10
Sunday’s NBA scores Boston 106, L.A. Clippers 104 L.A. Lakers 98, Detroit 97 Miami 100, Toronto 85 Sunday’s men’s Top 25 scores 12. Louisville (18-4) beat No. 25 Mar- quette (15-5) 70-51 23. Minnesota (17-5) beat Iowa 62-59 Sunday’s Women’s Top 20 scores 4. Stanford (20-2) beat Oregon State 65- 45 5. Duke (20-1) beat No. 11 North Carolina (20-3) 84-63 6. California (19-2) beat Oregon 72-45 8. Kentucky (19-3) lost to No. 13 Georgia (19-3) 75-71 9. Tennessee (17-5) lost to Missouri 80- 63 10. Maryland (18-3) beat Boston College 85-62 15. South Carolina (19-3) beat Auburn 59-51 17. Dayton (19-1) beat Richmond 72-64 18. UCLA (17-4) beat Utah 72-45 20. Florida State (18-4) beat Clemson 83-61 SCOREBOARD GOLF Wire-to-wire brilliance After just missing a putt that would have scored a rare 59 in the opening round of the Phoenix Open on Thursday, Phil Mickelson competed a wire-to-wire vic- tory on Sunday with a 4-shot win over Brandt Snedeker and a 256 total that was two shots off the PGA Tour record of 254. CONTACT US Page 3B Sports The Paducah Sun | Monday, February 4, 2013 | paducahsun.com Section B WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: Georgia’s women end Kentucky’s 34-game home win streak. | 3B Sports................... 575-8665 [email protected] Joey Fosko ............ 575-8661 [email protected] Dusty Luthy Shull ...575-8662 [email protected] Baltimore Ravens 34 San Francisco 49ers 31 NEW ORLEANS — From blow- out to blackout to shootout, Joe Flacco and the Baltimore Ravens had just enough power to survive one of the most electric Super Bowls ever. The outage ipped a switch for the San Francisco 49ers, but the Ravens used a last-gasp defensive stand to hold on Sunday night, 34-31. America’s biggest sporting event came to a half-hour stand- still in the third quarter when most of the Superdome lights and the scoreboards went dark. By then, the Ravens had a 22-point lead. Everything changed after that, though, and the 49ers staged a sensational rally before Ray Lewis and Co. shut it down. But there were plenty of white-knuckle mo- ments and the Ravens (14-6) had to make four stops inside their 7 at the end. For a Super Bowl with so many subplots, it almost had to end this way. Flacco’s arrival as a champion- ship quarterback coincides with Lewis’ retirement — with a second Super Bowl ring no less. The win capped a sensational month since the star linebacker announced he was leaving the game after 17 Hall of Fame-caliber years. The sibling rivalry between the coaching Harbaughs went to John, older than Jim by 15 months. “How could it be any other way? It’s never pretty. It’s never perfect. But it’s us,” John Harbaugh said. “It was us today.” At 4 hours, 14 minutes, it was the longest Super Bowl ever. Among the most thrilling, too. The loss of power delayed the game 34 minutes and left play- ers from both sides stretching and chatting with each other. It also cost Baltimore whatever momentum it built, and that was considerable after Jacoby Jones’ 108-yard kickoff return and game MVP Flacco’s three touchdown passes made it 28-6. Back came San Francisco (13-5- 1) in search of its sixth Lombardi Trophy in as many tries. Michael Crabtree’s 31-yard touchdown reception on which he broke two tackles made it 28-13. A Lights out: Ravens survive 49ers BY BARRY WILNER Associated Press Please see SUPER | 4B LOUISVILLE — Two weeks of struggle had begun to raise ques- tions about Louisville’s ability to contend in the Big East. And while some concerns remain to be addressed over the second half of their league schedule, the No. 12 Cardinals reclaimed some of their swagger with Sunday’s 70-51 rout of No. 25 Marquette. Russ Smith scored 18 points, Peyton Siva added 14 and Louis- ville shot 52 percent to run away from Marquette. The Cardinals’ reserves helped out by outscor- ing the Golden Eagles’ 19-10 — 21 points below their average com- ing in. That contribution helped snap Louisville (18-4, 6-3) out of an early funk and the Cardinals went on to their most decisive victory since they started 4-0 in the league and beat opponents by average of 18.5 points per game. That dominance was forgotten in a three-game losing streak and a close win over Pittsburgh, which made the Cardinals feel even bet- ter about getting it back. “The guards got back and got on the glass. I think we matched their physicality,” said Siva, who shot 6 of 9 from the eld includ- ing a 3-pointer to break out of a 7-for-31 slump in the four previ- ous games. He also had seven assists. “Coach told us they were going to come in here and be physical with us. I think we did a better job after ve minutes of matching their intensity.” Marquette had an opportu- nity to take a one-game lead in the league on Syracuse, but the Golden Eagles were left settling for a rst-place tie with the Or- ange. The Cardinals, meanwhile, moved a half-game closer to both schools with their second straight win, remaining in a four-way tie for third. The Cardinals nished 27 of 52 from the eld after a 1-for-8 start while holding the Golden Eagles (15-5, 6-2) to 36 percent shooting (19 of 53). They also outrebound- ed Marquette 38-26. “I think we really just locked in and keyed on every play from the scouting report,” said Lou- isville forward Chane Behanan, who had ve points and three rebounds. “Coach stressed the whole week in practice that Mar- quette was a great smack-down Louisville answers doubters with rout of No. 25 Marquette BY GARY GRAVES Associated Press Please see CARDS | 3B NEW ORLEANS — The Super Bowl was halted because of a power outage Sunday, plunging parts of the Superdome into dark- ness and leading to a 34-minute delay in the biggest game of the year. The Baltimore Ravens were leading the San Francisco 49ers 28-6 when most of the lights in the 73,000-seat building went out with 13:22 left in the third quar- ter. Auxiliary power kept the play- ing eld from going totally dark, but escalators stopped working and the concourses were only illu- minated by small banks of lights tied in to emergency service. Philip Allison, a spokesman for Entergy New Orleans, which pro- vides power to the stadium, said power had been owing into the stadium before the lights failed. “All of our distribution and transmission feeds going into the Superdome were operating as ex- pected,” Allison said. He said the outage appeared to originate in a failure of equipment maintained by stadium staff. It occurred shortly after Beyonce put on a 12-minute halftime show that featured extravagant lighting and video effects. On the CBS broadcast, the play- Electrical outage halts Super Bowl BY PAUL NEWBERRY Associated Press Please see OUTAGE | 4B No. 12 Louisville 70, No. 25 Marquette 51 MARQUETTE (15-5) Anderson 0-2 0-0 0, Otule 2-4 2-2 6, Cadougan 1-5 0-0 2, Blue 8-16 0-0 17, Lockett 4-6 7-9 16, J. Wilson 1-7 0-0 2, Mayo 1-3 0-1 3, D. Wilson 0-3 0-0 0, Taylor, Jr. 1-3 1-3 3, Gardner 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 19-53 10-15 51. LOUISVILLE (18-4) Hancock 2-4 0-0 6, Behanan 2-5 1-2 5, Dieng 2-6 4-4 8, Smith 6-15 4-4 18, Siva 6-9 1-2 14, Ware 0-1 0-2 0, Henderson 0-0 0-0 0, Blackshear 4-5 0-0 9, Harrell 3-5 0-0 6, Van Treese 2-2 0-0 4. Totals 27-52 10-14 70. Halftime–Louisville 38-24. 3-Point Goals–Mar- quette 3-13 (Lockett 1-1, Mayo 1-2, Blue 1-5, D. Wilson 0-1, Anderson 0-1, Cadougan 0-1, J. Wilson 0-2), Louisville 6-16 (Hancock 2-4, Smith 2-6, Blackshear 1-2, Siva 1-4). Fouled Out–None. Rebounds–Marquette 26 (Blue 5), Louisville 38 (Dieng 8). Assists–Marquette 6 (Anderson, Ca- dougan, Lockett, Otule, J. Wilson, D. Wilson 1), Louisville 17 (Siva 7). Total Fouls–Marquette 14, Louisville 20. A–NA. NEW ORLEANS — Quarterback Joe Flacco put off contract talks with the Baltimore Ravens until after the season was done. Seems like a pretty good deci- sion at the moment, huh? Capping a perfect postseason, the unassuming and unheralded Flacco completed 22 of 33 passes for 287 yards and three rst-half touchdowns Sunday, earning Su- per Bowl MVP honors for leading the Ravens to a 34-31 victory over the San Francisco 49ers. Setting aside any questions about just how good he is and where he belongs in the conversa- tion about the league’s best quar- terbacks, Flacco became only the sixth in 47 Super Bowls to throw for three scores in a rst half, con- necting with Anquan Boldin for 13 yards, Dennis Pitta for 1, and Jacoby Jones for 56. And the admittedly mild-man- nered guy, who played his college football far from the spotlight at Delaware, wrapped up Balti- more’s four-game run to the title with 11 TD passes and zero in- terceptions. It was an impressive streak that included road victo- ries against two of the game’s best QBs, Peyton Manning and Tom Brady. Flacco’s job in the second half Sunday was more about being safe than spectacular. He had helped Baltimore take a 21-6 halftime lead, and it grew to 28-6 when Jones returned the second- half kickoff a Super Bowl-record 108 yards. That, though, is when things got strange. First, a power outage knocked out many lights inside the Super- dome, delaying action for more than a half-hour. And when play resumed, San Francisco quickly scored 17 consecutive points to make things interesting. The Ravens held on down the stretch though, with two short eld goals by rookie Justin Tuck- er padding the lead, and the Ray Lewis-led defense stopping the 49ers on a fourth-and-goal at the 5. “I was sitting there thinking, ‘There’s no way. There’s no way we stop them here,’” Flacco said. Flacco boosts bargaining power BY HOWARD FENDRICH Associated Press Please see FLACCO | 4B Associated Press People stand on the field dur- ing a 34-minute power outage in the second half of Sunday’s Super Bowl XLVII between the San Francisco 49ers in the New Orleans Superdome. Associated Press San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree (15) cannot reach a pass thrown on fourth-and- goal as Baltimore Ravens safety Ed Reed (20) defends in the last minutes of the fourth quarter in Sunday’s Super Bowl XLVII in New Orleans. The Ravens led 34-29 at the time, and went on to a 34-31 victory. Associated Press Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco (5) holds the Vince Lombardi Trophy after defeating the San Francisco 49ers in Sun- day’s Super Bowl XLVII game in New Orleans. Flacco was MVP.

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Sunday’s NBA scoresBoston 106, L.A. Clippers 104L.A. Lakers 98, Detroit 97Miami 100, Toronto 85

Sunday’s men’s Top 25 scores12. Louisville (18-4) beat No. 25 Mar-

quette (15-5) 70-5123. Minnesota (17-5) beat Iowa 62-59

Sunday’s Women’s Top 20 scores4. Stanford (20-2) beat Oregon State 65-

455. Duke (20-1) beat No. 11 North Carolina

(20-3) 84-63

6. California (19-2) beat Oregon 72-458. Kentucky (19-3) lost to No. 13 Georgia

(19-3) 75-719. Tennessee (17-5) lost to Missouri 80-

6310. Maryland (18-3) beat Boston College

85-6215. South Carolina (19-3) beat Auburn

59-5117. Dayton (19-1) beat Richmond 72-6418. UCLA (17-4) beat Utah 72-4520. Florida State (18-4) beat Clemson

83-61

SCOREBOARD GOLFWire-to-wire brilliance

After just missing a putt that would have scored a rare 59 in the opening round of the Phoenix Open on Thursday, Phil Mickelson competed a wire-to-wire vic-tory on Sunday with a 4-shot win over Brandt Snedeker and a 256 total that was two shots off the PGA Tour record of 254.

