Classic Empire an early 4-1 Derby favorite

KENTUCKY DERBY: Favorite has won the last four Derbies. | 2B
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The Paducah Sun | Thursday, May 4, 2017 | paducahsun.com
Section
B
Classic Empire an early 4-1 Derby favorite
BY BETH HARRIS
Associated Press
LOUISVILLE — After he
endured hoof and back injuries and a reluctance to train,
things are looking up for Classic Empire.
The bay colt was made the
early 4-1 favorite for the Kentucky Derby on Wednesday,
with just four of the 20 horses
listed at single digits in a wideopen race.
Classic Empire was idle for
three months after winning
the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile
and being named 2-year-old
champion last year. He made
his 3-year-old debut with a
third-place finish in the Holy
Bull Stakes in February. Then
came two more months off,
and twice during that time, the
colt didn’t want to train.
“It’s been a crazy road, but
we’re right where we want to
be,” trainer Mark Casse said.
Classic Empire restored
Casse’s confidence in him by
delivering a half-length victory
in the Arkansas Derby in midApril.
“With the average horse
you couldn’t do what we have
done,” Casse said. “You need
so many things to go right and
the good news with this horse
is he’s so talented he can over-
come a lot.”
Classic Empire will break
from the No. 14 post on Saturday. Just two horses have won
the Derby from there. The last
was Carry Back in 1961.
Classic Empire’s sire, Pioneerof the Nile, finished second in the 2009 Derby.
“We couldn’t be in a better
place right now,” Casse said.
Recent history is on Classic
Empire’s side, too. The favorite has won the Derby each
of the last four years. It’s the
longest such streak since the
1970s.
Always Dreaming and McCraken, a three-time winner
at Churchill Downs, are cosecond choices at 5-1.
Trained by Todd Pletcher,
Always Dreaming drew the No.
5 post, which has produced
nine Derby winners, most recently California Chrome in
2014. Blue Grass Stakes winner McCraken will break from
the No. 15 hole. The last of five
winners from there was Triple
Crown champion American
Pharoah two years ago.
Casse is one of three trainers with multiple horses in the
race. He also trains State of
Honor.
Todd Pletcher and Steve
Asmussen have three starters
each. Pletcher is seeking his
second Derby win from the
trio of Always Dreaming, Tapwrit and Patch.
Asmussen has yet to win the
Derby in his long career. He’ll
saddle Lookin At Lee, Untrapped and Hence.
Irish War Cry is the fourth
choice at 6-1 odds and drew
the No. 17 post. No horse
has ever won from there, but
trainer Graham Motion was
pleased.
“Being in the auxiliary gate
keeps you in the clear, keeps
you away from the craziness,”
Please see DERBY | 2B
Birdsong tabbed
as Marshals coach
BY EDWARD MARLOWE
[email protected]
DRAFFENVILLE — The circle is now complete.
When Terry Birdsong first
left Reed Conder Gymnasium, he was but a Marshal –
heavily decorated and bound
for Division I basketball at
Western Kentucky and, later,
Murray State.
Now he is the head coach
for boys basketball at Marshall County, as announced
by officials on Wednesday
afternoon at the MCHS cafeteria.
Birdsong’s hiring follows
the release of 13-year head
coach Gus Gillespie and signifies a new era of Marshall
County hoops history – one
where a former player is returning with a long list of
coaching accolades and successes throughout western
Kentucky.
It also creates an immediate target on the Marshals,
who certainly believe they can
contend now and rest later.
“No other kids in this region
play under the expectations
that they play under,” said
Birdsong. “I’ve been there.
I know that feeling. The expectations here are very high,
and sometimes these kids feel
that pressure.
“We’re going to embrace it.
We’re going to talk about it
every day. We’re not going to
run away from it.”
Birdsong admits he is leaving “a good situation” and “a
lot of people”
that
he loves in
the Calloway County school
system. He
returned to
the Laker
sideline in
2014
afBirdsong
ter seven
seasons
at Graves County, and he’s
the only coach in 57 years
to bring not one, but two
regional championships to
Jeffrey Gymnasium (2003,
2015).
As a head coach for 21 seasons with stops at Webster
and Caldwell counties, Birdsong has a career record of
430-213 with four regional
titles, nine district championships and 49 postseason
victories. He’s a two-time
KABC Coach of the Year,
three-time All Purchase
Coach of the Year and one of
only 40 coaches to ever lead
two or more programs to the
KHSAA Sweet 16.
But at the behest of his
immediate family and some
personal reflection, Birdsong
added it just made sense to
come back to a place full of
friends and past experiences
that helped build the very
foundation of his career.
“I’ve always had it in the
back of my mind that maybe
Please see BIRDSONG | 2B
Boys Player of the Week
Eric Riffe
School: Paducah Tilghman
Grade: Sophomore
Position: Shortstop
Riffe was 6-for-14 (.429) at
the plate with five runs and five
RBIs last week to help the Blue
Tornado to a 3-1 week. He had
multiple hits in three games,
including a 4-RBI game with two
runs against Hickman County.
Girls Player of the Week
Cassidy Moss
School: Crittenden Co.
Grade: Senior
Position: Pitcher
This is the third time Moss
has been named our Player of
the Week.
In seven games last week, she
went 4-2 in the circle with 61
strikeouts and just 16 walks with
a 1.02 ERA. She also went 8-for22 in the box with four doubles,
seven RBIs and six runs with a
.500 on-base percentage.
RYAN HERMENS | The Sun
Murray senior Sarah McDowell, a Murray State golf signee, throws the shot put during track
and field practice. McDowell is a 2-time state champion in the discuss.
Murray Tigers’ trio concluding
record-breaking track careers
BY MIKE STUNSON
[email protected]
A thrower, sprinter and
jumper have been at the forefront of Murray’s rise to a state
track and field powerhouse.
Now seniors and in their sixth
year in the varsity program,
they’re looking to add to their
growing list of school records
and state championships.
Sarah McDowell, Grace
Campbell and Ann Taylor
have combined for seven
school records and eight individual state championships,
but they’re not slowing down.
“Slowing down” isn’t in the
vocabulary for Murray’s fearsome trio, who all excel in
other sports. Campbell’s bread
and butter is the high jump,
but she spent her offseason
as the sixth man for the Lady
Tiger state semifinalist basketball team. The sprinter, Taylor,
is a key defender for the Murray soccer team that won the
First Region championship in
2015. McDowell, meanwhile,
is the thrower of the bunch but
used her skills to finish as the
state runner-up in the state
golf championships last fall.
It’s made them some of the
RYAN HERMENS | The Sun
RYAN HERMENS | The Sun
Grace Campbell, a Murray
senior, is a Columbia track
and field signee. She is a
6-time state champion in various track events and is also
a key player in basketball.
Ann Taylor, a Murray senior,
is a Murray State soccer
signee and has recorded two
school track records — in the
200- and 400-meters.
most decorated athletes in the
history of Murray, and it was
clear in middle school that big
things were destined for these
three.
ell, Taylor and Campbell were
all middle-school track stars
but also competed at the high
school level.
They played basketball together growing up, but playing a level up as track athletes
Middle school
excellence
By seventh grade, McDow-
Please see TRIO | 2B
Racers try to rally before OVC tourney
BY EDWARD MARLOWE
[email protected]
MURRAY — With less than
a week remaining before the
Ohio Valley Conference Tournament, Murray State softball
seems to be rolling along quite
successfully.
Sitting at 34-15 overall and
10-6 in conference play, the
Racers have a final two-game
slate at Austin Peay before
heading off to Choccolocco
Park in Oxford, Alabama, for
tournament action.
Senior pitcher Mason Robinson (22-7, 1.77 ERA, 186 IP,
102 Ks, 27 BBs) has thrown
two perfect games in the past
two weeks – against Belmont
and Eastern Illinois – the first
in school history.
Robinson, however, is only
one part of a seven-nation
army of seniors starting
for MSU’s head coach Kara
Amundson, who noted on
Wednesday it was unbelievable to have so much help
from her top class.
“It’s just insane that they’re
capable of doing that,” she
said, prattling off names
like infielder Jessica Twaddle, infielder Maggie Glass,
outfielder Mallory Young,
catcher Jocelynn Rodgers,
outfielder Cayla Levins and
infielder Taylor Odom. “JT
has obviously been having
another heckuva year. Maggie Glass is kind of our defensive stronghold. They’ve been
Please see RACERS | 3B
Sports
2B • Thursday, May 4, 2017 • The Paducah Sun
143 RD RUNNING OF THE KENTUCKY DERBY
POST POSITIONS AND ODDS
Path to glory
Classic Empire has been made the early favorite for the Kentucky
Derby. The colt will break from the No. 14 post on Saturday.
The favorite has won the Derby in each of the past four years.
The starting gate will once again be
full with 20 horses vying to wear
Purse: $2,395,800
the garland of red roses.
First place: $1,635,800
Stables
Main track
1-mile oval
Ba
ck
e
str
tch
Infield
5
6
7
Clubhouse
Spires
8
9
CHURCHILL DOWNS
10
Race distance: 1 1/4 miles
11
Fate of the
favorites
12
(1875-2016)
FINISH
Out of the
1st
2nd 3rd money
13
7.7
20.4
32.4
Nyquist
14
2016 Kentucky
Derby winner
15
Winning post positions
(Since 1930)
8
Lookin At Lee
20-1
S. Asmussen/C. Lanerie
Thunder Snow
20-1
S. bin Suroor/C. Soumillon
Fast and Accurate
50-1
M. Maker/C. Hill
Untrapped
30-1
S. Asmussen/R. Santana, Jr.
Always Dreaming
5-1
T. Pletcher/J. Velazquez
State of Honor
30-1
M. Casse/J. Lezcano
Girvin
15-1
J. Sharp/M. Smith
Hence
15-1
S. Asmussen/F. Geroux
Irap
20-1
D. O’Neill/M. Gutierrez
Gunnevera
15-1
A. Sano/J. Castellano
Battle of Midway
30-1
J. Hollendorfer/F. Prat
Sonneteer
50-1
J. Desormeaux/K. Desormeaux
J Boys Echo
20-1
D. Romans/L. Saez
Classic Empire
4-1
M Casse/J. Leparoux
McCraken
5-1
I. Wilkes/B. Hernandez, Jr.
Tapwrit
20-1
T. Pletcher/J. Ortiz
Irish War Cry
6-1
G. Motion/R. Maragh
Gormley
15-1
J. Shirreffs/V. Espinoza
Practical Joke
20-1
C. Brown/J. Rosario
Patch
30-1
T. Pletcher/T. Gaffalione
4
Grandstand
39.4%
1
3
Winner’s
Circle
Finish
Turf
Course
Horse • Trainer/Jockey
2
Weight: 126 pounds
Post time: 6:46 p.m. (EDT)
9
16
Prior to the introduction of the
9 starting gate in 1930, horses were
dispatched by the use of ropes,
ribbon or wooden barriers.
8
7
6
5 5
4
2
2
3
5
4
2
4
17
18
19
1 1 1
0
POST 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
20
SOURCE: Churchill Downs Incorporated
Opening
odds
PP
NOTE: Numbers listed are post positions,
which may differ from program numbers.
AP
DERBY
CONTINUED FROM 1B
he said. “You don’t have
to stand in the gate that
long.”
The main starting gate
holds 14 horses and has
a six-stall auxiliary gate
that is attached. Horses
are loaded into the gate
two at a time, beginning
with posts one and 11,
which spend the most
time waiting for the start.
Four horses are listed
at 15-1: Girvin, Hence,
Gunnevera and Gormley.
Six horses are 20-1
shots: Lookin At Lee,
Thunder Snow, Irap, J
Boys Echo, Tapwrit and
Practical Joke.
Lookin At Lee drew the
dreaded No. 1 hole in the
starting gate. His sire,
Lookin At Lucky, had the
same spot in 2010. He
was the 6-1 favorite that
year but was pinched at
the start and got banged
against the rail before
finishing sixth.
There are even bigger
odds for bettors who like
extreme long shots. Untrapped, State of Honor,
Battle of Midway, and
Patch, the one-eyed
horse, are all at 30-1.
Patch, whose left eye
Sports Briefs
was removed because of
infection, drew the No.
20 post on the far outside.
He won’t be able to see the
rest of the field to his left.
“He’ll get to see the
crowd when he leaves
there,” Pletcher said.
The longest odds in
the field belong to Fast
And Accurate and Sonneteer, both at 50-1. Fast
And Accurate is partowned by Olympic skier
Bode Miller. Sonneteer
has yet to win a race in
his career. If he wins the
Derby, he’d be the first
maiden to do so since
Brokers Tip in 1933.
BIRDSONG
CONTINUED FROM 1B
Rain postpones Brewers at Cardinals
ST. LOUIS — The St. Louis Cardinals’ home
game against the Milwaukee Brewers on
Wednesday night has been postponed by bad
weather.
A makeup date was not immediately announced. Adam Wainwright of the Cardinals and
Chase Anderson of the Brewers had been set to
start the game.
The Cardinals said Thursday’s game against
the Brewers, originally scheduled for 12:45 p.m.,
had been pushed back to 6:15 p.m. because of
the weather forecast.
— Associated Press
Woman hit by stray bullet at Cards’ game
ST. LOUIS — Police are investigating after a
woman attending a St. Louis Cardinals baseball
game at Busch Stadium was struck by a stray
bullet.
Police say the 34-year-old victim was inside
the ballpark Tuesday during the game against
the Milwaukee Brewers when she felt pain in
her arm. She went to a first-aid station for treatment. A bullet was later found near her seat.
Police believe the bullet came from outside
the stadium.
The Cardinals said in a statement Wednesday
that the organization is grateful no one was seriously injured. The statement says nothing is
more important than the safety of fans.
— Associated Press
LeBron scores 39, Cavs rout Raptors
CLEVELAND — LeBron James scored 39
points, hopped Kareem Abdul-Jabbar on the
career playoff scoring list and pushed the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 125-103 blowout over the
Toronto Raptors in Game 2 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series on Wednesday night.
Just like a year ago in the conference finals,
the Cavs are up 2-0 on the Raptors, who had
better figure some things out or this series will
be over quickly. Toronto was blown out for the
fifth straight time in Cleveland in the playoffs,
losing each by an average of 24.2 points.
Game 3 is Friday night at Toronto’s Air Canada
Centre, where the Raptors will have the crowd on
their side.
— Associated Press
Minus Crosby, Penguins edge Capitals
PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Penguins
found a way to survive without injured star Sidney Crosby.
Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 36 shots and rookie Jake Guentzel took advantage of a fortunate
bounce to earn his league-leading eighth goal
of the playoffs and the defending Stanley Cup
champions held off the Washington Capitals 3-2
on Wednesday night in Game 4 of the Eastern
Conference semifinals.
— Associated Press
it would be neat some
day to come back where
I played and (roam) the
same halls that I walked
in high school,” he said.
“But now to be leading
this program, it’s a huge
undertaking, but something I’m very confident
in.”
In the immediate rearview mirror is a 2016-17
season that saw the Marshals march to a 21-11
record but lose their final
three contests to Christian
County, a Birdsong-led
Calloway County in the
Fourth District Championship and to McCracken
County in the opening
round of the First Region
Tournament.
And it’s a Marshall
squad that lost only two
seniors – Houston Harvey and Tristen Prange
– and will boast a senior class with Matthew
French, Aaron Reed,
Dylan Walters, Skyler
Smith and Lucas Nichols
and a host of underclassmen talent at his disposal.
“I’ve had some similar
experiences, but I think
all the resources are here
(to succeed),” Birdsong
added. “I think the talent’s here. I think the
feeder system is here.
Obviously the facility and
the resources (are here),
and I feel like there’s no
reason why we shouldn’t
be a premier team every
year in the First Region.
“It’s going to be a goal
– and it’s always been a
goal – to try get back to
Rupp Arena, and we’re
going to do everything
we possibly can to make
that happen.”
Nephew and another
former Marshal Sawyer
Donohoo will join Birdsong’s staff at Marshall
County, while the newly
minted coach added he’ll
continue to fill his sidelines with help over the
next few days.
paducahsun.com
TRIO
CONTINUED FROM 1B
in seventh and eighth
grade only improved
their relationships with
one another.
