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The Paducah Sun | Tuesday, September 6, 2016 | paducahsun.com
B
3 declare for ’17
MSU men’s hoops
BY EDWARD
MARLOWE
[email protected]
Just before Labor Day,
Murray State men’s basketball picked up three
consecutive verbal commitments in the span
of 48 hours – all for the
Class of 2017.
Tevin Brown
Associated Press
Tennessee Titans running back DeMarco Murray carries the ball past Oakland Raiders cornerback David Amerson (left) during the first half of an Aug.
27 preseason game in Oakland, Calif. New general manager Jon Robinson
has sifted through the roster adding 21 new players, revamping the offense
through a handful of trades and showing the door to a handful of high draft
picks from the previous regime. His biggest moves landed Murray for coach
Mike Mularkey’s run-oriented offense and included trading the No. 1 overall
pick that helped add Heisman Trophy winner Derrick Henry.
Listed at 6-foot-6, the
175-pound combo-guard
from Fairhope, Alabama, had publicly narrowed his final decision
to Murray State, Middle
Tennessee, Florida Gulf
Coast, the University of
Arkansas-Little
Rock,
Old Dominion and Illi-
nois State before eventually choosing the Racers
after a visit.
And Brown was highly
sought after, spurning interest from Wichita State,
Virginia Commonwealth,
Mississippi Valley State,
Alcorn State, Northern
Arizona, Alabama State,
Stetson, East Tennessee State, New Orleans,
North Carolina A&T,
Charleston
Southern,
Wofford,
Appalachian
State, Troy, Louisiana
Tech, Florida International, Drexel, South
Alabama, UT-El Paso,
Southern Miss and Georgia Southern in joining
MSU.
Brown was named the
2016 Coastal Alabama
Player of the Year and
was a finalist for Alabama’s prestigious Class
7A Player of the Year
award last season.
Leroy “Shaq”
Buchanan
Listed at 6-foot-3 and
185 pounds, the comboguard from Madison,
Mississippi, will spend
this upcoming season
playing a second year for
Northeast
Mississippi
Community College – a
team he helped push into
the 2016 NJCAA NationPlease see HOOPS | 2B
Revamped Titans
ready for turnaround
BY TERESA M.
WALKER
Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn. —
Turning around a franchise that has been the
NFL’s worst over the past
two seasons requires an
infusion of talent and
an attitude change. The
Tennessee Titans believe
they’ve done just that on
both counts.
New general manager
Jon Robinson has sifted
through the roster, adding
22 new players, revamping the offense through
a handful of trades, and
showing the door to some
high draft picks from the
previous regime. His biggest moves landed DeMarco Murray for coach
Mike Mularkey’s run-oriented offense, and trading
the No. 1 overall selection,
which netted more picks
that helped add Heisman
Trophy winner Derrick
Henry.
Mularkey has taken care
of instilling a physical approach on the field while
demanding attention to
detail in meeting rooms.
Now the Titans have to
start proving they aren’t
the franchise that went
5-27 the past two seasons.
Safety Rashad Johnson,
one of nine veteran free
agents signed this offseason who made the roster,
knows just how quickly a
team can turn from losers
to winners from his experience in Arizona.
“Each and every year
this league turns around
so much there’s so many
guys in and out of every
locker room, it’s always a
new team,” Johnson said.
The Titans still around
Please see TITANS | 2B
No all-Williams Open rematch
Cardinals wallop Pirates
BY HOWARD
FENDRICH
Associated Press
NEW YORK — Venus
Williams went from down
and out to a point from
victory, then back again.
In the end, she couldn’t
quite get past a woman a
dozen years younger and
never before at this stage
of a Grand Slam tournament.
Williams failed to convert a match point and
lost 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 (3) to
10th-seeded
Karolina
Pliskova of the Czech Republic in the fourth round
of the U.S. Open on Monday, despite vociferous
support from the Arthur
Ashe Stadium crowd
down the stretch.
“I really played the
perfect point there,” the
sixth-seeded
Williams
said about her chance to
end things while up 5-4
in the third set, and Plis-
Associated Press
St. Louis Cardinals’ Jedd Gyorko (3) celebrates with Stephen Piscotty (55),
behind Pittsburgh Pirates catcher Francisco Cervelli (center), after hitting a
solo home run off Pirates relief pitcher Jeff Locke during Monday’s fourth
inning at Pittsburgh.
BY WILL GRAVES
Associated Press
Associated Press
Karolina Pliskova reacts after defeating Venus
Williams during the fourth round of the U.S. Open
on Monday.
kova serving at 30-40,
“and she managed to stay
alive.”
Now Pliskova will face
No. 4 Agnieszka Radwanska or Ana Konjuh.
In men’s action, 2009
champion Juan Martin
del Potro became the
lowest-ranked man in the
U.S. Open quarterfinals
in 25 years, advancing
when No. 8 seed Dominic Thiem stopped in the
second set because of an
injured right knee.
The 2012 title winner
at Flushing Meadows,
Andy Murray, eased into
the quarterfinals for the
22nd time in his past 23
majors, beating No. 22
Grigor Dimitrov 6-1, 6-2,
6-2 at night. Murray now
faces 2014 runner-up Kei
Nishikori, who advanced
by beating No. 21 Ivo Karlovic 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (4).
PITTSBURGH — Adam
Wainwright is still in
search of his best stuff.
His bat made sure his best
wasn’t necessary.
The St. Louis ace drove
in three runs and survived
five occasionally bumpy
innings to pick up his first
victory since mid-July as
the Cardinals drummed
the staggering Pittsburgh
Pirates 12-6 on Monday.
Wainwright hit an RBIdouble off Chad Kuhl (33) in the second and added a two-run single in the
fourth as the Cardinals
held on to the second wild
card spot in the National
League by sending the
Pirates to their seventh
straight loss.
“We needed that win,”
Wainwright said. “We
need every win that we
can get coming down the
stretch. Any part that I
can play in that is a treat
for me, a privilege.”
Wainwright
(10-8)
allowed four runs and
struck out five as his ERA
rose to 4.61 while picking
up his first victory since
July 16. He hardly needed
to be sharp as the Cardinals battered Pittsburgh’s
beleaguered
pitching
staff. Jedd Gyorko and
Matt Adams homered
for St. Louis to extend the
team’s streak of games
with at least one home
run to a club-record 24.
Andrew
McCutchen
and Adam Frazier hit
home runs for the Pirates,
who have been outscored
47-22 during their cur-
rent slide. A week ago
Pittsburgh was well within striking distance of the
Cardinals for a playoff
spot but have fallen 41/2
games behind St. Louis
and dropped below .500
(67-68) for the first time
since July 2.
“We’re trying to figure
ourselves out and get out
of this and get back to
playing baseball the way
we want to play,” shortstop Jordy Mercer said.
“We just have to keep going.”
St. Louis pounded out
14 hits — eight for extra
bases — against five pitchers and wasted little time
getting to Kuhl, who has
been steady if not spectacular since joining the rotaPlease see WALLOP | 2B
Saban not speculating about Alabama’s frosh QBs after opener
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS
Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas — Nick
Saban had a moment early in
top-ranked Alabama’s season
opener when he wondered if it
really had been a good idea to
go with two freshman quarterbacks.
After a shaky first quarter,
including dual-threat true freshman Jalen Hurts fumbling on
his first play, things worked out
for the Crimson Tide in a 52-6
victory over No. 20 Southern
Cal. Just don’t ask Saban what
the quarterback plans are moving forward for the defending
national champion Tide.
“I made a decision for this
game that whatever we did at
quarterback was for now. ...
We made a decision today for
now. That’s the only decision
we made,” Saban said. “So I’m
not speculating on what we’re
going to do in the future.”
Alabama plays its home
opener next Saturday against
Western Kentucky before getting into SEC play the following
weekend at No. 11 Ole Miss, the
only team to beat the Tide in
the regular season the last two
seasons — and the Rebels did it
both years.
Saban never even revealed
who was taking the first snap
against USC until redshirt
freshman Blake Barnett went
out for the opening series Saturday night, becoming the
youngest starter the coach has
used at Alabama. Saban went
even younger when, as he had
planned, Hurts got into the
game on the third series.
“We think both guys are talented, and we wanted both
guys to play in the game,” Saban said. “When the first quarter was over, I was wondering
to myself, ‘Was this a good plan
or a bad plan?’ Both guys were
a little shaky in the beginning.”
Alabama gained 12 yards on
10 plays in the first quarter, and
trailed 3-0 before Hurts overcame the fumble to account for
four touchdowns.
The Tide led for good when
Hurts hit ArDarius Stewart for
a 39-yard TD, and found him
open again for a 70-yard scoring pass. The quarterback who
at this point last year was playing high school ball in Texas,
added touchdown runs of 7 and
6 yards to make it 38-3 before
he exited late in the third quarter. “He had the hiccup at the
beginning, bit it was his first
game, he turned the page and
got back on it,” Stewart said of
the young quarterback.
Saban was still far from completely satisfied after improving to 10-0 in season openers at
Bama. “If you want to know the
truth about it, I wasn’t pleased
with the way we played,” Saban said. “So my focus with
our team right now is what can
we do better? How can we get
better? How can every guy improve? ... Look, I’m happy that
we won. And I’m proud of our
team for beating a good team.
And I don’t want you to think
that I’m not.”
Sports
2B • Tuesday, September 6, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
McCracken CC
finishes 2nd, 3rd
Staff report
The combination of
Josh Grogan and Wes
Grogan helped the McCracken County cross
country team to a second-place finish at Saturday’s Central Kentucky Run for the Gold
race in Elizabethtown.
The eldest Grogan,
Josh, finished in eighth
place with a time of
16 minutes, 31 seconds,
while his brother Wes
was right behind him in
ninth place at 16:33.
McCracken
trailed
only Madisonville-North
Hopkins,
with
Ben
Hodges placing 17th for
the Mustangs, Michael
Helmich 29th and John
Wolfe 47th.
Graves County also
competed, coming in
seventh place led by
Garrett Wilson’s 15thplace time of 17:08.
The McCracken County girls were in third
place, just six points
away from second, as
Sarah Baker finished
in 13th with a time of
20:46.
McCracken’s
next three runners were
all close, as Maggie Aydt,
Rebecca Walker and
Abbie Farmer finished
between 28th and 31st.
Kaylyn Suitor, in 42nd
place, also scored for the
Lady Mustangs.
Graves’ girls finished
in seventh like its boys,
getting a 17th-place run
from Carley Dowdy.
McIlroy rallies to
win Deutsche Bank
BY DOUG FERGUSON
Associated Press
NORTON, Mass. —
Three holes into the
Deutsche Bank Championship, Rory McIlroy had
to make a 15-foot putt just
to escape with triple bogey.
He already was 4-overpar and had every reason
to believe this tournament was headed for an
outcome that was becoming far too familiar for a
player of his class. But
there was one difference.
His head didn’t drop.
His shoulders didn’t sag.
McIlroy went from a
miserable start to a memorable finish, closing with
a 6-under 65 on Monday
to make up a six-shot deficit and win the Deutsche
Bank
Championship
for his 20th career title
around the world.
“It’s just incredible, this
game, how quickly things
can change,” McIlroy said
after his two-shot victory over Paul Casey. “It’s
been a great lesson for me
this week not to get down
on myself, to stay patient.
After three holes Friday,
there was so much going through my head,
and none of those things
involved sitting beside a
trophy.”
Not just a trophy, but a
belt, too.
Deutsche Bank gave
him the blue belt with a
large silver buckle when
McIlroy won four years
ago, and because this was
the last year it is sponsoring the tournament, the
company wanted him to
keep it.
“World heavyweight
title,” McIlroy said of the
belt.
Not quite, but certainly
a step in that direction.
The only consolation
for Casey was that his
runner-up finish moved
him from No. 59 to No.
10 in the FedEx Cup, assuring a spot in the Tour
Championship for the
first time since 2010. PGA
champion Jimmy Walker
closed with a 70 to finish
third.
The top 70 advance to
the BMW Championship,
which starts Thursday at
Crooked Stick in Indiana.
Among those who moved
into the top 70 was David
Hearn of Canada, who
came into the week at No.
92. Hearn closed with a
70 and tied for eighth.
McIlroy, who finished
at 15-under 269, moves
back to No. 3 in the world.
TITANS
CONTINUED FROM 1B
from last year’s 3-13 squad
also expect a big improvement from themselves.
“We’re going to do our
best to live up to those expectations, including myself,” quarterback Marcus
Mariota said. “I hate just
meeting the expectation.
I’d rather go above and beyond. Hopefully as a team
we can continue to come
together and do that this
year.”
Other things to know before the
Titans open the season Sunday
hosting Minnesota:
LOADED BACKFIELD — Tennessee’s 32-game drought of not
having a running back rush for
100 yards should end quickly. Mularkey has made it very clear the
Titans will run the ball, and they
led the AFC in yards rushing per
game in the preseason. Murray
looks decisive and strong, with his
season in Philadelphia a distant
memory. He won’t have to carry
the entire load, which means he
might not near the 1,845 yards
he ran for with Dallas in 2014 to
earn Offensive Player of the Year.
Henry has shown a shiftiness to
go with his power, along with very
good hands that should make him
a reliable target for Mariota.
PROTECTING MARIOTA — The
No. 2 pick overall turned in quite
the rookie season. Mariota had
a 91.5 passer rating that was
second in franchise history to
the late Steve McNair during his
co-MVP season in 2003 and Hall
of Famer Warren Moon. He also
had the NFL’s longest run from
scrimmage, an 87-yard TD. But he
missed two games after spraining
each of his knees when hurt in the
pocket.
paducahsun.com
Marshall County Invitational
Staff report
Results of Saturday’s
Marshall County Invitational, won by the McCracken County boys
and girls golf teams.
