NBAMilwaukee 105, Philadelphia 96Utah 140, Toronto 133,3OTOklahoma City 92, Detroit 90Boston 101, Chicago 95Miami 113, Houston 110
Minnesota 90, Dallas 82Phoenix 110, Denver 100Atlanta at Portland, (n)
NFLPittsburgh 16, Kansas City 13, OT
SCOREBOARD BASEBALLTrout, Harper earn rookie honors
Mike Trout, left, of the Anaheim Angels becomes the eighth unanimous AL rookie of the year. Trout is the youngest AL Rookie of the Year selection, while NL Rookie of the Year Bryce Harper is the second-youngest NL winner. Harper gained 16 of 32 first-place votes in NL voting.
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SportsThe Paducah Sun | Tuesday, November 13, 2012 | paducahsun.com Section B
PRO BASKETBALL: The chance to play for Mike D’Antoni intrigues the Los Angeles Lakers. | 2B
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Joey Fosko ............ [email protected]
Dusty Luthy Shull [email protected]
NASCAR had a real dilemma on its hands with this whole Jeff Gordon mess hanging over the season fi nale.
History suggested Gordon could have been suspended from Sunday’s race at Homestead-Mi-ami Speedway as punishment for intentionally wrecking Clint Bow-yer at Phoenix, sparking a brawl in the garage. That’s the punish-ment Kyle Busch got a year ago for retaliating against Ron Hor-naday Jr. in a Truck Series event at Texas.
But was NASCAR seriously
going to sit the four-time cham-pion? From the season fi nale?
Nope. He instead got a $100,000 fi ne from NASCAR, which also docked him 25 points in the championship standings.
Maybe NASCAR should have also thanked him for triggering the fi ght and frenzied fi nal se-quence of events that had half the country talking about the series on Monday.
Even without that, the penalty was the right call by NASCAR, which walks a fi ne line between sport and entertainment — and has only itself to blame.
Some viewed Sunday as a black
eye for NASCAR, but others were celebrating it as one of the best races of the season. It wasn’t lost on Kevin Harvick, who snapped a 44-race losing streak with the victory.
“The sport was made on fi ghts. We should have more fi ghts,” he said. “Fights are what made NAS-CAR what it is.”
NASCAR heard the complaints from fans that drivers had be-come too corporate, the sport had strayed too far from its rough and tumble roots and scores were no longer settled at the track. The
Suspension would end ‘Boys Have At It’BY JENNA FRYER
Associated Press
Associated Press
Clint Bowyer (15), Jeff Gordon (24) and Joey Logano crash in Turn 4 during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Phoenix Interna-tional Raceway on Sunday in Avondale, Ariz. NASCAR fined Gordon $100,000 and docked him 25 points for intentionally wrecking Bow-yer on Sunday.Please see NASCAR | 3B
MURRAY — It was a hurtful way to lose a ball game the Murray State women’s basketball team felt it should have won, but the fi nal sec-onds weren’t the only story.
The Racers (0-2) fell to Indiana (1-1) 63-62 on Monday night at the CFSB Center. They had the ball in their hands in the fi nal seconds — and had the winning shot negated by a called timeout — but a lot of dominoes could have fallen much
earlier for the Racers.Racers senior guard Mariah
Robinson, who fi nished with team-highs of 19 points and nine re-bounds, watched as her half-court shot went in with about fi ve seconds to go in the game as MSU coach Rob Cross called a timeout.
“To be honest, we didn’t lose on that possession,” Robinson said. “We lost on the two possessions be-fore that, that we were on defense, letting them get the offensive re-bound and putbacks, and that was
pretty much the summary of the game.”
Down by as many as 12 points with 11:22 to go, the Racers went on a run led by bench player Keiona Kirby, who hit back-to-back threes to get MSU as close as 52-48 with 4:39 left. One of two foul shots from Kirby closed the gap to two with 38.9 left, and Robinson drained a three of her own to go up 62-61 with 11.8 seconds left and give the Racers
Racers lose thriller to IndianaBY DUSTY LUTHY SHULL
LEXINGTON — John Calipari isn’t happy with Kentucky’s ef-fort on the boards.
He didn’t specifi cally say anything to the No. 3 Wildcats about their rebounding during weekend practices. But by the time players fi nished running, Calipari had gotten his message across.
The Wildcats were pushed around in their 72-69 season-opening victory over Maryland. The Terrapins outrebounded Kentucky 54-38 and had 28 on the offensive end. That’s not supposed to happen against Kentucky’s vaunted frontcourt featuring 7-foot Willie Cauley-Stein and 6-10 Nerlens Noel.
Calipari doesn’t want it to hap-pen again. Neither does Cauley-Stein, who said he “doesn’t want to do anything” but rebound af-ter the extra running.
Kentucky plays No. 8 Duke tonight in Atlanta. It’s the fi rst meeting between the storied programs since the Blue Devils’ 95-92 overtime win in 2001.
“My whole game is to go get boards,” Cauley-Stein said Mon-day. “Like, that’s my whole plan. ... After all the running we’ve had to do, my sole purpose is trying to go get boards.”
The freshman center em-phasized that Calipari’s drills weren’t conducted in anger.
“He wasn’t mad,” Cauley-Stein said. “He was like, well,
you’ve got to do it. It’s a learning experience. Nobody likes to run, so you’ve got to have some kind of punishment. He had a smile on his face.”
Calipari said he had been too busy preparing his young squad in other areas to concentrate on
BY GARY GRAVESAssociated Press
Next week’s big, nationally tele-vised “Monday Night Football” showcase could feature a quar-terback matchup of journeyman Jason Campbell of the Bears vs. untested Colin Kaepernick of the 49ers. Not exactly the creme de la creme of the NFC.
Why? Concussions, of course.With so much attention paid to
replacement refs and bounty rul-ing appeals this season, it’s an issue
that’s slipped a bit under the radar lately. But it’s hard to ignore this: 25 percent of Sunday’s NFL games saw a starting QB leave with a con-cussion.
Two were Chicago’s Jay Cutler and San Francisco’s Alex Smith, whose teams play each other next Monday. Both stayed in Sunday’s games for several plays after what appeared to be head-rattling hits. Smith even threw a TD pass while playing with blurred vision before he departed, according to coach
Jim Harbaugh.“It’s a reminder that you’ve got
to err on the side of caution,” said Dr. Richard Ellenbogen, co-chair-man of the NFL’s head, neck and spine committee, who was not fa-miliar with the particulars of Sun-day’s quarterback injuries. “The question that I would ask is: Why did Mr. Smith not report this to his team physician, and say, ‘Hey, I’ve got blurred vision, is that a prob-lem?’ ... We have to educate the medical teams to be really conser-
vative. And we still have to educate players to self-report. If they don’t feel 100 percent, they have to be willing to very strongly tell some-body.”
More than 3,500 former players — including at least 26 members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame — have sued the NFL, saying not enough was done to inform them about the dangers of concussions in the past, and not enough is being done today to take care of them.
The instructions now used for
in-game sideline concussion as-sessments in the NFL include a box that reads: “Signs and symp-toms of concussion may be de-layed, and therefore it may be prudent to remove an athlete from play, not leave them alone, and se-rially monitor them over a period of time.” After that, in all capital letters, it reads: “When in doubt, take a ‘time out.’”
The NFL looked into the Cutler
NFL takes hit with three QB concussions on one dayBY HOWARD FENDRICH
Associated Press
Please see KENTUCKY | 3B
Big rebounding gap bothersCats’ Calipari
Associated Press
Kentucky’s Nerlens Noel (3) and Willie Cauley-Stein (15) defend a shot from Maryland’s Pe’Shon Howard on Friday in-New York. Kentucky coach John Calipari was not pleased by his big men’s lack of re-bounding skills.
Please see CONCUSSIONS | 2B
DUSTY LUTHY SHULL I The Sun
Erica Burgess (11) drives to the basket for the Murray State women’s basketball team Mon-day in a game against Indiana at the CFSB Center. Indiana won 63-62.