“We were the only
middle schoolers so it
was already intimidating being with the high
schoolers,” Taylor said.
“Since we were all together we were really
close and stayed together.”
In both seventh and
eighth grade, Murray’s
girls won the middle
school state championships — which aren’t
classified by school size.
Campbell had asserted
herself as the best jumper in the state for her
class in eighth grade,
with McDowell posting
two three-five finishes
at state and Taylor two
top-10 finishes along
with plenty of glory with
the sprint relays.
Each of the three excelled early in her middle-school days with
her own traits, according to head coach Mark
Boggess.
“Sarah immediately
made an impact. When
she first started throwing, she was getting
marks that got your attention out there. There
was a little learning
curve, but she was serious right out of the gate.
Once she got into it and
saw she could do it, she
sunk her teeth into it.
“Grace was the one
who grew up and blossomed. She was very
short and tiny, but she
was a fireplug. She was
one of those you loved
to coach; she listens and
stayed late. She grew in
stature, tallness. Eighth
grade is when she came
onto the scene.
“I knew Ann had the
potential to be really
special. She transitioned
from dancing and basketball to track and soccer and in middle school
she was on our varsity
spring relay. She was
able to get in that competition early on and it
didn’t seem to bother
her,” Boggess said.
Murray had never
won a high school state
championship in track
and field, but with the
trio of McDowell, Campbell and Taylor leading
the way, it became more
than just a pipe dream.
A seamless
transition
When they began
competing solely at the
high school level and
improving year by year,
so too did the team.
The Lady Tigers finished as the runner-up
at the state championships in 2015 by just
one point, and they
used that as motivation
to fuel their fire for the
2016 season — one that
would go down in history for Murray.
McDowell won her
second
consecutive
state championship in
the discus last year and
Campbell won the 300
meter hurdles, long
jump and triple jump to
double her state-championship count. Taylor
was near the top of the
sprint races and helped
anchor winning relay
teams.
It led to a state championship rout in 2016
for Murray, which is in
prime contention for a
second straight title later this month.
“I can’t believe we
have gotten state championships. We won middle school state championship two years in a
row so I knew we could
do something special,
but I never imagined
this,” McDowell said.
Taylor holds school
records in the 200
and 400-meter races,
Campbell owns records
in the 100 hurdles, 300
hurdles, long jump and
high jump, and McDowell possesses the discus
record.
Boggess said they
have far exceeded the
life span of a female
track and field athlete.
“Girls typically excel
at middle school when
they’re young and that
might be because by
high school they are
specializing and maturing physically,” he
said. “Some of (girls’)
best days are late middle school, early high
school. But Ann, Grace
and Sarah have put in
the work and have dedicated themselves to constantly improve.”
Two-sport stars
What’s extra special
about the talented Murray trio is their massive
contributions to other
sports for the Lady Tigers. Each has carved
her own legacy.
Campbell has played
golf and basketball in
high school. She was a
valuable piece to a basketball team that was
among the best in the
state last season.
With star post player
Maddie Waldrop out for
the first month of the
season recovering from
an ACL tear, Campbell
filled in admirably and
remained a key part of
the team.
“I love basketball and
it builds a lot of character. It’s good to stay in
shape,” said Campbell,
who will be attending
Columbia to compete on
its track and field team.
“It’s better if you play
two sports so you don’t
get burnt out. It’s almost
expected here.”
Taylor will be heading to Murray State to
play soccer, which she
decided to play over
track and field. She was
among the defensive
stars for a Murray team
that enjoyed plenty of
successes over the past
two seasons.
She said track has
helped her quite a bit
with soccer, as she’s
been able to work on her
speed in the offseason.
“I’m running all the
time in soccer. It’s a different type of running
than track,” she said.
“In track I’m running
shorter stuff and soccer
I’m running all the time,
so I think track helps me
with soccer more than
soccer helps me with
track.”
McDowell was the
First Region Player of
the Year last season
for golf, and the future
Murray State golfer has
used discus and shot put
to help improve her golf
game.
In the hunt for the
last two golf state championships,
McDowell
has proven to be a star
in two sports that are
very different, but at the
share similar components.
“My coach has told
me to go out to the golf
range and hit some drivers because it helps my
discus. Before state I’m
always out on the golf
course,” she said. “It’s
the same motion —
turning your core and
legs.”
Even more than the
physical aspect of playing two sports, there is
also the added mental
component. Each of the
three is used to winning
with her other sports,
and always looks to carry that over to the spring
sports season.
“You get on this big
stage, do so well and you
want to make that grand
entrance to other sports
as well, so it pushes us
to do better at the other
sports,” McDowell said.
Preparing for the
future
Like it or not, Boggess
only has three more
meets coaching the three
girls who have been on
the high school team for
six years. It’s the end of
an era for the Lady Tiger
track and field program,
but they’re doing everything they can to ensure
future generations enjoy
the same type of successes.
“We don’t really try
to tell them what to
do, we lead by example
probably,” Campbell
said of their leadership
techniques.
“When
they see us enjoying
track and want to do
it, hopefully that helps
them want to do it too.”
Murray has goals of
a second straight state
championship
and
plenty of individual
titles as well, but the
next three weeks are
about a lot more than
just trophies and medals.
It’s about each other
and enjoying the company and camaraderie,
because the next three
meets are all they have
with one another before
life as a high school student-athlete is up.
“I want to see us keep
growing as a team.
We’re a family — building that and building
our relationships because win or lose you
still have those relationships and them to
build you up,” McDowell said.
For a third of their
lives,
McDowell,
Campbell and Taylor
have been a part of the
varsity track program
at Murray. That coming to a close will open
up a new stage of their
athletic careers, but
it’s nothing that will be
easy to let go of.
“The last race is going to be bittersweet because I’ve been a part of
this team for six years,”
Taylor said. “It’s been
such a big part of my life
and Boggess has been
like a father. We grew
up doing this.”
Most schools dream
of having an athlete
of McDowell, Campbell or Taylor’s caliber
come around every few
years. Boggess has had
the opportunity to have
three at once, coaching them from when
they were raw in their
events to decorated
athletes at the region
and state level.
He said what he’ll
miss most about them
— even more than the
championships won —
is how they carried the
team from a leadership
perspective.
That’s
something that won’t
be able to be replaced
quite as easily.
“I’ve coached a lot
of really good teams
and I’ve coached a lot
of teams who were talented but didn’t fulfill
potential because they
didn’t have the leaders. We’re going to
see what we’re made
of next year because
we have talented girls,
but we have to have
girls to step up and be
leaders,” Boggess said.
“Sarah, Grace and Ann
have to literally pass
the baton. That’s been
the blessing of having
those three. They are
talented but their leadership on and off the
track has been more
instrumental for our
program.”
Sports
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Thursday, May 4, 2017 • 3B
Coming up
THE FINE PRINT
Baseball
MURRAY STATE
Today
vs. Milwaukee
at St. Louis
Time: 6:15 p.m.
TV: Comcast 95
Today
vs. Philadelphia
at Chicago
Time: 1:20 p.m.
TV: MLB
Friday
vs. Eastern
Kentucky
at Murray
Time: 6 p.m.
On Television
TODAY
GOLF
1 p.m. — PGA Tour, Wells Fargo Championship, first round, at
Wilmington, N.C. (GOLF)
MLB BASEBALL
Noon — Regional coverage, Cleveland at Detroit OR Oakland
at Minnesota (MLB)
3 p.m. — Regional coverage, Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs OR
Texas at Houston (games joined in progress) (MLB)
6 — Regional coverage, Baltimore at Boston OR Miami at
Tampa Bay (MLB)
NBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m. — NBA Playoffs, Eastern Conference, semifinal, Game
2, Boston at Washington (ESPN)
9:30 — NBA Playoffs, Western Conference, semifinal, Game
2, Utah at Golden State (ESPN)
NHL HOCKEY
6:30 p.m. — Stanley Cup Playoffs, Eastern Conference, semifinal, Game 4, Ottawa at N.Y. Rangers (NBCSN)
SOCCER
2 p.m. — UEFA Europa League, Celta Vigo vs. Manchester
United (FS1)
5:25 — FIFA Beach World Cup, third semifinal, at Nassau, Bahamas (FS2)
7 — FIFA Beach World Cup, fourth semifinal, at Nassau, Bahamas (FS2)
FRIDAY
AUTO RACING
10:30 a.m. — NASCAR, Xfinity Series, Sparks Energy 300,
practice, at Talladega, Ala. (FS1)
Noon — NASCAR, Xfinity Series, Sparks Energy 300, final practice, at Talladega, Ala. (FS1)
1:30 p.m. — NASCAR, Monster Energy Cup Series, Geico 500,
practice, at Talladega, Ala. (FS1)
3:30 — NASCAR, Monster Energy Cup Series, Geico 500, final
practice, at Talladega, Ala. (FS1)
5 — ARCA, General Tire 200, at Talladega, Ala. (FS1)
BOXING
7 p.m. — Yuriorkis Gamboa vs. Robinson Castellanos, lightweights, at Las Vegas (ESPN2)
DRAG RACING
7 p.m. — NHRA, Southern Nationals, qualifying, at Atlanta
(same-day tape) (FS1)
GOLF
1 p.m — PGA Tour, Well Fargo Championship, second round, at
Wilmington, N.C. (GOLF)
5 — Champions Tour, Insperity Invitational, first round, at The
Woodlands, Texas (same-day tape) (GOLF)
HORSE RACING
11 a.m. — Kentucky Derby Oaks, at Louisville, Ky. (NBCSN)
MLB BASEBALL
1 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Chicago Cubs (MLB)
7 — Regional coverage, Cleveland at Kansas City OR Boston
at Minnesota (MLB)
NBA BASKETBALL
6 p.m. — NBA Playoffs, Eastern Conference, semifinal, Game
3, Cleveland at Toronto (ESPN)
8:30 — NBA Playoffs, Western Conference, semifinal, Game
3, San Antonio at Houston (ESPN)
NHL HOCKEY
7 p.m. — Stanley Cup Playoffs, Western Conference, semifinal, Game 5, Nashville at St. Louis (NBCSN)
9:30 — Stanley Cup Playoffs, Western Conference, semifinal,
Game 5, Edmonton at Anaheim (NBCSN)
SOCCER
1:30 p.m. — Bundesliga, Koln vs. Werder Bremen (FS2)
Local schedule
TODAY
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL — Community Christian at Cairo,
Hickman County at Calloway County, Trigg County at Marshall
County, Mayfield at Ballard Memorial, Christian Fellowship at
Carlisle County, Dawson Springs at Livingston Central, Caldwell
County at Madisonville-North Hopkins.
HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL — McCracken County at St. Mary
DH, Paducah Tilghman at Carlisle County, Fulton City at Ballard
Memorial, Calloway County at Graves County, Mayfield at Fulton
County, Murray at Hickman County, Hopkinsville at Lyon County,
Trigg County at Caldwell County, Crittenden County at Webster
County.
FRIDAY
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL — Paducah Tilghman at Mayfield,
Ballard Memorial at St. Mary, Murray at Hopkinsville, Graves
County at Livingston Central, Trigg County at Hickman County,
Crittenden County at Madisonville-North Hopkins.
HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL — Carterville, Ill., at McCracken
County, Marshall County vs. Hancock County at Owensboro Catholic Classic, Caldwell County at Calloway County, Livingston Central at Carlisle County, Fort Campbell at Christian Fellowship DH.
With Laviolette, Preds
find offensive payoff
BY TERESA M.
WALKER
Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn. —
Three years ago, general
manager David Poile let
the only coach the Predators had ever known in
Barry Trotz leave and
hired Peter Laviolette to
inject more offense into
the Nashville lineup.
The payoff is coming with the NHL’s best
start this postseason.
The Predators are 7-1
and the only undefeated
team on home ice. They
have gotten goals from
a league-best 13 players,
and they’re spreading
the wealth around with
seven players scoring
game-winning goals.
The Predators are led
by their top line with
Ryan Johansen, Filip
Forsberg and Viktor Arvidsson combining for
21 points. The Nashville
defensive corps also
has a league-high eight
goals to go with 14 assists. Ryan Ellis leads
all defensemen with
nine points and has the
league’s longest point
streak since 1998 at seven games.
Nashville stands just
a win away from the
first conference final in
franchise history with a
3-1 series lead over St.
Louis in their Western
Conference semifinal
after a 2-1 victory Tuesday night.
Washington
Philadelphia
Miami
New York
Atlanta
W
18
12
12
12
11
Chicago
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
W
15
14
13
13
12
Colorado
Arizona
Los Angeles
San Diego
San Francisco
W
16
17
15
12
10
New York
Baltimore
Boston
Tampa Bay
Toronto
W
17
16
15
14
9
Minnesota
Cleveland
Chicago
Detroit
Kansas City
W
14
15
14
14
9
Houston
Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
Texas
W
19
15
11
11
11
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
9 .667
—
—
14 .462 5½
2
14 .462 5½
2
15 .444
6
2½
15 .423
6½
3
Central Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
12 .556
—
—
14 .500
1½
1
13 .500
1½
1
14 .481
2
1½
15 .444
3
2½
West Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
11 .593
—
—
12 .586
—
—
13 .536
1½
—
16 .429
4½
3
18 .357
6½
5
———
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
9 .654
—
—
10 .615
1
—
12 .556 2½
—
15 .483 4½
2
19 .321
9
6½
Central Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
11 .560
—
—
12 .556
—
—
12 .538
½
½
13 .519
1
1
17 .346 5½
5½
West Division
L Pct
GB WCGB
9 .679
—
—
13 .536
4
½
16 .407
7½
4
16 .407
7½
4
17 .393
8
4½
NL scores, schedule
Tuesday’s Late Games
San Diego 6, Colorado 2
L.A. Dodgers 13, San Francisco 5
Wednesday’s Games
Milwaukee at St. Louis, ppd.
Washington 2, Arizona 1
Cincinnati 7, Pittsburgh 2
Miami 10, Tampa Bay 6
N.Y. Mets 16, Atlanta 5
Chicago Cubs 5, Philadelphia 4
Colorado at San Diego, (n)
San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, (n)
Today’s Games
Pittsburgh (Nova 3-2) at Cincinnati (Adleman 0-1), 11:35 a.m.
Arizona (Shipley 0-0) at Washington
(Scherzer 3-2), 12:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Nelson 1-2) at St. Louis
(Lynn 3-1), 6:15 p.m.
Philadelphia (Eflin 0-0) at Chicago Cubs
(Lackey 2-3), 1:20 p.m.
Colorado (Freeland 3-1) at San Diego
(Perdomo 0-0), 2:40 p.m.
Miami (Straily 1-2) at Tampa Bay (Andriese 1-1), 6:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Wheeler 1-2) at Atlanta (Garcia 1-1), 6:35 p.m.
Friday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees at Chicago Cubs, 1:20 p.m.
San Francisco at Cincinnati, 5:40 p.m.
Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m.
Washington at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.
Miami at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m.
St. Louis at Atlanta, 6:35 p.m.
Arizona at Colorado, 7:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.
Cubs 5, Phillies 4
Philadelphia
Hernandez 2b
Nava lf
Altherr rf
Franco 3b
Herrera cf
Stassi 1b
Rodriguez p
Ramos p
Neshek p
Benoit p
d-Blanco ph
Galvis ss
Knapp c
Eickhoff p
Joseph 1b
Totals
AB
4
3
4
4
4
3
0
0
0
0
1
2
4
2
2
33
R
0
1
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
4
H BI BB SOAvg.
1 0 0 1.321
0 0 1 0.306
1 0 0 1.327
3 2 0 1.222
1 1 0 2.258
1 0 0 1.200
0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 1.214
0 1 1 0.255
1 0 0 2.296
0 0 0 1.091
0 0 0 1.187
8 4 2 11
Chicago
AB
Schwarber lf
3
Almora cf
1
Bryant 3b
4
Rizzo 1b
4
Zobrist rf-lf
3
Russell ss
4
Heyward cf-rf 3
Montero c
2
a-Contreras ph-c 1
Arrieta p
2
b-Szczur ph
1
Uehara p
0
Rondon p
0
R
0
0
0
1
1
0
2
0
1
0
0
0
0
H BI BB SOAvg.
