Monday, July 11, 2011

PUTTING
PUTTIN
N IN EXTRA EFFORT: Paducah’s Josh Rhodes wins the Rolling Hills Invitational in Lone Oak in a playoff. | 1B
-?<
)8;L:8?,LE
MONDAY, July 11, 2011
Vol. 115 No. 192
www.paducahsun.com
Florida man drowns at Lake Barkley
BY WILL PINKSTON
[email protected]
A fun day in the sun turned
tragic Saturday as a 21-year-old
man drowned at the Kuttawa
Beach and Recreational Area on
Lake Barkley during a field trip.
Sgt. Denny Broyles of Ken-
tucky Fish and Wildlife said a bystander at the beach area found
the submerged body of Benson
Beauchamp, of Tamarack, Fla.,
and brought him to shore. One
of Beauchamp’s fellow students
from the Kentucky Job Corps in
Muhlenburg County attempted to
administer CPR, but to no avail.
Lyon County coroner Ronnie
Patton declared Beauchamp dead
at 6:20 p.m. of a presumed drowning. Patton said there was nothing
unusual about the cause of death.
Broyles said Beauchamp was
attending a field trip to the Kut-
tawa Recreational Area with the
group of students from the job
corps. As members of the group
were boarding their buses to
leave at 5:30 p.m., they noticed
Beauchamp was missing and sent
members out to different parts of
the park to locate him.
Donnie Hamblin, of Princeton, was at the beach area with
his children and had overheard a
group of teenagers mention feeling something beneath the water earlier that afternoon. When
Please see DROWNING | 6A
Excessive heat advisory
Associated Press
Space Shuttle Atlantis docks at the International Space Station on Sunday. Atlantis is delivering more than 4 tons of food, clothes and other
space station provisions — an entire year’s worth,
in fact, to keep the complex going in the looming
post-shuttle era. Atlantis’ journey marks the final
shuttle mission by NASA.
JOHN WRIGHT | The Sun
Preston Hammonds of Hopkinsville stops for a drink of lemonade at a booth set up near Grace Episcopal Church during Bikes on Broadway in downtown Paducah on Sunday. Hammonds, his sister, Emily, and grandfather, Charlie of Paducah, stopped at the booth to get a drink on a day when temperatures rose into the mid-90s. Temperatures are expected to reach near 100 degrees today.
Heat index to approach 115 early in week
BY REBECCA FELDHAUS
[email protected]
High temperatures and humidity warranted meteorologists to issue an excessive heat
warning until midnight tonight.
The National Weather Service
in Paducah released the advisory which begins at 11 a.m.
Heat index readings will be
between 110 to 115 degrees, according to Robin Smith. Smith,
“We encourage people to drink at least
a half a gallon of fluids an hour, especially
if they’re doing any kind of exertion.”
Robert Jones
Physician assistant, Lourdes hospital
NWS meteorologist, said even
though the more intense advisory will expire by 12:01 a.m.
Tuesday, a general heat advi-
sory continues into the day and
evening. Daytime temperatures
will be between 95 and 100
degrees. According to Smith,
Shuttle’s last
hookup full
of hugs, kisses
and emotion
BY MARCIA DUNN
Associated Press
overnight temperatures will
provide little relief, hovering in
the upper 70s to mid-80s.
Those who don’t have to be
outside shouldn’t be, he said.
Smith recommended continuous hydration for those who
work outdoors. The old, young
and those with health problems
need the most attention, he
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — As the miles melted
between Atlantis and the International Space
Station, the emotions grew — in orbit and on
the ground.
At Mission Control on Sunday, lead flight
director Kwatsi Alibaruho declared “this is
it” as he gave the OK for the final docking
in space shuttle history. Flashbacks to the
shuttle’s very first space station docking
— with Russia’s Mir in 1995 — flooded his
mind as viewed the shuttle on the screens.
He was a NASA trainee back then.
About 240 miles above the Pacific,
Please see HEAT | 6A
Please see ATLANTIS | 6A
“Working with murals just takes the right training and the right tools.
It’s very cool to see people get creative and learn the process.”
Char Downs
Paducah artist
Lower Town artist to create Lexington mural
BY CORIANNE EGAN
[email protected]
When most people see a
100-foot-long wall that needs to be
painted, they immediately become
overwhelmed. Lower Town artist
Char Downs became inspired.
“We were originally supposed
CORIANNE EGAN | The Sun
Lower Town artist Char Downs examines her plans for a 100-foot mural in Lex- to work with 30 feet,” Downs
ington that will be painted throughout July. Downs was chosen from 100 artists said. “But I saw the wall and saw
who submitted plans and will begin work on the mural this week.
there was so much great space to
work with, so I researched and
put in everything I could.”
Downs was commissioned to
paint the long mural through the
month of July by the LexArts program, and will begin the first 30foot section in Lexington this week.
Her art will be featured on the wall
of the historic Hurst Furniture
store at Elm Tree and Short streets.
The picture pays homage to
NEWS TRACKER
1. Paducah Arts Alliance’s
3. Elizabethtown woman,
5. “Transformers: Dark of
residency program brings artists from afar.
2A
Heartland Hugs donating
teddy bears to comfort Joplin,
Mo., tornado survivors. 3A
the Moon” now rules this year’s
box office with an estimated
$261 million domestically.
“Horrible Bosses,” featuring Jason Bateman, Charlie Day and
Jason Sudeikis, debuts with
7B
$28.1 million.
2. Paducah’s Danielle Carruthers runs her personal best
time in the 100-meter hurdles
in Birmingham, England. 1B
Daily 75¢ Sunday $2.00
4. One hundred feared
dead after riverboat sinks in
central Russia.
10A
Have a news tip? Call 575-8650
Kentucky’s horse racing past and
present, spanning the 200-year
history of the Kentucky Association, the region’s first jockey club.
Along with horses racing through
the scene, Downs prominently
features riding boots, an active
race, the famed “silk purse” won
by the best jockey and, of course,
Please see MURAL | 6A
Forecast
Index
Today
Agenda .......... 2A
Bridge ............ 9A
Business........ 2A
Classifieds ..... 8B
Comics .......... 6B
Crossword...... 6B
Deaths........... 9A
Opinion.......... 4A
TV Listings ..... 5B
98°
Humid.
10A
Customer Service: 575-8800 or 1-800-599-1771
Local
2A • Monday, July 11, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
The Lineup
Today
Senior Medicare Patrol, fighting fraudulent abuse of program in Ballard, Carlisle,
Fulton, Hickman, Marshall and McCracken
counties; director LaShea Wyatt, 1400
H.C. Mathis Drive, Paducah, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.;
442-8993.
paducahsun.com
Agenda
Residency program
brings artists from afar
The Agenda is a listing of
government meetings today.
■ Arlington City Council — 5
p.m., City Hall.
■ Barkley Regional Airport
Authority Board of Directors —
3:30 p.m., Midwest Aviation,
200 Hardy Roberts Drive.
■ Calvert City Council —
5:30 p.m., City Hall.
■ Clinton City Council — 6
p.m., City Hall.
■ Eddyville City Council — 6
p.m., City Hall.
■ Fulton City Commission —
6:30 p.m. City Hall.
■ Graves Fiscal Court —
4:30 p.m., courthouse
■ Hardin City Council — 6
p.m., City Hall.
■ Hickman City Council — 7
p.m. City Hall.
■ Hickman County Fiscal
Court — 6:30 p.m., courthouse.
■ Human Rights Commission
— 3 p.m., Paducah City Hall.
■ Kevil City Council — 10
a.m., City Hall.
■ Kuttawa City Council — 7
p.m., City Hall.
■ Mayfield City Council — 6
p.m., City Hall.
■ McCracken Fiscal Court
— 6 p.m., district courtroom D,
main floor.
■ Metropolis (Ill.) City Council — 7 p.m., council room, city
hall.
■ Paducah Renaissance Alliance Board of Directors — 5:30
p.m., Paducah Renaissance Alliance office, 605 Broadway.
Paducah VA Clinic, 12:30-3:30 p.m.,
2620 Perkins Creek Drive. Veterans and
their families will be provided counseling
and assistance in filing benefits. By appointment, walk-ins as time allows. 4448465.
Barkley Regional Airport Authority
Board of Directors’ monthly meeting,
3:30 p.m., Midwest Aviation, 200 Hardy
Roberts Drive, West Paducah.
West Kentucky Songwriters Chapter,
Nashville Songwriters Association International, 6-8 p.m. Curris Center, Murray
State University. 293-7252.
Ledbetter Masonic Lodge 952 F&AM,
7 p.m. Meal at 6:15.
Graves County Genealogical Society,
7 p.m., Graves County Library. Refreshments. David Cissell, 247-4010.
Paducah Masonic Lodge No. 127
F&AM, 7:30 p.m., 24th and Jackson
streets. Meal at 6. 443-3127.
CORIANNE EGAN | The Sun
Jamie Spinello, an Artist In Residence from Austin, Texas, works on an art piece at the A.I.R. studio in Paducah.
BY CORIANNE EGAN
Tuesday
[email protected]
Paducah Lions Club, lunch, noon, Pork
Peddler. 443-3122.
Senior Medicare Patrol, fighting fraudulent abuse of program in Ballard, Carlisle,
Fulton, Hickman, Marshall and McCracken
counties; director LaShea Wyatt, 1400
H.C. Mathis Drive, Paducah, noon-4 p.m.;
442-8993.
Zonta Club of Paducah, 5:30 p.m.,
Whaler’s Catch, 123 N. Second St. 5753444.
Woodmen of the World, Lodge 2, 6:30
p.m., Knights of Columbus Hall, 3028 Jefferson St. 443-8263.
Paducah Singles Connection, 7 p.m.,
Grace Episcopal Church, Eighth and
Broadway. 443-6445 or 442-3855.
Experimental Aircraft Association, Big
Rivers Chapter, 7 p.m., McCracken County
Extension Office, 2705 Olivet Church
Road. Wilma Newberry, 744-3841.
National Railroad Historical Society,
Paducah Chapter, 7 p.m., second floor
meeting room, McCracken County Public
Library. 442-4032.
American Legion Chief Paduke Post
31, Legionnaire and auxiliary meeting, 7
p.m., 425 Legion Drive. 442-2525.
Blood drives
Noon-6 p.m., today, Calvert City Civic
Center.
Traffic alerts
Ky. 1286/South Friendship Road in McCracken County, closed today to replace
cross drain east of U.S. 45/Lone Oak
Road.
■■■
Items for the Lineup must be received in writing. Mail to: Lineup, The
Paducah Sun, P.O. Box 2300, Paducah,
KY 42002-2300; fax the newsroom at
442-7859; or email news@paducahsun.
com. Announcements are published day
of event. Information: 575-8677.
