Skip to main content

Full text of "The News Enterprise April 26, 2012"

See other formats


www.thenewsenterprise.coni 



Misfit 


THlfHSDflY 



pirates take the big scree 

How do they rate? Read the review. PULSE, AID 

APRIL 2S, 201? . SERVING HAROIN COUNTy SINGE 1974 . REACH SUBSCRIBER SERVICES AT (270) 


cents 


Hardin County sees drop in 
per capita personal income 


Total personal income 
among highest in state 

By MAKTY FINLEY 

iiifiiiley@lhenewsenlefprise.com 

Hardin County has main- 
Lained its fifth-place status in the 
state for total personal income but 
fell to 19th in per capita personal 
income based on data collected 
for 2010. 

The rankings were released 
Wednesday by the U.S. Depait- 
menl of Commerce’s Bureau of 
Economic /Vnalysis, which ana¬ 
lyzed personal income at the 


county level nationwide for 2010, 

Hardin Cormty^s level of per 
capita personal income dropped 
about i percent from $34,2 J 7 in 
200f> to in 2010, accord¬ 

ing to the report. Per capita iii' 
come waa measured by dividing 
the amount of personal income in 
a county by it3 total population, 
which the agency retrieved from 
the U.S- Census Bureau. 

Hardin County’s per capita 
personal income level is 103 per¬ 
cent of the state average of 
$32,3Ifi and 83 percent of the na¬ 
tional average of $39,937, accord¬ 
ing to the report. 

Both LaRue and Meade coun¬ 



ties shot ahead of Hardin County 
with significant gains. Meade 
County was ranked K)th for 2010 
after holding the 19th slot for 
2009, as per capita personal in¬ 
come grew from S32,500 to 
$34,774. 

LaRue was right be¬ 
hind Meade in the 11 spot 
for 2010 after being 
ranked 18th for 
2009, according 
to the report, 

LaRue'^s per 
capita income 

f rew from 
32,590 to 


Tum Uj income. All 


One dead after 
wreck of possible 
‘rolling meth lab 


Police say no seat 
belts were in use 

By SARAH BENNETT 

sberinelt@thenew5erncrprise.coTn 

An Elizabethtown woman 
is dead after a car believed 
to be carrying materials re¬ 
lated to metliamplietamine 
production collided with a 
tree Tuesday afternoon just 
outside Rineyville. 

Jessica L. Fisher, 30, died 


at 5:43 p.m, Tuesday at Uni¬ 
versity Hospital in fxiuisville 
from injmies sustained in the 
single-vehicle wreck, police 
said. Fisher was a backseat 
passenger in a red 1991 Hon¬ 
da Accord. 

The car’s driver, David I.. 
Staliins II, 26, and front-seat 
passenger, Matthew S. Stal- 
lins, 25, also were seriously 
injured and airlifted to Uni¬ 
versity Hospital. On Wed¬ 
nesday, the hospital listed 

Tuiu to WKECK, All 


High schoolers 
volunteer 
in Indiana 


Day of service takes North Hardin 
students to tornado-hit areas 


By KELLY CANTRALL 

kcanti^.ill@thcncwscnteipri5e.c(»ni 

The spiiit to serve in 
students of North Hardin 
High School was so strong 
it couldn’t be contained in 
the state borders. 

Semiors al North Har¬ 
din traveled to the area of 
Henryville, Ind., last 
Satiu’day to assist in clean 
up frtim tornadoes that hit 
the area March 2. Ii was 
part of the schooTs Day of 
Service, in which 189 stu¬ 
dents helped a number of 
local organizations and 
tornado victims. 

This is the second year 
for the service day» It was 
inspired when North 
Hardin faculty members 
saw a presentation about 
service days at a school 
conference, teacher Ange¬ 
la Cannon said. As a 


springboard to enacting 
service days at North Har¬ 
din, the teachers stalled an 
in-school recycling pro* 
gram. The god was to cre¬ 
ate an Intenial focal point 
of service before branch¬ 
ing out. 

Cannon said "'building 
school culture’’ was the 
main goal, and they want¬ 
ed a way to teach students 
a sense of motivation tmd 
pride in their actions. 

Ivocally, students spent 
time lielping at Elizabeth¬ 
town Parks and Recrea¬ 
tion, North Hardin Re¬ 
habilitation, the J.T. Alton 
5K run, Saunders’ Springs, 
Goodwill stores in Eliza¬ 
bethtown and Raddiff, 
Hardin County Animal 
Controh Rad cliff City 
Hall, Vine Grove City 
Hall, Freeman Lake, 
Sp ringH a ven Domesti c 



Above, North Hardin senior Robbie Witliams and classmates help with cleanup efforts In IVTarysvilfe, Ind. The group was 
carrying debris from a home and creating bum pHes. **lt was eye opening/' Williams said. showed me everything I take 
for granted every day and rt made me more thankful.'' 