0 0 1 3.190
0 0 0 0.280
2 0 0 1.299
1 0 0 1.248
1 0 1 0.226
0 0 0 0.250
1 1 1 0.263
1 0 0 0.389
1 2 1 0.243
0 1 0 1.154
1 1 0 0.214
0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 ---
L10
6-4
5-5
4-6
4-6
5-5
Str
W-1
L-2
W-1
W-1
L-1
HomeAway
8-6 10-3
7-4 5-10
5-6
7-8
4-10 8-5
5-5 6-10
L10
5-5
5-5
7-3
4-6
5-5
Str
W-2
L-1
W-1
W-1
L-1
Home Away
6-6
9-6
7-10
7-4
9-7
4-6
7-9
6-5
6-6
6-9
L10
5-5
5-5
7-3
4-6
4-6
Str
L-2
L-1
W-1
W-3
L-1
Home Away
7-6
9-5
12-5 5-7
10-5 5-8
6-4 6-12
6-8 4-10
L10
7-3
4-6
5-5
4-6
4-6
Str
W-2
L-2
W-2
L-1
L-2
Home Away
12-3 5-6
8-3 8-7
11-6 4-6
9-5 5-10
4-8 5-11
L10
7-3
5-5
7-3
5-5
2-8
Str
W-4
W-1
L-1
L-1
W-1
HomeAway
7-7
7-4
6-6 9-6
6-5 8-7
9-7 5-6
7-6 2-11
L10
7-3
8-2
4-6
2-8
3-7
Str
W-4
W-2
L-3
L-3
L-4
HomeAway
12-5 7-4
9-4 6-9
6-4 5-12
7-6 4-10
8-8 3-9
c-Jay ph
1 0 0 0 0 0.349
Davis p
0 0 0 0 0 0 --Baez 2b
3 0 1 0 1 0.271
Totals
32 5 9 5 5 6
Philadelphia 200 100 010 — 4 8 0
Chicago
010 004 00x — 5 9 0
a-doubled for Montero in the 6th. b-singled for Arrieta in the 6th. c-grounded out
for Rondon in the 8th. d-struck out for
Benoit in the 9th.
LOB—Philadelphia 5, Chicago 8. 2B—Altherr (7), Herrera (5), Stassi (1), Contreras
(5). RBIs—Franco 2 (23), Herrera (11), Galvis (16), Heyward (17), Arrieta (2), Contreras 2 (12), Szczur (2). SB—Nava (1), Baez
(1). SF—Galvis.
Runners left in scoring position—Philadelphia 3 (Stassi, Eickhoff, Joseph); Chicago 6 (Schwarber 2, Zobrist, Heyward,
Baez, Almora). RISP—Philadelphia 4 for 8;
Chicago 3 for 11.
Runners moved up—Rizzo, Arrieta.
GIDP—Jay.
DP—Philadelphia 1 (Galvis, Hernandez,
Joseph).
PhiladelphiaIP H R ERBBSO NP ERA
Eickhoff, L, 5.2 5 4 4 2 5 97 4.00
Rodriguez, 0 1 1 1 0 0 3 5.40
Ramos
0.1 2 0 0 0 1 12 4.63
Neshek
1 1 0 0 1 0 29 0.00
Benoit
1 0 0 0 2 0 14 2.13
Chicago
IP H R ER BBSO NP ERA
Arrieta, W, 6 6 3 3 1 7 85 4.63
Uehara, H, 4 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 3.38
Rondon, H, 5 1 2 1 1 0 1 19 1.59
Davis, S, 7-7 1 0 0 0 1 2 13 0.00
Rodriguez pitched to 1 batter in the 6th.
Inherited runners-scored—Rodriguez
2-2, Ramos 1-1. WP_Ramos, Davis. PB—
Knapp (1).
T—3:09. A—39,335 (41,072).
AL scores, schedule
Tuesday’s Late Game
L.A. Angels 6, Seattle 4, 11 innings
Wednesday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 8, Toronto 6
Boston 4, Baltimore 2
Cleveland 3, Detroit 2
Miami 10, Tampa Bay 6
Houston 10, Texas 1
Minnesota 7, Oakland 4
Kansas City 6, Chicago White Sox 1
L.A. Angels at Seattle, (n)
Today’s Games
Cleveland (Salazar 2-2) at Detroit (Fulmer 2-1), 12:10 p.m.
Oakland (Cotton 2-3) at Minnesota (Gibson 0-3), 21:10 p.m.
Texas (Griffin 2-0) at Houston (Musgrove
1-2), 1:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Holland 2-2) at Kansas City (Kennedy 0-2), 1:15 p.m.
Baltimore (Jimenez 1-1) at Boston (Kendrick 0-0), 6:10 p.m.
Miami (Straily 1-2) at Tampa Bay (Andriese 1-1), 6:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Wright 0-0) at Seattle (Miranda 2-2), 9:10 p.m.
Friday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees at Chicago Cubs, 1:20 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Baltimore, 6:05
Toronto at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m.
Boston at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Kansas City, 7:15 p.m.
Detroit at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Angels, 9:07 p.m.
Texas at Seattle, 9:10 p.m..
Pro basketball
NBA playoffs
SECOND ROUND; Best-of-7
Late Monday
Houston 126, San Antonio 99, Houston leads series 1-0
Tuesday
Boston 129, Washington 119, OT, Boston leads series 2-0
Golden State 106, Utah 94, Golden
State leads series 1-0
Wednesday, May 3
Cleveland 125, Toronto 103, Cleveland leads series 2-0
Houston at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday
Boston at Washington, 7 p.m.
Utah at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
Friday
Cleveland at Toronto, 6 p.m.
San Antonio at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday
Golden State at Utah, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday
Cleveland at Toronto, 2:30 p.m.
Boston at Washington, 5:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Houston, 7 p.m.
Monday
Golden State at Utah, 8 p.m.
Cavaliers 125, Raptors 103
TORONTO — Ibaka 7-14 2-2 16, Patterson 1-3 0-0 3, Lowry 7-12 4-5 20,
DeRozan 2-11 1-3 5, Powell 3-6 2-2
8, Carroll 0-6 0-0 0, Tucker 0-3 0-0 0,
Siakam 0-2 0-0 0, Valanciunas 10-13
3-5 23, Poeltl 1-2 0-0 2, Joseph 9-14 2-2
22, VanVleet 0-0 0-0 0, Wright 2-4 0-0 4.
Totals 42-90 14-19 103.
CLEVELAND — James 10-14 15-21
39, Love 4-9 0-0 9, Thompson 4-5 1-3
9, Irving 6-19 7-7 22, Smith 2-4 0-0 6,
Jefferson 0-0 0-0 0, Frye 6-9 1-2 18, Dero.
Williams 2-3 0-0 5, Shumpert 6-8 1-1 14,
D.Jones 0-0 0-0 0, J.Jones 0-0 0-0 0, Korver 1-4 0-0 3. Totals 41-75 25-34 125.
Toronto
22 26 25 30 — 103
Cleveland
34 28 37 26 — 125
3-Point Goals—Toronto 5-17 (Lowry 2-2,
Joseph 2-3, Patterson 1-2, Powell 0-1,
Wright 0-1, Tucker 0-2, Ibaka 0-2, Carroll
0-4), Cleveland 18-33 (Frye 5-7, James
4-6, Irving 3-6, Smith 2-3, Dero.Williams
1-1, Shumpert 1-2, Love 1-4, Korver 1-4).
Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Toronto 37
(Joseph 6), Cleveland 40 (Thompson 9).
Assists—Toronto 21 (Lowry 5), Cleveland
28 (Irving 11). Total Fouls—Toronto 21,
Cleveland 22. Technicals—Lowry, Love.
A—20,562 (20,562).
Hockey
Penguins 3, Capitals 2
Washington
0
2
0 — 2
Pittsburgh
1
2
0 — 3
First Period—1, Pittsburgh, Hornqvist 3
(Cullen, Maatta), 4:39.
Second Period—2, Pittsburgh, Guentzel
8, 3:51. 3, Washington, Kuznetsov 4 (Johansson, Williams), 7:21. 4, Washington,
Schmidt 1 (Shattenkirk, Oshie), 8:33. 5,
Pittsburgh, Schultz 2 (Guentzel, Malkin),
11:24 (pp).
Third Period—None.
Shots on Goal—Washington 12-17-9—
38. Pittsburgh 9-5-5—19.
Power-play opportunities—Washington 0
of 4; Pittsburgh 1 of 5.
Goalies—Washington, Holtby 5-5 (18
shots-15 saves). Pittsburgh, Fleury 7-2
(38-36).
A—18,617 (18,617). T—2:35.
Golf
FedEx Cup Leaders
Through May 1
Rank Player
Points Money
1. Dustin Johnson
1,903 $5,346,600
2. Justin Thomas
1,852 $4,449,220
3. Hideki Matsuyama 1,826 $4,777,654
4. Jon Rahm
1,361 $3,596,245
5. Adam Hadwin
1,201 $2,714,187
6. Jordan Spieth
1,192 $2,976,308
7. Pat Perez
1,096 $2,717,338
8. Rickie Fowler
1,069 $2,626,558
9. Justin Rose
980 $2,729,980
10. Brendan Steele 964 $2,091,499
11. Russell Henley
935 $2,242,347
12. Sergio Garcia
877 $2,576,426
13. Marc Leishman 869 $2,342,549
14. Kevin Kisner
857 $2,171,792
15. Wesley Bryan
850 $2,005,885
16. Brooks Koepka
833 $2,054,775
17. Gary Woodland
830 $2,070,260
18. Hudson Swafford 804 $1,773,052
19. Mackenzie Hughes 775 $1,680,103
20. Cameron Smith 758 $1,767,860
21. Charles Howell III 747 $1,696,171
22. Kevin Chappell
677 $1,745,208
23. Bill Haas
645 $1,710,597
24. Luke List
644 $1,478,189
25. Tony Finau
631 $1,350,506
26. Daniel Berger
629 $1,686,436
27. Sung Kang
611 $1,400,322
28. Rod Pampling
604 $1,383,888
29. Paul Casey
596 $1,417,559
30. Charley Hoffman 583 $1,525,408
Other Notables
36. Brandt Snedeker 517 $1,206,328
45. Phil Mickelson
475 $1,108,399
48. Rory McIlroy
462 $1,395,217
76. Henrik Stenson 345 $990,175
78. Adam Scott
334 $891,900
95. Ryan Palmer
255 $589,181
97. Patrick Reed
254 $642,118
99. Jason Day
250 $657,170
112. Bubba Watson 204 $524,478
134. Ian Poulter
158 $331,707
138. Jim Furyk
148 $377,614
Misc.
Stanley Cup playoffs
Second Round
(Best-of-7)
Tuesday
N.Y. Rangers 4, Ottawa 1, Ottawa leads
series 2-1
Nashville 2, St. Louis 1, Nashville leads
series 3-1
Wednesday
Pittsburgh 3, Washington 2, Pittsburgh
leads series 3-1
Anaheim at Edmonton, 9 p.m., Edmonton leads series 2-1
Today
Ottawa at N.Y. Rangers, 6:30 p.m., Ottowa leads series 2-1
Friday
Nashville at St. Louis, 7 p.m.
Edmonton at Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday
N.Y. Rangers at Ottawa, 3 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Washington, 7:15 p.m.
Sunday, May 7
x-Anaheim at Edmonton, TBD
x-St. Louis at Nashville, TBD
Monday, May 8
x-Washington at Pittsburgh, TBD
Tuesday’s Late Game
Predators 2, Blues 1
St. Louis
0
0
1 — 1
Nashville
0
0
2 — 2
First Period—None.
Second Period—None.
Third Period—1, Nashville, Ellis 4 (Wilson), 5:09 (pp). 2, Nashville, Neal 2, 13:03.
3, St. Louis, Edmundson 3 (Lehtera,
Steen), 16:11.
Shots on Goal—St. Louis 9-9-15—33.
Nashville 7-8-10—25.
Power-play opportunities—St. Louis 0 of
2; Nashville 1 of 4.
Goalies— St. Louis, Allen 5-4 (25
shots-23 saves). Nashville, Rinne 7-1 (3332).
A—17,273 (17,113). T—2:45.
Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF
BASEBALL — Suspended Detroit minor
league RHP Voelker (Erie-EL) 50 games
after testing positive for Amphetamine, a
stimulant in violation of the Minor League
Drug Prevention and Treatment Program.
American League
CLEVELAND INDIANS — Recalled RHP
Joe Colon from Columbus (IL). Placed RHP
Corey Kluber on the 10-day DL.
MINNESOTA TWINS — Optioned LHP
Buddy Boshers to Rochester (IL).
OAKLAND A’S — Placed LHP Sean Doolittle on the 10-day DL, retroactive to April
30. Designated RHP Cesar Valdez for assignment. Recalled RHP Bobby Wahl from
Nashville (PCL). Seelected the contract of
RHP Josh Smith from Nashville.
SEATTLE MARINERS — Sent RHP Casey
Fien outright to Tacoma (PCL).
TEXAS RANGERS — Placed LHP Cole
Hamels on the 10-day DL, retroactive to
April 30. Recalled RHP Anthony Bass from
Round Rock (PCL).
National League
COLORADO ROCKIES — Reinstated LHP
Mike Dunn from the 10-day DL. Selected the contract of C Ryan Hanigan from
Albuquerque (PCL). Optioned RHP Carlos
Estévez to Albuquerque. Placed C Tony
Wolters on the seven-day concussion DL.
MIAMI MARLINS — Placed RHP Edinson
Volquez on the 10-day DL. Recalled RHP
Nick Wittgren from New Orleans (PCL).
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NBA — Fined Houston C Nene $15,000
for escalating an altercation by pushing
San Antonio C Dewayne Dedmon above
the shoulders, during a May 1 game at
San Antonio.
RACERS
CONTINUED FROM 1B
an incredible senior
class, so moving into
the postseason here
and having that kind of
experience that they’ve
had for four years is a
big deal for us, I think.”
It’s a senior class that
has been to the tournament the past three
seasons and soon to be
fourth, starting from a
berth in the finals their
freshman year.
Twaddle – the OVC’s
2015 Player of the Year
– is having another
high-caliber
season
by batting .411 with 12
homers, 13 doubles, 38
RBIs and a .489 onbase percentage. It’s
all team-high numbers
similar to her 2015 line
(.427, 16 doubles, 8
HRs, 54 RBI), but with
a senior attitude of
“rowing the boat.”
“I’ve just been able
to have a blast with
my teammates and my
coaches and all of that
kind of stuff,” she said of
her season thus far. “It’s
just fun again. Every year
at the beginning we come
up with a team word and
individual words that we
all come up with.
“My word was ‘row,’
which seems kind of
vague, but it’s about rowing a boat. There’s no
glory in rowing a boat.
You’re rowing to move
and go forward. That’s
what I’ve been trying to
embrace: doing whatever it takes to move forward as a team in a game
and in practice. It’s a really selfless word that I’m
just trying to help put my
team in a position to do
well.”
Haven Campbell. A sin- job of being willing to do
gle from Jordan Spicer the
not-so-glamorous
was followed by a sacri- things, maybe.
“We have a whole
fice bunt before pitcher
Brooklin Lee reached on mantra of ‘playing the
a fielder’s choice. Leadoff game.’ And that just
Baylee Cook reached on means moving runners,
a fielding error at third scoring runners any way
base – the Racers’ lone that we can. We’ve emmiscue – that allowed braced that the last coua run to score before ple of weeks, and we’ve
a fielder’s choice to sec- had some success after
a little lull in the beginond base made it 4-2.
Sacrifice flies capped ning of the conference
the scoring for Belmont. season.”
“I think we’re doing a
Despite the loss, the
really good job of ‘doing Racers had been winA slight hitch
jobs,’” Twaddle said after ners of their past six
Wednesday’s
home the loss. “Obviously we games, while four confinale at Racer Field didn’t do that today. But tests were canceled due
against Belmont didn’t we’ve been doing a good to weather.
go as planned. Robinson
opened the first three innings in perfect fashion
while the Racers posted a
2-0 lead on RBIs from
Rodgers and Odom.