CONTACT US

Page 3B

SportsThe Paducah Sun | Monday, February 4, 2013 | paducahsun.com Section B

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: Georgia’s women end Kentucky’s 34-game home win streak. | 3B

Sports [email protected]

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

Dusty Luthy Shull [email protected]

Baltimore Ravens34

San Francisco 49ers31

NEW ORLEANS — From blow-out to blackout to shootout, Joe Flacco and the Baltimore Ravens had just enough power to survive one of the most electric Super Bowls ever.

The outage fl ipped a switch for the San Francisco 49ers, but the Ravens used a last-gasp defensive stand to hold on Sunday night, 34-31.

America’s biggest sporting event came to a half-hour stand-still in the third quarter when most of the Superdome lights and the scoreboards went dark. By then, the Ravens had a 22-point lead.

Everything changed after that, though, and the 49ers staged a sensational rally before Ray Lewis and Co. shut it down. But there were plenty of white-knuckle mo-ments and the Ravens (14-6) had to make four stops inside their 7 at the end.

For a Super Bowl with so many subplots, it almost had to end this way.

Flacco’s arrival as a champion-ship quarterback coincides with Lewis’ retirement — with a second Super Bowl ring no less. The win capped a sensational month since the star linebacker announced he was leaving the game after 17 Hall of Fame-caliber years.

The sibling rivalry between the coaching Harbaughs went to John, older than Jim by 15 months.

“How could it be any other way? It’s never pretty. It’s never perfect. But it’s us,” John Harbaugh said. “It was us today.”

At 4 hours, 14 minutes, it was the longest Super Bowl ever. Among the most thrilling, too.

The loss of power delayed the game 34 minutes and left play-ers from both sides stretching and chatting with each other. It also cost Baltimore whatever momentum it built, and that was considerable after Jacoby Jones’ 108-yard kickoff return and game MVP Flacco’s three touchdown passes made it 28-6.

Back came San Francisco (13-5-1) in search of its sixth Lombardi Trophy in as many tries.

Michael Crabtree’s 31-yard touchdown reception on which he broke two tackles made it 28-13. A

Lights out: Ravens survive 49ersBY BARRY WILNER

Associated Press

Please see SUPER | 4B

LOUISVILLE — Two weeks of struggle had begun to raise ques-tions about Louisville’s ability to contend in the Big East.

And while some concerns remain to be addressed over the second half of their league schedule, the No. 12 Cardinals reclaimed some of their swagger with Sunday’s 70-51 rout of No. 25 Marquette.

Russ Smith scored 18 points, Peyton Siva added 14 and Louis-ville shot 52 percent to run away from Marquette. The Cardinals’ reserves helped out by outscor-

ing the Golden Eagles’ 19-10 — 21 points below their average com-ing in.

That contribution helped snap Louisville (18-4, 6-3) out of an early funk and the Cardinals went on to their most decisive victory since they started 4-0 in the league and beat opponents by average of 18.5 points per game. That dominance was forgotten in a three-game losing streak and a close win over Pittsburgh, which made the Cardinals feel even bet-ter about getting it back.

“The guards got back and got on the glass. I think we matched their physicality,” said Siva, who

shot 6 of 9 from the fi eld includ-ing a 3-pointer to break out of a 7-for-31 slump in the four previ-ous games. He also had seven assists. “Coach told us they were going to come in here and be physical with us. I think we did a better job after fi ve minutes of matching their intensity.”

Marquette had an opportu-nity to take a one-game lead in the league on Syracuse, but the Golden Eagles were left settling for a fi rst-place tie with the Or-ange. The Cardinals, meanwhile, moved a half-game closer to both schools with their second straight

win, remaining in a four-way tie for third.

The Cardinals fi nished 27 of 52 from the fi eld after a 1-for-8 start while holding the Golden Eagles (15-5, 6-2) to 36 percent shooting (19 of 53). They also outrebound-ed Marquette 38-26.

“I think we really just locked in and keyed on every play from the scouting report,” said Lou-isville forward Chane Behanan, who had fi ve points and three rebounds. “Coach stressed the whole week in practice that Mar-quette was a great smack-down

Louisville answers doubters with rout of No. 25 MarquetteBY GARY GRAVES

Associated Press

Please see CARDS | 3B

NEW ORLEANS — The Super Bowl was halted because of a power outage Sunday, plunging parts of the Superdome into dark-ness and leading to a 34-minute delay in the biggest game of the year.

The Baltimore Ravens were leading the San Francisco 49ers 28-6 when most of the lights in the 73,000-seat building went out with 13:22 left in the third quar-ter.

Auxiliary power kept the play-ing fi eld from going totally dark, but escalators stopped working and the concourses were only illu-minated by small banks of lights tied in to emergency service.

Philip Allison, a spokesman for Entergy New Orleans, which pro-vides power to the stadium, said power had been fl owing into the stadium before the lights failed.

“All of our distribution and transmission feeds going into the Superdome were operating as ex-pected,” Allison said.

He said the outage appeared to originate in a failure of equipment maintained by stadium staff. It occurred shortly after Beyonce put on a 12-minute halftime show that featured extravagant lighting and video effects.

On the CBS broadcast, the play-

Electrical outage haltsSuper Bowl

BY PAUL NEWBERRYAssociated Press

Please see OUTAGE | 4B

No. 12 Louisville 70,

No. 25 Marquette 51MARQUETTE (15-5)Anderson 0-2 0-0 0, Otule 2-4 2-2 6, Cadougan

1-5 0-0 2, Blue 8-16 0-0 17, Lockett 4-6 7-9 16, J. Wilson 1-7 0-0 2, Mayo 1-3 0-1 3, D. Wilson 0-3 0-0 0, Taylor, Jr. 1-3 1-3 3, Gardner 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 19-53 10-15 51.

LOUISVILLE (18-4)Hancock 2-4 0-0 6, Behanan 2-5 1-2 5, Dieng

2-6 4-4 8, Smith 6-15 4-4 18, Siva 6-9 1-2 14, Ware 0-1 0-2 0, Henderson 0-0 0-0 0, Blackshear 4-5 0-0 9, Harrell 3-5 0-0 6, Van Treese 2-2 0-0 4. Totals 27-52 10-14 70.

Halftime–Louisville 38-24. 3-Point Goals–Mar-quette 3-13 (Lockett 1-1, Mayo 1-2, Blue 1-5, D. Wilson 0-1, Anderson 0-1, Cadougan 0-1, J. Wilson 0-2), Louisville 6-16 (Hancock 2-4, Smith 2-6, Blackshear 1-2, Siva 1-4). Fouled Out–None. Rebounds–Marquette 26 (Blue 5), Louisville 38 (Dieng 8). Assists–Marquette 6 (Anderson, Ca-dougan, Lockett, Otule, J. Wilson, D. Wilson 1), Louisville 17 (Siva 7). Total Fouls–Marquette 14, Louisville 20. A–NA.

NEW ORLEANS — Quarterback Joe Flacco put off contract talks with the Baltimore Ravens until after the season was done.

Seems like a pretty good deci-sion at the moment, huh?

Capping a perfect postseason, the unassuming and unheralded Flacco completed 22 of 33 passes for 287 yards and three fi rst-half touchdowns Sunday, earning Su-per Bowl MVP honors for leading the Ravens to a 34-31 victory over the San Francisco 49ers.

Setting aside any questions about just how good he is and where he belongs in the conversa-tion about the league’s best quar-terbacks, Flacco became only the sixth in 47 Super Bowls to throw for three scores in a fi rst half, con-necting with Anquan Boldin for 13 yards, Dennis Pitta for 1, and Jacoby Jones for 56.

And the admittedly mild-man-nered guy, who played his college football far from the spotlight at Delaware, wrapped up Balti-more’s four-game run to the title

with 11 TD passes and zero in-terceptions. It was an impressive streak that included road victo-ries against two of the game’s best

QBs, Peyton Manning and Tom Brady.

Flacco’s job in the second half Sunday was more about being safe than spectacular. He had helped Baltimore take a 21-6 halftime lead, and it grew to 28-6 when Jones returned the second-half kickoff a Super Bowl-record 108 yards.

That, though, is when things got strange.

First, a power outage knocked out many lights inside the Super-dome, delaying action for more than a half-hour. And when play resumed, San Francisco quickly scored 17 consecutive points to make things interesting.

The Ravens held on down the stretch though, with two short fi eld goals by rookie Justin Tuck-er padding the lead, and the Ray Lewis-led defense stopping the 49ers on a fourth-and-goal at the 5.

“I was sitting there thinking, ‘There’s no way. There’s no way we stop them here,’” Flacco said.

Flacco boosts bargaining powerBY HOWARD FENDRICH

Associated Press

Please see FLACCO | 4B

Associated Press

People stand on the field dur-ing a 34-minute power outage in the second half of Sunday’s Super Bowl XLVII between the San Francisco 49ers in the New Orleans Superdome.

Associated Press

San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree (15) cannot reach a pass thrown on fourth-and-goal as Baltimore Ravens safety Ed Reed (20) defends in the last minutes of the fourth quarter in Sunday’s Super Bowl XLVII in New Orleans. The Ravens led 34-29 at the time, and went on to a 34-31 victory.

Associated Press

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco (5) holds the Vince Lombardi Trophy after defeating the San Francisco 49ers in Sun-day’s Super Bowl XLVII game in New Orleans. Flacco was MVP.

Page 2: Georgia’s women end Kentucky’s 34-game home win streak ...matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/1140/... · 2/4/2013  · Flacco and the Baltimore Ravens had just enough

THE FINE PRINT

On televisionTODAY 

COLLEGE BASKETBALL (MEN)6 p.m. -- Notre Dame at Syracuse (ESPN)6 -- Oklahoma at Iowa State (ESPNU)6 -- George Mason at Old Dominion (NBC Sports)8 -- Texas at West Virginia (ESPN)8 -- Seton Hall at Pittsburgh (ESPNU)

COLLEGE BASKETBALL (WOMEN)6 p.m. -- Purdue at Penn State (ESPN2)8 -- Texas A&M at LSU (ESPN2)

HOCKEY8 p.m. -- Dallas at Colorado (NBC Sports)

TUESDAY COLLEGE BASKETBALL (MEN)

6 p.m. -- Florida at Arkansas (ESPN)6 -- Villanova at DePaul (ESPN2)6 -- Wake Forest at North Carolina (ESPNU)6 -- Purdue at Penn State (Big Ten)6 -- Boston College at Miami, Fla. (Sports South(6 -- Radford at Liberty (CSS)8 -- South Carolina at Kentucky (ESPNU)8 -- Ohio State at Michigan (ESPN)8 -- Florida State at Georgia Tech (Sports South)

COLLEGE BASKETBALL (WOMEN)6 p.m. – Notre Dame at Villanova (CBS Sports)

HOCKEY6:30 p.m. -- Tampa Bay at Philadelphia (NBC

Sports)7 – Nashville at St. Louis (Sports South)

Local sportsTODAY 

HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL – Doubleheaders: Murray at Mayfi eld. Boys: Union County at Livings-ton Central, Webster County at Lyon County. Girls: Calloway County at St. Mary, Lone Oak at Ballard Memorial, Hopkins Central at Trigg County.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL – Women: Mid-Continent at Morthland (7 p.m.).

TUESDAYHIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL – Doubleheaders:

Heath at Paducah Tilghman, Graves County at Bal-lard Memorial, Calloway County at Carlisle County, Lyon County at Lone Oak, Community Christian at Marshall County, Fulton County at Hickman County. Boys: Murray at Reidland, St. Mary at Christian Fel-lowship, South Fulton (Tenn.) at Fulton City, Caldwell County at Hopkins Central, Union County at Critten-den County, Dawson Springs at Trigg County, Egyp-tian at Massac County. Girls: Dawson Springs at Caldwell County, Livingston Central at Union County.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL – South Carolina at Ken-tucky (8 p.m.), Wichita State at Southern Illinois (7:05 p.m.), Mid-Continent at Trevecca Nazarene (7 p.m.), Shawnee at Mid-South (7:30 p.m.). SEC: Florida at Arkansas. OVC: Crowley’s Ridge at Eastern Kentucky.

