3b sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/b97p_bsection.pdf · national...

11
National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati 2 Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Mets 1 San Diego 5, Atlanta 4 Houston 7, Chicago Cubs 3 Florida at Arizona, (n) Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, (n) American League Tampa Bay 5, Texas 4 Detroit 8, Minnesota 7 Cleveland 6, Toronto 3 Chicago White Sox 10, Boston 7 Kansas City 7, L.A. Angels 3 N.Y. Yankees at Oakland, (n) Baltimore at Seattle, (n) SCOREBOARD TENNIS Djokovic’s record streak faces old nemesis Roger Federer won another straight-set victory at the French Open, earning him a spot opposite Novak Djokovic in Friday’s semifinals. The last player to beat Djokovic before he started his current 43-match win- ning streak (41-0 in 2011) was Federer in late Novem- ber of 2010. CONTACT US Page 2B Sports The Paducah Sun | Wednesday, June 1, 2011 | paducahsun.com Section B COLLEGE FOOTBALL: NCAA apparently turns its focus to vehicles bought by Buckeyes’ players. | 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] When Mayeld takes the eld at Brooks Stadium on Thursday night, the upstart Cardinals will playing for a regional baseball title for the rst time in 31 years. How this team got to the championship game almost de- es logic in itself. Two weeks ago, the Cardinals had won a mere ve games. If they beat Calloway County in the title game of the Orthopaedic In- stitute of Western Kentucky First Region tournament, they will have doubled that win total. “This team is doing stuff that nobody but the guys in this dug- out thought they were capable of,” Mayeld coach Stephen Hatchell said after the Cardinals pulled a 10-8 upset of defending regional champion Lone Oak. “It just took a while for it to come to- gether.” In the seminals, the Cardinals (9-16) made a statement with a seven-run rst inning, with six of the rst seven hitters getting base hits off Lone Oak starter Cullen Pope. One of them was a bloop single by freshman cleanup hit- ter Stuart Mills, and the rest were line drives and scorchers. “Cullen’s been good all year, but they stung the ball all over the place,” Lone Oak coach Geno Miller said. “They were swinging from the moment they got off the bus.” Mayeld starter Luke Guhy, who had thrown eight innings of one-run ball in a 16-inning win over Graves County in the district seminals, was the biggest ben- eciary. He had a two-run single that made it 3-0 and RBI hits buy Chase Sevic and Marc Wyn- stra extended the lead to 5-0 and brought on left-handed reliever Cody Draffen. “The way we came out swing- ing and came out scoring runs — that just really pumps us up,” said Guhy, who worked four in- nings before giving way to Mills and made a spectacular throw from deep in the hole at short- stop on a sixth-inning play that saved the Cardinals at least one run. Mayeld will have ace Austin Clark available for the champion- ship game. Clark threw four in- nings in Monday’s 11-1 win over Hickman County. The Purple Flash (24-13) didn’t go down without a ght, chipping away at the lead with four runs off Guhy in the third. Trailing 9-7 in the sixth after Lucas En- Seven spot spurs surprising Mayfield to regional finals BY JOEY FOSKO [email protected] Please see BASE | 3B LANCE DENNEE | The Sun Mayfield pitcher Stuart Mills cel- ebrates after the Cardinals defeat- ed Lone Oak during the First Region tournament at Brooks Stadium in Paducah on Tuesday. LANCE DENNEE | The Sun Lone Oak’s Colby Griggs slides into second to break up a possible double play as Mayfield second baseman Chase Sevic throws to first during the seventh inning of the First Region tournament at Brooks Stadium in Paducah on Tuesday. Mayfield beat the defending regional champions 10-8 and plays Calloway County today in the regional finals. Just call her Lauren “Lights Out” Cartwright. With two outs in the bottom of the eighth inning, Cartwright’s bloop single to right eld brought in the winning run for Reidland to defeat Marshall County 5-4 in the First Region seminal. Reidland will now play Calloway County, an early 5-1 winner over Heath, tonight at 7 p.m. at tournament host Graves County. Cartwright, an eighth-grader, previously had a two-out triple that could have been an in-the- park home run. Now hitting in the Lady Greyhounds’ No. 2 spot, Cartwright is only a month and a half removed from being Re- idland’s go-to courtesy runner. She is the culprit of a lighting sna- fu at the First Region All A Classic tournament where the acciden- tal ip of a switch turned into a 30-minute delay in a game. “There’s a lot of pressure, but you just have to step back and take a deep breath and know that you can do it,” Cartwright said, starting in right eld for the Grey- hounds. “I know that I’m just in the second position to move the runners and put the ball in play as best as I can.” Marshall County chipped away at Reidland all night, even get- ting right elder Buzz Ray to third base on a single and an error in center eld with two outs in the seventh inning still tied at 4. “This game is a shame that it’s played in the seminals,” Lady Marshals coach Patricia Greer said. “Every year it’s something just this tight and the kids feel the pressure, but I thought our kids did a great job of not letting the calls and all that get to them.” The Greyhounds and Lady Lak- ers will meet in the championship game for the fth time since 2004, and the meetings have been lucky. Calloway won its state title after beating Reidland in 2004, and Reidland won its last year after a win over Calloway in the nals. “Our last two times we had to face (former Reidland ace) Cassee Layne and that’s a hard chore,” Calloway coach Troy Webb said. “This time we don’t have her to face, but we’re going to have ei- ther Reidland or Marshall, two very good teams, and Marshall’s beat us three times already and Reidland beat us by one, but who- ever we get we don’t feel like we’re going to be overmatched like we were the last couple times we’ve been in the nals.” Reidland will face Calloway pitcher Lindsey Rucker, one of the relative unknowns in the re- gion as a rst-year senior starter. Rucker gave up nine hits to Bal- lard and Heath over the past two games, striking out nine and walking just two. “We’ve had trouble with Cal- loway the other two games we’ve had,” Heath coach Lyne Dickey said, her offensive-minded club getting just four hits off Rucker. “She changes her speed in those pitches and that’s the key to it. That’s why she’s so good, she don’t have to have anything else because she can just change that speed on you and it just keeps you off balance.” Reidland has history behind it as defending state champions, winning the All A Classic state title for the second year in a row and now on a 12-game winning streak heading into tonight. “Usually when you have it this tough each night, you usually play well that third night,” Reidland Reidland still in repeat hunt BY DUSTY LUTHY SHULL [email protected] Please see SOFT | 3B LANCE DENNEE | The Sun Taylor Armstrong (left) of Calloway County beats out a throw to Heath first baseman Caroline Webb in the second inning of the First Region softball tour- nament in Mayfield on Tuesday. BY R.B. FALLSTROM Associated Press ST. LOUIS — Skip Schumaker’s ineld RBI hit capped a three-run eighth inning, taking tough-luck Chris Carpenter off the hook in the St. Louis Cardinals’ 4-3 victo- ry over the San Francisco Giants on Tuesday night. Albert Pujols and Allen Craig hit RBI doubles in the eighth be- fore Schumaker, who had been in a 2-for-19 slump, got the go- ahead single against Javier Lo- pez (2-1) on a perfectly placed grounder between rst and sec- ond. Schumaker’s headrst dive into the bag beat the throw from second baseman Freddy Sanchez, who went far to his left to glove the ball. Ryan Franklin (1-3) struck out the side in the eighth in the rst victory for the ex-closer since July 30. Fernando Salas nished for his 10th save in 10 chances. Ryan Vogelsong pitched ve effective innings for the Giants, yielding a run and six hits. It was the fth consecutive solid out- ing for the right-hander, who re- placed injured Barry Zito. Schumaker finishes Cards’ winning rally BY TIM REYNOLDS Associated Press MIAMI — Dwyane Wade’s night began with a hug for his mom. It ended with an embrace from LeBron James. And the Miami Heat have struck rst in the NBA nals. James scored 24 points for his rst win in ve - nals-game appearances, Wade added 22 points and 10 rebounds and the Heat beat the Dallas Mavericks 92-84 in Game 1 of the title series on Tuesday night. The Heat trailed by eight points early in the third quarter before pulling away, remaining unbeaten at home in these playoffs and snapping Dallas’ ve-game James scores 24, Heat goes up 1-0 Please see NBA | 2B Associated Press Dirk Nowitzki of the Dallas Mavericks reacts in the first half of an NBA Finals loss to the Miami Heat in Mi- ami on Tuesday. Nowitzki led all scorers with 27.

Upload: others

Post on 25-Aug-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

National LeagueWashington 10, Philadelphia 2St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati 2Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Mets 1San Diego 5, Atlanta 4Houston 7, Chicago Cubs 3Florida at Arizona, (n)Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, (n)

American LeagueTampa Bay 5, Texas 4Detroit 8, Minnesota 7Cleveland 6, Toronto 3Chicago White Sox 10, Boston 7Kansas City 7, L.A. Angels 3N.Y. Yankees at Oakland, (n)Baltimore at Seattle, (n)

SCOREBOARD TENNISDjokovic’s record streak faces old nemesis

Roger Federer won another straight-set victory at the French Open, earning him a spot opposite Novak Djokovic in Friday’s semifinals. The last player to beat Djokovic before he started his current 43-match win-ning streak (41-0 in 2011) was Federer in late Novem-ber of 2010.

CONTACT US

Page 2B

SportsThe Paducah Sun | Wednesday, June 1, 2011 | paducahsun.com Section B

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: NCAA apparently turns its focus to vehicles bought by Buckeyes’ players. | 3B

Sports [email protected]

Steve Millizer [email protected]

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

Dusty Luthy Shull [email protected]

When Mayfi eld takes the fi eld at Brooks Stadium on Thursday night, the upstart Cardinals will playing for a regional baseball title for the fi rst time in 31 years.

How this team got to the championship game almost de-fi es logic in itself.

Two weeks ago, the Cardinals had won a mere fi ve games. If they beat Calloway County in the title game of the Orthopaedic In-stitute of Western Kentucky First Region tournament, they will have doubled that win total.

“This team is doing stuff that nobody but the guys in this dug-out thought they were capable of,” Mayfi eld coach Stephen Hatchell said after the Cardinals pulled a 10-8 upset of defending regional champion Lone Oak. “It just took a while for it to come to-gether.”

In the semifi nals, the Cardinals (9-16) made a statement with a seven-run fi rst inning, with six of the fi rst seven hitters getting base hits off Lone Oak starter Cullen Pope. One of them was a bloop single by freshman cleanup hit-ter Stuart Mills, and the rest were

line drives and scorchers.“Cullen’s been good all year,

but they stung the ball all over the place,” Lone Oak coach Geno Miller said. “They were swinging from the moment they got off the

bus.”Mayfi eld starter Luke Guhy,

who had thrown eight innings of one-run ball in a 16-inning win over Graves County in the district semifi nals, was the biggest ben-efi ciary. He had a two-run single that made it 3-0 and RBI hits buy Chase Sevic and Marc Wyn-stra extended the lead to 5-0 and brought on left-handed reliever Cody Draffen.

“The way we came out swing-ing and came out scoring runs — that just really pumps us up,” said Guhy, who worked four in-nings before giving way to Mills and made a spectacular throw from deep in the hole at short-stop on a sixth-inning play that saved the Cardinals at least one run.

Mayfi eld will have ace Austin Clark available for the champion-ship game. Clark threw four in-nings in Monday’s 11-1 win over Hickman County.

The Purple Flash (24-13) didn’t go down without a fi ght, chipping away at the lead with four runs off Guhy in the third. Trailing 9-7 in the sixth after Lucas En-

Seven spot spurs surprising Mayfield to regional finals

BY JOEY [email protected]

Please see BASE | 3B

LANCE DENNEE | The Sun

Mayfield pitcher Stuart Mills cel-ebrates after the Cardinals defeat-ed Lone Oak during the First Region tournament at Brooks Stadium in Paducah on Tuesday.

LANCE DENNEE | The Sun

Lone Oak’s Colby Griggs slides into second to break up a possible double play as Mayfield second baseman Chase Sevic throws to first during the seventh inning of the First Region tournament at Brooks Stadium in Paducah on Tuesday. Mayfield beat the defending regional champions 10-8 and plays Calloway County today in the regional finals.

Just call her Lauren “Lights Out” Cartwright.

With two outs in the bottom of the eighth inning, Cartwright’s bloop single to right fi eld brought in the winning run for Reidland to defeat Marshall County 5-4 in the First Region semifi nal. Reidland will now play Calloway County, an early 5-1 winner over Heath, tonight at 7 p.m. at tournament host Graves County.

Cartwright, an eighth-grader, previously had a two-out triple that could have been an in-the-park home run. Now hitting in the Lady Greyhounds’ No. 2 spot, Cartwright is only a month and a half removed from being Re-idland’s go-to courtesy runner. She is the culprit of a lighting sna-fu at the First Region All A Classic tournament where the acciden-tal fl ip of a switch turned into a 30-minute delay in a game.

“There’s a lot of pressure, but you just have to step back and take a deep breath and know that you can do it,” Cartwright said, starting in right fi eld for the Grey-hounds. “I know that I’m just in the second position to move the runners and put the ball in play as best as I can.”

Marshall County chipped away at Reidland all night, even get-ting right fi elder Buzz Ray to third base on a single and an error in center fi eld with two outs in the seventh inning still tied at 4.

“This game is a shame that it’s played in the semifi nals,” Lady Marshals coach Patricia Greer said. “Every year it’s something just this tight and the kids feel the pressure, but I thought our kids did a great job of not letting the calls and all that get to them.”

The Greyhounds and Lady Lak-ers will meet in the championship game for the fi fth time since 2004, and the meetings have been lucky. Calloway won its state title after beating Reidland in 2004, and Reidland won its last year after a win over Calloway in the fi nals.

“Our last two times we had to face (former Reidland ace) Cassee Layne and that’s a hard chore,” Calloway coach Troy Webb said. “This time we don’t have her to face, but we’re going to have ei-ther Reidland or Marshall, two

very good teams, and Marshall’s beat us three times already and Reidland beat us by one, but who-ever we get we don’t feel like we’re going to be overmatched like we were the last couple times we’ve been in the fi nals.”

Reidland will face Calloway pitcher Lindsey Rucker, one of the relative unknowns in the re-gion as a fi rst-year senior starter. Rucker gave up nine hits to Bal-lard and Heath over the past two games, striking out nine and walking just two.

“We’ve had trouble with Cal-loway the other two games we’ve had,” Heath coach Lyne Dickey said, her offensive-minded club getting just four hits off Rucker. “She changes her speed in those pitches and that’s the key to it. That’s why she’s so good, she don’t have to have anything else because she can just change that speed on you and it just keeps you off balance.”

Reidland has history behind it as defending state champions, winning the All A Classic state title for the second year in a row and now on a 12-game winning streak heading into tonight.

“Usually when you have it this tough each night, you usually play well that third night,” Reidland

Reidland stillin repeat hunt

BY DUSTY LUTHY [email protected]

Please see SOFT | 3B

LANCE DENNEE | The Sun

Taylor Armstrong (left) of Calloway County beats out a throw to Heath first baseman Caroline Webb in the second inning of the First Region softball tour-nament in Mayfield on Tuesday.

BY R.B. FALLSTROMAssociated Press

ST. LOUIS — Skip Schumaker’s infi eld RBI hit capped a three-run eighth inning, taking tough-luck Chris Carpenter off the hook in the St. Louis Cardinals’ 4-3 victo-ry over the San Francisco Giants on Tuesday night.

Albert Pujols and Allen Craig hit RBI doubles in the eighth be-fore Schumaker, who had been in a 2-for-19 slump, got the go-ahead single against Javier Lo-pez (2-1) on a perfectly placed grounder between fi rst and sec-

ond. Schumaker’s headfi rst dive into the bag beat the throw from second baseman Freddy Sanchez, who went far to his left to glove the ball.

Ryan Franklin (1-3) struck out the side in the eighth in the fi rst victory for the ex-closer since July 30. Fernando Salas fi nished for his 10th save in 10 chances.

Ryan Vogelsong pitched fi ve effective innings for the Giants, yielding a run and six hits. It was the fi fth consecutive solid out-ing for the right-hander, who re-placed injured Barry Zito.

Schumaker finishesCards’ winning rally

BY TIM REYNOLDSAssociated Press

MIAMI — Dwyane Wade’s night began with a hug for his mom. It ended with an embrace from LeBron James.

And the Miami Heat have struck fi rst in the NBA fi nals.

James scored 24 points for his fi rst win in fi ve fi -nals-game appearances, Wade added 22 points and 10 rebounds and the Heat beat the Dallas Mavericks 92-84 in Game 1 of the title series on Tuesday night.

The Heat trailed by eight points early in the third quarter before pulling away, remaining unbeaten at home in these playoffs and snapping Dallas’ fi ve-game

James scores 24, Heat goes up 1-0

Please see NBA | 2B

Associated Press

Dirk Nowitzki of the Dallas Mavericks reacts in the first half of an NBA Finals loss to the Miami Heat in Mi-ami on Tuesday. Nowitzki led all scorers with 27.