The Bruins (32-20,
8-12 OVC), currently
in the No. 8 position of
tournament
seeding,
strung some scoring together in the final four
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618-309-6964
4B
The Paducah Sun | Thursday, May 4, 2017 | paducahsun.com
BY MASON BLANFORD
[email protected]
Market House Theatre’s “The Secret Life of
Girls” reminds us while
bullying takes several
forms, its solution remains the same.
The onstage drama
premieres Friday night
and follows Abby — a
teenager seeking acceptance as she navigates a
frequently dysfunctional
school life.
The narratives of several young women intersect in what’s ultimately
a reflective piece about
the consequences our
actions have on others.
As “Secret Life”
explores several forms
of bullying — gossiping,
exclusion and namecalling — audiences will
understand there’s no
one type of person who
contributes to the cause.
And that’s why a dialogue is important.
“You will recognize
yourself and your
friends in these people,”
said Education Director
April Cochran, adding
the show will be a great
mother-daughter outing. “(The characters) all
grow and learn … and
this play offers a strategy on how to deal with
bullying in our lives.”
Michael-Ellen Walden
of Paducah said it wasn’t
difficult to get into
the mindset of Abby,
especially since the play
explores several aspects
of facing life as a young
woman.
“Abby has a group of
friends she likes, but
she’s still insecure about
her social position,”
Walden said. “Specifically, her more negative
interactions with them.”
“She experiences
some bullying, but in
the play you see (bullying) takes its effect on
everyone.”
Audiences may find
an unexpected lesson in
Today
Adult Sewing: 9 to
11 a.m., McCracken
County Cooperative Extension, 2025
New Holt
Road, 270554-9520.
Dance and
Tone: 10:45
to 11:30 a.m.,
Paducah Recreation Center,
1527 Martin
Luther King
Jr. Drive, 270444-8508.
Family Game Night:
5 p.m., McCracken
County Public Library,
555 Washington St.,
270-442-2510.
Heartland Cares Annual SpringTINI 2017:
5:30 to 8:30 p.m.,
Market House Square,
Second Street between Kentucky and
Broadway, 270-4448183.
Intermediate Crochet Class: 5:30 p.m.,
Raggle Taggle, 819
U.S. 68 W., Benton,
$30, 270-906-5608.
Meditation and Oneness Blessing: 7 to 9
p.m., Mindful Living,
2929B Broadway, 270217-5510.
Open Mic Dramedy Night: 7:30-11:30
p.m., 426 Broadway
St., Silent Brigade Distillery, 270-709-3242.
Want to go?
• Friday at 7:30 p.m.
• Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
• Sunday at 2:30 p.m.
Tickets may be available at the door,
but call the box office at 270-4446828 or buy online at markethousetheatre.org to ensure seating.
“Secret Life” — bullies
are human, too.
“A big message this
sends is that victims of
bullying aren’t alone,”
Walden said. “(But)
those doing the bullying — seen as the bad
guys of the story — are
also human. Everyone
is going through their
own issues, and we have
to be understanding of
others to have healthy
relationships and a good
life.”
Perhaps the role of
gossip queen Sutton,
played by Caroline
Meiners of Paducah,
illustrates this well.
“Her particular brand
of cattiness is gossiping,” Meiners said.
“Sutton is part of the
original clique — she’s
on the volleyball team
— and I don’t think she
realizes what she’s doing
is wrong until Abby is
emotionally affected by
a rumor.”
While it’s easy to
recognize “cattiness” as
a clear-cut issue, one
character presents an
uncomfortable reality —
very few are absolved of
bullying and its effects.
Claire Kelly of
Paducah described her
role of Anna Marie as
that of a bystander.
“She’s probably the
most innocent in her
clique, but she isn’t
innocent either,” Kelly
said. “She sees it happen, but doesn’t do
anything. So in a way —
she’s the worst of them.”
Those who identify
with Anna Marie
may take a firmer
stance against
bullying as curtains close, but
the character of
Chandler poses
less certainty.
Played by
Natalie Shadrick of
Paducah, Chandler enters at a “turning point,”
giving audiences a new
perspective onstage and
a possible question —
“What would I do?”
“I connect with another girl and start to form
a friendship with her
after she’s been alienated by the main clique,”
Shadrick said. “All of the
characters are relatable
— but specifically with
Chandler, she’s walking
into this situation totally
new.”
“With no context on
the entire show that’s
been happening, I think
her character is kind of
(like) inserting yourself
into the story.”
The show ends with
self-reflection and pause
as these four cast members will graduate from
McCracken County and
Paducah Tilghman high
schools.
For them, the true
premiere of “Secret Life”
was seven years ago
— and they’ve grown
up with its message in
mind.
“I definitely feel the
show’s issues have
become more real to me
over that time period,”
said Walden, who will
be attending North-
Paws to Read: 4
p.m., Graves County
Public Library, 601
N. 17th St., Mayfield,
270-247-2911.
Paducah Beer Werks,
301 N. Fourth St.,
270-933-1265.
Karaoke Night: 8:30
p.m., Silent Brigade
Distillery, 426
Broadway,
St., 270-7093242.
Mel Garbark
Estate Sale:
10 a.m., Ice
House, 120
N. Eighth St.,
Mayfield, 270247-6971.
Nacho Ordinary Fiesta: 4 to 6
p.m., Socially Present,
1000 Broadway, 270443-1746.
Opening of The St.
Clair Courtyard: 5 p.m.,
Max’s Brick Oven Cafe,
Market House Square,
270-575-3473.
Out Of This World
Exhibit: 10 a.m., Kentucky Oaks Mall, 5101
Hinkleville Road, 270444-0440.
Relay For Life: 6 p.m.
to 12 a.m., McCracken
County High School,
6530 New U.S. 60 W.,
270-444-0743.
“Secret Life of Girls”:
7:30 p.m., Market
House Theatre, 120
Market House Square,
270-444-6828.
Talismans w/ Susan
Lenart Kazmer: 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Ephemera
Tennis Apprentice
Program: 6 to 7:30
p.m., Paducah Tilghman High School,
2400 Washington St.,
270-217-0717
Friday
Chair Yoga: 12:15
p.m., Paducah Recreation Center, 1527
Martin Luther King
Jr. Drive, $5 annual
membership, 270-5591409.
CNB Yard Sale, Relay for Life: 8 a.m. to
12 p.m., City National
Bank, 423 Ferry St.,
Metropolis, Illinois,
618-524-2161.
Derby Day Program:
5 p.m., Graves County
Public Library, 601
N. 17th St., Mayfield,
270-247-2911.
Ironcore Resistance
Performs: 8 p.m.,
Please see GUIDE | 7B
Contributed photo
Caroline Dew (from left) as Stephanie, Caroline Meiners as Sutton and
Michael-Ellen Walden as Abby — all from Paducah — rehearse for Market
House Theatre’s newest production, “The Secret Life of Girls.” Education Director April Cochran said the show offers an active dialogue on bullying and
how to prevent it.
western University in
Evanston, Illinois to
study theater. “I’ve seen
more perspectives —
I’ve experienced more to
understand (different)
mindsets and motivations.”
“I remember some of
the more intense scenes
that affected me,” said
Meiners, who will attend Harding University
in Searcy, Arkansas as a
public-relations major
and future chorus member. “I’m not innocent
— none of us are — but
it shaped me in standing
up for others and standing up for myself.”
Kelly is going to
Belmont University in
Nashville, Tennessee
as a communications
and photography major
who will stay involved in
theater.
Shadrick will move on
to Campbellsville University to study history
and remain a still-avid
theater performer.
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Television
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Thursday, May 4, 2017 • 5B
THURSDAY DAYTIME - MAY 4
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NICK 18 SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob PAW Patrol
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ESPN 22 SportsCenter (N) Å
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26 J. Meyer
28 Prince
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59 (5:40) ›› “Star Wars: The Phantom Menace” (1999) Å
62 Too Cute! “Kitten Dolls”
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63 Paid Prog.
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99 My Wife
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Beat Flay
Prince
Prince
T.I.-Tiny
T.I.-Tiny
T.I.-Tiny
Love, Hip Hop
’70s Show
Prince
Prince
T.I.-Tiny
Basketball Wives Å
PREMIUM CHANNELS
(:45) ››› “Matchstick Men” (2003) ’ Å
HBO
Maj. Payn
SHO
(5:45) ››› “The Muppet Movie”
(:45) ›› “Suicide Squad” (2016, Action) Will Smith. ’ Å
››› “Scrooged” (1988) Å
(10:50) ››› “Live Free or Die Hard” (2007) ’
(:15) ›› “Miami Vice” (2006) Colin Farrell, Gong Li. ’ Å
(:15) ››› “Rabbit Hole” (2010) Nicole Kidman.
›› “People Like Us” (2012) Chris Pine. ’
›› “America’s Sweethearts” ’
THURSDAY EVENING - MAY 4
( WNPT
# WSIL
P 3 PM
3:30
Odd Squad
- ’ (EI)
Harry ’ Å
3
Odd Squad
’ (EI)
The Wendy Williams Show
Q WDKA 4 (N) ’ Å
Jeopardy!
The Insider
& WPSD 5 (N) Å
(N) Å
Jerry Springer (N) ’ Å
7 KBSI 8
WGN-A 9
5 WKMU 10
, KFVS 12
) WQWQ 14
ION
15
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Odd Squad Odd Squad
’ (EI)
’ (EI)
RightThisThe List
Minute (N)
(N) Å
The Robert Irvine Show
(N) ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’
16 Law & Order: SVU
NICK 18 SpongeBob SpongeBob
E!
19 The Kardashians
USA
ESPN 22 Nation
ESPN2 23 The Jump
CNN
MTV
LIFE
BET
Question
TNT
24 Jake Tapper
25 Jersey Shore ’ Å
26 Grey’s Anatomy Å
28 “The Nutty Professor”
34 The First 48 ’ Å
35 Bones ’ Å
FREE 36 (1:00) “Mrs. Doubtfire”
All/Family
FNET 37 All/Family
FNC
TVL
Judge Judy
Å
Cops ’ Å
42 Your World W/ Cavuto
Griffith
44 Griffith
4:30
Judge Judy
Å
Cops ’ Å
Wild Kratts Cyberchase
Å
’
Heartland
Access HolNews Now
lywood
How I Met/
How I Met/
Mother
Mother
Blue Bloods ’
5 PM
5:30
Martha
Speaks
News 3 News
at 5
Name Game
WordGirl
’ (EI)
ABC World
News
Name Game
Local 6 at
Five (N) ’
Mike &
Molly ’
Cops ’ Å
6 PM
6:30
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
7 PM
7:30
Tennessee
Volunteer
Crossroads Gardener
News 3 News News 3 News Grey’s Anatomy “Leave It
at 6
Inside” (N) ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Bones Investigating at Bren(N)
(N)
nan’s alma mater.
Nightly News Local 6 at Six Wheel of
Superstore ’ Superstore
(N) ’
Fortune (N)
“Tornado”
Modern Fam- Big Bang
Big Bang
MasterChef (N) ’ Å (DVS)
ily ’
Theory
Theory
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
World News
Nightly Business
Heartland
CBS Evening
News (N)
News
Mama’s
Mama’s
Family
Family
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
››› “Ice Age” (2002) ’ Å
Around
Interruption
SportsCenter
Question
Around
Interruption
Thunder
E! News (N) Å
The Kardashians
Full House
Second Wives Club
NBA Countdown (N)
NBA Basketball Conference Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) Å
NFL Live Å
30 for 30 Å
Storied
Situation Room
Erin Burnett OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Jersey Shore ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
››› “Drumline” (2002) Nick Cannon, Zoe Saldana. ’ Å
Grey’s Anatomy Å
Married at First Sight
Married at First Sight
Married
Payne
Payne
Browns
Browns
Browns
› “Alex Cross” (2012, Action) Tyler Perry, Matthew Fox. Å
Savoring
Amazing
News
Shroud
Daily Mass - Olam
World Over Live (N)
News
Friends ’
Browns
Married
Anderson Cooper 360
Law & Order: SVU
Friends ’
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter
Soundtracks Å
CNN Tonight
CNN Tonight
›› “Like Mike” (2002, Children’s) Lil’ Bow Wow. ’ Å
Married at First Sight
Fr. Spitzer’s Universe
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
The Filthy
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
60 Days In (N) Å
(:01) Live PD ’ Å
Bones ’ Å
Bones ’ Å
Bones ’ Å
›› “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” (2012, Fantasy) Ian McKellen. Å (DVS)
Facts/Life
Facts/Life
Special Report With Bret Baier (N) Å
The Andy Griffith Show
Say Yes
Say Yes
46 Say Yes
SYFY 47 (2:30) ›› “Jupiter Ascending” (2015) Å
Mike
Mike
FX
49 Mike
Say Yes
HGTV 50 Flip or Flop Flip or Flop
DSC 51 Naked and Afraid ’
Flip or Flop
TLC
Flip or Flop
M*A*S*H
B. Miller
B. Miller
The First 100 Days (N)
M*A*S*H
Nate & Jeremiah
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
My 600-Lb. Life Å
All/Family
Naked and Afraid ’
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Naked and Afraid ’
Flip or Flop
S. Spoons
S. Spoons
Raymond
Raymond
Skin Tight: Transformed
›› “X-Men III: The Last Stand” (2006) Hugh Jackman.
Naked and Afraid ’
Naked Afraid
Flip/Flop
Flip or Flop
Naked Afraid
Daily Mass - Olam
The Filthy
The Filthy
(:03) The First 48 Å
Hunters
TBS
AP
TRV
Swamp People
Tucker Carlson Tonight
The Five Å
King
King
King
62 North Woods Law ’
63 Mysteries-Museum
North Wo. Law
TOON 64 Gumball
COM 65 (:10) Archer
Teen
North Woods Law ’
North Woods Law ’
(:14) Swamp People ’
(:17) ››› “Star Wars: Return of the Jedi” (1983)
North Wo. Law
King
(:01) My 600-Lb. Life: Supersized “Nikki” ’
Hunters
North Wo. Law
Hunt Intl
Naked and Afraid ’
Flip/Flop
Flip or Flop
Naked and Afraid ’
›› “Volcano” (1997, Action) Å
PGA Golf
›› “Hercules” (2014) Dwayne Johnson. ’
(:03) Swamp People ’
Swamp People
Conan (N) Å
Seinfeld ’
North Woods Law ’
North Woods Law ’
Conan
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Mysteries-Museum
Clarence
Gumball
Powerpuff
Teen
We Bare
Gumball
King of Hill
Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy
Family Guy
Chicken
Aqua Teen
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
Tosh.0
South Park
Daily Show
President
At Midnight
South Park
Beat Flay
Beat Flay
Beat Flay
Beat Flay
Chopped Å
(:45) Futurama Å
Beat Flay
FOOD 67 Beat Flay
VH1 99 Black Ink Crew Å
North Woods Law ’
Bunker
››› “Iron Man 3” (2013) Robert Downey Jr.
Hunt Intl
Naked and Afraid XL
Swamp People (N) ’
All/Family
(9:55) ›› “Dredd” (2012) Karl Urban. Å
››› “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory” (1971) Å
››› “Avatar” (2009, Science Fiction) Sam Worthington, Voice of Zoe Saldana. Å
52 (1:30) ››› “The Perfect Storm”
Golf Central (N) (Live)
PGA Tour Golf Wells Fargo Championship, First Round.
GOLF 56 PGA Golf
›› “Hercules” (2014, Adventure) Dwayne Johnson. ’ Å
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
SPIKE 57 › “Wrath of the Titans” (2012) Sam Worthington. ’ Å
Swamp People Å
Swamp People ’
Swamp People ’
58 Swamp People Å
(:43) ›››› “Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back” (1980) Mark Hamill.