Violence Shelter, Helping 
Hand of HOPE and on 
the schooPs campus. 

The idea to include the 
Henryville area in the 
service day came from 
senior Taylor Domschke. 
Donischke said watching 
the news and seeing the 
damage motivated her to 
help in some vi av. After at¬ 
tending a dub meetjng in 
which the service day was 
discussed, she? brought the 

Turn to SERVICE, A12 



Left, North Hardin senior 
Dakota Wadsworth high-fives 
Lydia Insko-Grady after 
working outside the 

Marysvlller ind., Community 
Center. '"That feeling at the 
end when you know you did 
something good to help the 
community made it all 
worthwhile,” Wadsworth said- 


INSIDE 

One senior reflects 
on service in Indiana 

HVS, Al! 


Vine Grove to transform into Mayberry beginning May 11 


Festival to indude 
food, music, look-alike 
contest, other activities 

By AMBER COULTER 

bctniItA?r@lh^nevi/sentcrpri!se. com 

Some Vine Grove residents 
recently have taken up Mayor 
Blake Proffitt’s view of the city as 
their Mayberry. 


The fictional town was die set¬ 
ting for the popular “The Andy 
Griffith Show” in the 1960s and 
was known for its apple pie 
morality and neighboilhiess. 

Vine Grove will resemble the 
town in more than opinion be¬ 
ginning May 11 at Optimist Park 
on Knox Avenue with the city 
celebration Mayberry Days. 

The carnival, crafts and enter¬ 
tainment planned for the event 


begin at 5 p.m. May 11 with im¬ 
personators diessed as Mayberry 
residents, the Almost Home 
Band, food booths and the 
Across Kentucky Arts & Crafts 
bhow. 

Episode of “The Andy Grif¬ 
fith Show’ will be shown at dark 
u»ing projection equipment bor¬ 
rowed Irom Fort Knox. 

Craft and food booths contin¬ 
ue from noon to 6 p.m. May 12. 


Festivities also include a May- 
henry character look-alike con¬ 
test, a checkers tournament, sack 
and three-legged races, and a 
pig-calling contest. 

Billy Ray Latham, who 
played with the band The Darl¬ 
ings on the show Is expected to 
play with area bluegiass band 
The Darling Express. 

There also will be a '^jail” op¬ 
erated by the Vine Grove fire 


ajid police deparUiients in which 
visitors can have others locked 
up for $2, which goes to junior 
lirefighters. Inmates can be re¬ 
leased Ibr another $2, city events 
coordinator Donna Broadway 
said. 

**I told them to be lenient and 
if someone doesn’t have any 
money, please let them out,’^ she 
said. 

Turn to MAYBERRY, All 


INSIDE 

ABBY....AS NEIGHBORS.AS 

CALENDAR .A4 OBITUARIES .A4 

CLASSIFIEDS ...B7 OPINION..A6 

COMICS ..B13 PULSE..... .AlO 

LOTTERIES PUZZLES ..B12 

MONEY_*...AS SPORTS. 

MOVIES ..B12 TELEVISION „ .B12 


457 


□ SO 


L 

i. 2ai2, Tilt N&ws-Enternris^ Goiiv. 


VERTItER 



PARTLY CLOUDY 



■ COMPLETE REPORT. A2 


■ TODAY’S OBITUARIES 

Dorothy May Ford, 63 
Bobby E. Hfirl, 72 
Gary Tonker, 60 


SINCE YOU NSKED 

Results of Wednesday’s Uie News' 
Enterprise online polk as of 7 p.m.: 


m COMPLETE OBITUARIES, 


Follow US 

Ql 


QUESTION: Have you ever been fin¬ 
gerprinted? 

TOSl 74 percent Ko: 26 percent 

TODAYS QUESTION: Wlio is your 
favorite "The Andy Griffith Snow” 
character? 


Pad the pcilE questien under the 'opinien'" menu at 
wwwHtbenew^irtefpri&e.c^ 


fnr luiTTie dfltivfrv Dali Tf'?Cl. 



HOMES 


Insido Frlda)f 
























































































A2 


THE NEWS-ENTERPWSE 


Heartland 

LOCAL NEWS AND NOTES FROM AROUND KENTUCKIANA 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2D12 



ON THIS DATE IN 1865 John 

Wilkes Booth, assassin of 
President Abraham Lin¬ 
coln, was surrounded by 
troops near Port Royal, Va., 
and killed. As he died, he 
looked at his hands and 
said, '"Useless, useless ” 

IN 196B, the U.S. explode 
ed a L3 megaton nuclear 
device called ""Boxcar"" be¬ 
neath the Nevada desert. 

IN 1986, a nuclear melt¬ 
down occurred at the Cher¬ 
nobyl plajTit in Ukraine. 