Please see RACERS | 3B
THE FINE PRINT
On televisionTODAY
COLLEGE BASKETBALL (MEN)5 a.m. – Stony Brook at Rider (ESPN)7 – Northern Illinois at Valparaiso (ESPN)9 – Harvard at Massachusetts (ESPN)11 – Temple at Kent State (ESPN)1 p.m. – Detroit at St. John’s (ESPN)3 – Butler at Xavier (ESPN)6 – Michigan State vs. Kansas (ESPN)6 – Wichita State at Virginia Common-
wealth (ESPNU)7 – Texas Southern at Northwestern (Big
Ten)8:30 – Kentucky vs. Duke (ESPN)
COLLEGE BASKETBALL (WOMEN)5 p.m. – Kentucky at Baylor (ESPN2)
SOCCER1:30 p.m. – U21: Northern Ireland at Eng-
land (Fox Soccer)WEDNESDAY
COLLEGE BASKETBALL (MEN)6 p.m. – Wisconsin at Florida (ESPN2)6 – St. Bonaventure at Cornell (NBC
Sports)7 – Nebraska-Omaha at Texas Tech (FCS
Pacific)COLLEGE BASKETBALL (WOMEN)
7 p.m. – Cincinnati at Ohio State (Big Ten)7 – UCLA at Oklahoma (FCS Central)
COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL5 p.m. – Baylor at Texas Christian (FCS
Pacific)
Local sportsTODAY
COLLEGE BASKETBALL – Kentucky vs. Duke (8:30 p.m. at Georgia Dome, Atlanta), Austin Peay at Western Kentucky (7 p.m.), Mid-Continent at Boyce (6 p.m.). Women: Kentucky at Baylor (5 p.m.), Mid-Continent at Williams Baptist (6 p.m.). SEC: Florida Atlantic at Mississippi State, Alcorn State at Missouri, Coastal Carolina at Mississippi, McNeese State at LSU. OVC: Wright State at Eastern Illinois, Tennessee State at South Dakota State, Maryville at Belmont.
WEDNESDAYCOLLEGE BASKETBALL – Shawnee at
West Kentucky Tech (7 p.m.). SEC: Wiscon-sin at Florida. OVC: Western Illinois at SIU-Edwardsville, Fontbonne at UT Martin.
Coming up
BASEBALL/SOFTBALL: Nine Strong Academt is hosting its free opening day clin-ic for players ages 6-18 from 9 a.m.-noon Dec. 1 at the Paducah Regional Sportsplex. For more information, check Nine Strong’s Facebook page or its website at www.gonin-estrong.com.
BASKETBALL: Longtime ESPN commenta-tor Dick Vitale will speak at 8 p.m. Nov. 26 at Marshall County’s Reed Conder Gymna-sium as a fundraiser for the school’s ath-letic foundation. Tickets for the event are on sale at the school’s athletic office. Tickets are $40 for floor seats, $30 for lower gym seats and $15 for general admission. For more information, contact athletic director Jeff Stokes at 527-6714.
The Rules: Please send your submissions for Purchase sidelines to [email protected], or fax to 270-442-7859, or mail to Sports, The Paducah Sun, Box 2300, Paducah, Ky., 42003-2300.
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MURRAYSTATE
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2B • Tuesday, November 13, 2012 • The Paducah Sun Morning Update paducahsun.com
and Smith cases — and Phila-delphia’s Michael Vick, the third quarterback who got a concussion this weekend — and came away satisfi ed that the proper protocol was fol-lowed. Players who exhibit any concussion symptoms are supposed to be removed from a game immediately and not be allowed to return to play or practice until fully without symptoms.
“Our medical advisors rou-tinely review with team medi-cal staffs all signifi cant inju-ries,” league spokesman Greg Aiello wrote in an email. “In these cases, we learned that the teams handled the inju-ries properly and removed the players from the game as soon as they displayed symp-toms and were diagnosed with a concussion.”
Ellenbogen pointed out that concussion symptoms might take time to emerge.
That’s apparently what hap-pened with another notewor-thy player, Buffalo Bills run-ning back Fred Jackson, who took a late hit to the head in a loss at the New England Pa-triots on Sunday.
He was examined Monday — a day after showing what coach Chan Gailey called “concussion-like symptoms” on the fl ight home. Gailey said Jackson will miss Thurs-day’s game against Miami.
After Cleveland Browns
quarterback Colt McCoy re-turned to a game in Decem-ber 2011 despite not being checked for a head injury fol-lowing an against-the-rules hit to the helmet, the league put certifi ed athletic trainers in booths above the fi eld to watch for injuries and added video feeds on sidelines to make it easier to track dan-gerous hits immediately.
Aiello said that video was used by the Bears and 49ers on Sunday.
CONCUSSIONS
CONTINUED FROM 1B
Associated Press
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. — Pau Gasol got home from the game and read about it on Twit-ter, while Dwight Howard got a midnight message on his BlackBerry. They shared most Los Angeles Lakers fans’ mix of surprise, trepidation and anticipation.
Just when everybody thought the Lakers were getting back to-gether with Phil Jackson, they switched course in the middle of the night and went with Mike D’Antoni.
What a weekend in Holly-wood — and the real drama isn’t over yet.
The Lakers reacted with ample excitement and a little bewilderment Monday to their front offi ce’s surprising deci-sion to hire D’Antoni as coach
Mike Brown’s replacement over Jackson, the 11-time c h a m p i o n who discussed the job at his home Sat-urday and a p p a r e n t l y wanted to re-turn. D’Antoni didn’t even interview for the job in person, speaking to the Lak-ers over the phone.
“It has been crazy, but all this stuff will just make this team stronger,” said Howard, who has been in a Lakers uniform for about six weeks. “Everything that we’ve been through so far, it’s going to make us stronger, and we have to look at this as a positive situation.”
The Lakers’ third coach in
four days won’t take over the team until later in the week. D’Antoni still hadn’t been cleared to travel Monday after undergoing knee replacement surgery earlier in the month, al-though the Lakers are optimis-tic the former Knicks and Suns coach will arrive in Los Angeles on Wednesday.
So interim coach Bernie Bick-erstaff was still in charge Mon-day when the Lakers gathered for an informal workout ahead of tonight’s game against San Antonio. Just two weeks into the regular season, the Lak-ers (3-4) are about to start over with a new offense and another coaching staff — and a renewed certainty they’re expected to compete for a title this season.
Jackson issued a statement to a handful of media outlets Mon-day, implying he was essentially
offered the job after meeting with Lakers owner Jim Buss and general manager Mitch Kupchak. Jackson thought he would be able to come back to the Lakers on Monday with his decision, but instead was awak-ened by a midnight phone call from Kupchak.
“The decision is of course theirs to make,” Jackson said in his statement. “I am gratifi ed by the groundswell of support from the Laker fans who endorsed my return, and it is the princi-pal reason why I considered the possibility.”
The Lakers publicly offered no reason for passing over Jackson. But Brown is still owed well over $10 million, while D’Antoni will make $4 million a season for the next three years — and their sal-aries together might be less than what Jackson would command.
Lakers intrigued by chance to play for D’AntoniBY GREG BEACHAM
Associated Press
D’Antoni
San Fran-cisco 49ers quarterback Alex Smith takes a hit from St. Louis Rams linebacker Jo-Lonn Dunbar on Sunday in San Fran-cisco. Smith suffered a concussion from the play.
paducahsun.com Sports The Paducah Sun • Tuesday, November 13, 2012 • 3B
2009 fi nale at Homestead was one of those throwback races, and the crowd roared as drivers used their cars to deliver old-school justice.
President Mike Helton said at the time: “We didn’t certainly intend to make it too sterile, but the drivers were afraid to be them-selves, and that’s not good.”
So NASCAR relaxed at the start of the next season, using a “Boys, Have At It” policy that allowed the driv-ers to police themselves.
The boys tested NASCAR just four races in when Carl Edwards waited 153 laps for his crew to fi x his car for the sole purpose of getting back on the track at Atlanta to wreck Brad Keselowski. Edwards’ high-speed con-tact sent Keselowski’s car airborne, and there were immediate calls for Ed-wards to be suspended.
But doing so would have been the immediate end of the policy, and Edwards instead got off with a mere three races of probation. The boys have been allowed to have at it ever since.
There has been bump-ing and banging, and Tony Stewart’s threats to wreck each and every driver who blocks him from now un-til the end of time. There’s an occasional fl are-up, an
intentional act or two, and NASCAR intervenes when needed.
Then came last Novem-ber at Texas, when Busch blatantly put Hornaday, a championship contender, into the wall under caution.
Unlike Edwards, he ab-solutely deserved to be sus-pended.
Where NASCAR erred was in insisting that Busch had been suspended solely for the Hornaday incident when he had been out of control most of last season and arrogantly behaving as if his talent made him un-touchable. In fact, Horna-day had called for Busch to be suspended for that week-end’s Cup race, an option Busch seemed to dismiss in an interview after the ac-cident.
By suspending him the next morning, NASCAR sent a message it was in charge and Busch better start behaving.
Gordon’s decision to wreck Bowyer — he says Bowyer deserved it for a season’s worth of misdeeds — is more like the Edwards incident. Or perhaps more like another incident last season, when Brian Vickers promised retaliation against Matt Kenseth and then rode Kenseth’s back bumper un-til Kenseth turned into the wall. Vickers got no penalty.
Gordon, however, seemed to have zero regard for others on the track. The wreck also collected Joey Logano and Aric Almirola, championship contender Keselowski had to dodge his way around it and the whole thing was a direct contribu-tor to the last-lap wreck.