2B • Monday, February 4, 2013 • The Paducah Sun Morning Update paducahsun.com

Coming upBASKETBALL

ThursdayBelmontat Murray

Time: 7 p.m.TV: ESPNU

BASKETBALLTuesday

South Carolinaat LexingtonTime: 8 p.m.TV: ESPNU

BASKETBALLWednesday

Rutgersat Piscataway,

N.J.Time: 6:30 p.m.TV: ESPN3

BASKETBALLSaturday

Tennessee State

at MurrayTime: 7 p.m.

TV: none

BASKETBALLSaturdayAuburn

at LexingtonTime: 3 p.m.TV: WDKA

BASKETBALLSaturday

Notre Dameat South Bend,

Ind.Time: 8 p.m.

TV: ESPN

MURRAYSTATE

KENTUCKY

LOUISVILLE

A reputation is a bad thing to lose. Just ask Manti Te’o.

While the Notre Dame icon reels under the weight of a strange soap opera, it is becoming clear he was the highly naive victim in one of the most bizarre, most cruel hoaxes ever played. The sto-ry of the week in baseball, on the other hand, qualifi es as business as usual.

Gio Gonzalez and Nelson Cruz, in the pursuit of ath-letic excellence and person-al opulence, have seen their names make their way to the unethical side of the ledger. Both players denied the ste-roid allegations the Miami New Times presented after an investigation of a sleazy anti-aging clinic across the street from the University of Miami, but the reality is that’s just what you do when you’re caught cheating.

It doesn’t help their case that they were named along-side Alex Rodriguez, Melky Cabrera, Yasmani Grandal and Bartolo Colon. Unless they can somehow produce

a Ronaiah Tuiasosopo who somehow set them up — and they won’t — then Gonzalez and Cruz aren’t regaining their standing among base-ball’s solid citizens.

The best they ever will be is like Ryan Braun, the Brewers’ slugger who suc-ceeded in beating a steroid rap a year ago. They might hang on to many of the fans they have in their teams’ home areas, but nothing that happens from here makes the ties to Biogenesis and the disgraced Anthony Bosch go away, even if Gon-zalez’s father was Bosch’s client, not the 21-game win-ner himself.

While Braun avoided a suspension, he did it with a defense built around the procedures of how his urine was collected. He did not discredit the positive sam-ples themselves, as even top leaders in the players union have acknowledged.

There’s no shock value to any of this, of course. As Lance Armstrong so aptly demonstrated, it’s how sports is played in the mod-

ern era.Athletes can turn to shady

chemists for help, so some will. Most of us are sophisti-cated enough to understand that.

This isn’t to say most players cheat and get away with it. If that were the case, the players union wouldn’t have stepped up alongside Major League Baseball to try to discourage use. Play-ers certainly wouldn’t have agreed to the expansions of the program, the latest being in-season blood tests for synthetic human growth hormone.

Late to the game largely because of union interfer-ence, MLB now has the best testing program in profes-sional sports. The system that’s in place will catch cheaters and deal with those who have been caught.

MLB established its own investigation unit af-ter the Mitchell Report. It had boots on the ground in South Florida long be-fore the Miami New Times story, trying to fi nd out why Cabrera, Colon and so

many others from that area continued to be found us-ing performance enhancing drugs.

Biogenesis records ob-tained by the weekly news-paper tie Rodriguez to a va-riety of banned substances, including human growth hormone, synthetic testos-terone creams and lozenges, insulin-like growth fac-tor and DHEA. Gonzalez’s

name is listed next to a ref-erence about “pink cream,” which Bosch’s records show is a testosterone-laden balm. The Washington Post has tied the Nationals’ lefty to Jimmy Goins, a Univer-sity of Miami strength coach whom Bosch also allegedly gave PEDs.

Because Cabrera, Colon and Grandal recently have had positive tests that led

to suspensions, their part in this story seems limited. The intriguing aspect is whether MLB’s investiga-tion could lead to suspen-sions of Gonzalez and Cruz, which seriously could hurt the Nationals and Rangers.

The guess here is they will skate, as MLB would need an ironclad case to issue discipline without a positive test.

Latest PED revelations no real surprise to major league baseballBY PHIL ROGERS

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Grant Hill hit a fall-away jumper with 6.6 seconds left in the second overtime to lift Marion (Ill.) over Massac County 74-72 in Saturday’s high school bas-ketball.

Hill fi nished with 30 points and grabbed 12 re-bounds for the double-dou-ble. Dalton Mitchell paced the Patriots with 16 points, followed by Daz Nickerson (14), Austin Kendall (12), Ethan Schulte (11) and Davontay Blye (10). Kendall

got 12 rebounds and Schul-te had 11 as both players re-corded double-doubles.

–––Marion 9 33 46 58 65 74Massac County 7 19 37 58 65 72

MARION — Stuckey 6, Carter 6, Tucker 19, Hill 30, Murphy 4, Cash 7, ManFreedo 2.

Field goals 30/60. 3-pointers 2/10 (Mur-phy, Tucker). Free throws 12/17. Fouls 21. Rebounds 45.

MASSAC COUNTY — Mitchell 16, Blye 10, Nickerson 14, Kendall 12, Schulte 11, Reinwald 6, Stoner 3, Roundtree, Welch.

Field goals 23/67. 3-pointers 9/23 (Mitchell 4, Nickerson 3, Reinwald, Stoner). Free throws 17/29. Fouls 15. Rebounds

45. Record 16-8.

CCA 43, Carlisle 42 — CCA picked up its fourth consecutive win with a

thrilling victory at home in Saturday’s girls basketball. Freshman Lexie Rudy led the Lady Warriors with 15 points and Payton Carter added 14. Jenna Babb led Carlisle with 12.

–––Carlisle County 14 17 27 42Community Christian 8 15 26 43

CARLISLE COUNTY — Moran 2, M. Thomas 4, McKelly 5, Babb 12, Sams 9, Edging 4, Hooper 6, Morris, Rudd.

Field goals 17/46. 3-pointers 0/5. Free throws 8/18. Fouls 20. Record 10-10.

COMMUNITY CHRISTIAN — Rudy 15, Carter 14, Clinard 6, Meadows 2, DeJarnett 2, Peyton 4, Wade.

Field goals 13/48. 3-pointers 3/17 (Rudy 2, Carter). Free throws 14/22. Fouls 17. Record 6-14.

Patriots fall to Marion in double OTStaff report

Page 3: Georgia’s women end Kentucky’s 34-game home win streak ...matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/1140/... · 2/4/2013  · Flacco and the Baltimore Ravens had just enough

paducahsun.com Sports The Paducah Sun • Monday, February 4, 2013 • 3B

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Wis-consin overcame a ragged start and used 39 combined points from a pair of play-ers who come from Illinois to beat the Illini on the road Sunday, 74-68.

Ben Brust scored a game-high 20 for the Badgers (15-7, 6-3 Big Ten) and Frank Kaminsky had 19. Both are from the Chicago area, and Kaminsky was playing his fi rst serious minutes since suffering an eye injury against Indiana Jan. 15.

Their big night made up for a quiet one from Jared Berggren, who was the Bad-gers’ leading scorer coming in. But Berggren drew two fi rst-half fouls and picked up his third early in the sec-ond half, limiting his time on the court. He fi nished with six points in 17 min-utes.

Neither team was effec-

tive offensively over the fi rst 20 minutes.

Wisconsin shot under 30 percent for most of the fi rst half and combined with the Illini to score 14 points in the game’s fi rst eight min-utes.

Wisconsin eventually started making shots and Il-linois (15-8, 2-7) didn’t until it was too late.

Illinois was led by Joseph Bertrand’s 17 points. Four other Illini scored in double fi gures: Nnanna Egwu with 14, Brandon Paul — who came off the bench for the fi rst time this season — with 13 and D.J. Richardson and Tracy Abrams with 10 each.

The Illini have lost seven of nine and have fallen to 10th in the conference.

The Illini closed the gap on the Badgers very late but trailed by 15 with 5:13 to play.

The Badgers built that big lead on defense and run of

impatient Illini shooting.First, Myke Henry missed

on a long 3-pointer, an-swered quickly by Berg-gren, whose short bucket put Wisconsin up 53-41 with 8:54 to play.

Then, after a quick miss on a 3-point try by Rich-ardson, Evans sank a jump shot from the corner for a 55-41 edge.

Wisconsin survived a run by the Illini early in the half.

Illinois closed to 35-30 on a dunk by Egwu and had a chance to narrow that gap by two more when Joseph Bertrand stole the ball and fed Henry as he sprinted down court. But Henry, a reserve who plays just 10 minutes a game, missed the dunk. And an Assembly Hall crowd ready to explode instead could do nothing but groan.

Given that reprieve, the Badgers made Illinois pay.

Wisconsin went on an 8-0

run, capped by a 3-pointer from a wide-open Kamin-sky — so open he hesitated before taking the shot, glancing as if to look for a pass that might be the bet-ter option. And just like that the Badgers were up 43-30 with 14:33 to play.

Kaminsky played 23 min-utes off the bench. Since having his left eye poked in the Indiana game he’d played just four minutes, and still has to wear protec-tive goggles.

The Badgers shot 55.6 percent in the second half, and went to the free-throw line 31 times, hitting 19.

In contrast, Wisconsin shot 35.5 percent in the fi rst half. Illinois was worse, at 29.6 percent.

Illinois, though, took the lead 16-14 on a 3-pointer by Richardson with 8:21 left in the fi rst half.

Wisconsin went on a 19-8 run for a 33-24 halftime lead.

Wisconsin grinds away at Illinois BY DAVID MERCER

Associated Press

Briefs

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Phil Mickelson completed a wire-to-wire victory in the Phoenix Open, again flirting with history in a dominating four-day run at TPC Scott-sdale.

Mickelson shot a 4-under 67 on Sunday to finish at 28-under 256, two strokes off the PGA Tour record of 254 set by Tommy Armour III in the 2003 Texas Open.

Mickelson missed a chance for a 59 in the first round followed with rounds of 65 and 64 to take a six-stroke lead into the final round.

Brandt Snedeker finished second, four strokes back after a 65.

Mickelson took a three-stroke lead to the 17th tee, and nearly drove into the left-side water on the driv-able par 4, his ball stopping a yard short of the haz-ard. He hit his 25-yard second shot 15 feet past the hole and made the birdie putt. Snedeker matched him with a little shorter putt to remain three shots behind.

Mickelson parred the par-4 18th after another drive to the left, one that easily cleared the water he hit into Friday en route to a double bogey. Snedeker closed with a bogey.

Mickelson finishes off Phoenix Open victory

— Associated Press

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Stephen Gallacher made an eagle on the 16th hole to win the Dubai Des-ert Classic on Sunday, overcoming early jitters to beat playing partner Richard Sterne by three shots.

Gallacher finished with a 22-under total of 266. Looking for his first European Tour win since 2004. The 111th-ranked Scotsman had a three-shot lead over Sterne but bogeyed the first two holes while Sterne birdied the second.

Gallacher wins Desert Classic by 3 shots

— Associated Press

AUSTIN, Texas — University of Texas regents met by private telephone call Sunday to discuss recently-disclosed incidents involving athletic coaches having inappropriate relationships with students.

Women’s track coach Bev Kearney resigned last month during an investigation for having a 2002 rela-tionship with a student-athlete. On Friday night, football offensive coordinator Major Applewhite acknowledged he was disciplined in 2009 for an incident with a stu-dent during the Longhorns’ trip to the Fiesta Bowl.

Texas regents discuss coaching scandal

— Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — Bill Parcells was a winner every-where he coached. Time and time again, he took over struggling franchises and showed them what it takes to be a success, including a pair of Super Bowl titles with the New York Giants.

Parcells pulled off another victory Saturday — elec-tion to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Getting in on his fourth try, Parcells led an induction class that also included mouthy defensive lineman Warren Sapp, prolific receiver Cris Carter and a pair of stalwarts from the trenches, offensive linemen Jona-than Ogden and Larry Allen.

The class included a pair of senior selections, Cur-ley Culp and Dave Robinson. The announcement was made in New Orleans, site of Sunday’s Super Bowl.