IN HARDIN COUNTY 
30 YEARS AGO, the Rev. 
Joe Batcheldor, pastor of St. 
James CathDlic Church, an¬ 
nounced tiieie would be a 
Community (warden on 
College Street Road be¬ 
tween the U.S. 31W Bypass 
and College Heights Melli' 
odiitt Church. The project 
was sponsored by Hardin 
County Helping Hand. 

20 YEARS AGft a substance 
abuse awareness program, 
Paient 'To Parent, was fea¬ 
tured. The national pro¬ 
gram was a video-based ap¬ 
proach to teacli parents how^ 
to communicate with their 
children* Bill Twyman co¬ 
founded the local chapter 
and the Rev. John Kachel- 
man was facilitator. 

From News-Enterprise wire 
sentiees and staff reports 




Partly cloudy. 
High: 75 

TOHICHT: Partly 
cloudy. Low: 51 


mm mm mm 

V ^ 

64/54 69/45 61/42 

Storm Storm Parity 
chance. chance. cloudy. 




High 

Low 

Out look 

Fort Campbell 

78 

S6 

PiCkJv 


30 

66 

PlCkly 

Bowling Creen 

79 

64 

MoCjdy 

Lexington 

73 

50 

MoCJdy 

Louisville 

75 

63 

PiCk^ 

Pikovluo 

76 

59 

McOdy 

Covfnfilofl 

68 

60 

MoCJdy 


Source; SOfvice 



0OC»* 

RRST FULi LAST WEW 
QUARTER MOON QUARTER MOON 

Aprtl^ Mays 1^ May 30 

Today's sunrise ftW am. 

Today's sunset . .7:30 pJTL 

HIGHS/LOWS 


Vine Grove still without 
interim police chief 


By SARAH BENNETT 

i;hc n ih oncwsc nto jprisc.com 

of Wednesdayj ai^ interim 
police chief had not been appoint¬ 
ed in Vine Grove, but Mayor 
Stake Profiltt anticipates tapping a 
temporary chief to be named to¬ 
day. 

The city has been without a po¬ 
lice chief for more than a week. 
Former chief Steve Manning, 60, 
was removed from the position last 
Tuesday after serving Vine Grove 
for more than four years. 

Protfitt said Friday he wouldn't 


comment on why Maiming was re¬ 
moved, and said the city does not 
comment on employee-related is¬ 
sues. 

“He^s been a friend of mine for 
35 years,’' Proffitt added. ‘'Some- 
limes separations happen, and this 
one transpired that way. Steve’s a 
good man ” 

In a fourth-class city, the police 
chief serves at the pleasure of the 
mayor, giving Proffitt hiring and 
termination authority. 

Proffitt previously said the city 
would consider interim chief can¬ 


didates inside and outside Vine 
Grove Police Department. The 
mayor said he ha.s no time table in 
mind for hiring a full-time chief. 

H want to make sure it’s the 
right choice,"^ Pioffitt aid. 

The \me Grove P I re Depart¬ 
ment currently empluvs three part- 
time and live hill-time officers. 
Capt. Dale Rjgg a former Vine 
Grove police chief is the highest 
ranking officer at the department 
in the chiefs absence. 

Sarah Bennett can be 
readied at (270) 505-1750. 


Fossil 

stumps 

experts 

'the Associated l^ress 

DAYTON, Ohio - Ex 
peris are trying lo figure out 
what a fossil dubbed ""God- 
Killus” used lo be. 

The 150-pound fossil re¬ 
covered last year in noithem 
Kentucky is more lhan 6 feel 
long and 3 feet wide. To the 
untrained eye, it looks like a 
bunch of rocks or a concrete 
blob. Experts are trying to de- 
tennine whether it was an an¬ 
imal, mineral or a form of 
plant life from a time when 
the Cincinnati region was un- 
dciwater. 

“We are looking for people 
who mighl have an idea of 
what it is," said Ben Dattilo, an 
assistant pinfessoi of geology 
at Indiana University-l\irdue 
University Fort Wayne, 

Scientists said the fossil is 
450 miUion years old. Univer¬ 
sity of Cincinnati geologist 
Carl Brett said it's tlie largest 
fossil ever extracted from that 
en. in the Cincinnati region. 

“This is the ultimate cold 
case,” said Ron Fine the ama¬ 
teur paleontologist who spot¬ 
ted the fossil on a hillside. 



JIU. PICKETT/TTifi 


CLIMBING THE LADDER DF SUCCESS 

Shawn Tibbs, left, and Albert Coffey position a sheet of metal roofing 
Wednesday as they repair the canopy on the Glendale Antique Mall. 


Growing good gardeners 


yesterday . JIM 

Fprl Kroi NWS repof jiqg » pf 5 p/n. 

Record hSgh/year*. * .W/1989 

Record tow/year*...35/1947 

Average high/low* ^.. .7M9 

PRECIPITATION 

Pa$t 34 hoais* *. 0.03 

Last 30... . 3.54 

DeviMiw iram iwfm .. ..... . ..~0.42 
Jan. l-presfliit**.*. 13.82 

IXyfaitkHi liwn irann ... . 


sowm: 'Cch^iia. siatiui 


ALlEftGY REPORT 


Netkinal Allergy Bureau pollen and 
meld report fpr the area. 