NASCAR needed to take action against the crew chiefs, and did by fi ning Brian Pattie $25,000 for failing to maintain con-trol of Bowyer’s crew and placing Alan Gustafson on probation through the end of the year because he’s responsible for Gordon’s crew.
With that, NASCAR was done with the matter.
“There’s no doubt that a unique set of circumstances combined with a champi-onship battle on the line resulted in raw emotions coming into play,” said NASCAR vice president of competition Robin Pem-berton. “We consider the penalties appropriate and those involved understand our decision and we expect them to abide by them.”
It was the appropriate re-
sponse from NASCAR. Ei-ther the series is going to be about immediate paybacks and justice — you know, the stuff that’s got every-body talking and moves the meter — or there’s no such thing as “Boys, Have At It” anymore.
NASCAR
CONTINUED FROM 1B
NEW YORK — Mike Trout of the Los Angeles Angels became the young-est AL Rookie of the Year on Monday and Bryce Harper of the Washing-ton Nationals was voted the second-youngest win-ner of the NL honor.
Trout, who turned 21 on Aug. 7, received all 28 fi rst-place votes from the Baseball Writers’ Asso-ciation of America’s AL panel. The center fi elder was the eighth unani-mous AL pick and the fi rst since Tampa Bay’s Evan Longoria in 2008.
Trout, who hit .326 with 30 homers and 83 RBIs, received the maximum 140 points. Oakland out-fi elder Yoenis Cespedes was second with 63, fol-lowed by Texas pitcher Yu Darvish (46), who joined Trout as the only players listed on every ballot.
Harper turned 20 on Oct. 16. The outfi elder got 16 of 32 fi rst-place votes and 112 points from the NL panel. Arizona pitcher Wade Miley was second with 12 fi rst-place votes and 105 points, followed by Cincinnati slugger Todd Frazier with three fi rsts and 45 points.
Harper batted .270 with 22 home runs and 59 RBIs.
Rookienods goto Trout,Harper
Associated Press
rebounding drills. But that will have changed when the Wildcats take the fl oor against the Blue Devils.
He said his players should have a grasp of fun-damental concepts such as positioning themselves for rebounds.
“It’s more or less us being conscious about (the fact that) we follow the fl ight of the ball, which is I think sixth grade,” Calipari said. “It might be seventh grade
(that you learn) you don’t follow the fl ight of the ball. You see the fl ight and then you go fi nd somebody (to block out) and then go get the ball.
“But again, if we haven’t worked on it I can’t be upset. And we hadn’t. I just thought, we’re 7-foot, 6-11, 6-10, 6-9, we’ll re-bound. No. When your guards are taking off and they’re wedging you under and you’re looking at the ball and you’re next to the cheerleader, you’re proba-
bly not going to get the ball. ... It’s going to take time.”
Rebounding isn’t the only issues the Wildcats have.
Kentucky enters the game against Duke (1-0) with some of the same point guard questions they had before its opener.
Sophomore Ryan Har-row, who has been both-ered the past week by the fl u, played just 10 min-utes against Maryland and hasn’t practiced.
Graduate student Julius
Mays, who suffered a cut under his eyebrow in the game, also didn’t practice after swelling developed on Sunday. Calipari said Mays didn’t receive stitches but is expected to be available against the Blue Devils.
The Wildcats don’t seem overly concerned.
One reason is Jarrod Polson’s play against Mary-land. Prepared to play extensive minutes with Harrow ailing, the junior responded with career highs of 10 points, three as-
sists, two rebounds and a pair of game-clinching free throws.
His play may not have surprised his coach, but his friends were startled.
Many expected the game to be controlled by his highly touted fresh-man teammates. Polson estimated that he received “more than a hundred” congratulatory texts over the weekend.
He also sounds ready for more opportunities to con-tribute.
KENTUCKY
CONTINUED FROM 1B
DUSTY LUTHY SHULL I The Sun
Mariah Robinson of Murray State goes up for a layup on a fastbreak in the Racers women’s basketball game against Indiana on Monday at the CFSB Center.
their fi rst lead since 10 minutes into the game.The Hoosiers traveled the length of the fl oor
with post player Linda Rubene, who dished in the post for a layup from Sasha Chaplin for the fi nal score.
After the Racers’ fi nal timeout, another 3-point attempt from Robinson as time ex-pired was no good.
“I’ve let ’em go and won a ball game, and I’ve let ’em go and gotten no shot,” Cross said. “I knew she (Robinson) was getting ready to shoot a 60-footer and there were 5 1/2 sec-onds left in the game. There was no reason to shoot it.”
Cross said the lineup on the fl oor in the fi nal minutes — Robinson, Kirby, Ashleigh McBean and freshmen Erika Sisk and Kelsey Dirks — was slightly befuddling to orches-trate with veteran guard Erica Burgess on the bench nursing some lingering cramping issues.
“We had situations (in practice) where we had to get a stop in that time frame, but not with that specifi c lineup on the fl oor,” Cross said. “I don’t think if anybody ventured a guess that we’re in a one-possession ball game with 11 seconds left, that lineup would be on the fl oor, but you have to plan for all contin-gencies, but we learned from it.”
The Racers trailed 34-28 at the half, and both teams shot an identical 32.4 percent from the fl oor, hitting 22 of their 68 shot at-
tempts. Though MSU committed just 12 turn-overs and collected seven steals, the Racers were outrebounded 52-46 by a rangy Hoo-siers squad that had 16 offensive boards.
Indiana coach Curt Miller, in his fi rst year with the Hoosiers after coaching Bowling Green for 11 years, said the Racers did an ex-cellent job of taking away their pick-and-roll offense and forcing plenty of isolation plays.
“When kids are making individual plays, it looks pretty, but when kids are missing or there’s good defense, it’s ugly basketball,” Miller said. “And both teams struggled to make plays off the dribble tonight, and credit to Kirby there in the second half stretch, (she) really, really gave them a spark that probably should have had Murray beat us tonight.”
The Racers starters (Sisk, Burgess, Rob-inson, Dirks and Kyra Watson) were a com-bined 13-of-51, while the six players off the bench were 9-of-16. Kirby, a sophomore, scored nine points and recorded two assists in nine minutes of play.
“We need another guard who will step up and be consistent,” Cross said. “She (Kirby) did a nice job tonight. What she did tonight is what I’ve been seeing in practice the last couple of days.”
Jasmine McGhee led the Hoosiers with 20 points, while Chaplin had 11 points and 10 re-bounds.
Call Dusty Luthy Shull, a Sun sports writer, at 270-575-8662.
RACERSCONTINUED FROM 1B
PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers es-caped with a victory. The health of their franchise quarterback is another matter en-tirely.
The Steelers edged the woeful Kansas City Chiefs 16-13 in overtime on Monday night but lost Ben Roethlisberger for most of the second half — and perhaps a lot longer — with a right shoulder injury.
Roethlisberger left the game early in the third quarter after a hard tackle and did not return.
Shaun Suisham kicked a 23-yard fi eld goal 51 seconds into the extra period for the victory.
Steelerssurvivein OT
Associated Press
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SELECT WINNERS SELECT WINNERS OF EACH GAMEOF EACH GAME
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P.O. Box 2300 Paducah, KY 42002or play online at www.paducahsun.com
For questions call 270-575-8752
Week 11Week 11
Week 9 WinnerWeek 9 WinnerCongratulations to Week 9 winner Bob Donley
of Golconda. Bob’s entry for games played November 1-5 was one out of three entries
that picked 13 out of 14 games correctly. Bob won in a tiebreaker with his guess of 51 being
closest to the tiebreaker score of 54.
Thursday, November 15 Miami ❏ at Buffalo ❏
Sunday, November 18 Arizona ❏ at Atlanta ❏
Cleveland ❏ at Dallas ❏
Green Bay ❏ at Detroit ❏
Cincinnati ❏ at Kansas City ❏
NY Jets ❏ at St. Louis ❏
Indianapolis ❏ at New England ❏
Philadelphia ❏ at Washington ❏
Tampa Bay ❏ at Carolina ❏
Jacksonville ❏ at Houston ❏
New Orleans ❏ at Oakland ❏
San Diego ❏ at Denver ❏
Baltimore ❏ at Pittsburgh ❏
Monday, November 19 Chicago ❏ at San Francisco ❏
Byes: Tennessee, Minnesota, NY Giants, Seattle
ALL ENTRIES MUST BE POSTMARKED BY
NOVEMBER 14, 2012Must be 18 to enter. No purchase necessary. Employees of Paxton Media Group and their immediate families are not eligible to enter. The person with the most correct picks of the week will be the weekly winner. In the event of a tie, the person whose guess for the total game points for that week’s tie breaker game is the closest will be named the weekly winner. If there is a secondary tie, the winner will be determined by random drawing. Any entries received that are postmarked after the specifi ed date will not be eligible. All weekly winners will be invited to a Tailgate Party sponsored by Pizza Inn where various prizes will be given away.
