th century cowboys seemed like a good idea at the time. But “Cowboys and Aliens” received dismal reviews and after a decent opening weekend, the film went south.

A look at summer’s winners and losers

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

MINOT, N.D. — Holly-wood actor Josh Duhamel says he believes his North Dakota hometown will re-build from a devastating fl ood, and on Saturday he shared that hopeful mes-sage with thousands of people attending a benefi t concert he helped plan.

Images of fl ooded Mi-not neighborhoods ap-peared on large video screens as Duhamel, 38, spoke on stage about the city’s recovery efforts in

between performances from Minneapolis-based rockers Charlz Newman and headlining act The Black Eyed Peas. His wife, Fergie, is a Black Eyed Peas member.

The concert at the State Fairgrounds in Minot was sold out, with more than 12,000 tickets going for $100 each. Duhamel said money from the Mi-not Rising show and a recovery fund will help buy materials for people rebuilding their homes.

Duhamel visit, concert aid flooded hometown

Associated Press

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Christina Ricci stars this fall in ‘Pan Am’ on ABC. ‘Pan Am’ is one of several shows, old and new, that features strong female characters.

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6B • Monday, September 5, 2011 • The Paducah Sun Television paducahsun.com

Channel 2Midnight — Arts Showcase8 a.m. — Your United Way8:30 a.m. — Union Label9 a.m. — American Red Cross9:30 a.m. — Kentucky Cancer Program10 a.m. — Backstage Pass: Kentucky Song-writersNoon — Campus Spotlight12:05 p.m. — Community Billboard4 p.m. — Minority Focus4:30 p.m. — Tot School5 p.m. — Tourism Talk5:30 p.m. — Refl ections6 p.m. — A Better You6:30 p.m. — Rays of Hope

7 p.m. — WKCTC Science Series8 p.m. — Berry Craig’s Notebook8:30 p.m. — Army Newswatch9 p.m. — River Discover Center9:30 p.m. — Master Gardening10 p.m. — Rubicon Road: Apple Valley Toyland10:30 p.m. — Poetry Bon Bouche11 p.m. — WKCTC Poetry Reading

Channel 118 a.m. — Break A Sweat9 a.m. — Quality of Life Matters in the City of Paducah: Barkley Regional Airport10:30 a.m. — Your City at Work: Recycle9 p.m. — Your City at Work: Flood Wall9:30 p.m. — City Profi le: Korean War Memorial

Horoscopes

MONDAY, SEPT. 5, 2011ARIES (March 21-April 19): Fo-

cus on the result you want rather than the trivial matters that are causing you aggravation. Now is not the time to deal with issues you cannot change. If you do your best, you will be in a position to overcome your obstacles.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t allow someone’s tough talk to stand in your way when it comes to work and what you need to accomplish to advance. Say little and do more and your actions will bring good results. Jealousy probably explains the clash you are having with some-

one.GEMINI (May 21-June 20): A

money situation will cause emo-tional confusion. Problems will arise if you are too fl irtatious or impractical about the way you handle a personal situation. Ad-just your plans to avert any hard feelings.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Change can be good. Welcome what comes your way and you will fi nd it much easier to adjust. Love is highlighted, and doing things that make the people you care about happy will bring favor-able results. A partnership will bring all sorts of perks.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Protect what you have personally and professionally. Don’t let your emotions kick in and cause you to give too much. A change is overdue and will help escort you into the future with greater knowl-edge and insight. Socialize with people who interest you mentally and inspire you emotionally.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Make choices that benefi t you, not someone else. You are likely to face opposition at home and with people you are involved with personally. Your best efforts will come from helping a cause you believe in or volunteering for an

organization that has something to offer you in return.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Do your best to lower your debt and secure your assets. Dealing with banks and institutions will prove profi table as long as you aren’t impulsive. Develop an idea, but don’t market it just yet. Not ev-eryone you are dealing with is stable.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Listen, but don’t take what you hear as gospel. An event or meet-ing that interests you will change your attitude about old beliefs and standards. Jump-start your imagination; try new things.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Personal issues may be dif-fi cult to handle. Someone is likely to confront you if you have been fl irting or spending too much time away from home. It is best to an-swer questions quickly, so as not to raise suspicion. Altering your current living space will help you move forward.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Get down to business. Take care of fi nancial matters and set your sights on higher goals. Don’t leave anything undone. Act now.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Honesty will be imperative when it comes to partnerships. If you

aren’t satisfi ed with the answers you are getting, dig deeper. Avoid overindulgent people or those looking to get something for noth-ing.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Be careful not to side with any-one. Take a back seat and play mediator. You can only damage your reputation by meddling. A personal issue with someone you are close to will end up cost-ing you emotionally or fi nancially. Socialize, have fun and avoid de-bates.

Birthday Baby: You are sensi-tive, unpredictable, helpful, ener-getic, charming and thorough.

Page 7: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall ...assets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/FY38_090511b.pdf · LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee

paducahsun.com Variety The Paducah Sun • Monday, September 5, 2011 • 7B

Dear Annie: My husband and I were married for 47 years. Four years ago, he said he wanted to “fi nd himself.” A month later, he was in Las Vegas (with another woman), using the company car and gas card. When he stopped answering his phone, I called his manager to fi nd out where he was, and consequently, he was fi red. He blamed me. I was so angry that I moved in with my sister, and he brought that woman to live in our house. Un-til that moment, I had no idea there was an ongoing affair.

I still have not received any divorce papers, which he told me I was supposed to sign. How can I fi nd out if he actually fi led? — Waiting in Los Angeles.

Dear Waiting: In most states, divorce fi lings are a matter of public record and can be accessed through your local county offi ces. Regardless, you should get a lawyer immediately. Your husband has not proved

himself to be trustworthy, and it’s important that you protect yourself.

Dear Annie: Three months ago, my husband and I received an email invitation to a friend’s 70th birthday party, given by his adult children.

A month later, another email arrived, informing us that each guest was expected to pay $25 for our meals at the restaurant, and that there also would be a “money tree.” I thought that was tacky, but we like this guy and still planned to go. Then, a week before the date, we re-ceived a third email, saying the price would now be $32 apiece. The son said he’d be at the en-trance to collect money, and for our convenience, “there is an ATM nearby.”

Annie, if the hosts couldn’t afford a restaurant, why didn’t

they simply have people at their home for coffee and cake? I called the son and told him we are senior citizens and on a fi xed income. I said we were sorry, but could not afford to attend. Then, the son tried to put a guilt trip on me.

I have never heard of any-thing so nervy! There’s a Yid-dish word for it, but I don’t know how to spell it. I hope we haven’t lost a friend. — Now I’ve Seen it All.