Top girls
individual scores
Devany Cope, Mayfield — 77 (winner in
playoff)
Payton Carter, Henderson County — 77
Hallie Riley, Marshall
County — 78
Carlie Shoemaker,
Muhlenberg County —
79
Sarah McDowell,
Murray — 80
Morgan Markwell,
Morgan County — 80
Nicole Taylor, Graves
County — 81
Shelby Darnell, Madisonville-North Hopkins
— 81
Ryan Lee, McCracken County — 82
Faith Martin, South
Warren — 82
Ke’Asha Phillips, Owensboro — 82
Top 3 Team Scores
McCracken County,
338
Marshall County,
349
Massac County, 356
Top boys
individual scores
Daniel Love, Daviess
County — 69
Dalton Bagwell, McCracken County — 70
Chase Korte, McCracken County — 71
Connor Coombs,
Muhlenberg County —
71
Cullan Brown, Lyon
Photo provided
McCracken County’s girls won the Marshall County Invitational on Saturday, shooting a 338. Pictured (from left): Coach Chris Hunkler, Ryan Lee,
Carley Beatty, Caitlin Herndon, Allison Hane and Jessica Stephens. Photo provided
McCracken County’s boys shot a 303 to win the Marshall County Invitational on Saturday. Pictured (from left): Connor Kirkham, Josh Maclin, Dalton Bagwell, Chase Korte, Clayton Turnbo and Coach Nick Mills. County — 72
Quinn Eaton, Marshall County — 72
Jay Nmmo, Marshall
County — 73
Brock Burnham, Massac County — 74
CM Nixon, South
Warren — 74
Husten Lancaster,
Mayfield — 76
Collins Dodson, Mayfield — 76
Dawson McDaniel,
South Warren — 76
Top 3 Team Scores
McCracken County,
303
Mayfield, 306
Marshall County,
309
Texas coaching triangle keeps fans happy
No. 10 Notre Dame —
his words — but an offense and a quarterback
that finally look as if
they can compete in the
Big 12.
Sure, maybe Texas
A&M followers left Kyle
Field a little frustrated
that the Aggies blew a
fourth-quarter lead, but
a win against a ranked
team in overtime is no
reason to raise the heat
on coach Kevin Sumlin’s seat.
Such is college football in the Lone Star
State this year: an almost weekly referen-
dum on the coaches at
Texas and Texas A&M,
while the sports’ current boy genius roams
the sideline for a nonPower Five school that
has a chance to become
the story of the season.
Two coaches facing pivotal seasons and their
possible replacement
within reasonable driving distance.
For now, things are
looking up for Strong.
A year after getting humiliated 38-3 at South
Bend, Indiana, by the
Fighting Irish, the
Longhorns beat No.
10 Notre Dame 50-47
in double overtime on
Sunday night.
“Our fans really needed that,” said Strong,
who got a hug from Gov.
Greg Abbott as he left
the field and a “Charlie!
Charlie!” chant from a
smattering of students
who hung around just
to see the coach run
through the tunnel.
“We’ve been down for
so long and people have
been talking about us.
It was a night for us to
make it right. At least
for one game, for one
game.”
Southern Miss, Troy,
Western Kentucky, Memal Tournament.
phis, Texas-Rio Grande
Last year, he averaged Valley and Southeastern
14 ppg, 5.7 rpg and 2.7 Louisiana before opting to
apg in 28 games, shoot- join the Racers.
ing 40.8 percent from
Temetrius “Ja”
the floor, 25 percent from
Morant
behind the arc and 70
percent from the charMorant is listed as a
ity stripe. He had interest 6-foot-1, 160-pound point
from Middle Tennessee guard out of Crestwood
State, Alabama A&M, High School in Sumter,
Chattanooga, Florida Gulf South Carolina.
Coast, UNC Greensboro,
He had interest from
South Carolina State,
Maryland-Eastern Shore,
Duquesne, UNC Asheville, High Point, Wofford,
Coastal Carolina, UT-El
Paso, Winthrop, Southern
Utah and South Carolina
before settling in with the
Racers after a visit.
“I went through the
recruitment process and
they were consistent when
it came to truly wanting
me. When I got to campus
and they rolled out the red
carpet, I was convinced
it wasn’t a visit. It was
home,” Morant told Garrett Tucker of HoopSeen.
com. “With the people I
met from the school and
the players, I was very
comfortable in Murray
State being the place I
wanted to be.”
NOTE: Verbal commitments are not permanent
decisions. Players can still
choose to sign elsewhere if
they change their minds.
to see him hit again.”
Thursday.
BY RALPH D. RUSSO
Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas —
Across the East Texas
triangle that connects
Austin, College Station
and Houston, most everybody is happy with
their favorite team’s
college football coach
after the first weekend
of the season.
Tom Herman has
Houston Cougars fans
thinking College Football Playoff.
Charlie Strong gave
Texas Longhorns supporters not just a “signature” victory against
HOOPS
Robinson tinkered with the
offensive line, signing veteran
center Ben Jones away from AFC
South rival Houston. After trading
away the top pick, Robinson traded back up to select right tackle
Jack Conklin at No. 8 out of Michigan State.
WHO’S CATCHING — Developing a young quarterback means
giving him better targets for his
passes. Tight end Delanie Walker
led Tennessee with a career-year
with 94 receptions for 1,088
yards. Nobody else caught more
than 36, so Robinson signed Rishard Matthews from Miami and
drafted Tajae Sharpe with the first
pick of the fifth round; both are set
to start. They also signed veteran
Andre Johnson who’s shown this
preseason he still knows how to
catch passes.
LEBEAU IN CHARGE — Tennessee made huge strides last season with Dick LeBeau assisting
defensive coordinator Ray Horton.
Now LeBeau is the coordinator after Horton left for Cleveland after
losing the head coaching job to
Mularkey. A unit that ranked 12th
in yards allowed still has plenty of
room for improvement after being
27th in points allowed. Depth behind the starters has improved.
Johnson was signed to take over
at free safety for Michael Griffin,
who was released in February.
Both starting cornerbacks, Jason
McCourty and Perrish Cox, finally
are healthy and should be together on the field for the first time for
Mularkey in the opener.
PENALTY WATCH — The Titans
ranked second last season in fewest penalties, and nobody in the
NFL was flagged less than Tennessee in the final eight games after
Mularkey became interim head
coach. Determined to keep the
Titans from hurting themselves,
he had officials working practices
since the offseason program.
CONTINUED FROM 1B
WALLOP
CONTINUED FROM 1B
tion full-time a month ago.
Wainwright’s double to
the wall in center field put
the Cardinals in front and
Stephen Piscotty’s tworun double later in the inning gave Wainwright an
early cushion, one he flirted with giving away. Pittsburgh touched him for
two runs in the bottom of
the inning but Wainwright
avoided major damage.
“I hate giving up runs after we score,” Wainwright
said. “That’s driving me
crazy. But what we did do
well there is we held them
to two. We could have let
that inning get away from
us, and we didn’t.”
Jeff Locke came on relief of Kuhl in the third and
the Cardinals quickly went
to work. Kolten Wong’s
RBI single against him
made it 4-2 and Gyorko
opened the fourth with a
long home run down the
left-field line for his 26th
of the year.
Wainwright’s
bloop
to left later in the inning
pushed St. Louis’ lead
to six runs and allowed
Wainwright to leave after
five innings in which he
needed 93 pitches.
“He was at 93 pitches,
and we’re in September,”
Cardinals manager Mike
Matheny said. “The first
two (innings) were stressful. To me, we’ve got a lead
that we think our bullpen
can hold. I guess your
greatest argument (for
leaving him in) is you want
Trainer’s Room
Up Next
Cardinals: Piscotty left
in the fifth inning after
being hit in the wrist with
a pitch though Matheny
said X-rays were negative.
... RHP Mike Leake will return after a bout with the
shingles when he starts on
Wednesday. ... C Brayan
Pena is finally healthy after battling injuries much
of the season but the team
will not use him to catch a
full game.
Pirates: C Francisco
Cervelli was taken out of
the game after the fourth
inning with discomfort in
his left thumb. ... C Elias
Diaz is being evaluated for
cellulitis in his left leg and
will be re-evaluated on
Cardinals: Rookie Luke
Weaver makes his fourth
major league start today.
Weaver is 1-2 with a 3.86
ERA and gave up three
runs over six innings in his
last start against Milwaukee.
Pirates: Veteran Ryan
Vogelsong (3-4, 3.56 ERA)
will make his ninth start of
the season and seventh
since returning from the
DL on Aug. 4 after missing more than two months
while recovering from
facial fractures sustained
when he was hit by a pitch
on May 23. Vogelsong is
3-7 with a 5.75 ERA in 22
appearances against the
Cardinals.
Morning Update
paducahsun.com
Coming up
The Paducah Sun • Tuesday, September 6, 2016 • 3B
THE FINE PRINT
Marinez 0.1 0 0 0 0 1 3 3.21
Suter
0.1 0 0 0 0 0 2 4.00
Rowen
0 3 4 3 0 0 8 27.00
Scahill
1.2 1 0 0 0 0 28 3.18
Rowen pitched to 4 batters in the 8th.
Inherited runners-scored—Marinez
1-0, Scahill 2-2. HBP—Davies (Rizzo),
Scahill (Montero). WP—Hendricks.
T—2:51. A—43,662 (41,900).
Baseball
Today
vs. Pittsburgh
at Pittsburgh
Time: 6:05 p.m.
TV: Fox Sports-South
Today
vs. Milwaukee
at Milwaukee
Time: 7:10 p.m.
Today
vs. Minnesota
at Minneapolis
Time: 7:10 p.m.
On Television
Washington
New York
Miami
Philadelphia
Atlanta
W
80
72
68
61
54
Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
Cincinnati
W
89
72
67
60
57
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Colorado
Arizona
San Diego
W
77
73
66
58
57
Toronto
Boston
Baltimore
New York
Tampa Bay
W
77
76
75
71
58
Cleveland
Detroit
Kansas City
Chicago
Minnesota
W
79
75
71
65
51
Texas
Houston
Seattle
Los Angeles
Oakland
W
82
73
70
62
58
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
57 .584
—
—
66 .522 8½
1
70 .493 12½
5
76 .445
19 11½
84 .391 26½ 19
Central Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
48 .650
—
—
64 .529 16½
—
68 .496
21
4½
77 .438
29 12½
79 .419 31½ 15
West Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
60 .562
—
—
64 .533
4
—
71 .482
11
6½
79 .423
19 14½
80 .416
20 15½
———
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
60 .562
—
—
61 .555
1
—
62 .547
2
—
65 .522 5½
3½
78 .426 18½ 16½
Central Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
57 .581
—
—
62 .547 4½
—
66 .518 8½
4
72 .474 14½ 10
87 .370
29 24½
West Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
56 .594
—
—
64 .533 8½
2
67 .511 11½
5
75 .453 19½ 13
79 .423 23½ 17
TODAY
SOCCER
10:45 a.m. — International friendly: Russia vs.
Ghana (FS2)
1:30 p.m. — UEFA, FIFA 2018 World Cup qualifying:
Sweden vs. Netherlands (ESPN2)
1:30 — UEFA, FIFA 2018 World Cup qualifying: Switzerland vs. Portugal (FS1)
1:30 — UEFA, FIFA 2018 World Cup qualifying: Belarus vs. France (FS2)
7 — CONCACAF, 2018 World Cup qualifying: United
States vs. Trinidad and Tobago (FS1)
9 — CONCACAF, 2018 World Cup qualifying: Mexico
vs. Honduras (FS1)
TENNIS
11 a.m. — U.S. Open: Men’s & Women’s quarterfinals (ESPN)
6 p.m. — U.S. Open: Men’s & Women’s quarterfinals (ESPN)
WNBA BASKETBALL
9 p.m. — Minnesota at Los Angeles (ESPN2)
WEDNESDAY
MLB BASEBALL
2:30 p.m. — L.A. Angels at Oakland (MLB)
6 — St. Louis at Pittsburgh (ESPN)
9 — Texas at Seattle (ESPN)
PARALYMPICS
6 p.m. — 2016 Rio Summer Games: Opening Ceremony (NBCSN)
SOCCER
6:55 p.m. — NWSL: Chicago at FC Kansas City
(FS1)
TENNIS
11 a.m. — U.S. Open: Men’s & Women’s semifinals
(ESPN)
6 p.m. — U.S. Open: Men’s & Women’s semifinals
(ESPN2)
Local Sports
NL scores, schedule
Monday’s Games
Chicago Cubs 7, Milwaukee 2
N.Y. Mets 5, Cincinnati 0
Philadelphia 6, Miami 2
St. Louis 12, Pittsburgh 6
Washington 6, Atlanta 4
Colorado 6, San Francisco 0
San Diego 2, Boston 1
L.A. Dodgers 10, Arizona 2
Today’s Games
Atlanta (Perez 2-2) at Washington (Gonzalez 10-9), 6:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Weaver 1-2) at Pittsburgh (Vogelsong 3-4), 6:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Montero 0-0) at Cincinnati
(Finnegan 8-10), 6:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Morgan 1-9) at Miami (Urena 3-5), 6:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Hammel 14-7) at Milwaukee (Peralta 5-9), 7:10 p.m.
San Francisco (Samardzija 11-9) at Colorado (Anderson 5-5), 7:40 p.m.
Arizona (Miller 2-10) at L.A. Dodgers
(Stripling 3-6), 9:10 p.m.
Boston (Buchholz 5-10) at San Diego
(Clemens 2-4), 9:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
N.Y. Mets at Cincinnati, 11:35 a.m.
Atlanta at Washington, 6:05 p.m.
St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Miami, 6:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Colorado, 7:40 p.m.
Boston at San Diego, 8:10 p.m.
Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.
Cardinals 12, Pirates 6
St. Louis
TODAY HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER — Doubleheaders:
Paducah Tilghman at Ballard Memorial, St. Mary at
McCracken County, Calloway County at Mayfield. Boys:
Lyon County at Caldwell County, Christian County at
Trigg County. Girls: Graves County at Murray, Marshall
County at Hopkinsville, Christian County at Crittenden
County, Caldwell County at Madisonville-North Hopkins, Trigg County at Fort Campbell.
HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL — Hickman County
at Paducah Tilghman, St. Mary at Mayfield, Marshall
County at Community Christian, Carlisle County at
Graves County, Fulton City at Futon County, Crittenden
County at Webster County, Livingston Central at Trigg
County.
WEDNESDAY HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL — Livingston Central
at University Heights.
THURSDAY HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER — Doubleheaders: Mayfield at Ballard Memorial. Boys: Paducah Tilghman at
McCracken County, Graves County at Murray, Caldwell
County at Calloway County, St. Mary at Massac
County, Lyon County at Dawson Springs, Trigg County
at Webster County. Girls: McCracken County at Graves
County, Calloway County at Fort Campbell, Dawson
Springs at Lyon County, Christian County at Caldwell
County, Trigg County at Hopkins County Central.
HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL — Paducah Tilghman
at Calloway County, Community Christian at Ballard
Memorial, Marshall County at Murray, Graves County
at Mayfield, Fulton County at Carlisle County, Union
City, Tenn. at Hickman County, Fulton City at Humboldt, Tenn., Crittenden County at Trigg County, Livingston Central at Union County.
Carpenter 3b
Gyorko ss
Piscotty rf
Garcia 2b
Adams 1b
Molina c
Kelly c
Grichuk cf
Hazelbaker lf
b-Pham ph-lf
Wong 2b-rf
Wainwright p
d-Pena ph
Broxton p
e-Peralta ph
Socolovich p
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
5
5
3
2
6
3
1
4
0
3
4
3
1
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
2
1
0
2
1
1
1
0
0
2
2
1
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
2
0
0
1
0
1
1
3
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
3 .276
1 .244
1 .275
0 .268
1 .249
0 .291
0 1.00
0 .231
0 .244
1 .228
0 .246
0 .189
0 .222
0 --0 .242
0 ---
Totals
40 12 14 12 5 7
Pittsburgh
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Harrison 2b
Hanson 2b
Jaso 1b
Locke p
c-Kang ph
Frazier rf
McCutchen cf
Bastardo p
Rogers 3b
Polanco rf
Hughes p
Rodriguez cf
Marte lf
Freese 3b
Watson p
Cervelli c
Fryer c
Mercer ss
Kuhl p
a-Bell ph-1b
4
1
1
0
1
2
4
0
1
3
0
1
4
4
0
2
2
4
0
3
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
2
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1 .278
0 .250
1 .264
0 .125
1 .242
0 .341
0 .253
0 --1 .063
1 .265
0 .000
0 .249
1 .311
1 .266
0 --1 .264
0 .185
0 .260
0 .063
0 .283
Totals
37 6 12 6 1 8
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
031 420 020 — 12 14 0
020 020 002 — 6 12 2
a-doubled for Kuhl in the 2nd. b-out on
fielder’s choice for Hazelbaker in the 4th.
c-struck out for Locke in the 5th. d-doubled for Wainwright in the 6th. e-out on
sacrifice fly for Broxton in the 8th.
E—Freese (8), Bell (3). LOB—St. Louis
10, Pittsburgh 6. 2B—Carpenter (30), Piscotty (31), Grichuk (22), Wainwright (6),
Pena (1), Kelly (1), Bell (3). 3B—Mercer (3).
L10
6-4
7-3
1-9
2-8
7-3
Str
W-1
W-3
L-4
W-1
L-1
HomeAway
39-26 41-31
38-3334-33
33-3335-37
30-3931-37
22-4432-40
L10
7-3
5-5
3-7
4-6
3-7
Str
W-2
W-2
L-7
L-1
L-2
Home Away
51-2038-28
30-3742-27
34-3433-34
37-3623-41
34-3523-44
L10
6-4
4-6
6-4
5-5
4-6
Str
W-3
L-2
W-1
L-1
W-1
Home Away
45-2732-33
38-3035-34
36-3430-37
25-4333-36
31-3426-46
L10
6-4
5-5
5-5
6-4
4-6
Str
L-1
L-2
W-1
W-2
L-2
Home Away
40-2837-32
41-3035-31
45-2530-37
38-2833-37
34-3924-39
L10
7-3
7-3
5-5
4-6
2-8
Str
L-1
W-2
W-1
L-1
L-2
Home Away
45-2434-33
39-2836-34
42-2529-41
35-3030-42
27-4324-44
L10
7-3
7-3
3-7
8-2
3-7
Str
L-2
W-2
W-1
W-3
L-1
Home Away
47-2235-34
39-2934-35
38-3032-37
32-3330-42
31-3927-40
HR—Gyorko (26), off Locke; Adams (13),
off Locke; McCutchen (20), off Wainwright;
Frazier (2), off Socolovich. RBIs—Gyorko
(51), Piscotty 2 (75), Adams 2 (46), Grichuk
(54), Wong (18), Wainwright 3 (14), Pham
(17), Peralta (21), McCutchen 2 (60), Cervelli (29), Bell 2 (10), Frazier (8). SF—Peralta, Bell. S—Hazelbaker.
Runners left in scoring position—St. Louis 6 (Carpenter 3, Molina, Grichuk 2); Pittsburgh 2 (Jaso, Polanco). RISP—St. Louis 7
for 18; Pittsburgh 2 for 7.
Runners moved up—Wong, McCutchen.
GIDP—Garcia, McCutchen.
DP—St. Louis 1 (Carpenter, Wong, Adams); Pittsburgh 1 (Hanson, Mercer, Bell).
St. Louis
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Wnrht W, 10-8 5 7 4 4 1 5 93 4.61
Broxton
2 2 0 0 0 2 26 4.42
Socolovich 2 3 2 2 0 1 26 3.72
Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Kuhl L, 3-3 2 4 3 3 3 2 58 4.09
Locke
3 5 7 4 2 2 74 5.57
Hughes
2 1 0 0 0 0 18 3.19
Bastardo
1 3 2 2 0 2 21 2.92
Watson
1 1 0 0 0 1 9 2.64
HBP—Kuhl (Carpenter), Locke (Piscotty).
WP—Locke. T—3:25. A—26,297 (38,362).
Cubs 7, Brewers 2
Chicago
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Totals
37 7 10 6 2 4
Milwaukee
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Totals
31 2 6 2 2 10
Chicago
Milwaukee
000 001 240 — 7 10 0
010 000 001 — 2 6 2
La Stella 3b
Pena p
b-Zobrist ph-rf
Bryant rf-3b
Rizzo 1b
Soler lf
1-Szczur pr-lf
Russell ss
Heyward cf
Baez 2b
Montero c
Hendricks p
a-Coghlan ph-rf
Smith p
Buchanan p
Villar 3b-ss
Gennett 2b
Braun lf
Carter 1b
Nieuwenhuis rf
Broxton cf
Arcia ss
Scahill p
Maldonado c
Davies p
Marinez p
Suter p
Rowen p
Perez 3b
3
0
1
5
4
3
1
5
4
4
3
2
2
0
0
4
4
4
3
3
4
3
0
3
2
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
2
0
1
0
2
2
0
2
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0 .283
0 --0 .272
2 .302
0 .292
1 .254
0 .268
0 .245
0 .232
0 .273
0 .206
1 .106
0 .231
0 --0 ---
3 .294
1 .263
1 .307
1 .228
2 .215
0 .240
0 .211
0 .000
1 .191
1 .083
0 .000
0 --0 --0 .265
a-singled, advanced to 2nd for Hendricks in the 7th. b-out on fielder’s choice
for Pena in the 8th.
1-ran for Soler in the 8th.
E—Gennett (10), Arcia (5). LOB—Chicago
7, Milwaukee 4. 2B—Montero (6), Arcia (5).
HR—Carter (33), off Hendricks; Braun (25),
off Buchanan. RBIs—Soler (28), Heyward
(42), Baez (49), Coghlan 3 (23), Braun (75),
Carter (78). CS—Nieuwenhuis (9).
Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 1 (Bryant); Milwaukee 3 (Nieuwenhuis
2, Davies). RISP—Chicago 5 for 8; Milwaukee 0 for 5.
Runners moved up—Rizzo, Maldonado,
Braun. FIDP—Montero. GIDP—Maldonado.
DP—Chicago 1 (La Stella, Rizzo); Milwaukee 1 (Braun, Gennett).
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Hndics W, 14-76 5 1 1 2 6 97 2.07
Pena
1 0 0 0 0 1 10 6.75
Smith
1 0 0 0 0 2 15 3.52
Buchanan
1 1 1 1 0 1 16 9.00
Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Dvis L, 10-7 6.2 6 3 2 2 3 98 4.01
AL scores, schedule
Monday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 5, Toronto 3
Baltimore 7, Tampa Bay 3
Kansas City 11, Minnesota 5
L.A. Angels 10, Oakland 7
Detroit 5, Chicago White Sox 3, 11
innings
Seattle 14, Texas 6
Houston 6, Cleveland 2
Today’s Games
Toronto (Sanchez 13-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Cessa 4-0), 6:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Gallardo 4-7) at Tampa Bay
(Odorizzi 9-5), 6:10 p.m.
Houston (Peacock 0-0) at Cleveland
(Kluber 15-8), 6:10 p.m.
Detroit (Boyd 5-2) at Chicago White
Sox (Gonzalez 2-6), 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Gee 6-7) at Minnesota
(Santana 7-10), 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Nolasco 5-12) at Oakland
(Detwiler 1-3), 9:05 p.m.
Texas (Perez 9-10) at Seattle (Paxton
4-5), 9:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 12:10 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 1:10
p.m.
L.A. Angels at Oakland, 2:35 p.m.
Toronto at N.Y. Yankees, 6:05 p.m.
Houston at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m.
Kansas City at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.
Texas at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.
Royals 11, Twins 5
Kansas City
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Dyson cf
c-Burns ph-cf
Orlando rf
Hosmer 1b
Morales dh
Perez c
Butera c
Gordon lf
Cuthbert 3b
A.Escobar ss
Merrifield 2b
5
1
4
3
3
5
0
5
4
5
4
Totals
3
0
1
2
1
1
0
1
0
1
1
3
0
2
2
1
2
0
2
1
2
1
0
0
1
4
3
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
0
0
1
0
1
0 .254
0 .100
1 .305
0 .273
1 .252
2 .256
0 .261
1 .225
1 .288
1 .269
2 .271
Me.Cabrera lf
Abreu 1b
Morneau dh
Frazier 3b
Avila c
Garcia rf
Saladino 2b
5
4
5
4
5
5
5
Totals
43 3 10 3 2 16
Detroit
Chicago
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Totals
37 5 12 5 3 10
Kansas City
Minnesota
020 030 240 — 11 16 0
102 100 010 — 5 12 1
Dozier 2b
Mauer 1b
Plouffe 3b
Sano dh
Rosario lf-rf
E.Escobar ss
Schafer rf
a-Grossman ph-lf
Centeno c
b-Suzuki ph-c
Buxton cf
5
4
5
4
5
4
3
0
3
1
3
3
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
3
0
1
1
3
0
2
0
1
0
1
4
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
2 .279
1 .273
0 .256
2 .239
0 .267
2 .260
0 .375
0 .269
1 .253
0 .281
2 .222
a-hit by pitch for Schafer in the 7th.
b-grounded out for Centeno in the 7th.
c-out on fielder’s choice for Dyson in the
9th.
E—Centeno (5). LOB—Kansas City 8,
Minnesota 10. 2B—Dyson (11), Perez (26),
Gordon (14), A.Escobar (23), Sano (19), Rosario (17), Schafer (2). HR—Morales (23),
off Berrios; Hosmer (21), off Dean; Dozier
(36), off Kennedy; Dozier (37), off Kennedy; Dozier (38), off Pounders. RBIs—Orlando (32), Hosmer 4 (87), Morales 3 (67),
Perez (59), Gordon (32), A.Escobar (47),
Dozier 4 (91), E.Escobar (34). SB—Dyson
(26). SF—Orlando, Hosmer. S—E.Escobar.
Runners left in scoring position—Kansas
City 5 (Morales, Cuthbert 2, Merrifield 2);
Minnesota 5 (Dozier, Plouffe 2, E.Escobar,
Suzuki). RISP—Kansas City 6 for 13; Minnesota 1 for 9.
Runners moved up—Cuthbert, Gordon.
GIDP—Hosmer, E.Escobar.
DP—Kansas City 1 (A.Escobar, Merrifield, Hosmer); Minnesota 1 (Dozier, E.Escobar, Mauer).
Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Kndy W, 10-9 5.1 9 4 4 2 6 94 3.76
Moylan
0.1 0 0 0 0 1 4 3.53
Flynn H, 2
1 1 0 0 1 0 18 2.42
Pounders
1.1 1 1 1 0 2 21 9.72
Alexander
1 1 0 0 0 1 10 4.11
Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Berrios L, 2-5 5 9 5 5 1 6 95 9.21
Wimmers
1 1 0 0 0 1 14 3.38
Rogers
0.1 2 2 2 0 0 13 3.83
Light
0.2 2 2 2 2 0 25 7.88
Dean
1 2 2 2 1 1 18 7.03
Chargois
1 0 0 0 1 1 15 7.82
Light pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.
Inherited runners-scored—Moylan 2-0,
Flynn 2-0, Pounders 2-0, Light 1-1, Dean
2-2. HBP—Flynn (Grossman).
T—3:24. A—20,992 (39,021).
Tigers 5, White Sox 3
11 innings
Detroit
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Totals
41 5 9 5 3 12
Chicago
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Maybin cf
5
Iglesias ss
5
Mi.Cabrera 1b
5
V.Martinez dh
4
1-Kinsler pr-dh
0
J.Martinez rf
4
Upton lf
4
J.Jones 3b
3
a-Saltalamacchia ph 1
Aybar 2b
0
McCann c
5
Romine 2b-3b
5
Eaton cf
Anderson ss
0
0
2
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
4
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
2 .323
1 .248
0 .316
0 .292
0 .279
2 .317
1 .239
2 .267
1 .186
0 .225
3 .225
0 .229
5 0 0 0 0 4 .276
5 0 2 0 0 1 .287
0
1
1
1
1
3
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
101 000 000 03 — 5 9 0
001 000 100 01 — 3 10 1
Pro basketball
WNBA sschedule
Today’s Games
Phoenix at Atlanta, 6 p.m.
Indiana at San Antonio, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Los Angeles, 9 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Seattle at New York, 6 p.m.
Chicago at Washington, 6 p.m.
Tennis
U.S. Open
At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center; New York; Surface:
Hard-Outdoor; Purse: $46.3 million (Grand
Slam)
Singles
Men Fourth Round
Juan Martin del Potro, Argentina, def.
Dominic Thiem (8), Austria, 6-3, 3-2, retired.
Stan Wawrinka (3), Switzerland, def. Illya
Marchenko, Ukraine, 6-4, 6-1, 6-7 (5), 6-3.
Kei Nishikori (6), Japan, def. Ivo Karlovic
(21), Croatia, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (4).
Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Grigor Dimitrov (22), Bulgaria, 6-1, 6-2, 6-2.
Women Fourth Round
Simona Halep (5), Romania, def. Carla
Suarez Navarro (11), Spain, 6-2, 7-5.
Karolina Pliskova (10), Czech Republic,
def. Venus Williams (6), United States, 4-6,
6-4, 7-6 (3).
Serena Williams (1), United States, def.
Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, 6-2, 6-3.
Doubles
Men Third Round
Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut (1), France, def. Jeremy Chardy, France,
and Sam Groth, Australia, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4.
Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez (8),
Spain, def. Thomaz Bellucci and Marcelo
Demoliner, Brazil, 6-3, 6-3.
Robert Lindstedt, Sweden, and Aisamul-Haq Qureshi, Pakistan, def. Jean-Julien
Rojer, Netherlands, and Horia Tecau (5),
Romania, 6-3, 7-6 (4).
Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez (8),
Spain, def. Thomaz Bellucci and Marcelo
Demoliner, Brazil, 6-3, 6-3.
Jamie Murray, Britain, and Bruno Soares
(4), Brazil, def. Brian Baker, United States,
and Marcus Daniell, New Zealand, 6-3,
7-6 (7).
Women Third Round
Andreja Klepac and Katarina Srebotnik (13), Slovenia, def. Alla Kudryavtseva,
Russia, and Sabine Lisicki, Germany, 7-6
(3), 6-0.
Barbora Krejcikova and Katerina Siniakova (16), Czech Republic, def. Andrea
Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka (4), Czech
Republic, 7-5, 7-5.
Sania Mirza, India, and Barbora Strycova (7), Czech Republic, def. Nicole Gibbs,
United States and Nao Hibino, Japan, 6-4,
7-5.
Golf
Deutsche Bank Championship
At TPC Boston; Norton, Mass.; Yardage:
7,214; Par 71; Purse: $8.5 million
Final
Rory McIlroy $1,530,000 71-67-66-65 — 269
Paul Casey $918,000 66-66-66-73 — 271
Jimmy Walker $578,000 68-64-70-70 — 272
Adam Scott $408,000 67-71-70-65 — 273
Fabian Gomez $310,250 66-71-68-69 — 274
James Hahn $310,250 65-74-66-69 — 274
Patrick Reed $310,250 68-67-70-69 — 274
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THE BEST LITTLE GARAGE AROUND
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Get Ready for Fall Break
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• Jasper Engines and Transmissions
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WE DO IT ALL - MAJOR OR MINOR
2 .294
1 .293
1 .258
2 .218
4 .229
0 .244
1 .260
a-struck out for J.Jones in the 9th.
1-ran for V.Martinez in the 11th.
E—Eaton (5). LOB—Detroit 7, Chicago 9.
2B—Garcia (16). HR—Mi.Cabrera (30), off
Sale; Mi.Cabrera (31), off Sale; Upton (21),
off Beck; Avila (6), off Verlander. RBIs—Mi.
Cabrera 2 (87), Upton 3 (67), Avila (9), Garcia (43), Saladino (34). SB—Frazier (11).
Runners left in scoring position—Detroit
3 (V.Martinez, Romine 2); Chicago 4 (Me.
Cabrera, Frazier, Avila, Saladino). RISP—
Detroit 1 for 3; Chicago 2 for 7.
GIDP—Mi.Cabrera.
DP—Chicago 1 (Anderson, Saladino,
Abreu).
Detroit
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Verlander
7 8 2 2 1 11 116 3.28
Rondon
1 0 0 0 0 0 12 3.46
J.Wilson
1 0 0 0 0 1 11 4.15
A.Wilson W, 2-01 1 0 0 0 2 18 2.95
Rodriguez
1 1 1 1 1 2 23 2.80
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Sale
8 6 2 2 0 8 118 3.07
N.Jones
1 0 0 0 0 3 16 2.52
Robertson
1 0 0 0 0 1 10 3.81
Beck L, 1-1 0.2 2 3 3 3 0 23 6.60
Jennings
0.1 1 0 0 0 0 8 1.82
Inherited runners-scored—Jennings 1-0.
HBP—Sale (Upton). WP—Jennings.
T—3:56. A—18,653 (40,615).
39 11 16 11 5 9
Minnesota
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
We Accept K-Tap
Fleet Accounts Cards
And Extended Warranties
Two Locations to Serve You Better
Boyd’s Auto Service
Draffenville, KY
270-252-9120
Television
4B • Tuesday, September 6, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
TUESDAY DAYTIME - SEPTEMBER 6
( WNPT
P 6 AM
6:30
- Wild Kratts Ready Jet
Å
Go! ’ (EI)
# WSIL 3 (5:00) News 3 News This
Morning (N) Å
Q WDKA 4 Shepherd’s Paid Program
Chapel ’
& WPSD 5 (4:30) Local 6 Today (N) ’
7 AM
7:30
NICK 18 SpongeBob
E!
19 Botched Å
SpongeBob
8:30
Daniel Tiger
Real Life
Raising
Paid Program Andrew
101 Å
Hope ’
Wommack
Today Zelda Williams; Rory Feek. (N) ’ Å
L King
7 KBSI 8 Paid Program Paid Program Nature
Knows
Report
Joyce Meyer James
Creflo DolWGN-A 9 It’s Supernatural!
Robison
lar Å
Wild
Kratts
Ready
Jet
Nature
Cat
Å
Curious
5 WKMU 10
Å
Go! ’ (EI)
George
, KFVS 12 (4:30) The Breakfast Show CBS This Morning (N) ’ Å
Faith Focus
) WQWQ 14 The Brady
Bunch
ION 15 Paid Prog.
Feldick
USA 16 CSI: Crime Scene
8 AM
Nature Cat Å Curious
Daniel Tiger
George
Good Morning America (N) Å
The Breakfast Show (N)
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Judge Faith Judge Faith
’
’
Walker, Texas Ranger “The
Long Haul” Å
Daniel Tiger Daniel Tiger
9 AM
9:30
Sesame
Bob the
Street
Builder ’
Rachael Ray (N) ’ Å
Arthritis
Tai Chi
Pain?
Master!
Today’s Take (N) ’ Å
Judge Mathis (N) ’ Å
Walker, Texas Ranger
“Rampage” ’ Å
Sesame
Peg Plus Cat
Street
’ (EI)
LIVE with Kelly Chris Noth;
Bradley Whitford.
Paid Program Paid Program Matlock Client’s kids want
him convicted.
NUMB3RS “One Hour”
NUMB3RS ’ Å
10 AM
10:30
Dinosaur
Dinosaur
Train
Train
The View (Season Premiere)
(N) ’ Å
Paternity
Corrupt
Court
Crimes ’
Today Rory Feek; Hillsong
United performs.
The People’s Court (N) ’ Å
11 AM
11:30
Diagnosis Murder “Two
Birds With One Sloan”
NUMB3RS ’ Å
The Steve Wilkos Show
The 700 Club ’ Å
’Å
In the Heat of the Night ’ Å In the Heat of the Night
“Odessa” ’ Å
Peg Plus Cat Cat in the Hat Curious
Curious
’ (EI)
George
George
Heartland
Bold/Beau- The Talk ’ Å
News (N)
tiful
Gunsmoke Girl witnesses
Heartland
Paid Program
mom’s murder.
News (N)
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds Å
Walker, Texas Ranger
“Stolen Lullaby” Å
Dinosaur
Dinosaur
Train
Train
The Price Is Right ’ Å
CSI: Crime Scene
NCIS “Switch” ’
NCIS “Family Secret”
NCIS “Ravenous” ’
NCIS “Bait” ’
PAW Patrol
Umizoomi
Bubble
Bubble
Shimmer
PAW Patrol
PAW Patrol
Blaze
Alvinnn!!!
Botched Å
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
The Kardashians
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
Blaze
Mutt
Botched Å
Umizoomi
New Day (N)
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
At This Hour With
Legal View
Teen Mom OG Å
Teen Mom OG Å
Unlocking the Truth ’
Unlocking the Truth ’
(:10) Catfish: The TV Show ’
Dance Moms Å
Dance Moms Å
Dance Moms Å
Dance Moms Å
Dance Moms Å
House of Payne
››› “Coach Carter” (2005, Drama) Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Ri’chard, Rob Brown.
Living Right
Mother Angelica
BET
Balancing
Martin ’
Paid Prog.
EWTN 29 St. Michael Rosary
CNBC 31 (5:00) Squawk Box (N) Å
Dish Nat.
A&E
34 Parking
Parking
35 Charmed ’ Å
FREE 36 Last Man
Last Man
Dog
TNT
Charmed ’ Å
Last Man
FNET 37 Bewitched
Bewitched
FNC 42 (5:00) FOX and Friends (N)
TVL
TLC
44 Paid Prog.
21 DAY FIX
46 Four Weddings Å
Crime Watch Daily ’ Å
Days of our Lives (N) ’ Å
SpongeBob
CNN
26 Paid Prog.
28 Prince
1:30
Hot Bench
Hot Bench
’Å
’Å
In the Heat of the Night
“Fool for Love” Å
Super Why! Thomas &
’ (EI)
Friends
The Young and the Restless
(N) ’ Å
The Big Valley Heath convicted of murder.
Criminal Minds ’
SportsCenter (N) Å
LIFE
1 PM
Divorce
Divorce
Court ’
Court ’
Local 6 Midday (N) ’
ESPN 22 SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
ESPN2 23 (5:00) Mike & Mike (N) (Live) Å
MTV
12:30
Peg Plus Cat Cat in the Hat Curious
Curious
’ (EI)
George
George
The Chew ’ Å
General Hospital (N) ’ Å
CSI: Crime Scene
Botched “Human Dolls”
24 New Day (N)
25 Music Feed ’
12 PM
Super Why! Thomas &
’ (EI)
Friends
Be a MilBe a Millionaire
lionaire
Cops ReCops Reloaded ’
loaded ’
The Doctors ’ Å
Daily Mass - Olam
First Take (N) ’ (Live) Å
Squawk on the Street (N)
Dog
Dog
Dog
Storage
Storage
Rosary
Outside
FABLife Co-host Nicole
“Snooki” Polizzi. Å
Steve Harvey (N) ’ Å
Inside EdiDaytime
tion (N) ’
Jeopardy
Maury (N) ’ Å
In the Heat of the Night “By
Means Most Foul”
Arthur ’ (EI) Nature Cat Å
Let’s Make a Deal ’ Å
The Meredith Vieira Show
’Å
Criminal Minds Å
NCIS “Untouchable” ’
Alvinnn!!!
NFL Live (N) Å
Football
Wolf (N)
CNN Newsroom
Catfish: The TV Show
Dance Moms Å
SpongeBob
Wild ’n Out
Squawk Alley (N)
Fast Money Halftime
Power Lunch (N) Å
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Threshold of Hope (N)
Chaplet
Storage
Storage
Supernatural ’ Å
Bones ’ Å
Last Man
Last Man
700 Club
The 700 Club ’ Å
Gilmore Girls ’ Å
Gilmore Girls ’ Å
Reba ’
Reba ’
Reba ’
Reba ’
The Middle
Jeannie
Jeannie
All/Family
All/Family
Benson ’
B. Miller
S. Spoons
Facts-Life
Facts-Life
Benson ’
Benson ’
Your Health ’
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
America’s Newsroom (N)
Four Weddings Å
Bones ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
Supernatural ’ Å
S. Spoons
Intl. Rosary
Closing Bell (N) Å
Supernatural ’ Å
B. Miller
Wild ’n Out
Dance Moms Å
(:08) ›› “Madea’s Witness Protection” (2012)
The Best of Journey
Storage
CNN Newsroom
Wild ’n Out
Supernatural ’ Å
Benson ’
SpongeBob
The Kardashians
FIFA World Cup 2018 Qualifying
Dance Moms Å
Daily Mass - Olam
Storage
2:30
2016 U.S. Open Tennis Men’s and Women’s Quarterfinals. (N) (Live)
SportCtr
Women of
NCIS “Iced” ’
2 PM
Arthur ’ (EI) Nature Cat Å
Bones ’ Å
The Middle
Happening Now (N)
Outnumbered (N)
Happening Now (N)
The Real Story (N)
Shepard Smith
Griffith
The Andy Griffith Show
Griffith
Bonanza Å
Gunsmoke “Larkin”
Gunsmoke Å
Gunsmoke Å
Playhouse Masters ’
Hoarding: Buried Alive
Hoarding: Buried Alive
48 Hours: Hard Evid.
48 Hours: Hard Evid.
48 Hours: Hard Evid.
Griffith
Griffith
Four Weddings Å
SYFY 47 (5:00) “Heebie Jeebies”
“The Dead 2: India” (2013) Joseph Millson. Å
›› “Warm Bodies” (2013) Nicholas Hoult. Å
FX
49 ›› “Next” (2007) Nicolas Cage. ’ Å
›› “Green Lantern” (2011, Action) Ryan Reynolds. ’ Å
Two Men
››› “Fright Night” (2011) Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell. Å
Two Men
How I Met
How I Met
HGTV 50 Renovation
DSC 51 Beast
Hunters
Hunt Intl
House Hunters Reno
House Hunters Reno
House Hunters Reno
Misfit Garage
Misfit Garage
Misfit Garage
Beat
Paid Prog.
52 Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
GOLF 56 Morning Drive (N) (Live)
Tiny House
Tiny House
Tiny House
J. Meyer
Paid Prog.
Misfit Garage
AMC
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Stooges
SPIKE 57 Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
HIST 58 Modern Marvels “Axes”
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
TBS
Married
AP
59 Married
Married
62 Cats 101 ’ Å
TRV
Tiny House
Tiny House
Tiny House
Misfit Garage
Misfit Garage
Jesse James Blacksmith ’ Å
The Crocodile Hunter
Misfit Garage
King
K-9 Cops ’ Å
How I Met
How I Met
››› “Back to the Future Part II” (1989) Michael J. Fox.
PGA Tour Golf
Ink Master ’ Å
King
Tiny House
›› “Turner & Hooch” (1989) Tom Hanks. Premiere. Å
Morning Drive
Married
Tiny House
›› “Oculus” (2013) Karen Gillan.
How I Met
Two Men
Two Men
››› “Back to the Future Part III”
PGA Tour Golf Deutsche Bank Championship, Final Round.
Ink Master ’ Å
Ink Master ’ Å
Ink Master ’ Å
Ink Master ’ Å
Ink Master ’ Å
Ink Master ’ Å
Milwaukee
Milwaukee
Forged in Fire Å
Forged in Fire “Tabar”
Forged in Fire “Katar”
Forged in Fire Å
Forged in Fire Å
King
King
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy
New Girl
New Girl
Animal Cops Houston
Animal Cops Houston
Pit Bulls and Parolees
Pit Bulls and Parolees
Fatal Attractions Å
Fatal Attractions Å
Feed-Bea.