Parcells, Sapp among 7 Hall inductees

— Associated Press

LEXINGTON — No. 13 Georgia coach Andy Land-ers has been preparing shooting guard Khaalidah Miller to play point in case of emergency.

Well, the emergency came after just a few prac-tices. Jasmine James picked up three fi rst-half fouls, and in went Miller to run the of-fense.

“Oh, Lord,” she said was her reaction to the move.

But Miller thrived, scor-ing a career-high 25 points and leading Georgia to a 75-71 over No. 8 Kentucky on Sunday.

The loss ended a 34-game home win streak for the Wildcats (19-3, 7-2).

“Since high school, I real-ly haven’t played that posi-tion,” Miller said. “I always kind of looked at (James) as the one to control the fl oor. Well, I’ve just been working it, and tonight was the night I had to step up and play the position.”

Georgia (19-3, 7-2) held a 74-71 lead after James hit one of two free throws with 1:12 left, and the score stayed unchanged until the Wildcats held the ball with about 20 seconds to go.

A’dia Mathies and Jen-nifer O’Neill tried to fi nd an opening for a quick 2-pointer or an open 3, but as time ran out, O’Neill held the ball and was looking to force a 3. With about 5 sec-onds to go, Shacobia Bar-bee stripped the ball from O’Neill at the top of the key, and Kentucky couldn’t foul until 0.4 seconds remained.

It took a couple of half-time tweaks to overcome a 40-30 defi cit, Landers said.

Georgia had 17 turnovers in the fi rst half – it came in averaging 14.3 per game –and fi nished with 26, which matched a season worst.

The other tweak was to realign the Lady Bulldogs’ defense to disrupt O’Neill. She fi nished with 18 points, but had four after halftime.

“She had stepped back and knocked down a couple of threes,” Landers said. “Really, we made the deci-sion with about two min-utes left in the fi rst half, but we had such a mixed lineup out there and no real good time to discuss it with the kids, dead ball-wise or timeout-wise, so we just sat on it until halftime.”

In the second half, Ken-tucky coach Matthew Mitchell said he was pleased with how his team got be-hind Georgia’s defense and to the basket, but could not fi nish at the rim.

Georgiahalts ’Catshome streak

Associated Press

team and they got maybe just two or three against us. I’m thrilled with how we played today.”

Gorgui Dieng added eight points and eight re-bounds for Louisville.

Vander Blue had 17 points and Trent Lockett 16 for the Golden Eagles, who have dropped two of their last four games.

The Cardinals unveiled all-white uniforms for the school’s “White Out” pro-motion that even involved coach Rick Pitino, who was resplendent in an all-white suit.

“I wasn’t going to wear it,” the coach said, “but my daughters kept texting me and said it’s bad karma if you don’t wear it.”

But early on, Louisville’s offense was as blank as its outfi ts.

The Cardinals trailed 9-1 behind 0-for-7 shoot-

ing and three turnovers, going nearly six minutes

before Montrezl Harrell scored their fi rst basket with a dunk at the 14:19 mark. Marquette controlled the game for several more minutes, but the freshman forward’s shot helped shake the Cardinals from their listless start.

A 24-9 run followed over the next nine minutes as the Cardinals made 10 of their next 15 attempts. Wayne Blackshear, who missed the previous game with a shoulder injury, hit three of his fi rst four shots.

“Coach just told us to do our jobs,” said Blackshear, who fi nished with nine points.

Stephan Van Treese added three rebounds in the half while Harrell put a body in front of 6-foot-8, 290-pound Golden Eagles reserve forward Davante Gardner, who went to the bench with his second foul

midway through the half. Marquette’s second-lead-ing scorer fi nished with just two points and two re-bounds in 13 minutes.

“You have to beat Lou-isville twice,” Marquette coach Buzz Williams said. “You have to beat them in the front court, then you have to beat them in the backcourt. Going into to-day, one of every three points that scored were based off turnovers. They rebounded 42 percent of their missed shots. Those two numbers are outstand-ing.

Marquette struggled get-ting the ball into the paint and fell victim to Louis-ville’s pressure defense sev-eral other times. The result was 10-of-31 shooting in the fi rst half and a 38-24 defi cit to the Cardinals.

Louisville’s starters found their games, as well, with Smith scoring 12 points and Siva nine in the fi rst half.

CARDS

CONTINUED FROM 1B

Associated Press

Illinois’ forward Sam McLaurin (left) and Wisconsin’s forward Mike Bruesewitz fight for the ball in Sunday’s game at Assembly Hall in Champaign, Ill. Wisconsin beat the Illini 74-68.

Associated Press

Louisville’s Wayne Blackshear (center) battles Marquette’s Chris Otule for a loose ball during the first half of Sunday’s Big East game in Louisville. The Cardinals cruised to a 70-51 victory.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Sam Querrey beat Thiago Alves 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (3) on Sunday to give the United States a dramatic 3-2 victory over Brazil and a spot in the Davis Cup quarterfinals.

The U.S. will host Serbia in the next round in Boise, Idaho, from April 5-7.

Querrey stepped up after teammate John Isner lost 2-6, 6-4, 6-7 (7), 6-4, 6-3 to Thomaz Bellucci earlier Sunday, forcing a deciding fifth match.

Querrey lifts US to victory in Davis Cup

— Associated Press

Paducah Tilghman’s wrestling team split a pair of dual meets on Saturday. The Tornado defeated Da-viess County 43-28 but fell to Fort Campbell 55-18. Zenon Rodriguez (106 pounds), Derek Miller (120) and Zak Thompson (182) won in both meets for Tilghman. Winners against Daviess County were Jack Daniels (113), Chandler Martin (132), Noelle Williams (152), Bobby Caldwell (220) and Dominic Hephner (285).

Complete results are:

Fort Campbell (FTC) 55.0 Paducah Tilghman (TIL) 18.0120: Derek Miller, TIL, pinned Ja-cob Ellison, 3:10. 126: Jose In-triago, FTC, forf. 132: Nick Ringle, FTC, dec. Chandler Martin, 4-2. 138: David Sahms, FTC, pinned Michael Murray, 0:23. 145: Nigh-gell Davidson, FTC, pinned Micah Davis, 2:15. 152: Gino Haywood, FTC, pinned Noelle Williams, 3:22. 160: Jerry Haywood, FTC, pinned Jared Turner, 1:13. 170: Jordan Brandon, FTC, forf. 182: Zak Thompson, TIL, pinned Enrique Martinez, 3:57. 195: double for-feit. 220: Dustin Armendariz, FTC, maj. dec. Bobby Caldwell, 16-7. 285: Jake Jorstad, FTC, pinned Dominic Hephner, 1:15. 106: Ze-non Rodriguez, TIL, pinned Syanne Ferguson, 4:11. 113: Nick Brooks,

FTC, pinned Jack Daniels, 1:29.Paducah Tilghman (TIL) 43.0

Daviess County (DAV) 28.0106: Zenon Rodriguez, TIL, dec. Skyler Martinson, 7-2. 113: Jack Daniels, TIL, pinned Josh Maxwell, 3:15. 120: Derek Miller, TIL, forf. 126: double forfeit. 132: Chan-dler Martin, TIL, maj. dec. Joey In-sko, 12-4. 138: Amad Cano, DAV, pinned Michael Murray, 1:13. 145: Jordan Ward, DAV, pinned Micah Davis, 5:50. 152: Noelle Williams, TIL, pinned Gabe Jones, 1:28. 160: Quintin Davis, DAV, maj. dec. Jared Turner, 15-5. 170: Conner Judd, DAV, forf. 182: Zak Thomp-son, TIL, pinned Ian O`Brien, 0:32. 195: Gary Steward, DAV, forf. 220: Bobby Caldwell, TIL, pinned Chase Allen. 1:37. 285: Dominic Heph-ner, TIL, forf.

Tilghman splits at wrestling meetsStaff report

Page 4: Georgia’s women end Kentucky’s 34-game home win streak ...matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/1140/... · 2/4/2013  · Flacco and the Baltimore Ravens had just enough

4B • Monday, February 4, 2013 • The Paducah Sun Sports paducahsun.com

couple minutes later, Frank Gore’s 6-yard run followed a 32-yard punt return by Ted Ginn Jr., and the 49ers were within eight.

Ray Rice’s fumble at his 24 led to David Akers’ 34-yard fi eld goal, but Balti-more woke up for a long drive leading to rookie Jus-tin Tucker’s 19-yard fi eld goal.

San Francisco wasn’t done challenging, though, and Colin Kaepernick’s 15-yard TD run, the longest for a quarterback in a Su-per Bowl, made it 31-29. A 2-point conversion pass failed when the Ravens blitzed.

Tucker added a 38-yarder with 4:19 remaining, setting up the frantic fi nish.

Kaepernick couldn’t get

the Ravens into the end zone on the fi nal three plays — there was contact on Crabtree on the fi nal pass that appeared incidental, and Jim Harbaugh insisted it was pass interference.

Ravens punter Sam Koch took a safety for the fi nal score with 4 seconds left. His free kick was returned by Ginn to midfi eld as time ran out.

In the fi rst half, Flacco was as brilliant as Tom Brady, Joe Montana or Terry Brad-shaw ever were in the NFL’s biggest game. The only quarterback to win a playoff game in each of his fi rst fi ve seasons — his coach holds the same distinction — was nearly perfect.

It was typical of Flacco and Baltimore’s postseason run. The Ravens stumbled into the playoffs with four

defeats in its last fi ve regu-lar-season games as Lewis recovered from a torn right triceps and Flacco strug-gled. Harbaugh even fi red his offensive coordinator in December, a stunning move with the postseason so close.

But that — and every oth-er move Harbaugh, Flacco and the Ravens made since — were right on target. Just like Flacco’s TD passes of 13 yards to Anquan Boldin, 1 to Dennis Pitta and 56 to Jones in the fi rst half, tying a Super Bowl record.

New Orleans native Jones, one of the heroes in a double-overtime playoff win at Denver, seemed to put the game away with his record 108-yard sprint with the second-half kickoff.

Soon after, the lights went out — and when they

came back on, the Ravens were almost powerless to slow the 49ers.

Until the fi nal moments.“The fi nal series of Ray

Lewis’ career was a goal-line stand,” Harbaugh said.

“It’s no greater way, as a champ, to go out on your last ride with the men that I went out with, with my teammates,” Lewis said. “And you looked around this stadium and Balti-more! Baltimore! We com-ing home, baby! We did it!”

It was a bitter loss for Jim Harbaugh, the coach who turned around the Niners in the last two years and brought them to their fi rst Super Bowl in 18 years. His team made a similarly stun-ning comeback in the NFC championship at Atlanta, but couldn’t fi nish it off against Baltimore.

SUPERCONTINUED FROM 1B

by-play announcers went silent.

CBS sideline reporter Steve Tasker announced the problem of a “click of the lights” to viewers. Later, the halftime crew anchored by host James Brown re-turned to fi ll the time with football analysis. Brown said a power surge caused the outage.

“We lost all power up here at the press box level,” play-by-play announcer Jim Nantz said after power was restored. He and announcer Phil Simms were off the air for most of the 34-minute outage.

The failure occurred shortly after Jacoby Jones returned the opening kick-off of the second half for a 108-yard touchdown, the longest play in Super Bowl history and pushing the Ra-vens to a commanding lead. But when play resumed, the momentum totally changed.

The Niners scored two straight touchdowns and closed the gap to 31-29 in the fourth quarter.

The public address an-nouncer said the Super-dome was experiencing an interruption of electrical service and encouraged fans to stay in their seats. Some fans did the wave to pass the time. Players milled around on the side-lines, some took a seat on the bench, other on the fi eld. A few of the Ravens threw footballs around.

Offi cials gathered on the fi eld and appeared to be talking to stadium per-sonnel. Finally, the lights came back on throughout the dome and the game re-sumed.

“Let’s go!” referee Jerome Boger said to the teams.

The NFL said stadium offi cials were investigating the cause, but there was no immediate word of why the power went out.