Page 2: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

On televisionTODAY

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL1:10 p.m. — Houston at Chicago Cubs (WGN)7 — San Francisco at St. Louis (ESPN)

NHL HOCKEY7 p.m. — Stanley Cup: Boston at Vancouver

(WPSD-6)TENNIS

11 a.m. — French Open, men’s and women’s quarterfinals (ESPN2)

THURSDAYNBA BASKETBALL

8 p.m. — Finals, Dallas at Miami (WSIL-3)COLLEGE SOFTBALL

Noon — World Series, California vs. Alabama (ESPN2)

2:30 p.m. — World Series, Oklahoma State vs. Baylor (ESPN2)

6 — World Series, Oklahoma vs. Arizona State (ESPN2)

8:30 — World Series, Missouri vs. Florida (ESPN2)

GOLF8:30 a.m. — Europe: Wales Open, first round

(TGC)11:30 — Nationwide: Prince George’s County

Open, first round (TGC)2 p.m. — PGA: the Memorial Tournament, first

round (TGC)

Local sportsWEDNESDAY

HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL – Second Region tournament (at Christian County): Championship (7:30 p.m.).

HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL – First Region tournament (at Graves County): Championship, Reidland vs. Calloway Coun-ty (7 p.m.). Second Region tournament (at Madisonville): Championships, Madisonville vs. (TBD).

THURSDAYHIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL – First Region tournament (at

Brooks Stadium): Championship, Mayfi eld vs. Calloway County (6 p.m.).

Coming up

GOLF: Murray State University’s 23rd annual Racer Classic is Friday at Miller Memorial Golf Course in Murray. The tournament begins with a 1 p.m. shotgun start. The entry fees range from a $95 individual entry to a corporate or family package for $480. For more information and a registration form, contact the athletic of-fice at 809-3369 or visit www.goracers.com.

BASEBALL: Tryouts for Mayfield Post 26’s American Legion team are 2 p.m. Sunday at Graves County High School. For more informa-tion, contact coach Andy Ford at 559-4347.

TENNIS: The Paducah Tennis Association’s free clinics for beginning junior players are Thursday at 6:30 p.m. and Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Lone Oak Tennis Center. For more informa-tion, contact Crystal Bailey at 331-1914 or via e-mail at [email protected].

TENNIS: The Paducah Tennis Association is sponsoring two more free clinics for beginners, this Saturday at noon and again on June 18 at 9 a.m. at the Lone Oak Tennis Center. Players can also join a USTA 2.0 adult league for be-ginners. For more information, contact Crystal Bailey at 331-1914 or via e-mail at [email protected].

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.,

Purchase memos

Todayvs. San

Franciscoat St. Louis

Time: 7:15 p.m.TV: ESPN

Thursdayvs. San

Franciscoat 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 • Wednesday, June 1, 2011 • The Paducah Sun Morning Update paducahsun.com

road winning streak.Chris Bosh scored 19

points — holding up three fi ngers when it was over, a clear nod to the three wins Miami needs for a title — and Mario Chalmers added 12 for the Heat, who host Game 2 on Thursday night.

Wade’s 3-pointer with 3:06 left put the Heat up 82-73, then the largest lead of the game for either team. The Mavs shaved two points off it on the next possession when Nowitzki hit two free throws, but James gave the Heat their fi rst double-digit lead of the fi nals a few sec-onds later.

He dribbled upcourt against Shawn Marion, crossed his dribble over and got clear for a dunk while being fouled. The free throw made it 85-75, and

most in the sellout, white-clad crowd began standing in anticipation.

Even then, it wasn’t over. Nowitzki made two more free throws — he was 12 for 12 from the line for the game — with 1:36 left, cut-ting the Miami lead to six.

A momentary blip.Wade grabbed a key de-

fensive rebound, dribbled away from three Dallas pur-suers and found Bosh for a dunk with 1:08 left that re-stored the 10-point lead.

NBA: Miami’s ‘Big Three’ make major contributions in victoryCONTINUED FROM 1B

BY HOWARD FENDRICHAssociated Press

PARIS — Quickly and rather quietly, Roger Federer is back in the French Open semifi nals.

There will be absolutely noth-ing low-key — or, it seems safe to say, easy — about what comes next for the 16-time Grand Slam champion: a showdown

against Novak Djokovic, who is 41-0 this year and unbeaten in his last 43 matches overall.

With attention focused else-where, perhaps in part because some assume his best days are behind him, the no-fuss, no-muss Federer simply has won all 15 sets he’s played so far, capped Tuesday by a 6-4, 6-3,

7-6 (3) quarterfi nal victory over No. 9-seeded Gael Monfi ls of France.

Djokovic’s quarterfi nal oppo-nent, Fabio Fognini, withdrew Monday with an injured left leg.

Today’s men’s quarterfi nal include No. 4 Andy Murray against unseeded Juan Ignacio Chela of Argentina.

No. 5 Francesca Schiavone of Italy, the defending champion, came back after losing 10 of the fi rst 12 games and beat No. 14 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova of Russia 1-6, 7-5, 7-5. She plays No. 11 Marion Bartoli of France, who defeated No. 13 Svetlana Kuznetsova of Russia, the 2009 champion, 7-6 (4), 6-4.

Federer to face unbeaten Djokovic at French

Heat 92, Mavericks 84DALLAS (84) — Marion 6-12 4-5 16,

Nowitzki 7-18 12-12 27, Chandler 3-4 3-5 9, Kidd 3-8 0-0 9, Stevenson 2-3 0-0 6, Ter-ry 3-10 3-4 12, Stojakovic 0-3 0-0 0, Barea 1-8 0-0 2, Haywood 0-1 3-6 3. Totals 25-67 25-32 84.

MIAMI (92) — James 9-16 2-2 24, Bosh 5-18 9-12 19, Anthony 0-1 0-0 0, Bibby 0-4 0-0 0, Wade 9-19 2-5 22, Chalmers 3-8 3-4 12, Haslem 3-8 1-1 7, Howard 0-1 2-2 2, Miller 2-5 0-0 6. Totals 31-80 19-26 92.Dallas 17 27 17 23—84Miami 16 27 22 27—92

3-Point Goals_Dallas 9-22 (Kidd 3-7, Terry 3-7, Stevenson 2-3, Nowitzki 1-2, Stojakovic 0-3), Miami 11-24 (James 4-5, Chalmers 3-7, Miller 2-4, Wade 2-4, Bibby 0-4). Fouled Out_None. Rebounds_Dallas 46 (Marion 10), Miami 59 (Wade 10). Assists_Dal-las 18 (Kidd 6), Miami 20 (Wade 6). Total Fouls_Dallas 22, Miami 21. A_20,003 (19,600).

Best hand car wash in Town

Insured • Bonded • References • Valet ServiceWe will honor competitors coupons.

Special discounts for church vans/dealerships welcome. Look for the pink building 118 North 13th Street-Paducah

270-443-0820 or 519-8184

Gift Certifi cates

available

Only $10.00

Commercial & Residential Cleaning Store Hours: Mon - Fri 7:30 - 5:00 & Sat 8:00 - 4:00

4123 Schneidman Rd. • Paducah, KY270-443-8851 • www.sandersnursery.com

EVERYDAY LOW PRICESEVERYDAY LOW PRICESPerennials Perennials

$3.95$3.95& Up& Up

Knock Knock Out Roses Out Roses

$10.95$10.95& Up& Up

DogwoodDogwood

$19.95$19.95& Up& Up

Page 3: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

paducahsun.com Sports The Paducah Sun • Wednesday, June 1, 2011 • 3B

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A day after coach Jim Tressel’s forced resignation for lying about Ohio State players receiving improper benefits, the focus has shifted to the investigation of star quarterback Terrelle Pryor and his succession of used cars.

The salesman who put Pryor behind the wheel of several vehicles said in a sworn affidavit re-leased by Ohio State on Tuesday that he didn’t offer any special deals to Buckeyes.

“The deals that I did for Ohio State student-athletes were no different than any of the other 10,000-plus deals that I’ve done for all my other customers,” Aaron Kniffin said in the statement.

Ohio State confirmed that the NCAA continues to look into potential violations. The Columbus Dispatch has reported that the NCAA and Ohio State are investigating more than 50 vehicle pur-chases by Buckeyes players, family members and friends over the past. Sports Illustrated, citing a source close to the investigation, reported that Pryor, who will be a senior this fall, might have driven as many as eight cars in his three years in Columbus.

McCourt makes Dodgers’ payroll

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles Dodgers owner Frank McCourt has paid his major league bills — for now. Despite baseball officials who believed he didn’t have enough money to cover the team’s end-of-the-month payroll, the embattled McCourt was able to cover Dodgers-related expenses Tuesday, said a person familiar with the situation who requested anonymity because he wasn’t au-thorized to speak publicly.

Based on an opening-day payroll of $103.8 million, the payroll for its major league roster in the second half of May was about $8.25 million.

Stern considers new deal a ‘challenge’

MIAMI — David Stern says it will be “a chal-lenge” to reach a deal for a new collective bar-gaining agreement before the current one expires in a month. Speaking before Game 1 of the NBA finals on Tuesday night, Stern says a deal to prevent a work stoppage will depend on whether both sides “will be bold enough to do what has to be done here.”

Associated Press

NCAA probefocuses onPryor’s cars

coach Tony Hayden said, thinking back to Monday’s 9-5 win over Graves Coun-ty. “We’re looking forward to being in the champion-ship game, we know we got a lot of work ahead of us, but it’s nice to have young kids come through and make plays.”

Calloway 5, Heath 1 — With two outs in the top of the fi rst inning, Heath pitcher Neely Quint loaded the bases with two walks and a hit batter only to have Cal-loway County center fi elder Taylor Futrell hit a bases clearing double for Callo-way to go up 3-0.

Heath couldn’t recover, recording fi ve errors to go along with the Lakers’ eight hits. The Lakers left 12 runners on base, leaving bases loaded twice.

–––Calloway (21-12-1) 300 010 1 5 8 1Heath (19-14-1) 001 000 0 1 4 5

Rucker and Boggess; Quint, Hagood (6) and Long.

WP: Rucker. LP: Quint2B: C-Futrell. 3B: none. HR: none. Top

hitters: C-Futrell 2-4 (3 RBI), Armstrong 2-5.

Reidland 5, Marshall County

4 (8 innings)— Reidland built an early 3-1 lead part-ly thanks to catcher Hope Davidson’s two-run dou-ble. Marshall kept chipping away, adding another run with Mallory Young scor-ing on Allee Moore’s sac-rifi ce fl y to center fi eld and two more with Buzz Ray’s long ground ball to second in the fi fth to go up 4-3.

The Lady Greyhounds got some assistance from the Marshals in the fi fth in-ning, scoring a run on three errors that could have been

interference calls and no nits. In the bottom of the eighth, Heather Hayden started the rally with a bunt single, followed by a bloop hit from Erica Howard and Cartwright’s bloop to win.

–––Marshall (24-8) 101 020 00 4 6 4Reidland (25-10) 300 010 01 5 11 3

Helton and Meadows; Matchen, Dodd (6) and Davidson.

WP: Dodd. LP: Helton2B: R-Davidson. 3B: R-Cartwright. HR:

none. Top hitters: R-Howard 4-5, Cart-wright 2-3 (RBI), Hayden 2-4.

Contact Dusty Luthy Shull, a Paducah Sun sports writer, at 270-575-8662.

SOFT: Rucker holds Heath to four hits in Lakers’ regional winCONTINUED FROM 1B

glert’s RBI single, Lone Oak had runners on fi rst and second with one out. Austin Drake hit a ground ball in the hole to Guhy, who fl ipped to third base for the forceout. Sam Goode singled in Englert to make it 9-8, but Mills struck out Josh Dickson to end the rally.

“We’d score, and they would answer us,” Miller said, noting that Mayfi eld scored in single runs in each of its last three at-bats. “They just kept hitting.”

–––Lone Oak (24-13) 004 112 0 8 9 2Mayfi eld (9-16) 700 111 x 10 14 3

Pope, Draffen (1), Goode (6) and Wright; Guhy, Mills (5) and McCarter.

WP: Guhy. LP: Pope.2B: LO-Dickson, Coleman; M-Higginson. 3B: none. HR: none.

Top hitters: LO-Drake 2-4 (1 RBI), Englert 1-3 (2 RBI), Goode 1-3 (2 RBI); M-Sevic 3-3 (3 RBI), Mills 3-4, Ivey 2-3 (1 RBI), Wynstra 2-4 (1 RBI), Guhy 1-4 (2 RBI).

Calloway 11, Reidland 6— Calloway County rocked Reidland starter Micah Chessor for nine runs in two-plus in-nings but needed a three-inning stint from ace Dylan Dwyer to hold off Re-idland.

“We had a big lead, but they scored and had some momentum, so we wanted to put a stop to that, espe-cially the way we’d seen them claw their way back against Ballard (Memo-rial in the fi rsr round,” said Calloway coach Ryan Hobbs, whose program hasn’t won a regional title since 1986.Dwyer relieved Garrett Cowen to start the fi fth and struck out nine of the 11 hit-ters he faced, including fi ve straight to end the game, in a 45-pitch effort.

“That’s just a little more than a normal bullpen session for him two days before a start,” Hobbs said. “We went about 10 pitchers longer than we wanted to, but he’ll be fi ne. ”

Dwyer, who started at designated hitter, also had two hits and a walk and scored twice, has no qualms about throwing again on Thursday.

“Nothing that ice and a little ibuprofen won’t fi x,” Dwyer said with a smile. “I’ll be ready to go, no problem.”

–––Reidland (20-10) 002 301 0 6 11 5Calloway County (18-16) 423 020 x 11 10 2

Chessor, Cissell (3) and Warford; Cowen, Dwyer (5) and Daw-son.

WP: Cowen. LP: Chessor.2B: CC-Greer. 3B: none. HR: none. Top hitters: R-Warford 3-4,

Glass 2-4 (1 RBI), Chessor 2-4 (1 RBI); CC-Dwyer 2-3 (1 RBI), Craig 2-4, Greer 1-3 (2 RBI), Dawson 1-3 (2 RBI).

Contact Joey Fosko, a Paducah Sun sports writer, at 270-575-8661.

BASE: Cardinals come alive just in time for tourney run

CONTINUED FROM 1B

LANCE DENNEE | The Sun

Heath’s Taylor Sheerer (6) slides safely into second as Calloway County’s Lindsey Rucker (right) and Erin Burton approach the base during the third inning of the First Region softball tournament in Mayfield on Tuesday.

Staff reportAshley Wright had a

grand slam that pulled Livingston Central within two runs in the bottom of the seventh inning, but the Cardinals’ rally fell short in Monday’s fi rst-round 8-6 loss in the Second Region tournament at Madison-ville.

After Wright’s homer, Haley Lampley reached

on an errorm bringing the tying run to the plate, but Hopkins Central pitcher Ali Austin got out of the jam.

–––Hopkins Central (27-10) 210 104 0 8 14 1Livingston Central (22-9) 000 100 5 6 8 1

Austin and Brackette; Rudd, Merritt (2) and Lampley.

WP: Austin. LP: Rudd.2B: HC-Brackett, Flener. 3B: HC-McNary,

Brackett. HR: HC-Flener (0 on in 1st); LC-Wright (3 on in 7th). Top hitters: HC-Austin 3-4, Flener 3-5 (3 RBI), Brackett 2-3 (1 RBI), Tow 2-4, McNary 2-5 (1 RBI); LC-Head 2-3, Wright 2-4 (4 RBI).

Livingston falls short in Second Region

FGoodrich® Advantage T/A® pgrade your everyday ride into anything but.

Days ofawesome

driving

365Thousands of miles* you’ll feel the fun

75Excellent

all-weatherbite

UPGRADE YOUR DRIVEUPGRADE YOUR DRIVE

See us to upgrade your drive today.

Buy any set of four new BFGoodrich* brand passenger or light truck tires from May 12 through June 8, 2011, and get a $50 MasterCard® Prepaid Card after mail-in rebate*

Advantage T/A®

Upgrade your everyday ride into anything but.

*See redemption form at participating dealers for complete offer details. Offer expires 06/08/11. Void where prohibited. The card is issued by Citibank, N.A. pursuant to a license by MasterCard International Incorporated and managed by Citi Prepaiid Services. MasterCard is a registered trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated. Cards will not have cash access and can be used everywhere MasterCard debit cards are accepted.Copyright © 2011 Michelin North America, Inc. All rights reserved.