Dear Seen: The word you are looking for is “chutzpah,” and yes, the son seems to have a lot of it. Unfortunately, he’s not alone. A lot of people think it’s OK to make the guests foot the bill for whatever event they decide to have. We do suggest, however, that you send the honoree a nice card and a small gift if you can afford it. We are certain it will be appreci-ated.

ACROSS1 E.T. carriers,

theoretically5 Fetch

10 Last letters inLondon

14 Calaminemineral

15 Where one’sname might go,on a form

16 “Out of Africa”author Dinesen

17 ComposerStravinsky

18 Eight is enoughfor one

19 Spitting sound20 1981

Fonda/Hepburnclassic

23 Mac maker26 “I Ching” readers27 2006

Bullock/Reevesromance

31 Back talk32 “Hi-__, Hi-Lo”33 Annual sports

awards37 In re39 Designer Karan42 Donkey’s need, in

a party game43 Low on funds45 Winged peace

symbol47 Director Ang or

Spike48 1994

Streep/Baconthriller

52 Sleeve opening55 Puts in the mail56 2004 Kevin

Spacey tribute (toBobby Darin)

60 Yankeessuperstar,familiarly

61 “Old MacDonald”refrain

62 New Zealander66 Mafia boss67 Dog’s warning68 Michener novel,

typically69 Tinkertoy

alternative70 Playable on a

VCR71 Do, re or mi

DOWN1 Israeli

submachine gun2 Source of Eve’s

leaves3 Yoko from Tokyo4 Dead Sea find5 Web opinion

piece6 Puerto __7 Part of IMF: Abbr.8 Must9 French sponge

cake10 Having the most

pizazz11 These, in Tijuana12 Intimidate13 Loses control on

the ice21 Host Conan of

NPR’s “Talk ofthe Nation”

22 Rudolph’s is red23 Book of maps24 Engage in an

online scam25 __-Bismol28 Tease29 “Evil Woman” gp.30 Delhi tongue34 “Going Rogue”

author Sarah35 Give way

36 Mushers’ vehicles38 Greek __ Church40 Oct. follower41 D.C.’s

Pennsylvania,e.g.

44 Suffix with tele- orDance-A-

46 Celtic language49 Firstborn50 Light-sensitive

eye part51 Debilitate

52 Taken __:surprised

53 Showed again54 Mr. Magoo, e.g.57 Jalopy58 Galway’s land59 Word after “going

twice ...”63 NASDAQ debut64 Dorothy Parker

forte65 Arctic pier

material

By Andrea Carla Michaels(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 09/05/11

09/05/11

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

[email protected]

Wife needs lawyer to protect herself from cheating husband

Ask Annie

Marvin

Blondie

Garfield

B.C.

Dilbert

Zits

Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

Page 8: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall ...assets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/FY38_090511b.pdf · LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee

This 3 year old majestic brick & stone home boasts of over 6,000 sq.ft. Under Roof with up to 6 Bedrooms and 3-1/2 Baths; 2 Kitchens; 2 Garages; Family Room; Rec Room; Crown Molding; Tray Ceilings; Brazilian Cherry Hardwood Floors & Granite Throughout; Full Walk-Out Basement; In-Ground Pool; Large Balcony Deck; Large Patios and Views, Views, Views! Owners have over $700,000.00 invested - sells to the high bidder regardless of the amount of the bid.

Monday, Sept. 5th

(Labor Day!)10:07 AM

ROBERT ALEXANDERROBERT ALEXANDERREAL ESTATE & AUCTION CO.REAL ESTATE & AUCTION CO.

(270) 554-5212 or 1-800-307-SOLD

www.rareauctions.comwww.rareauctions.com

SOSO

RARERARE

KY Auct. Lic.#P01437 • KY RE Lic.#173 • IL Auct. Lic.#0410000399 • IL RE Lic.#075.0092126 • IN Auction. Lic.#AU19600046 • IN RE

Lic.#IB29900115 • TN Auct. Lic.#00005152 • TN RE Lic.#00271464

Robert Alexander , CAI, Broker/Auctioneer Robert Alexander , CAI, Broker/Auctioneer John Alexander, AuctioneerJohn Alexander, Auctioneer

TBCPi

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118 Periwinkle Hill Rd., Cadiz, KY

Magnifi cent Waterfront Home - Fabulous Lake

Barkley

AUCTIONAUCTIONAbsolute

Fabulous Lake Barkley Waterfront Estate Situated on ±2.8 Waterfront Acres!

Open House: Day of Auction at 8:37 AM or Call for Preview

Property between Property between Cadiz & DraffenvilleCadiz & Draffenville

Location: Traveling Hwy 68 through Aurora turn left on 68/80. Go 10.5 miles and turn right on Ky 164 (Linton Rd), then right on Ky 1891 (Lock E Rd). Watch for auction signs.

Directions: Take Ky. Ave downtown & turn rt. on South 9th St. next to McCracken Co. Health Dept & across from Michaels Pizzeria Restaurant then proceed 0.5 miles arrive at property on the corner of S. 9th & Tennessee St. Signs posted.REAL ESTATE: Attractive 4 bed rm. 2 bath home w/ central heat, replacement windows, tall ceilings, fi replace, large spacious rooms, spiral staircase, wide moldings, 200 amp service, all utilities available, winding stairs that lead to large covered front porch, 2 car detached garage & more. GO TO WWW.COLSONSELLS.COM FOR PHOTOS. Terms of Auction: Real Estate Terms: 20% deposit day of auction. Balance due in 30 days. 10% buyer premium will be added to fi nal bid. Auctioneers Note: Home sells onsite rain or shine. Bank letter of credit required if unknown by Auction Co.

ABSOLUTE AUCTIONBRICK HOME • CORNER LOT

THURSDAY • SEPTEMBER 8TH • 6:00 PMADDRESS: 900 TENNESSEE ST. PADUCAH, KY 42003

Chris Colson, Broker/Auctioneer • Pam Trimble – AgentDave Rowton – Apprentice Auctioneer • Mike Colson - Apprentice Auctioneer

Ky. Auct. Lic #P939 • Ky. RE Lic. #58391www.colsonsells.comwww.colsonsells.com

3250 Key Drive, Paducah, KY 420033250 Key Drive, Paducah, KY 42003

270.444.0031270.444.0031

Classified Private Party Ad Rates:

Deadlines:IN-COLUMN ADVERTISINGSun. & Mon.........................................................Fri. 3 p.m.

Tues.-Sat.................................................12-Noon Prev. DayChanges-Cancellations............................................12 Noon Prev. DayPaducah Homes.....................................................................Noon Mon.