Trees .. ..Moderate 

Weeds. WrawTt 

Grass .. Uiw 

Meld Lew 


Sponsored bp: 

Ha Te Le, MD 
Thao H. Pham, HD 
T^o T. Le, MD, NHS 

Adergt/ and Aslbnits Specia/Tsts 

270-765-6149 


By AMBER COULTER 

fttoykcr@lhtfn«fwstnitfq>riHf.toni 

Janine Washle remember? 
when her mother used to give her 
and her siblings small garden plots 
to raise anj-ihing that interesled 
them. 

Her mother inspected the gar¬ 
dens sometimes to teach her chil¬ 
dren lessons that helped turn 
Washlc into a gardener for life. 

“I just remember learning so 
much,’^ she said. 

Washle, co-owner of Clover- 
Field Farm and Kitchen on Mount 
Olive Road near Hardin Springs, 
wants to give area middle and high 
school students tlie same opportu- 
nity. 

The faim is site of a Gardeners 
of Weedin^ Youth Garden Project 
an 11-week summer program that 
allots each of 12 students a small 
garden plot to raise produce and 
leant about food production. 

Participation costs $125, and 
students must supply their own 
sunscreen, gloves, trowels, and 


seeds and plants of their choice. 

Other gardening necessities, 
water and light lunches wdl be pro- 
\1ded. 

Students will learn techniques to 
make the best use of theh smah 
pk>L$, such as growing vertically, 
Washle said, 

“Ifs all about education ” she 
said. “Pm going to show them that 
even though it looks like a small 
plot, weVe going to do a lot with 
it,” 

Washle said there are many 
young people who have missed 
out on learning where their food 
comes from. 

She said she sometimes hears 
high school students wonder how 
they’ll pay increasing grocery 
prices to feed their families if they 
don^t get lilgh-paying jobs. 

“I feel like it’s important for kids 
to be given an opportunity to learn 
where their food comes from,” she 
said. 'TFs basically giving them the 
tools so this is something that they 
can carry with tliem into their 
adult lives, and they can see if they 


even like gardening,” 

Students also will learn what 
they can do with produce after har¬ 
vesting it, such as canning, making 
salsa and saving seeds. They also 
vrill blog about their experiences 
on Clovi rField' web ite, Washle 
said. 

^Tt'3 Just o mportant to me to 
reach out fo students.” she said* “i 
enjoy educating adults, but there's 
something about a young mind* 
Ifs just so open.” 

The y^mng gardeners also ^viU 
be asked to contribute weekly 
from their gardens to a basket of 
produce to be given to a family in 
need. Recipient.^ are selected by 
Glendale Chiistian Church. 

Washle said she hopes assisting 
area families will help students see 
everyone can do a fittlc for those 
around them. 

To reseiv-e a spot in the pro¬ 
gram, call (270) 862-3762. 

Washle hopes to continue the 
program in the future. 

Amber Cowttpr can be 
reached at (270) 5^-1746 l 


DAILY BRIEFING 

HARDIN DOUNTY 

State, county 
reach agreement 
on bridge work 

Hardin Fiscal Court this 
week authorized an agree¬ 
ment with the Kentucky 
Tran spor tation Cabin ef s 
Department of Rural and 
Municipal Aid to replace 
the Wimp Lane bridge, a 
small n>ad crossing in 
Cecilia, 

Judge-Executive Harry 
Berry said the project has 
been estimated to cost 
around $98,000 and the 
state will provide 80 per¬ 
cent of the money to con¬ 
struct the new crossing “ a 
maximum of $78,400 ^ 
with the county covering 
the rest. 

Berry said the county re¬ 
cently replaced a similar 
crossing in the Colesburg 
area. 


MANCHESTER 

Police: County 
magistrate stabs 
wife, kills self 

Police in eastern Ken¬ 
tucky say a Clay County of¬ 
ficial has killed lumself after 
slabbing his wife several 
times. 

Clay County Coroner 
Danny Finley said Magis¬ 
trate James 'Jimbo" Lyttle^ 
51, died of a gunshot to the 
head frnnn a ..3R-r.aliber re¬ 
volver. 

Manchestei Police Chief 
Chn t idtz aid 4"' year old 
Sharon I).ttk wai lake n to 
Un 1 vei sit Y o f Ken tucky 
Chandler Medical Center 
after the attack Wednesday 
at the couple’s home. Fultz 
says the reason for the inci¬ 
dent is unkno^vn. 

Fultz .said Sharon Lyttle 
told emergency workers her 
husband stabbed her. Auth¬ 
orities said he shot himself 
in an outbuilding. 