Days ofawesome

driving

365Thousands of miles* you’ll feel the fun

75Excellent

all-weatherbite

GET A

MASTERCARD*PREPAID CARD

after mail-in rebate

$50

929 KY Ave. Downtown Paducah

RIDE with Confi dence

443-9316

Page 4: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST YTDName Div PE Last Chg %Chg

YTDName Div PE Last Chg %Chg

12,876.00 9,614.32 Dow Jones Industrials 12,569.79 +128.21 +1.03 +8.57 +25.40 5,565.78 3,872.64 Dow Jones Transportation 5,469.55 +60.97 +1.13 +7.10 +29.22 441.86 346.95 Dow Jones Utilities 436.37 +2.83 +.65 +7.75 +23.61 8,718.25 6,355.83 NYSE Composite 8,477.28 +90.94 +1.08 +6.44 +27.27 2,490.51 1,689.19 Amex Index 2,437.16 +18.13 +.75 +10.36 +36.10 2,887.75 2,061.14 Nasdaq Composite 2,835.30 +38.44 +1.37 +6.88 +27.58 1,370.58 1,010.91 S&P 500 1,345.20 +14.10 +1.06 +6.96 +25.64 14,562.01 15.80 Wilshire 5000 14,287.49 +147.07 +1.04 +6.94 +27.05 868.57 587.66 Russell 2000 848.30 +12.04 +1.44 +8.25 +32.35

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AT&T Inc 1.72 9 31.56 +.27 +7.4AirProd 2.32 18 95.09 +1.13 +4.6AEP 1.84 15 38.20 -.12 +6.2AmeriBrgn .42f 17 41.22 +.16 +20.8ATMOS 1.36 15 33.35 +.26 +6.9BB&T Cp .64f 23 27.54 +.24 +4.8Comcast .45 19 25.24 +.35 +15.4CrackerB .88 12 47.38 -.22 -13.5CSI .44 18 27.65 ... +9.07Dillards .20f 17 56.19 -.01 +48.1EnPro ... 13 45.58 +.72 +9.7FullerHB .30f 17 22.29 +.57 +8.6GenCorp ... 25 6.28 +.26 +21.5Goodrich 1.16 21 87.29 +.69 -.9Goodyear ... ... 17.73 +.22 +49.6HonwllIntl 1.33 20 59.55 +.36 +12.0

Jabil .28 17 21.58 +.36 +7.4Kroger .42 14 24.82 +.10 +11.0Lowes .56f 17 24.14 -.11 -3.7MeadWvco 1.00 21 34.02 +.50 +30.0OldNBcp .28 22 10.80 +.12 -9.2Penney .80 21 35.43 -.57 +9.7PilgrimsP ... ... 4.97 +.10 -29.9RegionsFn .04 ... 7.06 +.08 +.9SbdCp 3.00a 8 2310.00 -35.00 +16.0SearsHldgs ... ... 71.00 +.17 -3.7Total SA 3.16e ... 57.59 +1.27 +7.7USEC ... ... 4.18 +.01 -30.6US Bancrp .50f 13 25.60 +.18 -5.1WalMart 1.46f 13 55.22 +.52 +2.4WestlkChm .25 13 56.10 +.35 +29.1

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DABB Ltd ... 26.90 +.49ACE Ltd 8 68.82 +.24AES Corp 16 12.96 +.20AFLAC 9 47.79 -.21AK Steel ... 15.30 +.01AMB Pr ... 36.99 +.50AMR ... 6.27 -.08AOL ... 20.57 +.42AT&T Inc 9 31.56 +.27AU Optron ... 8.15 +.12Aastrom ... 3.27 +.17AbtLab 13 52.25 +.70AberFitc 31 75.77 -.58AbitibiB n ... 24.80 +.48Abraxas ... 4.40 +.27Accenture 19 57.39 +.48Accuride n ... 13.10 -.42Achillion ... 7.49 +.32AcmePkt ... 75.69 +2.16ActivsBliz 28 11.99 +.54AdobeSy 20 34.63 +.34AdvATech ... 6.03 AdvBattery 2 1.50 -.02AMD 9 8.68 +.19AdvSemi 12 6.15 +.30Aeropostl 7 18.90 -.18AEterna g ... 2.54 +.17Aetna 10 43.68 +.09AgFeed ... 1.24 +.09Agilent 21 49.87 +.27Agilysys ... 6.81 +2.03Agrium g 19 88.06 +1.61AkamaiT 36 33.94 +.28Akorn 28 6.81 +.18AlcatelLuc ... 5.67 +.02Alcoa 24 16.81 +.33Alexion s 68 47.42 +1.24AllegTch 60 67.00 +.57AllosThera ... 2.20 +.03AllscriptH ... 20.11 +.01Allstate 13 31.38 +.14AlphaNRs 50 54.79 +1.72AlteraCp lf 18 48.09 +1.04Altria 15 28.06 +.12AmBev s ... 31.54 +.02Amarin ... 19.07 -.43Amazon 85 196.69 +2.56Ameren 11 29.71 +.02Amerigrp 12 70.91 +1.34AMovilL 16 52.70 +.34AmAxle 6 11.56 +.27ACapAgy 4 30.37 +.09AmCapLtd 3 9.90 +.10AEagleOut 17 13.26 +.19AEP 15 38.20 -.12AmExp 14 51.60 +.47AmIntlGrp 2 28.50 -.38AmOriBio 6 1.26 +.01AmTower 60 55.48 +.57AmWtrWks 18 30.01 +.19Ameriprise 14 61.23 +.86AmeriBrgn 17 41.22 +.16Amgen 12 60.54 +1.19AmkorT lf 8 6.39 +.03Amylin ... 13.89 +.44Anadarko ... 79.52 +.86AnalogDev 14 41.17 +.62Annaly 7 18.13 +.06AntaresP ... 1.85 +.03Anworth 9 7.25 Aon Corp 21 52.15 +.78A123 Sys ... 6.15 +.13Apache 13 124.60 +1.35ApolloGrp 16 41.11 +.89Apple Inc 17 347.83 +10.42ApldMatl 12 13.78 +.35ArcelorMit 17 33.45 +.62ArchCoal 22 29.89 +.29ArchDan 10 32.41 +.20ArenaPhm ... 1.44 -.03AresCap 8 16.82 +.31AriadP 14 8.68 -.13ArmHld ... 28.55 +.04ArmourRsd ... 7.64 -.05Arris 22 11.29 +.02ArubaNet ... 28.42 +.26Ashland 8 68.34 +7.30AsiaInfoL 20 17.93 +.43AsscdBanc ... 14.09 +.14AssuredG 6 17.02 +.34Atmel 15 15.02 +.12Autodesk 42 42.98 +.48AutoData 23 55.11 +.98AvagoTch 20 33.79 -1.22AvalRare n ... 7.82 +.20AvanirPhm ... 4.51 -.16AvisBudg 17 17.59 +.16Avon 18 29.71 +.45BB&T Cp 23 27.54 +.24BHP BillLt ... 95.42 +.97BP PLC ... 46.24 +.70BPZ Res ... 4.38 +.24BRFBrasil ... 18.94 +.25Baidu 12 135.71 +1.78BakrHu 30 73.93 +.47BcoBrades ... 19.92 +.19BcoSantSA ... 11.89 +.48BcoSBrasil ... 11.36 +.16BkofAm 21 11.75 +.06BkIrelnd ... 1.63 -.06BkNYMel 13 28.11 +.39Bar iPVix rs ... 21.29 -.65Bard 20 111.78 +.89BarnesNob ... 19.62 +.06BarrickG 13 47.76 +.37Baxter 16 59.52 +.41BedBath 18 53.89 +.43BerkH B 15 79.07 +1.03BestBuy 10 31.76 +.17BigLots 12 33.41 +.99BiogenIdc 22 94.73 +1.52BioMedR ... 20.49 +.06BioSante ... 3.13 +.22Blackstone ... 17.24 +.19BlockHR 13 16.20 +.23Boeing 17 78.03 +1.04Boise Inc 8 8.44 +.18BostonSci 21 7.18 +.14BrigExp ... 31.14 +.21Brinker 15 25.78 -.02BrMySq 15 28.76 +.29Broadcom 18 35.98 -.54BrcdeCm 23 6.67 +.06Brkfl dOfPr 7 19.67 +.30Brkfl dOP rt ... .03 -.01Buenavent 17 44.12 -.22CA Inc 15 23.40 +.51CB REllis 36 26.43 -.08CBL Asc 77 19.24 +.21CBS B 22 27.95 -.03CF Inds 16 153.78 -1.41CIGNA 9 49.89 +.42CIT Grp 18 44.33 +.53CMS Eng 14 19.94 +.24CNO Fincl 11 7.74 +.10CSX 18 79.30 +1.37CTC Media 22 20.17 +.17CVR Engy 27 21.86 +.28CVS Care 16 38.69 -.11CablvsnNY 27 35.52 +.62CabotO&G 90 58.75 +.63Cadence 15 10.69 +.05Calpine ... 15.79 +.19Cameco g ... 28.06 -.87Cameron 21 47.66 +.29CampCC n ... 12.80 +.15CdnNRs gs ... 43.61 +1.04CdnSolar 8 9.85 +.57CapOne 8 54.34 +.30CapitlSrce 20 6.47 +.07CapFdF rs 31 11.95 +.07CpstnTrb h ... 1.74 -.02CardnlHlth 16 45.42 +.07CareFusion 25 28.98 +.28CarMax 18 29.66 +.20Carnival 16 38.81 +.41

NYSE

INDEXES

COMMODITIES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Vol (00) Last Chg S&P500ETF 1431090 134.90 +1.39NokiaCp 1356463 7.02 -1.18BkofAm 1001572 11.75 +.06iShR2K 690831 84.84 +1.19FordM 625082 14.92 +.32

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

CVtPS 34.30 +9.98 +41.0Sequans n 19.17 +3.87 +25.3FtBcp pfE 17.30 +2.82 +19.5FtBcp pfB 17.68 +2.68 +17.9FtBcp pfD 17.29 +2.47 +16.7

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

52-Week Net % YTD 52-wk High Low Name Last Chg Chg % Chg % Chg

AmrRlty 2.58 -.65 -20.1Lentuo n 5.07 -.92 -15.4NokiaCp 7.02 -1.18 -14.4RealD n 27.30 -3.60 -11.7Goldcp wt 2.87 -.31 -9.7

DIARYAdvanced 2,344Declined 732Unchanged 97Total issues 3,173New Highs 228New Lows 11

DIARYAdvanced 301Declined 185Unchanged 30Total issues 516New Highs 20New Lows 6

DIARYAdvanced 1,828Declined 812Unchanged 97Total issues 2,737New Highs 136New Lows 46

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

HeraldNB 3.79 +.80 +26.8Bacterin n 3.69 +.45 +13.9Banro g 3.79 +.44 +13.1UtdCap 27.00 +2.80 +11.6SondeR grs 3.25 +.32 +10.9

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

EstnLtCap 3.65 -.35 -8.8BovieMed 2.75 -.20 -6.8Uranerz 3.20 -.21 -6.2OrsusXel rs 2.03 -.13 -6.0MLIdxPl33 23.80 -1.20 -4.8

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %ChgName Last Chg %ChgName Last Chg %Chg

Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg

Agilysys 6.81 +2.03 +42.5Yongye 5.33 +1.58 +42.1KipsBMd n 3.60 +.59 +19.6Zion wt12-12 2.54 +.39 +18.2Zion wt1-12 3.89 +.53 +15.8

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

VlyNBc wt 2.65 -.55 -17.2ClevBioL h 4.45 -.91 -17.0TransitnT g 3.11 -.63 -16.8ChinaBio 13.78 -2.32 -14.4Andatee 3.37 -.48 -12.5

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AMEX

Rentech 66277 1.04 +.08VantageDrl 62410 2.00 +.06Hyperdyn 59242 4.75 +.07TrnsatlPet 51007 2.23 ...NA Pall g 49712 4.12 +.24

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

NASDAQ

SiriusXM 2319095 2.35 -.02Level3 1014345 2.29 -.04Intel 557898 22.51 +.30Microsoft 550907 25.01 +.25Cisco 531173 16.80 +.34

Caterpillar 19 105.80 +1.20Celanese 22 52.09 +1.17Celgene 32 60.91 +1.03CellTher rsh ... 2.20 +.04Cemex ... 8.61 +.17Cemig pf ... 19.09 -.11CenovusE 43 37.09 +.69CenterPnt 17 19.33 +.25CentEuro ... 12.56 +.39CntryLink 13 43.19 +.16Cephln 12 79.69 -.09Chemtura n ... 19.05 +.38CheniereEn ... 11.71 +.15ChesEng 11 31.34 +.23Chevron 10 104.91 +1.70Chicos 22 15.08 -.13Chimera 6 3.91 +.01ChinaCEd 24 5.63 -.18ChinaInfo 2 1.93 -.07ChinaSecur 6 4.92 -.05ChinaUni ... 22.08 +.45ChiValve 2 2.90 -.30Chubb 9 65.59 +.66CienaCorp ... 26.75 +.23Cimarex 17 95.93 +3.26CinciBell 23 3.18 +.10Cirrus 6 16.45 +.23Cisco 13 16.80 +.34Citigrp rs 14 41.15 +.18CitzRepB h ... .87 +.03CitrixSys 55 87.62 +.46CleanDsl rs ... 8.25 -.20CleanEngy 65 14.30 +.02Clearwire ... 4.60 +.04CliffsNRs 9 90.70 +1.03Coach 22 63.66 -.25CocaCola 13 66.81 +.30CocaCE 16 28.89 +.28Coeur ... 27.57 +.21CogdSpen ... 6.00 -.01CognizTech 30 76.04 +1.27ColgPal 18 87.53 +1.81CollctvBrd 12 15.60 -.06ColonPT ... 21.10 +.41Comcast 19 25.24 +.35Comc spcl 18 23.55 +.12CmclMtls ... 14.89 +.02CompDivHd ... 15.61 +.23CompSci 8 39.89 -.15Compuwre 21 10.19 +.18ConAgra 17 25.43 +.39ConocPhil 11 73.22 +.58ConsolEngy 25 51.27 +.52ConstellA 8 21.96 +.28ContlRes 35 66.22 -.26ConvOrg h ... .17 -.02CoreSite n ... 17.70 +.75CorinthC ... 3.86 Corning 9 20.15 +.28Cosan Ltd 15 11.88 +.19Costco 26 82.48 +.95CovantaH 31 16.97 +.32CoventryH 12 35.18 +.37Covidien 17 55.00 +.47Cree Inc 27 43.89 +.28Crocs 27 22.73 -.14CrwnCstle ... 41.41 -.37CrownHold 21 40.61 +.50Cummins 17 105.24 +.27CypSemi 40 23.42 +.06CypSharp 26 12.84 +.09DCT Indl ... 5.66 +.07DR Horton 87 12.18 +.20DanaHldg 45 18.12 +.10Danaher s 19 54.53 +.09Darling 23 19.15 +.13DeanFds 31 13.88 +.31Deere 15 86.08 +.34Dell Inc 10 16.08 +.29DeltaAir 16 10.08 +.08DeltaPtr h ... .71 DenburyR 61 21.96 +.32Dndreon ... 42.39 +.01DenisnM g ... 2.29 -.07Depomed 5 9.12 +.49DevelDiv ... 14.49 +.10DevonE 10 84.07 +.73DiaOffs 11 73.67 +.82DiamRk ... 11.50 +.13DirecTV A 19 50.26 +.33DrSCBr rs ... 33.17 -1.49DirFnBr rs ... 42.02 -1.29DirLCBr rs ... 33.25 -1.04DrxEMBull ... 39.99 +1.82DrxEBear rs ... 14.18 -.41DrxFnBull ... 28.22 +.80DirxSCBull ... 88.90 +3.60DirxEnBull ... 79.14 +2.29Discover 10 23.84 +.07DiscCm A 24 43.56 -.15DishNetwk 11 30.28 +.15Disney 18 41.63 +.11DomRescs 15 47.72 +.49DonlleyRR 15 21.34 +.44DoralFncl ... 2.08 -.04DEmmett ... 21.05 +.40Dover 17 67.23 +1.42DowChm 19 36.13 +.53DrPepSnap 16 41.20 +.14DrmWksA 13 23.91 -.92DresserR 32 52.58 +.91DryShips 7 4.06 +.33DuPont 15 53.30 +.74DukeEngy 13 18.75 +.13DukeRlty ... 15.04 +.27Dynavax ... 2.76 -.05Dynegy ... 6.06 +.14

E-F-G-HETrade rs ... 15.81 +.10eBay 22 31.17 +.49EMC Cp 31 28.47 +.04EOG Res ... 109.14 +.99EagleBulk 8 2.88 +.19ErthLink 12 7.90 +.06EstWstBcp 19 20.09 +.29EKodak 15 3.34 -.06Eaton s 17 51.67 +.29Ecolab 24 54.88 +.89EdisonInt 11 39.36 +.04ElPasoCp 29 21.05 +.14Elan ... 9.57 +.18EldorGld g 41 15.89 -.10ElectArts ... 24.41 +.51EmersonEl 19 54.55 +.43EmpDist 17 19.16 +.44EnCana g 97 34.10 +.11EndvSilv g ... 10.29 +.31Endologix ... 8.57 +.15Ener1 ... 1.25 +.15ENSCO 13 53.32 -.67EqtyOne 27 19.61 +.15EqtyRsd 65 61.83 +1.23EricsnTel ... 14.84 +.20EvrgrSlr rs ... .70 -.03ExcoRes ... 20.14 -.01Exelon 14 41.85 +.15Expedia 19 28.01 +.32ExpScrip s 26 59.56 +1.08ExtraSpce 44 21.76 +.39ExxonMbl 12 83.47 +.84F5 Netwks 47 113.58 +.73FMC Tch s 32 44.63 +.56FNBCp PA 16 10.55 +.33FX Ener 8 8.69 +.40FairchldS 13 18.04 +.07Fastenal s 34 33.18 +.33FedExCp 21 93.64 +1.74Ferro 22 13.10 +.55FiberTwr ... 1.85 +.33FibriaCelu ... 15.57 +.58FidNatInfo 21 32.18 +.32FifthThird 16 13.06 +.13Finisar 22 24.02 +.30FstHorizon ... 10.51 +.05FstNiagara 18 14.20 +.13FstSolar 18 124.25 +2.88FirstEngy 16 44.62 +.27