DISPLAY ADVERTISINGSun..........................................................................................Wed. 4 p.m.Mon.......................................................................................Thurs. NoonTues......................................................................................Thurs. 4 p.m.Wed............................................................................................Fri. 4 p.m.Thurs.......................................................................................Mon. NoonFri............................................................................................Tues. NoonSat............................................................................................Wed. Noon

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Sun Publishing, a division of The Paducah Sun, is currentlyaccepting resumes for the position of

GRAPHIC DESIGNER

The Paducah Sun is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin or disability.

This position will work directly with the Director/Account Manager to create/produce high quality, cutting edge design for publications and other special projects.

Applicants must be able to multi-task, work well under pressure, meet strict deadlines, work quickly and efficiently, pay attention to detail, be able to follow written and/or verbal layout instructions, possess excellent grammar & spelling skills and be extremely proficient using a Macintosh computer along with the latest versions of Quark Express, PhotoShop, Illustrator and InDesign programs. Must also be familiar with Flight Check software and preparing jobs for print on offset and web presses.

The minimum requirements include a high school diploma or the equivalent with 2 years of college or special training preferred. At least 2 years of hands-on experience working as a graphic designer is mandatory.

This is a full-time position with benefits available. Pay will be commensurate with education and experience.

Qualified applicants are asked to email a cover letter, resume andsalary history/requirements to [email protected]

No phone calls please.

The Paducah Sun Production Department has positions available for part-time production worker.Positions’ Main Requirements:•Place preprinted sections into newspapers or preprint jacket.•Assist in the processing of newspapers including stacking, bundling,counting, and labeling finished products and delivering papers to post office.

Job Specifications:•Education: High school diploma, GED or equivalent.•Skills and Abilities: Fast learner, be alert, ability to communicate, ability to work with hands, responsible for acting in a safe and responsible manner, valid driver’s license required.

•Hours may vary from 6 p.m. until 5 a.m., Monday through Sunday.

An application and job description may be obtained atThe Paducah Sun office located at 408 Kentucky Ave., Paducah, KY

from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday

The Paducah Sun is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin or disability.

PRODUCTION/INSERTING POSITIONis currently accepting applications for:

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Wood PalletsThe Paducah Sun ispleased to offer freenewsprint end rollsand wood pallets tothe community. Eithermay be picked updaily while supplieslast in the alley behindThe Paducah Sunbuilding.

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ADAdvertisers are re -quested to check thefirst insertion of ads forany error. The Padu-cah Sun will be re -sponsible for onlyONE INCORRECT IN-SERTION. Any errorshould be reported im-mediately so correc-tions can be made.CHECK YOUR ADcarefully and notifyThe Classified Adver-tising Department dur-ing office hours Mon-day through Friday8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.in case of an error.

270-575-8700

0142 LOST

LOST YOUR DOG??Check the AnimalShelter 4000 ColemanRd.

0151 GARAGE/ESTATE SALES

Concord

HUGE Labor Daysale, Mon. 7-11. 5407Stevin Dr. furn., appli-ances, clothes, more.

West end

MULTI family, baby &toddler boy clothes,motorcycle, misc. To-day 7:30. 2928 Adam.

EMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENT

0204 ADMINISTRATIVE

0208 SALES

ACCOUNT rep posi-tion available with re-gional marketing firm.Please visit www.ivs.net/employment.php

0212 PROFESSIONAL

LICENSED Aestheti-cian / Cosmetologist.Lg. Room/Equipment/Supplies/Products pro-vided. Send Resume:Renu, 111 Nahm St.#3, Paducah 42001.

PROJECTSCOORDINATORThe Pennyrile AreaDevelopment Districtis seeking a qualified,motivated, and selfstarting individual forthe professional posi-tion of Projects Coor-dinator. This individualwill be responsible fordeveloping and admin-istering economic andcommunity develop-ment projects and ini-tiatives in the ninecounty Pennyrile re-gion and will workclosely with cities,counties, special dis-tricts, and other agen-cies on a daily basis.The qualified candi-date should possess aBachelors Degree inBusiness, Finance,Economics, Public Ad-ministration or relatedfield. Excellent organ-izational, communica-tion, and computerskills are a must andthe successful candi-date must be able tohandle a multitude oftasks simultaneously.PADD offers an excel-lent compensation andbenefits package anda dynamic work envi-ronment. Mail resumeand cover letter to Al-isha Sutton, Adminis-trative Officer, Penny-rile Area DevelopmentDistrict, 300 Ham -mond Drive, Hopkins-ville, KY 42240. Theposition will remainopen unti l f i l led.PADD is an Equal Op-portunity Employer.

Senior Electrical/

Instrument Engineer

Arkema Inc., a leadingglobal chemical com-pany, is actively re -cruiting for an Electri-cal/Instrument Engi-neer at its Calvert City,KY facility. Arkema of-fe rs compet i t i vewages and benefits.Salary will be com -mensurate with educa-tion and experience.Responsibilities forthis position include:engineering projectmanagement for in-strumentation andcontrol projects, indi-rectly supervising E&ITechnicians, controlsystem programming,and management ofelectrical/instrumenta-tion spare parts inven-tory.The qualified candi-date must possess aminimum of a B.S. de-gree in Electrical Engi-neering with five yearsexperience in electri-cal, instrumentationand control design ormaintenance in chemi-cal/petrochemicalmanufacturing.

Qualified applicantsshould apply online atwww.arkema-inc.com

EOE/AAE

Senior LeadProject

EngineerArkema Inc., a leadingglobal chemical com-pany, is actively re -cruiting for a SeniorLead Project Engineer

0212 PROFESSIONAL

at its Calvert City, KYfacility. Arkema offerscompetitive wagesand benefits. Salarywill be commensuratewith education and ex-perience. This posi-tion is responsible forthe implementation ofall phases of capitalproject developmentand execution.This position requiresa minimum of a B.S. inengineering - me -chanical or similar,comprehensive under-standing of engineer-ing standards, twentyyears of project re -lated experience, anddemonstrated supervi-sion and leadershipability in a chemicalplant environment.

Qualified applicantsshould apply online atwww.arkema-inc.com

EOE/AAE

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

CertifiedMedication

AideNeeded for WesternKentucky CorrectionalComplex in Fredonia,KY, Mon. - Fri., 1:30p -9:30p. Primary dutiesto include preparing,administering, & docu-menting medications &treatments. Currentregistration with Ken-tucky Nurse Aide Reg-istry is required &must possess docu-mentation of havingsuccessfully passedthe medication aidecompetency exam.Please forward re -sume & letter of inter-est referencing the po-sition to CorrectCare -Integrated Health, Fax859-685-0901 or [email protected]

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

NOW Hiring CertifiedNursing Assistants.Calvert City Convales-cent Center, 110 Con-valescent Dr. Nophone calls.