“We sincerely apologize for the incident,” Superdo-me spokesman Eric Eagan said.

He told The Associated

Press that Superdome tech-nical staff were working more than hour after the outage to determine what caused it but still didn’t know.

Once the game resumed, CBS said all commer-cial commitments for the broadcast were being hon-ored. The network sold out its allotment of advertising at $3.8 million per 30-sec-ond spot.

“We lost numerous cam-eras and some audio pow-ered by sources in the Su-perdome,” said Jennifer Sabatelle, vice president of communications for CBS Sports. “We utilized CBS’ backup power and at no time did we leave the air.”

The outage provided a major glitch to what has largely been viewed as a smooth week for New Or-leans, which was hosting its fi rst Super Bowl since 2002 and was eager to show off how the city has rebuilt since Hurricane Katrina.

Monique Richard, who is from the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain, had tickets in the upper deck.

“My exact words on the way over here were, ‘I hope this goes off without a hitch,’ because the city just looked so good, they were doing so well, the weather so good everything was kind of fall-ing into place,” she said.

“We haven’t had the Su-per Bowl in 11 years. It might be 20 more. Hope-fully, everybody will be un-derstanding.”

New Orleans was once a regular in the Super Bowl rotation and hopes to re-gain that status. Earlier in the week, the host commit-tee announced it will bid on the 2018 Super Bowl, which would coincide with the 300th anniversary of the city’s founding.

The 38-year-old Super-dome has undergone $336 million in renovations since Katrina ripped its roof in 2005. Billions have been spent sprucing up down-town, the airport, French Quarter and other areas of the city in the past seven years.

OUTAGECONTINUED FROM 1B

“But we did.”Neither Flacco nor his

team appeared to be ready to take on all comers as the regular season concluded.

After all, the Ravens lost four of their fi nal games to stumble into the playoffs.

And Flacco, a fi fth-year pro, fi nished only 12th in the 32-team NFL in passer rating at a passable 87.7 — way behind league leader Aaron Rodgers’ 108.0 — while compiling 22 touch-down passes and 10 inter-ceptions.

Middle-of-the-pack, to say the least.

But he and his team sure did shine when the results mattered most.

“I tell you what: We don’t make it easy,” Flacco said.

“But that’s the way the city of Baltimore is. That’s the way we are.”

He certainly becomes a different player in the play-offs. He set an NFL record for quarterbacks by leading his team to playoff wins in each of his fi rst fi ve seasons. He is 9-4 overall in the post-season.

His contract is up now. And he could wind up with one of the biggest deals in NFL history, perhaps com-manding somewhere in the neighborhood of $20 mil-lion a year.

There would have been an opportunity to sign something last offseason, but Flacco’s agent and the Ravens could not agree on how much he was worth.

The rest of the world wasn’t really sure, either.

FLACCOCONTINUED FROM 1B

Associated Press

San Francisco 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh (left)greets Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh after the Ravens defeated the 49ers 34-31 in Sunday’s Super Bowl XLVII in New Orleans.

©S

un ‘

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paducahsun.com Entertainment The Paducah Sun • Monday, February 4, 2013 • 5B

Lights out? Blame Be-yonce’s electrifying perfor-mance.

If naysayers still doubted Beyonce’s singing’s talents — even after her national an-them performance this week at a press conference — the singer proved she is an ex-ceptional performer at the Super Bowl halftime show.

Beyonce opened and closed the performance belting songs, and in be-tween she danced hard and heavy — and better than most contemporary pop stars.

She set a serious tone as she emerged onstage in all black, singing lines from her R&B hit “Love on Top.” The stage was dark as fi re and lights burst from the sides. Then she went into her hit “Crazy In Love,” bringing some feminine spirit to the Super Dome as she and her background dancers did the singer’s signature booty-shaking dance. Beyonce ripped off part of her shirt and skirt. She even blew a kiss. She was ready to rock, and she did so like a pro.

Her confi dence — and voice — grew as she worked the stage with and without her Destiny’s Child band mates during her 13-min-ute set, which comes days after she admitted she sang to a pre-recorded track at President Barack Obama’s inauguration less than two weeks ago.

Beyonce proved not only that she can sing, but that she can also entertain on a stage as big as the Super Bowl’s. She was far better than Madonna, who sang to a backing track last year, and miles ahead of the Black Eyed Peas’ disastrous

set in 2011.Beyonce was best when

she fi nished her set with “Halo.” She asked the crowd to put their hands toward her as she sang the slow groove on bended knee — and that’s when she the performance hit its high note.

“Thank you for this mo-ment,” she told the crowd. “God bless y’all.”

Jennifer Hudson, who sang “America the Beauti-ful” with the 26-member Sandy Hook Elementary School chorus, an emotion-al performance that had some players on the side-line on the verge of tears.

The students wore green ribbons on their shirts in honor of the 20 fi rst-grad-ers and six adults who were killed in a Dec. 14 shooting rampage at the school in

Newton, Conn.The students began the

song softly before Hudson, whose mother, brother and 7-year-old nephew were shot to death fi ve years ago,

jumped in with her gospel-fl avored vocals. She stood still in black and white as the students moved to the left and right, singing back-ground.

Beyonce brings electricity at Super BowlBY MESFIN FEKADU

Associated Press

NEW YORK — The love-struck zombies of “Warm Bodies” swarmed the box offi ce on Super Bowl weekend with a $20 million opening.

On a weekend that Hollywood largely punts to football, the PG-13 fi lm from Lionsgate’s Summit Entertainment easily led the box offi ce, according to studio estimates Sun-day. The Super Bowl al-ways means a signifi cant slide in movie-going on Sunday — studios predict a decrease of as much as 70 percent from Sat-urday to Sunday — but “Warm Bodies” still lured many teenage fans.

The fi lm is about a zombie whose love for a human redeems him. Lionsgate, which also released the “Twilight” saga, is calling it a “rom-zom-com” for its mix of humor, romance and the supernatural. The fi lm appealed particularly to females, who made up 60 percent of the audience.

“They’ve defi nitely cracked the code on how to attract that teen audience with fi lms like ‘The Hun-ger Games,’ ‘Twilight’ and

something like ‘Warm Bod-ies,’ which defi nitely plays right into the sweet spot of that demographic,” says Hol-lywood.com box-offi ce ana-lyst Paul Dergarabedian.

David Spitz, executive vice president of Lionsgate, said the studio courted fe-male teens with “Warm Bodies” by pairing its trail-er with the last “Twilight” fi lm, “Breaking Dawn, Part II.”

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hol-lywood.com. Where avail-able, latest international numbers are also includ-ed. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. “Warm Bodies,” $20 million.

2. “Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters,” $9.2 mil-lion.

3. “Silver Linings Play-book,” $8.1 million.

4. “Mama,” $6.7 million.5. “Zero Dark Thirty,”

$5.3 million.6. “Bullet to the Head,”

$4.5 million.7. “Parker,” $3.2 million.8. “Django Unchained,”

$3 million.9. “Les Miserables,”

$2.4 million.10. “Lincoln,” $2.4 million.

‘Warm Bodies’ heats up box office weekend

BY JAKE COYLEAssociated Press

NEW YORK — Sex sells. Babies sell even more. And advertisers are hoping ani-mals will make you laugh all the way to their stores.

While the San Francisco 49ers and the Baltimore Ravens battle on the fi eld during Super Bowl XLVII, marketers from Best Buy to M&M to Toyota are com-peting against each other on advertising’s biggest stage. And they’re doing so by pulling out the most per-suasive tools of their trade.

The stakes are high, with 30-second spots going for an average of $4 million this year. And more than 111 million viewers are ex-pected to tune in.

Here are some ad high-lights through the fourth quarter:

Babies, animals and families oh my

■ Hyundai’s “Epic Play-date” spot right before kickoff showed a family partying with the band The Flaming Lips: wreaking havoc at a natural history museum, getting chased by bikers, going to a petting zoo and playing in a park.

“Make every day epic with the new seven-passen-ger Santa Fe,” a voiceover states.

When the family gets back home and the daugh-ter asks, “What are we go-ing to do now?” The fa-ther replies, “Well, I think there’s a game on,” and the broadcast went straight to the kickoff.

■ Audi’s 60-second ad in the fi rst quarter, with an ending voted on by view-ers, shows a boy gaining confi dence from driving his father’s Audi to the prom, kissing the prom queen

and getting decked by the prom king.

■ Toyota’s ad stars Kaley Cuoco from CBS’s “The Big Bang Theory” granting wishes to a family, from a boy wanting to go into space to a dad wanting to lose his “spare tire.”

■ Budweiser’s Clydedales made another appearance in an ad that shows a man and his horse reuniting af-ter several years.

Humor is key■ Best Buy’s 30-sec-

ond ad in the fi rst quarter starred Amy Poehler, of NBC’s “Parks and Recre-ation,” asking a Best Buy employee endless ques-tions about electronics.

“Will this one read “50 shades of Grey to me in a sexy voice,” Poehler asks about an e-book reader. When the staffer says no she asks, “Will you?”

■ M&M’s showed its red spokescharacter singing Meatloaf’s “I Would Do Anything For Love,” and wooing beautiful women,

but stopping short when they try to eat him.

■ Oreo’s ad featured a showdown in a library be-tween people fi ghting over whether the cookie or the cream is the best part of the cookie. The joke — the fi ght escalates into thrown chairs and other destruc-tion, but because the fi ght is in a library, everyone still has to whisper.

■ Doritos went for hu-mor with its two user-cre-ated spots. Winners of the

“Crash the Super Bowl” contest included one about a Doritos-crazy goat. An-other showed a dad playing princess with his daughter to get Doritos. His bud-dies catch him, but instead of making fun of him they join in the fun.

“Is that my wedding dress?” says his wife when she sees them playing.

■ Taco Bell showed a group of seniors partying, getting tattoos, and eating its Doritos Locos Tacos.

Celebs, babies, beer: its ad timeBY MAE ANDERSON

Associated Press

Associated PRes

This undated screenshot provided by SodaStream shows the company’s Super Bowl advertisement.

Associated Press

This undated screenshot provided by Go Daddy shows the company’s Super Bowl advertisement.

Associated Press

Beyonce performs during the halftime show of Super Bowl XLVII game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Baltimore Ravens, Sunday in New Orleans.

Associated Press

Jennifer Hudson performs with students from Sandy Hook Elementary School singing “America the Beautiful” before the Super Bowl on Sunday in New Orleans.

LOS ANGELES — The Super Bowl resembled a trip to the movie theater with several potential summer blockbusters airing new ads.

Three fi lm trailers aired through the fi rst half and halftime and several oth-ers were broadcast dur-ing the lengthy pre-game show. While ad rates for the Super Bowl are noto-riously expensive — $4 million for 30 seconds during Super Bowl 47 — they can generate buzz and potential ticket sales.

Reactions to an ad for the sixth installment of the “Fast and Furious” franchise quickly started trending on Twitter, with series star Ludacris fi eld-ing viewers’ responses.

“The cost per minute is enormous, but studios obviously feel they are going to get the biggest bang for their buck,” said Paul Dergarabedian, box offi ce analyst for Holly-wood.com.

Also airing in the fi rst half were promos for “Star Trek Into Darkness” and the “Oz The Great and Powerful.” After lights went out in the Super Dome in the third quarter, an ad for the third “Iron Man” fi lm aired.

“This is where the stu-dios take the opportunity to plant the seeds of excite-ment of potential moviego-ers for their biggest movies of the year,” Dergarabedian said. He noted the studios aren’t just aiming at do-mestic viewers, but the vast international audience that the Super Bowl attracts.

Film ads also played a prominent role in the ramp up to the game.

Walt Disney Co. co-spon-sored an hour of pre-game coverage and used it to pro-mote “The Lone Ranger,” which stars Armie Hammer and Johnny Depp. In addi-tion to a 90-second promo for the fi lm, CBS aired a tie-in interspersing scenes from the fi lm with footage of the 49ers and Ravens playing.