FlagstB rs ... 1.42 +.01Flextrn 10 7.24 +.13FlowrsFds 22 33.33 +.51Fluor 30 68.93 +.93FootLockr 1 24.94 +.02FordM 7 14.92 +.32ForestLab 10 36.02 +.24ForestOil 21 29.90 +.16FortuneBr 29 64.73 +.81FMCG s 10 51.64 -.09FrontierCm 63 8.85 +.04FrontierOil 14 29.86 +.35Frontline 9 18.42 +.68FuelCell ... 1.90 +.44GT Solar 10 12.76 +1.23Gafi sa SA ... 11.04 +.44GameStop 10 27.98 -.23Gannett 6 14.26 +.18Gap 11 19.40 +.20GaylrdEnt ... 32.25 +1.02GenDynam 11 74.22 +2.96GenElec 17 19.64 +.20GenGrPr n ... 16.48 +.18GenMarit ... 1.69 +.13GenMills s 16 39.77 +.48GenMoly ... 4.88 +.28GenMot n 8 31.81 +.53GenOn En ... 3.99 -.05Genpact 25 16.02 +.09Genworth 56 11.11 +.02Gerdau ... 11.03 +.19GeronCp ... 4.39 -.06GileadSci 13 41.74 +.55GlaxoSKln ... 43.46 -.03GlimchRt ... 10.24 +.02GloblInd ... 6.27 -.06GluMobile ... 5.09 +.11GolLinhas ... 13.01 +.57GoldFLtd 3 16.44 +.41Goldcrp g 16 50.07 +.10GoldStr g ... 2.67 +.05GoldmanS 15 140.73 +2.07Goodyear ... 17.73 +.22Google 19 529.02 +8.12GranTrra g ... 7.16 +.11GtPanSilv g ... 3.25 +.03GreenMtC ... 82.37 -.17Guess 15 45.72 +.67GulfRes 2 3.42 -.13HCA Hld n ... 34.89 +.15HCP Inc 42 37.94 +.72HFF Inc 32 16.33 -.25HSBC ... 52.36 +.65HSBUS pfH ... 25.24 -.23Hallibrtn 21 50.15 HanwhaSol 4 6.73 +.83HarbinElec 8 16.48 +.20HarleyD 36 37.16 +.43HarmonyG ... 13.91 +.12HartfdFn 7 26.65 +.12Hasbro 18 45.74 +.24HltCrREIT 68 53.19 +.89HltMgmt 17 11.40 +.08Heckmann ... 6.00 +.01HeclaM 40 8.49 -.01Heinz 18 54.92 +.24HelixEn ... 17.52 +.21HercOffsh ... 6.25 -.05Hershey 25 55.73 +.71Hertz 26 16.15 +.07Hess 10 79.03 +.43HewlettP 9 37.38 +.42Hologic ... 21.50 +.47HomeDp 17 36.28 +.28HonwllIntl 20 59.55 +.36HostHotls ... 17.58 -.01HovnanE ... 2.64 -.06HubbelB 18 66.16 +1.14HudsCity ... 9.13 +.07HumGen ... 27.37 +.42Humana 12 80.53 +1.13HuntBnk 21 6.60 +.07Huntsmn 18 18.95 -.02Hypercom ... 10.69 +.14Hyperdyn ... 4.75 +.07

I-J-K-LIAC Inter 27 36.78 +1.56IAMGld g 21 21.05 +.28ICICI Bk ... 47.69 +.64ION Geoph 46 10.09 +.29iShGold s ... 14.99 -.02iSAstla ... 26.72 +.18iShBraz ... 75.22 +.88iSCan ... 32.90 +.32iShGer ... 27.15 +.85iSh HK ... 19.45 +.48iShJapn ... 10.27 +.18iSh Kor ... 66.01 +1.12iSMalas ... 15.08 +.14iShMex ... 62.36 +.23iShSing ... 14.20 +.18iSTaiwn ... 15.76 +.45iShSilver ... 37.60 +.57iShChina25 ... 45.37 +1.19iSSP500 ... 135.31 +1.31iShEMkts ... 48.53 +.78iShSPLatA ... 52.38 +.29iShB20 T ... 96.69 +.22iS Eafe ... 62.06 +1.26iShiBxHYB ... 92.40 +.25iSR1KG ... 61.77 +.58iSR2KV ... 75.29 +1.10iSR2KG ... 96.90 +1.33iShR2K ... 84.84 +1.19iShUSPfd ... 40.09 +.02iShDJTel ... 25.65 +.05iShREst ... 62.80 +1.08iShBasM ... 80.86 +.79ITW 16 57.32 +.28Imunmd ... 4.42 +.12Incyte ... 17.73 -.19Informat 65 58.66 +.81InfosysT 25 61.75 +.10IngerRd ... 49.90 +.37IngrmM 10 19.01 +.33Inhibitex ... 4.59 +.33IntgDv 18 8.39 +.20Intel 10 22.51 +.30IBM 14 168.93 +1.43Intl Coal 50 14.53 +.01IntlGame 20 17.24 +.04IntPap 12 31.22 +.31Interpublic 24 11.93 +.07IntraLks n ... 20.65 +.14Intuit 26 53.97 +.60Invesco 18 24.67 +.34IronMtn ... 34.01 +.03ItauUnibH ... 22.83 +.31IvanhM g ... 25.21 -.51JA Solar 4 6.03 +.36JDS Uniph 75 20.19 +.15JPMorgCh 10 43.24 +.45Jabil 17 21.58 +.36JanusCap 11 10.33 +.06JetBlue 19 6.07 -.01JohnJn 15 67.29 +.52JohnsnCtl 17 39.60 +.54JonesGrp 26 12.29 +.09JoyGlbl 19 89.65 +.45JnprNtwk 32 36.61 -.44KB Home ... 12.28 +.13KLA Tnc 11 43.10 +1.48KT Corp ... 18.22 -1.02KV PhmA ... 3.19 -.19Kellogg 18 56.99 +.55KeryxBio ... 5.42 +.09KeyEngy 24 17.68 +.15Keycorp 11 8.47 +.02KimbClk 16 68.30 +.64Kimco ... 19.51 +.35KindMor n ... 29.29 +.11Kinross g 23 15.72 -.39KodiakO g ... 6.85 +.06Kohls 14 53.24 -.38Kraft 20 34.97 +.22KrispKrm 49 8.40 -.40Kroger 14 24.82 +.10

Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 19.67 +0.17 +6.2Amer Century Inv: EqInc 7.63 +0.06 +6.2 GrowthI 27.66 +0.28 +7.0 Ultra 24.56 +0.28 +8.4 ValueInv 6.07 +0.05 +6.2American Funds A: AmcpA p 20.23 +0.19 +7.4 AMutlA p 27.06 +0.25 +7.5 BalA p 18.95 +0.16 +6.3 BondA p 12.41 +0.01 +3.2 CapIBA p 52.96 +0.52 +7.1 CapWGA p 38.26 +0.58 +7.6 CapWA p 21.16 +0.05 +4.5 EupacA p 43.88 +0.74 +6.1 FdInvA p 39.51 +0.46 +8.0 GwthA p 32.37 +0.36 +6.3 HI TrA p 11.56 +0.01 +5.5 IncoA p 17.66 +0.15 +7.8 IntBdA p 13.56 +0.01 +2.0 ICAA p 29.61 +0.31 +5.6 NEcoA p 27.31 +0.36 +7.8 N PerA p 30.37 +0.44 +6.1 NwWrldA 56.44 +0.87 +3.4 SmCpA p 40.66 +0.55 +4.6 TxExA p 12.04 +3.6 WshA p 29.40 +0.30 +8.7Aquila Funds: KY TF A 10.51 +4.1Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 31.03 +0.48 +3.0 IntEqII I r 12.84 +0.21 +3.0Artisan Funds: Intl 23.03 NA MidCap 36.88 NA MidCapVal 22.39 NABaron Funds: Growth 56.30 +0.44 +9.9Bernstein Fds: IntDur 14.01 +0.01 +3.7 DivMu 14.48 +2.9 TxMgdIntl 16.24 +0.29 +3.2BlackRock A: Eng&ResA 42.46 +0.47 +8.0 EqtyDiv 18.89 +0.18 +8.2 GlAlA r 20.39 +0.19 +5.0BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 18.98 +0.16 +4.6BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 18.93 +0.18 +8.3 GlbAlloc r 20.49 +0.18 +5.1Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 57.58 +0.74 +7.9Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 32.73 +0.35 +8.4 AcornIntZ 42.94 +0.63 +4.9 ValRestr 53.12 +0.51 +5.3Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 9.69 +0.07 +3.7DFA Funds: IntlCorEq 11.95 +0.19 +6.4 USCorEq2 11.88 +0.12 +8.5DWS Invest S: GroIncS 17.84 +0.19 +9.6Davis Funds A: NYVen A 36.44 +0.40 +6.1Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 36.85 +0.40 +6.2Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq 22.53 +0.43 +1.7 EmMktV 36.28 +0.67 +0.3 IntSmVa 18.29 +0.26 +6.3 USLgVa 22.16 +0.20 +10.4 US Small 23.28 +0.32 +9.1 US SmVa 27.29 +0.39 +6.7 IntlSmCo 18.21 +0.25 +6.1 Fixd 10.36 +0.6 IntVa 19.48 +0.33 +6.3 Glb5FxInc 11.18 +2.8 2YGlFxd 10.21 +0.6Dodge&Cox: Balanced 75.28 +0.64 +7.8 Income 13.56 +0.01 +3.6 IntlStk 37.58 +0.56 +5.2 Stock 116.92 +1.25 +8.9DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 11.18 NAEaton Vance A: LgCpVal 18.98 +0.17 +4.4Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 9.08 +3.0 LgCapVal 19.04 +0.18 +4.5FMI Funds: LgCap p 16.94 +0.16 +8.5FPA Funds: FPACres 28.44 +0.14 +6.2Fairholme 32.82 +0.14 -7.8Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 21.05 +0.21 +5.6 StrInA 12.71 +0.02 +4.8Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI 21.27 +0.21 +5.8Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 14.23 +0.09 +5.1 FF2015 11.89 +0.07 +5.2 FF2020 14.52 +0.11 +5.7 FF2020K 13.73 +0.11 +5.8 FF2025 12.17 +0.11 +6.0 FF2030 14.57 +0.14 +6.2 FF2030K 14.19 +0.12 +6.2 FF2035 12.17 +0.13 +6.5 FF2040 8.50 +0.08 +6.5Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 13.25 +0.15 +7.2 AMgr50 16.14 +0.10 +5.0 Balanc 19.25 +0.13 +5.9 BalancedK 19.25 +0.13 +6.0 BlueChGr 49.14 +0.51 +8.4 Canada 61.17 +0.66 +5.2 CapAp 26.95 +0.19 +6.4 CpInc r 9.85 +0.02 +6.5 Contra 71.74 +0.73 +6.0 ContraK 71.74 +0.73 +6.1 DisEq 24.45 +0.30 +8.5 DivIntl 31.70 +0.53 +5.1 DivrsIntK r 31.69 +0.53 +5.2 DivGth 30.39 +0.34 +6.9 Eq Inc 47.35 +0.50 +7.3 EQII 19.55 +0.21 +7.4 Fidel 34.93 +0.37 +8.7 FltRateHi r 9.87 +1.9 GNMA 11.70 +0.01 +3.4 GroCo 92.76 +1.02 +11.6 GroInc 19.54 +0.23 +7.0 GrowthCoK 92.75 +1.01 +11.6 HighInc r 9.18 +5.2 Indepn 26.23 +0.23 +7.7 IntlDisc 34.45 +0.53 +4.3 InvGrBd 11.63 +0.01 +3.2 InvGB 7.56 +3.6 LgCapVal 12.37 +0.13 +7.9 LatAm 59.11 +0.63 +0.1 LevCoStk 31.24 +0.28 +9.9 LowP r 42.08 +0.43 +9.6 LowPriK r 42.08 +0.43 +9.7 Magelln 75.63 +0.95 +5.7 MidCap 31.49 +0.25 +9.2 MuniInc 12.52 +3.8 OTC 61.27 +0.79 +11.5 100Index 9.30 +0.11 +6.4 Ovrsea 34.28 +0.59 +5.5 Puritn 18.98 +0.13 +6.3 SCmdtyStrt 12.93 +0.09 +2.3 SrsIntGrw 11.96 +0.17 +5.9 SrsIntVal 10.59 +0.17 +6.5 SrInvGrdF 11.63 +3.2 STBF 8.53 +1.4 SmllCpS r 21.43 +0.25 +9.3 StratInc 11.37 +0.01 +4.8 TotalBd 10.95 +3.6 USBI 11.52 +2.9 Utility 17.57 +0.11 +10.5 Value 74.63 +0.83 +8.6

Fidelity Selects: Gold r 49.36 +0.30 -3.4Fidelity Spartan: ExtMkIn 41.33 +0.45 +9.6 500IdxInv 47.76 +0.50 +7.8 IntlInxInv 37.39 +0.54 +6.7 TotMktInv 39.31 +0.41 +8.2Fidelity Spart Adv: 500IdxAdv 47.76 +0.50 +7.8 TotMktAd r 39.31 +0.41 +8.2First Eagle: GlblA 48.87 +0.49 +5.4 OverseasA 23.52 +0.23 +3.8Frank/Temp Frnk A: CalTFA p 6.83 +0.01 +3.5 FedTFA p 11.68 +0.01 +4.7 FoundAl p 11.36 +0.10 +8.6 HYTFA p 9.86 +0.01 +4.6 IncomA p 2.28 +0.01 +7.3 NYTFA p 11.45 +3.8 USGovA p 6.84 +0.01 +2.9Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: GlbBdAdv 13.97 +0.08 +5.0 IncmeAd 2.27 +0.01 +7.4Frank/Temp Frnk C: IncomC t 2.30 +0.01 +7.0Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 22.27 +0.20 +7.9Frank/Temp Temp A: ForgnA p 7.72 +0.11 +10.6 GlBd A p 14.00 +0.07 +4.9 GrwthA p 19.71 +0.26 +10.8 WorldA p 16.15 +0.22 +8.8Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 14.03 +0.08 +4.7GMO Trust III: Quality 21.83 +0.28 +9.1GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 15.28 +0.30 +4.7 Quality 21.84 +0.29 +9.2Harbor Funds: Bond 12.41 +0.02 +3.3 CapApInst 39.92 +0.40 +8.7 Intl r 65.55 +1.11 +8.3Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 35.53 +0.31 +2.6Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI 35.57 +0.31 +2.7Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 44.67 +0.40 +5.5 Div&Gr 21.02 +0.22 +7.8Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 12.26 -0.04 -0.2IVA Funds: Wldwide I r 17.59 +0.14 +5.2Invesco Funds A: Chart p 17.55 +0.15 +8.5 CmstkA 16.86 +0.17 +7.5 EqIncA 9.05 +0.06 +5.8 GrIncA p 20.41 +0.18 +6.5Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 25.49 +0.27 +7.4 AssetStA p 26.31 +0.28 +7.8 AssetStrI r 26.55 +0.28 +7.9JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd x 11.61 -0.02 +2.9 HighYld x 8.34 -0.04 +5.5 ShtDurBd x 11.01 -0.02 +1.0 USLCCrPls 21.68 +0.23 +4.9Janus T Shrs: GlLifeSciT r 26.86 +0.30 +15.6 OvrseasT r 49.15 +1.02 -2.9 PrkMCVal T 24.24 +0.18 +7.4John Hancock Cl 1: LSBalanc 13.62 +0.10 +6.0 LSGrwth 13.67 +0.14 +6.5Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.90 +0.36 +0.6Longleaf Partners: Partners 31.49 +0.29 +11.4Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 15.00 +0.06 +7.5 StrInc C 15.68 +0.07 +7.5 LSBondR 14.95 +0.07 +7.4 StrIncA 15.59 +0.07 +7.8Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdY 12.60 +0.04 +5.7Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 12.19 +0.11 +5.5 BdDebA p 8.10 +0.01 +6.3 ShDurIncA p 4.63 +0.01 +2.5MFS Funds A: TotRA x 14.78 +0.07 +5.8 ValueA 24.51 +0.23 +7.8MFS Funds I: ValueI 24.63 +0.24 +7.9Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 9.45 +0.12 +9.8Matthews Asian: China Inv 30.34 +0.57 +3.3 IndiaInv r 20.19 +0.58 -6.0MergerFd 16.28 +0.02 +3.2Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.56 NA TotRtBdI 10.56 NAMorganStanley Inst: MCapGrI 42.16 +0.42 +12.9Mutual Series: GblDiscA 31.17 +0.29 +6.8 GlbDiscZ 31.57 +0.29 +6.9 SharesZ 22.46 +0.20 +8.0Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 50.94 +0.60 +10.8Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 29.51 +0.20 +6.4 Intl I r 20.53 +0.21 +5.8 Oakmark r 44.69 +0.41 +8.2Oberweis Funds: ChinaOpp 15.71 +0.40 -5.5Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 8.26 +0.06 +7.1 GlbSMdCap 16.72 +0.18 +8.1Oppenheimer A: BalancA p 10.67 +0.05 +6.1 DvMktA p 36.43 +0.54 -0.1 GlobA p 65.97 +0.82 +9.3 GblStrIncA 4.41 +0.01 +5.4 IntBdA px 6.72 +0.03 +4.1 MnStFdA 33.83 +0.34 +4.4Oppenheimer Roch: RoMu A p 15.15 +2.0Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 36.07 +0.53 PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 11.06 +0.01 +3.3PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r 11.04 +0.02 +5.1 AllAsset 12.67 +0.04 +5.7 ComodRR 9.70 +0.07 +7.3 HiYld 9.51 +0.01 +5.3 LowDu 10.53 +0.01 +2.3 RealRtnI 11.68 +4.8 ShortT 9.91 +1.0 TotRt 11.06 +0.01 +3.4PIMCO Funds A: RealRtA p 11.68 +4.6 TotRtA 11.06 +0.01 +3.2PIMCO Funds C: RERRStg t 4.84 +0.07 +20.0 TotRtC t 11.06 +0.01 +2.9PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 11.06 +0.01 +3.2PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 11.06 +0.01 +3.3Perm Port Funds: Permannt 48.90 +0.19 +6.7Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 43.34 +0.42 +6.0Price Funds: BlChip 40.94 +0.46 +7.4 CapApp 21.77 +0.16 +7.2 EmMktS 35.85 +0.69 +1.6 EqInc 25.17 +0.24 +6.6 EqIndex 36.34 +0.38 +7.7 Growth 34.29 +0.35 +6.7 HiYield 6.97 +0.01 +5.9