NAME: ___________________________________
Phone: __________________________________
Address: _________________________________
City: ____________________________________
State: _________________ Zip: ______________
Tie Breaker Score: Philadelphia at Washington
____________________(TOTAL GAME POINTS)
Only one entry per person per week.
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Instigate what you want to see happen. Waiting for help is a waste of time. A moneymaking opportunity is apparent if you partner with an old friend or as-sociate. Traveling to conduct a face-to-face meeting will broad-en your chance for success.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Check out foreign markets and educational or job opportunities. Take a serious look at your cur-rent status and the people influ-encing your life. Speak up, show determination and prepare to put your plans into motion. Use your imagination.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You’ll have good ideas and so-
lutions that will put you in the spotlight. Greater professional opportunities are apparent if you share your interest in reform and getting more for less. Someone from your past will play a role in a decision you make.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don’t let change cloud your vi-sion. Do your best to be creative and social with people who come from different backgrounds. You will learn a lot if you are recep-tive to new concepts. A creative venture will enhance your life.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don’t shirk your responsibilities or you will face criticism. Once you have your chores out of the way, you will be able to experience interesting encounters with
people who can make you more aware of the possibilities that exist. Engage in the action.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Get-ting out with friends or attending a community event will lead to greater knowledge and insight into future trends. Don’t let the people you live with or are close to interrupt your plans. Argu-ments will not lead to solutions.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You may be confused with regard to how you earn a living. Get back to basics, and consider new ways to implement old skills. Don’t be shy — share your thoughts and you will get inter-esting and helpful feedback. Op-portunity knocks.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Openness will be the ticket to making the best decision. The information you receive will al-low you to see where others stand. Gravitate toward those offering dedication, courage and loyalty. Strive for perfection.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You may feel like chatting and sharing your ideas, but don’t be too quick. Someone is likely to lead you astray or take advantage of your openness. Keep what you are doing a se-cret until you are well on your way to completion.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Follow your instincts. Focus on your goals. Preparation and observation will lead to vic-tory. Don’t let someone else’s
change of plans slow you down or disrupt your day. Stick to the truth and don’t hesitate to dis-mantle the competition’s plan.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Avoid people who tend to upset you. You have more options than you realize. Concentrate on your finances, important paperwork and getting your life in order. Greater opportunities will develop once you achieve greater stability.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Tie up loose ends. Take care of financial, medical and legal matters that might stand in your way if left unattended. Dealing with institutions, government agencies or hospitals will lead to unusual but favorable solu-tions to any problem you face.
Channel 2Midnight — Arts Showcase8 a.m. — Berry Craig’s Notebook8:30 a.m. — Army Newswatch9 a.m. — In The Fight9:30 a.m. — Master Gardening10 a.m. — WKCTC Open Mic12:05 p.m. — Community Billboard4 p.m. — Oscar Cross Boys and Girls Club of Paducah4:30 p.m. — L.I.F.E. After Lockup5 p.m. — West KY Academic Bowl5:30 p.m. — Fabulous Fifties & Beyond6 p.m. — Books Of Our Time7 p.m. — Easter Seals7:30 p.m. — The Heart of Collaboration8 p.m. — Minority Focus8:30 p.m. — Tot School
9 p.m. — Tourism Talk9:30 p.m. — Refl ections10 p.m. — Paducah School of Art Groundbreaking Ceremony10:30 p.m. — Rays of Hope11 p.m. — WKCTC Science Series
Channel 118:30 a.m. — Your City at Work: Distracted Driving9 a.m. — Your City at Work: Engineering/Public Works9:30 a.m. — City Profi le: Mayor Paxton’s Tenure10:30 a.m. — Your City at Work: Teach An Old Dog, New Tricks11 a.m. — Quality of Life Matters in the City of Paducah: National Quilt Museum5:30 p.m. — Paducah City Commission Meeting LIVE
Horoscopes
paducahsun.com Variety The Paducah Sun • Tuesday, November 13, 2012 • 5B
Dear Annie: My cousin “Ty-ler,” who had a host of prob-lems as a teenager, became a policeman at age 23. He was a jerk before he joined up, but now he’s become a bigger jerk.
Tyler is always bragging that he can fi x parking tick-ets or give you a ticket just for annoying him. He talks back to people constantly, always trying to have the last word. It’s awful, and it makes fam-ily gatherings impossible. His mother is a champion grudge holder and is still angry with Tyler for things he did as a teen. His father is completely passive. Tyler’s wife is OK, al-though I don’t know what she sees in him. His toddler son is very aggressive.
I’ve asked Tyler politely to behave more appropriately, but of course, he won’t listen. I’ve walked out of family din-ners and made it clear why. I’ve even spoken to my fam-ily about it, but they refuse to avoid occasions just because of
Tyler, even though after these gatherings my mother vents to me in the car.
I can’t take this anymore, and I now avoid Tyler at all costs. I’m thinking of video-taping him and showing his superiors. I would not trust this man to carry a gun, serve warrants or make arrests. I’m afraid he’s going to do some-thing rash and someone will get hurt, and I’ll have to testify against him at his trial. If any police out there are reading this, I’d like to know what they think. — No State.
Dear No State: Earning a badge would not change Tyler from a jerk into a re-sponsible adult, but it does increase fear levels. How-ever, if he is simply brag-ging to his relatives and not actually doing any-thing, there’s not much
recourse for you. Your parents get to handle Ty-ler however they choose, so please stop trying to dictate their actions. But if you dislike your cousin so much that you cannot bear to be in his presence, we agree that you should avoid these family gather-ings whenever possible.
Dear Annie: Dan Peek from Grandparents and Others on Watch, Inc. was right on target in advising “Older Sister” to contact authorities about her brother, the sex offender.
We live in a tight commu-nity. One woman was having sleepovers at her home while her father, a registered child sex offender, was living with her. She was unwilling to rec-ognize the risk, so we con-tacted all the parents of the children. We could not endure knowing that she was supply-ing him with potential victims. — Serious in the South About Protecting Kids.
ACROSS1 College donor,
often5 401(k) cousin,
briefly8 Garden ground
cover13 Mount Olympus
wife14 Break bread16 Novelist Zola17 “As if!”20 Halley’s sci.21 Full of vitality22 Ideological suffix23 Lift with effort25 ’60s
counterculturistTimothy
27 “As if!”31 Rants about the
boss, e.g.34 Jacob’s brother35 Niagara Falls
prov.36 Gorky Park city37 Like hor. puzzle
answers38 “As if!”40 Hostility41 Started, as a keg43 P.I.44 Hypnotic trance
breaker45 “Friend __?”46 “As if!”48 Pal of Threepio50 Not at all droopy51 Intro makers52 One might say
“shay” for “say”54 Inevitable end57 “As if!”61 Honolulu hello62 Egg on63 Sculling gear64 Headwear in
iconic Cheposters
65 Many ESPN fallhighlights
66 Way to betickled
DOWN1 Cry of
enlightenment2 Film heroine
with memorablebuns
3 Java vessels4 “Grumpy Old
Men” co-star5 Rite words6 Modern caller
ID, perhaps7 Part of A.D.8 Drop-line link9 Wrigley Field
judges10 Mouthing the
lyrics11 Red Skelton
characterKadiddlehopper
12 Cooped-up layer15 Bird on old
quarters18 Earl __ tea19 Groundbreaking
tool24 Greenland
coastal feature26 Company that
rings a bell?27 “Marvy!”28 Green grouch29 “Star Trek”
velocitymeasure
30 Word in manyuniversitynames
32 Bar mitzvahreading source
33 Didn’t lose a game36 Java order38 Off! ingredient39 Mike, to Archie42 Upscale sports
car44 Perch on46 Like babes47 Dennis the
Menace’s dog
49 Pay extension?51 Stallion or bull53 Craig Ferguson,
by birth55 Asian tongue56 Bring home57 “Marvy!”58 Monopoly
token59 Has too much,
briefly60 Clucking sound
By Jeff Chen(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 11/13/12
11/13/12
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
y y
Avoiding contact with obnoxious cousin may be the best way to deal with him
Ask Annie
Marvin
Blondie
Garfield
B.C.
Dilbert
Zits
Beetle Bailey
Wizard of Id
Dustin
Baby Blues
Barney Google and Snuffy Smith
6B • Tuesday, November 13, 2012 • The Paducah Sun Variety paducahsun.com
paducahsun.com The Paducah Sun • Tuesday, November 13, 2012 • 7B
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8B • Tuesday, November 13, 2012 • The Paducah Sun A&E paducahsun.com
LOS ANGELES — What tunes fi t a post-apocalyptic society? For NBC’s fresh-man drama “Revolution,” the answer is Led Zeppelin’s “Kashmir” and “Since I’ve Been Loving You.”