LOUISVILLE 

Kentucky mom 
to meet Obama 

A Kentucky mother of 
three who urges parents to 
get more involved in 
schools is scheduled to meet 
with President Obama at 
the Wliite House. 

Myrdin Thompson of 
loOuisville is One of a dozen 
people from across the 
counti y meeting with Oba¬ 
ma today to mark tlie one- 
year anniversary of his 
White House Champions of 
Change program that rec¬ 
ognizes community leaderSn 
She was named to the pro¬ 
gram last yeai' for volunteer 
work in public schools. 

From News-Enterprise mre 
servicer and staff repvrtr 

■™M!1 

Vie News-Enlerptm is 
committed to accuracy in 
its news reports. Confirmed 
factual errors will be cor¬ 
rected in this space daily. 
To request a correction, 
readers can call 769-1200, 
Ext, 8290, or email oe@ 
thenew senterprise .com - 
TIME FRAME: Ashley N. 
Chapman stopped working 
at Jack & Jill Child Care Be 
Preschool in Rad cliff six 
years ago, according to an 
official with the agency, 
w^hich closed its doors in 
November 201L The tim¬ 
ing was unclear in a Wed¬ 
nesday story. 


GONTHT US 


TheNews-Enterprise 

Dixie Aue.. 

Bizabeltiiawn. KV 42701 
IDffioe hours: S pjTi. Mond^rktey 

MAIN NUMBER 

{270} 769-1200 
(800) 653^344 (loll 

CUSTDMER SEirVIGE 
HOME DEUVERY CUSTOMER SERVICE 
SOS^ITTO. or 

hoiTiederiveTyt^enewsenterprise.conn 
If you have a vacation stop, restart or did 
not receive y!>ur Mews-Enierprise, please 


cortiact u&, Replacement ctelivef y will lake 
place ufvtil 10 a.im. Callers after 10 a.iti. 
will have a replacement delivered the next 
mofnlfig. 

TO SUBSCRIBE 

Home delivery subscription rates ere list¬ 
ed below. Mail rates are available upon re- 
quest. To subscribe, call (270) SOS- 
1770, or (8DD) BSaC344, Ext. 8385. 

EAST PAY per moflU? *,,, p$t wnth 


THREE JVIOHTMS .*.S40.61 

SIK MONTHS ... $74.27 

ONE ¥EAF».... 35 


SUNDAY ONIY EASY PAY gm . S6.4$- 


SUKDAYONLY{Smos.) . $ 22.05 ^ 

SUhTOAY ONLY {6 moa.} ... $37.13* 

SUr«5A¥ ONLY {1 yn) .....$70.73* 


Prices are for home delivery. Marl rates sltghlJy 
h^r. 

mciuoee ihe 20i2 ijwmb 

d^: April B; hkWiPfDa^*. Mpy SS; July 4; LaCxy C^. 

Sflpc 3; Oct- 31; TharikB^iving Dsy. Ndv. 22; 

NOV. 23: Dec. r; Dm. 14; Dm. 21: Dm. 2B. 

TUPLAGIAGUkSSlFIEDAD 

By plwne: 769^1200, Ext. 8601 
By efnallt nec3a5s®»thene wsenterpnse.com 
By fax: [270) 76S731S 
On tbe web: www.thenewsenteftmse.oom 


IB PLACE A QISPUY AD 

By phono: 76&ia<>0. Ext. 8354 

PUBLISHER aChrisOrdway 
(270) 50S1466 

ciordw3(y@t heoewsenterprise.com 

EDITOR 

Ben Sheroan. (270) 50&1764 
bsherofifi^theiiewsentepise.oom 
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR 
Larry Jobe. [270} 505-1409 
fjobe@thenew5enterprise.cann 
CIRCULATION DIRECTOR 
Portia OJdham, (270} 505-1419 
poldihann^thenewsenterprise.com 


HEWSRDOJW [270)505-1751 
NEWS EDITOR 

Jeff D'Alessio. (270) 505-1757 

jdalessk>®thetiewsentefprise.tiQnrL 

SPORTS EDITOR 

Chuck Jones. (270) 505^1759 

ciones^Sthenewsenterprise .com 

FEATURES EDITOR 

Sarah Berl^ire (270) 505-1745 

sher ksh i re^lhenewsenterprjse. 

com 

CHIEF COPY EDITOR 

Sarah Reddoch, (270J 505-1744 
sreddoct#thenewBentefpri^ 


TD SEND A PRESS RELEASE 

By enwii; fie(§1h«new«enterprise.coni 
By fax: (270) 7606965 

ABOUT THE PAPER 

The News-Enterprise (USPS 172-960} is 
published six days a week Sunday 
through A daily rtewspeper costs 
50 cents and Sundays and Thanksgiving 
are $1 per Issue. Periadicals poat^e 
at Eiiiabetetown. Wy, POSTMAS¬ 
TER: Sand flddnass. changes te The 
News-lritGrptlse, 4QH W Diicie Awe., 
EJixabelfitown. KY 42701, 

ThA N«w^-EntArpflse H a 
Corrirngnity InC^ rew$p[^f 














































THE WEWS^EWTERPRESE 


NEWS 


■mURSDAV, APRIL 26 , 2012 


A3 






at Haidin County Honda 

We work hard to make your buying experience pleasurable with a 


Piice^Match Guarantee, several financing 
S^_options and an overall great selection 


of new & pre-owned vehicles. 