IntlBond 10.37 +5.3 IntlStk 15.07 +0.26 +5.9 LatAm 54.75 +0.66 -3.5 MidCap 64.31 +0.53 +9.9 MCapVal 25.54 +0.18 +7.7 N Asia 19.82 +0.39 +3.3 New Era 54.72 +0.52 +4.9 N Horiz 37.80 +0.37 +12.9 N Inc 9.62 +0.01 +2.8 R2010 16.22 +0.11 +5.7 R2015 12.62 +0.10 +6.1 R2020 17.51 +0.16 +6.5 R2025 12.86 +0.13 +6.8 R2030 18.49 +0.18 +7.0 R2040 18.67 +0.20 +7.2 ShtBd 4.87 +1.4 SmCpStk 38.12 +0.42 +10.7 SmCapVal 38.70 +0.57 +7.1 SpecIn 12.70 +0.03 +4.5 Value 25.28 +0.26 +8.3Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 14.23 NAPutnam Funds Y: MultiCpGr 57.19 +0.58 +8.2RBBSenbc p 5.53 +0.02 -7.1Royce Funds: PennMuI r 12.71 +0.14 +9.1 PremierI r 22.46 +0.21 +10.4Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 40.17 +0.42 +8.0 S&P Sel 21.09 +0.22 +7.8Scout Funds: Intl 34.29 +0.50 +5.9Sequoia 145.16 +0.84 +12.3Templeton Instit: ForEqS 21.71 +0.38 +8.3Third Avenue Fds: ValueInst 53.33 +0.66 +3.0Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 30.07 +0.40 +7.4 IntValue I 30.75 +0.42 +7.5Tweedy Browne: GblValue 25.06 +0.28 +5.2Vanguard Admiral: CpOpAdl 82.44 +0.98 +7.4 EMAdmr r 40.83 +0.76 +2.4 Energy 135.94 +1.72 +12.4 ExtdAdm 45.41 +0.51 +10.0 500Adml 124.31 +1.30 +7.8 GNMA Ad 10.95 +3.3 GrwAdm 33.87 +0.35 +7.5 HlthCr 59.39 +0.56 +15.9 HiYldCp 5.86 +0.01 +5.9 InfProAd 26.56 +0.04 +4.7 ITBdAdml 11.44 +0.01 +4.1 IntGrAdm 65.46 +1.18 +6.4 ITAdml 13.55 +3.7 ITGrAdm 10.05 +0.01 +4.2 LtdTrAd 11.08 +1.7 LTGrAdml 9.63 +0.03 +5.6 LT Adml 10.88 +3.8 MCpAdml 102.05 +0.94 +10.7 MuHYAdm 10.27 +0.01 +3.7 PrmCap r 73.82 +0.86 +8.1 ReitAdm r 88.84 +1.39 +14.1 STsyAdml 10.77 +0.01 +1.2 ShtTrAd 15.91 +0.9 STIGrAd 10.80 +1.9 SmCAdm 38.19 +0.46 +9.8 TtlBAdml 10.76 +0.01 +2.9 TStkAdm 34.04 +0.36 +8.3 WellslAdm 55.36 +0.26 +6.3 WelltnAdm 56.86 +0.47 +6.6 Windsor 48.91 +0.54 +7.3 WdsrIIAd 49.56 +0.42 +8.8Vanguard Fds: AssetA 26.24 +0.28 +7.3 DivdGro 15.66 +0.14 +8.9 Energy 72.39 +0.92 +12.4 Explr 81.48 +0.88 +11.8 GNMA 10.95 +3.3 GlobEq 19.18 +0.26 +7.4 HYCorp 5.86 +0.01 +5.8 HlthCre 140.72 +1.33 +15.8 InflaPro 13.52 +0.02 +4.6 IntlGr 20.56 +0.36 +6.3 IntlVal 33.45 +0.44 +4.0 ITIGrade 10.05 +0.01 +4.2 LifeCon 17.07 +0.11 +4.8 LifeGro 23.54 +0.25 +6.7 LifeMod 20.72 +0.18 +5.9 Morg 19.44 +0.19 +7.8 MuInt 13.55 +3.7 PrecMtls r 27.20 +0.51 +1.9 PrmcpCor 14.93 +0.16 +8.4 Prmcp r 71.12 +0.82 +8.1 SelValu r 20.54 +0.16 +9.5 STAR 20.24 +0.15 +6.1 STIGrade 10.80 +1.8 TgtRetInc 11.72 +0.05 +4.4 TgRe2010 23.49 +0.16 +5.3 TgtRe2015 13.12 +0.10 +5.6 TgRe2020 23.41 +0.20 +5.9 TgtRe2025 13.41 +0.13 +6.3 TgRe2030 23.11 +0.23 +6.6 TgtRe2035 14.00 +0.16 +7.0 TgtRe2040 22.99 +0.25 +6.9 TgtRe2045 14.44 +0.16 +7.0 Wellsly 22.85 +0.11 +6.2 Welltn 32.92 +0.28 +6.5 Wndsr 14.49 +0.16 +7.3 WndsII 27.92 +0.24 +8.8Vanguard Idx Fds: TotIntAdm r 27.75 +0.45 +5.3 TotIntlInst r 111.03 +1.81 +5.3 500 124.28 +1.30 +7.8 MidCap 22.47 +0.20 +10.6 SmCap 38.14 +0.46 +9.8 SmlCpGth 24.61 +0.28 +12.3 SmlCpVl 17.15 +0.21 +7.1 TotBnd 10.76 +0.01 +2.9 TotlIntl 16.59 +0.27 +5.3 TotStk 34.03 +0.36 +8.2Vanguard Instl Fds: DevMkInst 10.63 +0.17 +6.5 ExtIn 45.41 +0.51 +10.1 FTAllWldI r 99.01 +1.65 +5.5 GrwthIst 33.87 +0.35 +7.5 InfProInst 10.82 +0.02 +4.7 InstIdx 123.45 +1.30 +7.8 InsPl 123.46 +1.30 +7.8 InsTStPlus 30.79 +0.32 +8.3 MidCpIst 22.54 +0.20 +10.7 SCInst 38.19 +0.46 +9.8 TBIst 10.76 +0.01 +2.9 TSInst 34.05 +0.36 +8.3Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl 102.69 +1.08 +7.8 STBdIdx 10.63 +1.7 TotBdSgl 10.76 +0.01 +2.9 TotStkSgl 32.86 +0.35 +8.3Waddell & Reed Adv: Accm 8.01 +0.09 +6.9 ScTechA 11.47 +0.16 +10.4Western Asset: CorePlus I 11.04 +0.01 +4.0Yacktman Funds: Fund p 18.21 +0.18 +10.1

Name P/E Last Chg YTDName NAV Chg. %Rt.

4,102,775,706Volume 136,205,941Volume 2,402,325,612Volume

Wheat CBOT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 11 781.00 807.00 772.00 782.00 -37.00Sep 11 827.00 855.00 821.00 832.00 -36.00Dec 11 875.00 902.00 871.00 882.00 -27.00Mar 12 908.00 932.00 904.00 916.00 -20.00Est. Sales 288,371 Fri’s sales 94,515Fri’s open int.459,199 Chg. -2625.00Corn CBOT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 11 747.00 763.00 743.00 747.00 -11.00Sep 11 715.00 729.00 710.00 717.00 -10.00Dec 11 674.00 683.00 665.00 673.00 -11.00Mar 12 683.00 693.00 676.00 683.00 -11.00Est. Sales 443,026 Fri’s sales 213,338Fri’s open int.1,437,449 Chg. +11928.00Oats CBOT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 11 385.00 390.00 377.00 386.00 +3.00

Sep 11 394.00 396.00 391.00 395.00 +3.00Dec 11 399.00 404.00 390.00 401.00 +3.00Mar 12 408.00 413.00 404.00 413.00 +3.00Est. Sales 4,654 Fri’s sales 819Fri’s open int.12,818 Chg. -98.00Soybean CBOT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelJul 11 1376.00 1391.00 1366.00 1376.00 -3.00Aug 11 1371.00 1386.00 1363.00 1372.00 -3.00Sep 11 1366.00 1381.00 1362.00 1367.00 -4.00Nov 11 1363.00 1377.00 1354.00 1363.00 -5.00Est. Sales 266,437 Fri’s sales 116,787Fri’s open int.575,686 Chg. +2128.00

Gold COMX Aug 11 1536.80 -.50Silver COMX Jul 11 3830.5 +44.2

GRAINS

METALS

LIVESTOCK

Federal Market News Service

Closed

Exch Contract Settle Chg

J F M A M

May 31, 2011

+128.21

12,569.79 11,000

12,000

13,000

www.fourriversbusiness.com

July IssueAvailable

June 23rd!

4B • Wednesday, June 1, 2011 • The Paducah Sun Business paducahsun.com

BY DAVID K. RANDALL AND STAN CHOE

Associated PresNEW YORK — That screech-

ing sound you heard in May? That was the stock market.

While the month ended with four days of gains in most of the indexes, con-cerns that high gas prices, tornadoes and fl ooding in the South, the post-natural disaster slowdown in Japan and a growing debt crisis in Europe sent the Standard and Poor’s 500 stock index down 1.4 percent in May. That decline followed a 2.85 percent gain in April, which

followed gains that set the fastest pace in the fi rst quar-ter since 1998. Before this month, stocks were boosted by higher corporate earnings, increased business spending and a global economic ex-pansion.

Other risky assets also saw declines in May, following a year of increases. The prices of commodities like oil, cattle and coffee fell by an aver-age of 7 percent. Meanwhile, Treasury bond prices, which tend to rise when inves-tors fear that the economy is slowing, rose to near their highest level of the year.

For Tuesday, the stock market ended higher, on signs that Germany might drop its demands for an early rescheduling of Greek bonds, paving the way for a deal that could prevent Greece from defaulting on its debt. The S&P index gained 14.10, or 1.1 percent, to 1,345.20. The Dow Jones industrial average added 128.21, or 1 percent, to 12,569.79. And the Nasdaq composite rose 38.44, or 1.4 percent, to 2,835.30.

These gains came in spite of another grim report on the U.S. housing market. Home prices in in 12 of the 20 cit-

ies tracked by the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller index dropped in March to the lowest levels since the hous-ing bubble popped in 2006. “Home prices continue on their downward spiral with no relief in sight,” said Da-vid Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P In-dices.

Oliver Pursche, president of Gary Goldberg Financial Services, said the report didn’t hurt investors’ con-fi dence much because their expectations for the U.S. housing market were al-ready low.

Stocks end month on high note

Associated Press

Specialist Evan Solomom (right) is surrounded by traders waiting for the IPO of Freescale Semiconductor on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday.

Page 5: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

Channel 2Midnight — Arts Showcase8 a.m. — Minority Focus8:30 a.m. — Tot School9 a.m. — Tourism Talk9:30 a.m. — Refl ections10 a.m. — A Better You10:30 a.m. — Rays of Hope11 a.m. — WKCTC Science SeriesNoon — Campus Spotlight12:05 p.m. — Community Billboard4 p.m. — Thinking About Sports5 p.m. — For the Love of Animals: First Aid For Cats - Part One5:30 p.m. — Eye on Arts6 p.m. — Heart of Collaboration6:30 p.m. — Sharing Miracles

7 p.m. — Educational Forum8 p.m. — Today’s Air Force8:30 p.m. — L.I.F.E. After Lockup9 p.m. — Cooking at the College9:30 p.m. — Fabulous Fifties & Beyond10 p.m. — Books Of Our Time11 p.m. — Easter Seals11:30 p.m. — The Spirit Of Frederick Douglass

Channel 119 a.m. — Your City at Work: Flood Wall9:30 a.m. — Your City at Work: Recycle3 p.m. — WKCTC Scholar House Groundbreaking4 p.m. — Break A Sweat4:30 p.m. — City Profi le: Human Rights Commission5 p.m. — Quality of Life Matters in the City of Paducah: Jeff Pederson

paducahsun.com Television The Paducah Sun • Wednesday, June 1, 2011 • 5B

Page 6: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

6B • Wedensday, June 1, 2011 • The Paducah Sun paducahsun.com paducahsun.com The Paducah Sun • Wednesday, June 1, 2011 • 7B

Go ToGo To PPaducahaducahCCarsars.com.comTO SEE DEALERSTO SEE DEALERSFULL INVENTORY

See Full Inventories www.PaducahCars.com

10 FORD FLEX SE

$17,9953.5, V6, Tuxedo Black, PW, PL,

AC, TW, CC, CD, Cloth, PS, 3rd

Row

Premier Motors 270-437-4127

www.premiermotors.com

07 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR L$21,995

5.4, V8, Dk Blue Eff, Leather, PS, 3rd Row, TV/DVD, Power

Running BoardsPremier Motors 270-437-4127

www.premiermotors.com

08 PONTIACTORRENT

$13,9953.4, V6, Black, PW, PL, AC, TW,

CC, CD, Cloth, PS

Premier Motors 270-437-4127www.premiermotors.com

08 VOLVO C70 T5 CONVERTIBLE

$23,995Celestial Ble Met, Retractable

Hard Top, Leather, Heated Seat

Premier Motors 270-437-4127www.premiermotors.com

PREMIER MOTORS

The More You Look, The

Better We Look!www.premiermotors.com

07 HYUNDAI AZERA LIMITED

$12,9954 Door, 3.8, V6, Ebony Obsidian,

Leather, Sunroof, Heated Seat

Premier Motors 270-437-4127www.premiermotors.com

10 FORD F150 XLT CREW CAB

$21,9954.6, V8, White, PW, PL, AC, TW,

CC, CD, Cloth, PS

Premier Motors 270-437-4127www.premiermotors.com

07 FORD EDGE SEL AWD

$18,9953.5, V6, Black, Leather, ABS,

Dualac, Heated Seat, Navigation

Premier Motors 270-437-4127www.premiermotors.com

08 CADILLAC CTS

$21,9954 Door, 3.6, V6, Black Raven,

Leather, PS, Sunroof, Heated Seat

Premier Motors 270-437-4127

www.premiermotors.com

09 NISSAN MURANO SL AWD

$26,9953.5, V6, Black Obsidian, Leather, ABS, Sunroof,

Heated Seat Premier Motors 270-437-4127

www.premiermotors.com

LOADED

C & K MOTORS

3870 St. Rt. 408Hickory, KY 42051

270.674.5602or 270.705.5973

C & K Motors

www.ckmotorsky.com

2002 Ford F350

$11,9007.3L Diesal , CREW , 4x4 ,

SWB , 90 Day Warranty270-674-5602 or 270-705-5973

www.ckmotorsky.com

98 Jeep Grand Cherokee$5,500

122k 4x4 Limited 4x4 Leather Sunroof 90 day

Warranty270-674-5602 or 270-705-5973www.ckmotorsky.com

2004 MercuryMountaineer

$8,700Sunroof, Heated Leather,

Seats 7, AWD, 102k, 90 Day Warranty

270-674-5602 or 270-705-5973www.ckmotorsky.com

2000 ChevyZ71

$6,900Z71, 5.3L, 3dr, 138K,

90 Day Warranty270-674-5602 or 270-705-5973

www.ckmotorsky.com

2002 Chevy Cavalier Z24

$4,995Z24, 4dr, 108k, Tires 80%,

Power Windows, 90 Day Warranty

270-674-5602 or 270-705-5973www.ckmotorsky.com

1999 Olds Alero

$4,2003.4L, Sunroof, 107k, 2dr,

90 Day Warranty

270-674-5602 or 270-705-5973

www.ckmotorsky.com

2000 Chevy Tracker

$4,9004x4, 4dr, Bucket Seats,

4 cyl. (Gas Saver) 90 Day Warranty

270-674-5602 or 270-705-5973www.ckmotorsky.com

2000 Ford Ranger

$4,9003.0L (Gas Saver) 2wd, Cold

Air, 90 Day Warranty

270-674-5602 or 270-705-5973

www.ckmotorsky.com

20

$4x4

2002 FordMustang

$7,995GT, 24MPG, 5SP, V8, Tires

80%, 88K, 90 Day Warranty270-674-5602 or 270-705-5973

www.ckmotorsky.com

2Z71!!