American Grilled Å
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods Å
Bizarre Foods Å
Teen
Uncle Gra.
Uncle Gra.
Clarence
We Bare
Teen
Gumball
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Trisha’s
Trisha’s
Trisha’s
Pioneer
Pioneer
Chopped Junior
Prince
Love & Hip Hop
63 Paid Prog.
TOON 64 Teen
COM 65 Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Live There
Live There
Feed-Bea.
Feed-Bea.
Feed-Bea.
Clarence
Teen
Teen
Baby Lny.
Baby Lny.
Tom & Jerry
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
(:13) Saturday Night Live ’ Å
How I Met
How I Met
Tosh.0
FOOD 67 Paid Prog.
VH1 99 My Wife
Tai Cheng
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Pioneer
Trisha’s
Trisha’s
Trisha’s
My Wife
Jamie Foxx
Jamie Foxx
Jamie Foxx
Jamie Foxx
Prince
Prince
Prince
Feed-Bea.
Feed-Bea.
Movie
Hit the Floor ’
Chopped Junior
›› “The Honeymooners” (2005) Mike Epps ’
PREMIUM CHANNELS
›› “The Princess Diaries” (2001) ’ Å
HBO
Fly Me
SHO
(5:45) ››› “Ginger & Rosa” ’
››› “Cry-Baby” (1990) ’ Å
(:25) “Springsteen & I”
› “Shutter” (2008) Joshua Jackson.
(:45) ››› “Listen to Me Marlon” (2015) ’
›› “San Andreas” (2015) Dwayne Johnson. ’
››› “Revolutionary Road” (2008) ’ Å
››› “Real Women Have Curves”
›› “Death Warrant” (1990) ’
“Stanford Prison Exp”
TUESDAY EVENING - SEPTEMBER 6
P 3 PM
( WNPT
# WSIL
3:30
Ready Jet
Odd Squad
- Go! ’ (EI)
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
3
The Wendy Williams Show
Q WDKA 4 “Hot Topics” ’
Jeopardy!
The Insider
& WPSD 5 ’ Å
(N) Å
Jerry Springer “Hottie High7 KBSI 8 School Hook-Ups”
Blue Bloods “Nightmares”
WGN-A 9 ’ Å
Ready Jet
Odd Squad
5 WKMU 10 Go! ’ (EI)
RightThisRightThis, KFVS 12 Minute (N)
Minute (N)
The Bill Cunningham Show
) WQWQ 14 ’ Å
ION 15 Criminal Minds Å
16 NCIS “Bloodbath” ’
NICK 18 SpongeBob Loud
E!
19 The Kardashians
USA
4 PM
4:30
Wild Kratts Wild Kratts
Å
Å
The Ellen DeGeneres Show
’Å
Family
Family
Feud ’
Feud ’
Dr. Phil ’ Å
5 PM
5:30
Martha
Speaks
News 3 News
at 5
Name Game
WordGirl
’ (EI)
ABC World
News
Name Game
MTV
LIFE
BET
24 Jake Tapper
25 Wild ’n Out
A&E
TNT
34 The First 48: Gangland
35 Castle “The Dead Pool”
FREE 36 The Middle
FNET 37 All/Family
FNC
TVL
TLC
7 PM
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
NCIS “Hiatus”
Henry
The Kardashians
Henry
The Kardashians
Thunder
WWE SmackDown! (N) ’ (Live) Å
Thunder
E! News (N) Å
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
Chrisley
Chrisley
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
WAGS “New Blood”
SportsCenter (N) Å
WNBA Basketball: Lynx at Sparks
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
(:45) Ridiculousness ’
Dance Moms Å
Dance Moms Å
Payne
Payne
Payne
News
Mass for Servant of God
Ridiculous.
Dance Moms (N) Å
House of Payne
Dance Moms (N) Å
Man vs. Child
Man vs. Child
Payne
One Shot (N)
(:03) One Shot
News
Rosary
Threshold of Hope
Catechism
Shark Tank ’ Å
Mad Money (N)
The Profit “Dilascia”
Shark Tank ’ Å
Married at First Sight
Married
Castle “Knockout” ’
Castle “Rise” ’
Castle “Pretty Dead”
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
›› “Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian”
All/Family
Bunker
Bunker
Facts-Life
Facts-Life
All/Family
(:45) Married at First Sight (N) Å
Castle Å (DVS)
S. Spoons
S. Spoons
The Profit
Castle “Head Case” ’
B. Miller
Greta Van Susteren
The O’Reilly Factor (N)
The Kelly File (N)
Hannity (N)
Griffith
Griffith
Griffith
The Andy Griffith Show
Raymond
Raymond
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Countdown
Counting On (N) Å
Cake Boss (N) Å
HGTV 50 House Hunters Reno
DSC 51 Fast N’ Loud Å
House Hunters Reno
House Hunters Reno
Fixer Upper Å
Hunters
Fast N’ Loud Å
Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
Harley and the Davidsons ’ (Part 1 of 3) Å
52 “Back-Future III”
GOLF 56 PGA Tour Golf
SPIKE 57 Ink Master ’ Å
››› “Back to the Future” (1985) Michael J. Fox. Å
AP
TRV
Castle Å (DVS)
So Raven
So Raven
B. Miller
All/Family
Bunker
Bunker
The O’Reilly Factor
The Kelly File
Raymond
King
King
›› “Darkness Falls” (2003) Chaney Kley. Å
All/Family
King
(:04) Counting On Å
King
(:04) Cake Boss Å
›› “Oculus” (2013, Horror) Karen Gillan. Å
Hunt Intl
Harley and the Davidsons (N) Å
(:07) Atlanta ’ Å
(:14) Atlanta ’ Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
(9:58) Harley and the Davidsons Å
››› “Back to the Future Part II” (1989) Michael J. Fox.
Halt and Catch Fire (N)
Halt and Catch Fire
“Back to the Future”
Learning
Feherty (N)
Golf C’tral
Inside PGA
Inside the PGA Tour
Golf’s Greatest Rounds (N)
Ink Master ’ Å
Ink Master ’ Å
Ink Master “Ink Finale”
Ink Master ’ Å
Ink Master ’ Å
Ink Master (N) Å
Ink Master
Ink Master
Tattoo
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Forged in Fire Å
Forged in Fire (N) ’
Milwaukee
Milwaukee
Milwaukee
Milwaukee
(:03) Forged in Fire ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
62 Fatal Attractions Å
63 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
TOON 64 Gumball
COM 65 Tosh.0
Castle Å (DVS)
The 700 Club ’ Å
(:02) Playhouse Masters
Atlanta ’ Å
Golf Acad.
Mass
Married at First Sight
Griffith
Fixer Upper Å
(:10) Martin ’ Å
Women of
Adventure Capitalists
Special Report
Fixer Upper Å
Wild ’n Out
(:02) Dance Moms
Married at First Sight
The Andy Griffith Show
Raymond
Wild ’n Out
The Profit (N)
››› “Matilda” (1996) Mara Wilson. ’
All/Family
Anderson Cooper 360
Mary-Jane
(:01) Born This Way (N)
The Five (N)
Golf Central (N) (Live)
Nicole
Payne
The First 48: Gangland
B. Miller
Ridiculous.
Payne
The First 48 ’ Å
B. Miller
Ridiculous.
SportsCenter (N) Å
Baseball Tonight (N)
CNN Tonight
Mother Angelica Live
Fast Money (N)
Say Yes
E! News (N) Å
World/Poker
Nicole
Choices
Full House
World/Poker
Erin Burnett OutFront
Challenge
Full House
SportsCenter (N) Å
The Situation Room (N)
Ridiculous.
Nicky
2016 U.S. Open Tennis Men’s and Women’s Quarterfinals. (N) (Live)
The Situation Room (N)
Mary-Jane
Nicky
››› “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” (2014) Chris Evans. Å
TBS
11:30
NCIS “Hiatus”
SpongeBob
› “I, Frankenstein” (2014) Aaron Eckhart. Å
58 Pawn Stars
59 Friends ’
11 PM
Loud
›› “The Craft” (1996) Robin Tunney. Å
SYFY 47 (1:30) ›› “Oculus”
››› “Captain America: The First Avenger” (2011) ’ Å
FX
49 Mike
HIST
10:30
NCIS “Jeopardy” ’
Castle Å (DVS)
AMC
10 PM
Local 6 at
Nightly News
Five (N) ’
Mike &
Modern FamMolly ’
ily ’
Blue Bloods Danny’s son is
severely injured.
World News Nightly Business
Heartland
CBS Evening
News (N)
News
Mama’s
Mama’s
Family
Family
Criminal Minds Å
The Middle
42 Your World W/ Cavuto
44 Gunsmoke Å
46 Four Weddings Å
7:30
Judge Judy Judge Judy
(N)
(N)
Blue Bloods “Higher Education” ’ Å
Wild Kratts Cyberchase
Å
’
Heartland
Access HolNews Now
lywood
How I Met/
How I Met/
Mother
Mother
Criminal Minds Å
Dance Moms Å
26 Dance Moms Å
28 (1:08) ›› “Madea’s Witness Protection” (2012)
With Jesus
EWTN 29 The Friar
CNBC 31 (2:00) Closing Bell (N)
6:30
9/11 Inside the Pentagon
Frontline FBI agent John
America by the Numbers
BBC World Last of the
For the Love of Their
(N) ’ Å
O’Neill. ’ Å
’Å
News ’
Wine
Brother Run. ’ Å
News 3 News Ent. Tonight Bachelor in Paradise (Sea- Bachelor in Paradise: After Mistresses “The Show Must News 3 News (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live
(:37) Nightat 6
son Finale) (N) ’
Paradise Å
Go On” ’ Å
at 10
’Å
line (N)
Family
Family
The Walking Dead “Secrets” The Walking Dead ’
The SimpThe SimpThe SimpFamily Guy The ClevePaid Program
Feud ’
Feud ’
’
sons Å
sons Å
sons Å
’Å
land Show
Local 6 at Six Wheel of
America’s Got Talent The semifinalists perform at the Dolby Better Late Than Never
Local 6 at
(:34) The Tonight Show
Seth Meyers
(N) ’
Fortune ’
Theatre in Los Angeles. (N) Å
“Seoul Brothers” (N) ’
10:00 (N)
Starring Jimmy Fallon
Big Bang
Big Bang
Brooklyn
New Girl
Lucifer A quarterback finds a News at 9 on FOX23 (N)
Mike &
2 Broke
2 Broke
Modern FamTheory
Theory
Nine-Nine
corpse. ’
Molly ’
Girls Å
Girls Å
ily ’
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
›› “Get Smart” (2008) Steve Carell. Agent Maxwell Smart ›› “Get Smart” (2008) Steve Carell. Agent Maxwell Smart How I Met/
How I Met/
battles the KAOS crime syndicate.
battles the KAOS crime syndicate.
Mother
Mother
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
9/11 Inside the Pentagon
Frontline FBI agent John
America by the Numbers
BBC World POTUS
Bluegrass
Connect.,
(N) ’ Å
O’Neill. ’ Å
’Å
News ’
2016 Å
Backroads
Shaw
Heartland
The Middle NCIS The hunt for the British Zoo “Pangaea; Clementine” (Season Finale) Plans arise to Heartland
(:35) The Late Show With
James
News (N)
’Å
spy continues.
stop the Noah Objective. (N) Å
News (N)
Stephen Colbert
Corden
M*A*S*H Å Heartland
The Flash “Flash Back” ’ Å MADtv “Episode Six” (N)
Law & Order: Criminal
Carol Burnett Discovering Heartland
The Twilight
News (N)
’Å
Intent “D.A.W.” Å
Life
News (N)
Zone
Criminal Minds Å
Criminal Minds Å
Criminal Minds Å
Criminal Minds Å
Saving Hope ’
Saving Hope ’
ESPN 22 (11:00) 2016 U.S. Open Tennis Men’s and Women’s Quarterfinals. (N) (Live)
ESPN FC
Around
Interruption SportsCenter (N) Å
ESPN2 23 Qualifying
CNN
6 PM
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Big Bang
Big Bang
Fatal Attractions Å
Fatal Attractions Å
Fatal Attractions Å
Fatal Attractions Å
(:01) Fatal Attractions
Tattoo
Conan Å
Broke Girl
(:02) Fatal Attractions
(:03) Fatal Attractions
(:04) Fatal Attractions
Conan
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Delicious Destinations
Andrew
Andrew
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Andrew
Andrew
Teen
Clarence
Gumball
Powerpuff
Teen
We Bare
Gumball
King of Hill
Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Family Guy
Family Guy
Chicken
Squidbillies
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
The Comedy Central Roast Å
Daily Show
At Midnight
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
FOOD 67 Chopped Junior
VH1 99 Basketball Wives LA ’
Amer. Dad
Chopped Junior
Chopped Junior
Chopped Junior
Chopped Junior (N)
Chopped
Chopped (N)
Chopped
Chopped
Basketball Wives LA ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Hit the Floor ’
Love & Hip Hop
Love & Hip Hop
››› “Friday” (1995, Comedy) Ice Cube. ’
›› “San Andreas” (2015) Dwayne Johnson. ’
Hard Knocks
››› “Spy” (2015) Melissa McCarthy. ’ Å
60 Minutes Sports (N)
FSU
PREMIUM CHANNELS
HBO
“Me and Earl and the Dying Girl”
SHO
“Stanford Prison Exp”
(:45) ›› “National Treasure” (2004) Nicolas Cage. ’ Å
(:05) “Intruders” (2015) Premiere. ’
(:35) ›› “Springsteen & I” (2013)
Inside the NFL (N)
Channel 2
8:00 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
Noon
4:00 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
5:00 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
FSU
Inside the NFL Å
The Road To Recovery
WKCTC Author Series: Celeste
Goodwin
Beth Baker Presentation
Community Billboard
West KY Stars Basketball
REPLAY
Your United Way
L.I.F.E. After Lockup
Community Service Spotlight
KY Cancer Program
The Heart of Collaboration
New Pathways
kNOwMore Nonprofits
7:30 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
8:30 p.m.
9:00 p.m.
9:30 p.m.
Channel 11
8:30 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
9:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
5:30 p.m.