“World War Z” also aired an ad right before the game’s kick-off.

For films, Super Bowl provides super stage

BY ANTHONY MCCARTNEYAssociated Press

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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2013ARIES (March 21-April 19):

Readdress issues you have with someone from your past. Make a choice regarding your direction based on what you want, not what you think someone else wants. Give love a chance.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Treat partnerships with respect. Question anyone putting pres-sure on you. Avoid mixing busi-ness with pleasure. You can offer help, but don’t let anyone take advantage of your kindness or generosity. Self-improvement projects based on past success will be beneficial.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Refuse to let things bother you. Anger will not make matters bet-

ter. You must focus on work and doing and being your very best. Dig deep and you will discover information that will help you find the best solution.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Ponder any decisions you have to make. Time is on your side, and impulsive behavior will only make you veer off course. Take a creative approach when deal-ing with peers, friends or rela-tives who may be adverse to your direction.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): A little inspiration will go a long way. You need to lighten up and en-joy life more. Forget about your responsibilities for a moment and enjoy exploring new people, places and activities. Love is on

the rise. 5 starsVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):

Don’t expect everyone to agree with you. Disagreements are likely to develop, especially if you or someone else is being evasive. Solutions can be found, but only if you know what you are up against. Moderation will be an important factor in the outcome.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Open-mindedness coupled with charm, knowledge and a peace-ful approach will lead to suc-cess. Travel plans can be made that will raise your awareness, inspire you or improve your ap-pearance.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Be prepared to jump from one

thing to another if it will keep you out of trouble and help you accomplish what needs to be done. Your dedication and loyal-ty will play a role in the outcome of a sticky situation.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Clarity may be lacking when dealing with friends or your peers. If there is something you don’t understand, ask. Re-spond as precisely as possible so you aren’t blamed for giving out false information. Someone from your past will make an of-fer.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Cautious, quiet pursuit of your goals will ensure that you avoid interference from someone who is likely to cause trouble. Con-

centrate on precision, prepara-tion and making sure you have taken care of any errors that could affect your reputation.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18): Stick close to home and avoid individuals likely to give you a hard time. Dealing with financial matters, medical issues and authority figures will be difficult. Fixing up your surroundings or enjoying the comfort of your home will help ease stress.

PISCES (Feb.19-March 20): Getting involved in someone’s pri-vate affairs will backfire. Put more time and effort into your creative goals and you will find a way to translate what you know and do best into a greater earning poten-tial. Avoid overspending.

Channel 2Midnight — Arts Showcase8 a.m. — Your United Way8:30 a.m. — Union Label9 a.m. — West KY Academic Bowl9:30 a.m. — KY Cancer Program10 a.m. — Backstage Pass: The Dirt Daubers12:05 p.m. — Community Billboard4 p.m. — Minority Focus4:30 p.m. — Tot School5 p.m. — Tourism Talk5:30 p.m. — Refl ections6 p.m. — Band of Brothers6:30 p.m. — Rays of Hope7 p.m. — WKCTC Science Series8 p.m. — Berry Craig’s Notebook8:30 p.m. — Soldiers Journal

9 p.m. — In The Fight9:30 p.m. — Master Gardening10 p.m. — Disaster Preparedness Conference

Channel 118 a.m. — Break A Sweat10:30 a.m. — Your City at Work: Paducah Recreation Center6 p.m. — Planning & Zoning Meeting LIVE8:30 p.m. — Your City at Work: Juvenile Firesetter Intervention9 p.m. — Your City at Work: Engineering/Public Works

Horoscopes

6B • Monday, February 4, 2013 • The Paducah Sun Variety paducahsun.com

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ACROSS1 David

Copperfield’sforte

6 High-rankingIndian

10 Like the Sahara14 Last new Olds15 Alike, in Lourdes16 Madcap17 Main idea, as of

an argument20 “__ Pinafore”21 Handy bags22 Inventor Howe23 Candy in a

wrapper24 WSW’s opposite25 Stick to a strict

budget32 Beauty parlor33 Saying to

remember34 Tool for a

lumberjack36 Cultivate the soil37 Car pedal38 Needed a Band-

Aid39 Till now40 __ fatale41 Town near the tip

of Cape Cod42 To the point45 Notes after mis46 Contents of a

cruet47 Saltwater candy50 Rested (against)53 __ Beta Kappa56 Burnout cause59 Part of USA: Abbr.60 Like dedicated

fans61 18th-century

Swissmathematician

62 Goes bad63 High roller’s rolls64 Baseball’s Pee

Wee

DOWN1 Sitcom set in

Korea2 Homecoming

visitor3 Jeweler’s

inventory4 401(k) alternative,

briefly

5 Have inside6 Take a break7 Flu-like

symptoms8 Pokes9 Three racing

Unsers10 Colorful garden

shrub11 Wife of a

6-Across12 Ancient Peruvian13 Turns blue,

perhaps18 Campus

residence19 Like someone

pacing back andforth

23 Forehead24 Rim25 Comical Soupy26 Material27 Cheese city in

northeast Italy28 End of Rhett’s

sentence thatbegins “Frankly,my dear”

29 Like a newborn30 Relative worth31 Put forth, as

effort

32 Le Carrécharacter

35 Tokyo’s formername

37 Puts money (on)38 Songwriter

Jacques40 Wears at the

edges41 Social network for

short messages43 Bids44 Male offspring

47 Old Russianmonarch

48 Prefix with sphere49 Guitar ridge50 Volcanic output51 City west of Tulsa52 Does some sums53 Ashen54 Hurries55 Legal memo

opener57 Carpentry tool58 Feel bad about

By Bernice Gordon(c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 02/04/13

02/04/13

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

[email protected]

Tossing longtime boyfriend outof home may lead to legal issues

Marvin

Blondie

Garfield

B.C.

Dilbert

Zits

Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

Dear Annie: I have been with “John” for more than 10 years. We have children together. I have reached the point in my life that I wish to be mar-ried. I never wanted to be a girlfriend forever, and he knew this from the be-ginning.

John says stupid things like, “If you did such-and-such, then I’d marry you.” I don’t believe marriage is about how much I can do for him. It’s about loving each other enough to com-mit. I love John, but he is unwilling to take that step, so I have told him if we are not married by next sum-mer, he has to move out and let me get on with my life. I’m not trying to force him to the altar. It’s simply that if a legal commitment isn’t in the cards, I need to plan my future without him.

The problem is, John

tells me he will not leave. I don’t want things to get nasty by involving the authorities, but I want more out of my life than he does. Over the past few months, I have made myself completely miser-able just thinking about all of this. Am I being un-reasonable? Am I putting myself and my needs first by demanding he make a choice? — Dazed and Confused.

Dear Dazed: No. John’s needs have come fi rst for the past 10 years. But aside from that, you already may have a legal com-mitment in place. When a couple lives together as long as you have, it is recognized in many states as a com-

mon-law marriage. So, although you haven’t had a ceremony, you may, in fact, be legally tied.

You also have chil-dren, and a separation will entail custody, visi-tation and child sup-port arrangements, so you might consider counseling before dis-entangling yourself. Even something as sim-ple as tossing him out of the house becomes a legal matter. Check the laws in your state re-garding common-law marriage, and if neces-sary, get the assistance of an attorney.

Please email your ques-tions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Cre-ators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

Ask Annie

paducahsun.com Variety The Paducah Sun • Monday, February 4, 2013 • 7B

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8BClassifieds

The Paducah Sun | Monday, February 4, 2013 | paducahsun.com

575-8700or 1-800-599-1771

outside McCracken Co.Email: [email protected]

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0204 ADMINISTRATIVE

The Herald Ledger, an affiliate of Paxton Media Group, is currently accepting resumes for the position of

GENERAL MANAGER

Paxton Media Group is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin or disability.

A well-trained and experienced staff makes this award-winning publication a must-read newspaper in the Lyon County communities it serves. This Paxton Media Group publication operates as a part of the Paducah Group, and is printed at the state-of-the-art press facility of The Paducah Sun.

The successful candidate will: • Live and be involved in the community • Possess a record of leadership and accomplishment • Have sales and management experience

College degree preferred; experience in newspaper advertising sales or management also preferred.

Resumes may be mailed or emailed to: Gary Adkisson, General Manager

The Paducah Sun, PO Box 2300, Paducah, KY 42002-2300 or [email protected]

Resumes must be received by Friday, February 22, 2013 to be considered. No phone calls please.

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

Currently has the following position open:

(State Registered Nursing Assistant) If you meet these requirements and desire

to be part of a team that is dedicated to providing quality care, APPLY IN PERSON AT:

500 Beck Lane, Mayfield, KY 270-247-7890

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SRNA’s

(270) 575-8700 or 1-800-599-1771 Inside KY or 1-800-959-1771 Outside KY

3 Lines - 7 Days - $ 17 00

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CHECKYOUR

ADAdvertisers are re-quested to check thefirst insertion of adsfor any error. The Pa-ducah Sun will be re-sponsible for onlyONE INCORRECTINSERTION. Any er-ror should be repor-ted immediately socorrections can bem a d e . C H E C KYOUR AD carefullyand notify The Clas-sified Advertising De-partment during busi-ness hours Mondayt h r o u g h F r i d a y6:30AM - 5:30 PM orSaturday and Sunday6:30AM - 11AM incase of an error.

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0142 LOST

LOST YOUR DOG??Check your localAnimal Shelter orHumane Society

GARAGE /ESTATE GARAGE /ESTATE SALESSALES

0151 GARAGE/ESTATE SALES

INDOOR Yard SaleFeb. 6-9, 8-5

Carson Park, FloralHall, Joe Clifton Dr.

EMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENT

0204 ADMINISTRATIVE

0208 SALES

FURNITURE WorldGalleries & MattressSuperstore is cur-rently seeking an ex-perienced Sales As-sociate to join oursales team. Full-timeposition with unlim-ited income potential.B r i ng resume toschedule an inter-view today, 533 LoneOak Rd., Paducah.

Window World -NOW HIRING!

Seek ing "SALESSTAFF". Must haveprevious experience,excellent customerrelation skills, enthu-siastic, and profes-sional appearance. IfYOU ARE not mak-ing $50,000 a yr.,please call 270-443-0031 for an appt. orsend resume to:

[email protected] TRAININGavailable for inspiredapplicant.

0212 PROFESSIONAL

PERSONALTRAINERSNEEDED

National certification,current CPRcertification &

experience required.Apply in person at:Energy Fitness2343 New Holt Rd.

Paducah, KYNo phone calls.

EOE

FRANK FARMERChevrolet needs ex-perienced FinancialDirector. Great payand benefits. CallGenera l ManagerCharles Townsend at

336-279-0376 or618-524-2151.

0216 EDUCATION/TEACHING

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TIONClassical Christianschool accepting ap-plications for quali-f i e d e l e m e n t a r yteachers. Inquiriesmay be made at 270437-3170.

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BUSY medical prac-tice is accepting re-sumes for part-timemedical assistant.Applicants should bedependable, outgo-ing & friendly. Sendresumes to BB 515c/o The PaducahSun, PO Box 2300,Paducah, KY 42002.

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

Building Bridges fromour house to yours.

Scheduling/ SupplyClerk for NursingDept., Monday thruFriday 7:00AM To3:30PM with occa-sional weekends &afternoons or mid-night shift. Experi-ence Preferred. Ap-ply in Person at LakeWay Nursing and Re-habilitation Center,2607 Main Street inBenton, KY 42025.

Equal OpportunityEmployer/AAE

Drug Free Facility.BUSY physician of-fice has opening forboth front & back of-fice positions. Medic-al office experiencepreferred. Send re-sume: PO Box 9100,Paducah, KY 42002.

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

FULL-TIME medicalconsultant needed towork as a paralegalin the litigation prac-tice of growing lawfirm. RN, BSN, ARNPo r s i m i l a r b a c k -ground, training andexper ience is re-quired. Candidatemust have strong or-ganizational and ana-lytical skills. Excel-lent compensationpackage provided.Please send resumeto: Attn. Personnel,Whit low, Roberts,Houston & Straub,PLLC, 300 Broad-way, Paducah, KY42001.