20MSeats 77.3L

98122K

HEARTLAND MOTORS

2003 Dodge

Ram 4x4

2001 Chevrolet

Silverado 4x4

2002 Ford

F150 4x4

2005 Ford

Ranger

2005 Dodge

Durango

2006 Chrysler

300 Touring

2000 Ford Mustang

Convertible

2003 Ford

Sport Trackp

1-800-460-9332www.heartlandmotorsales.com

1-800-460-9332www.heartlandmotorsales.com

g

1-800-460-9332www.heartlandmotorsales.com

g

1-800-460-9332www.heartlandmotorsales.com

g

1-800-460-9332www.heartlandmotorsales.com

1-800-460-9332www.heartlandmotorsales.com

1-800-460-9332www.heartlandmotorsales.com

1-800-460-9332www.heartlandmotorsales.com

1-800-460-9332www.heartlandmotorsales.com

841 US Hwy 62 Calvert City, KY

1-800-460-9332270-395-9100

www.heartland-motorsales.com

2003 GMC Yukon

Suburban

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

Big “H” Auto Mart270-527-9433

www.bighautomart.com

606 Main Street

Benton, KY 42025

www.bighautomart.com270-527-9433

danny ham’s

2005 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY LIMITED

$9,995QUAD SEATS, 3RD ROW SEAT,

ENTERTAINMENT, CHROME WHEELS, HAS IT ALL!

2005 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER TOURING

$8,9954 DOOR, AUTOMATIC,

LOADED UP!

2007 NISSAN VERA

$10,500

91K MI, GAS SAVER 33MPG

2001 HONDA ODYSSEY $6,995

LOADED, 2ND ROW BUCKET SEATS, 3RD ROW SEAT, REAR

AIR, 105K MI

2008 FORD EDGE SEL $19,995

4 DR. ALL WHEEL DRIVE

2005 NISSAN MAXIMA SE $13,995

3.5 V6, SKY ROOF, ONLY 55K MI

2004 CHEVY MALIBU MAXX LT

$8,995114K MI, XM SATELLITE

RADIO, STEERING WHEEL AUDIO CONTROLS, CD PLAYER,

SUNROOF

1999 MAZDA MIATA

$6995

CONVERTIBLE, 4 CYL

2006 DODGE RAM 3500 SLT

$29,900

TOW PKG

2003 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT

$9,995 REG-CAB, AUTOMATIC, 20”

CHROME WHEELS, VERY NICE!

2006 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR

LIMITED EDITION $15,995

HAS EVERY OPTION, JUST LIKE NEW!

1999 CHEVY 1500 LS EXTENDED

PICKUP $6,995

149 K MI, POWER LOCKS, MIRRORS & WINDOWS, TILT,

AIR, & CRUISE

1999 CHEVY 1500 LS

$6,995

EXT-CAB, 2 WHEEL DRIVE

2006 CHEVY SILVERADO 1500 Z71

$17,900 CREW-CAB, LEATHER &

LOADED UP!

2006 CHEVY EQUINOX LT $10,995

99K MI

1997 FORD F150

$4,995 TOW PKG., DUAL EXHAUST & TOOL BOX, VERY, VERY, NICE!!

2009 CHEVY IMPALA LT$15,900

41K MI

2010 CAMARO LT

$21,995STRIPE PKG, 20” WHEELS,

21K MI, TINTED GLASS

2009 CHEVY IMPALA

$15,900

46K MI

TAPPS AUTO SALES

2002 BUICK CENTURY

$4,950BROWN, 3.1 L, V6, AUTO, LILT, CRUISE, PW, PL, AM/

FM/CASS.

1994 HONDA ACCORD

$4,950MAROON, 2.2L, 4CYL, AUTO,

LILT, CRUISE, PW, PL, AM/FM/CD, SUNROOF!

2002 CHEVROLET MALIBU

30 MPG!!!$5,950

SLIVER, 3.11, V6, AUTO, TILT, CRUISE, PW, PL, AM/FM/CD

1990 GMC SIERRA SLE 2500

$3,950

WHITE, 5.7L, V8, AUTO, TILT,

CRUISE

2002 FORD ESCAPE XLT

$7,950

RED, 3.0L, V6, AWD, AUTO, TILT, CRUISE, PW, PL, A/FM/

6 DISC CD CHANGER

1995 CHEVROLET SILVERADO Z71

$5,950

BLACK/TAN, 5.7L, V8, AUTO,

TILT, PW, PL, AM/FM/CD

2000 FORD RANGER XLT

$6,950 BLACK, 3.01, V6, AUTO, TILT,

CRUISE, PW, PL, AM/FM/CD, 4X4.

2003 GMC YUKON SLT

$10,950 WHITE, 5.3L, V8, SLT-

LOADED, AUTO, 4X4, PW, PL, TILT, CRUISE, LEATHER,

SUNROOF!!!

2010 SCAG FREEDOM Z

STARTING AT

$5299.99THE FREEDOMZ, ZERO-TURN RIDER

IS THE NEWEST HIGH-PERFORMANCE MOWER FROM SCAG. CHOOSE FROM 36”, 48”, 52” OR 61” CUTTER WITH AIR-COOLED ENGINES UP TO 28HP

1995 DODGE DAKOTA

$4,950

BLUE, 3.9L, V6, 4X4, TILT,

CRUISE, AM/FM/CASS

Call 575-8750Call 575-8750 To Be Spotlighted InPaducahCars.comPaducahCars.com

Participating Dealerships

C & K Motorswww.tappsautosales.com

2161 Irvin Cobb DrivePaducah, KY 42003

270.575.0061

www.bighautomart.com606 Main StreetBenton, KY 42025

270.527.9433

www.premiermotors.com537 Brewers Hwy.Hardin, KY 42048

270.437.4127

www.ckmotorsky.com3870 St. Rt. 408

Hickory, KY 42051270.674.5602

or 270.705.5973

www.heartlandmotorsales.com841 US Hwy 62Calvert City, KY1-800-460-9332270-395-9100

Page 7: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

Dear Annie: I am looking forward to my daughter’s wed-ding. She wants her father, my ex, to walk her down the aisle. He comes from a dysfunction-al family, and none of them speaks to the others.

My ex, who is helping to pay for the wedding, insists that no invitations go to any of his family. He has threatened to walk out if any of them attend. However, our daughter has developed a good relation-ship with her “Aunt Marie and Uncle John.” They have been there for her and contributed so much to her life.

Obviously, my daughter very much wants to invite this aunt and uncle. Should she disregard her father’s wishes and risk the chance that he will not be part of her wed-ding? She could ask her step-father to escort her down the aisle. He has raised her for the past 15 years. She loves her

father and does not want to alienate him. It is terribly im-portant to her that he give her away. What should she do? — Mother of the Bride.

Dear Mother: We dis-like it when people is-sue ultimatums about who can be invited. Your ex-husband has put his daughter in a terrible po-sition. She needs to talk to him, explaining that her aunt and uncle have been good to her, and it would mean a lot if he would be fl exible enough to include them. If he refuses to re-consider, your daughter must decide how impor-tant it is that her father walk her down the aisle. Sorry.

Dear Annie: Thank you for

printing the letter from “Kut-tawa, Ky.,” who has issues with background noise and loud commercials during TV programs.

My husband is a sci-fi fan who is going deaf. I, on the other hand, have super-sen-sitive hearing and can hear a pin drop at 50 feet. Too many times, he complains that he cannot hear the dialogue and cranks up the volume, when the background noise is ex-cruciating to people with nor-mal hearing, let alone those like me. Kuttawa is not the only one suffering from the cacophony. — Guelph in Can-ada.

Please e-mail your ques-tions to [email protected], or write to: An-nie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045.

Marvin

Blondie

Garfield

Mary Worth

Dilbert

Zits

Beetle Bailey

One Big Happy

HoroscopesWEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 2011

ARIES (March 21-April 19): You’ll be ex-cellent when it comes to making quick and necessary maneuvers. A little discipline and hard work will bring about the changes you’ve been looking for. You are on your way to another victory.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t be a couch potato when a little effort has the potential to bring fabulous results. A part-nership can be fortifi ed if you put a little pressure on yourself and the person you are involved with to begin the plans for new projects.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You’ll have trouble containing your emotions. You need to stimulate your mind and express your desire for change. You can make re-forms to your own life or in a group situa-tion that will have a lasting and benefi cial effect.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Focus on what you can do for others and you will feel good about who you are and what you have

done. Someone you care about will be a burden but in the end your hard work and support will pay off in the results you get.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Less is more, so don’t overspend, overdo or overindulge. Altering the way you do things will have a huge, favorable impact on your current situation and your future.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Don’t get too personal or feel too overwhelmed by what’s expected of you. Criticism will be offered to benefi t you, not to make you feel bad.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You can im-prove your situation and your future. Get-ting started will be the most diffi cult task, but once you have taken the fi rst step, you will begin to see your progress.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Partner-ships will have a huge impact on your life and your future. Nurture the relationships that are important to you emotionally, men-tally, physically and fi nancially.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Give

and take will bring greater balance to your life and help you ward off any complica-tions that can develop. It’s best if you are the observer, not the aggressor, if you want to protect your position.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Take a passionate approach to both your person-al and professional lives, making sure that you are fair with everyone you deal with.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Don’t let anyone sway you into doing something you know is not to your benefi t. Your emphasis should be on home and family and making your environment healthy, happy and free from poor infl uences.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Once you let go of the past, you will fi nd it much easier to get on with your life. Put more effort into your goals and rethink your pro-fessional dreams.

Birthday Baby: You want to experience life fully. You question and assess and gravitate toward the unfamiliar and the unusual.

ACROSS1 Turkish title5 Dept. of Labor

agency9 Isn’t serious

14 Aloof15 Lovey-dovey

exchange16 Ready for use17 Abdominoplasty,

familiarly19 Salad dressing

restriction20 One at the top of

the board21 Evil intent22 Hearing aid?23 Pepto-Bismol

target26 General __

Chicken28 Poet who wrote of

the wasp, “Idistrust hiswaspitality”

29 Envy, e.g.30 Self-help guru

Deepak33 Sandra’s “Speed”

co-star36 Bourgeois39 Anklebone40 More than interest43 Chef’s phrase46 Parts of the hip48 From square one49 Lint receptacle?54 Jeanne d’Arc,

e.g.: Abbr.55 Nimbi56 Enjoys

surreptitiously, asa smoke

58 La Scalaproduction

59 Easy A (or whereto learn about thispuzzle’s theme?)

62 Loses one’stemper

63 Fifth color of elespectro

64 Stopped working65 Surgical tube66 Salad, at times67 __-bitty

DOWN1 Tread the boards2 European stew

3 Where schoolattendance isusually taken

4 __ mater5 Hawaii’s “main

islands,” e.g.6 Become

disenchanted with7 Ad __8 Inquire9 Syndicated

columnistGoldberg

10 First name on anhistoric WWIIbomber

11 Zeno’s followers12 Meditative martial

art13 Bad temper18 NFL rushing units21 1960s Borgnine

sitcom role22 List-ending

letters24 Succeeds25 “Just __!”: “Be

right there!”27 Polish partner31 Dietary guideline

letters32 Talks off the cuff34 Tandoori bread

35 Org. that stagesan annual Juneopen

37 Doozy38 Classical

language of India41 Prepares42 Maa, in “Babe”43 Detests44 Show enthusiasm

for, as anopportunity

45 Purport

47 Available for siring50 Actress Sophia51 You often get a

rise out of it52 Frère of a mère or

père53 Classical

beginning57 Autobahn auto59 57-Down filler60 Israeli weapon61 Big name in ice

cream

By Donna S. Levin(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 06/01/11

06/01/11

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

[email protected]

Father’s feud with family could disrupt daughter’s wedding

Ask Annie

8B • Wednesday, June 1, 2011 • The Paducah Sun Variety paducahsun.com

Page 8: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

paducahsun.com People The Paducah Sun • Wednesday, June 1, 2011 • 9B

BY DAVID HILTBRANDMcClatchy-Tribune News ServicePHILADELPHIA — It’s no

surprise that Mark-Paul Gosselaar and Breckin Meyer have such strong chemistry as a pair of outrageous attorneys on TNT’s new series, “Frank-lin & Bash.”

These two guys are so much cut from the same cloth, they probably share threads.

They’re the same age — 37. Both got into the business as child actors. Even their hair color is so similar that Meyer had to lighten his for the show to avoid confusion.

Both have held onto un-usual fi rst names despite advice early in their ca-reers to adopt more con-ventional showbiz handles.

“Breckin is a Welsh name,” says Meyer as he and his costar barnstorm through Philadelphia to promote their show, which debuts Wednesday at 9 p.m. EDT on TNT. “My father heard it once and liked it. But he spelled it wrong; it’s supposed to be Brecken.”

And that middle name, Erin?

“If I was a girl, I was go-ing to be named Erin,” he says. “I guess they thought, ‘We bought ‘em, might as well use ‘em.’”

As for Gosselaar, “there’s no explanation for why I have two fi rst names,” he says. “All my siblings ex-cept me have very Ameri-canized names for a Dutch immigrant family.”

(Yes, Meyer has some Dutch blood in his ances-try.)

The easiest distinction between the two actors is that Gosselaar enjoys a height advantage over Meyer, who has been tak-ing grief for his 5-foot-5 frame his whole career.

“My fi rst starring role was in ‘Road Trip’ (a 2000 fi lm),” he says. “I was so excited reading my fi rst review. I remember it was really positive. Then in the middle the critic referred to me as ‘a trash-compact-ed Bill Maher.’ I thought, ‘There’s no reason to write that. That’s just (expletive) mean.’”

The ribbing has followed him onto the “Franklin & Bash” set. He remembers shooting a scene in the pi-lot with Malcolm McDow-ell, who plays the boss who hires the two cheeky icon-oclasts for his corporate law fi rm.

“I don’t know him at all,” says Meyer. “To me, he’s a living legend. The whole time we’re doing our lines together, he’s staring at my scalp.

“I’m like, ‘Come on, meet my gaze.’ I fi gure he’s messing with me. Finally we get the scene and I go, ‘Malcs, what the hell are you doing?’ He said, ‘I’m looking at the height of a normal man.’”

Gosselaar has the more standard matinee-idol looks. The only razzing he has taken for his appear-ance stemmed from the

shoulder-length hair he adopted for his previous TNT series, “Raising the Bar.”

“I’m the Felicity of legal dramas,” he says, referring to Keri Russell’s celebrat-ed locks on the drama of the same name. “No one could look past the hair. It created this polarizing reaction. We had seven million viewers for ‘Rais-ing the Bar’s’ debut and I think half of them didn’t show up the next week be-cause of the hair.”

Both actors are still of-ten recognized and ac-costed for work they did decades ago. Meyer often gets “Hey, it’s Travis” from his role as a teenage skate-boarder in the fi lm “Clue-less.”

(Weird trivia: Brittany Murphy played Meyer’s girlfriend in “Clueless.”

Years later, he would re-place her as the voice of Joseph Gribble on the ani-mated series “King of the Hill.”)

Gosselaar admits his head still turns when someone shouts out “Zack.” That was the name of his character on the tweener comedy “Saved by the Bell,” a show that has gained eternal life in syn-dication.

He’s pretty sure his fi rst kiss was a scripted one on that sitcom.

Meyer’s earliest buss is a matter of public re-cord, thanks to Drew Bar-rymore’s memoir, “Little Girl Lost.” ‘‘We were 11,” he says. “Drew changed the names of everyone in the book. Except mine.”

His fi rst on-screen kiss was also memorable. In the 1998 fi lm “54,” he locked lips with Ryan Phil-lippe.

Between them, Gosse-laar and Meyer have nearly 50 years of on-camera ex-perience.

According to Jason En-sler, the executive produc-er of “Franklin & Bash,” that seasoning is a huge asset.

“We got very, very lucky,” he says. “These guys never miss a mark; they never miss a line. When you’ve got that in your back pock-et, you can play with other things. Their professional-ism gives us so much cre-ative freedom.”

Work ethic. Just one more thing these two have in common.

DES MOINES, Iowa — A back injury has forced actor Michael J. Fox to withdraw from the Principal Charity Classic pro-am golf event in West Des Moines this week.