60 Minutes Sports ’
Tot School
Tourism Talk
Reflections
Campus Spotlight
Extraordinary Valor
Your City at Work: Distracted
Driving
Your City at Work: Engineering/
Public Works
PHRC: Community Coming
Together
Your City at Work: Online Safety
City Commission Meeting LIVE
Horoscopes
TUESDAY, SEPT. 6, 2016
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
A partnership will take a turn
that could result in an important development. Follow
your heart and be ready for
an adventure. The changes
will have a remarkable impact on your life.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Use your imagination
when looking for solutions or
dealing with problems that
crop up. Your ability to see
different sides of an issue
will help you come up with
answers that will please others.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Do your best to get along
with the people you encounter, but not at the expense
of doing something that may
jeopardize your position or
your health.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Speak up and collaborate
with the people you feel have
something to contribute.
Socialize, network and offer
solutions about the causes
you feel strongly about.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Someone from your past will
cause an emotional situation to escalate. Don’t try to
evade issues if you want to
avoid a backlash. Work on
self-improvement and offering your very best to those
who need you the most.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Remain cautious when dealing with people who are likely
to take advantage of your
knowledge or skills. Take
time out of your busy schedule to show interest in what
your friends and family members are up to.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
Plan a vacation or a family
gathering. Interacting with
people from different walks
of life will broaden your perspective. Don’t be angered
by those who fudge the
truth. Instead, you can avoid
doing business with them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21): Take part in protests,
fundraisers or anything
that addresses issues you
care about. Participating is
the only way to bring about
change. Your contribution will
be appreciated, and the connections you make will last a
lifetime.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21): Stick close to
home and avoid unnecessary
conversations with people
who don’t share your opinion. Arguing will be tiresome
and could take away time
and energy from the projects
you want to accomplish.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Don’t let the changes
others make influence you.
Stick to your own agenda
and only collaborate with
those who have as much to
offer as you do.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): There will be a fine line
between fiction and truth.
Take your time and make
an honest assessment of
whatever you hear before you
take action.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20): Look into an investment
that allows you to use your
skills and put time and money into something you love
doing. Refuse to let someone’s doubts hold you back
or stifle your plans.
paducahsun.com
Variety
The Paducah Sun • Tuesday, September 6, 2016 • 5B
BEETLE BAILEY
DENNIS THE MENACE
BLONDIE
HI & LOIS
BABY BLUES
BC
CURTIS
WIZARD OF ID
ZITS
DILBERT
Crossword
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
GARFIELD
FORT KNOX
PICKLES
ACROSS
1 Skatepark feature
5 Tuxedo part
9 Flew the coop
13 Old Voice of
America
overseer: Abbr.
14 Dislike intensely
15 Twisted shape
16 Without a care in
the world
18 Olympics
segment
19 Dipped chip
20 Vatican City is
one
22 Sweetie, in
dialect
23 Clove crusher
27 She, in São
Paulo
28 “I think,” in chats
29 Pointy hat wearer
30 CIA relative
31 Prefix meaning
“ten”
33 Fictional visitors
from space
35 Surprise victory
37 Big band venue
41 U.S.-Canada
defense system
44 Quite a long while
45 Buckwheat
noodle of Japan
49 Tuna at a sushi
bar
50 Okinawa okay
53 Fr. holy woman
55 Hi-__ image
56 Deceptive
measure
59 Courtroom VIPs
60 Frozen
convenience
store offering
61 Funny Cheri
63 Solitary
64 Log-on needs ...
and, literally, what
the ends of 16-,
23-, 37- and 56Across can be
67 Gung-ho, as a
fan
68 Cuatro y cuatro
69 __ Cong
70 Rare bills
71 “That was a close
one!”
72 Odds partner
DOWN
1 Like some tuxedo
shirts
2 Usually
3 Hand-held
cleaner, briefly
4 Summit-ending
agreement
5 TV channels 2 to
13
6 Place for a ring
7 Iron alloy
8 Like the bikini in
a 1960 #1 hit
9 Burton of “Roots”
10 Gridiron squads
11 Delicate handling
12 Extension on an
unformatted
document file
15 Of assistance
17 It’s said that he
said, “I never
said most of the
things I said”
21 25% of M
24 “Absolutely!”
25 Campus mil.
group
26 Won at musical
chairs
32 Toothpasteendorsing gp.
34 “__ what I
mean?”
36 Start of a
sequence ending
in “thx”
38 Stuck (to)
39 Watering aid
40 Feed the kitty
41 “Stillmatic” rapper
42 Eponymous
electrical current
principle
43 1970 John
Wayne film
46 Call for pizza,
say
47 Like Dumbledore
and Santa Claus
48 Lends a hand
51 Nile snake
52 Summer treat
54 It used to be
plenty
57 Actress Mila
58 Arrive at
62 “Slithy” thing in
“Jabberwocky”
63 Works at a
museum
65 One called Miss
66 Sty mother
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
[email protected]
By Janice Luttrell
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
09/06/16
09/06/16
A&E
6B • Tuesday, September 6, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
Movies: Highlights from September to November
BY LINDSEY BAHR
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — There’s
something for everyone in
movie theaters this fall. The
calendar is jam-packed with
romance, spectacle and jawdropping true life stories.
Some of our most familiar
franchises take bold leaps into
undiscovered areas of their
universes: Marvel side-steps
into the metaphysical with the
Benedict
Cumberbatch-led
“Doctor Strange” (Nov. 4) and
J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter
world gets new life in “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find
Them” (Nov. 18).
A monthly rundown of fall
highlights:
September
■
“Sully” (Sept. 9) — Direc-
tor Clint Eastwood takes audiences behind the scenes
of the investigation around
the Miracle on the Hudson,
with Tom Hanks as Capt.
Chesley Sullenberger.
■ “The Magnificent Seven”
(Sept. 23) — Denzel Washington and Chris Pratt head
to the old West in Antoine
Fuqua’s remake of the John
Sturges film, itself a remake
of “Seven Samurai.”
■ “Deepwater Horizon”
(Sept. 30) — Discover the
true story of what happened
to the men and women on
the oil rig that caused the
catastrophic Gulf of Mexico
oil spill. Mark Wahlberg, Kurt
Russell and Gina Rodriguez
star.
■ “American Honey” (Sept.
30) — Go on an atmospheric
road trip through the Midwest with some drifting
teens, including a revelatory
Shia LaBeouf.
October
■ “The Birth of a Nation”
(Oct. 7) — Controversy surrounding writer, director and
star Nate Parker aside, his
film tells the fascinating
story of Nat Turner’s 1831
slave rebellion.
■ “The Girl on the Train”
(Oct. 7) — Emily Blunt stars
in this adaptation of Paula
Hawkins’ best-selling thriller
about a divorced woman who
becomes entangled in the
mysterious disappearance
of a woman she’d watched
from afar.
■ “The Accountant” (Oct.
14) — Who said accounting
was boring? A math whiz
with some dangerous clients
gets in over his head in the
new Gavin O’Connor thriller.
Ben Affleck, Anna Kendrick
and J.K. Simmons star.
■ “Moonlight” (Oct. 21)
— Director Barry Jenkins
tells a lyrical coming of age
story set in the underbelly of
Miami’s drug scene with the
help of Naomie Harris and
Janelle Monae.
■ “Inferno” (Oct. 28) —
Tom Hanks reprises his role
as symbologist Robert Langdon in the Dan Brown series.
November
■ “Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk” (Nov. 11) — A
young Iraq veteran returns
home for a victory tour in
Ang Lee’s adaptation of Ben
Fountain’s acclaimed novel.
■ “Arrival” (Nov. 11) —
Amy Adams and Jeremy
Renner star in director Denis
Villeneuve’s mind-bendingly
intelligent alien encounter
drama.
■ “Manchester by the Sea”
(Nov. 18) — Kenneth Lonergan spins a poetic tale of
family and tragedy in a film
that’s been pegged as an
Oscar contender since January. Casey Affleck, Michelle
Williams and Kyle Chandler
star.
■ “Moana” (Nov. 23) —
Disney Animation takes us
back thousands of years to
the South Pacific for a story
about young woman who
sets sail for a fabled island.
Dwayne Johnson voices a
demigod, of course.
Dear Annie
Reader’s girlfriend
has showy friends
Dear Annie: I recently started seeing this
girl — “Lisa.” We met
through a mutual friend
— who turned out to be
pretty much our only
mutual friend. Our social circles couldn’t be
more different. A lot of
her friends are 20-somethings who don’t have
to work because their
parents are still supporting them. They’re into
partying, staying up all
night, taking drugs that
enable them to stay up
all night, etc. I haven’t
really been able to click
with any of them, even
the guy friends. They
don’t have much to talk
about except for whatever bar they’re checking
out that night.
Sometimes I meet up
with them straight from
work, still in my office
clothes, and they make
snide comments. They
wear expensive clothes
and name-drop designers as if I’m supposed
to be impressed, but I
don’t know or care what
they’re talking about.
Lisa is pretty much the
only one in that group
who has a job, and she
doesn’t do drugs or even
drink much, but she enjoys going out. When
I’ve tentatively brought
up some of these traits to
her, she says she thinks
her friends are funny.
She admits some of
them can be a little rude
at times, but she always
insists “they mean well.”
My friends all work
and, for the most part,
would prefer a movie
night
at
someone’s
house to a club. (I’m the
same way, although I
like going out occasionally.) They’re a down-toearth group.
I cringe at the thought
of introducing my group
of friends to Lisa’s. It
would be like oil and water. What do you think?
Could it still work?
— Apprehensive
Dear
Apprehensive: Self-help guru
Jim Rohn has made
the claim that we are
the average of the
five people we spend
the most time with.
Though that might
not be a scientific
fact, the essence of
the statement is true.
The company we
keep is an expression
of our values.
If you don’t like
this girl’s friends,
then my guess is
that when you get to
know her better, you
won’t like her. Even
if you find you really do like her, there
will most likely be
problems, because
it’s important you
like the friends of the
person you’re dating. If you don’t like
them, you’ll come
to resent it whenever she spends time
with them. You’ll be
unhappy; she’ll be
unhappy. That’s not
the stuff of a healthy,
harmonious
relationship.
Consider
moving on.
Dear Annie: I belong
to a social collectors club
that meets and has open
houses throughout the
year. We have potluck
luncheons at all of our
meetings. One of our
members always gets in
line first and piles his
plate high with portions
that are two or three
times larger than normal. He gulps down his
food and gets back in
line for seconds before
the complete group has
been through the line.
Usually, he is the last
one in line and finishes
whatever is left. We are
all financially comfortable, so money to buy
food is not an issue. Over
the past several years,
we have tried to speak
with him a few times
about not getting in line
for seconds until everyone has gone through
the line once. Everyone
is talking about this behind his back. We’re
worried because the holidays are coming up and
we will have lots of open
houses.
We would appreciate any suggestions you
have to stop his behavior.
— Not a Buffet
Dear Not a Buffet:
This man is treating
your potlucks more
like a high-school
cafeteria (and he’s
eating like someone
with the metabolism of a teenager).
You might consider
making a general announcement at the
start of the event,
asking the attendees to please refrain
from having seconds
until everyone has
had a chance to get a
plate and begin eating. If he still tries
to go for it, people
might feel more comfortable
stopping
him if the ground
rules were blatantly
laid out just a few
minutes prior. Good
luck.
Send your questions
for Annie Lane to [email protected].
Associated Press
Theo Padnos poses Aug. 30 at the family’s house in remote Reading, Vt. In 2012, Padnos, a journalist, slipped into Syria to cover its unfolding civil war and was promptly kidnapped by members of an
al-Qaida branch. Padnos retraces his journey in “Theo Who Lived,” a new documentary screening
Sept. 30 in Cambridge, Mass.
Padnos recounts years as Syrian prisoner
BY PHILIP MARCELO
Associated Press
BOSTON — In 2012, freelance
journalist Theo Padnos slipped
into Syria to cover its unfolding
civil war and was promptly kidnapped by members of an al-Qaida branch.
Convinced he was a CIA agent
because he spoke Arabic, the
group held the Massachusetts native for nearly two years before releasing him in August 2014.
Now, Padnos is retracing his
journey in “Theo Who Lived,” a
documentary being screened Sept.
30 in Cambridge. Its theatrical
premiere is in New York City on
Oct. 7, followed by a wider release.
Padnos, 47, who has been living
in Paris and Vermont, tells the Associated Press he’s grateful to have
survived.
The ordeal not only changed his
outlook on life but also gave him
perspective on the Syrian conflict
that he feels is important to share.
Padnos is working on a nonfiction book, a play and a novel
drawing on his experience. He
wrote about his captivity for the
New York Times Magazine shortly
after his release and is trying to
continue writing about the region
as a journalist.
“I had a real spiritual voyage,
which was terrifying for me and
my family at the time,” Padnos
said from his family’s vacation
home in Vermont. “But looking
back, this is what life gave me and
I’d like to take what I learned and
turn it into some positive benefit.”
The film follows Padnos as he
returns to places in Turkey and
Israel that figured prominently in
his 22-month capture. The film
crew never set foot in Syria. Pad-
“Looking back, this is what life gave me
and I’d like to take what I learned and turn
it into some positive benefit.”
Theo Padnos
nos reflects on his captivity on sets
emulating his tiny prison cell and
the room he was subjected to torture and beatings.
Along the Turkey-Syria border,
he recalls the moment when his
travelling companions instruct
him to dash across the field and
hop the razor wire fence separating them from Syria.
It’s a moment Padnos says he’d
replay in his mind for months after.
The trio of men had claimed
they were providing supplies to
the Free Syrian Army and offered
to take him across the border with
them. But they were actually affiliated with al-Qaida. They staged a
fake interview, beat him and took
him hostage shortly after crossing
the border.
“This is where I threw my life
away. It’s like a precipice that
I walked up to and I actually
jumped,” Padnos says in the film.
“Now I’m back in a safe place and
I’m thinking why did I ever jump?”
Padnos also details a series of
failed escapes, including one in
which cellmate and American
photojournalist Matthew Schrier
managed to sneak out through a
narrow prison window but Padnos could not.
Padnos’ mother, Nancy Curtis,
who is interviewed in the documentary, says she still has mixed
emotions about her son’s release.
During the ordeal, she became
close to the parents of other
Americans kidnapped by extremists overseas. Many of them were
not as fortunate as her family, she
says.
Curtis and other family members, working with the U.S. and
Qatari governments, successfully
arranged for Padnos’ release just
days after the Islamic State beheaded New Hampshire journalist James Foley in a video. The
family maintains that no ransom
was paid.