0232 GENERAL HELP

COMMUNITYOPTIONS, INC.

is a national nonprofitorganization with themission to develophousing and employ-ment for people withdisabilities. We oper-ate in 37 cities across10 states, and supportthousands of peopleand their families withthe help of over 2,500employees.In Marshall County,KY, we are seekingCommunity SupportStaff. FT & PT shiftsavailable.Responsibilities incl.:assisting individualsw/maintaining their in-dependence & em -powering them to be-come integrated mem-bers of their communi-ties by providing sup-port in social, recrea-tional, and vocationalactivities. Assist indi-viduals w/daily livingskills and the develop-ment of independentcommunity living, ad-ministering medica-tion, complete the ap-propriate docs and ac-companying individualto/from appts & activi-ties.Req'd: H S Diploma/GED, a valid Driver'sLicense, reliable trans-portation and insur-ance. EOEPlease fax resume to:

270-450-0812 oremail: carla.spencer@

comop.org

EXPERIENCEDAUTO DETAILER

Must have valid driv-ers license, submit todrug test. 3-5 yrs ex-perience required.

270-498-6848

0232 GENERAL HELP

EXPRESSWAY CarWash now hiring full &part time positions.Driver's license & drugscreening req. Applyin person at 3245 ParkAve., Paducah, KY.

HIRING for Inside &Outside Positions.Room for advance -ment for the right can-didate. Apply in per-son at Finish Line CarWash, 3516 ClarksRiver Road.

LEO Anderson Con-struction hiring experi-enced resident ia lframers. 554-0455.

PHONE sales to es-tablished customerbase. Invoicing &shipping, some lifting.Knowledge of Quick-Books helpful. Part-time, Lyon Co. area.Send resume to BB368 c/o The PadcahSun, PO Box 2300,Paducah, KY 42002.

AVON: $8-15/hour.Full or PT. 703-2866.

0232 GENERAL HELP

LOCAL Surveying &Engineer ing f i rmseeks hardworking in-dividuals for full-timepositions on a SurveyField Crew. Excellentbenefits package.Overnight travel re -quired. Pay based onexperience. Must havevalid drivers license &pass pre-employmentdrug screen. Mail ordeliver resume to:

Todd McBeeCivil Design Group

133 Market House Sq.Paducah, KY 42001

WRIGHT Tree Servicehas openings in thesourounding areas ofPaducah. Wright Treeis an employee ownedcompany and is look-ing for foremen, climb-ers, groundmen. Payis based on experi -ence. We work 4 (10hr) days. We offer paidvacation, full benefits& paid holidays. If in-terested in these jobs,you may call TimBriggs @ 270-875-5545 or Dan Smith @269-924-4580.

0232 GENERAL HELP

THOROUGHBREDRESEARCH GROUP

is acceptingapplications for itsTelephone SurveyCenters in Mayfield

and Paducah.Applications for part-time telephone inter-viewer positions with astarting pay of $8.00per hour will be ac -cepted Mon.- Fri. from1 pm to 7 pm at May-field Shopping Plaza,1102 Paris Rd., May-field and 4645 VillageSquare Drive, Suite D,Paducah (behindHome Depot, off ofHinkleville Rd.).Applicants will have tobe available to work atleast 20 hours a weekand one weekend day.Initial Mon.- Fri. shiftswill run 4 pm to 11 pm(10 pm for students).Sat. shift will be from 9am to 5 pm and Sun.shift from 12 pm to 5pm. Great job for asecond income, col-lege students, and re-tirees. NO SALES.

ClassifiedThe Paducah Sun | Monday, September 5, 2011 | paducahsun.com8B

Browse it. Search it. Click it.

Classifieds are now available

on the Internet! www.paducahsun.com

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(Answers tomorrow)CLAMP CLOAK MUFFLE ALWAYSSaturday’s Jumbles:

Answer: What strolling in Hollywood can be for amovie star — A WALK OF FAME

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.

GUNYO

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KELWYE

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is currently accepting applications for:

The Paducah Sun currently has a part-time position available for an office delivery agent. Duties will include delivery of newspaper routes, making of new delivery tapes, delivery of missed papers of home delivery subscribers, assist with kiosk and door to door sales.

Applications may be picked upMonday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at

The Paducah Sun 408 Kentucky Avenue

Paducah, KentuckyNo phone calls please.

PART-TIME OFFICE DELIVERY AGENT

The Paducah Sun is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin or disability.

Production Supervisor3A Composites has an immediate opening at its Benton, Kentucky facility. This position will report to the Production Superintendent. The incumbent will be responsible for managing the production operations as well as manufacturing support on the evening shift. This position will maintain open communication with the Production Superin-tendent to properly target needed improve-ment while establishing department goals and objectives and support company policy. A two or four year degree with an engineering or mechanical background is preferred. Three years of manufacturing experience in a unionized facility, with the ability to lead and manage people.

Send resume to:3A Composites USA Inc.

Attn: Tammy Boland3480 Taylorsville HwyStatesville, NC 28625

Email: [email protected]

HELP WANTED:AG EQUIPMENT

SERVICE TECHNICIANM & S Implement Co., Inc. (a New Holland, Agco, Massey-Ferguson, Kinze, etc., farm equipment dealership) has an opening for a Service Technician. Minimum of 3 years related experience or successful completion of related technical school program. Competitive salary & benefit package. Come in for an application or submit resume to:

M & S Implement Co., Inc.350 Highway 145 South

Harrisburg, IL 62946Fax: 618-253-7603

Email:[email protected]

0232 GENERAL HELP

News ClerkThe Paducah Sun hasan immediate openingfor a part-time news-room clerk. A strongcandidate will possessexperience with wordprocessing programsand customer service.Good typing skills witha high level of accu-racy is essential. Theposition is part-timewith shifts scheduledin the evenings with atleast one weekendevening.The Sun is theseven-day a.m., head-quarters newspaper ofPaxton Media GroupLLC, publisher of 32daily newspapers andnumerous associatedweeklies in the Southand Midwest. Pay isbased on experience.Please respond beforeSept. 9, 2011. Applica-tions can be made atthe Sun office, 408Kentucky Ave. in Padu-cah. Also, resumesmay be sent to RonClark, News Editor, [email protected]. No postage ortelephone inquiries,please.Paxton Media GroupLLC is an equal oppor-tunity employer anddoes not discriminateon the basis of race,religion, sex, age, na-tional origin or disabil-ity.