LPN needed for busyAl lergy & Asthmaclinic. If you are de-pendable, energetic& want to work in anenjoyable environ-ment with great be-nefits & schedule, faxresume to C l in icManager, Sandee at502-429-6157. 4-H OFFICE 554-9520

BE A 4-H

VOLUNTEER

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paducahsun.com The Paducah Sun • Monday, February 4, 2013 • 9B

(Answers tomorrow)OPERA SPENT OPPOSE SPRUCESaturday’s Jumbles:

Answer: Whether or not the coin would land heads ortails was — A TOSS UP

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.

PYRCT

DALMY

DEEMLY

PAPREA

©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

Fin

d u

s o

n F

acebook h

ttp://w

ww

.facebook.c

om

/jum

ble

”-“Print youranswer here:

0240 SKILLED TRADE

Tri-State International Trucks of Murray is now hiring full-time

Diesel Service Technicians This career opportunity is for someone with experience working on Heavy/Medium Duty Diesel Trucks. Compensation will depend on qualifications including computer skills. Tri- State offers great wages, insurance pack- age, 401(k), paid vacation & holidays, and secure employment. Apply in person at:

100 Max Hurt Dr., Murray, KY Or email: jcrabtree@

tristateinternational.net Or fax to 270-753-5773

Call 270-753-1372 for more information

0563 MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE

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HOME SERVICE HOME SERVICE DIRECTORYDIRECTORY

1024 BACKHOE

CASEMCKEEL EQUIPMENT

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(270) 444-0110Daily, Weekly & Monthly RentalsParts • Sales • Service

1048 CLEANING SERVICES

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R IC K ’S H A N DY M A N S E RV IC E

I do just about everything.

Reliable repair on time! Done Right! 270-556-5338

1150 HAULING

1156 HEATING/COOLING

INSTALL & REPAIRGas floor furnaces,

Empire wall furnaces,space/ventless heat-ers, gas logs, ranges.

Joe Thweatt554-1208, 217-4027

Lic. #M00651

1162 HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR

For all your home improvements & new construction projects.

No Job Too Small. Free Estimates.

Licensed & Insured. Quality Work at a

Fair Price. 270-559-0643

ANDERSON’S CONTRACTING

PADUCAH’S BEST Windows - $175 Installed

Vinyl Siding, Gutters Pressure Washing, Roofing

Pole Barns, Rent-A-Husband No Job Too Big or Small 270-564-5770 270-442-0809

1162 HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR

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• Rotten Joists/Beams • Floors Leveled

• Gutters Cleaned/ Repaired

• Water under house No Problem!

• Metal Roofing 35 Years Experience 270-356-0389 270-999-1988

New HomesAdditions

RemodelingVinyl Siding

Replacement WindowsGarages • Decks

Carports • Any Typeof Home Repair

Licensed • InsuredSince 1976

Kevin Rose Construction462-8285

1162 HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR

POWLEY CONTRACTING & CONSULTING

Specializing in Remodel & New

Construction. Licensed & Insured 270-210-0073

REPAIR or REPLACE FLOORS

New Bathrooms 217-2872

1198 LAWN/LANDSCAPE/TREE SVC

ADORE LAWN& LANDSCAPING

Fall Cleanup,Trimming, Mulching,

Overseeding,Hedge Trimming

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1198 LAWN/LANDSCAPE/TREE SVC

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Gutter CleaningFREE ESTIMATES

Call George 270-816-2309

S&ELAWN & TREE SERVICE

Cutting • HaulingStump Removal

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1200 TREE SERVICE

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InsuredFree Estimates

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RICHARD’S TREE SERVICE Trimming, Removal & Stump Grinding

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1228 PAINT/WALLCOVER

GP PAINTING, LLC For All Your Professional

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(270) 519-5104

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RUSHING’S PAINTING & DRYWALL, LLC.

FULLY INSURED Wallpaper hanging & removal; plaster repairs;

drywall hanging & finishing; painting -

interior/exterior. Free Estimates 270-210-8580 270-898-3765

1276 ROOFING

Affordable HomeImprovementSpecializing inALL your home

improvement needs(Roofing, Flooring,

Repairs, etc.)Insured, Free Est.

5% Military DiscountScott, 270-309-3025

HINESROOFING

35 Years Experience~ INSURED ~

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1306 SERVICES

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ALL TYPESTom Allen210-1550

Allen Auto Sales

PROFESSIONAL PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORYSERVICE DIRECTORY1824 PEST CONTROL

STORY’S PEST CONTROL Over 30 years

experience serving Southern Illinois & Western Kentucky 618-524-3973

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

JacksonPurchaseMedical

Associates,PSC

seeks qualifiedindividuals for the

following positions:Laboratory

TechLab and phlebotomyexperience required.Hours are as needed,including weekends.Must be able to worka flexible schedule.

PhlebotomistHours are as neededM-F. Phlebotomy ex-perience and com-puter skills required.Qualified applicantsshould send resume

to P.O. Box 7448Paducah, KY

42002-7448 or [email protected]

LAKE Way Nursingand Rehabil i tationCenter is currentlyseeking experiencedSRNA’s. We are of-fering a sign on bo-nus of $500.00 toSRNA’s who haveb e e n s t a t e r e -gistered over threeyears and have agood a t tendance.Here at Lake Way weare building bridgesfrom our home toyours in everythingwe do. Apply in Per-son at 2607 MainStreet in Benton, KY42025. Equal Oppor-tunity Employer DrugFree Facility.

LifeCare Center of LaCenter

has the following positions available: • Full-Time Midnight RN

• Full-Time Weekend LPN - Baylor Pay

Competitive Pay & Benefits

Contact Tana Cooper at 270-665-5681

or apply in person at 252 W. 5th Street

LaCenter, KY

0232 GENERAL HELP

AUDITIONS at Bad-gett Playhouse Sun.,March 3. Profession-al resumes only to:

infograndriversvariety.com

AUTOMOTIVECASHIER/

RECEPTIONISTExpanding dealer-ship is seeking can-didate for the full-timeposition of Parts/Ser-vice Cashier/Recep-tionist. Must havecashier and/or ac-counting experience,excellent customerservice skil ls, andcomputer proficiency.Excellent Benefits -medical, dental, vis-ion, 401(k), and paidvacation. Please mailresume to:

PO Box 9550Paducah, KY 42001

MARKETING FIRMHIRING for in-storerep. Must be goodwith people. We train.

573-334-5172.P L A N T M a t e r i a lhandl ing posi t ion.Fork lift exp req. Faxresume to: 395-4325.

0232 GENERAL HELP

AUTOMOTIVETITLE CLERK

Expanding dealer-ship is seeking can-didate for the full-timeposition of Title Clerk.Candidate will handleall aspects of billingvehicles, includingtitling, licensing andregistrat ion. Musthave knowledge oftitle laws and licens-ing requirements. Ex-cel lent Benefi ts –medical, dental, vis-ion, 401(k), and paidvacation. Please mailresume to:

PO Box 9550Paducah, KY 42001

EXP. maids, part/full-time. Comfort Suites,Paducah, by mall.

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

THOROUGHBREDRESEARCH GROUPis hir ing for te le-phone interviewer po-sitions that start at$8.00 per hour. Ap-plications will be ac-cepted from 10am to4pm M-F at the May-field Shopping Plaza-1102 Paris Rd. Ap-plicants will have tobe available to workat least 20 hours aweek and one week-end day. Applicantsmust be able to readand type. Great jobfor a second income,college students, andretirees. NO SALES.

0240 SKILLED TRADE

Bluegrass Hondais looking for a

Honda ServiceTechnician

Honda experience aplus, but not neces-sary. Excellent elec-tronic and diagnosticskills a must. Must bea team player andhave a good attitude.Pay based on quali-fications and experi-ence. Please apply inperson to 3235 ParkAvenue, PaducahKY, or email resume'to: [email protected]

James Marine, Inc.(JMI) has immediateopenings for Experi-enced CNC & Manu-al Machinists. Com-petitive wages & anexcel lent benef i tspackage that includehealth, dental, vision,life insurance, paidholidays & vacation,matching 401(k) &more.For confidential con-sideration, qualifiedcandidates may ap-ply in person at 4500Clarks River Road(Paducah), online atwww.jamesmarine.com or can mail orfax a resume to:

HR RecruiterPO Box 3183

Paducah, KY 42002-3183

Fax: (270) 448-0050 EQUAL

OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER

0240 SKILLED TRADE

M E C H A N I C / R & Rtech. Tools required.Pay based on experi-ence. Apply in per-son at BJ's Transmis-sion, 1005 Oaks Rd.DIESEL MECHANICClass A or B helpful.

Apply at DISS,6760 KY Dam Rd.

No phone calls.

0244 TRUCKING

EQUIPMENTHAULER DRIVERSTC in Paducah hasan opening for an ex-perienced driver tohaul company equip-ment & trucks to com-pany locations. Musthave CDL-A with Xendorsement. Pleasecall JR at 443-9298 ortoll free at 1-800-442-0722 for more detailson benefits.

Hiring Class ADrivers

Teams & SolosSIGN ON BONUSTEAMS / $10,000

SOLO / $3,0003 Years OTR Experi-ence. Age 24+. GreatWeekly Pay, Bene-fits, Bonus Programs.Volvo’s w/53 ft. DryV a n . M i d w e s tRoutes. 10cpm Extrafor Canada Runs.

Call TNi1-866-378-5071www.tri-nat.com

JIM SMITH Contract-ing Co. now takingapplications for ex-perienced dump truckDrivers. Must have aclean MVR. Applica-tions can be pickedup at 1108 DoverRd., Grand Rivers,KY or www.jimsmith

contracting.com.No calls please.

SALESMANDRIVER

INSTALLERPrice Ballard-CarlislePropane in LaCenterhas an opening for alocal propane gas de-livery salesman truckdriver and tank in-stal ler . Must haveCDL-HazMat Tanker.Best job with excel-lent pay and benefits.Please call 270-665-5173 or toll free 1-800-874-4427 ext. 144 oremail us at: [email protected]

TIRED OF OTR?Local Driver

25 Years2 yrs. exp. CDL

Clean MVRApply in person withcopy of MVR/CDL at

1442 Bloom Ave.Paducah, KY 42003

[email protected]

0248 OFFICE HELP

BUSY office seekinga part-time reception-ist to join our team.Desired candidatesshould be friendlyand enthusiastic withthe ability to multitask in a fast pacedenvironment. Pleasesend resumes to BB521 c/o The Padu-cah Sun, P.O. Box2300, Paducah, KY42002-2300.

Part-TimeSales Administrative

Assistant PositionProvide clerical andadministrative sup-port for the Dir. ofSales and dept. staff.Requires computerliteracy with MS Win-dows, Word & Excelexperience, 3 to 5years administrativeexperience, and ex-cellent communica-tion & organizationalskills.

More info on www.AmericanQuilter.com/

about_aqs.Submit cover letter

and resume toDirector of Sales,

AQS, PO Box 3290,Paducah, KY 42002

or to [email protected].

0260 RESTAURANT

OASIS SouthwestGrill is hiring experi-enced se rve rs &cooks, full-time. Ap-ply within, no phonecalls. I-24 Exit 40,Kuttawa.

SHOW-ME'S Res-taurant is acceptingapplications for As-s i s tan t Manage r .Prefer previous res-taurant managementexperience. Apply inperson at 3009 OldHusbands Rd., Padu-cah, KY 42003. EOE

TOKYO HIBACHI hir-ing Servers. Apply at3535 James SandersBlvd., 933-1900.

0264 CHILD CARE

N O T E T O P A R -E N T S : K e n t u c k yState Law requires li-censing for child carefacil i t ies providingcare for 4 or morechildren not related tot h e l i c e n s e e b yblood, marriage oradoption.

0276 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

Liquor Licenseavail. for McCrackenCo. 270-703-5709.

0276 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

The Paducah Sunneeds IndependentContractors in the

Paducah andHardin areas.