The songs will be featured in next week’s episode of “Revolution,” on the same day that Led Zeppelin’s “Celebration Day” album and a companion docu-mentary on DVD will be released.
Corporate synergy led to the deal for the onetime rock band that rarely allows use of its music in Holly-wood projects. “Revolution” is produced in association with Warner Bros. Televi-sion, and Led Zeppelin has a deal with Warner Music Group’s publishing arm.
But it was Eric Kripke, creator and executive pro-ducer of “Revolution,” who brought his series and the band together.
When Warner-Chappell Music sent out an email asking if any producers on the studio lot would be in-terested in using Led Zep-pelin songs, Kripke jumped at the chance.
“The speed and over-whelming enthusiasm with which I responded, I think, frankly weirded them out a little,” said the self-de-scribed “massive Led Zep-pelin fan.”
His credentials: Between “Revolution” and “Super-natural,” the CW drama he created, Kripke said he’s probably used Led Zeppe-lin references in the titles of some 20 episodes. “Revolu-tion,” about an American family struggling with the nation’s sudden loss of all electrity and all the technol-ogy it powered, was in part inspired by the band’s mu-sic and its sense of “mythic adventure,” he said.
Warner made a logical
pick with “Revolution”: The series benefi ts from a 10 p.m. EST Monday berth after NBC’s hit singing con-test “The Voice” and started strong in the ratings, espe-cially with the advertiser-favored young adult demo-graphic.
The Led Zeppelin-ac-cented episode of “Revo-lution” will air 10:01 p.m. EST Monday, Nov. 19. A “Revolution” promo spot featuring “Kashmir” will air throughout this week on
NBC, with an extended ver-sion available on the net-work’s website.
The “Celebration Day” projects document the band’s 2007 reunion con-cert at London’s 02 Arena. Original members Plant, Page and John Paul Jones, along with Jason Bonham, son of the late drummer John Bonham, played to honor Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun.
For the group, which disbanded after John Bon-ham’s 1980 death, the con-cert was its fi rst full show in 27 years. The documen-tary, including hits “Whole Lotta Love” and “Stairway To Heaven,” was released in theaters last month.
NEW YORK — Anne Hathaway credits her new husband Adam Schulman for helping her get through the grueling fi lming of the screen adaptation of “Les Miserables.”
In “Les Mis,” the 30-year-old actress plays Fantine, a struggling, sick-ly mother forced into pros-titution in 1800s Paris.
Hathaway lost 25 pounds and cut her hair for the role. She tells the
December issue of Vogue, the part left her in a “state of deprivation, physical and emotional.” She felt easily overwhelmed and says Shulman was under-standing and supportive.
The couple wed in Sep-tember in Big Sur, Calif. Hathaway wore a custom gown by Valentino whom she collaborated with on the design. Working with the designer is a memory she says she will “treasure forever.”
Hathaway says ‘Les Mis’ made her feel deprived
Associated Press
Associated Press
Tracy Spiridakos as Charlie Matheson (left), Billy Burke as Miles Matheson, Daniella Alonso as Nora and Paras Patel as Albert are featured in NBC’s “Revolution.” The series by J.J. Abrams tells of a world 15 years after the world inexplicably suffers a power outage.
‘Revolution’ snares Zeppelin songsBY LYNN ELBER
Associated Press“The speed and overwhelming
enthusiasm with which I responded, I think, frankly weirded them out
a little.”Eric Kripke
Creator, executive producer, “Revolution”
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Levi Mansfi eld O.D. Optometrist
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Newberry Eyecare CenterNewberry Eyecare Center60 Lakeview Dr., Paducah, Ky 42001
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’Tis the Seasonto eat, drink, and be merry!
The cookbook will include recipes for Mocha Punch, Frozen Banana Pineapple Salad, Jalapeno Bacon Deviled Eggs and many more savory recipes just in time for the holidays.
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2012 edition
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institution. Students who are planning to transfer credits should contact the receiving institution about its transfer credit policy.
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Thursday, Nov. 15th 10:07 AMAUCTIONAUCTIONAbsol
ute
ROBERT ALEXANDERROBERT ALEXANDER(270) 554-5212 or 1-800-307-SOLD
www.rareauctions.comwww.rareauctions.com
RARERARE
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KY Auct. Lic.#P01437 • KY RE Lic.#173 • IL Auct. Lic.#0410000399 • IL RE Lic.#075.0092126 • IN Auction. Lic.#AU19600046 • IN RE
Lic.#IB29900115 • TN Auct. Lic.#00005152 • TN RE Lic.#00271464
Robert Alexander , CAI, Broker/Auctioneer Robert Alexander , CAI, Broker/Auctioneer John Alexander, AuctioneerJohn Alexander, Auctioneer
Purchase Pkwy & Hwy 62, Calvert City, KYLocation: Traveling I-24 or Purchase Parkway take the Calvert City Exit. Property lies between the 2 exits next to Dairy Queen (1665 Oak Park). Signs posted.
Outstanding Interstate AcreageNear Kentucky Lake - Recently Voted Wet
±2.4 Acres • 2 Tracts • ±408ft Hwy 62 FrontagePrime Commercial Location. High traffi c, high visibility and possibly the #1 KY Lake/Marshall County commercial site available. Located at the confl uence of I-24, Purchase Parkway and US Hwy 62, just minutes to KY Dam Village State Park and recently voted to allow alcohol sales. Offered in 2 tracts by high bidder choice. No minimums, no reserves. Excellent location for restaurant, strip mall, offi ces, retail & much more. Offered in 2 ±1 Acre Tracts, separate & combined. All utilities available.Terms of Auction: 15% deposit day of auction, balance within 30 days. A 10% buyer premium will be added to the fi nal bid/s and included in the total contract price/s.
Thursday, Nov. 15th 10:07 AMAUCTIONAUCTIONAbsol
ute
ROBERT ALEXANDERROBERT ALEXANDER(270) 554-5212 or 1-800-307-SOLD
www.rareauctions.comwww.rareauctions.com
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KY Auct. Lic.#P01437 • KY RE Lic.#173 • IL Auct. Lic.#0410000399 • IL RE Lic.#075.0092126 • IN Auction. Lic.#AU19600046 • IN RE
Lic.#IB29900115 • TN Auct. Lic.#00005152 • TN RE Lic.#00271464
Robert Alexander , CAI, Broker/Auctioneer Robert Alexander , CAI, Broker/Auctioneer John Alexander, AuctioneerJohn Alexander, Auctioneer
714 - 720 Leiberman, Paducah, KYLocation: On the South Side, traveling the Beltline West go past Lowes a few blocks. Turn left on Leiberman. Signs posted.
Out-Of-Town Owner Says Sell! 3 COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS - SELLING ALL TOGETHER
Zoned M1, Light Industrial. ±200ft Frontage. Buildings 716 and 718 have an adjoining corridor for a total of ±3340 sq.ft. combined. Building 716 has a ±12ft wide x 10.75ft Truck/Cargo Door and ±12.25ft high clearance. Building 720 has ±1870 sq.ft; Welcoming Foyers; 2 Offi ces and has concrete parking and natural gas central heat & air. Each building has easy access and can be rented separate or combined. Building 720 is presently rented out as a church facility on a month to month basis. It has a welcoming Foyer; His & Her Restrooms and large Meeting Room. All 3 buildings are of masonry construction w/concrete fl oors. All 3 have similar layouts, with foyers and large, open service areas. Gas and electric are separate metered. 716 & 718 share a water meter. 720 has separate metered water. Building 716 has ±1,470 sq.ft., Building 718 has ±1,870 sq.ft. and Building 720 has 1,870 sq.ft. Tract Size: ±200 x 130ft. Auctioneer’s Note: M1 Light Industrial Zoning allows many varied uses from offi ces to residential, services business to wholesale, retail and warehousing. Selling As Is. Terms of Auction: 25% deposit day of auction, balance within 30 days. A 10% buyer premium will be added to the fi nal bid and included in the total contract price.
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In-Column DeadlinesSunday....3PM FridayMonday....10AM Sat.Tues.-Sat....12 Noon
Previous Day
DAILYCONSECUTIVE
RATES(2 LINES MINIMUM)
1 Day...$3.92Per Line
2 Days...$2.77Per Line Per Day3-4 Days...$2.38Per Line Per Day5-6 Days...$2.05Per Line Per Day7-13 Days...$1.81Per Line Per Day
14-22 Days...$1.73Per Line Per Day
23-31 Days...$39.77Per Line Per Month
CHECKYOUR
ADAdvertisers are re-quested to check thefirst insertion of adsfor any error. The Pa-ducah Sun will be re-sponsible for onlyONE INCORRECTINSERTION. Any er-ror should be repor-ted immediately socorrections can bem a d e . C H E C KYOUR AD carefullyand notify The Clas-sified Advertising De-partment during busi-ness hours Mondayt h r o u g h F r i d a y6:30AM - 5:30 PM orSaturday and Sunday6:30AM - 11AM incase of an error.