Sunday’s lottery
Kentucky
Pick 3-evening: 9-4-2
Pick 4-evening: 8-9-1-7
Illinois
Pick 3-midday: 2-0-5
evening: 4-3-4
Pick 4-midday: 6-8-6-3
evening: 3-8-6-1
Little Lotto: 13-17-21-28-37
Numbers are unofficial
Three years ago, the founding
members of the Paducah Arts
Alliance brainstormed about
how to make Paducah a stop for
artists around the country.
“We are kind of far away from
the big cities,” said Freda Fairchild, one of the founding members
of the alliance. “So we started to
brainstorm about how to get people here. We realized we could
just find a place to put them up
and do it ourselves. That’s how it
all started.”
The group’s brainchild, the
Artist in Residency program,
brings artists from across the nation and overseas to Paducah to
work on their craft and give talks
and workshops to the community. In three years, 23 artists have
participated, coming from as far
away as France and Austria.
“It really gets you away from
home, away from distractions,” said Jamie Spinello,
an artist from Austin, Texas,
who is in residency at A.I.R.
Studio.”Removing yourself from
your natural environment helps
you further yourself.”
A.I.R. Studio, 621 Madison St.,
includes workspace and a small
gallery, as well as an efficiency
apartment for residents. Artists
spend anywhere from a week to
a month working in Paducah,
but are also required to do some
community outreach, which can
include workshops or lectures,
or exhibiting at the gallery.
“The energy they bring to the
area is fantastic,” said Lily Liu,
local artist and PAA member.
“The interaction we get as artists
is really special.”
Spinello, who works with jewelry and also does three-dimensional paper art, has been working at the studio for 10 days, and
has started a new piece featuring
flowers and hands during her
time in Paducah. She is working
alongside Kristen Van Patten,
an artist also from Austin who
draws and designs sculptures as
well.
The alliance has also partnered with the Yeiser Art Center, which will allow residency
artists to give their workshops
in a larger space, and to exhibit
their art when they are in town.
Spinello and Van Patten will
have an exhibition at Studio
Mars, 418 N. Seventh St., from
6-8 p.m. today.
After over two months of
searching, the Paducah Symphony Orchestra hired a new
executive director Friday. The
board hired Daniel Sene, former executive director of the
Idaho Falls Symphony, as its
new director, citing his experience in marketing and music
Fred L. Pelle is the chief
executive officer of the Jackson
Purchase Medical Center, effective today.
A 24-year veteran of the health
care industry, Pelle comes to
JPMC from
Wellmont
Health System, where
he
served
as president
of Hawkins
County Memorial Hospital and Hancock County
Pelle
Hospital in
Tennessee.
Pelle has also served as chief operating officer of HCA Palmyra
Medical Center in Albany, Ga.,
vice president of operations of
The Medical Center in Bowling Green and the chief operating officer of Trover Regional
Medical Center in Madisonville.
He earned a master’s degree in
business administration from
Troy State University in Troy,
The Sun is looking for good
news from all parts of the
region. And getting it to the
newspaper is easier than
ever. Simply attach a photo
with 100 words or less, or just
the write-up alone, and email
it to neighbors@paducahsun.
com.
That’s it. Just one email
and then look to upcoming
editions of the Sun as your
good news from school, work,
recreation, sports and from
your neighborhood is shared
with the newspaper’s nearly
50,000 readers each day.
It’s said that no news is
good news. At the Sun we say
good news is great news. So
let’s hear from you.
direction.
During Sene's tenure with
the Idaho Falls Symphony, subscription attendance tripled and
contributions from private entities and corporations increased.
Sene also has a newspaper background and is a 2010 graduate
of the League of American Or-
0EOPLEE
0EOPLEAND"USINESS
ISFORNEWSOFPROMO
TIONSHIRINGSANDPRO
FESSIONALAWARDSAND
HONORSINVOLVINGFIRMS
ANDRESIDENTSOFWEST
ERN+ENTUCKYORSOUTH
ERN)LLINOISANDOF
FORMERRESIDENTS0IC
TURESMAYBE
SUBMITTEDALTHOUGH
THEIRUSEISNOTGUARAN
TEEDANDWILLNOTBE
MAILEDBACKUNLESSA
STAMPEDSELF
ADDRESSEDENVELOPEIS
PROVIDED
chestra's “Essentials of Orchestra Management” course.
Former director Darlene
Dreyer resigned earlier this
year, vacating her office at the
end of May. The symphony has
been under the control of interim executive director Greer
Waldrop since June.
ÕȘiÃÃ
.EWSFOR0EOPLEAND"USINESSASWELLASANNOUNCEMENTS
OFBUSINESSOPENINGSOROTHERITEMSOFBUSINESSNEWS
SHOULDBEMAILEDTO"USINESS%DITOR4HE0ADUCAH3UN
0/"OX0ADUCAH+YEMAILEDTO
BUSINESS PADUCAHSUNCOMORLEFTINTHEDEPOSITORYATTHE
THENEWSPAPERS+ENTUCKY!VENUEENTRANCE0ICTURESSUBMITTED
MAYBEPICKEDUPFROM4HE3UNSLIBRARIANBETWEENAMAND
PM-ONDAYTHROUGH&RIDAY
Ala., and a bachelor’s degree
from Athens State College in
Athens, Ala.
■■■
Dr. Jimmy E. Couch,
neurologist and epileptologist
at Murray-Calloway County
Hospital, was published in the
American Journal of the Medi-
cal Sciences. Couch co-wrote
“Concomitant Lymphoma and
Cryptococcosis in a Patient
with Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome,” along with
six other doctors. On the Murray hospital’s staff since 2009,
Couch is director of the West
Kentucky Epilepsy Center, 300
S. Eighth St., Suite 301 E.
Also, Kyser Lough
joined
the
Murray-Calloway County Hospital’s
planning and
marketing
department
as a marketing specialCouch
ist.
■■■
Diane Dalton Evans is
the newest member of Western Baptist Hospital’s board of
directors. The Mayfield native
is president
of Invest Financial Corp.
in Paducah.
Evans earned
a
master’s
degree
in
business administration
from Murray
State UniverEvans
sity.
Miss a day. Miss a lot.
WEDNESDAY
Sports
■ Entertainment news
from around the region.
FRIDAY
Taste
■ Information to help you
live and relax in style.
■ Electronic gadgets,
gizmos and geegaws.
THURSDAY
To subscribe, call 800-959-1771.
■ What movie came out
SUNDAY
on top at the box office?
Home
Current
■ Get the delicious details
on all things edible.
TUESDAY
Get more good
news in The
Paducah Sun
Paducah Symphony hires new executive director
Coming Up ...
■ The 2011 All-Stars take
to the field in Arizona.
Neighbors
Download
Entertainment
■ News from the local
business community.
SATURDAY
Business
MONDAY
Local/Region
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Monday, July 11, 2011 • 3A
Heartland Hugs donating Coal workers among largest
teddy bears for Joplin relief donors to three candidates
Associated Press
Associated Press
ELIZABETHTOWN — An Elizabethtown woman wants
to help comfort victims of
a tornado that ripped apart
much of Joplin, Mo.
To do so, Becky Meredith
hopes to send the embattled town about 300 teddy
bears.
“You still hear stories on
the TV where people are still
without their homes and
children are still without
some type of comfort, so I’m
hoping a bear would bring
some hope to them,” she
said. “It’s something to hold
on to when everything else
seems to be falling apart.”
The effort isn’t that unusual for Meredith, who in
October started a chapter
of Hugs Across America, a
nonprofit organization that
donates stuffed animals to
children in crisis situations.
FRANKFORT — Alliance
Coal
employees
were
among the biggest donors
in Kentucky’s primary election campaign, according
to a newspaper report.
The Courier-Journal reviewed campaign contributions that candidates filed
with the Kentucky Registry
of Election Finance and
found that 10 employees of
Alliance, along with their
spouses, donated a total of
$60,000 to three candidates: Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes for secretary
of state; Republican Todd
P’Pool for attorney general;
and Republican David Williams for governor.
Cason P. Carter, a spokesman for Alliance, said it is
up to employees whether to
be politically active.
The campaigns said they
Associated Press
Becky Meredith of Elizabethtown, sits among some of the 300
teddy bears she hopes to send to victims of the tornado that
ripped apart much of Joplin, Mo., in June.
Her chapter is named
Kelsey Heartland Hugs
in honor of Kelsey Briggs,
who died of injuries from
child abuse in 2005.
Meredith developed contact with the girl’s family and
began collecting bears to
give to children who need
emotional support, such
as those dealing with illness and abuse, and organizations that support
those children.
Police arrest Paducah woman in alleged theft
Police arrested a Paducah
woman Saturday in connection with the theft of
several items from a purse.
McCracken County Sheriff’s deputies began investigating the thefts after Alissa Lewis, 27, of Paducah
contacted police at approx-
imately 7:45 p.m. Saturday,
reported Sgt. David Shepherd. Lewis told police she
believed items were taken
from her purse after she
gave a ride to Cynthia Cunningham, 46, of Paducah
and another woman. Police
interviewed both women
and searched Cunningham’s residence on Key
Drive, finding the majority
of the stolen items, Shepherd reported.
Police believe that Cunningham had taken the
items and further attempted to tamper with evidence
related to the crimes,
Shepherd reported. Police charged Cunningham
with theft of a controlled
substance, tampering with
physical evidence and unlawful taking (pick pocket).
Cunningham was jailed in
the McCracken County Jail.
9DOXDEOH,QVHUWV
7KHIROORZLQJLQVHUWV
DUHLQWRGD\·VHGLWLRQRI
6WDQOH\6WHHPHU
LQGLFDWHV]RQHGFLUFXODWLRQ
3OHDVHFRQWDFWRXUFXVWRPHUVHUYLFHGHSDUWPHQWDW
LI\RXDUHPLVVLQJDQLQVHUW
believe the candidates received the contributions
because of their support for
the coal industry.
State government closely
regulates the environmental impact and safety of coal
mining.
The newspaper reviewed
contributions to candidates
running for statewide office since November’s general election. It found that the
contributions, which were
given to the candidates between early March and early
May, put Alliance employees
in the company of wealthy
businessmen and party activists. Only four other couples
gave more to the candidates,
according to the review.
It was the first time half
of the couples had given
more than $100 to a candidate for state office, according a Kentucky Registry of
Election Finance database.
www.paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun is published daily by Paxton Media Group, LLC at 408 Kentucky Avenue,
Paducah, KY 42003. Periodical postage paid at Paducah, KY 42003.
(270) 575-8600
USPS 526-180
ISSN-1050-0030
READER INFORMATION
MISS YOUR PAPER?