Ask Ateet Diir 
S VMr/MflM 
MlH Ftw talntMQnci 
Pregf*m! 


2012 Accord Sedan EX-L 


MPG; 23 City/M Hwy' 


Call or stop 
in today to 
speak with 
one of 
our loan 
officers and 
learn more 
about our 


^ When it comes to 

car dealerships, 

BmacR 

isn’t always better. 


Hometown Banking.,. 

There is a Difference 

SOUTH CENTRAL BANK 


2908 Ring Road • Elizabethtown, KY • 270.763.6600 
4079 N. Dixie Hwy, * Elizabethtown, KV ♦ 270,763,9797 

www.southcentralbank.com 


Member 

itn^ roic 


2012 Civic 


2012 Crosstour 2012 Odyssey 


_JLJ 

5608 N. DIXIE, 
ELIZABETHTOWN 


JMPfMtterfam ' 

Kncix 

iFtidclIfl 

t 

>h]ndJ 


)e lOHin 


www.harclincountyhoncla.c6m 


Wean 

leimigl 


New guidance on background checks 


Equal Opportunity 
Commission updates 
job policy 

By SAM HANANEL 

The Assneiated Ptess 

WASHINGTON - Is an arrest in 
a barroom brawl 20 years ago a job 
disqualifier? Not necessarily, the goN^- 
emment said Wednesday in new 
guidelines on how employers can 
avoid running afoul of laws prohibit¬ 
ing job discrimination. 

The Equal EinplovmeiiL Opportu¬ 
nity Commission's updated policy 
on criminal background checks is 
part of an effort to rem m practices 
that can limit job opportunities for 


nnnorilies that have higher arrest 
and conviction rales than vvhitCi 

“The ability of Afncan ^Vmencans 
and HLspanics to pm emplojment 
after prison is one of the pai amouni 
civil justice issues of our time," said 
Stuart Ishimaro, one of three Demo¬ 
crats on the five-member commis¬ 
sion. 

But some employers say the new 
policy — approved in a 4-1 vote ^ 
could make it more cumbersome 
and expensive to conduct back¬ 
ground checks. Companies see the 
diecks as a way to keep workers and 
customers safe, weed out unsavory 
workers and prevent negligent hiring 
claims. 

The new standard urge employ 
ers to give applicants a chance to ex¬ 
plain a report of past cnmmal mis¬ 
conduct before they aie rejected out 


right. An applicant might say the re¬ 
port is inaccurate or point out that 
the conviction was expunged. It may 
be completely unrelated to the job, 
or an ex-con may show he^S been iiil- 
ly rehabilitated. 

rhe EEOC also recommends that 
eniployei's stop asking about past 
convictions on job applications. And 
it says an arrest without a conviction 
is not generally an acceptable reason 
to deny employmenL 

While the guidance does not have 
the force of regulations, it sets a high¬ 
er bai- in explaining how businesses 
can avoid violating the law. 

“It’s going to be much more bur¬ 
densome,’" said Pamela Devata, a 
Chicago employment lawyer who 
has represented companies trying to 
comply with EEOC's requirejnents. 


Pentagon official signals 
possible Army layoffs 


Panetta already has said Marines 
will decrease by 20,000 


By DONNA CA55ATA 
The AsHicialsct EVess 

WASHINGTON - A 

Pentagon official signaled 
on Wednesday that the 
Army could lay off as 
many as 24,000 enlisted 
personnel and up to 5,000 
officers within five years to 
meet a projected reduction 
in the force driven by 
budget cuts and the wina- 
ing down of two wars. 

Pressed on the possibili¬ 
ty of involuntary termina¬ 
tions, Thomas Lamont, an 
assistant secretary of the 
Army^ told a Senate 
Armed Services panel that 
layoffs were possible as the 
Anny shrinks from a peak 
of ,570,000 to 490,000. 


“I hate to throw out 
numbers, but I have seen 
numbers that would ap¬ 
proach enlisted category 
perhaps as high as mid- 
20s, 23, 24,000," Lamont 
said. ""On the officer con¬ 
tingent, again these are 
very rough numbers and 
aU based again on assump¬ 
tions and attrition rates, of¬ 
ficers may go up" to 4,5 (K) 
to 5,000. 