“I always clung to the hope that
he’d come home,” Curtis said.
“But I also don’t feel great joy and
happiness. Probably anyone who
has had a solider in the war who
came home but knows others that
didn’t have similar emotions.”
Director David Schisgall says
Padnos’ story is a rare eyewitness account of life inside a jihadi
group by an outsider with a deep
understanding of the region’s language and culture.
Having spent years prior studying Arabic and Islam in Yemen
and Syria, Padnos was able to
build trust and friendships with
some of his captors.
Near the end of his captivity, he
was given greater freedoms and
even travelled personally with
the then-high commander of alNusra Front, an al-Qaida affiliate
in Syria.
Beach Boys’ Love talks encounter with Manson
Associated Press
Beach Boys singer
Mike Love has detailed
the band’s brief relationship with cult leader Charles Manson in
the late 1960s in a new
memoir.
People magazine re-
ports Love writes that
Manson and his followers moved in with bandmate Dennis Wilson in
1968, a little more than
a year before Manson’s
cult killed seven people,
including actress Sharon Tate.
Love recalls being
at the house with another Beach Boy, Bruce
Johnston, when Manson handed out LSD
and was “orchestrating
sex partners” for some
of his female followers. Love says he tried
to bow out of the situation and went to take
a shower, but was confronted by Manson, who
Love says told him, “you
can’t leave the group.”
Love’s memoir, “Good
Vibrations,” is set for release later the month.
Newspapers in Education
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Tuesday, September 6, 2016 • 7B
Next Week:
A Mini Page
Hero!
Issue 36, 2016
Founded by Betty Debnam
Curious George facts
Curious
George
Turns 75!
• When “Curious George” was
published in 1941, the king of England
was George VI. The monkey in the story
was called Zozo in England to avoid
offending the king.
• The Man With
the Yellow Hat is the
only other recurring
character in the
Curious George
books. He’s never
called by a name in
the original stories,
but in the movie, he’s
named Ted.
• Boston Children’s
Hospital requested
a story that would
prepare kids for a hospital visit, so the
Reys wrote “Curious George Goes to the
Hospital.”
• “Curious George Gets a Medal”
was inspired in the 1950s by two mice
who were sent into space to study the
effects of weightlessness.
• A museum exhibit called “Let’s Get
Curious!” has toured children’s museums
since 2007.
Mini Fact:
There are
more than
75 million
Curious
George
books in print
worldwide.
images courtesy Houghton Mifflin
Are you a fan of Curious George and his
wild adventures? You might be surprised to
learn that Curious George turns 75 years old
this year! The Mini Page learns more about
the funny little monkey and his creators, H.A.
Rey and Margret Rey.
A French monkey
Hans Augusto Rey was born in Hamburg,
Germany, in 1898. He lived near a zoo and
loved animals and drawing as a child.
Margarete Elisabeth Waldstein was also
born in Hamburg, in 1906. She was also an
artist. Hans and Margret, as she was known,
met in 1935 in Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil,
where Hans was
selling bathtubs in his
family’s business.
They married
in 1935 in Brazil
Margret and Hans Rey
and moved to Paris,
where they worked on art projects together.
Hans’ first book, “Cecily G. and the Nine
Monkeys,” was published in 1939. Hans
and Margret thought one of the characters,
Curious George, deserved his own story. They
started to work on a book.
Trouble in Europe
Before the Reys’ book could be published,
political events in Europe forced them, both
Jews from Germany, to flee Paris. They
took off on two bikes just days before the
Nazis captured the city. They carried only
the essential items: warm coats, food and
five book manuscripts, including “Curious
George.”
The Reys rode their bikes all the way to
the French border with Spain. After selling the
bikes, they took a train to Lisbon, Portugal, and
eventually made their way to New York City.
George’s first book
In 1941, Houghton Mifflin publishing
company released
the first “Curious
George” book. The
Reys wrote seven
stories about Curious
George. More books
were released in the
1980s, and a series
of books called the
New Adventures
continues today.
Modern fun
with George
Resources
In the 1941 book,
Curious George comes
home with the Man in
the Yellow Hat.
Today, “Curious
George” appears
on television, and
the monkey has starred in three movies.
George’s adventures have been translated into
many languages, including Japanese, French,
Afrikaans, Portuguese, Swedish, German,
Chinese, Danish and Norwegian. The monkey
even has six apps for mobile phones and
tablets.
On the Web:
• CuriousGeorge.com
• pbskids.org/curiousgeorge/games/#1
• houghtonmifflinbooks.com/features/
cgsite/
At the library:
• “The Journey That Saved Curious
George: The True Wartime Escape of
Margret and H.A. Rey” by Louise Borden
The Mini Page® © 2016 Universal Uclick
Try ’n’ Find
Mini Jokes
Words that remind us of Curious George are hidden in this
puzzle. Some words are hidden backward or diagonally,
and some letters are used twice. See if you can find:
ADVENTURES, APPS,
BIKES, BIRTHDAY,
BOOK, BRAZIL,
CURIOUS, GEORGE,
HAMBURG, HANS, HAT,
KING, LANGUAGES,
MARGRET, MONKEY,
MOVIES, NAZIS, PARIS,
REY, YELLOW.
F
K
M
O
V
I
E
S
E
N
S
E
G
A
U
G
N
A
L
Y
S
E
Y
G
N
I
K
I
A
T
I
G
R
O
L
P
M
D
A
S
R
R
Q
U
H
I
H
Y
Y
P
A
O
O
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George: How do
monkeys go
down the stairs?
Gina: They slide down the banana-ster!
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Eco Note
In July, African
conservationists began moving up
to 500 elephants from several parts
of the continent to a Malawi wildlife
reserve, where they hope to protect the
pachyderms from being poached into
extinction. The elephants are tranquilized
with darts fired from helicopters, then
trucked to the Nkhotakota Wildlife
Reserve.
adapted with permission from Earthweek.com
You’ll need:
• Cooking spray
• 4 hot dogs, cut crosswise into 1-inch
pieces
• 1 yellow bell pepper, seeded and cut into
1-inch pieces
• 1 medium zucchini, cut
into 1-inch pieces
• 12 pieces spaghetti,
uncooked
• salt and ground black pepper
• 1 cup pasta sauce
What to do:
1. Coat grill pan or griddle with cooking spray and preheat over medium-high heat.
2. Skewer alternating pieces of hot dog, bell pepper and zucchini onto each piece of spaghetti.
Season with salt and pepper. Brush some sauce over the hot dogs and vegetables.
3. Warm the remaining sauce in a small saucepan.
4. Cook kebabs on pan for 3 to 5 minutes, turning frequently. Serve with remaining sauce.
Adapted from “The Robin Takes 5 Cookbook for Busy Families” with permission from Andrews McMeel Publishing (andrewsmcmeel.com).
Puzzling
Unscramble the words below that remind us of favorite books.
etnuavder
yerymst
urhmo
ailsnam
Thank You
The Mini Page® © 2016 Universal Uclick
Spaghetti-Hot Dog Kebabs
* You’ll need an adult’s help with this recipe.
Cook’s Corner
The Mini Page thanks
Karen Walsh with HMH Books for
Young Readers for help with this issue.
Teachers:
For standards-based activities to
accompany this feature, visit:
bbs.amuniversal.com/teaching_guides.html
Answers: adventure, mystery, humor, animals.
Sports
8B • Tuesday, September 6, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
NASCAR needs new crop of superstars
BY JENNA FRYER
Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Jeff
Gordon is mostly retired and
Tony Stewart is almost out the
door. Now Dale Earnhardt Jr. is
sidelined for the rest of the year,
exposing NASCAR’s glaring
need for new stars to captivate
the audience.
The three big names who
have moved the needle for
NASCAR the past two decades
have a combined seven championships, 168 career Cup wins
and five Daytona 500 victories.
More important, they are the
household names for NASCAR,
the ones who move the needle
and make people pay attention.
But Gordon called last year
his last, only to be called back to
the race car in late July when a
concussion knocked Earnhardt
out for the season. Stewart,
meanwhile, has just 13 races left
in his NASCAR driving career.
He was in vintage form Sunday night at Darlington Raceway, where he seemed to intentionally wreck Brian Scott in
a move that earned him a postrace sit-down with NASCAR’s
bigwigs. Stewart’s response to
the incident? A wry smile and
denial of culpability.
NASCAR will argue the sport
is bigger than one, two or three
personalities, and that the stable
is full of young talent to carry
stock car racing deep into the future. There’s some truth to that
and it stretches beyond Kyle
Busch and Joey Logano.
Kyle Larson is a week removed from his first Cup victory, a win that earned him a
berth in NASCAR’s playoffs,
and rookie Chase Elliott is a
week away from securing his
spot in the 10-race championship series. Austin Dillon could
also make the Chase for the
championship in next week’s
regular-season finale, as could
Chris Buescher, last year’s Xfinity Series champion who used a
win at rain-shortened Pocono to
slide into title contention.
Ryan Blaney won’t make the
Chase, but the 22-year-old has
been competitive and part of a
new generation of drivers that
NASCAR will have to rely upon
once its superstars are in street
clothes.
Associated Press
Chase Elliott (right) talks with Kasey Kahne in the garage
during Saturday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup practice at Darlington
Raceway.
The problem, though, is that fall in love with them, then what
none of these new faces are the does it matter?
Labor Day weekend has been
complete package. They seem
fun on Snapchat and other celebrated the last two years in
forms of social media, but put NASCAR as a throwback to its
them in a firesuit with a live tele- earlier days, when the racing
vision camera and all the sparkle was rougher and the men were
is sucked right out of their per- tougher and drivers didn’t hide
sonalities.
from fans or media in million
There are plenty of drivers dollar motorhomes. They didn’t
with the talent of Erik Jones, complain about packed schedWilliam Byron or Daniel Suarez, ules, crowded garages or too
but if they can’t make a fan base many interview requests.
Watt will play Sunday in Texans’ opener
Associated Press
HOUSTON — J.J. Watt
will play in the Houston
Texans’ season opener
against the Chicago Bears
on Sunday.
Watt returned to practice Monday for the first
time since back surgery in
July. Right tackle Derek
Newton also was back after sitting out since injuring his hamstring on the
first day of training camp.
Coach Bill O’Brien
said both will play in the
opener.
“It was good to have
them back,” O’Brien said.
“Both guys were in there
working with their teammates. It’s always good to
have your team as close to
full strength as possible.”
Watt missed all of
training camp and the
Texans’ four preseason
games after surgery to
repair a herniated disk in
his back.
The Texans activated
him from the physically
unable to perform list on
Saturday, and the team
announced that he passed
his physical on Sunday.
Watt, the NFL’s Defensive Player of the Year
in three of the past four
seasons, hasn’t missed a
game in his five-year career. The defensive end
also sat out the entire preseason in 2012 because
of an elbow injury and
returned for the season
opener.
The Texans practiced
in full pads on Monday.
O’Brien didn’t provide
many details on what he
saw from Watt and Newton, but they were “working well.” He said there
are a few things he’ll be
looking for from them in
practice this week.
“I think with anybody
that comes off of being
out for a while, the first
thing you want to look at
is their level of conditioning ... . I think that’s the
big thing” he said. “From
there, it’s just about how
are they reacting to whatever their injury was, how
is that playing out in practice?”
Wentz named Eagles’ starting QB
Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA
—
The Carson Wentz Era is
now for the Philadelphia
Eagles.
The No. 2 overall draft
pick will start Week 1
against the Cleveland
Browns despite missing
the final three preseason
games after injuring his
ribs in the opener.
“I’m very confident
and I’m very excited to
get this opportunity,”
Wentz said Monday.
Coach Doug Pederson
made the announcement two days after the
Eagles traded Sam Bradford to the Vikings for a
2017 first-round pick
and a 2018 conditional
fourth-round pick.
“Everybody feels like
this kid is ready to go,”
Pederson said. “We
drafted him to take on
the reins. It’s something
now that we’re prepared
to do. He’s such a special
guy. This stage is not too
big for him.”
The Eagles traded up
twice in the draft to select Wentz second overall. They recovered some
of the draft picks they
lost by dealing Bradford
to the desperate Vikings,
who lost Teddy Bridgewater for at least the
2016 season following a
severe knee injury.
“It was right for this
football team,” Pederson
First
First Kentucky
Kentucky Bank
Bank
Farmers
Bank Library
& Trust of Marion/
Fulton Public
Selma
KY of Marion
Farmers Bank & Trust
Technical
Technical Welding
Welding Inspection,
Inspection, Inc.
Inc.
Conrads
Conrads Food
Food Store
Store
Peck
Gream Commission
Warren, Inc.
Lake Flannery
Barkley Tourist
Dairyman’s
Supply
Co.
Peck Flannery Gream Warren, Inc.
Community
Community Foundation
Foundation of
ofWest
West
Kentucky,Inc.
Inc.
Kentucky,
Beltline Electric
Hope Clinic
They called everything like it
was and fear of sponsor backlash didn’t stifle many personalities.
So it was fitting to see Smoke
mete out his own justice on Sunday, and to hear Kevin Harvick
succicitly blast his crew after yet
another race was lost in the pits.
Across the border, on a road
course in Canada, two teenagers waged a furious drag race to
the checkered flag with a bid in
NASCAR’s playoffs on the line
for Cole Custer.
It’s not that NASCAR needs
the drama, the theatrics, the
fisticuffs, to be successful. It’s
just that people need a reason
to care, and listening to a driver
reel off a list of sponsors between praising downforce and
tire wear isn’t the sexiest sell.
NASCAR needs new superstars, and NASCAR needs them
to be engaging, entertaining and
excited to be part of the show.
Somehow, that message needs
to be conveyed to these young
drivers before the fan base leaves
with Gordon, Stewart and all the
other stars from that romantic
time when NASCAR was fun.
said of the blockbuster
trade. “It’s something
that we believe in. I believe in. This is why we
drafted (Wentz). Would
an ideal situation be
later than sooner? Sure.
But right now, where
we are, we’ve got a good
football team around
him. All the pieces are
here for him to be successful and us to win
some games.”
Chase Daniel, who
signed a three-year, $21
million contract in the
offseason, remains the
backup.
“If I were Chase, I’d be
disappointed,” Pederson
said. “But he’s the ultimate team player.”