0232 GENERAL HELP

PhotographerThe Paducah Sun hasan immediate openingfor a part-time photog-rapher. A strong can-didate will possess ex-perience with live ac-tion photography usingdigital SLR camerasand equipment. Fastand accurate work isessential. Also, theability to write wellstructured sentencesand paragraphs is im-portant. The position ispart-time with shiftsscheduled in the dayand evening hours,depending on assign-ment, with at least oneweekend day each

0232 GENERAL HELP

week.The Sun is theseven-day a.m., head-quarters newspaper ofPaxton Media GroupLLC, publisher of 32daily newspapers andnumerous associatedweeklies in the Southand Midwest. Pay isbased on experience.Please respond beforeSept. 9, 2011. Applica-tions can be made andwork samples offeredat the Sun office, 408Kentucky Ave. inPaducah. Also, re -sumes with work sam-ples may be sent toDuke Conover, Execu-t i ve Ed i to r , a [email protected]. No postageor telephone inquiries,please.Paxton Media GroupLLC is an equal oppor-tunity employer anddoes not discriminateon the basis of race,religion, sex, age, na-tional origin or disabil-ity.

0236 INDUSTRIAL TRADE

Electrical & Instrumentation

TechnicianArkema Inc., a leadingglobal chemical com-pany, is actively re -cruiting for an E&ITechnician at its Cal-vert City, KY facility.Practical experienceand required trainingskills of at least fiveyears as an E&I Tech-nician or equivalentcraft is required. Thequalified candidatemust be proficient inthe following: Installa-tion and repair of high,medium, and low volt-age electrical systems.Installation, troubleshooting, and repair ofinstrumentation usedto control the proc -esses in a chemicalmanufacturing plant.Knowledge of properand safe use of alltools required to main-tain electrical and in-strument circuits in anindustrial chemicalplant is required.Hourly rate is $30.08.Arkema offers a com-petitive benefit pack-age.

Qualified applicantsshould apply online atwww.arkema-inc.com

EOE/AAE

0240 SKILLED TRADE

LABORERS & Experi-enced Welders/FittersApply: 270-415-9972.

PILGRIM'S PRIDEDIESEL MECHANIC

A large Western Ken-tucky complex is seek-ing an experienceddiesel mechanic. Thisposition will report tothe Truck Shop Super-intendent.The ideal candidatewill be a mature,self-motivated individ-ual willing to work in afast-paced environ -ment and adhere tocompany policies.Candidate must pos-sess high school di-ploma or equivalent.The qualified individ-ual must also possessa Class A CDL.We offer a competitivepay with an attractivebenefit package in -cluding:*Paid Holidays & Vacations*Medical, Vision, & Dental Benefits*401(k))*Life/Accidental Death & Dismemberment Insurance*Short Term Disability

Please apply at:Department of

Employment ServiceMayfield * Murray

* PaducahPilgrim's Pride Corpo-ration is an AffirmativeAction/Equal Opportu-nity Employer Fe -males & Minorities areencouraged to apply.

0244 TRUCKING

Hiring Class ADrivers

Teams & SolosSIGN ON BONUS

LIMITED TIME ONLYTEAMS / $10,000

SOLO / $3,0003 Years OTR Experi-ence. Age 24+. GreatWeekly Pay, Benefits,Bonus Programs. Vol-vo s w/53 ft. Dry Van.Midwest Routes.10cpm Extra for Can-ada Runs. Call TNi.

1-866-378-5071www.tri-nat.com

OVER-the-road driver,home most weekends,clean driving record.Call Bushart Trucking,270-705-1838

0244 TRUCKING

LOCAL Company hasposition open for aTruck Driver, homeevery weekend &most weeknights. Ap-plicant must have agood driving record, acurrent CDL, & currentmedical card. Reply toBB 367 c/o The Padu-cah Sun, PO Box2300, Paducah, KY42002.

SALESMANDRIVER

INSTALLERPrice Ballard-CarlislePropane in LaCenterhas an opening for alocal propane gas de-livery salesman truckdriver & tank in -staller. Must haveCDL-HazMat Tanker.Best job with excel-lent pay & benefits.Call 270-665-5173 ortoll free 1-800-874-4427 ext. 142 or emailus at [email protected].

0260 RESTAURANT

NOW Hiring host -esses, experiencedservers & experiencedgrill cooks. Please ap-ply at Patti's in GrandRivers Mon-Fri 9am to4pm.

OASIS Southwest Grillis now hiring experi-enced Grill Cooks,full-time. Apply within,no phone calls. I-24,Exit 40, Kuttawa.

0260 RESTAURANT

TOKYO Hibachi nowhiring Servers. Applyat 3535 James Sand-ers Blvd., 270-933-1900.

WILLY JAKSImmediate opening forEnergetic Servers. Ap-ply in person, 323Ferry St., Metropolis.Must be 21, $5 +tips.

0264 CHILD CARE

NOTE TO PARENTS:Kentucky State Lawrequires licensing forchild care facilitiesproviding care for 4 ormore children not re-lated to the licenseeby blood, marriage oradoption.

0280 BUSINESSES FOR SALE

MOBILE Home parkfor sale, 7 mobile unitsw/lots, 3BR house, 2acres adjoining park,p r e s e n t i n c o m e$3300/mo., all unitsconstantly full, locatedon Hwy 60, Ledbetter,KY. If interested: 270-898-4350 from 9-5.

0288 ELDERLY CARE

WILL sit with elderly.270-217-2429.

PETSPETS

0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS

AFRICAN & Australianfinches, 618-524-8732lv. message.

AKC English BulldogPuppies. 270-335-3943 or 994-3915.

0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS

AKC Gold Retrieverpups, w/ shots.270-994-8844.

AKC Pomeranians, 1stshots, vet checked.270-804-3767 or 270-804-3090.

AKC YORKIES270-928-2462

BOSTON Ter r ie rp u p s , C K C ,731-799-5235.

ENGLISH BULLDOG PUPS, AKC

Champion Bloodlines1 yr. health guarantee

Vet Checked270-678-7943

trulocksredgables.com

FREE cats & kittens270-556-5352

FREE Lab mix pup-pies to good home.270-210-8968

IMPERIAL Shih Tzupuppies & TinySchnauzer puppies,554-9644, 853-5387.

LOVABLE kitty needsa good home, shots,spayed. 270-816-4173

POODLES, $400-upVisa/MC 898-4712

PUPS, Many Colorstinymicrodachshund.

com. 534-5988

REG. Yorkie puppies,12 wks. old, $250.270-952-0343.

YORKIE Bichon mix &Yorkie Japanese Chinmix, shots & wormed,7 wks. 270-759-2457

FARMFARM

0450 LIVESTOCK

11 GENTLE, blackbred Heifers, startcalving in about 2weeks, 270-898-2950,270-366-4318.

0470 FARM EQUIPMENT

JIM WILSON EQUIP-MENT Going Out ofBusiness Sale! Allparts at least 50% dis-counted from list. Allwhole goods also dis-counted. Sale ongo-ing, Mon. - Fri., 8am-12pm, Barlow, KY.