Fox had been expected to tee off at the Glen Oaks Country Club on Wednesday.

The Des Moines Regis-ter reported Tuesday that tournament spokeswoman Joelle Kirchhoff says Fox has decided against making the trip after hurting his back. He competed in the tourney in 2009.

The Principal Charity Clas-sic, a Champions Tour Event, runs from Friday through Sunday at Glen Oaks.

Dallas nightclubpatron sues comedian

Andy Dick

DALLAS — A Texas man is suing comedian Andy Dick over his December perfor-mance at a Dallas nightclub.

Robert Tucker claims he suffered emotional distress and defamation as a result of an alleged incident in which Dick exposed his geni-tals while walking through the audience.

The suit filed May 10 also names a talent agency that represents the comedian and the club where he per-formed. It says they should have known Dick’s “long his-tory of assaulting patrons.”

The lawsuit cites Dick’s January 2010 arrest on felony sexual abuse charges, after al-legations he groped a bouncer and patron at a Huntington, W. Va., bar, as well as other incidents.

Court documents don’t list an attorney for Dick. His at-torney in the West Virginia case didn’t immediately return a call from The Associated Press.

Delayed ‘Hobbit’ films get release dates, titles

NEW YORK — Peter Jack-son’s two-film adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit” has release dates.

New Line Cinema, Warner Bros. and MGM announced Monday that “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” will be released Dec. 14, 2012. The sequel, “The Hobbit: There and Back Again,” is to be re-leased Dec. 13, 2013.

The films have suffered repeated delays over studio funding problems, a threat-ened actors’ boycott and ulcer surgery for Jackson. Shot con-secutively, they began filming in March in New Zealand.

The 3-D “Hobbit” films are prequels to Jackson’s Oscar-winning “Lord of the Rings” trilogy. The movies star Martin Freeman, Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen, Cate Blanchett and Orlando Bloom.

Associated Press

Stars of TNT’s new laywer show have lots in common

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Mark-Paul Gosselaar (left) costars with Breckin Meyer in ‘Franklin & Bash’ on TNT.

Michael J. Fox withdraws from Iowa pro-am

Tooth Whitening

$96.00Call For Complimentary

Consultation

New Patient Exam$45.00

Includes All Necessary X-Rays and Oral

Cancer Screening.(Save Up To $100.00)

Denture Consultation

$30.00

BluegrassBluegrassDental CenterDental Center

BluegrassBluegrassDental CenterDental Center

Don Tilley DDS Trent Nelson DMDFAMILY & COSMETIC DENTISTRY

657 Lone Oak Rd. • Suite 5 Roblyn Bldg. • Paducah, KY 42003

Most Insurance Plans Accepted

442-5071INTEREST FREE FINANCING AVAILABLE

rrs TM

Live Remote Sat, June 4th 10am - 1pm at Tobacco Barn, Paducah

Come out and help fi ght domestic violence

Value Approx. $60,000

Gaming License Number 2211

Purchase tickets during business hours at the following locations:Eagle SWS, PaducahPurchase Ford, Mayfi eldPrecision Audio, Mayfi eld & PaducahBurger King, Mayfi eldMichelson’s Jewelers, Paducah

Winnelson Plumber Supply, PaducahSonic, West PaducahTobacco Barn, PaducahSam Miller-State Farm, FultonTapps Auto Sales, Paducah

Randy’s Body Shop, PaducahNew Wave Hair Salon, Mayfi eldExpress Way Car Wash & Quick Lube, PaducahPurchase Ford, Mayfi eld Pagliai’s Pizza, Murray

2ND PRIZE WILL BE $10002ND PRIZE WILL BE $10003RD PRIZE WILL BE $5003RD PRIZE WILL BE $500

All proceeds go to Merryman House

TICKETS ON SALE NOW! TICKETS ON SALE NOW! TICKETS $25 EACHTICKETS $25 EACH

LIMITED TICKETSLIMITED TICKETS

WIN THIS 2011 SHELBY GT 500

ll d M HAll dll dl dd MllllAll H“MONEY FOR A CAUSE”“MONEY FOR A CAUSE”

WINNER WILL BE WINNER WILL BE DRAWN ON DRAWN ON

JULY 9TH AT...JULY 9TH AT...

mayfield, ky

Page 9: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

To Place An Ad:

575-8700or 1-800-599-1771

outside McCracken Co.E-mail: classifi [email protected]

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

Offi ce Hours:Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Adjustments:Advertisers are requested to check the fi rst insertion of their ads for any error. The Paducah Sun will be responsible for only one incorrect insertion.Any error should be reported immediately so corrections can be made.

We accept Mastercard & Visa! ®

CLASSIFIED PRIVATE PARTY AD RATES:LinesPer Day

1Day

2Days

3Days

4Days

5Days

6Days

7Days

1Month

2 $7.62 $11.08 $14.28 $19.04 $20.50 $24.60 $25.62 $82.00

3 $11.43 $16.62 $21.42 $28.56 $30.75 $36.90 $38.43 $123.00

4 $15.24 $22.16 $28.56 $38.08 $41.00 $49.20 $51.24 $164.00

5 $19.05 $27.70 $35.70 $47.60 $51.25 $61.50 $64.05 $205.00

6 $22.86 $33.24 $42.84 $57.12 $61.50 $73.80 $76.86 $246.00

7 $26.67 $38.78 $49.98 $66.64 $71.75 $86.10 $89.67 $287.00

3 LINES 10 DAYS

$3050

ANY PRIVATE PARTY FOR SALE ITEMS:

ITEMS UNDER $1,000:

3 LINES 7 DAYS

$1700

ITEMS UNDER $50:

3 LINES 3 DAYS

$465

• Private party (non-commercial) for sale items only.

• Additional lines available.

• Includes online edition and 1 day in New For You Today.

• No refunds for early cancellation.

• Private party (non-commercial) for sale items only.• Total of items must be $1,000 or less and price(s) must be in ad.• Additional lines available.• Includes 1 day in New For You Today and 7 days on the online edition.• Pet ads excluded.• No refunds for early cancellation.

• Private party (non-commercial) for sale items only.• Total of items must be $50 or less and price(s) must be in ad.• No orders will be taken by phone.• Extra lines are not available.• Pet ads excluded.• No refunds for early cancellation.

ClassifiedThe Paducah Sun | Wednesday, June 1, 2011 | paducahsun.comPage 10B

MERCHANDISE TRANSPORTATION

Miss a

day. M

iss a

lot.

LR, DR, KIT. OPEN, 2 FIREPLACES, 2 LG. BRS., 2 FULL BATHS, OFFICE., GARAGE, WK-IN CLOSET, EXP. BRICK

NEW ELECTRICAL, PLUMBING, & HVAC

WAS NOW

CALL OWNER

ABSOLUTE AUCTIONSaturday, June 4th @ 9:00 am

200+- Travel TrailersWill be sold to the highest bidder!!Many dealer units with slide-outs

Auction Site: 155 Co-op Drive – Halls, TN

Preview: Friday, June 3rd 8:00 am until 5:00 pm

Visit the website for auction photos/listing:www.SEAUCTION.com

**WOW – CHECK THIS OUT****Register to WIN a Travel Trailer!!

Must be present to win.Phone: 205-758-3068

www.SEAUCTION.comSoutheast Auction CompanyJ. Michael Langford TNAL5613

TN Firm 4722

ANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTS

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE

ClassifiedAdvertising

Dept.DIAL 575-8700

To place yourWANT AD

MONDAY-FRIDAY8:00 AM TO 4:30 PM

OR EMAIL:classifieds@

paducahsun.com

In-Column DeadlinesSun.-Mon....3 P.M. Fri.Tues.-Sat....12 Noon

Previous Day

DAILYCONSECUTIVE

RATES(2 LINES MINIMUM)

1 Day...$3.92 Per Line2 Days...$2.77 Per

Line Per Day3-4 Days...$2.38 Per

Line Per Day5-6 Days...$2.05 Per

Line Per Day7-13 Days...$1.83 Per

Line Per Day14-23 Days...$1.77Per Line Per Day

24-31 Days...$41.00Per Line Per Month

CHECKYOUR

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.

270-575-8700CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISINGPOLICY

On all personal andhappy ads, The Padu-cah Sun reserves theright to divulge thename of the partyplacing the ad. Also,we will no longer putany age on happybirthday ads.

FREEEnd Rolls &

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.

0142 LOST

BLOODHOUND,Downtown area, F, or-ange collar w/tags,270-584-5421

KEY RINGS, 10 keyson 3 rings. Lost 5/26.REWARD! 994-2295

LOST YOUR DOG??Check the AnimalShelter 4000 ColemanRd.

GARAGE /ESTATE GARAGE /ESTATE SALESSALES

0151 GARAGE/ESTATE SALES

Public AuctionSAT., JUNE 4, 9 AM

500 N. 12TH ST.Estate & Moving

Sony organ; mirrors;luggage; 2 3-cushioncouches & chairs;power single bed;metal cabinet; BRsuite (needs work);wet bar; clocks; books.Watch Friday's paper.

Come Bid & Buy!HAM"S

REALTY & AUCTION443-2096 443-2353

West Paducah/Heath

YARD sale, furniture,misc. FRIDAY 7-?5309 Tuck Rd.

West end

MOVING SALE- Eve-rything must go! 3200Ky Ave. Wed-Sat 7-?

0151 GARAGE/ESTATE SALES

Lone Oak/Hendron

3 FAMILY yard sale, 2ACs, golf clubs, cloth-ing, misc. June 3 & 4,7-? 529 Oaklawn Dr.

Other areas

JUNE 2, 3, 4, Hwy 68at Bethlehem BaptistChurch on BethlehemChurch Rd. betweenSharpe/Palma.

THURS. & FRI. Hunt-ers Ln., off SharpeSchool Rd. Multi-fam-ily, misc., toys, shoes,purses, householditems, nice clothes forall. 7-?

YARD SALE: June2-4, 2149 Scale Rd.(Hwy 795) off Hwy. 68,Marshall Co., 7a-2p.

EMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENT

0204 ADMINISTRATIVE

FOOD WORLD IGAFuture City/Kevil nowaccepting applicationsfor a Management po-sition, Head cashier, &Stock positions. Applyin person at 9400 Hwy60 West. No phonecalls please.

FULL TIME office po-sition. Mulit tasker fa-miliar with HR, collec-tions, and proficientwith MS Office. Able tolearn new computerprograms a must.EOE. Mail resumes toAttn. Tami PO Box1157, Paducah Ky42002.

0204 ADMINISTRATIVE

0212 PROFESSIONAL

KEEFORCE is seek-ing a Computer Tech-nician. For details ofposition, please visitwww.keeforce.com &click on Careers.

KY Lic. HairstylistBooth avail. 554-4253

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

ESTABLISHED familypractice seeks PT orFT Office Manager.Bachelor degree inBusiness Mgt. re -quired. Master's de-gree preferred. Prev.mgt. exp. required -prefer in medical field.Rotating schedule -incl. some evening &weekend hrs. E-mailresume to:

[email protected]

FAMILY pract iceseeks a FT MedicalBilling Specialist. Mini-mum 1 yr exp in medi-cal billing field re -quired. Prefer NCICS.Expertise with medicalbilling, coding, collec-tions, & compliance isa must. Respond byemail to

[email protected]

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

RN JOB FAIR!$30/HR & UP!

Thursday June 9 from10a-3p at the PaducahCareer Center, 416 S6th St. If you have 1yr. of M/S, ICU, CCU,PCU or Tele experi-ence, we have 10top-paying openingsavail. Benefits, con-tracts/per Diem shifts.$400 retention bonus!Door prize for first 15applicants. RSVP to

888-576-3955or just stop by.

0232 GENERAL HELP

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

0232 GENERAL HELP

ANCHOR Trailwaysseeks qualified Char-ter Bus Drivers. PreferCDL with P endorse-ment. Must complywith federal DOTrules. Will considertraining the right can-didate. Send name &address to: [email protected]

for application.

COLLEGESTUDENTS

& 2011 HS GRADS$13 base-appt, FT/PTschedules, sales/svc,no exp. nec., all ages17+, conditions apply.

270-366-0008

Experienced equip.MECHANIC needed.Must have own handtools. Rollison Equip-ment Co. Bardwell Ky.270-628-5427

Page 10: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

Residential & Commercial Reroofs & Repairs

Free Estimates Licensed & Insured

REPAIRS &NEW ROOFS

Shingles, Metalor Rubber

Discount To All217 -2872

EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE

& REPAIRS

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

•LESSONS •GUITARS •BANJOS

F ree es tim a tes

P r o f e s s i o n a l P a i n t i n g

RUSHING’S PAINTING &

DRYWALL

270 -210 -8580

Tru Blu Pressure Washing Licensed & Insured

Call for free estimate!

270-519-9638

Ace Tree Service & Stump Removal

898-8733

Windell & Son Lawn & Landscaping Bushhogging

F REE E STIMATES

Since 1976

Kevin RoseConstruction462 -8285

PADUCAH ’S BEST Vinyl Siding / Windows

Gutters, Pressure Washing Roofing, Pole Barns

Rent-A-Husband No Job Too Big or Small

270 -559 -0162

PRECISION CONTRACTING

& REMODELING

270 -816 -2975

Water Damage?

CUSTOM BULLDOZING

270-293-0371

RAM EXCAVATING Lan d Clearin g Bu ild in g Pads Water Ways

Po n ds * Far ms Co m m ercial 270-705-6480 leave m essage

CLEAN OUT HAUL OFF

NO JOB TOO SMALL!

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

J OINER S EALCOATING Asphalt Sealing Striping Crack Repair Free Estimates Numerous References 270-933-9273

ABSOLUTE AUCTIONSaturday, June 4th @ 9:00 am

200+- Travel TrailersWill be sold to the highest bidder!!Many dealer units with slide-outs

Auction Site: 155 Co-op Drive – Halls, TN

Preview: Friday, June 3rd 8:00 am until 5:00 pm

Visit the website for auction photos/listing:www.SEAUCTION.com

**WOW – CHECK THIS OUT****Register to WIN a Travel Trailer!!

Must be present to win.Phone: 205-758-3068

www.SEAUCTION.comSoutheast Auction CompanyJ. Michael Langford TNAL5613

TN Firm 4722

LR, DR, KIT. OPEN, 2 FIREPLACES, 2 LG. BRS., 2 FULL BATHS, OFFICE., GARAGE, WK-IN CLOSET, EXP. BRICK

NEW ELECTRICAL, PLUMBING, & HVAC

WAS NOW

CALL OWNER

BE A 4-H

VOLUNTEER

4-H OFFICE 554-9520

paducahsun.com The Paducah Sun • Wednesday, June 1, 2011 • 11B

0236 INDUSTRIAL TRADE

HIRING 2 Local full-time Field Environ -mental LDAR Techni-cians for Calvert City.Industrial exp. a plus.Hirees will be trainedfor job duties. Safety &TWIC cards are re -quired. Fax resume to:

337-433-8413or email to

[email protected]

0240 SKILLED TRADE

Bricklayers Needed270-217-3530

GOOD MONEYPaid for honest, qual-ity work! Need de -pendable, self moti-vated Auto Technicianwho takes pride intheir work. Advance-ment & benefits avail-able. 270-994-4717 or270-556-1994.LABORERS & Experi-enced Welders/Fitters.Apply: 270-415-9972.

0240 SKILLED TRADE

Now hiringthe following:

EXPERIENCED*Civil Carpenters*Helpers*Laborers*Heavy Equipment Operator*Foundation Drill Rig Operator

GROUP offersPaid Vacations,

401(k), medical, dentaland life insurance.

Fax resume to225-752-2552

or e-mail: [email protected]

0244 TRUCKING

Hiring Class ADrivers

Teams & Solos3 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

TIRED of OTR?Local Driver

25 yrs.2 yrs. exp. CDL

Clean MVRReply to barry-kytf@

comcast.net.443-9397.

0244 TRUCKING

SALESMANDRIVER

INSTALLERWest Kentucky Pro-pane Gas in Paducahhas an opening for alocal propane deliverytruck driver & tank setinstaller. Would needto have a CDL-Haz-Mat and Tanker. Ex-cellent pay and bene-fi ts . Call (270)442-5557 ext. 142 oremail [email protected]

0248 OFFICE HELP

FULL-time Clerical po-sition, Microsoft Officeknowledge needed,$9/hr. Send resume to

[email protected]

P/T OFFICEPOSITION

Great part-time posi-tion available in Padu-cah office. Flexableschedule. Above aver-age compensation.Handling national ac-counts over the phonefor local well-estab-lished company. Mustbe able to work infast-paced fun envi-ronment. Must enjoypeople, have excellentorganizational skills

0248 OFFICE HELP

and can think crea -tively. Sales experi-ence a plus. Send re-sume and 150-200words on why you arethe right person forthis position to:

[email protected]

0256 HOTEL/MOTEL

COURTYARD by Mar-riott is looking forNight Audit/ FrontDesk Associate. Expe-rience preferred. Needflexible schedule. Will-ing to work 1st, 2ndand 3rd shift.

DAYS INN now hiringfor Guest Representa-tive, Breakfast Atten-dant, Maintenance &Housekeeping. Applyin person at 3901Hinkleville Rd.