NEW SUBSCRIBER?
QUESTION ABOUT A BILL?
WANT A BACK ISSUE?
Monday - Friday 7 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
Saturday - 7 a.m. till 10:30 a.m.
Sunday - 7 a.m. till 10:30 a.m.
Call Customer Service (Local) 575-8800
Outside McCracken Co. 1-800-599-1771
Outside KY
1-800-959-1771
How to call us
NEWS
575-8650
Sports
575-8665
Features
575-8658
Business
575-8656
Weddings, etc.
575-8678
Outdoors
575-8684
Tours of the paper
575-8625
PADUCAH SUN ONLINE 575-8800
ADVERTISING
Display
575-8750
Classified
575-8700
ALL DEPARTMENTS 575-8600
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Editor and Publisher
Jim Paxton
General Manager
Gary Adkisson
Executive Editor
Duke Conover
Controller
John J. Shumaker
Advertising Director
Carolyn Raney
Creative Services Manager
Kim Lawhorn
Circulation Director
Matt Jones
Admin. Circulation Director
Judy Lynch
Circulation Operations Manager
Tom Maher
Marketing Manager
Kendra Payne
Production Manager
Jesse Rogers
Subscription rates
All subscriptions payable in advance.
Home delivery 7 days a week:
1 month
$19.50
4 months $76.00
8 months $151.04
1 year
$224.76
Sunday Only (where available)
$12.97 per month
Weekend Package (Where Available)
(Fri., Sat., Sun.) $15.49 per month.
By Mail
Regional 7 days a week
$21.84/mo.
Regional daily except Sun. $18.85/mo.
Outside region, 7 days
$26.47/mo.
Outside region, Sun. only
$15.45/mo.
Single copies:
Daily: 75 cents
Online Edition:
Sunday: $2.00
$6.89/mo.
YOUR CARRIER: Your newspaper carriers are
independent contractors, and
The Paducah Sun will not be responsible for any
payments made to the carriers.
All payments should be made at
The Paducah Sun office, 408 Kentucky Avenue.
INSERTS: In many cases, insert advertisers do
not purchase The Paducah Sun for full
circulation. For this reason, the number of preprinted advertising supplements you may
receive depends on where you live and whether
you have home delivery or bought a rack copy.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is entitled to use
for publication all local news published in this
newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
THE PADUCAH SUN, P.O. Box 2300,
Paducah, KY 42002-2300.
This publication can be heard on the telephone by persons who have trouble seeing or reading the
print edition. For more information, contact the National Federation of the Blind NFB-NEWSLINE®
service at (410) 659-9314, extension 2317, or go to www.nfb.org.
Opinion
4A • Monday, July 11, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
Project labor agreements are neither fair nor balanced
BY JIM WATERS
A favorite, but unproven, argument of
union bosses is that government regulations favoring them result in higher-quality buildings and safer working conditions.
Such claims are being echoed – again,
without proof – by Kentucky congressman Ed Whitfield.
Many readers shared my surprise in
discovering last week that the Hopkinsville Republican voted to give the federal
government the option of forcing nonunion contractors to sign Project Labor
Agreements on large military construction projects.
Government-mandated PLAs force
contractors who want to win federal construction contracts to:
— Recognize unions as the representatives of their employees on that job site.
— Use the union hiring hall to obtain
most, if not all, of their workers.
— Pay into pension and benefit plans
even if contractors have their own plans.
— Obtain apprentices only through
union programs.
— Obey restrictive and inefficient union
work rules.
But the surprise doubled when I received the e-mail response to my request
for a stattement explaining the congressman’s vote.
Press secretary Robert Sumner says
his boss believes it’s “important that all
workers have the best possible working
conditions, and that on
public works projects
funded by the taxpayers, everything possible
must be done to ensure
a highly skilled, efficient workforce that can
deliver projects on time
and within budget.”
Talk about a slap in
the face of Kentucky’s
Waters
nonunion contractors.
Ouch.
Suggesting the government needs to
“have the option” of forcing union-like
rules on contractors appallingly insinuates that those who build our offices,
homes, investment properties and manufacturing facilities somehow or other do
inferior work and cannot deliver.
Between the time President George
W. Bush signed executive orders in 2001
protecting federally funded construction
projects from PLAs and when President
Obama signed his executive order in 2009
of construction occurred on-post since the
Base Realignment and Closure process
began six years ago.
The naïveté continues: “Rep. Whitfield
does not believe (PLAs) should be required in all circumstances. … This action
… will preserve the option for the use of
PLAs, without mandating their use.”
Seriously!
I wonder what kind of “circumstances”
the congressman envisions that would
result in any agency head that serves at
the pleasure of the Obama administration, which rode to power on the backs
of labor unions, not mandating the use
of PLAs – especially in light of the reelection campaign. We’re talking here
about military construction projects of at
least $25 million, which means lots of loot
finding its way into campaign coffers.
Finally: “Rep. Whitfield believes that is
a balanced approach that will work in the
taxpayers’ interest.”
But, as typically happens when government attempts to determine what’s “fair”
and “balanced,” neither usually occurs.
— Jim Waters is vice president of
policy and communications for the Bluegrass Institute, Kentucky’s free-market
think tank.
Reagan’s strategy not working for Obama
-?<
)8;L:8?,LE
Edwin J. Paxton, Editor & Publisher, 1900-1961
Frank Paxton, Publisher, 1961-1972
Edwin J. Paxton Jr., Editor, 1961-1977
Jack Paxton, Editor, 1977-1985
Fred Paxton, Publisher, 1972-2000
David Cox
Editorial Page Editor
urging federal agencies to consider mandating PLAs, thousands of large federal
projects – totaling more than $147 billion
were built.
In a letter to Whitfield, the Associated
Builders and Contractors of Kentuckiana
point out that these projects, “despite the
outright prohibition of government-mandated PLAs on any large (projects exceeding $25 million in total cost) or small
federal construction projects, have been
built safely, on-time and on-budget.”
Even Kentucky’s school superintendents know that coercive union-favoring
regulations are not magic bullets for
higher quality projects.
A survey by the Kentucky Legislative
Research Commission a few years back
found that only 4 percent of the commonwealth’s 176 school superintendents
believed requiring prevailing wages rates
on school construction projects – another
union-friendly govenrment mandate –
results in “discernible, higher quality.”
Forced PLAs also could have real economic impact on private contractors in
Kentucky, where construction has been
occurring at fever pitch at military institutions. According to the Fort Knox Public
Relations Office, around $1 billion worth
Jim Paxton
Editor & Publisher
Duke Conover
Executive Editor
Rough justice could
await Casey Anthony
In all of these cases,
Casey Anthony killed
it is far easier to conher daughter. She may not
clude that the defendant
have meant to, and she
caused the death — that
may have been much more
he or she was the only
interested in her own social
person with the opportulife than in her daughter’s
nity and motive — than it
well-being, but I have
is to prove that they did
absolutely no doubt that
so with malice aforeshe was responsible for her
thought,
in a premeditatdaughter’s death.
Susan Estrich
ed and purposeful way,
So why was she acquitwhich is what is required
ted? Could it really be a
in a first-degree murder case. Reasonable
case of it is better to be rich (or at least
doubt has a different meaning when it’s a
enough of a celebrity to be well-reprelife-or-death decision.
sented) and guilty than poor and innoForgive me the pedestrian analogy, but
cent, as so many of my students think?
The short answer is sometimes. The long I think the easiest way to grasp this may
answer is that it depends as much on the be by thinking about shopping. You go to
the department store and try on a jacket.
skill and judgment of the prosecutors as
The tag tells you it’s 70 percent off. I love
it does on the defense.
If you want to be God, I always tell my it, you say, and you do. For $50, it’s spectacular. For half off, you love it almost
students, go be a prosecutor. I’d like to
as much. At full price, even a minor flaw
believe that God is infallible, but I know
— a missing button, a pulled thread — is
for a fact that prosecutors aren’t.
enough to end the love affair. Reasonable
There is an old joke prosecutors tell
each other about how convicting a guilty doubt is equally flexible.
Had the jury been asked whether
person is no great accomplishment. It’s
convicting someone who is not guilty that Anthony was guilty of voluntary manslaughter, I think they would have been
is the real challenge.
able to conclude that she was, beyond
Anthony is as guilty of killing her
a reasonable doubt. Had O.J. Simpson
child as O.J. Simpson was of killing his
been charged, as most ex-wife killers are,
former wife and Ron Goldman. He got
with either second-degree murder or
off — as did Anthony — because he is a
voluntary manslaughter, I’d like to think
celebrity (and because of the animosity
among minority jurors toward the LAPD) he would have been convicted.
The irony is that most men who kill
and because celebrities are not always
their former wives (and even innocent
favored by the system.
bystanders) in a fit of jealous rage serve
The danger when you represent a ceabout seven years in prison — which
lebrity is not that he will be treated with
white gloves, but rather that prosecutors is less than the sentence meted out to
(either because they love the publicity or Simpson for what otherwise would be
a rather minor offense. Simpson was
because they fear the pressure it brings)
Caponed.
will go too far too fast to overcharge and
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me
overprosecute precisely because of the
twice, shame on me.
publicity.
Justice is very rough, but if I were
The Anthony case was based entirely
on circumstantial evidence. There was no Casey Anthony (and to be honest, she is
real forensic proof, no cause of death, no one woman I can’t even imagine being),
I’d watch my step from here on, very,
damning DNA. The defendant was the
very carefully. She may have gotten away
mother of the victim — which in many
with murder, but she won’t get away the
ways makes the crime worse. But it also
next time.
makes it even more critical, and more
Justice may not be blind, and someimportant, to have evidence of purtimes it seems to be deaf and dumb, but
poseful intent. Ditto for husbands and
ex-husbands and wives and ex-wives who rough justice can be very rough on those
who get away with murder.
kill their spouses.
to frame the choice. They
5.1, 9.3, 8.1, 8.5, 8, 7.1
concluded, since Reagan
and 3.9.
blamed Jimmy Carter for
While that might sound
the country’s problems,
like a controversial series
Obama should do likewise
of Olympic curling scores,
with Bush. Reagan said
these numbers in fact add
Americans faced a choice
up to a grave problem for
between “going back” to
Barack Obama.
the old policies and pressThey are the quarterly
ahead with new ones.
percentage gains in gross
œ˜>…Êœ`LiÀ} ingObama
parroted the
domestic product starting
same line: “This is a choice
in 1983 through to Election
between the policies that led us into the
Day 1984. And they aren’t the only signifimess, or the policies that are leading out
cant numbers. In 1984, real income for
of the mess,” Obama said in a campaign apindividuals grew by more than 6 percent
pearance for Senate Majority Leader Harry
and inflation plummeted.