0480 FARMS FOR SALE

37.5 ACRES, 3 BRbrick, gar. apt., pool, 2barns, Heath area.$299K. 270-744-9656.

MERCHANDISEMERCHANDISE

0503 AUCTION SALES

Col. Paul Wilkerson &Sons Real Estate &Auction, Lowes, KY

674-5659 or 674-5523

0509 HOUSEHOLD GOODS

For sale wood kitchentable with 6 chairs,$100; bunk beds, $50.270-816-5909

GUARANTEED UsedAppliances. 1600 IrvinCobb Dr., 443-1115.

0512 MUSICAL MERCHANDISE

ROLAND Electronicdrum set. $650, OBO.270-210-1330.

WASHBURN bassguitar w/amp, $300.270-247-5030.

paducahsun.com The Paducah Sun • Monday, September 5, 2011 • 9B

HOME SERVICE HOME SERVICE DIRECTORYDIRECTORY

1018 ASPHALT/CONCRETE

CONCRETEWORK

Large or SmallFree Estimates270-442-8686270-816-3187

J OINER S EALCOATING Asphalt Sealing Striping Crack Repair Free Estimates Numerous References

270-933-9273

SMITH'S SEALCOATING

StripingCrack Filling

270-908-5780Quality

Affordable Work

1024 BACKHOE

CASEMCKEEL EQUIPMENT

COMPANY, INC.1939 N. 8TH STREETPADUCAH, KY 42001

(270) 444-0110Daily, Weekly & Monthly RentalsParts • Sales • Service

1048 CLEANING SERVICES

HousecleaningAffordably

*Will clean homes,offices, or business

*ReferencesProvided

*Affordable Rates270-349-4119

1048 CLEANING SERVICES

MINUTE MAIDSWhy Spend the Day Cleaning?

*No job too small/big*Insured/Bonded*100% Satisfaction

Kathy Hoppel 270-816-3188

1108 EXCAVATING

CUSTOM BULLDOZING Cat D6H 10’ Blade Clearing, under-

brushing, fence rows, waterways, ponds.

Free Estimates 23 Years Experience 270-293-0371

1150 HAULING

CLEAN OUT HAUL OFF

• Garages • Attics • Basements

• Outbuildings W. KY & So. IL

No Job Too Small! FREE ESTIMATES (270) 210-5470

1156 HEATING/COOLING

INSTALL, REPAIR,CLEAN & SELLWINDOW AIR

CONDITIONERSChargeups. Will pick

up or you bring.Joe Thweatt

554-1208, 217-4027Lic.#M00651

1162 HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR

KEYRoofing,

Painting &RemodelingWe will Save You

Money $$FREE ESTIMATES

270-703-0978270-205-6063

MINDSPRING442-3360

We can solve your addition,

renovation, and design

build needs.

New HomesAdditions

RemodelingVinyl Siding

Replacement WindowsGarages • Decks

Carports • Any Type of Home Repair

Licensed • InsuredSince 1976

Kevin RoseConstruction462 -8285

PADUCAH ’S BEST Windows - $175 Installed

Vinyl Siding, Gutters Pressure Washing, Roofing

Pole Barns, Rent-A-Husband No Job Too Big or Small 270-564-5770 270-442-0809

1162 HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR

POWLEY CONTRACTING & CONSULTING

Specializing in Remodel & New

Construction. Licensed & Insured 270-210-0073

For all your home improvements & new construction projects.

No Job Too Small. Free Estimates.

Licensed & Insured. Quality Work at a

Fair Price. 270 -559 -0162

PRECISION CONTRACTING

& REMODELING

SKIP MILLSRemodel & RepairCarpentry, Painting,

Trim, Windows,Doors, Screens,

Sheetrock,Laminate Floors,Power Washing.

35+ Yrs., Licensed554-3905

1198 LAWN/LANDSCAPE/TREE SVC

ADORE LAWN& LANDSCAPINGSpring Cleanup,

Trimming, Mulching,Overseeding, HedgeTrimming, Fertilizing

& Seeding.270-554-2426270-933-8869

1198 LAWN/LANDSCAPE/TREE SVC

Ignacio & Son s LANDSCAPING

Mowing Weeding Trimming Mulching

Gutter Cleaning Fall Clean Up

Pressure Washing

FREE ESTIMATES Call George

270-816-2309

MIKE'S TRACTOR& LAWN SERVICE

NEW YARDINSTALLATIONYard Leveling,

Utility ConstructionRepair, Sand,Gravel, Dirt

Sodding(Top Soil & Fill Dirt)Hauled & Spread

FREE ESTIMATESINSURED

270-519-2410270-462-3662

S&E LAWN & TREE SERVICE Cutting • Hauling Stump Removal

Insured 441-2111 or 554-4521

1200 TREE SERVICE

Ace Tree Service & Stump Removal Aerial Bucket Truck

Insured Free Estimates

898-8733

A-SAP TREE & STUMP REMOVAL

•Experience you can count on

•Prices you can afford •Specializing in

Large TreeRemoval •Trimming

•Stump Grinding In Business Since1987

270-906-8216 270-252-6110

Ask for P. Jarvis

LITTLE'STREE & STUMP

REMOVALAerial Bucket TruckFULLY INSURED

FREE ESTIMATES270-933-3086

PRO AFFORDABLETREE SERVICE

*The Best Prices!*High Quality Work*Fast Response*Free Estimates*Licensed/Insured

270-366-2033

RICHARD’S TREE SERVICE

Beat Any Written Estimate Guaranteed

•Free Estimates •Insured

270-816-5488

1228 PAINT/WALLCOVER

GP PAINTINGFor All YourProfessional

Painting Needs*Fully Established

*Fully Insured*Free Estimates270-519-5104

RUSHING’S PAINTING &

DRYWALL 20 Years Experience Excellent References Wallpaper hanging & removal; plaster repairs;

drywall hanging & finishing; painting -

interior/exterior. Free Estimates

270-210-8580, 898-3765

1258 PRESSURE WASHING

Tru Blu Pressure Washing Licensed & Insured

Call for free estimate!

270-519-9638

1276 ROOFING

COWBOY UP ROOFING

I can install metalroofing for the sameprice of 2-layer shin-gle tear-off , 30-yearshingles. I will beatany bid 5%. FreeEstimates & Insured

270-705-5799270-382-2387

1276 ROOFING

HINESROOFING

35 Years Experience~ INSURED ~

All Work Guaranteed443-6338556-5474

KLAPP ROOFING CO., INC.