Defense Secretary I^eon 
Fanetla, in announcing the 
Pentagon budget earlier 
this year, also said the 
Marines would drop by 
20,000, to 182,000. The 
Pentagon has indicated 
that the reductions would 
come through attrition 


service members retire. 
The possibihty of layoffs 
would anger many in 
Congress who already aie 
trying to reverse defense 
cuts. The military is facing 
nearly a half-tiillion cut in 
projected spending over 10 
years based on the budget 
agreement reached by 
President Barack Obama 
and congressional Repub¬ 
licans last summer. 

At the hearing, Sen. 
Kelly Ayntte, R-N.H., 
pointed out that many of 
the service members who 
might get laid off hud 
served multiple tours in 
Iraq and Afghanistan. 

“Telling a well-perform¬ 
ing combat veteran just 
back from war that he is 
getting kicked out of the 
Army would represent a 
breach of faith between 
our country' and those who 
have deployed to keep us 


safe," she said in a state¬ 
ment after the hearing. “I 
worry about the demoral¬ 
izing effect giving pink 
slips to our warfighters 
could have throughout the 
entire all-volunteer force.” 


Marines discharge 
sergeant for 
Facebook posts 

By ELLIOT SPAGAT 

The Associated 

SAN DIEGO — A sergeant will be discharged for 
criticising President Barack Obama on Facebook in a 
case that called into question the Pentagon's policies 
about social media and its limits on the speech of ac¬ 
tive duty militaiy personnel, the Marine Corps said 
Wednesday. 

Sgt. Gary Stein will receive an other-than-honor- 
able discharge and lose most of his benefits for violat¬ 
ing the policies, the Corps said. 

The Saji Diego a ea M^ime who has served nine 
years in ffu Corp aid hf di appointed by the 
decision. He aigued he was exercising his constitu¬ 
tional righfii to free speech, 

“I love the Marine Corps, I love my job. I wish it 
wouldn^t have gone this w'ay. Pm having a hard time 
seeing how 15 words on Facebook coidd have ruined 
my nine-year careeiv” he said, 

Gary Kreep, an attorney for Steii^, said he would 
pursue administrative appeals in the Marine Corps 
but anticipate.^ the effort will fail. He said he planned 
to file an amended complaint in federfil court. 

*^As long os he wants to pursue this, we will be sup¬ 
porting him," said Kieep» who is executive director 
of the United States lustice Foundation, an advocacy 
gioup. 

The Marines acted after saying Stein stated March 
1 on a Facebook page used by Marine meteorolo¬ 
gists, “Screw Obama and 1 will not follow all orders 
from him.’* Stein later darifiied that statement, saying 
he would not follow unlawful orders. 

Brig. Gen. Daniel Yoo, commanding general of 
the Maiine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, said in a 
brief statement Wednesday that evidence supported 
an administrative board*s recommendation to dis¬ 
charge Stein. 


Over 400 
Liquors * 

CuBtom Hade* 

Gift Baekets 

Over 315 
Wines Including 
Bok & Jug 

Cold Beer 
£ Wine 


RADCLIFFS NEWEST LIQUOR STORE 

QraniiDpeM^I 

Enter To Win 2 Opening Day 

"2012 UK Wildcat' 
FOOTBALL 
TICKETS 


Drawifig to be held May Sth 




ON£ 


NORTH HARDIN 
WINE &L SPIRITS 

350 N. Dixie Blvd., Radcliff, KY 40160 • 270-351-3555 

Store Hours: 

Mon. - Thurs. lO-lO; fri, - Sat. 10-11; Sun* 1-10 






















































A4 


THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


NEWS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 



The Basics of Alzheimer’s and Dementia/ 10-11:30 
a.m., Hardin County Public Library, 100 Jim Owen Drive, 
E’town, sponsored by Greater Kentucky and Southern 
Indiana Chapter of Alzheimer’s Association. To register 
for free, call 1-800-272-3900. 

Metropolitan Policy Organization, public meeting of policy 
committee, 10 a.m., Lincoln Trail Area Development 
District board room, 613 College Street Road, E’town. 
POC: 769-2393. 

Quarterly Downtown Development meeting, 5:30-7 p.m.. 
First Federal Gallery at the Historic State Theater, 209 
W. Dixie Avenue, E’town. Express your ideas to help re¬ 
vitalize the downtown area. POC: 982-2209. 

Using Library Resources, 1-2 p.m., Hardin County 
Public Library, 100 Jim Owen Drive, E’town. Presented 
by Rebekah Akers, library staff. Registration required. 
POC: 769-6337. 


m 


Couponing 101, 10-11:30 a.m., Hardin County Public 
Library, 100 Jim Owen Drive, E’town. Learn where to find 
coupons, how to use them and how to save 50 percent. 
Registration required. POC: 769-6337. 

Fish fry, 5-8 p.m., Morrison Lodge No. 76, 125 N. 
Mulberry St., E’town. $6. Proceeds benefit lodge build¬ 
ing fund. POC: Bill, ( 270 ) 234-4154. 