270-575-8700
0107 SPECIAL NOTICE
CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING
POLICYOn all personal andhappy ads, The Pa-ducah Sun reservesthe right to divulgethe name 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 tot h e c o m m u n i t y .Either may be pickedup daily while sup-plies last in the alleybehind The PaducahSun building.
0142 LOST
LOST YOUR DOG??Check the Animal
Shelter
MALE Blonde Terriermix “Buddy.” No tags.75lb. Near Kohl’s.Reward. 331-6514.
GARAGE /ESTATE GARAGE /ESTATE SALESSALES
0151 GARAGE/ESTATE SALES
VERY nice jackets,s m a l l , a l l m a j o rbrands, North Face/Patagonia/ call forappt. 270-293-0138.
EMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENT
0204 ADMINISTRATIVE
0208 SALES
JCP at KentuckyOaks Mal l , s to re#2086 now hiring forSales/Support posi-t i o n s . A p p l y a tjcp.com/careers, se-lect stores, & enter"Paducah or 2086".
Route SalesRep Position
Hostess Brands isseeking applicantsfor Route Sales Rep-resentatives for theMayfield, KY area.Full time Teamstersposition with familyhealth insurance.
Apply atHostessBrands.com
Company paid phys-ical and drug screenrequired. HS or GEDrequired.
0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL
BUSY Multi providermed ica l p rov ide rseeking fulltime of-fice coordinator. Musthave a minimum of 35 yrs experience inpatient billing/insur-ance. TCC exp. pre-ferred. Please sendresumes to OfficeManager P. O. Box7 0 3 8 , P a d u c a h4 2 0 0 2 .EXAMONE is look-ing for independent,neat, professional,medically trained in-dividuals to completemobile insurance ex-ams as independentcontractors.Must be trained in the
following areas:*Phlebotomy (min. 100 draws)*Medical terminology*Medical histories*Vital signs*EKG experience a plusMust have insuredvehicle and cleandriver’s l icense.Make your own hours- full or part-time!Great Pay!
Call today for moreinformation!!!502-429-8770
Or send resume to:Louisville@
examone.com
Sign-on Bonus:$300.00
Lake Way Nursing &Rehabilitation Centeris currently accept-ing applications forS ta te Reg is te redNursing Assistants(SRNA). We offercompetitive wagesand an excellent be-nefit package. Pleaseapply in person atLake Way Nursing &Rehab Center, 2607Main St., Hwy. 641 S,Benton, KY 42025.EOE/AAE, No PhoneCalls Please.
Sign-on Bonus:$500.00
Lake Way Nursing &Rehab Center is cur-rently accepting ap-plications for the fol-lowing position: RNFull-Time. We offercompetitive wagesand an excellent be-nefit package. Mustbe licensed in theState of Kentucky.Apply in person atLake Way Nursing &Rehab Center, 2607Main St., Hwy 641 S,Benton, KY 42025.EOE/AAE, No PhoneCalls Please.
0228 ACCOUNTING
PrecisionMachine,Inc
CONTROLLERCPA / 4 yr account-ing degree preferred5 yr minimum experi-ence H R experiencea plus. Send resume& salary history toPO Box 2753, Padu-cah, KY 42002-2753.
Excellent Benefits100% Employee
Owned
0232 GENERAL HELP
CHIZ CABSExp. Drivers
Must be 25+ & passbackground check.
270-227-2009
EXPRESSWAY CarWash now hiring forour busy season, 4full-t ime positions.Apply at 3245 ParkAve., Paducah.
Hydroblasters/Vacuum
OperatorsCDL class A or B
with prior experienceCalvert City, KYApply on line at:www.pscnow.
apply2jobs.com
COOKParkview Nursingand RehabilitationCenter in Paducah
Ful l - t ime posi t ionavailable for a cookwith food prepara-tion experience in aninstitution or healthcare facility. Must befamiliar with clinicaland therapeutic di-ets. High school dip-loma or equivalentrequired. We offergreat pay and bene-fits, including medic-al coverage, 401(k)and paid vacation,sick days & holidays.
Cynthia Ivy270-443-6543
270-442-3312 Fax544 Lone Oak Rd.
Paducah, KY 42003Cynthia_Ivy@
LCCA.comVisit us online at
LCCA.COM.EOE/M/F/V/D-36445
MARKETING FIRMHIRING for in-storerep. Must be goodwith people. We train.573-334-5172.
MECHANICSAPPRENTICE
Good pay/benefitswhile you train. Med-ical, 30 days vaca-tion/yr., $ for school.HS grads ages 17-34. Call Mon.-Fri.,800-777-6289.
AVON: $8-15/hour.Full or PT. 703-2866.
0232 GENERAL HELP
IF YOU ARE NOTMAKING $75,000
OR MORE,PROFESSIONAL
INSTALLERSwith SidingExperience
Must have ownequipment &
contractor's liabilityinsurance.
Apply in person:Window World
155 County Park Rd.Paducah, KY
443-0031
0240 SKILLED TRADE
ELECTRICIANCommercial exp., lowvoltage cabling exp.Send resume to POBox 3372, Paducah,KY 42002.
SMS Machine seek-ing machinist & mill-wright workers. Ap-ply within at 1619 USHwy 60, Ledbetter.
0244 TRUCKING
CDL Truck Driverneeded, experiencein tractor trailer, load-ing , un load ing &hauling constructionequip. Send resumeto 1939 N. 8th St.,Paducah, KY 42001.
EQUIPMENTHAULER DRIVERSTC in Paducah hasan opening for an ex-perienced driver tohaul company equip-ment & trucks to com-pany locations. Musthave CDL-A with Xendorsement. Pleasecall JR at 443-9298 ortoll free at 1-800-442-0722 for more detailson benefits.
Hiring Class ADrivers
Teams & SolosSIGN ON BONUSTEAMS / $10,000
SOLO / $3,0003 Years OTR Experi-ence. Age 24+. GreatWeekly Pay, Bene-fits, Bonus Programs.Volvo’s w/53 ft. DryV a n . M i d w e s tRoutes. 10cpm Extrafor Canada Runs.
Call TNi1-866-378-5071www.tri-nat.com
LOCAL and OTRDRIVERS Needed
32-42¢/mile & up.Full-time, part-time orteam. Driver choosesroute of 1, 3, or 5day(s). Lease pur-c h a s e p r o g r a m$ 1 . 3 0 / m i l e .
618-694-6813
0248 OFFICE HELP
DATA ENTRYUPG in Paducah hasan opening for an ex-perienced data pro-cessor. Must be goodwith numbers & com-puters. Excellent pay& b e n e f i t s . C a l lSherry at 270-450-4150 or 1-800-874-4427 ext. 150 or [email protected].
0260 RESTAURANT
OASIS SouthwestGrill is hiring experi-enced servers, full-time. Apply within, nophone calls. I-24 Exit40, Kuttawa.
TOKYO HIBACHI hir-ing dishwashers &servers. Apply at3535 James SandersBlvd., 933-1900.TOKYO SUSHI nowhiring servers.Applyin person 10:30-2:30,3500 James SandersBlvd. 270-442-6115.
0264 CHILD CARE
N O T E T O P A R -E N T S : K e n t u c k yState Law requires li-censing for child carefacil i t ies providingcare for 4 or morechildren not related tot h e l i c e n s e e b yblood, marriage oradoption.
0276 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
The Paducah Sunneeds IndependentContractors in the
Benton-Draffenville,Paducah,
Metropolis-Brookport,and Melber-Boaz-
Hickory areas.Potential monthly
profit of up to $2,000.To be part of thisamazing process,
call Jason at270-575-8792
or email [email protected]
PETSPETS
0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS
AKC English Bulldogpups. 270-335-3943,
270-994-3915.CKC Reg. Boxerpups, fawns, brindles& b lacks . Ready11/12, $425-500. Call270-519-1760.CKC reg. SiberianHusky pups, $250ea. 270-366-2038.COLLIE pupp ies ,AKC Reg., sable &white, parents ons i t e , 1 s t s h o t s ,wormed, $200, 1 M 1F 270-389-9523.
ClassifiedThe Paducah Sun | Tuesday, November 13, 2012 | paducahsun.com 9B
0832 MOTORCYCLES
2007 HONDA 150R,Exc. cond. 556-8716.
(Answers tomorrow)SPELL RATIO POUNCE GROOVYYesterday’s Jumbles:
Answer: An important way to compensate our veterans is to — PAY RESPECT
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.
BREEL
TOGAL
RALDIZ
SSALPH
©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.
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Print answer here:
Service DirectorService DirectorLinwood Chrysler Dodge Jeep Hyundai is seeking a pro-fessional service director in Paducah, KY. You will lead a team of highly trained and motivated technicians. This posi-tion requires solid communication and multitasking skills, strong leadership ability, and a competitive drive to be the best. This person will need a professional approach and ap-pearance.