Residential & Commercial

Reroofs & Repairs Free Estimates

Licensed & Insured 270-559-4263

RE-ROOF REPAIRS & NEW ROOFS 217-2872

T&S ROOFINGSeamless Gutters

We do it all!Remodeling, VinylSiding, Dry Wall,

Ceramic TileWe are not the

biggest but we are the best!270-556-7876

1306 SERVICES

FURNITURERESTORATIONFurniture/CabinetRepair, Stripping,

FinishingM&R Woodworks

554-1705

1306 SERVICES

TransmissionRepairs

ALL TYPESTom Allen210-1550

Allen Auto Sales

PROFESSIONAL PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORYSERVICE DIRECTORY1572 COUNSELING

Exit 11, N. of I-24, 270-519-0896 P LAN N OW F OR

“T HE U NEXPECTED ” with Brenda, click “LIVE HELP” www.hughesfuneral.com KY Licensed Funeral Director

brenda.allcock@ hughesfuneral.com “People serving people”

1770 MUSIC LESSONS

Guitar Lessons -Banjo -Bass

-Dobro -Mandolin

Jack Martin 442-8167

LAWN, GUTTERS, HAULING

LAWN CARE, MOWING,WEEDEATING,

LEAF REMOVAL, ETC.GUTTERS CLEANED

MINOR REPAIR(270) 443-9633

Page 10: Paducah Tilghman graduates Hunter Cantwell and Bryan Hall ...assets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/FY38_090511b.pdf · LOUIS — Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee

To honor your grandparents or show off your grandkids in our special Grandparents Day issue on September 11, bring your name, phone number and payment along with a photograph of Grandparent(s) and/or Grandchild or Grandchildren and their names to The Paducah Sun in care of the Classified Advertising Department during office hours to 408 Kentucky Avenue. Please include a self-addressed stamped envelope for return of original photo.

National Grandparents Dayis Sunday, September 11, 2011

Publish Date: September 11, 2011

Deadline For Pictures:Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Or mail to:The Paducah SunAttn: Classifieds

P.O. Box 2300Paducah, KY 42002-2300

0527 SPORTING GOODS

COMPLETE set Ad-ams Golf, w/bag. $400270-575-9623

0533 FURNITURE

BROYHILL DR set, 6chairs, 108" table w/2leaves, $950; TommyBahama king BR suitew/mattresses & dresser,$2,000. 270-559-6279

HAND Carved Victo-rian bed, 1800's, byappointment only:618-303-0013.VARIOUS antique &replica pieces. cornercupboards, desks,bookcases, all appli-ances. 270-816-2191.

0554 WANTED TO RENT/BUY/TRADE

JUNKED CARS, $500& up. 270-933-8698

WE BUY running, fix-able, junk cars, trucks,vans, campers, farm &construction equip.CASH. 270-804-8333.

0563 MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE

18,000 BTU A/C,$250. 554-7373.

CANNONDALE Tan-dem bicycle, $1500:MP 250cc scooter$1600; Schwinn 50ccScooter, $500. 618-967-1420 or 524-2876

THIS NEWSPAPERCOULD BE YOURSEVERY DAY! Whatbetter gift to give your-self or a friend, CallThe Paducah SunCustomer Service De-partment for details.5 7 5 - 8 8 0 0 o r1-800-599-1771.

WHITE'S Metal Detec-tors, buy. sell, trade &repair. 898-7618.

REAL ESTATE FOR REAL ESTATE FOR RENTRENT

0605 REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

HUD PUBLISHER'SNOTICE

All real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any prefer -ence, limitations, ordiscrimination basedon race, color, religion,sex, handicap, familialstatus or national ori-gin, or intention tomake any such prefer-ences, limitations ordiscrimination. Statelaws forbid discrimina-tion in the sale, rentalor advertising of realestate based on fac-tors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We willnot knowingly acceptany advertising for realestate which is in vio-lation of the law. Allpersons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.

0610 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS

2 BR, newly remod-eled, Strathmoor Blvd.o f f C a i r o R d .744-0900.

BRAND new 2BR 1B,washer/dryer hookup,central heat/air, Brook-port area, $550/mo.270-556-0939 or618-564-3014.

CALVERT CITY, 2 BRupstairs apt., $425mo. 270-210-0929.

NICE large efficiency,all utilities incl. 2142Jefferson, 443-3090.

2BR, exc location, lgclosets, all built in kit.,w/d con., newly deco-rated, off st. parking.No pets. Ref. req.$650/mo. 443-7103.

CLOSE to mall, 2 BR,sun deck, nice, $495.No pets. 442-3284.

F & F LeasingSpacious 2 BR, LoneOak, central heat/air,all electric. 554-8195.REIDLAND, 2 BR,$495. Lease, NOPETS. 898-2256.

SOUTHGATE MANOR1BR. 270-442-6621

STUDIO downtown,$500, incl. gas & wa-ter. 559-0296.

WHITTIER APTS.1 BR, Sec. 8

Senior & Disabled270-443-3809. EHO

0615 FURNISHED APARTMENTS

1 BR, utils. included,$550. 270-243-0328.HUSBAND Rd., $600,No pets, 559-0688.

0620 HOMES FOR RENT

3BR 1B, Ledbetter. Nopets. $600 + $600dep. 898-8197.

0620 HOMES FOR RENT

2BR 1B, 1 car gar.,gas heat, 2212 Ken-tucky Ave. $495/mo.442-6379. 217-0300.

3BR 1B, no pets, Fre-emont, $600 +deposit.270-217-0114.

BEAUTIFUL Lower-town Artist District,house. 575-430-2854.

2 BR, $550. 2607 Ma-ple, 559-0296.

2BR 1B, $550, nopets, 559-0688.

STEVIN Dr., $1200/mo. no pets, 559-0688

WEST END: 3BR 2B,$1100 + deposit, ref-ererences, 556-4567.

0630 DUPLEXES FOR RENT

2BR 2B Jacuzzi, ga-rage, CLEAN! $850,No smoking. No pets.270-519-1963.

3BR 2B, 2000 sq ft,$950, 554-2287.

0645 WANTED TO RENT

NEED 3-4 BR houseor apt., small dog, re-tired. City or Country.Rent to Own pre -ferred. 701-317-5749.

0665 VACATION PROPERTY

ISLANDER Beach Re-sort condo, NewSmyrna Beach, FL,$700 week, 9/23/11-9/30/11. 618-543-6038

0670 BUSINESS PLACES/OFFICES

CONTRACTOR's of-fice w/shop, 217-3800.

GROCERY/Restau-rant for lease, Free-mont area. 554-9612.