Hampton InnNursing
& Suites
McCracken
&
David
K. SandersCenter
CPA PLLC
Rehabilitation
Hampton
Inn & Home
Suites
Gilbert Funeral
Lynx
PhelpsServices
Farm & Home Service
Life
Care
Center
LaCenter
River Valley
AG of
Credit
Gilbert
Funeral
Home
The Blind Place, LLC
Phelps
& Home Service
Doe’s Farm
Eat Place
River Valley AG Credit
Dairymans Supply
The Blind Place
Nancy Barnes, Attorney at Law
Hope Clinic
Sherwin Williams - Paducah
Cadiz Family Restaurant
Western Rivers Corporation
FBT Environmental Services
Red Lobster of Paducah
Rhew Hendley Florist/Courtyard East Antiques
Pettus - Rowland Funeral Home
For information on how to support NIE call Amanda Breedlove @ 270.575.8764
575.8704
Classified
9B
The Paducah Sun | Tuesday, September 6, 2016 | paducahsun.com
GENERAL HELP
0232
7R3ODFH$Q$G
is currently
accepting
applications
Is currently
accepting applications
for for
is currently accepting applications for:
575-8700
or1-800-599-1771
outside McCracken Co.
Email: [email protected]
FULL-TIME OFFICE DELIVERY AGENT
Duties
will include
delivery
newspaper
The Paducah
Sun currently
has aoffull-time
positionroutes,
availablemaking
for an
of new
delivery
of delivery
missedofpapers
of
Office
Delivery
Agent.tapes,
Duties delivery
will include
newspaper
routes,
of new
delivery tapes,
delivery
missedand
papers
of
homemaking
delivery
subscribers,
assist
withof kiosk
door
home delivery
subscribers,
assist with kiosk
and provided.
door to door sales.
to door
sales. Company
vehicle
Company vehicle provided.
Applications
maybebepicked
picked
Applications may
up up
Monday
through
a.m.
4 p.m.
Monday
through Friday,
Friday, 8 8a.m.
to 4top.m.
at at
The
Paducah
Sun
The Paducah Sun
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Avenue
408Kentucky
Kentucky Avenue
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Kentucky
Paducah, Kentucky
For more information
contact
Jason
Hall at 270-575-8710
No 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.
'HDGOLQHV
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&/$66,),('$'5$7(6
2
3
4
5
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Days Days Days Days Days Days
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
POLICY
On all personal
and happy ads,
The Paducah Sun
reserves the right
to divulge the
name of the party
placing the ad.
Also, we will no
longer put any age
on happy birthday
ads.
Classified
Advertising
Dept.
270-575-8700
MONDAY-FRIDAY
8:00AM TO 4:30PM
OR EMAIL:
classifieds@
paducahsun.com
In-Column Deadlines
Sunday-12PM Friday
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Tuesday-Saturday
10AM Previous Day
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YOUR AD
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Call about our
30 day specials!
Advertisers are requested to check
the first insertion of
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. CHECK
YOUR AD carefully and notify The
Classified Advertising Department
during business
hours Monday
through Friday
8:00AM - 5:30 PM
in case of an error.
270-575-8700
FREE PALLETS
The Paducah Sun
is pleased to offer
free wood pallets
to the community.
They may be
picked up daily
while supplies last
in the alley behind
The Paducah Sun
building.
SPECIAL NOTICE
END ROLLS FOR
SALE
The Paducah Sun
has newspaper
end rolls available
for sale while
supplies last at our
office located at
408 Kentucky Ave.,
Paducah, KY, from
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through
Friday. Depending
on size, large rolls
are priced from $3
to $6 and half rolls
are priced from $2
to $4. There is no
charge to
non-profits or
teachers with
school ID.
LOST
0142
LOST YOUR DOG??
Check your local
Humane Society
270-443-5923
GARAGE /ESTATE
SALES
GARAGE/ESTATE
0151
SALES
Garage Sale
SPECIAL
Single Family
5 lines / 3 days
270-575-8700
EMPLOYMENT
0204
ADMINISTRATIVE
0232
GENERAL HELP
ACCEPTING
applications for
local route delivery,
Class A CDL.
Hourly &
Commission.
Apply Golden
Eagle Distributing,
8 AM-3 PM at 5235
Charter Oak Dr.
Moonshine Beer
& BBQ Co.
375 Outlet Ave
Eddyville, KY. Now
hiring experienced
restaurant staff.
Apply during business hours EOE.
Roofers and
Laborers Needed.
Full time, Must
have valid drivers
licenses. Roofers
must have 5 yrs.
experience.
Call 270-442-8326
TRUCKING
0244
Part Time or Full
Time Drivers Class
A & B. Also,
Regular licensed
driver with DOT
physical. Apply at
Dry Ice Sales,
6760 Ky Dam Rd.
Paducah Ky 42003
0264
CHILD CARE
NOTE TO PARENTS:
Kentucky State
Law requires
licensing for child
care facilities
providing care for 4
or more children
not related to the
licensee by blood,
marriage or
adoption.
0272
PROFESSIONAL
0212
PRODUCTION/INSERTING POSITION
The Paducah Sun Production Department has positions available parttime production worker.
Positions’ Main Requirements:
• Place preprinted sections into newspapers or preprint jacket.
• Assist in the processing of newspapers including stacking, bundling,
counting, and labeling finished products and delivering papers to
post office
Job Specifications:
• Education: High school diploma, GED or equivalent.
• Skills and Abilities: Fast learner, be alert, ability to communicate,
ability to work with hands, responsible for acting in a safe and
responsible manner, valid driver’s license required.
• Hours may vary from 6 p.m. until 5 a.m., Monday through Sunday.
An application and job description may be obtained at
The Paducah Sun office located at 408 Kentucky Ave., Paducah, from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday
The Paducah Sun is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on
the basis of race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin or disability.
RETAIL HELP
0252
Opportunity is knocking!
We want you to join our team!
1RZ+LULQJ
*HQHUDO0DQDJHUV
&RPSHWLWLYH3D\DQG0DQ\%HQHILWV
Apply Online at
www.FiveStarFoodMart.com
FiveStar is an equal opportunity employer.
TRUCKING
0244
Gibson Truck Lines in Murray, KY
is hiring company drivers for long haul
and regional runs. Longhaul drivers avg
$1200 weekly, time out 8 to 10 days.
Regional drivers avg $1000 weekly,
time out 5 to 6 days. Short regional
drivers avg $800, time out 4 days. All
drivers must be 25 years old, have 2
years over the road experience in last
5 years. 270-767-0191.
GENERAL HELP
0232
Kellwell Food Management is now
hiring food service workers for full time
positions in the McCracken County
area. Must be able to pass a drug
screen and back ground check.
Kellwell offers: Health, Dental, Eye
Care, & paid vacations. If interested
please call the number listed.
(606)464-9596.
PEOPLE SEEKING
EMPLOYMENT
Will Sit w/Elderly,
part time, AS in
Nursing. 270-3312957, Patricia
PETS
0320
CATS/DOGS/
PETS
Adorable Yorkie
Puppies. Tails &
Dewclaws Clipped.
$350 each. 2
Yorkie missed
$150. Please call
270-988-2781
FARM
Browse it.
Search it.
Click it.
www.paducahsun.com
10B • Tuesday, September 6, 2016 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
HOME SERVICE 1048 CLEANING 1144 HANDYMAN 1156
SERVICES
DIRECTORY
Dhomynic
Home & Office
BASEMENT
Lightfoot
Cleaning
1030 WATERPROOFING Est. 1986 Great
Handyman
foundation
problems, leaking,
cracking or settlement, basements
or crawlspaces,
Free Estimates!
270-441-7200
1048
CLEANING
SERVICES
A&R
Cleaning Service
Exp. & Insured
Serving McCracken
& Surrounding Co's
270-556-4287
Rates and
References Call
Theresa @
270-445-1440
1108
EXCAVATING
GOODE
TRUCKING &
EXCAVATING
White Rock,
Gravel, Sand,
Topsoil, Lime,
Land Clearing,
Dirtwork, Grading,
Demolition
(270) 970-0421
(270) 832-5790
We also do
Window Cleaning!
Services
No job too small
Licensed & Insured
(270) 366-4165
Free Estimates
1150
HAULING
CLEAN OUT
HAUL OFF
• Garages • Attics
• Basements
• Outbuildings
W. KY & So. IL
No Job Too Small!
FREE ESTIMATES
(270) 210-5470
INSTALL & REPAIR
Clean & sell window
air units, Charge ups,
Will pick up or you
bring
Joe Thweatt
270-554-1208
270-217-4027
Lic.#M00651;$71/hr.
1162
HOME IMPROVEMENT
& REPAIR
Well Hung
Siding,
Roofing &
Gutters
GENERALCONTRACTOR
CONTRACTOR
GENERAL
Over 25 Years Experience
1198
ADORE LAWN &
LANDSCAPING
Leaf Removal &
Cleanup, Mulching,
Over seeding,
Hedge Trimming
270-554-2426
270-933-8869
Hayden's
Lawn Care
Free Estimates
270-556-4459
Joe's Tractor &
Backhoe Service
Hauling White &
Red Gravel,
Top Soil, Sand
& Mulch. Spread
For Driveways &
Yards. Tilling...
Free Estimates!
270-564-9008
Doors, Windows,
Siding,Decks,
Decks, Covers,
Siding,
Retaining Walls, etc.
BE A 4-H
VOLUNTEER
Mike Downing
270-816-3609
270-816-3609
MERCHANDISE 0610
0563
MISC. ITEMS
FOR SALE
THIS NEWSPAPER
COULD BE YOURS
EVERY DAY!
What better gift to
give yourself or a
friend.
Call The Paducah
Sun Customer
Service Dept for
details. 575-8800
or 1-800-599-1771.
UNFURNISHED
APARTMENTS
1 BR, good & quiet
location, water pd.
No pets $440 mo.
554-0211/217-5890
Upscale 2 BR apt.
Over looking TN
River. $850 mo.
501-454-9564
REIDLAND: 2 BR,
$600, 270-8986500.
REIDLAND: 1 BR,
$450.3 br duplex
$695. No Pets.
270-898-2256.
0710
HOMES FOR
SALE
SEEING is believing! Don't buy
property based on
pictures or representations. For free
information about
avoiding timeshare and real estate scams, write
the Federal Trade
Commission at
Washington, DC
20580 or call the
National Fraud Information Center,
1-800-876-7060.
FOR
REAL ESTATE FOR 0620 HOMESRENT
TRANSPORTATION
RENT
3 bd. 2 bath, $1200
CARS FOR SALE
270-933-1774
0868
REAL ESTATE
FOR
0605 FOR RENT 0630 DUPLEXESRENT
04 INFINITY - G35
Low Miles, Loaded
HUD
PUBLISHER'S
NOTICE
All real estate
advertised herein
is subject to the
Federal Fair
Housing Act which
makes it illegal to
advertise any
preference,
limitations, or
discrimination
based on race,
color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial
status or national
origin, or intention
to make any such
preferences,
limitations or
discrimination.
State laws forbid
discrimination in
the sale, rental or
advertising of real
estate based on
factors in addition
to those protected
under federal law.
We will not
knowingly accept
any advertising for
real estate which is
in violation of the
law. All persons
are hereby
informed that all
dwellings
advertised are
available on an
equal opportunity
basis.
Lone Oak, Very
Nice 2/2, Close to
hospital, $850/mo.
No Pets.270-3318929
3 BR, 2 B w/garage, Reidland.
908-9860
REAL ESTATE FOR
SALE
(270) 217-3996
FINANCIAL
0910
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
GOVERNMENT
WILDLIFE JOBS!
Great Pay and
Benefits. No
Experience
Necessary. The
ticket to a dream
job might really be
a scam. To protect
yourself, call the
Federal Trade
Commission
toll-free,
1-877-FTC-HELP,
or visit www.ftc.gov
A public service
message from The
Paducah Sun and
the FTC.
SOME ads in this
classification are
not necessarily for
"help wanted" but
for employment information booklets.
LAWN/LANDSCAPE/
TREE SVC
4-H OFFICE 554-9520
0710
1198
LAWN/LANDSCAPE/
TREE SVC
1200
TREE SERVICE
LITTLE'S
YARD WORK &
ODD JOBS
FREE
ESTIMATES
TREE & STUMP
REMOVAL
Hedge Trimming
DONALD
FORKEY
Aerial Bucket Truck
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES
(270) 210-3718
1200
TREE SERVICE
ACE TREE
SERVICE
270-933-3086
PADUCAH
TREE
SERVICE
& Stump Removal
(270) 210-5132
Aerial Bucket Truck
Insured
Free Estimates!
FREE ESTIMATES
(270) 898-8733
FIVE STAR
TREE
SERVICE
Stump Grinding,
Tree Trimming,
NO TREE TOO TALL.
NO JOB TOO SMALL.
WE CUT THEM ALL.
FREE ESTIMATES.
PRO AFFORDABLE
TREE SERVICES
270-366-2033
PRESSURE
WASHING
1258
QUALI-CARE
Business/
Residential
Hot or Cold
PRESSURE
WASHING
Concrete Scrubbing
270-575-1093
ROOFING
1276
Affordable Home
mee
Improvement
nt
Specializing inn
ALL your homee
edds
improvement needs
ngg
(Roofing, Flooring
Repairs, etc.))
st..
Insured, Free Est.
ounnt
5% Military Discount
30225
Scott, 270-309-3025
1276
ROOFING
COWBOY UP
• Metal Roofing
Shingle roof
Flat roof
*Free EstimatesWill beat any
contactor's price
270-705-5799
270-382-2345
PROFESSIONAL
SERVICE DIRECTORY
MUSIC LESSONS
1770
Piano Lessons seasoned music
teacher seeking
students. Any
age, your home.
618-645-0319
HINES
ROOFING
Shingles & Metal
35 Years Experience
Take Down &
Storm Cleanup
No Job Too Big or
Too Small!
INSURED
All Work Guaranteed
270-443-6338
270-556-5474
270-804-9449
HOMES FOR SALE
CONCORD AREA
MCHS - 3 miles 4 Br, 3B, 2 Kitchens
Lrg.Family Rm Finished Basement
3500 sqft 220 Matthew Dr.
270-554-0722
Info: [email protected]
LEGALS
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
THFYE
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
TRUBS
SHIRTT
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
Midwest
Basement Tech
HEATING/
COOLING
PARAEP
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
Print your
answer here:
Yesterday’s
(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: BRASH DRAWN ENTICE HICCUP
Answer: When the economy expands, the number of
new job openings goes — “HIRE” AND “HIRE”