Reid. “America doesn’t go backwards, we
The unemployment rate in November
go forward.”
1984 was still 7.2 percent — relatively high
Such “Reaganesque” rhetoric didn’t save
— but it had dropped from 10.8 percent in
Democrats from a “shellacking” (to borrow
December 1982, and it was clear the momentum was for even lower unemployment. Obama’s word) at the polls (though in a decidedly mixed blessing the Democrats did
“Staying the course” with Ronald Reagan
made sense to most people, which is why he hold on to Reid’s seat). Obama lost more
than twice as many seats in the House (63)
won re-election in a 49-state landslide.
as Reagan did and six in the Senate.
Sadly for Obama — but far worse for
Obama explained away the electoral rethe country — that kind of growth seems
like a pipe dream. Last month, the Federal buke not on his policies but on his inability
to communicate the truth to the public. It’s
Reserve lowered its forecast for 2011 GDP
funny how the supposedly greatest comgrowth from a range of 3.1 percent to 3.3
municator since Reagan is always suffering
percent, made just two months earlier, to
from a communications problem.
a much slower 2.7 percent to 2.9 percent.
And this points to the real reason why the
And it revised downward its projections for
Reagan parallel just doesn’t work. As much
2012 and 2013 as well.
as it may annoy Obama and his supporters
For Democrats who insist that James
Carville’s mantra “It’s the economy, stupid” to hear it, the reason why Reagan’s rhetoric
was effective is that voters believed it was
is the key to unlocking any election, these
numbers couldn’t be more sobering. But for matched to successful policies. Meanwhile
many of Obama’s top priorities — health
the Democrats and liberal pundits who’ve
care reform, green energy, etc. — have had,
spent the last two years looking to Reagan
at best, a tangential connection to the ecofor inspiration, the data should have the
nomic recovery and arguably, as in the case
same sobering effect as being thwacked in
of energy, they’ve made things worse.
the face with a semi-frozen flounder.
Political scientist Brendan Nyhan has
You don’t hear much about it now, but
not long ago the White House was taking a rightly pointed out that even Reagan’s communications strategy didn’t improve media
lot of comfort in the Reagan example. According to a Time cover story, “Why Obama coverage or his standing in public opinion
(Hearts) Reagan,” the president was fixated polls. Reagan’s popularity recovered with
the economic recovery. (The media coverwith emulating the Gipper. He quizzed
age, however, remained relentlessly hostile
historians about him. He took a Reagan
biography with him for his Christmas vaca- until a few years ago.)
In recent weeks, it seems that the White
tion. He even wrote a glowing op-ed about
House has discovered that, barring an
Reagan for USA Today.
entirely unforeseen economic boom, the
As the November elections approached,
White House strategists and liberal writers Reagan analogy is a non-starter for them.
That spells an ironic challenge for Obama,
spun the Reagan precedent as a reason
because it probably means that he will have
to remain optimistic about Obama’s
to run a base election whereby he galvanizre-election chances. Reagan had lost 26
House seats (and zero in the Senate) in his es his core supporters and hopes red meat
and turnout numbers will save him.
first midterm elections yet went on to win
In short, it means the president will be
re-election handily. Liberal writers such
as The New Republic’s John Judis insisted emulating George W. Bush’s re-election
strategy even as he pins all his problems on
Obama could limit his losses by emulating
George W. Bush.
Reagan’s communications strategy.
This column first appeared in USA
Reportedly, Obama’s speechwriters even
Today.
studied Reagan’s speeches for tips on how
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Monday, July 11, 2011 • 5A
th 2011
June
24,
July 15 2011
MiracleEar
EarHearing
Hearing Aid
Aid Center
Center
Miracle
4793
Village
Square
Drive
Ave
1915
W Parrish
Owensboro,
KY KY
Suite
BB • Paducah,
Miracle
@
Center
MiracleEar
EarService
Service
Center
Dogwood Estates – 949 W 7th Street
114 EBeaver
Fifth StDam,
• Benton,
KY KY
Appointment
Only
BBy
ya
ppointment o
nly!
By
appointment
only!
Hearing aids do not restore natural hearing. Individual experiences may vary depending on severity of hearing loss, accuracy of evaluation, proper fit and ability to
adapt to amplification. Hearing test is always free. Hearing test is an audiometric test to determine proper amplification needs only. These are not medical exams
or diagnoses. If you suspect a problem please seek treatment from a physician.
From Page One
6A • Monday, July 11, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
ATLANTIS: Shuttle is being retired
HEAT: Symptoms of heat exhaustion include flushed skin, nausea and light-headedness
after this flight, the last of the program
CONTINUED FROM 1A
“Atlantis arriving.
Welcome to the
International
Space Station
for the last time.”
the station’s naval bell
chimed a salute — one
of many landmarks, or
rather spacemarks, of
this final two-week shuttle mission that are being
savored one by one.
“Atlantis
arriving,”
called out space station
astronaut Ronald Garan
Jr. “Welcome to the International Space Station
for the last time.”
“And it’s great to be here,”
replied shuttle commander
Christopher Ferguson.
Cries of joy and laughter filled the connected
vessels once the hatches
swung open and the two
crews — 10 space fliers
altogether representing
three countries — exchanged hugs, handshakes and kisses on the
cheek. Cameras floated
everywhere,
recording
every moment of the lastof-its-kind festivities.
Atlantis, carrying a
year’s worth of supplies,
is being retired after this
flight, the last of the 30year shuttle program.
“I won’t say that I got
close to welling up in the
eyes, but I will say that it
was a powerful moment
for me,” Alibaruho later
told reporters. He tried to
keep his feelings discreet
so as not to distract his
team of flight controllers,
but said, “I know they
were all feeling very similar emotions, thinking
about where we’ve come
from, how much we’ve
accomplished ... what’s
coming next.”
Alibaruho said the moment was also powerful for the 10 people in
space for the docking: six
Americans, three Russians and one Japanese.
“You could sense a palpable increase in emotion from all of the crew
members, not just our
U.S. astronauts,” he said.
“They were extremely
happy and really elated
to see their visitors, and
I know that they really
recognize and appreciate
the significance of these
moments.”
A computer failure
Ronald Garan Jr.
Space station astronaut
aboard Atlantis took
away some of the redundancy desired for the
rendezvous, but did not
hamper the operation.
Within a few hours,
though, news came that
NASA was monitoring a
piece of space junk that
could come dangerously close to the orbiting
shuttle-station complex
on Tuesday — right in the
middle of a spacewalk.
Mission management
team chairman LeRoy
Cain stressed it was still
too soon to know whether the unidentified object
would truly pose a threat,
and that a decision
would be made today as
to whether the linked
spacecraft would have to
move out of harm’s way.
The size of the object was
not immediately known.
This was the 46th docking by a space shuttle to a
space station.
Nine of those were to
Mir back in the 1990s,
with Atlantis making
the very first. The U.S.
and Russia built on that
sometimes
precarious
experience to create,
along with a dozen other nations, the world’s
largest spacecraft ever:
the permanently inhabited, finally completed,
12½-year-old International Space Station.
This time, Atlantis is
delivering more than 5
tons of food, clothes and
other space station provisions — an entire year’s
worth, in fact, to keep
the complex going in the
looming post-shuttle era.
The shuttle astronauts
quickly handed over a bag
of groceries loaded with
fresh fruit and promised
the station residents some
extra jars of peanut butter.
“Outstanding,” said inhabitant Michael Fossum.
DROWNING: ‘We’re still uncertain about
the events that led up to the drowning’
are. We’re still uncertain
about the events that led
up to the drowning.”
Broyles added that no
foul play is suspected and
that any investigation into
the death is on hold, pending results from an autopsy. Patton said the autopsy
will be performed at the
medical examiner’s office
in Louisville, since the regional medical examiner’s
office in Madisonville is
temporarily closed.
CONTINUED FROM 1A
job corps members told
Hamblin their friend was
missing, Hamblin began
searching the water and
found Beauchamp’s body.
“The members of the
group had been swimming in the swimming
area earlier in the day,”
Broyles said. “I don’t
know if he went under and
no one saw him go under
or what the circumstances
paducahsun.com
CONTINUED FROM 1A
said. Those out on the lakes
must be mindful of fluid intake and breaks in the shade,
since they won’t be near
health professionals.
“The problem is, with the
high heat and humidity,
you’ll easily get sunburned,”
Smith said. “Heaven forbid
if they’re out there drinking,
you overheat, dehydration.
... Caffeine will do that, too.”
Robert Jones is a physician assistant at Lourdes
hospital. He said most
people know to drink fluids
and stay indoors, but they
often don’t drink enough.
“We encourage people to
drink at least a half a gallon
of fluids an hour, especially
if they’re doing any kind of
exertion,” Jones said.
Most often, health professionals see symptoms of heat
exhaustion before the more
serious cases of heat stroke.
Symptoms of heat exhaustion include flushed skin,
feeling nauseated and feeling
light-headed. Roberts said
when people experience those
symptoms they should immediately get out of the sun and
seek medical attention.
For those far from hospitals and doctors, Roberts
recommended sitting down
in shade and drinking cold
JOHN WRIGHT | The Sun
An electronic billboard at Texaco Xpress Lube on Lone Oak Road in Paducah shows the temperature
as it approaches triple digits.
“The problem is, with the high heat and humidity, you’ll easily
get sunburned. Heaven forbid if they’re out there drinking,
you overheat, dehydration. ... Caffeine will do that, too.”
Robin Smith
Meteorologist, National Weather Service in Paducah
drinks to lower the body
temperature. If a person
stops sweating, it’s an indicator of heat stroke, which
is a more serious emergen-
cy, according to Roberts.
Smith said showers and
thunderstorms later in the
week won’t lower temperatures very much, if at all.
This is the first excessive
heat advisory for the summer. Smith said it’s to be expected as July is usually the
hottest month for the region.
Art submitted
A mural designed by Char Downs for a 100-foot-long wall in Lexington depicts the 200-year history of the Kentucky Association, the
region’s first jockey club.
MURAL: Downs was selected out of 100 proposals, which were narrowed to 3 finalists
CONTINUED FROM 1A
Kentucky Bluegrass.
“I went through books
and made sure I knew all
of the images that could go
along with the idea I had,”
Downs said. “Then as I
painted and as I mapped
out the space, I started really seeing what fit and
what didn’t. I worked it
down from 40 images to
what is on the mural.”
After submitting her work
earlier this year, Downs was
selected out of 100 artist
proposals, which were narrowed to three finalists. She
will also team with fellow
artist Teresa Perry to teach
workshops and mechanics
lessons focusing on large
pieces. The workshops will
begin this week. Volunteers
and participants will also
get to design the last 10 feet
of the mural, which Downs
left blank.