Potential monthlyprofit of up to $1,800.

To be part of thisamazing process,

call Darren at270-575-8792

or email [email protected]

0288 ELDERLY CARE

I WILL sit with theelderly. 252-6396.

PRIVATE Caretaker,weekdays, to assistin all aspects of dailyliving including lightcook ing /c lean ing .Medical knowledge &e x t e n s i v e b a c k -ground check re-quired. Only applic-ants with salary re-quirements will beconsidered. Sendwork history & quali-fications to BB 520c/o The PaducahSun, P.O. Box 2300,Paducah, KY 42002.

PETSPETS

0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS

COCKER SPANIELpups, $125. No Sun.calls, 270-623-6078.

GERMAN Shepherdpuppies, 618-564-3106, 618-645-1315.

POODLE puppies,$300 & up. 898-4712.

T H E P e r f e c tValentine! SiberianHusky puppies. $300.(270) 366-1069.

FARMFARM

0470 FARM EQUIPMENT

2001 INTERNATION-AL 8100, single axle,$9,800. 832-7800.

2008 MAHINDRA4110, 4x4, 42 h.p.,canopy top, 590 hrs.,$13,500. 705-4613.

MERCHANDISEMERCHANDISE

0503 AUCTION SALES

Col. Paul Wilkerson& Sons Real Estate/Auction, Lowes, KY674-5659, 674-5523

0506 ANTIQUES/ART

KEN BAR Antiques &More now tak ingvendors for 2013.Call 270-804-3213.

0533 FURNITURE

BED: Queen Pillow-Top Mattress Set.NEW in plastic. Candeliver, $195.

270-293-4121.PRETTY Dinette set,$290. 554-9643.

0554 WANTED TO RENT/BUY/TRADE

JUNK Cars/Batteries,$200 & up. 933-8698.WANTED TO BUY:

RAW FURSMcClellan Fur Co.,Pulaski, IL. 618-342-6316, 618-342-6871

0563 MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE

DIAMOND engage-ment ring & weddingband set, 1.2 carat/cert i f ied diamond,white gold, $1500OBO. 618-771-7777E N C Y C L O P E D I ABritannica, 15th edi-tion, $175, 534-4197.THIS NEWSPAPERCOULD BE YOURSEVERY DAY! Whatbetter gift to giveyourself or a friend,Call The PaducahSun Customer Ser-vice Department fordetails. 575-8800 or1-800-599-1771.

REAL ESTATE FOR REAL ESTATE FOR RENTRENT

0605 REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

HUD PUBLISHER'SNOTICE

All real estate advert-ised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any prefer-ence, limitations, ordiscrimination basedon race, color, reli-gion, sex, handicap,familial status or na-tional origin, or inten-t ion to make anysuch preferences,limitations or discrim-ination. State lawsforbid discriminationin the sale, rental oradvertising of real es-tate based on factorsin addition to thoseprotected under fed-eral law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for realestate which is in vi-olation of the law. Allpersons are herebyin fo rmed tha t a l ldwellings advertisedare available on anequal opportuni tybasis.

0610 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS

LONE OAK1 BR, 1 B, exc., quietlocation, water paid.No pets, no smoking,554-0211, 217-58902BR, 2B, quiet street,private garage, LoneOak, no pets, $525.270-366-1602.

3BR, 2B $950 + de-posit, Reidland, 270559-6252CALVERT CITY, niceupstairs 2BR apt.,$425/mo. 210-0929.EFFICIENCY, utils.incl., $450/mo. NearWB Hosp. 519-8636.NEWLY remodeled.1 & 2 BR Apt. 270933-6640, 564-9744.

0610 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS

Near Lourdes2 BR, all appliances

$595 + deposit270-554-0114

1 BR, incl. gas heat &water , downtown,$525. 270-559-0296.

2 BR, 2 B duplex, ja-cuzzi, garage, clean.No smoking, no pets,$850. 270-519-1963.

Cardinal Point2 BR, 1 B, 1 laundry

room, West Endarea. 444-7334.

Hrs: 10-12, Mon.- Fri.

REIDLAND, 2 BR,$495. Lease. Nopets . 898-2256.

Southgate Manor1 BR. 270-442-6621

WEST END LTD2BR, 1B TownhomeW/D hookup in kit.

2BR, 1B flat, privatestorage, W/D hook-

up in basement.270-442-9258

Hours: 8-10 a.m.Mon-Fri.

0610 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS

WHITTIER APTS.1 BR, Sec. 8

Senior & Disabled270-443-3809. EHO

WILLOW OAKS1, 2, & 3 BR APTS.All electric, laundryroom on property

270-443-4200Hours: 1:30-4:30

Mon-Fri.

0615 FURNISHED APARTMENTS

1 BR, 1 B w/pool &storm room, $150wk., deposit required.270-415-0404, 9a-7p.

2 BR apts., $700443-7103

$475/$625/MO. 1BR,no pets, 559-0688.

0620 HOMES FOR RENT

LONE Oak Town-home, 3 BR, 2 B, eat-in kit., 1-car garage,util. room, $950 mo.556-5280.

3 BR, 1.5 B, no pets,$700. 556-0848.

Page 10: Georgia’s women end Kentucky’s 34-game home win streak ...matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/1140/... · 2/4/2013  · Flacco and the Baltimore Ravens had just enough

10B • Monday, February 4, 2013 • The Paducah Sun paducahsun.com

©S

un ‘

12

2Classifieds PRESENT

GREAT WAYS TOEXPRESS YOURSELFTHIS VALENTINE S DAY!

1 WRITE TO YOUR HEART’S DESIRE.Roses are

blue

Violets are red...

Roses are purple

Tulips are

yellow...

I love you

Sweetheart

Your message will appear February 14th in the special

Valentine’s Day feature, From the Heart, in our Classified Section.

Mail or bring payment for your valentine message along

with the information filled out below so that it reaches us by

Monday, February 6 at 4 p.m. Select one of the options below

to express your valentine message to your loved one.

2 SHOW OFF YOUR KIDS OR GRANDKIDSYour child or grandchild will be thrilled when his/her

picture appears in the paper on February 14th. Our special “Love to the Little Ones” page is the perfect spot to show off the apple of your eye. Just send the Child’s photograph and name, along with your name, address and phone number to The Paducah Sun, 408 Kentucky Ave., Paducah, KY 42003, Attn.: Classifieds. Please include a self-addressed stamped envelope for return of original photo.

Think of their joy when they see their picture in the paper and what joy it will bring you! This is one Valentine’s Day your child or grandchild will long remember.

CHILD’S NAME(Parents/Grandparents Name)

CHECK THE OPTIONS BELOW TO EXPRESS YOURSELF.

1

1 in. (10 Words)

$900

I’d like to write a love line using the following words and artwork:

I’d like to show off my child on Valentine’s Day. $16.00 BLACK & WHITE

One child per square, age 1 day to 12 yearsMail or bring payment, photo, name, address, phone number and self-addressed stamped envelope to The Paducah Sun Classifieds, 408 Kentucky Ave., Paducah, Ky. 42003.BRING IT IN BY 4 P.M. MON., FEB. 6!

PICTURE MESSAGE: (Please Print)

2 in. (20 words)

$11003 in. (40 Words)

$1300

Child’s Name

(Circle 1)-Parent/GrandparentName

(Circle 1)-Parent/GrandparentName(Circle 1)-Parent/GrandparentName

YOUR NAME

ADDRESS

CITY STATE ZIP

DAYTIME PHONE

Bring it by The Paducah Sun office at 408 Kentucky Avenue in Paducah. Open weekdays from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Plus for an additional $200

you may put your love line in red

YOUR NAME DAYTIME PHONE

ADDRESS

CITY STATE ZIP

Yes put my love line in red for an additional $200

Please Check the above boxes of choice and fill in your message in the boxes below.

2

HURRY! DEADLINE IS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6 AT 4 P.M.! PUBLISHES ON VALENTINE’S DAY!

$25.00 FULL COLOR

(3 or more $11.00 each)

(3 or more $20.00 each)

6Wednesday

WED

WEDNESDAY

0620 HOMES FOR RENT

3 BR, 2.5 B on 3acres near mall, $795mo. 442-3579.

3BR 2B MH, lot 56,new, $650/mo.; 3BR2B MH doublewidew/carport, $675/mo.554-8552.

LONE OAK, 225 Gil-haven Dr., 3 BR, 1 B,$700/mo. + deposit.770-265-9283.

LONE OAK, 3630Hwy. 45, 3 BR, 1.5 B,$750/mo. + deposit.770-265-9283.

2BR 1B, $500 + dep.,no pets. 559-0688.

0630 DUPLEXES FOR RENT

LONE OAK area,2BR, 519-7884.

REIDLAND, 2 BR, 2B, gas logs, garage,$725 + deposit. 270-362-3907.

Lone OakPatio Home

2BR, 2B w/garage$795 + deposit270-554-0114

3BR, 2B unfurnished,$700. 554-2287

LG. 1 BR plus car-port , 3662 ForestCircle. 443-3090.

0670 BUSINESS PLACES/OFFICES

MIDTOWN, +- 1800sq ft, avail. 3/1, Exc.parking. 441-7420.

2715 OLIVET Church2500 SF. 559-1515.

N. Friendship, 4,500sq. ft. office & show-room, 8,000 sq. ft.shop & warehouse.270-210-1955.

0675 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT

2 BR, $450. IndianOaks, 442-1727

3BR 2B MH, lot 56,new, $650/mo.; 3BR2B MH doublewidew/carport, $675/mo.554-8552.

3BR 2B on 3 acres,all elect., 288 KalerMill, Symsonia. $400-$400 deposit. 442-1493, 851-3281.

2 BR, $450. 2650 N.Friendship. 983-1718

REAL ESTATE FOR REAL ESTATE FOR SALESALE

0710 HOMES FOR SALE

ON GOLF COURSEMurray, KY

$68 per sq. ft.Video Tour: www.HomesByOwner.

com/62941270-227-3303

SEEING is believing.Don't buy propertybased on pictures orrepresentations. Forf r e e i n f o r m a t i o nabout avoiding time-share and real es-tate scams, write theFederal Trade Com-mission at Washing-ton, DC 20580 or callthe National FraudInformation Center, 1-800-876-7060.

0741 MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE

02 CLAYTON, 3BR2B, mint condition,270-489-2525.

2012 14x54, 2 BR, 1B, no land, $28,500.270-293-4021.

TRANSPORTATIONTRANSPORTATION

0852 HEAVY EQUIPMENT

'96 3500 HD, Chevydiesel, 30' buckettruck, $7,500 OBO;T190 Turbo bobcat,high track. 705-3599.

0860 VANS FOR SALE

'91 FORD Aerostarextended XLT, exc.cond . , V6 au to . ,$1850. 270-965-30212006 KIA Mini-van,V6, CD, rear heat/air,new tires, gold, 57K,$7900. 217-8906.

0864 PICKUP TRUCKS FOR SALE

09 SILVERADO Z714x4, ext. cab, 67 K,ext. warr. $21,900OBO. 270-508-0200.

2001 DODGE Cum-mins 2500, regularcab, 2-WD, brandn e w t i r e s , 2 9 0 Kmiles, $7,900 OBO.Call Cody, 564-8843

2008 FORD F-250Lariat, crew cab, 4x4,$26,000. 832-7800.

0880 OFF-ROAD VEHICLES

2007 HONDA 420Rancher ES, exc.c o n d . , 2 0 0 h r s . ,$3,500. 705-4613.

FINANCIALFINANCIAL

0910 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

Government WildlifeJobs! Great Pay andBenefits. No Experi-ence Necessary. Theticker to a dream jobmight real ly be ascam. To protectyourself, call the Fed-eral Trade Commis-sion toll-free, 1-877FTC-HELP, or visitwww.ftc.gov. A pub-lic service messagefrom The PaducahSun and the FTC.SOME ads in thisclassification are notnecessarily for "helpwanted" but for em-ployment informationbooklets.

LEGALSLEGALS