59 (2:12) “Star Wars: A New Hope”
The Filthy
(:03) The First 48 Å
“Hobbit: Desolation”
AMC
HIST
The Filthy
Martin ’
“Another Cinderella”
Raymond
Flip or Flop
Women of
Bunker
(:12) M*A*S*H Å
Flip or Flop
Defending
All/Family
B. Miller
››› “Iron Man 3” (2013) Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow. ’ Å
Flip or Flop
Martin ’
B. Miller
Hannity (N) Å
Raymond
Martin ’
The 700 Club ’ Å
The Five (N) Å
My 600-Lb. Life: Supersized “Nikki” (N) ’
The Filthy
Married at First Sight
Martin ’
Pretty Little Liars Å
Tucker Carlson Tonight
›› “Ghost Rider” (2007) Nicolas Cage, Eva Mendes. Å
››› “Guardians of the Galaxy” (2014) Chris Pratt. ’ Å
All/Family
Friends ’
E! News (N) Å
NBA Basketball Conference Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) Å
The First 48 ’ Å
Bunker
Friends ’
Baseball Tonight (N)
Mad Money (N) Å
Bunker
Jubilee Festival of the Blue- The Local
grass highlights. ’
Traveler ’
(:35) The Late Show With
James
Stephen Colbert
Corden
Discovering Heartland
The Twilight
Life
News (N)
Zone
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Law & Order: SVU
The First 48 ’ Å
›› “Save the Last Dance” (2001) Julia Stiles. ’ Å
11:30
Friends ’
Full House
Fast Money (N) Å
››› “Dirty Dancing” (1987) Jennifer Grey. ’ Å
11 PM
Inside the FBI: NY
Married at First Sight (N) Å
Rosary
10:30
Last of the
The Forgotten Coast Rare
Wine
wildlife in Florida.
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live
(:37) Night’Å
line (N)
Family Guy The ClevePaid Program
’Å
land Show
(:34) The Tonight Show
Seth Meyers
Starring Jimmy Fallon
2 Broke
2 Broke
Modern FamGirls Å
Girls Å
ily ’
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Full House
Second Wives Club
Situation Room
Friends ’
10 PM
BBC World
News ’
Heartland
News (N)
Carol Burnett
Thunder
The Kardashians
9:30
Doc Martin “City Slickers” ’ The Coroner Member of a
lifeboat crew drowns.
(:01) Mom
Life in Pieces The Amazing Race (N) ’ Å
(N) Å
(N)
Riverdale Jughead joins the Law & Order: Criminal
quest for truth. (N)
Intent “The Gift” Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Law & Order: SVU
The Kardashians
9 PM
Antiques Roadshow “Virginia Beach” (N)
Heartland
Ent. Tonight Big Bang
Big Bang
News (N)
Theory
Theory
The Middle Heartland
Supernatural “Twigs & Twine
’Å
News (N)
& Tasha Banes”
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Henry
Henry
8:30
BBC World
News ’
News 3 News
at 10
The Simpsons Å
Local 6 at
10:00 (N)
Mike &
Molly ’
Cops ’ Å
Law & Order: SVU
Alvinnn!!!
8 PM
Dickensian ’ Å
Dickensian The death of
Jacob Marley. Å
(:01) Scandal “The Box”
The Catch Alice receives a
(N) ’ Å
confession. (N)
Bones “The Predator in the Last Man
Last Man
Pool” ’ Å
Standing
Standing
Chicago Med “White ButThe Blacklist “Dr. Bogdan
terflies” (N) ’
Krilov” (N) Å
The Mick Mickey fights at the News at 9 on FOX23 (N)
country club. ’
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Cops ’ Å
Loud
SportsNation (N) Å
Chaplet
EWTN 29 The Friar
CNBC 31 (2:00) Closing Bell (N)
A&E
4 PM
Wild Kratts Arthur ’ (EI)
Å
The Ellen DeGeneres Show
(N) ’ Å
Family
Family
Feud ’
Feud ’
Dr. Phil ’ Å
Chopped Å
Chopped “Web Stars”
Chopped Å
Black Ink Crew Å
›› “Johnson Family Vacation” (2004) ’ Å
Chopped Å
Chopped Å
›› “Big Momma’s House” (2000) Martin Lawrence. ’ Å
›› “Space Jam” (1996) Michael Jordan. ’
Big Mom
PREMIUM CHANNELS
HBO
(2:50) ››› “Eddie the Eagle” ’
SHO
(:15) ›› “The Man Who Knew Infinity” (2015)
(:40) ››› “The Sixth Sense” (1999) ’ Å
VICE News
(:15) “Pet” (2016) Dominic Monaghan. ’ Å
›› “Victor Frankenstein” (2015) ’ Å
Guerrilla “Episode 3”
Billions ’ Å
(8:50) Veep
REAL Sports Gumbel
Dark Net
Penn/Teller
Gigolos ’
Canelo
(:15) “Suicide Squad”
Dark Net
The Circus
Billions ’
Channel 2
Listings unavailable at press time
Channel 11
Listings unavailable at press time
Horoscopes
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 2017
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Communication will be your
vehicle to success. Open up
about the way you feel and
how you see things unfolding. Honesty coupled with
solutions to whatever needs
to be accomplished will put
you in the driver’s seat.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Don’t limit what you can do
by trying to do everything on
your own. Be a participant
and get involved in projects
that allow you to use your
skills diversely.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Taking physical action will
lead to regret. Take a step
back and let personal situations unfold naturally. Own
up to mistakes and be ready
to compromise.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Look at all the possibilities.
Don’t limit what you can do.
A new approach to your everyday routine will help you
get chores out of the way
early, leaving plenty of time
to discuss weekend plans
with friends, relatives or your
peers.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be
careful when dealing with
people who want something
from you. A deal that’s proposed will lack substance.
Don’t agree too quickly to
something that you will need
to consider thoroughly.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Emotions will swell if you
take what’s said literally.
Don’t fall into a trap that alters your course.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
Getting involved in activities
that challenge you mentally
and physically will help you
make decisions that will improve your life. Don’t allow
anyone to put a dent in your
long-term plans.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21): Don’t let emotional
anger interfere in business.
Make your position clear
so that you can get back to
business and do what you do
best.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21): Emotional deception will throw you off your
game. Don’t mix business
with pleasure or let what’s
going on between you and
someone you love interfere
with your professional responsibilities. A physical
activity will do you good.
Choose love over discord.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Watch what’s going
on around you. Don’t take
anything for granted. The
changes others make will
affect your reputation if you
aren’t prepared to defend
your position.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Discuss matters of concern with someone you care
about and you will come up
with a solution to a problem
that concerns you. Communication should be geared toward discussing responsibilities and expectations. Take
better care of your health.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20): A change will take place
if you let down your guard.
Observe what everyone else
is doing to ensure you aren’t
being left out. A practical,
honest approach to work and
getting along with your peers
will be necessary.
6B • Thursday, May 4, 2017 • The Paducah Sun
Variety
paducahsun.com
BEETLE BAILEY
DENNIS THE MENACE
BLONDIE
HI & LOIS
BABY BLUES
BC
CURTIS
WIZARD OF ID
ZITS
Crossword
DILBERT
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
GARFIELD
FORT KNOX
PICKLES
ACROSS
1 Overlook
7 Monte Mario’s
city
11 Gravy, on menus
14 At anchor
15 Somber notice
16 German direction
17 “Proceed as
planned”
18 *“Thinking ... ”
20 *Shakespeare
play set on an
enchanted island
22 Period in ads
23 Lair
24 Bladed tool
25 Ancient Greek
theater
26 “Thought I should
share,” briefly
28 Pit gunk
30 __-wolf
31 Candy heart word
32 *Busker’s
performance,
perhaps
38 Specialty
40 Vital circulation
component
41 Provocative
42 *They may be
crowned
45 __ Alamos
46 “Forgot About
__”: Grammywinning duet
featuring
Eminem
47 Actor Stephen
48 Army crawler
49 Stale
52 One in a
cheering crowd
54 Moving wheels
56 Classic “You as
well?”
57 *Proven long
term
61 Collectors’ event,
and a hint to
what’s hidden in
the answers to
starred clues
63 Hot
64 Wheels
65 First name at
Woodstock
66 Canadian coin
67 Tick off
68 First queen of
Carthage
69 Performer with
20 Oscar
nominations
DOWN
1 Tag line?
2 Many a blackclad teen
3 Serious
downturns
4 Talk with style
5 University
officials
6 Ancient Dead
Sea kingdom
7 Swiss luxury
brand
8 Quite heavy
9 Baker’s
protection
10 Bread machine?
11 Leader of the
animated
Pussycats
12 Was of __:
helped
13 Dutch Golden
Age artist
19 Make lovable
21 Echo
25 Electrical unit
26 Glitch
27 Cosmonaut
Gagarin
29 “... love hath
made thee __
snake”: “As You
Like It”
30 Put into words
33 Poetic adverb
34 Endless,
poetically
35 Aspic-coated
French chicken
dish
36 Tappable image
37 Dermatologist’s
concern
39 Accumulates
43 Mine output
44 One without
49 “Casino” co-star
50 In conflict,
seriously
51 Gawk
52 Specialty
53 Defensive retort
55 Concerning
57 Actress Hatcher
58 Wee ones
59 Lackawanna’s
lake
60 Word with freeze
or fry
62 Ticked off
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
[email protected]
By Craig Stowe
©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
05/04/17
05/04/17
A&E
paducahsun.com
Is this mother overprotective
or reasonably cautious?
Dear Annie: I am a
single mom with two
boys, ages 4 and 7. We
recently took a trip out
to Chicago to visit my
parents.
Our flight was delayed
by over an hour.
My 7-year-old asked
whether he could go
into the men’s bathroom
alone.
I said no and decided that the three of us
should stay together
while at a busy airport.
I took him into the ladies’ room with me.
As I directed him to go
into a stall and I held
my 4-year-old’s hand, a
woman said, “You know,
he really is too old to be
in a ladies’ room.”
I explained that I
didn’t want him to be
alone in a large public
place; all it takes is one
creep.
Afterward, though, I
began doubting myself.
Was she right?
Did I do the right
thing? When is a child
old enough to go to the
bathroom alone in a
public place? — Cautious Mom
Dear Mom: You
made the best decision for your family.
And
frankly,
I
would have done the
same thing.
If anything had
happened to your
son while he was
unattended in the
Dear
Annie
men’s room, you
never would have
forgiven yourself.
We must look out
for and support our
fellow mothers, not
make them doubt
themselves or feel
uncomfortable about
their decisions.
You did the right
thing.
Dear Annie: I have
read your column for a
long time but have never
written to you before. I
had to respond both to
“Crybaby” and to the advice you gave her. Until
recently, I was just like
“Crybaby.”
I thought that crying
for a positive or negative
reason was just how I responded and it was just
who I was.
My parents said I was
a very sensitive and
compassionate
child,
and I thought it “normal” to cry about many
circumstances.
I lived with these emotions until I was thoroughly checked out with
bloodwork.
The cause was hormonal, and once the hormones were balanced,
the emotions were also
balanced. I could actually see people crying
and listen to what they
were saying without
crying myself.
It was freedom I
never thought I could
have.
“Crybaby” should
make sure her vitamins,
supplements
and hormones are balanced. Lack of sleep
and stress deplete
many important nutrients in our system.
Also, behavior modification will not help
“Crybaby” if it is hormonal or nutrient deprivation.
A thorough blood
analysis will show
whatever deficiency
she may have.
It is nice to know
that there is a “Crybaby” out there who
would
understand
what I faced for about
40 years. — Drier My
Eyes
Dear Drier: For
anyone experiencing possible nutrient deficiencies or
hormonal imbalance,
bloodwork
is a wise step, and
I appreciate your
raising the point.
I’m sure “Crybaby” will be happy
to hear she’s not
alone, too.
Send your questions
for Annie Lane to
dearannie@creators.
com.
The Paducah Sun • Thursday, May 4, 2017 • 7B
SiriusXM to provide
a Beatles channel
BY DAVID BAUDER
Associated Press
NEW YORK — SiriusXM satellite radio said
Tuesday it will debut a
channel devoted to the
Beatles later this month,
achieving a long-sought
dream to highlight the
music of the pop legends.
The Beatles Channel
launches May 18, a week
before the band’s newest archival project is
released: a box set keyed
to the 50th anniversary
of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely
Hearts Club Band.”
Backed by the band,
Associated Press
the channel will feature The Beatles perform on the CBS “Ed Sullivan
music from the Beatles, Show” in New York on Feb. 9, 1964.
its members’ solo projBut, he said, “The moects and artists who in- than a dozen channels
branded to specific art- ment came, and you can
fluenced them.
Its suite of programs ists, including Bruce rest assured that when
will include “My Fab Springsteen, Eminem, the moment came, we
Four,” where other mu- Kenny Chesney, Pitbull dove right in.”
Similarly, the band
sicians and celebrities and Tom Petty.
The Beatles remained and its management
talk about their favorite
the Holy Grail, and Siri- were cooperative once
Beatles songs.
“I still remember the usXM President and the decision was made
thrill of when we first chief content officer that the time was right,
heard our music on the Scott Greenstein said he he said. Plenty of archiradio, but I don’t think made his interest plain val material was made
any of us would have with the band’s manage- available, including inimagined that we’d have ment years ago. But it terviews where Beatles
our very own Beatles ra- was a delicate subject; had talked about specific
dio channel more than both McCartney and songs, many of them
50 years later,” said Paul Starr remain active mu- heard once or twice beMcCartney, with Ringo sicians and have worked fore and forgotten.
“It will be a channel
Starr one of the two sur- with Sirius, and he
viving Beatles. “The Siri- didn’t want them think- that will sound shockusXM channel will have ing the satellite network ingly current and alive,
it all, eight days a week.” was only interested in not a retrospective jukebox,” Greenstein said.
SiriusXM has more their past.
GUIDE
CONTINUED FROM 4B
Paducah, 333 N. Ninth
St., $379 w/ $75 kit
fee, 270-443-0003.
“T2 Trainspotting”: 7
and 9:30 p.m., Maiden
Alley Cinema, 112
Maiden Alley, 270-4417007.
Watoto Children’s
Choir: 7 to 8:30 p.m.,
Broadway United Methodist Church, 701
Broadway St., 270443-2401.
Saturday
Borderline: 5 p.m.,
Silent Brigade Distillery, 426 Broadway St.,
270-709-3242.
Derby Day Fashion
Show: 10 a.m. to 9
p.m., Kentucky Oaks
Mall, 5101 Hinkleville
Road, 270-444-0440.
Derby Party: 1 to
6 p.m., Maiden Alley
Cinema, 112 Maiden
Alley, 270-441-7007.
Mel Garbark Estate
Sale: 10 a.m., Ice
House, 120 N. Eighth
St., Mayfield, 270-2476971.
Mother’s Day Craft:
3:30 to 4 p.m., Metropolis Public Library,
317 Metropolis St.,
618-524-4312.
Out Of This World
Exhibit: 10 a.m., Kentucky Oaks Mall, 5101
Hinkleville Road, 270444-0440.
Paducah’s Down and
Derby: 2 p.m., to 12
a.m., Soirées Event
Center, 2069 Irvin
Cobb Drive, 270-5577518.
Run for the Arts 5k:
7 a.m., Janice Mason
Art Museum, 71 Main
St., Cadiz, $20 entry,
270-522-9056.
“Secret Life of
Girls”: 7:30 p.m., Market House Theatre,
120 Market House
Square, 270-4446828.
Spring Into Dance:
1:30 to 3:30 p.m.,
Robert E. Johnson
Theatre, Murray State
University Fine Arts
Building, Murray, $5-8
at the door.
Talismans w/ Susan
Lenart Kazmer: 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Ephemera
Paducah, 333 N. Ninth
St., $379 w/ $75 kit
fee, 270-443-0003.
Third Annual Kentucky Derby Party: 2
p.m., Charlie Joe’s Bar
and Grill, 5925 Old US
Hwy. 45 S., 270-5341222.
Third Annual Market
Street Spring Fling: 7
a.m. to 3 p.m., Market
Street, Metropolis, Illinois, 618-524-2758.
Western Kentucky
Streetcar Madness: 4
p.m. to 12 a.m., Beacon Dragway, 4460
Shemwell Lane, 270898-8100.