“Working with murals
just takes the right training
and the right tools,” Downs
said. “It’s very cool to see
people get creative and
learn the process.”
The first section of the
mural is estimated to be
finished by Aug. 15. Downs
will spend her first few days
gridding out the project,
then painting with volunteers. She hopes the second
and third sections will be
completed in the next couple summers.
“I’m so excited,” she said.
“I have barely gotten to sleep
this whole week. My brain
is going a thousand miles a
minute with my plans.”
MOVED
GIANT INDOOR YARD SALE
Wed., July 13 - Sat., July 16 • 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Old Wagner Candy Building • Joe Clifton Drive
Across from Cardinal Point • Paducah
HELP THE HOMELESS
Refrigerators, Nice Furniture & More!
ALL PROCEEDS GO TO CARE FOR THE HOMELESS at River City Mission.
The mission houses men and families.
Drop Off Donations at Joe Clifton Drive
Call 442-7921 for Pick-Up.
Big Wireless is a full service repair facility
with over 2,000 faceplates on display.
WE BUY AND SELL
USED PHONES
451 Jordan Dr. (Behind Cinemark) 443-9338
1/2 OFF
Faceplates
BUY ONE GET ONE HALF OFF
Expires 7/31/11
Coupon
28TH ANNUAL
2 LARGE CHEESE PIZZAS
W TH 2 TOPPINGS
WI
TOPPI
PING
NGSS EACH
E
WITH
$
Coupon
Coupon
PADUCAH DONOR DAYS
21
13
EXPIRES 8/
8/15/11
ADDITIONAL TOPPINGS AVAILABLE
Italian
Village
Pizza
125 S. 3rd St. • 442-9500
Coupon
Visit us online @
paducahsun.com
All presenting blood donors will receive a Paducah Donor Days T-shirt and free pizza from Pizza Inn.
JULY 13 &14 ‘7:00 AM-7:00 PM
ROBERT CHERRY CIVIC CENTER
S P O N S O R E D
B Y :
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Monday, July 11, 2011 • 7A
HAVE A FREE ONE-NIGHT
RENTAL ON SUPER VALU
AND REDBOX!
$1 PER NIGHT DVD RENTALS,
NEW RELEASES EVERY TUESDAY.
Your first night
is FREE
7SPVU77
at the redbox
kiosk for a free
one-night rental
Valid 7/11/11
to 7/17/2011
This code is valid for the first night of rental only. Your
credit or debit card (necessary to redeem free rental)
will be charged $1.00 plus tax until 9:00 am every
subsequent night after the free rental period.
©Redbox Automated Retail, L.L.C. Valid at participating locations. Sale or trade of this card and the
promotional code on it are strictly prohibited.
Cut Seedless
Watermelon
Large Southern
Peaches
Red Ripe
Tomatoes
¢
¢
49
49
¢
88
99
2/$
5
lb.
1
¢
99
lb.
Vidalia
Onions
lb.
Iceberg
Lettuce
Blueberries
1 pint
lb.
Selected Varieties 7 oz. Spritzers or
head
Selected Varieties
Shredded or
Chunk Cheese
Western or Wishbone
Salad Dressing
2/$
2/$
16 oz.
8 oz.
3
grocery
Selected Varieties
Bunny Hamburger or
Hot Dog Buns
2
Nabisco
Oreos
2
15-16.6 oz.
Nabisco
Snak-Saks
2/$
49
4
8 oz.
3.25-4.76 oz.
Selected Varieties
Nabisco Wheat Thins
or Ritz Chips
99
Instant
Rice
beverages
29
99
2
McCormick
Black Pepper
99
69
2
8 ct.
10
SUPERVALU
07-11-11
Kellog’s Cereal
6
14 oz.
Assorted
RC Products
Nestea
99
¢
4/$
2 ltr.
6 pk 1/2 liter
Internet Printable Coupon Acceptance Policy
10
We reserve the right to change or amend this policy at any time.
T
JULY 2011
W
T
F
07-17-11.
2/$
SuperValu accepts legitimate printable coupons that consumers receive via retailer or manufacturer websites, email campaigns, and from legitimate online coupon sites. We recognize that our customers are
increasingly turning to the internet to fi nd coupons, therefore we have created the following policy regarding printable coupons.
• Printable coupons will be accepted for up to 50% of product retail (no free coupons)
• Printable coupons MUST SCAN! Coupons that do not scan at the register will NOT BE ACCEPTED
• We will only accept original coupons that are not photocopied or reproduced
• See our Website www.supervalupaducah.com for valuable coupons
M
07-17-11
4 oz.
17 oz. Froot Loops, 17 oz. Apple Jacks, 17.2 oz. Corn Pops, 23 oz. Frosted Flakes,
18 oz. Rice Krispies, 24 oz. Corn Flakes or 25.5 oz. Raisin Bran Crunch
Coke Products
6 pk 1/2 liter
5
Selected Varieties
Assorted
4/$
11.75-17.25 oz.
5
3-4 pk.
39
1
5
2/$
3/$
Selected Varieties
1
Fiber One
Cereal
2/$
5 ct.
4
Selected Varieties
General Mills
Fiber One Bars
Orville Redenbacher’s
Microwave Popcorn
Kellogg’s
Pop Tarts
5
Selected Varieties 5 oz. Nature Valley Nut Clusters or
16-32 oz.
11-12 oz.
2/$
12.9-21.5 oz.
Selected Varieties
24 oz. loaf
1
Welch’s Essentials
Juice Cocktails
64 oz.
1
Nabisco
Nilla Wafers
8.1 oz.
4
49
White Sandwich
Bread
Selected Varieties
2/$
Pickles
9-10.5 oz.
Selected Varieties
McCormick Grill Mates
Dry Rub
2
Selected Varieties
99
Selected Varieties
2
1.486-6.6 oz.
Selected Varieties
Frito Lay Cheetos,
Fritos or Lay’s Chips
99
Betty Crocker Decadent or
Brownie Supreme
2/$
3
8 ct. pkg.
3
Selected Varieties
Gerber Graduates, Snacks or
Lil’ Entrees
2/$
Selected Varieties
www.redbox.com
S
S
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
If we do not have an item, we will gladly substitute a comparable
item
Check us out at www.supervalupaducah.com
We reserve the right to limit quantities and correct printing errors.
2 LOCATIONS
2855 Lone Oak Rd.
Paducah, KY
2969 Jackson St.
Paducah, KY
We Accept Visa,
Master Card, & Discover
We Accept Illinois Link or
Kentucky EBT Cards!
Join Us On
Facebook
For Savings
and Prizes!
facebook.com/supervalupaducah
Assorted Varieties
Fuze or Glaceau
Vitamin Water
10/$
16.9-20 oz. btls.
10
Groceries
for Good
Donate $1 Today
At The Checkout
To Benefit Hope
Unlimited In July
8A • Monday, July 11, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
beef, pork, poultry & seafood
U.S.D.A. Choice
Boneless
Chuck Steak
3
Fast Classics
Boston Butt
Pork Roast
79
99
79
1
29
7 oz.
99
Selected Varieties
2
99
1 lb. pkg.
1
29
lb.
5
99
7
16 oz. pkg.
99
1
lb.
Supreme Choice
Certified Angus
New York
Strip Steak
Cooked Shrimp
99
From Our
Service
Case
41-50 ct.
16 oz. pkg.
lb
2/$
1 lb. pkg.
Fresh Boneless
Skinless Chicken
Breast
99
lb.
has made meal planning easy and convenient
with the Pick 5 meats. Choose from different varieties
of meats each week. They are conveniently packed for
easy selection.
has a long tradition of offering
the best meats in town and Pick 5 just gives you another
reason to choose
for all our meats.
49
lb
1
5
1 lb. roll
Double G Ham
Shank Portion
Salmon Fillets
Pork Cutlets
3
Yellow or
Red Bell
Peppers
49
1
199
lb
Classic Romaine,
Greener Selection,
Tender Spinach
or Just Lettuce
2/$
2
79¢
Cucumbers
each
Green Bell
Peppers
8 oz. pkg.
4
9-12 oz. pkg.
49
Cauliflower
299
lb
3
each
Fresh Ground
Chuck
999
2/$
lb.
Sliced
Mushrooms
2
2/$
Supreme Choice
69
Green Beans
12-24 oz. tub
Double G
Ham
Butt Portion
lb.
Williams
Sausage
¢
Bob Evans
Side Dishes
Bone In Western
Style Pork Ribs
Bolthouse
Baby Cut
Carrots
489
Bar-S
Jumbo Franks
13.7-19.2 oz.
99
1
20-28 oz. pkg
Tennessee Pride
Breakfast Biscuits
5
lb
1
6
Selected Varieties
2/$
Boneless
Pork Chops
Selected Varieties
lb.
Healthy Ones
Deli Tub
lb
2
Fresh
Pork Steak
69¢
279
each
B-Size
Red Potatoes
3 lb. bag
each
dairy & frozen
Assorted Varieties
Selected Varieties
Prairie Farms
Yogurt
10/$
6 oz.
99
4
3
Assorted Varieties
4/$
5.8 oz.
Selected Varieties
Selected Varieties
12-34.2 oz.
Selected Varieties
6
48-59 oz.
Selected Varieties
Banquet Family Size
Dinners
lb.
699
499
99
9
Sold as
Full Slab
lb.
Mrs. Gerry’s
99
2
lb.
each
Mrs. Gerry’s
White
Macaroni
Salad
Turkey
Steakhouse
Coleslaw
29
49
3
lb.
lb.
199
5
24 oz.
Selected Varieties
New York Ciabatta
or Garlic Toast
or Bread Sticks
2/$
6
10.5-12 oz.
5
Selected Varieties
Equaline
Bandages
¢
99
99
2
59
2
Selected Varieties
Regular or
High Protein Boost
99
10-40 ct.
Equaline Triple
Antibiotic Ointment
1 oz.
6.4 oz.
Cinnamon
Twirls
169
Two Bite Brownie
or Cinnamon
Rolls
299
2 ct. pkg.
Fresh Baked
White
Bread
169
loaf
11.75-13 oz.
Assorted
Dinner
Rolls
249
Mini
Muffins
379
12 ct.
Angel Food
Cake
2
12 ct.
Selected Varieties
Father’s Table
Variety Cheese Cake
49
99
3
each
12 oz.
household essentials
health and beauty
Colgate
Toothpaste
Selected Varieties
lb.
Kretschmar Fully Cooked
St. Louis Style
Ribs
99
Selected Varieties
12 ct.
Starne’s
BBQ
Ham
lb.
Fried Chicken
Tenders
Compare to
Neosporin
Daisy Sour
Cream
2/$
40 ct.