We offer: • Two knowledgeable and motivated service writers. • A highly trained warranty administrator. • Modern facility with room to grow. • Aggressive pay plan and benefi t package. • Medical, 401K, and paid vacation. • Ability to make an immediate positive impact. • No limits to your success and income.
Resumes may be mailed or dropped off to Linwood Motors, 3345 Park Ave, Paducah, KY 42001 or may be dropped off at Linwood.
3345 Park Avenue,Paducah, KY
PADUCAH
BLAKEMORE LUXURY CONDO
HEART OF LOWERTOWN LR, DR, KIT. OPEN, 2 FIREPLACES,
2 LG. BRs, 2 FULL BATHS, OFFICE., GARAGE, WALK-IN CLOSET, EXP. BRICK NEW ELECTRICAL, PLUMBING, & HVAC
Drastically
Reduced
By Owner
WAS $249,900 NOW $155,100
CALL OWNER 270-559-0755 270-519-0818 270-559-1839
415 N. 6th St. - Unit B
0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS
ENGLISH BULLDOG PUPS, AKC
Champion bloodlines,1 yr. health guaran-tee, vet checked.
270-678-7943trulocksredgables.com
SHIH TZU pups, M/F,CKC, shots/wormed,$250-$300. 270-804-8103 after noon.
SIAMESE kitten, fe-male, $50. 205-0728.
TWO 17 mo. old fe-m a l e B e a g l e s &Beagle puppies, allAKC. 270-628-3570.
FARMFARM
0410 FARM MARKET
Deep Fried Turkeys,Smoked Hams for
Thanksgiving.270-554-3969
0430 FEED/FERTILIZER
COW FEEDCOTTON GIN
TRASHAlso round rolls hay,delivery avail., semiloads. 731-676-0857.
0450 LIVESTOCK
ANGUS BULLS, 21mos., calving ease &growth, Bremer Bros.
618-524-5396
0450 LIVESTOCK
WESTKENTUCKY
SELECT BREDHEIFER SALE200 Spring Calving
Heifers; 4 AngusBulls & 2 GelbviehBulls sell following
the heifer saleSee these heifers and
bulls atwww.ca.uky.edu/
bredheifer/Sat., November 17
at 12 NoonKY - TN Livestock
Market, GuthrieFor more info., contact
Kevin Laurent270-365-7541 ext. 226
MERCHANDISEMERCHANDISE
0503 AUCTION SALES
Col. Paul Wilkerson& Sons Real Estate/Auction, Lowes, KY674-5659, 674-5523
0527 SPORTING GOODS
GUN SHOWNOV. 17 & 18
SAT. 9-5, SUN. 9-4PADUCAH
Julian CarrollConvention CenterBUY-SELL-TRADEINFO 563-927-8176
GUNS, reloaders &equipment for sale.270-748-7858.
LIKE NEW signedNancy Lopez Legacywhite leather golfbag. $200. 205-2067.
0533 FURNITURE
7 PC white, BR suitew/canapy. Sm sofa,beige. 442-6407
0542 BUILDING MATERIALS
4-APT. bldg. to betorn down free for thelumber.270-694-4606
0554 WANTED TO RENT/BUY/TRADE
JUNK Cars/Batteries,$200 & up. 933-8698.
RUNNING, fixable,junk vehicles, trailers.CASH. 270-804-8333
WILL BUY LEAD50¢ lb. 554-2615
0563 MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE
1 0 ' X 1 6 ' S h e d ,$1,500. 415-5853.
2 KEROSENE heat-ers, used once, $100each. 270-933-1909.THIS NEWSPAPERCOULD BE YOURSEVERY DAY! Whatbetter gift to giveyourself or a friend,Call The PaducahSun Customer Ser-vice Department fordetails. 575-8800 or1-800-599-1771.
REAL ESTATE FOR REAL ESTATE FOR RENTRENT
0605 REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
HUD PUBLISHER'SNOTICE
All real estate advert-ised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any prefer-ence, limitations, ordiscrimination basedon race, color, reli-gion, sex, handicap,familial status or na-tional origin, or inten-t ion to make anysuch preferences,limitations or discrim-ination. State lawsforbid discriminationin the sale, rental oradvertising of real es-tate based on factorsin addition to thoseprotected under fed-eral law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for realestate which is in vi-olation of the law. Allpersons are herebyin fo rmed tha t a l ldwellings advertisedare available on anequal opportuni tybasis.
0610 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS
LONE OAK1 BR, 1 B, exc., quietlocation, water paid.No pets, no smoking,554-0211, 217-5890REIDAND, 2 BR, 1 B,$550+dep. 559-6252.
0610 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS
1 & 2 BR, remodeled.For info call 270-331-1077, 983-2582, or564-9744.
REIDLAND, 2 BR,$495. Lease. Nopets . 898-2256.TAKING applications:2BR 1B, no pets, justremodeled, $400/mo.270-442-5068.
LG Efficiency, all util.pd in full. 2142 Jeffer-son, 443-30901BR, 432 N. 5th,$300. No pets/ nosmoking, 443-3763.2 BR, 1.5 B town-house in Lone Oak,rent + dep. 554-4049.
Cardinal Point2 BR, 1 B, 1 laundryroom, Wes t Enda rea . 444 -7334 .Hrs: 10-12, Mon.- Fri.
LONE Oak, 2BR, 1Btownhouse, water &refuse incl., $500 +dep./lease. 554-0602
REIDLAND, 2 BRTownhouse, $600/mo. 898-6217.
Southgate Manor1 BR. 270-442-6621
WEST END LTD2BR, 1B TownhomeW/D hookup in kit.
2BR, 1B flat, privatestorage, W/D hook-
up in basement.270-442-9258
Hours: 8-10 a.m.Mon-Fri.
WHITTIER APTS.1 BR, Sec. 8
Senior & Disabled270-443-3809. EHO
WILLOW OAKS1, 2, & 3 BR APTS.All electric, laundryroom on property
270-443-4200Hours: 1:30-4:30
Mon-Fri.
WEST End, 2 BR,1.5 B, 1 yr. lease, nopets, $520. 554-9925
0615 FURNISHED APARTMENTS
1 BR apt., incl. utils.,cable/WiFi, no pets,$650. Reidland, nolease. 898-7146.
1 & 2 BR, exc. loca-tion, includes W/D,off-street parking. Nopets, $550 & $700/mo. 443-7103.$475/$625/MO. 1BR,no pets, 559-0688.
0620 HOMES FOR RENT
1505 N.12th., 2 BR, 1B, $550/mo 443-7472
2 BR, 1 B house forrent. Call 270-816-2170 after 5pm.2 BR, 1 B, no pets,721 Oaks Rd., $650+ dep. 270-559-2846.
0620 HOMES FOR RENT
3BR 1B, 817 OldMayfield Rd. $700 +$700 dep. 575-0061.
3 BR, 2 B for lease,new floors, 1,900 SF,Kevil, $1,000/mo. +dep. 417-505-8692.
4BR 1.5B, 1 car gar-age, 3759 RamonaDr. $925 +dep. 270-994-4089 after 4pm.
LONE Oak- $1250/mo; 2500 sqft; 4BR,2.5B, 3 car gar.; cul-d-sac, lawn care incl;refs req. 1-2yr lease;270-388-0047.
Lone Oak 1 BRAll appliances, Ww/
garage, $595 + dep..554-0114
2 S T O R Y r u s t i chome, 3BR 2.5B, 2car garage, Reidland,$900. 270-331-0648.
3 BR, 2800 Fairmont,$650. 559-0296.
0630 DUPLEXES FOR RENT
Lone Oak 2 BR,2B, w/ garage, $725+ deposit. 554-0114
2 BR, 2 B, garage, nosmoking, no pets,$750. 270-519-1963.
2BR 2.5B town-house, 1 car garage,fireplace, Reidland,
270-331-0648
0670 BUSINESS PLACES/OFFICES
2,530 SQ. ft. - 2 largerooms, high ceilingssuitable for high baystorage, 164 S. 31st,across from The StarRestaurant. $800/mo.270-331-1371.
OFFICE/RETAILat Governor's Cross-ing , 1 ,000 up to3,600 sq. ft., acrossfrom Energy Fitness.270-556-4262.
0675 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT
2 BR, $400-$500.No pets. Indian Oaks
442-1727
M.H . i n coun t r y ,private lot, 2 BR, 2 B,$475 mo. 554-5477.
0675 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT
3BR 2B on 6 acres,346 Kaler Mill. $400-$400 deposit. 3BR2 B h o u s e , 1 1 0 13 4 8 W S y m s o n i a ,$400- $400 dep. 442-1493, 851-3281.