2320 BROADWAY540 - 6000 sq. ft. suite

442-6685

0675 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT

2 BR 2B, $400-$500.No pets. Indian Oaks.

442-1727

0676 MOBILE HOME LOTS FOR RENT

2.5 ACRES mobilehome lot, $250, 402-891-9844, LO area.

LARGE lots, LocustValley, Lone Oak, 3mos. free, 210-5324.

LG. Lots, I will movehome. 270-748-7499.

REAL ESTATE FOR REAL ESTATE FOR SALESALE

0710 HOMES FOR SALE

1213 STARKE AVE.$39K 554-1149

3BR 2B, brick home,1+acres, Calvert City,395-4933, 554-0584.

4BR, 2.5B, 2600 sq. ft.,corner lot, 500 sq. ft.deck w/recessed hottub. Jill Dr., McKenziePark Sub. $249,900.270-519-9398.

EXC. Cond. & loca-tion. Quick posses -sion. 4BR 2.5B 4+ ga-rages. Lge. man cavew/ hot tub. Muchmore. Call 444-9977.

FOR Sale By Owners:3 BR, 1 B, 2-car ga-rage, Blandville, KY.$60K OBO. 270-876-7183, 270-556-1143.

HEATH Schools, 3BR2B. New roof, Stain-less steel appl., 1carattached, 2 car de -tached garage. Movein ready. 559-6329.

Now you can run apicture of your homeor mobile home insideyour classified line adjust like this one! CallClassified TODAY fordetails. 270-575-8700.

REIDLAND brick 3BR,2.5 B, attached 3-cargarage, corner lot,$295K. 270-210-9548or 270-519-0297. Norealtor calls.

SEEING is believing.Don't buy propertybased on pictures orrepresentations. Forfree information aboutavoiding timeshareand real estate scams,write the FederalTrade Commission atWash ing ton , DC20580 or call the Na-tional Fraud Informa-t i o n C e n t e r ,1-800-876-7060.

0728 LAKE/RIVER/RESORT

Brand New!LAKE

COTTAGEonly $97,500

New construction! 3BR, 2B, 1200 SF cot-tage on 1+ acre w/pri-vate access to160,000 acre Ken -tucky Lake. BONUS:FREE Boat Slips! Lo-

0728 LAKE/RIVER/RESORT

cated in desirablelakefront communityw/recreation center,infinity-edge pool &150 acre nature pre-serve. Excellent fi -nancing. Must see.Call now, 1-800-704-3154, ext.3728.

0741 MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE

2008 CHAMPION14x76, 3BR 2B, extranice, will rent lot,270-217-0114.

97 SOUTHERN 16x803BR, 2B, vinyl siding,NICE! 270-489-2525.

BANK REPO2000 16x72 Cham -pion, 2BR 2B, $500down & low monthlypayments.

See @ Today'sHomes! 270-527-5645

0780 MISC. REAL ESTATE

CHURCH, furnished,in Paducah w/mobilehome, storage build-ings on 4 lots.$45,000.

270-994-0667

0786 WANTED TO BUY REAL ESTATE

I WILL buy your housefor cash or lease/op-tion to purchase. Makeyour payment, do re-pairs & close quickly.Any cond. 856-4422;CEBBuysHouses.com

WE BUY USEDMOBILE HOMES

270-856-4422

0793 MONUMENTS/CEMETERIES

2 BURIAL sites, Dixoncemetery in GrandRivers, $300 each.239-657-2684.

TRANSPORTATIONTRANSPORTATION

0804 BOATS FOR SALE

Now you can run apicture of your boat orcamper inside yourclassified line ad justlike this one! CallClassified TODAY fordetails. 270-575-8700.

0820 CAMPERS/TRAILERS

'06 CAR Trailer, 18"Diamond plate w/9000lb winch, nice.$2,595. 443-8136.

2-HORSE horse trailercamper, $5,000. 618-201-8610.

0832 MOTORCYCLES

'06 HERITAGE SoftailClassic, glacier white,10K original miles, lotsof chrome, $13,000firm. 270-210-9732.

04 HD Lowrider, 98xxmiles, exc. cond.$8000. 270-217-1854

1987 HONDA Gold-wing Aspercade, fullyloaded, low miles,$4,000. 618-201-8610.

2004 YAMAHA V-Star,22K miles, garagekept, good cond.,$3500. 270-970-7795.

0856 SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES

2001 INFINITY QX4,GPS, fully loaded,$5,950. 270-217-0510.

2011 ESCAPE Lim-ited, silver,loaded, 600mi., $17,500. TuckerAuto, 270-653-6044.

Now you can run apicture of your truck orSUV inside your clas-sified line ad just likethis one! Call Classi-fied TODAY for de -tails. 270-575-8700.

0864 PICKUP TRUCKS FOR SALE

1977 GMC Grande Si-erra 1500, 350 V-8,looks/runs great, 79Kmi. Pics-email [email protected],Eddyville, KY, $3,000OBO. 618-604-1898.

1994 TOYOTA 4x4ext. cab, runs great,$3,500. 618-543-7504

0868 CARS FOR SALE

'89 Mercedes SE 83Kmi. Loaded $3,750.270-388-2987

2000 Lincoln TownCar, 133K mi., loaded,nice vehicle, $3,200.898-7580.

2001 CHEVY Prism,195K miles, runs well,good A/C, new tires,fair cond., 28 MPG,$2,000. 270-331-0195.

96 LINCOLN TownCar, loaded, new tires,$2500. 564-3633.

0868 CARS FOR SALE

Now you can run apicture of your car in-side your classifiedline ad just like thisone! Call ClassifiedTODAY for details.270-575-8700.

MOST VEHICLESUNDER $5,000

JIM NELSONUSED CARS

4030 Clarks River Rd.

0880 OFF-ROAD VEHICLES

72 CJ 5 Jeep, 4x4,good tires, $1250.270-674-5672.

FINANCIALFINANCIAL

0910 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

Government WildlifeJobs! Great Pay andBenefits. No Experi-ence Necessary. Theticker to a dream jobmight really be ascam. To protect your-self, call the FederalTrade Commissiontoll-free,1-877-FTC-HELP, orvisit www.ftc.gov. Apublic service mes -sage from The Padu-cah Sun and the FTC.

SOME ads in this clas-sification are not nec-essarily for "helpwanted" but for em-ployment informationbooklets.

10B • Monday, September 5, 2011• The Paducah Sun paducahsun.com

SERVICE DIRECTORY SPECIAL

This space can be yours for as little as $ 90 00

per month.

Larger ads available at tremendous savings also.

Run a one inch ad or larger in our Service Directory for one month for only...

$ 3 00 per inch per day (Regular price $13.33 per inch)

Call Classified Advertising at 270-575-8700 for details.

• Ads must be 1” or larger (1 column format only) • Minimum 30 day run • Pre-payment required • No refunds for early cancellations