Manda
Roast
Beef
649
4
North Star
Fudge Bars
fresh bakery
Lorraine
Swiss
Cheese
Ozark Pride
56 oz.
Original or Light
2/$
fresh deli
3
399
Totino’s
Pizza Rolls
5
2 lb. bag
Selected Varieties
Ice Milk, Dream or
2/$
5
199
Prairie Farms Old Recipe
or Homestyle Churn
Ice Cream
11
Tropicana
Orange Juice
25-28 oz.
Frozen
Vegetables
2/$
5
Lean Cuisine
Entrees
2/$
4
12 oz.
Selected Varieties
California
Pizza Kitchen or
DiGiorno Pizza
(Excludes Simple Favorites)
2/$
2/$
4-12 ct.
Skinny Cow
Ice Cream
Cups
6-11.75 oz.
American
Cheese
Singles
Skinny Cow
Ice Cream
7
¢
99
99
1
6 ct.
Equaline Nasal
Decongestant P.E.
Compare to
Sudafed
18 ct.
Selected Varieties
Sure Deodorant
2.6-2.7 oz.
Selected Varieties
5.5 ml. Set & Refresh or
Febreze
Air Effects
2/$
9.7 oz.
5
Charmin
Ultra Bath Tissue
6
49
12 roll
Bounty
Paper Towels
649
8 roll
homelife
®
Selected Varieties
Snack or
Sandwich Bags
129
50-150 ct.
Selected Varieties
Puffs
Tissue
99
¢
56-72 ct.
Selected Varieties
Dawn
Dish Soap
2/$
10.1-24 oz.
5
Obituaries
paducahsun.com
Funeral notices
Paid obituaries furnished to The Paducah Sun by mortuaries.
Barry Lynn Faith
BENTON — Our Barry
Lynn Faith, a wonderful
husband, loving father
and precious Papa passed
away at his residence on
Griggstown Road shortly
after
4 : 0 5
p.m. on
July 9,
2011.
H
e
passed
away
s u r rounded by
family
and friends after a longfought battle with colon
and liver cancer.
Barry was a member
of Zion’s Cause Baptist
Church and worked in the
automotive business. He
was also self-employed
in the antique restoration
business, built furniture
and retired from Labor’s
Local #1214.
Barry was born August
31, 1951, to Donald “Peanut” Faith of Calvert City
and Susie Bell (Cope)
Faith. He was preceded in
death by his mother, Susie. Barry is survived by
his wife of 40 years, Judy
Bradley Faith of Calvert
City; his daughter, Wendy Faith Treas of Benton;
his son, Brad Faith and
wife, Lindsey, of Benton;
and his brother, Ronnie
Faith and wife, Christy,
of Reidland. He is also
survived by three grandchildren, Corey Treas,
Tanisha Treas and Tyler
Treas, all of Benton.
Barry was a fierce
competitor and a great
athlete growing up in
Griggstown and attending Sharpe Elementary,
North Marshall High
School, Gaston Jr. College in N.C. and Stetson
University in DeLand,
Florida. The name Barry
Faith became well known
throughout
Marshall
County as he grew up
and played sports. Barry
was always the best and
excelled at whatever he
participated in. Pound
for pound he truly was
an amazing athlete with
a determination that was
unstoppable. He was a
2-time all purchase basketball player at North
Marshall and an allstate selection in 1969
in baseball. He was the
basketball all-time career
scoring leader at Gaston
College, where all five
starters were from Kentucky, and he holds practically all the offensive
records. He finished his
Rose Marie Wilkins
METROPOLIS, Ill. — Rose Marie Wilkins, 69, of Metropolis died Tuesday at Western
Baptist Hospital in Paducah.
Mrs. Wilkins is survived
by four children, Ron Bankson of Elkhart, Ind., and
Brenda McCormick, Glenda Wilkins and Rhonda
Wilkins, all of Metropolis; 13
grandchildren; and 10 greatgrandchildren.
She was preceded in
death by her husband, William Wilkins, and 13 brothers and sisters. Her parents
were Henery and Rosetta
Thorne.
Graveside services will be
at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the Masonic Cemetery in Belknap.
The Rev. Shane Baker will
officiate.
Aikins Farmer Funeral
home is in charge of arrangements.
career at Stetson University in DeLand, Florida as
being voted MVP of the
basketball team by his
teammates. He didn’t invent the word hustle but
his play defined it. Barry
just recently found out
that his 1969 North Marshall baseball team that
finished 3rd in the state
will be inducted into the
Marshall County Hall of
Fame this September.
It really put a smile on
his face to talk about his
team.
Later in life, Barry
again excelled as he became one of the top
washer pitchers in the
mid-south. He won over
30 championships in singles, doubles and numerous other awards. He was
Kentucky State Champion and Grand Champion
in the 50-up division and
back to back winner of
the prestigious International Washer Doubles
Championship in Yorkville, Tenn. Barry was
looking to repeat again
this year, as that feat had
never been accomplished
before.
Barry loved buying,
building and selling antique furniture. Barry
spent many hours building and refurnishing antiques. He made many
good friends through the
years and loved going to
auctions and flea markets. He was a regular at
the Nashville Flea Market
and loved talking to and
meeting people. What he
enjoyed most was being
with his family, and he
was so proud of being a
Papa to Tyler. Barry did
not need or want the finer
things in life and was satisfied and happy with living modestly and enjoying time with his family.
Anybody that knew Barry
realized that he done it
his own way and always
provided for his family.
Funeral services will
be held Wednesday, July
13, 2011, at 11:00 a.m. at
Collier Funeral Home in
Benton. Joe Edd Brooks
and Brother Charles Frazier will officiate. Burial
will follow in the Mullinax Cemetery. Friends
may call after 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday, July 12, 2011, at
Collier Funeral Home in
Benton.
The family asks that
memorial contributions
be made to the Zion’s
Cause Baptist Church
Building Fund, 1532 U.S.
Hwy 68 West, Benton,
KY 42025.
Thomas Payne
MAYFIELD — Thomas W.
Payne, 57, of Graves County died Saturday at Western Baptist Hospital in
Paducah.
He was a retired farmer,
a member of Henry County
Co-op and an AGR Alumni.
He was of the Baptist faith.
Mr. Payne is survived by
his wife, Debbie Glisson
Payne; a daughter, Katherine Elise Cook of Sugarland,
Texas; a brother, Jim Payne
of Mayfield; his mother, Bettie Payne of Mayfield; and
several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death
by his father, James Paul
Payne.
Memorial services will be
at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Byrn
Funeral Home in Mayfield.
Friends may call after 4 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral
home.
Ethel Ann Burd
MAYFIELD — Ethel Ann
Burd, 79, of Mayfield died
Sunday at Green Acres
Healthcare in Mayfield.
Arrangements were incomplete at Byrn Funeral
Home in Mayfield.
Frederick Hasse
BENTON — Frederick Donald Hasse, 90, of Benton
died at 8:53 a.m. Sunday at
his home.
M r .
Hasse retired as a
tool and
die maker
with Hoof
Products
in
Cicero, Ill.
He was a
member
of St. Matthew by the Lake
Lutheran Church. He was
a veteran of the U.S. Army
and received the Purple
Heart during World War II.
He was a member of Disabled American Veterans.
He is survived by his wife,
Betty Hannan Hasse; one
daughter, Susan J. Korona
of Benton; one son, Frederick Paul Hasse of Benton;
four grandchildren, Scott
Marsteller of Gilbertsville,
Tamara Hassa of Benton,
Janine Atchley of Wichita,
Kan., and Frederick Karl
Hasse of Jacksonville, Fla.;
and 10 great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death
by one grandson and three
sisters. His parents were
Frederick Albert Hasse
and Agnes Grace Dietrich
Hasse.
Services will be at 11 a.m.
Tuesday at Filbeck-Cann
and King Funeral Home
and Crematory. The Rev.
Paul W. Meier will officiate and burial with military
rites will be in Price Cemetery. Friends may call after
6 p.m. today at the funeral
home.
Contributions may be
made to Lourdes Hospice,
P.O. Box 7100, Paducah, KY
42002; or St. Matthew by
the Lake Lutheran Church,
3966 U.S. 641 North, Benton, KY 42025.
Floetta Mae Hill
The Paducah Sun • Monday, July 11, 2011 • 9A
Rita-G Limbaugh
GILBERTSVILLE — Joyce L.
“Rita-G” Limbaugh, 65, of
Gilbertsville, formerly of Arnold, Mo.,
died
at
1 0 : 2 0
p.m. Saturday at
her home.
She retired
as
club room
manager
for
the
Veterans
of Foreign Wars Post 2184
in St. Louis County. She was
a member of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars Ladies Auxiliary.
She is survived by three sisters, Mary Jane Turner of Arlington, Brenda Gay Ashley of
Bardwell and Jo D. Holcomb
of Gilbertsville; two brothers, Chester W. Goldsmith
of Clinton and Harold Lewis
Goldsmith of Milburn; and
several nieces and nephews.
Rita was preceded in death
by her husband, Danny Limbaugh. Her parents were
Chester E. Goldsmith and
Mary Hogancamp Goldsmith.
Memorial services will be
at 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. Tuesday
in her home at 25 Dogwood
Hills Club Road, Gilbertsville, KY 42044. Filbeck-Cann
and King Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements. Online condolences may left at
www.filbeckcannking.com.
Expressions of sympathy
may be made to Lourdes Hospice, P.O. Box 7100, Paducah,
KY 42002.
Ozell Stinson
MAYFIELD — Rosey “Ozell”
Stinson, 86, of Mayfield,
formerly of Arlington, died
at 3:10 a.m. Sunday at Mills
Health Rehabilitation Facility in Mayfield.
She was a homemaker
and a member of Oak Grove
Missionary Baptist Church
in Arlington.
She is survived by two
daughters, Bonnie Azbell of
Mayfield and Rozetta Murphy of Arlington; four sons,
Donnie Stinson of Bardwell,
the Rev. Ronnie Stinson Sr.
of Mayfield, and Tommie
Stinson and the Rev. Timmy
Stinson, both of Arlington;
14 grandchildren; 23 greatgrandchildren; and seven
great great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in
death by two daughters,
Vickie Stinson and Tammy
Massey; three brothers;
and two sisters. Her parents
were Tommy and Burna
Wicks Rodgers.
Services will be at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at Trace Creek Baptist Church with the Revs.
Glenn Holifield and Ronnie
Stinson Jr. officiating. Burial
will be in Trace Creek Cemetery. Friends may call after 5
p.m. today at Brown Funeral
Home in Mayfield.
Memorial contributions
may be made to Gideon’s International.