Sunday
Randall Atcheson
Performs: 3 p.m.,
Carson Center, 100
Kentucky Avenue, 270450-4444.
“Secret Life of Girls”:
2:30 p.m., Market
House Theatre, 120
Market House Square,
270-444-6828.
Talismans w/ Susan
Lenart Kazmer: 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Ephemera
Paducah, 333 N. Ninth
Southern Illinois Spinners and Weavers
Fiber & Arts Fair
Saturday May 13th, 2017
10am-4pm
At the Massac County Communtiy Center
4476 Korte Rd. Metropolis, IL 62960
featuring demos & live music
throughout the day!
Join us for our 9th annual festival
Come shop at our marketplace to buy,spinning fibers, yarns,
handcrafted textiles, soaps, pottery, and much more!
FREE Admission!
sisaw.weebly.com
St., $379 w/ $75 kit
fee, 270-443-0003.
“T2 Trainspotting”:
4 and 7 p.m., Maiden
Alley Cinema, 112
Maiden Alley, 270-441-
7007.
All items for the
“Go Guide” must be
emailed to [email protected] no later
than 5 p.m. Monday.
Go Guide listings are
free, and include entertainment and arts
events in the Purchase
Area region.
Stocks
8B • Thursday, May 4, 2017 • The Paducah Sun
Today
Manufacturing bellwether
Orders to U.S. factories have
risen lately, signaling improving
fortunes for American manufacturers.
Surging demand for commercial aircraft has lifted factory
orders since December. That’s
good news for U.S. manufacturers, which are slowly recovering
from a weak patch caused by
falling demand for American
exports. The Commerce
Department reports today how
factory orders fared in March.
Factory orders
seasonally adjusted percent change
3% 2.8
2
1.3
1.5
1.0
1
-2.3
0
est.
0.4
-1
-2
-3
O
N
D
’16
J
’17
F
M
Source: FactSet
CombinedStocks
Stocks in bold changed 5% or more in price
Name
Div P/E Last Chg Name
Div P/E
GenElec
.96 20
A-B-C-D
5
AGNC Inv
2.16
4 20.13 -.37 GenMotors 1.52
.02e ...
AK Steel
... 20
5.93 -.31 Gerdau
GileadSci
2.08
7
AMD
... dd 10.39 +.07
.02e ...
AkamaiT
... 25 52.80 -9.70 GoldFLtd
... dd
Alibaba
... 37 116.57 -1.52 Groupon
AlpAlerMLP 1.35e
q 12.51 -.07 Hanesbds s .60 12
HlthcreTr
1.20
24
Ambev
.06e
6
5.84 -.02
.26
9
Anadarko
.20 dd 51.95 -4.33 HP Ent n
.16 28
Annaly
1.20a 10 11.53 -.16 HopFedBc
.32 20
Anthem
2.60 19 179.94 -1.33 HuntBncsh
Apple Inc
2.52f 17 147.06 -.45
I-J-K-L
ArcelorMit
...
8
7.57 -.33 IAMGld g
... 76
AresCap
1.52 12 16.79 -.74 ICICI Bk
.16e ...
BcoBrad s
.37e ...
9.87 -.04
iShGold
...
q
BkofAm
.30f 15 23.77 +.24
iShBrazil
1.03e
q
B iPVxST rs
...
q 14.78 +.32
iShSilver
...
q
BarrickG
.12f 27 16.21 -.20
q
BrMySq
1.56f 33 55.06 -.89 iShChinaLC .76e
iShEMkts
.84e
q
Carlisle
1.40f 17 100.78 +.17
3.05
q
Cemex
.29t ...
8.76 -.17 iSh20 yrT
1.70e
q
Cemig pf
.14e ...
3.01 +.13 iS Eafe
1.77e
q
CntryLink
2.16 10 25.42 -.53 iShR2K
Inphi
...
18
ChesEng
... dd
5.54 +.22
1.09f 16
Cisco
1.16 18 34.25 +.01 Intel
...
q
Citigroup
.64 12 60.24 +.53 iSh UK rs
.32e ...
CliffsNRs
...
6
6.26 -.37 ItauUnibH
1.92 14
CobaltIEn
... dd
.33 -.04 JPMorgCh
.34 19
CocaCola
1.48 26 43.32 -.07 Keycorp
KindMorg
.50 68
ConAgra
.80 20 37.76 -.19
... 53
CSVelIVST
...
q 76.19 -1.52 Kinross g
2.20f 13
DDR Corp
.76 12 10.56 -.42 Kohls
LendingClb
...
dd
DelphiAuto 1.16 17 87.01 +8.56
.47a ...
DeltaAir
.81
9 48.31 +.48 LloydBkg
DxGBull rs
...
q 29.74 -.77
M-N-O-P
DrGMBll rs
...
q 15.88 -.55
MarathnO
.20 dd
DirDGlBr rs
...
q 35.40 +.96
MartMM
1.68 36
DxSCBear rs
...
q 17.55 +.29
Mattel
1.52 25
Disney
1.56f 20 111.62 -2.75
Merck
1.88 17
DollarTree
... 22 81.92 +.22
MetLife
1.60
11
DomRescs 3.02f 20 76.57 -.65
... 34
DowChm
1.84 20 61.71 -.81 MicronT
1.56 30
DryShp rs .04e
1
.74 -.32 Microsoft
DukeEngy
3.42 17 82.04 -.35 MobileTele .88e ...
MolinaHlth
... 47
E-F-G-H
MolsCoorB 1.64 29
.76 31
EldorGld g
.02e dd
3.48 +.02 Mondelez
1.26f cc
EmersonEl 1.92 24 59.27 +.11 Mosaic
.24 dd
EnCana g
.06 40 10.85 +.26 Nabors
.84 23
ENSCO
.04
2
7.49 +.12 NikeB s
.08
2
Etsy n
... ... 10.51 -.89 NobleCorp
.40 dd
ExxonMbl
3.08f 37 82.70 +.65 NobleEngy
.17e ...
Facebook
... 36 151.80 -.98 NokiaCp
3.60 22
FairmSant
... dd
4.80 -.25 NorthropG
.56 39
FedExCp
1.60 17 189.92 +.89 Nvidia
... ...
FireEye
... dd 13.78 +1.57 Oclaro
... dd
FstNBC lf
...
1
.25 +.15 OcwenFn
.60 22
FstSolar
... dd 33.91 +3.59 Oracle
PPG
s
1.60
18
FirstEngy
1.44 11 28.95 +.28
... 39
Fitbit n
... dd
5.68 -.13 PayPal n
... ...
Fleetcor
... 18 131.26 -6.74 Petrobras
1.28 14
FordM
.60a
6 11.07 +.15 Pfizer
... ...
FrptMcM
... dd 12.02 -.70 PierisPhm
.31p 17
FrontierCm .16m dd
1.61 -.32 PiperJaf
... dd
GATX
1.68f 10 59.51 +.23 PlugPowr h
GenDynam 3.36f 20 194.18 +.11 PS SrLoan 1.01
q
3.78 -.08
8.85 +.37
11.92 -.18
37.88 -.43
15.59 -.34
38.29 -.18
40.31 -.27
121.78 +.08
64.26 -.13
138.29 -.86
36.16 -4.38
36.98 +.29
33.14 -.23
12.42 -.23
87.00 +.50
18.86 +.38
20.28 -.17
3.70 +.34
39.92 +.76
6.04 +.19
3.64 -.03
+.21
-.88
-.32
+.93
+.08
+.23
-.22
-.88
+4.40
-4.47
+1.29
-1.32
+.01
-.54
-.09
-1.24
+.04
+.18
+.77
-.26
-.24
-.27
-.03
+.09
-.14
+1.27
+.30
-.06
-.03
Spotlight on Kellogg
Out of balance
Wall Street expects that Kellogg’s latest quarterly report card will
show mixed results.
The maker of Corn Flakes
and Keebler cookies is due to
serve up its first-quarter results
today. Financial analysts predict
that Kellogg’s earnings edged
higher in the January-March
period from a year earlier, even
as revenue declined. Investors
will be listening for an update on
the company’s efforts to cut
costs and invest more in
advertising.
The Commerce Department
reports today its tally of where
the nation’s trade gap stood in
March.
The trade deficit declined
sharply in February as imports
from China fell by a record
amount and American exports
rose for the third month in a
row. U.S.-made autos and
autos parts, which hit the
highest level since July 2014,
led the small rise in exports in
February.
MAY 2017
June Issue Publishes
May 25th
www.fourriversbusiness.com
Area employers encouraged
to focus on transitioning soldiers
www.fourriversbusiness.com
Name
Div P/E Last
PwShs QQQ1.52e
q 136.99
PUVixST rs
...
q 13.69
Chg Name
-.44 21stCFoxA
+.52 Twilio n
Twitter
Q-R-S-T
Qualcom
2.28f
RiteAid
...
RymanHP
3.00
SpdrGold
...
S&P500ETF 4.13e
SpdrOGEx .73e
SRC Eng
...
Schwab
.32
SiriusXM
.04
SouthnCo
2.32f
SwstnEngy
...
SpiritRltC
.72
Sprint
...
Square n
...
SP CnSt
1.28e
SP Engy
2.04e
SPDR Fncl .46e
SP Inds
1.12e
SP Util
1.55e
Stryker
1.70
Synchrony
.26
TahoeRes
.24
TevaPhrm 1.36e
3M Co
4.70f
Transocn
...
17
37
11
q
q
q
dd
29
32
17
dd
11
dd
dd
q
q
q
q
q
27
11
15
11
24
6
54.49
4.06
63.19
117.98
238.48
34.69
7.04
40.40
4.85
49.47
7.32
8.92
7.77
18.28
54.65
67.50
23.84
66.51
51.27
135.71
28.77
8.99
30.72
197.63
10.76
+1.20
-.05
-.56
-1.67
-.29
+.02
-.53
+.37
+.01
-.04
-.16
-.33
-1.30
-.53
+.05
+.19
+.19
+.05
-.18
-.46
-.10
+1.15
-1.39
+1.10
+.34
2,400
S&P 500
21,080
Dow Jones industrials
2,360
Close: 2,388.13
Change: -3.04 (-0.1%)
20,740
Close: 20,957.90
Change: 8.01 (flat)
2,320
20,400
10 DAYS
2,400
21,000
20,000
2,200
19,000
2,100
2,000
18,000
N
D
J
StocksRecap
Vol. (in mil.)
Pvs. Volume
Advanced
Declined
New Highs
New Lows
NYSE
NASD
3,787
3,718
1186
1746
120
50
2,066
2,056
1012
1790
94
72
F
M
DOW
DOW Trans.
DOW Util.
NYSE Comp.
NASDAQ
S&P 500
S&P 400
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
17,000
A
HIGH
20972.74
9149.40
701.41
11537.06
6076.96
2389.82
1732.57
24887.35
1399.12
N
LOW
20874.18
9081.11
697.14
11493.32
6053.28
2379.94
1721.08
24792.78
1386.32
D
J
CLOSE
20957.90
9133.14
697.54
11529.66
6072.55
2388.13
1727.41
24864.26
1390.92
Stocks of Local Interest
F
CHG.
+8.01
-20.83
-4.14
-21.64
-22.82
-3.04
-7.31
-89.71
-8.44
M
A
%CHG.
YTD
+0.04%
+6.05%
-0.23%
+0.99%
-0.59%
+5.75%
-0.19%
+4.28%
-0.37% +12.81%
-0.13%
+6.67%
-0.42%
+4.02%
-0.36%
+6.14%
-0.60%
+2.49%
Stock listings requested by our readers
52-WK RANGE
LO
CLOSE
CHG
YTD
%CHG %CHG
45.90
+.15
+15.6
43.89
38.40
-.55
-1.4
-9.7
9
23.27
21.99
-.19
-0.9
129.00
6
157.84
143.82
+.30
NAME
TICKER
Computer Services Inc
CSVI.PK
AT&T Inc
T
36.10
3
Aerojet Rocketdyne
AJRD
16.04
Air Products
APD
CLOSE
HI
1YR
%RTN
P/E
DIV
21
1.00
+4.6
15
1.96
+22.5
+21.1
dd
...
+0.2
...
+9.0
23
3.80f
AEP
57.89
8
71.32
67.90
-.11
-0.2
+7.8
+9.2
17
2.36
AmerisourceBergen
ABC
68.38
6
94.50
82.67
+.01
...
+5.7
-1.4
14
1.46
Aon plc
AON
100.55
0
121.05
120.34
+.42
+0.4
+7.9
+13.7
20
1.44f
ATMOS Energy
ATO
68.51
9
82.07
80.11
-.61
-0.8
+8.0
+13.0
23
1.80f
BB&T Corp
BBT
32.85
7
49.88
44.15
+.68
+1.6
-6.1
+26.1
16
1.20
Comcast Corp A
CMCSA
29.81
9
40.62
38.54
-.80
-2.0
+11.6
+30.4
22
0.63f
Cracker Barrel
CBRL
130.15
8
175.04
163.45
+.20
+0.1
-2.1
+15.4
26
4.60
Dillards Inc
DDS
46.56
4
77.70
56.66
+.72
+1.3
-9.6
-21.3
12
0.28
Dover Corp
DOV
62.89
8
82.56
77.43
-.40
-0.5
+3.3
+21.5
24
1.76
EnPro Inds
NPO
42.56
0
74.89
72.70
+.10
+0.1
+7.9
+23.8
45
0.88
0.24
Freds Inc
FRED
7.89
6
21.77
15.04
-.12
-0.8
-19.0
+1.7
dd
Fuller HB Co
FUL
41.52
9
54.32
52.89
+.01
...
+9.5
+18.8
21
0.56
Goodyear
GT
24.31
9
37.20
35.18
-.09
-0.3
+14.0
+23.9
10
0.40
Honeywell Intl
HON
105.25
9
135.00
131.07
-.12
-0.1
+13.1
+17.3
19
2.66
Jabil Circuit
JBL
16.78
0
29.75
28.83
-.38
-1.3
+21.8
+70.8
21
0.32
Kimberly Clark
KMB
111.30
6
138.87
126.77
+.03
...
+11.1
+4.2
21
3.88
Kroger Co
KR
28.29
2
37.97
29.40
+.58
+2.0
-14.8
-17.3
14
0.48
Lowes Cos
LOW
64.87
0
85.76
85.53
+.15
+0.2
+20.3
+14.0
21
1.40
Motorola Solutions
MSI
62.76
0
87.55
86.37
+.45
+0.5
+4.2
+15.4
20
1.88f
NiSource Inc
NI
21.17
5
26.94
24.01
-.23
-0.9
+8.4
+8.5
22
0.70
Old NBcp IN
ONB
11.58
8
18.95
17.05
+.10
+0.6
-6.1
+35.2
16
0.52
Penney JC Co Inc
JCP
5.32
1
11.30
5.49
+.05
+0.9
-33.9
-43.5
dd
...
Pilgrims Pride
PPC
17.15
9
26.50
25.30
+.01
...
+33.2
+2.0
Regions Fncl
RF
7.80
8
16.03
14.12
+.28
+2.0
-1.7
+49.2
16
0.28f
Seabrd Cp
SEB
4031.16 -145.44
-3.5
+2.0
+36.2
15
3.00
Sears Holdings Corp
SHLD
5.50
4
18.18
10.43
-.28
-2.6
+12.3
-34.4
dd
...
Sherwin Wms
SHW
239.48
0
338.00
334.18
-.52
-0.2
+24.4
+16.8
27
3.40
8 4545.00
14 2.75e
Total SA
TOT
44.06
9
52.34
50.90
-.04
-0.1
-0.1
+5.4
US Bancorp
USB
38.48
8
56.61
52.21
+.64
+1.2
+1.6
+22.6
16
1.12
WalMart Strs
WMT
62.72
0
75.77
75.76
+.24
+0.3
+9.6
+14.7
17
2.04f
Westlake Chemical
WLK
39.48
9
68.08
62.62
-1.71
-2.7
+11.8
+29.7
WestRock Co
WRK
35.77
9
56.32
53.99
+.20
+0.4
+6.3
+49.6
Last Chg
28.88 -1.55
25.01 -8.93
18.57 +.33
U-V-W-X-Y-Z
UPS B
US NGas
US OilFd
USSteel
VWR
Vale SA
Vale SA pf
ValeantPh
VanEGold
VnEkRus
VanE JrGld
VangEmg
VangEur
VangFTSE
Vereit
VerizonCm
ViacomB
VulcanM
WeathfIntl
WellsFargo
WstnUnion
WhitingPet
WmsCos
Yamana g
3.32f
...