0260 RESTAURANT

LOCAL Nightclub hir-ing all Positions,618-940-0073 or270-442-3042.

OASIS Southwest Grillis now hiring experi-enced Servers &Cooks, full-time. Applywithin, no phone calls.I-24, Exit 40, Kuttawa.

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.

0276 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

The Paducah Sunneeds IndependentContractors in thefollowing counties:

McCracken * MarshallBallard * Graves,

and Carlisle.Potential monthly

profit of up to $2,000.To be part of this

amazing process, call270-575-8781.

PETSPETS

0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS

2 ENGLISH Bulldogs,1 Boston Terrier.

731-614-9149

2 TINY male ACA reg.Yorkie pups, $500.270-436-5508.

AKC Champion LabPups. Great huntersand companions $500.

270-205-9522

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

AKC LAB Pups, all 3colors, vet checked,parents on premises,$350. 270-217-1096

0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS

AKC PUG female pup7 mos. old. all shots$150. 625-2457

AKC YORKIE pups,males $200, females$300. 270-249-9461.

FREE 9 mo. M YellowLab to approved homeonly. 270-488-3411.

GERMAN Shepherdpups, parents onpremises, blk & tan,$200, 618-638-4234.

SHIH TZU PUPPIES,M&F, CKC, shots/wormed, $300-$400.270-804-8103 eve.

TOY POODLE pups.$50, 270-445-0799

YORKIE Bichon pups,4 mos. old, $250-$400. 270-873-2447.

FARMFARM

0420 YOU PICK

STRAWBERRIESYou pick or prepicked.Open daily 8-8, con-tainers avail. Blue -berry Hill Farm, Cob-den, IL, 618-893-2397.

0470 FARM EQUIPMENT

1971 JD 4000 with148 JD loader, 270-293-9432.

2006 CASE IH JX75,900 hrs., $15,000.270-436-5508.

MERCHANDISEMERCHANDISE

0503 AUCTION SALES

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

674-5659 or 674-5523

0506 ANTIQUES/ART

2 EARLY 1800s Dutcharmoires, $2500 ea.Queen Anne DR setw/sideboard, $800.270-559-5955.

0509 HOUSEHOLD GOODS

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

0530 SWIMMING POOLS

33' ABOVE groundpool, bought July 09,all access. includingsteps, $4500 OBO.270-519-1889.

0533 FURNITURE

LANE brown leathercouch, loveseat, re-c l i ne r , o t t oman ,$2000. Outdoor rattan:2 swivel rockers, 1couch, 1 loveseat,$1000. 270-559-5955.

LG. overstuffed navyblue soft leather sofa,armchair & ottoman,$800 OBO, 217-0612.

0545 MACHINERY & TOOLS

WOODMASTER 4 in 1Molder/Planer, 4-waymoney maker, Molder,18"P laner , DrumSander, & Gang RipSaw. New uni t .270-331-0544

0554 WANTED TO RENT/BUY/TRADE

WILL BUYJunk or Wrecked Cars

270-217-3631

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

NEED CASH?Up to $500 for your

junked or wrecked car.270-408-1200

WANTED to Buy:25-35 HP wide frontend Tractor w/loader,618-564-2065.

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

WILL Buy lead .40/ lb.Paducah 554-2615

0563 MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE

12,000 BTUs windowunit Air Conditioner,$125, 270-442-8167.

0563 MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE

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.

Page 11: 3B Sports - assets.matchbin.comassets.matchbin.com/sites/1140/assets/B97P_BSection.pdf · National League Washington 10, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 4, San Francisco 3 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati

is currently accepting applications for:

The Paducah Sun has an immediate opening for a full-time Systems Manager. This position maintains The Paducah Sun and Paducah Weeklies computer systems, networks, output devices, telephone system and other essential equipment on the network at a level that assures functionality adequate to accomplish timely production and delivery of the daily Paducah Sun and Paducah Weeklies. Duties include maintenance and periodic upgrade to the Sun’s computers, firewalls and other security systems and programs. Implementing effective back-up procedures for all business-critical computers. Technical training in computer system maintenance and trouble-shooting required. Familiarity with Apple operating systems and servers is required as is occasional work with PC based systems. Two year technical degree preferred. Send resume detailing qualifications, relevant experience, salary expectation, and references to:

General ManagerThe Paducah Sun

408 Kentucky AvenuePaducah, KY 42002

You may also submit by email to [email protected] applicants will be contacted for interviews.

No telephone inquiries please.

SYSTEMS MANAGER

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.

Answers customer calls quickly and courteously, accurately processes all transactions to represent The Paducah Sun. Job responsibilities include: Preparing/printing proper paperwork for postal reports, payments, credits and adjustments. Position is for mostly weekends/some weekdays.

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

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.

PART-TIME CUSTOMER SERVICE REP

is currently accepting applications for:

12B • Wednesday, June 1, 2011 • The Paducah Sun paducahsun.com

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

1BR or 2BR,Strathmoor Blvd.

744-8063, 564-1064.

1BR, downtown, hard-wood floors, $365/mo,270-293-1291.

NICE 1BR, easy park-ing, no steps, must be55+. 1220 Sandersacross from LourdesMed. Pavilion, $399/month. 534-0143/853-6184.

EMILY Circle, 2BR,1.5B $575 + dep. w/lease. 217-1093

BEAUTIFUL 2 BR Apt.overlooking Tenn.River, $825/month.501-454-9564.

F & F LeasingSpacious 2 BR, LoneOak, central heat/air,all electric. 554-8195.

HOLIDAY HOUSEAPTS., 1 BR, no pets,unfurn., $375 mo. +deposit. 270-217-1093

LONE OAK1 BR, 1 B, exc., quietlocation, water paid.554-0211, 217-5890.

LONE Oak, 2BR/1BTownhouse, water &refuse incl., $475 +dep. Lease. 554-0602.

SOUTHGATE MANOR1BR. 270-442-6621

STUDIO downtown,$475, incl. gas & wa-ter. 559-0296.

West End Ltd.Office hrs. 8-10am

Cardinal PointOffice hrs. 10a-12p

Willow OaksOffice hrs. 1-4:30pm

270-443-4200

0610 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS

WHITTIER APTS.1 BR, Sec. 8

Senior & Disabled270-443-3809. EHO

0615 FURNISHED APARTMENTS

HUSBAND Rd., $600,No pets, 559-0688.

0620 HOMES FOR RENT

2 BR, 1 B, no pets,218 Lindberg, $600mo. + dep. 559-2846.

3800 SQ. FT. Home,nice, rent + dep., 270-210-3895, 898-2008.

LARGE 3 BR 1B,2800 Fairmont, nopets, $625. 556-0848.

0630 DUPLEXES FOR RENT

WHISPERING Oaks.Large 3BR, 2B, 2 cargar. No pets. Nosmoking. $950 mo. +$600 Dep., 1 yr lease.270-462-4435

0670 BUSINESS PLACES/OFFICES

COMMERCIAL Spacefor Rent, exc. locationin Fountain Sq., May-field, KY. spaces avail.1500-5100 sq. ft. 270-247-6811, 705-2330.

GARAGE/shop:paved& fenced. 217-3800.

OFFICE suite for den-tal/medical or busi -ness w/similar spaceneeds. Will finish tosuit. Century Bldg.270-853-6184.

OFFICE/RETAIL, 700up to 3,600 sq. ft.,across from EnergyFitness. 556-4262.

2320 BROADWAY540 - 6000 sq. ft. suite

442-6685

WORK AREA or stor-age space w/OH door& office. 442-9717.

0675 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT

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

442-1727

FARLEY, 2BR, $375to $425/mo. 331-6396.

REAL ESTATE FOR REAL ESTATE FOR SALESALE

0710 HOMES FOR SALE

1BR 1B 1213 Stark.Ready now. 554-1149

2BR, $18,000. 512Harahan, 366-6958 or502-649-7947

NICE 4BR home. Newroof, windows, siding.dblot 2918 Bradley St.$79,900. 366-6606

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

0710 HOMES FOR SALE

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.

New ConstructionLake Barkley area,3BR 2B, access toEddy Creek & MineralMounds.

270-388-1696

0720 DUPLEX/APTS

DUPLEX - Brick, 2BR1B, 1100 sq ft per unit+ garage. Exc. cond.Large private lot lo-cated in West End.956 - 958 Heritage Pl.(270) 534-8933.

0728 LAKE/RIVER/RESORT

NEWLY BUILTLake Vacation

HomeON 1.71 ACRES

Only $97,500New designer ready1,952 SF vacationhome w/private ac -cess to 160,000 acreKentucky Lake. Walkto Marina! BONUS:FREE Boat Slips! Lo-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, x.6339.

0734 LOTS & ACREAGE

LAND FOR SALE: 36acres +/- located inSouth East CallowayCounty in the NewConcord area. 10 +/-acres of open tillableor pasture ground andthe remainder iswooded with maturetrees. Lots of TrophyDeer, Turkey, andother wildlife. Goodbuilding site. $69,000.Call 270-293-7872.

0741 MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE

'08 CLAYTON 16x80,3 BR, 2 B, vinyl, likenew. 270-489-2525

'91,16 X 80 Mobilehome. Good cond.Some extras. $20,000,OBO 618-638-8005

1996 CHAMPION At-lant ic , 4BR 2B.$9,200. Serious inquir-ies only. 908-1681

BANK REPO16x80, 3BR 2B, $500down with approvedcredit. See at Today'sHomes! 270-527-5645

0741 MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE

BANK REPO2004 Doublewide32x70. Must see toAppreciate! $1,000down & low monthlypayments w/approvedcredit. See at Today'sHomes! 270-527-5645

DOUBLEWIDE home,3BR 2B, 3161 Dela-ware, behind LO Highschool, $48,500. Callbefore 9am or after7pm, 270-554-4239.

0754 COMMERCIAL/OFFICE

1 CITY block in Farm-ington, 2 acres, res-taurant w/6000 ft at-tached warehouse,1500 sq ft building. Allor part. $125K for all.270-345-2044.

2000 sq ft, 3 bay ga-rage, office. Plenty ofparking, 600 S. 6th stPaducah near down-town. 270-443-8423 toview.

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

TRANSPORTATIONTRANSPORTATION

0804 BOATS FOR SALE

'07 21' SEARAY 200Select w/5.0 Mer -Cruiser & trailer,$29,900. 928-3872

2003 STARDUST17X84 WidebodyHouseboat for sale.Located on KentuckyLake. Twin 5.0 Mer-cruisers,rear thrusters,low hrs,turn-key boat!Very well maintained.$219,900 MotivatedSeller. Call Mike at270.484.5055

2009 TAHOE 19' fish& ski, inboard V6, allextras, $16,500. 270-436-5508.

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

2007 LAYTON TravelTrailer, 30' with slide,queen bed w/ bunks.Very good cond.$13,000. 554-8240

2011 32' JAYCO Ea-gle Super Lite traveltrailer, 2 slides, out-door kit., too many op-tions to list. 556-9024

0824 MOTOR HOMES

2006 FORD Allegromotorhome, 1800 act.miles, 2 slides, stor-age unit kept, exc.cond. Serious inquiriesonly, 270-832-0623.

0832 MOTORCYCLES

2009 HONDA Rebel250, 3K mi., 1 owner,$2800. 270-331-3288.

0852 HEAVY EQUIPMENT

81 MACK; 90 FORDBob, both diesel, ToroBig Red, 556-3961.

0856 SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES

1996 OLDSMOBILEBravada Smart Track,$1500. 270-928-2980.270-217-5074.

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.

0860 VANS FOR SALE

1999 CHEVY Venturevan, $3,500. Greatcond. 270-556-9732.

0864 PICKUP TRUCKS FOR SALE

1998 CHEVY 1500,V6, 2WD, white, 204Kmi., $2000 OBO.270-331-3288.

0868 CARS FOR SALE

2 0 0 0 N I S S A NMaxima, V6, auto,grey, 133K, $5,900.443-1045, 217-8906.

2002 LEXUS 300, Sil-ver, $6000 f irm.366-3132.

2004 HYUNDAI SanteFe, 71K mi., $7000.270-415-5649.

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 Nelson Used Cars4030 Clarks River Rd.

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.

LEGALSLEGALS

0955 LEGALS

MURRAY STATE Uni-versity is acceptingbids from qualifiedcontractors for theCollege Courts HVACUpgrade Project-2, onthe campus of MurrayState Univers i ty .There will be a pre-bidconference at 10:00A.M., June 7, 2011.Bids will open June16, 2011 at 2:00 P.M.Contractors may re-ceive a copy of the bidadvertisement by con-tacting Steven Staple-ton (270) 809- 4099and re fe renc ingCC-226S-11.

JACKSONPURCHASE ENERGY

CORPORATIONPUBLIC NOTICE

CASE NO.2011-00057

THE APPLICATIONOF JACKSON

PURCHASE ENERGYCORPORATION FORAN ADJUSTMENT IN

EXISTING RATESJackson Purchase En-ergy Corporat ion,2900 Irvin Cobb Drive,

0955 LEGALS

P.O. Box 4030, Padu-cah, KY 42002-4030,will file an applicationwith the KentuckyPublic Service Com-mission in Case No.2011-00057 pursuantto KRS 278.455(2) toflow through the pro-posed increase inrates being requestedby its wholesale powersupplier, Big RiversElectric Corporation inCase No. 2011-00036.The rates contained inthis notice, which arethe rates contained inthe application, arerates proposed byJackson Purchase En-ergy Corporat ion;however, the KentuckyPublic Service Com-mission may orderrates to be chargedthat differ from thera tes con ta i nedtherein.Schedule Rate ClassIncrease PercentR Residential$2,311,920 7.87%C-1 Small CommercialSingle Phase$167,710 7.89%C-3 Schedule C-3$49,740 7.90%D Commercial & In-dustrial Demand Lessthan 3,000 KW$774,512 7.89%I-E Large Commercial& Industrial - Existing$113,954 7.88%L Large Commercial &Industrial - 3,000-5,000 KW $0 0.00%OL Outdoor Lighting$76,852 7.88%The effects of the pro-posed rates on the av-erage monthly bill byrate class are listedbelow.Schedule Rate ClassIncrease PercentR Residential$7.44 7.87%C-1 Small CommercialSingle Phase$6.34 7.89%C-3 Schedule C-3$11.20 7.90%D Commercial & In-dustrial Demand Lessthan 3,000 KW

0955 LEGALS

$112.89 7.89%I-E Large Commercial& Industrial - Existing$4,748.09 7.88%L Large Commercial &Industrial - 3,000-5,000 KW $- 0%OL Outdoor Lighting$0.68 7.88%The present and pro-posed rate design ofJackson Purchase En-ergy Corporation arelisted belowSchedule Rate ClassPresent ProposedR-ResidentialCustomer Charge$9.00 $9.71Energy Charge$0.06211 $0.06700C-1 Small Commer-cial-1PhFacilities Charge$10.00 $10.79Energy Charge$0.06312 $0.06810C-3 Small Commer-cial-3PhCustomer Charge$18.00 $19.42Energy Charge$0.05939 $0.06408D C&I less than 3000kWFacilities Charge$35.00 $37.76Demand Charge$6.50 $7.01Energy Charge1st 200 kWh/kW$0.03422 $0.03693Next 200 Wh/kW$0.02692 $0.02904Next 200 Wh/kW$0.02321 $0.02504Over 600 Wh/kW$0.01961 $0.02115IE Large C&I ExistingFacilities Charge$300.00 $323.63Demand Charge1st 3000 kW$34,500.00 $37,217.93Additional kW$11.50 $12.41Energy Charge$0.01735 $0.01872L Large C&I 3000-5000 kWFacilities Charge$300.00 $323.63Demand Charge$11.30 $12.19Energy Charge$0.01735 $0.01872Lights Watts175 MV $7.51 $8.10

0955 LEGALS

400 MV $11.22 $12.10100 HPS $7.51 $8.10250 HPS$10.00 $10.79250 HPS-Flood$10.56 $11.39175 Metal$12.67 $13.67150 Metal$12.34 $13.31400 Metal$17.82 $19.221,000 Metal-Flood$25.04 $27.01Any corporation, asso-ciation, or person witha substantial interestin the matter may, bywritten request, withinthirty (30) days afterpublication of this no-tice request to inter-vene in the proceed-ing. That written re-quest must be submit-ted to the KentuckyPublic Service Com-mission, Post OfficeBox 615, 211 SowerBoulevard, Frankfort,KY 40601, and shouldset forth the groundsfor the request, includ-ing the status and in-terest of the party. In-tervention may begranted beyond thethirty (30) day periodfor good cause shown.Interveners may ob-tain copies of the ap-plication by contactingJackson Purchase En-ergy Corporat ion,2900 Irvin Cobb Drive,P.O. Box 4030, Padu-cah, KY 42002-4030or by calling (270)442-7321. A copy ofthe application andany other filings areavailable for public in-spection at the Ken-tucky Public ServiceCommission at theabove stated addressand at JPEC s mainoffice at 2900 IrvinCobb Drive, Paducah,KY 42002.

By: G. Kelly Nuckols,President and CEO