GOLCONDA, Ill. — Floetta
Mae Hill, 82, of Golconda
died Thursday at Southgate Health Care Center in
Metropolis.
She is survived by three
sons, Dewayne Hill of Golconda, Larry Shell of Melber, Ky., and Billy Shell
of Lebanon, Tenn.; three
daughters, Carla Parr, Janis Fell and Darlene Hill,
all of Golconda; three
brothers, Carl Henshaw
of Mesa, Ariz., Dean Henshaw of Simpson and Garry Henshaw of Marquette,
Mich.; 14 grandchildren;
and 16 great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in
death by her husband,
Jesse Hill; one son, Darrell
Shell; two brothers; and
one grandchild. Her parents were Ernest and Pearl
Jenkins Henshaw.
Services will be at 1 p.m.
today at Aly Funeral Home
in Golconda. Interment
will be in New Home Cemetery in Eddyville. Friends
may call after 10 a.m. today
at the funeral home.
Pauletta Holland
Memorials may be made
to Dutton Chapel Church,
TUPELO, Miss. — Pauletta A.
c/o Aly Funeral Home, Larkins Holland, 58, of TuP.O. Box 690, Golconda, pelo, formerly of Paducah,
IL 62938.
died at 5:10 a.m. Saturday
at St. Francis Hospital in
Memphis, Tenn.
George Koster
Arrangements were inGeorge Koster, 87, of complete at Pettus-RowPaducah died Saturday at land Funeral Home.
Western Baptist Hospital.
Theola Jenkins
Services will be at 1 p.m.
Theola A. Jenkins, 72, of
Wednesday at the Lone Oak
chapel of Milner & Orr Fu- Paducah died at 9:20 a.m.
neral Home. Friends may Sunday at Medco Center of
call after 5 p.m. Tuesday at Paducah.
Arrangements were incomthe funeral home.
Other arrangements are plete at Pettus-Rowland Funeral Home.
pending.
James McNamara
MURRAY — James McNamara, 87, of Murray died
Saturday at Murray-Calloway County Hospital.
Mr. McNamara was an
engineer until his retirement, when he became an
avid golfer. He was a World
War II veteran and of the
Roman Catholic faith.
He is survived by his wife,
Anita Smith McNamara;
two sons, Scott James McNamara of Houston and
Edmund Peter McNamara
of Stamford, Conn.; two
daughters, Elizabeth W.
Cramp of Portland, Maine,
and Ruth M. McNamara
of Newmarket, N.H.; eight
grandchildren; and five
great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death
by two brothers and two
sisters. His parents were
Charles Henry James and
Linda Weston McNamara.
Services are will be at
4:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Imes–Miller Funeral Home
with Kevin McNamara officiating. Friends may call
after 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral home.
Condolences may be left
at www.imesmiller.com.
Petit collaborated with
Welles, Astaire, Picasso
Associated Press
PARIS — Acclaimed choreographer Roland Petit,
whose creations dazzled
stages from Paris to Hollywood and inspired
dancers, writers and designers has died. He was
87.
The Paris National Opera said Petit's wife, Zizi
Jeanmaire,
informed
them that the choreographer died on Sunday
in Geneva. No cause of
death was given.
Jeanmaire, ballerina
turned music hall performer who collaborated
with her husband, and
the couple's daughter
Valentine, saluted Petit
as “not only a great innovator ... but also an incomparable creator who
marked and will mark all
generations.”
Petit took his first
dance steps aged nine at
the Paris Opera's School
of Dance “and never truly
left the house,” they said
in a statement.
While opening several ballet companies in
Paris after its liberation
from occupying Nazis
and the Marseille ballet
house, Petit maintained
ties with Paris Opera,
offering 11 creations, including “Notre Dame de
Paris.”
His reputation grew
well beyond France in
the 1950s during a four-
year stint in Hollywood,
collaborating with Orson
Welles in “The Lady in
the Ice” (1953) and choreographing classics like
“Daddy Long Legs” with
Fred Astaire and Leslie
Caron (1954) or “Anything Goes” with Bing
Crosby and Zizi Jeanmaire (1955).
Famed
American
dancer Alvin Ailey said in
1970 that he owed everything to Petit.
French Culture Minister Frederic Mitterrand, paying tribute, said
that some of his works
brought together designers like Yves SaintLaurent for costumes,
Picasso for decor and
writer and poet Jacques
Prevert. Notable pieces
included “Carmen” or
“Le Jeune Homme et la
Mort” (The Young Man
and Death).
Petit choreographed
for Rudolf Nureyev and
Margot Fonteyn among
other great dancers during an eclectic career
that saw him spend six
months at the head of the
Paris Opera in 1970 then
moving to the Casino
de Paris for music hall
creations until 1976. He
then settled in Marseille
and lent his name to the
company in 1981, now
known as National Ballet of Marseille-Roland
Petit.
Duplicate Bridge
2. Peggy Brady.
ECHO DUPLICATE
3. Carolyn Cook.
1723 Kentucky Ave. Open Team Game Sunday
HICKMAN
1:30 p.m.
1. Dianna Nerren and Nancy Richards.
Top scorers for June: 1-Jo Echols;
2. Betty Amberg and Jo Grissom.
2-Jim Kallaher; 3-Dennis Rose; 4-Bob
3. Margie Evans and Naomi Fuller.
Echols; 5-Barbara Day.
Monday Night Open Pairs
1. Jim and Martha Kallaher.
2. Dan Roy-Bob Echols.
Tues. Afternoon Open Pairs N.S.
1. Margi Dyer-Doug Snow.
2. Tommy Taylor-Phil Fultz.
3. Dot Ramage-Brenda Stephenson.
E.W.
1. Bill Petrie-Jane Baker.
2. Fran Russell-Ron Brockman.
3. Wyatt and Raynetta Earp.
Thurs. Afternoon Open Pairs N.S.
1. Judy Shepherd-Phil Fultz.
2. Barbara Day-Sandra Lemon.
3. Brenda Gagnon-Doug Edwards.
E.W.
1. Julia Rambo-Tommy Thompson.
2. Dalton and Marcia Darnell.
3. Ron Brockman-Bob Echols.
MAYFIELD
July 1
1. Margi Dyer and Doug Snow.
2. Janet and Ron Brotherson.
3. Maxine and Tom Wynn.
4. Sandy Linn and Ray Lytle.
July 6
1. Margi Dyer.
METROPOLIS
Tuesday Afternoon
1. Janet Browning-Bea Adkins.
2. Pearline Kickasola-Joann Bennett.
Wed. Afternoon Stratified Pairs
Flight A
1. Fran Russell-Dennis Rose.
2. Barbara Day-Brenda Gagnon.
3. Norma Cloyd-Bruce Gardner.
4. Julia Rambo-Jane Baker.
Flight B
1. Phyllis Newton-Cynthia Bremer.
2-3. (tie) Bea Adkins-Howard Colbourne; Ron DeLuca- Phil Fultz.
Sat. Afternoon Stratified Pairs
Flight A
1. Jody Knox-Sharon Henneke.
2. Julia Rambo-Jane Baker.
3-4. (tie) Barbara Day-Ron DeLuca;
Norma Cloyd-Bruce Gardner.
5. Fran Russell-Dennis Rose.
Flight B
1. Peggy Brady-Kathy McWhorter.
2. Jim and Louella Lyon.
PADUCAH
1. Tommy Wynn-Ron Brockman.
2. Ora Brooks-Maxine Wynn.
3. Ray Lytle-David Whitlock.
KIM HOMRA
INSURANCE AGENCY
2715 Olivet Church Rd. • Paducah, KY 42001 • 554-1697
Auto • Home
•• Auto
• Home
• Business • Life
• Business
• Life
• Health
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company and Affiliated Companies Nationwide Life Insurance Company. Home Office: Columbus, Ohio 43215-2220
Nationwide, the Nationwide Framemark and On Your Side are federally registered service marks of Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company.
Serving Your Family for Generations
Locally Owned and Operated
/PSUIUI4USFFUr
rXXXMJOETFZGVOFSBMDPN
Nation/World
10A • Monday, July 11, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
Pawn shops, payday lenders are hot
Russian riverboat sinks;
100 missing, feared dead
Associated PRess
NEW YORK — As the jobless rate inches up and the
economic recovery sputters, investors looking for
a few good stocks may
want to follow the money
— or rather the TV, the
beloved Fender guitar, the
baubles from grandma,
the wedding ring.
Profits at pawn shop
operator Ezcorp Inc. have
McClatchey-Tribune News Service
MOSCOW — More than
100 people were missing
and feared dead after a passenger cruiser sank on the
Volga River on Sunday afternoon, Russian officials
said.
The 56-year-old doubledeck riverboat Bulgaria
was carrying 188 people
— 142 passengers and 46
crew members — when it
went under about 2 miles
from the shore of the Volga, in central Russia near
the regional capital of Kazan, about 500 miles east
of Moscow.
Two bodies were quickly
recovered, officials said, and
about 80 passengers had
been rescued, 13 of whom
were rushed to hospitals,
Irina Andrianova, Russian
Emergency Situations Ministry spokeswoman, said in
televised remarks.
Divers found the ship on
its side at the bottom, about
60 feet down, and were seeking to determine whether
anyone inside was still alive.
“According to our divers
chances to find people alive
are minimal,” Andrianova
said.
Emergency
Situations
Minister Sergei Shoigu
ordered dozens of rescue workers to determine
whether survivors had
paducahsun.com
jumped by an average 46
percent annually for five
years. The stock has doubled from a year ago, to
about $38. And the Wall
Street pros who analyze
the company think it will
go higher yet. All seven of
them are telling investors
to buy the Austin, Texas,
company.
Is the economy still just
in a soft patch? A hard
patch? Will the market rise
or drop? Even experts are
just guessing. In investing,
it’s often better to focus on
what you can safely predict,
even if that safety is found
in companies that thrive on
hard times. One good bet:
The jobless aren’t likely to
find work anytime soon.
And companies profiting
from their bad fortune will
continue to do so.
Associated Press
A relative embraces a survivor upon the arrival of the Arabella
riverboat with dozens of survivors of a shipwreck in Kazan, on the
Volga River in central Russia. A woman drowned and some 100
remain missing after the double-decker passenger boat sank in
the middle of the river some 2 miles away from the nearest bank
on Sunday.
managed to make it to any
of 13 nearby islands.
The ship may have sunk
because it was overloaded,
a law enforcement source
told Interfax news agency.
The vessel was made in
Czechoslovakia in 1955
and was equipped with two
rescue boats that could accommodate 36 people and
several rescue rafts for 120
people, Interfax reported.
The boat sank during a
thunderstorm
accompanied by strong rain, said a
survivor whose wife and
grandson were missing.