...
.20
...
.29e
.29e
...
.12e
.64e
...
1.10e
1.71e
1.10e
.55
2.31
.80
1.00f
...
1.52
.70f
...
1.20f
.02
19 107.35 +.43
q
7.43 +.07
q
9.93 +.01
dd 21.37 -.60
23 33.62 +5.10
...
8.36 -.46
...
8.05 -.41
3
9.80 -.51
q 21.51 -.23
q 20.41 -.39
q 30.70 -.47
q 40.41 -.29
q 54.09 -.17
q 40.39 -.13
11
8.20 -.15
11 46.15 +.24
11 39.26 -3.20
42 127.59 -.86
dd
5.32 +.02
14 54.85 +.69
11 19.26 -.87
dd
8.32 +.10
52 30.71 +.38
53
2.67 +.01
seasonally adjusted in billions
$0
est.
-42.6 -45.5 -44.3 -48.2 -43.6 -44.5
-10
-20
-30
-40
-50
O
N
’16
D
’17
J
F
M
Source: FactSet
Closing figures as of Wednesday, May 3, 2017
YTD
Chg %Rtn
+.01
+1.2
-.08 +7.6
-.05 +5.2
-.02 +4.8
-.14 +9.9
-.10 +5.6
-.17 +13.3
-.12 +8.2
-.17 +10.6
-.02 +4.0
-.09 +6.5
-.07 +13.4
-.23 +11.6
-.05 +5.2
+.07
-13.0
+1.8
+16.8
+11.3
+5.0
+4.2
-.01 +1.9
-.09 +12.6
-1.08 +5.3
+1.9
-.09
-.09
-.04
-.15
-.15
-.45
-.01
-.13
-.05
-.29
-.01
-.13
+7.3
+7.3
+6.9
+14.1
+14.1
+13.2
+19.7
+6.0
+7.0
+4.0
+2.0
+6.9
+.05
-.01
-.01
+4.9
+3.0
+3.2
-.22 +14.7
-.07 +12.9
-.33 +14.4
+.09
+5.3
-.07 +18.6
-.12 +19.3
+1.6
-.17 +14.1
-.03 +17.1
PIMCO
IncInstl
12.28
RlEstRlRtStrC m
6.53
TtlRetIns
10.16
Putnam
MltCpGrY
87.69
Schwab
SP500Idx
36.94
T. Rowe Price
BlueChipGr
83.97
CptlAprc
28.01
EqIdx500 d
64.23
GrStk
62.00
LatinAmerica d
22.96
MdCpGr
83.22
NewInc
9.44
Rtr2020
21.77
Rtr2030
24.39
Val
35.56
Vanguard
500IdxAdmrl
220.69
500IdxInv
220.67
BalIdxAdmrl
32.44
DivGrInv
24.92
EqIncAdmrl
71.24
GrIdxAdmrl
64.23
HCAdmrl
85.03
InTrInvGrdAdmrl
9.75
InTrTEAdmrl
14.07
InsIdxIns
217.74
InsIdxInsPlus
217.75
InsTtlSMIInPls
53.56
LtdTrmTEAdmrl
10.96
MdCpIdxAdmrl
173.91
PrcMtlsMngInv
9.61
PrmCpAdmrl
120.49
STInvmGrdAdmrl 10.67
SmCpIdxAdmrl
64.12
StarInv
25.33
TrgtRtr2020Inv
29.78
TrgtRtr2025Inv
17.33
TrgtRtr2030Inv
31.13
TrgtRtr2035Inv
19.01
TrgtRtr2040Inv
32.55
TtBMIdxAdmrl
10.72
TtBMIdxIns
10.72
TtBMIdxInsPlus
10.72
TtInBIdxAdmrl
21.72
TtInBIdxIns
32.60
TtInBIdxInv
10.86
TtInSIdxAdmrl
27.35
TtInSIdxIns
109.38
TtInSIdxInsPlus 109.40
TtInSIdxInv
16.35
TtlSMIdxAdmrl
59.72
TtlSMIdxIns
59.73
TtlSMIdxInv
59.69
WlngtnAdmrl
69.96
WlslyIncAdmrl
63.07
WndsrIIAdmrl
65.68
Waddell & Reed Adv
AcculativeA m
9.96
SciandTechA m
15.40
-.01
+3.7
+.6
+2.3
-.20 +13.2
-.04
+7.3
-.13
-.01
-.07
-.07
-.09
-.20
-.01
-.03
-.05
-.04
+15.6
+6.9
+7.3
+16.4
+18.6
+10.4
+1.6
+6.7
+8.3
+5.7
-.24 +7.3
-.24 +7.3
-.05 +4.8
-.05 +6.9
+.03 +4.9
-.25 +12.4
-.39 +12.2
-.02 +2.1
+.02 +2.3
-.23 +7.3
-.24 +7.3
-.11 +6.9
+.01 +1.7
-.78 +7.1
-.10 +2.3
+.05 +10.7
-.01 +1.1
-.34 +4.1
-.03 +7.0
-.06 +5.4
-.04 +6.0
-.06 +6.6
-.04 +7.2
-.07 +7.7
-.01 +1.5
-.01 +1.5
-.01 +1.5
+.6
+.01
+.6
+.5
-.10 +11.4
-.41 +11.4
-.41 +11.4
-.06 +11.3
-.12 +7.0
-.12 +7.0
-.12 +6.9
-.04 +4.4
+2.9
-.03 +5.4
-.03 +7.6
-.11 +12.9
For Hong Kong property prices, it looks like the only
way is up.
Housing costs in the Asian financial center have
steadily risen to stratospheric heights.
Home prices and rents in the
Chinese city are at or close to
all-time highs, according to
government and private
surveys.
The city is frequently named
one of the world’s most
expensive housing markets
thanks to years of ultralow
interest rates and unrelenting
demand from mainland
Chinese buyers. Another factor:
supply of land from the
government, which controls all land for development in
the space-starved former British colony, hasn’t kept
pace with demand.
The government is keen to deflate the property
bubble gently rather than having it
pop with messy consequences.
But measures taken so far,
including three rounds of
government cooling measures
since 2012 and progressively
tighter mortgage rules, have hardly
put a dent in demand.
The fourth and latest intervention
came in April, with the elimination
of a loophole that let first time
buyers purchasing multiple
properties escape stamp duty.
Pricey pads:
Despite the government’s repeated attempts to cool the market, Hong Kong is one of
the world’s most expensive places to rent or buy property.
Home price index
Rental index
350
300
Home price index vs Rental index
250
Amer Elec Power
2590.00
Div P/E
.36 18
... ...
... dd
Name
NAV
American Century
ValInv
8.91
American Funds
AMCpA m
29.30
AmrcnBalA m
26.01
AmrcnMutA m
38.40
CptWldGrIncA m 47.96
CptlIncBldrA m
60.35
EuroPacGrA m
51.13
FdmtlInvsA m
58.73
GrfAmrcA m
46.49
IncAmrcA m
22.38
InvCAmrcA m
38.42
NwPrspctvA m
40.05
SmCpWldA m
51.30
WAMtInvsA m
42.90
BlackRock
EngyResInvA m 17.38
StrIncOppsIns
9.90
DFA
EmMktsCorEqIns 20.27
IntlCorEqIns
12.96
USCorEqIIInstl
19.48
USLgCpValInstl
36.42
Dodge & Cox
Inc
13.73
IntlStk
42.90
Stk
190.60
DoubleLine
TtlRetBdI
10.69
Fidelity
500IdxInstl
83.60
500IdxPremium
83.60
Bal
23.45
Contrafund
111.57
ContrafundK
111.52
GrCo
154.80
LatinAmerica d
22.81
LowPricedStk
52.47
Puritan
21.95
TelecomandUtls
25.55
TtlBd
10.64
TtlMktIdxPrm
68.71
Franklin Templeton
GlbBdAdv
12.42
IncA m
2.33
IncC m
2.36
Harbor
CptlApprecInstl
64.98
IntlInstl
65.93
Janus
GlbLifeSciT
51.65
MFS
ValI
38.03
Matthews
ChinaInv
18.35
IndiaInv
30.59
Metropolitan West
TtlRetBdI
10.62
Oakmark
IntlInv
25.90
Oberweis
ChinaOpps m
12.81
Trade balance
Hong Kong’s costly homes
10 DAYS
22,000
2,300
MutualFunds
Your.
Regional.
Business.
Connection.
Last Chg
29.23 +.24
33.48 +.28
2.98 -.17
67.21 -1.38
3.22
3.47 -.53
20.72 -1.34
29.84 +.22
18.67 -.03
14.96 +.20
13.14 +.19
14.85
238.97
21.74
63.63
52.10
28.00
69.08
9.30
64.15
90.89
45.03
23.63
9.99
54.53
4.53
30.18
5.88
245.51
104.25
8.19
2.73
44.89
109.20
49.02
9.17
33.47
3.67
61.95
2.21
23.24
paducahsun.com
2.71e
20
200
150
100
50
2000’s
Futures trading on the Chicago Board of Trade
Open
High
Low
Wheat CBOT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
May 17 442.00
443.00
440.00
Jul 17
453.00
456.00
445.00
Sep 17 467.00
470.00
460.00
Dec 17 488.00
490.00
481.00
Est. Sales 281,470 Tue’s sales 209,011
Tue’s open int.438,524 Chg. -13512.00
Corn CBOT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
May 17 363.00
367.00
362.00
Jul 17
372.00
375.00
370.00
Sep 17 379.00
383.00
377.00
Dec 17 390.00
393.00
387.00
Est. Sales 513,906 Tue’s sales 349,484
Tue’s open int.1,326,162 Chg. +3264.00
Company
Spotlight
Settle
Chg
443.00
454.00
467.00
488.00
+1.00
n/a
-.00
-1.00
366.00
374.00
382.00
392.00
+2.00
+2.00
+2.00
+2.00
Etsy (ETSY)
Price-earnings ratio: Lost money
$16
Settle
Chg
246.00
238.00
223.00
218.00
+1.00
-3.00
-8.00
-4.00
965.00
975.00
976.00
971.00
+7.00
+6.00
+6.00
+5.00
The company is under growing pressure from
shareholders upset with lackluster profits and an anemic
stock performance.
Etsy went public with a splash just over two
years ago. Its stock nearly doubled from its
$16 IPO price in its first day of trading, but
since then it’s slumped amid stagnant sales
and investor concern about counterfeit goods
being sold on the site.
Shares in Etsy slid 7.8 percent to $10.51.
The stock is down 12 percent so far this year.
Wednesday’s close: $10.51
52-WEEK RANGE
$8
Open
High
Low
Oats CBOT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
May 17 248.00
248.00
246.00
Jul 17
240.00
242.00
232.00
Sep 17 225.00
225.00
223.00
Dec 17 221.00
221.00
217.00
Est. Sales 778 Tue’s sales 830
Tue’s open int.5,646 Chg. -119.00
Soybean CBOT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
May 17 959.00
966.00
959.00
Jul 17
969.00
976.00
967.00
Aug 17 971.00
977.00
968.00
Sep 17 966.00
972.00
964.00
Est. Sales 252,504 Tue’s sales 151,284
Tue’s open int.641,899 Chg. +624.00
Shake up at Etsy
Etsy shares slumped Wednesday after the online crafts
marketplace posted a weak first quarter, replaced its
chief executive and announced it will
cut 8 percent of its workforce.
The New York-based company
named board member Josh Silverman
as CEO, replacing Chad Dickerson,
who also stepped down as board
chairman.
Etsy will also cut about 80 jobs as it
moves to trim costs.
AP
2010’s
Kelvin K. Chan; Alex Nieves • AP
Commodities
0.76
1.60
1990’s
Source: Hong Kong Rating and Valuation Department
Price change
ETSY
9-mos
1-yr
-24.1% 25.1
2-yr*
-30.5
(Based on last 12-month results)
*annualized
Source: FactSet
Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after
stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend,
annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.
PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.
Stock Footnotes: g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. pf - Preferred stock issue. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year.
s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of
the name.
Classified
9B
The Paducah Sun | Thursday, May 4, 2017 | paducahsun.com
0151
7R3ODFH$Q$G
575-8700
or1-800-599-1771
outside McCracken Co.
Email: [email protected]
GARAGE/ESTATE
SALES
Church-Wide
Yard Sale
Milburn Chapel
Hwy 60 at Heath
Middle School.
Fri 7-5, Sat 7-12,
household items,
Avon collectibles,
furniture, kids
items and much
more!
SPECIAL
Single Family
5 lines / 3 days
270-575-8700
,1&2/801
$'9(57,6,1*
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Make some money in the early morning hours
by delivering newspapers as an
Independent Contractor for the Paducah Sun.
Routes available in the following areas:
Garage Sale
$30
'HDGOLQHV
Are you an early riser?
Mega Sale! 442 N
36th St Paducah
KY May 5th & 6th
Don't miss! Largest
sale of the summer
Reidland/ Farley
Paducah, Lowes, Lone Oak,
Murray, Benton
Kevil/LaCenter
• Call Brijit Stiles to find out more!
270-575-8792
Call To
d
Be Put ay To
On Our
Bundle
H
Waiting auler
List!
or email [email protected]
2120 Knob Hill Dr.
Happy Hollow Sub.
Saturday 7am boys
clothes 24m-2T,
shoes, toys, misc
Lone Oak/Hendron
150 Charlotte Ann
Dr. Sat. Only 7-1.
Lone Oak. Lots Of
Goodies To
Choose From!
GENERAL HELP
0232
GENERAL HELP
0232
3553 Clinton Road
(Lone Oak Mobile
Home Pk. Lot#18
Sat. Only 8-4pm
Indoor Sale
EMPLOYMENT
is currently accepting applications for:
is currently accepting applications for:
FULL-TIME
OFFICE
DELIVERY AGENT
PART TIME
TELEMARKETER
FULL-TIME
SERVICE
REP
FULL-TIME CUSTOMER
OFFICE DELIVERY
AGENT
This
positionSun
includes
outbound
telephone
calls
The Paducah
currentlymaking
has a full-time
position
available for
an
and
following
on Duties
sales calls.
It also
includes
ongoing
Office
Delivery up
Agent.
will include
delivery
of newspaper
training
andofhelp
organize
projects.
routes,
making
new to
delivery
tapes,telemarketing
delivery of missed
papers of
&/$66,),('$'5$7(6
The
Paducah
Sun some weekends.
Evening hours and
may
include
Lines
Per 1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Day Day Days Days Days Days Days Days
Applications may bePaducah,
pickedKentucky
up from 8:00 am - 4:30 pm
phone calls
please.
at our officeNo
located
at 408
Kentucky Ave.
AnswersSun
customer
courteously,
The Paducah
currentlycalls
has aquickly
full-timeand
position
available for an
accurately
all transactions
to represent
The
Office
Deliveryprocesses
Agent. Duties
will include delivery
of newspaper
Paducah
Sun.ofResponsibilities
include
routes,
making
new delivery tapes,
deliverypreparing/printing
of missed papers of
proper
paperwork,
scheduling
ed ads,
processing
home
delivery
subscribers,
assist withclassifi
kiosk and
door to
door sales.
payments,
and working
Company vehicle
provided.with carrier managers as needed to
resolve complaints. Computer knowledge is needed.
Applications may be picked up
Monday
through Friday,
8 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
Applications
may be
picked
up at
The Friday,
Paducah8Sun
Monday through
a.m. to 4 p.m. at
408
Avenue
TheKentucky
Paducah
Sun
Kentucky
408Paducah,
Kentucky
Avenue
No phone calls
please.
Paducah,
Kentucky
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.
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.
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home delivery subscribers, assist with kiosk and door to door sales.