REAL ESTATE FOR REAL ESTATE FOR SALESALE
0710 HOMES FOR SALE
3BR 1B, brick, 3109Madison St., total re-model, refin. wd. flrs.,fenced, 12X16 stg.bldg. $78,900. 270-443-0443
3BR, 2B Brick homew/5 acres, Pope Co.,IL. 270-356-0725.
675 FERREN Rd.,Ledbetter, 3B/2B +att. 2 car garage.1750 sq. ft. on 1.25acres. 270-508-1258
FARM HOUSE, Gol-conda, $45,000. As-sume FHA loan, noequity. 618-309-3656
FSBO, 11th St., 2BR,hardwoods, $29,700OBO. 618-309-1901.
FSBO: 2BR 1B, 1.5acres, lg. 2 car gar-age, 2965 Giebe Rd.,270-519-7884.
SEEING is believing.Don't buy propertybased on pictures orrepresentations. Forf r e e i n f o r m a t i o nabout avoiding time-share and real es-tate scams, write theFederal Trade Com-mission at Washing-ton, DC 20580 or callthe National FraudInformation Center, 1-800-876-7060.
0734 LOTS & ACREAGE
15 ACRES, BallardCo., fenced w/3 sided20x40 pole barn.270-210-0991.
2 EXCELLENT hunt-ing farms, CrittendenCo., 31 acres & 168acres. Timber, elec.,water, road front. Byowner, 270-556-3576
0786 WANTED TO BUY REAL ESTATE
I WILL BUY yourhouse, farm, estate,commercial property,o r mob i l e home .CEBBuysHomes.com,270-247-2981. Paycash/close quickly.
TRANSPORTATIONTRANSPORTATION
0832 MOTORCYCLES
1996 HONDA Trike,23,000 mi., $19,000.270-753-2135.
2007 HONDA 150R,Exc. cond. 556-8716.
0856 SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES
'00 JEEP Wrangler, 6cyl, auto., AC,125Kmi., very clean. 270-853-4230. $8,800
0868 CARS FOR SALE
'03 MIT. Eclipse Spy-der, 1 owner, conv.,leather, 54K, $9,000.519-9922, 519-8022.
2011 DODGE NitroHeat SUV, $20,975OBO. 442-0179.
82 CHEVY Caprice,38K mi., $5000. 270-832-4301.
FINANCIALFINANCIAL
0910 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Government WildlifeJobs! Great Pay andBenefits. No Experi-ence Necessary. Theticker to a dream jobmight real ly be ascam. To protectyourself, call the Fed-eral Trade Commis-sion toll-free, 1-877FTC-HELP, or visitwww.ftc.gov. A pub-lic service messagefrom The PaducahSun and the FTC.
0910 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
SOME ads in thisclassification are notnecessarily for "helpwanted" but for em-ployment informationbooklets.
10B • Tuesday, November 13, 2012 • The Paducah Sun paducahsun.com
HOME SERVICE HOME SERVICE DIRECTORYDIRECTORY
1018 ASPHALT/CONCRETE
Charles SmithCONCRETE
REPAIR • Crack Fill & Sealcoating • Striping • Waterproofing
270-366-9112
1024 BACKHOE
CASEMCKEEL EQUIPMENT
COMPANY, INC.1939 N. 8TH STREETPADUCAH, KY 42001
(270) 444-0110Daily, Weekly & Monthly RentalsParts • Sales • Service
1108 EXCAVATING
WURTHExcavating, LLC
Clearing, demolition,driveways, farm clean
up, hauling, ponds,septic systems, yardsOne call can do it all!Dwayne 559-7025
1144 HANDYMAN
R IC K ’S H A N DY M A N S E RV IC E
I do just about everything.
Reliable repair on time! Done Right! 270-556-5338
King’s Handyman Service
New construction Remodeling
No job too big or small Need a handyman? I do it all, Call Clyde!
270-564-1954 15 yrs Experience
1150 HAULING
*Odd Jobs*Trash Hauling*Yard Mowing
*Clean Up*Moving/Delivery
*Roto-tilling270-933-3384
1150 HAULING
AFFORDABLE HAULINGSERVICE
*Haul Junk *LawnDebris *Basements
*Attics *Garages270-564-0109
1156 HEATING/COOLING
INSTALL & REPAIRGas floor furnaces,
Empire wall furnaces,space heaters, gas
logs, ventless heatersJoe Thweatt
554-1208, 217-4027Lic.#M00651
1162 HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR
B & F HOME REPAIR
• Rotten Joists/Beams • Floors Leveled
• Gutters Cleaned/ Repaired
• Water under house No Problem!
• Metal Roofing 35 Years Experience 270-356-0389 270-999-1988
Furniture Doctor Furniture Repair
Antique Restoration www.
furnituredoctorofpaducah .com
270-994-6688
1162 HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR
GENERAL CONTRACTOR 23 Yrs. Experience
Remodels Room Additions Garages • Sheds Decks • Screen Rooms • Doors,
Windows & Siding Concrete &
Masonry 270-816-3609
New HomesAdditions
RemodelingVinyl Siding
Replacement WindowsGarages • Decks
Carports • Any Typeof Home Repair
Licensed • InsuredSince 1976
Kevin Rose Construction462-8285
PADUCAH’S BEST Windows - $175 Installed
Vinyl Siding, Gutters Pressure Washing, Roofing
Pole Barns, Rent-A-Husband No Job Too Big or Small 270-564-5770 270-442-0809
POWLEY CONTRACTING & CONSULTING
Specializing in Remodel & New
Construction. Licensed & Insured 270-210-0073
1162 HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR
For all your homeimprovements & new construction projects.
No Job Too Small.Free Estimates.
Licensed & Insured. Quality Work at a
Fair Price.270-559-0162
PRECISIONCONTRACTING
& REMODELING
REPAIR or REPLACE FLOORS
New Bathrooms 217-2872
1198 LAWN/LANDSCAPE/TREE SVC
ADORE LAWN& LANDSCAPING
Fall Cleanup,Trimming, Mulching,
Overseeding,Hedge Trimming
270-554-2426270-933-8869
BBF LAWNSERVICELeaf RemovalClean Gutters
Licensed & InsuredFree Estimtes
270-558-5074
1198 LAWN/LANDSCAPE/TREE SVC
•CANTER•Lawn Service
•BUSHHOGGING•- Reasonable -
- Quick -Time to Seed &
Fertilize!•Lawn Service•
Kelly Canter2220 Olympia Ave.270-243-0366
JS Lawn Care Fall Clean Up Free Estimates Leaf Removal
Mowing 270-705-1862
11 yrs. experience
Need YourLeaves Taken
Care Of?*free estimate*lowest price*quick serviceGuaranteed
Call 270-564-0109
S&ELAWN & TREE SERVICE
Cutting • HaulingStump Removal
Insured441-2111 or 559-3123
1198 LAWN/LANDSCAPE/TREE SVC
Mike’s Tractor & Lawn Service *River bottom topsoil *Driveways repaired *Gravel-red or white
hauled & spread 270-462-3662 270-519-2410
1200 TREE SERVICE
Ace Tree Service& Stump RemovalAerial Bucket Truck
InsuredFree Estimates
898-8733
LITTLE'STREE & STUMP
REMOVALAerial Bucket TruckFULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES270-933-3086
PRO AFFORDABLETREE SERVICE
•The Best Prices!•High Quality Work•Fast Response•Free Estimates•Licensed/Insured
270-366-2033
RICHARD’S TREE SERVICE Trimming, Removal & Stump Grinding
Lowest prices in town! •Free Estimates
•Licensed & Insured 270-816-5488
1228 PAINT/WALLCOVER
GP PAINTING, LLC For All Your Professional
Painting Needs •Fully Established
•Fully Insured •Free Estimates
(270) 519-5104
RUSHING’S PAINTING & DRYWALL, LLC.
FULLY INSURED Wallpaper hanging & removal; plaster repairs;
drywall hanging & finishing; painting -
interior/exterior. Free Estimates 270-210-8580 270-898-3765
1276 ROOFING
A & J Builders270-804-8305Specialize in Metal& Shingle RoofingHomes, Pole Barns
Metal fromManufactureMetal Mall
270-247-8413
Affordable HomeImprovementSpecializing inALL your home
improvement needs(Roofing, Flooring,
Repairs, etc.)Insured, Free Est.
5% Military DiscountScott, 270-309-3025
1276 ROOFING
HINESROOFING
35 Years Experience~ INSURED ~
All Work Guaranteed443-6338556-5474
STEPHENSROOFING
Specializing in:• New Roofs• Metal Roofs
• Repairs270-564-8520
1306 SERVICES
TransmissionRepairs
ALL TYPESTom Allen210-1550
Allen Auto Sales
PROFESSIONAL PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORYSERVICE DIRECTORY
1824 PEST CONTROL
STORY’S PEST CONTROL Over 30 years
experience serving Southern Illinois & Western Kentucky 618-524-3973