Other survivors said the
WOMEN’S CLEARANCE
$
boat was packed with tourists and the sinking occurred very suddenly.
Russian television showed
chilling footage of shocked
survivors whose relatives
were feared dead. One
young woman said she lost
her 10-year-old daughter.
“We all found ourselves
buried alive inside the
boat like in a sarcophagus
and were trying to get out
through the window,” the
woman, wrapped in a long
towel, said in Kazan’s port. “I
was holding her by the hand
but then she began to choke
and pushed me away.”
3999
Handbags
20% OFF
HandBags
50% OFF
CLEARANCE ROOM
Buy One Get One HALF PRICE
($49.99 and up)
H
AYES SHOE
S
5181-B Hinkleville Rd.
270-933-1118 • Mon-Sat 9-7 • Sun 1-5
Next to Kohl’s Shopping Center Across from Lowe’s
$&&8:($7+(5Š)25(&$67)253$'8&$+
)LYH'D\)RUHFDVWIRU3DGXFDK
.HQWXFN\:HDWKHU
6KRZQLVWRGD\ҋVZHDWKHU7HPSHUDWXUHVDUHWRGD\ҋVKLJKVDQGWRQLJKWҋVORZV
7RQLJKW
7RGD\
89,QGH[7RGD\
7XHVGD\
:HGQHVGD\
7KXUVGD\
15
12
9
6
3
0
)ULGD\
&RYLQJWRQ
$VKODQG
/RXLVYLOOH
)UDQNIRUW
3DGXFDK
/H[LQJWRQ
3DUWO\VXQQ\YHU\
KRWDQGKXPLG
3DWFK\FORXGV
ZDUPDQGKXPLG
ƒ
ƒ
2ZHQVERUR
%RZOLQJ*UHHQ
3DUWO\VXQQ\D
WVWRUPYHU\KRW
KXPLG
ƒ
&ORXGVDQGVXQ
ZLWKDWVWRUP
KXPLG
ƒ
3DUWO\VXQQ\ZLWK
DWKXQGHUVWRUP
SRVVLEOH
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
7HPSHUDWXUH
+LJK ƒ
/RZ ƒ
1RUPDOKLJK ƒ
1RUPDOORZ ƒ
3UHFLSLWDWLRQ
KRXUVHQGLQJSP µ
0RQWKWRGDWH µ
1RUPDOPRQWKWRGDWH µ
<HDUWRGDWH µ
/DVW\HDUWRGDWH µ
1RUPDO\HDUWRGDWH µ
6XQDQG0RRQ
1DWLRQDO6XPPDU\
+HDWDQGKXPLGLW\ZLOOLQFUHDVHLQWKH
1RUWKHDVWWRGD\DKHDGRIDFROGIURQW
EULQJLQJVKRZHUVDQGWKXQGHUVWRUPVWRWKH
ZHVWHUQSDUWRIWKH1RUWKHDVWWKH*UHDW
/DNHVDQGWKH0LGZHVW6WRUPVFRXOGEH
VWURQJWRVHYHUHIURP1HEUDVNDWR,OOLQRLV
3OHQW\RIGUHQFKLQJVKRZHUVDQGWKXQGHU
VWRUPVZLOORFFXULQWKH6RXWKHDVW
0LVVRXUL3DUWO\VXQQ\KRWDQGKXPLGWRGD\DVWURQJWKXQ
GHUVWRUPLQWKHQRUWK$VWURQJWKXQGHUVWRUPLQWKHQRUWK
DQGHDVWWRQLJKW
$UNDQVDV0RVWO\VXQQ\DQGKRWWRGD\0DLQO\FOHDUWRQLJKW
+RWWRPRUURZZLWKVXQVKLQHDQGSDWFK\FORXGV
-XO\
-XO\
-XO\
$XJ
1DWLRQDO:HDWKHU
Iqaluit
47/41
Whitehorse
78/50
7HQQHVVHH3DUWO\VXQQ\DQGYHU\KRWWRGD\DQDIWHUQRRQ
WKXQGHUVWRUPLQWKHHDVW$VKRZHURUWKXQGHUVWRUPWRQLJKW
KRZHYHUGU\LQWKHZHVW
Yellowknife
80/62
Churchill
70/51
1DWLRQDO&LWLHV
7RGD\
+L /R :
Vancouver
69/57
7XH
+L /R :
&LW\
7RGD\
+L /R :
ƒ
6XQULVHWRGD\DP
6XQVHWWRQLJKWSP
0RRQULVHWRGD\SP
0RRQVHWWRGD\DP
)XOO
/DVW
1HZ
)LUVW
)RUHFDVWVDQGJUDSKLFVSURYLGHGE\$FFX:HDWKHU,QF‹
&LW\
ƒ
5HJLRQDO:HDWKHU
,QGLDQD&ORXGVDQGVXQWRGD\DWKXQGHUVWRUPKRWDQG
KXPLG
3DGXFDKWKURXJKSP\HVWHUGD\
ƒ
.HQWXFN\3DUWO\VXQQ\YHU\KRWDQGKXPLGWRGD\DVKRZHU
RUWKXQGHUVWRUPLQWKHQRUWKGXULQJWKHDIWHUQRRQ
,OOLQRLV+RWDQGKXPLGWRGD\ZLWKFORXGVDQGVXQDVKRZHU
RUWKXQGHUVWRUPH[FHSWDVWURQJWKXQGHUVWRUPLQWKHZHVW
DQGGU\LQWKHVRXWK
$OPDQDF
3DUWO\VXQQ\ZLWK
WKXQGHUVWRUPV
SRVVLEOH
7XH
+L /R :
&LW\
7RGD\
+L /R :
$WODQWD
W W
+RXVWRQ
SF V
3KLODGHOSKLD
$WODQWLF&LW\
V W
,QGLDQDSROLV
W W
3KRHQL[
%DOWLPRUH
V W
-DFNVRQYLOOH
W W
3RUWODQG0(
%LOOLQJV
SF SF
.DQVDV&LW\
SF SF
3RUWODQG25
%LUPLQJKDP
W SF
/DV9HJDV
V V
3URYLGHQFH
%RLVH
V V
/LWWOH5RFN
V V
5DOHLJK'XUKDP %RVWRQ
SF W
/RV$QJHOHV
SF SF
5DSLG&LW\
&KDUOHVWRQ6& W W
/RXLVYLOOH
W W
5HQR
&KDUOHVWRQ:9 SF W
0HPSKLV
V SF
6DFUDPHQWR
&KLFDJR
W SF
0LDPL
W W
6W/RXLV
&OHYHODQG
W SF
0LOZDXNHH
W SF
6DOW/DNH&LW\ 'HQYHU
W W
0SOV6W3DXO
W W
6DQ'LHJR
'HV0RLQHV
W W
1DVKYLOOH
SF W
6DQ)UDQFLVFR 'HWURLW
W SF
1HZ2UOHDQV
W W
6HDWWOH
(O3DVR
V SF
1HZ<RUN&LW\ V W
7RSHND
)DLUEDQNV
SF VK
2NODKRPD&LW\ V V
7XFVRQ
+RQROXOX
V SF
2PDKD
W W
:DVKLQJWRQ'& :HDWKHU:VVXQQ\SFSDUWO\FORXG\FFORXG\VKVKRZHUVWWKXQGHUVWRUPVUUDLQVIVQRZIOXUULHVVQVQRZLLFH
V
W
SF
F
SF
V
W
V
V
SF
V
SF
SF
F
SF
W
V
7XH
+L /R :
W
V
W
F
W
W
W
V
V
W
W
SF
SF
F
SF
SF
W
Calgary
75/53
Winnipeg
75/53
Seattle
72/55
6WDWLRQDU\
)URQW
6KRZHUV
7VWRUPV
5DLQ
)OXUULHV
6QRZ
,FH
San Francisco
63/53
Montreal
86/71
Minneapolis
89/66
Billings
88/62
&ROG)URQW
:DUP)URQW
St. John's
70/53
Saskatoon
73/52
Denver
92/62
Chicago
89/74
Los Angeles
79/65
Toronto
92/71
Detroit
93/72
New York
90/74
Washington
94/77
Atlanta
95/76
El Paso
93/76
Chihuahua
88/63
La Paz
100/70
Houston
97/75
Monterrey
92/74
Miami
91/79
Halifax
76/57
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
6KRZQDUHQRRQSRVLWLRQVRIZHDWKHUV\VWHPVDQGSUHFLSLWDWLRQ7HPSHUDWXUHEDQGVDUHKLJKVIRU
WKHGD\)RUHFDVWKLJKORZWHPSHUDWXUHVDUHJLYHQIRUVHOHFWHGFLWLHV
<HVWHUGD\ҋV1DWLRQDO+LJK/RZ)RUWKHFRQWLJXRXVVWDWHV
+LJKƒLQ+XWFKLQVRQ.6/RZƒLQ6WDQOH\,'
8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.
/RZ0RGHUDWH+LJK9HU\+LJK([WUHPH
9DOXHVLQGLFDWHWKHH[SRVXUHWRWKHVXQҋVXOWUDYLROHWUD\V
5HJLRQDO&LWLHV
&LW\
7RGD\
+L /R :
%HOOHYLOOH,/
%RZOLQJ*Q.< %ULVWRO71
&*LUDUGHDX02 &DUERQGDOH,/ &KDWWDQRRJD71 &ROXPELD02 (YDQVYLOOH,1
)W6PLWK$5
,QGLDQDSROLV,1 -DFNVRQ.<
-DFNVRQ71
-RSOLQ02
.DQVDV&LW\02 .QR[YLOOH71
/H[LQJWRQ.<
/LWWOH5RFN$5 /RQGRQ.<
/RXLVYLOOH.<
0HPSKLV71
1DVKYLOOH71
3DGXFDK.<
3HRULD,/
6W/RXLV02
6SULQJILHOG,/
6SULQJILHOG02 7HUUH+DXWH,1 SF
SF
W
SF
SF
SF
SF
W
V
W
SF
SF
SF
SF
SF
SF
V
SF
W
V
SF
SF
W
SF
W
SF
W
7XH
+L /R :
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
V
W
W
W
V
SF
W
W
V
W
W
SF
W
W
W
W
W
SF
W
5LYHUVDQG/DNHV
)ORRG +W KU
&LW\
VWDJH \HVW FKJ 7RGD\ 1H[W 1H[W
(YDQVYLOOH 6PLWKODQG 3DGXFDK &DLUR
6W/RXLV
&DSH*LU 1HZ0DG 0HPSKLV /DNHV$ERYH'DP%HORZ'DP 7HPS
/DNH%DUNOH\1&
.\/DNH1&
6PLWK3RRO1$
1$ 'DWDQRWDYDLODEOHWRGD\