Must have
good
verbal communication, people skills,
Company
vehicle
provided.
ability to maintain paperwork and some computer
Applications
may be picked up
experience.
Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
408 Kentucky Avenue
Call about our
30 day specials!
ANNOUNCEMENTS 0107
0107
SPECIAL NOTICE
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
Monday-1:30PM Fri.
Tuesday-Saturday
10AM Previous Day
CHECK
YOUR AD
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
PART-TIME POSITION
SPECIAL NOTICE
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.
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.
LOST
LOST YOUR DOG??
Check your local
Humane Society
270-443-5923
GARAGE /ESTATE
SALES
GARAGE/ESTATE
0151
SALES
120 Brenna Dr. 5
Family Yard sale
Fri Sat 7am-3
Furn. MISC Items
& clothes
1318 Friedman Ln
Fri-Sat May 5-6
8AM-3PM
340 Suwanee Cir.
May 5 & 6 Gilbertsville-behind
KenBar off Hwy.
641. Good Stuff!!!
0232
GENERAL HELP
Diesel Mechanic
Class A CDL
helpful. Apply at
Dry Ice Sales,
6760 Ky. Dam Rd.,
Paducah Ky 42003
Experienced
Brick Layers and
Laborers Needed.
270-554-9316
270-559-1892
HVAC
Journeyman
Technician and
Sheet Metal
Workers
Needed.
Paid vacation,
holidays, 401K &
insurance. Pick
up application at:
Penn & Son
Sheet Metal
961 Slickback
Rd. Benton, Ky.
PAINTERS
WANTED
$9-12/hr. Must
have valid drivers
license, own transportation & be able
to pass drug
screen. Must be
willing to learn and
have a good attitude. Training
available. Apply at:
M & M Decorating,
710 H C Mathis
Dr., Paducah, 9-3
Mon. thru Fri.
Roofers and
Laborers Needed.
Full time, Must
have valid drivers
licenses.
Call 270-442-8326
0244
TRUCKING
Part Time Driver,
CDL Not Required.
Class B Helpful.
Full Time Drivers,
Class A CDL
Required. Apply at
Dry Ice Sales,
6760 Ky Dam Rd.
Paducah Ky 42003
Applicants should send a cover letter and
resume to Executive Editor Steve Wilson at
[email protected].
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.
CHILD CARE
0220
MEDICAL/DENTAL
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.
is currently
accepting
applications
Is currently
accepting applications
for for
PRODUCTION/INSERTING POSITION
The Paducah Sun has an opening for a
part-time obituary clerk/news assistant.
The position involves afternoon hours and may
include Saturday or Sunday shifts.
0264
PROFESSIONAL
0212
is currently
applications
Is c rrentlaccepting
accepting applications
for for
END ROLLS FOR
SALE
0142
PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT
0268
We are looking for
Dietary Cooks, Dietary Aides,
Laundry Aides & Housekeepers
If you are passionate about helping others and have a strong work ethic please
apply at the address below:
Metropolis Rehab and Healthcare
2299 Metropolis St., Metropolis, IL
or Email: [email protected]
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.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
CLASSIFIED
CAN DO IT!
Sell. Rent. Place. Find.
Buy. Announce. Greet.
Classified can do it all.
Quickly. Easily.
Cheaply.
Try it now.
Chances are you have
things in storage which
classified can sell or
rent for you.
575-8700
MONDAY THRU
FRIDAY
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
WERFE
©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
RIHDT
VOTEMI
GORJEG
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
8 A.M.
UNTIL
-
0204
ADMINISTRATIVE
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
$GMXVWPHQWV
4:30 P.M.
Yesterday’s
(Answers tomorrow)
LOUSY
KITTEN
GAGGLE
Jumbles: CHIVE
Answer: After a long day of showing off his new electric
bulb, Thomas Edison was — OUT LIKE A LIGHT
10B • Thursday, May 4, 2017 • The Paducah Sun
HOME SERVICE 1108 EXCAVATING 1156
DIRECTORY
GOODE
TRUCKING &
CLEANING
1048 SERVICES EXCAVATING
White Rock,
A&R
Cleaning Service
Exp. & Insured
Serving McCracken
& Surrounding Co's
270-556-4287
We also do
Window Cleaning!
Need your home or
office clean? Then
call "Team Mitchell"
270-993-4320
Just once or all the
time affordable and
reliable. Great
references and free
estimates!
Gravel, Sand,
Topsoil, Lime,
Land Clearing,
Dirtwork, Grading,
Demolition
(270) 970-0421
(270) 832-5790
1150
HAULING
CLEAN OUT
HAUL OFF
• Garages • Attics
• Basements
• Outbuildings
W. KY & So. IL
No Job Too Small!
FREE ESTIMATES
(270) 210-5470
paducahsun.com
HEATING/
COOLING
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
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
Over 25 Years Experience
Doors, Windows,
Siding, Decks, Covers,
Retaining Walls, etc.
Mike Downing
270-816-3609
1198
LAWN/LANDSCAPE/
TREE SVC
ADORE LAWN &
LANDSCAPING
Leaf Removal &
Cleanup, Mulching,
Over seeding,
Hedge Trimming
270-554-2426
270-933-8869
0276
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
Are you an
early riser?
THE PADUCAH
SUN
is looking
for an
Independent
Contractor for
our Murray
Route with a
potential
income of
$750 per
month, 6 days
a week
and our
LaCenter/
Wickliffe Route
with a
potential of up
to $1500 per
month, 6 days
a week.
Potential
income of up
to $750 per
month, 6 days
a week.
For additional
information
please call:
Brijit Stiles at
270-575-8792
PETS
0320
CATS/DOGS/
PETS
6 AKC registered
Rottweiler Puppies,
5 weeks old, ready
to go now! $350
270-703-4400
BASENJI (very rare)
or Cocker pups.
270-543-4451
FARM
0450
LIVESTOCK
18-20mo. old black
Gelbvieh Bulls for
sale. 270-836-5518
Bulls for Sale
Polled Hereford
bulls, 12-26 mo old
Complete performance data, EPD's &
semen checked.
Young's Polled
Herefords
Kuttawa , KY
270-963-0309
Reg Angus Bulls,
bred cows &
heifers. Calving
ease and growth.
Bremer Bros 618524-5396
MERCHANDISE
0563
MISC. ITEMS
FOR SALE
1CT 7 Large Diamonds Ring Size 6
1/2 Appraises for
$1500 asking 900
270-804-9457
REAL ESTATE FOR 0610
RENT
REAL ESTATE
0605 FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED
APARTMENTS
FREE 1st month!
1 BR, great location,
$440 mo.
554-0211 / 217-5890
2804 KY Ave.
$450. 1BR, water
pd & Baptist Hosp.
618-398-1113
2br, 1.5 Ba. $575
270-554-2287
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.
CALVERT CITY,
Nice 2 BR upstairs,
$475/mo.
270-210-0929
Safe Clean and
Affordable Studio &
1 BR apt. for rent,
utilities incl. starting @ $650/mo.
270-210-7806
Townhouse- Mall
Area-2 BR. 2 BA.,
1,100 sq. ft.,
All appl. incl.,
water & trash incl.,
$950/mo. 2 mi.
from McCracken
Co. High School.
270-556-1365
DUPLEXES FOR
RENT
Lone Oak 2 BR
0630
2 B w/Garage
All Appliances
270-554-0114
3BR, 2B w/garage,
Reidland 908-9860
1198
LAWN/LANDSCAPE/
TREE SVC
AFFORDABLE
MOWING &
LANDSCAPING LLC.
“Big Enough To
Get The Job Done
But Small Enough
To Care!”
MENTION THIS
AD FOR:
10% Residential,
15% Senior/
Military/ Union,
20% Commercial
Discounts
All Your Lawn Care &
Landscaping Needs
or Just Give Us A Call
We Can Do It All.
Licensed & Insured
FREE ESTIMATES
270-331-1239
Hayden's
Lawn Care
Serving Western
KY for 20 yrs.
Free Estimates
270-556-4459
1198
LAWN/LANDSCAPE/
TREE SVC
Joe's Tractor &
Backhoe Service
Hauling White &
Red Gravel,
Top Soil, Sand
& Mulch. Spread
For Driveways &
Yards. Tilling...
Free Estimates!
270-564-9008
Local Family
Owned Licensed
& Insured Lawn
Care Co. offering
great customer
service with
competitive
residential and
commercial
pricing. For a free
estimate call
270-816-4270
Moore Lawncare
1198
LAWN/LANDSCAPE/
TREE SVC
THE BROTHER'S
LAWN CARE
CALL US TODAY!
Give us the opportunity to show you
what we can do!
Lic. & Ins.FREE Est.
270-816-0845
270-816-0910
THE CRISTOBAL
LAWN SERVICE
The following vehicles stored at Larry
Meadows Towing Service 937 Jefferson
Street Paducah, KY 42001 will be sold at a
Public Auction to recover towing & storage on
May 19, 2017 at 10:00 am. Titles are not
warranted and subject to prior liens. All sales
are final. CASH ONLY, Seller reserves the
right to bid.
2000 CHEVY 1500
VIN#2GCEC19T4Y1307199
2005 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY
VIN#2C4GP54L85R175170
2011 CHEVY MALIBU
VIN#1G1ZB5E18BF296524
1999 FORD TAURUS
VIN#1FAFP53U5XA168051
1995 PONTIAC SUNFIRE
VIN#1G2JB524XS7513220
ACE TREE
& Stump Removal, LLC
YARD WORK &
ODD JOBS
FREE
ESTIMATES
TREE & STUMP
REMOVAL
Hedge Trimming
DONALD
FORKEY
(270) 210-3718
(270) 898-8733
(270) 210-2479
LITTLE'S
Aerial Bucket Truck
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES
270-933-3086
PADUCAH
TREE
SERVICE
1276
ROOFING
Affordable Home
Improvement
Specializing in
ALL your home
improvement needs
(Roofing, Flooring
Repairs, etc.)
Insured, Free Est.
5% Military Discount
Scott, 270-309-3025
COWBOY UP
• Metal Roofing
Shingle roof
Flat roof
*Free EstimatesWill beat any
contactor's price
270-705-5799
270-382-2345
1276
ROOFING
Paducah’s Best
Roofing, Gutters
Siding, Storm
Damage &
Handyman
Services
270-564-5770
1306
SERVICES
FURNITURE
RESTORATION
Furniture/Cabinet
Repair, Finishing
M&R Woodworks
270-554-1705
HINES
ROOFING
Shingles & Metal
35 Years Experience
INSURED
All Work Guaranteed
270-443-6338
270-556-5474
Service Directory
1x1 - 30 days
$90.00
Call for more info
270-575-8700
(270) 210-5132
FREE ESTIMATES
0955
LEGALS
Open Sites
Paducah Public Schools is participating in the Summer Food Service Program. Meals will
be provided to all children without charge and are the same for all children regardless of
race, color, national origin, sex, age or disability, and there will be no discrimination in
the course of the meal service. Meals will be provided, at a first come, first serve basis, at
the sites and times as follows:
Paducah Middle School, 342 Lone Oak Road, Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 8:30-9:15 AM | Lunch: 11:30-12:15 PM
Anderson Court, 801 N. 8th St., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 10:05-10:30 AM | Lunch: 1:30-2 PM
Cardinal Point Apartments, 2741 Trimble St., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 7:40-7:55 AM | Lunch: 11:00-11:20 AM
Dudley Court, 801 McGuire Ave., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 9:25-9:50 AM | Lunch: 11:30-11:50 AM
Ella Munal Community, 2010 Hendricks St., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 9:20-9:40 AM | Lunch: 12:15-12:35 PM
0630
DUPLEXES FOR
RENT
West Paducah
2 bdrm. duplex,
attached double
garage, $600 mo.
270-628-3143 or
270-331-0999
REAL ESTATE FOR
SALE
HOMES FOR
0710
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.
FINANCIAL
0910
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
SOME ads in this
classification are
not necessarily for
"help wanted" but
for employment information booklets.
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.
Elmwood Court, 2330 Ohio St., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 8:35-9:00 AM | Lunch: 11:30-11:55 AM
McNabb Elementary, 2100 Park Ave., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 8:15-9:30 AM | Lunch: 11:00 AM- 12:30 PM
Mora Mi Apartments, 2991 Clay St., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 7:40-7:55 AM | Lunch: 10:40-10:55 AM
North Friendship Trailer Court, 2655 North Friendship Rd. – Lot #61, Paducah, KY 42001
(M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 8:45-9:10 AM | Lunch: 12:45-1:10 PM
Paducah Tilghman High School, 2400 Washington Street, Paducah, KY, 42001 (M-W) June 5-7,
2017
Breakfast: 8:30-9 AM
Lunch: 11-11:30 AM
Paducah Tilghman Football, 2400 Washington Street, Paducah, KY, 42001 (M-F) June 5-July
28, 2017
PM Snack: 5-5:30 PM
Supper: 8:30-9:30 PM
Robert Coleman Park, 10th and Caldwell St., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Lunch: 12:45-1:10 PM
Salvation Army, 2990 Trimble St., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Lunch: 12:15-12:35 PM
West End Day Care, 135 Memorial Dr., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 8:00-8:30 AM | Lunch: 11:00-11:30 PM
Enrolled Sites and Camps
Paducah Public Schools is participating in the Summer Food Service Program. Meals will
be provided to all eligible children free of charge. (To be eligible to receive free meals at a
residential or non-residential camp, children must meet the income guidelines for reduced-price meals in the National School Lunch Program. The income guidelines for reduced-price meals by family size are listed on the next page.) Children who are part of
households that receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly
foods stamps) benefits or benefits under the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations (FDPIR), or Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) are automatically eligible to receive free meals.
Acceptance and participation requirements for the Program and all activities are the
same for all regardless of race, color, national origin, sex, age or disability, and there will
be no discrimination in the course of the meal service.
Meals will be provided at the sites and times as follows:
Cub Scouts Day Camp, 109 S. 5th St., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) July 5-8, 2016
Lunch: 11:30-12:30 PM
Shelter 13, 14, 15-Noble Park 2801 Park Ave., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-June 7, 2016
Breakfast: 9:00-8:30 AM | Lunch: 11:45-12:15 PM
Shelter 16-Noble Park, 150 Recreation Trace, Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Breakfast: 9:00-9:30 AM
Shelter 19/AC Building – Noble Park, 125 Skatepark Lane, Paducah, KY 42001
(M-F) June 5-July 28, 2016
Lunch: 11:00-12:00 PM
Oscar Cross Boys and Girls Club, 2956 Park Ave., Paducah, KY 42001 (M-F) June 5-July 28,
2016
Breakfast: 8:15-8:45 AM | Lunch: 12:00-12:30 PM
In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights
regulations and policies, the USDA, its Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race,
color, national origin, sex, disability, age, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity in
any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA. Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g. Braille, large print, audiotape,
American Sign Language, etc.), should contact the Agency (State or local) where they applied
for benefits. Individuals who are deaf, hard of hearing or have speech disabilities may contact
USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339. Additionally, program information
may be made available in languages other than English.
To file a program complaint of discrimination, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, (AD-3027) found online at: http://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_cust.html, and
at any USDA office, or write a letter addressed to USDA and provide in the letter all of the information requested in the form. To request a copy of the complaint form, call (866) 632-9992.
Submit your completed form or letter to USDA by: (1) mail: U.S. Department of Agriculture Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights 1400 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, D.C. 20250-9410; (2) fax: (202) 690-7442; or (3) email:
[email protected] institution is an equal opportunity provider.
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.
A-SAP Tree &
Stump Removal
(270) 252-6110
(270) 493-2678
We specialize
in large tree
removals, hangers
& trimming.
Aerial Bucket Truck
Insured
Free Estimates!
270-556-9539
LEGALS
TREE SERVICE
Mowing,Trimming,
Mulching,
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
Call Jose
(270) 564-9168
(270) 564-6090
• Mowing
• Trimming
• Mulching
• Seeding
• Leaf Removal
Free Estimates
0955
1200
BE A 4-H
VOLUNTEER
4-H OFFICE
554-9520