Funky Chicken Pin Cushion class, registration deadline is 
April 27; class is 9 a.m.-l p.m. May 5, Hardin County 
Extension Service, 201 Peterson Drive, E’town. Class 
size limited. $12, includes some supplies. POC: 765- 
4121. 


Adopt-a-pet, Animal Refuge Center in Vine Grove, 11 
a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. POC: 877-6064. 

Adult and pediatric CPR/AED with first aid review, 9 
a.m.-12:30 p.m., Hardin/LaRue Red Cross Service 
Center, 405 W. Dixie Ave., E’town. $90. POC: 765-4979. 

Animal Refuge Center Blessing of the Animals and adop¬ 
tion reunion, 1-6 p.m.. Freeman Lake Park Elizabethtown 
Lions Club Pavilion. Blessing at 2 p.m. Goody bags avail¬ 
able for furry friends. Dog wash, bake sale and meet oth¬ 
er adoptive families. POC: Penny Edwards, 877-6064. 

Annual Tractor Drive for a Cure, benefits American 
Cancer Society’s Relay for Life, 10 a.m. CDT, Horse 
Cave Bale Warehouse No. 1; live auction at 12:30 p.m. 
CDT. Entry fee: $25 per tractor; must be 14 or older to 
drive, slow-moving vehicle sign required, wagon/trailers 
must have fixed sides; POC: David Groce, 537-4652; 
Gary Dennison, 528-1467; Paul Dennison, 786-1663. 

2nd Annual Relay for Life Car Show, 11 a.m.-4 p.m., rain 
date Sunday, E.W. James parking lot, 200 St. John Road, 
E’town. Entry fee $15 per car, trophies given for best of 
show, best tuner, best domestic, best truck, best bike 
and best work in progress. Door prizes, 50/50 drawing, 
food, music by DJ Brian Hash. Proceeds benefit 
American Cancer Society. POC: Amanda Stearman, 
astearman.thirtyone@gmail.com. 

Benefit auction and dinner for Teresa Carby Anstead, 4 
p.m. CDT, Cub Run Elementary School, 170 East Gap 
Hill Road, Cub Run. Cattlemen’s Association ribeyes, 
hamburgers and hot dogs. Auction at 5:30 p.m. CDT, 
gospel singing and bake sale. Proceeds will benefit fu¬ 
neral expenses and debts incurred because of the death 
of her daughter, Deanna Anstead Barton. POC: Beth 
Ross, 769-8403, 369-7667 or bethanya.ross@ky.gov, 
Phillip Knight, 531-1958, Cindy Hendren, 524-4275, or 
769-1604, Ext. 1015. 

Cecilia Community Ruritan Yard Sale, 28 miles starting 
on Ky. 86 in Cecilia, 8 a.m., set up yard sale or rent a 
booth for $10 from Cecilia Ruritan; vendors welcome. 
POC: Clarissa Yates, cpyates@comcast.net, 766-7821. 

E-Scrap Recycling, 8 a.m.-2 p.m., AGC Automotive 
Americas, 1 Auto Glass Drive, Leitchfield Road, west of 
Central Hardin High School, sponsored by Hardin 
County. POC: 765-2350. 

Freeman Lake Bluegrass Day, 3 p.m.-dark, 140 Free¬ 
man Lake Park Road, E’town, sponsored by C.J. Lewan- 
dowski Upton No. 749 and Morrison No. 76 Masonic 
lodges. Featuring Karl Shiflett and Big Country Show, 
Tommy Brown and the County Line Grass, King’s High¬ 
way, Blue Lonesome, Floyd’s Fork Ramblers and Bobby 
Smith and Style 28. $10 donation, 10 and youger admit¬ 
ted free. Collecting baby food, diapers, baby clothes and 
baby related items. Concessions available, vendors wel¬ 
come. Rain or shine. POC: Lon Zea, 369-0592. 

Fort Knox Community Leadership and Education Con¬ 
ference, 11 a.m.. Leader’s Club, Fort Knox. Theme is 
“Be the Change, Be a Leader.” A day of leadership de¬ 
velopment and education networking. Topics include 
community service, resume writing for young profession¬ 
als ages 16-21, bullying, social media and more. Event 
is free but reservations strongly suggested. POC: Gail 
Phoenix, gail_phoenix@yahoo.com or (502) 377-1458. 

Greenspace hike with your best friend doggie day hike, l 
p.m., Greenspace Helm Trailhead near Roses. Adop- 
table pets, dog training tips and demonstrations. Dogs 
should be on a leash and current on all vaccinations. 
POC: Lori Timbers, 765-9074 or hvfarms@wind 
stream.net. 

Muitipie Scierosis Society’s Uude on the Move Continued!’ 
Team, l p.m., 1373 Red Hill Road, Vine Grove. Entrance 
fee is $2, which covers the cost of a barbecue meal and 
drinks; kids 3 and younger eat free. Raffles for Scentsy 
products. Home Depot tools gift basket with free large 
pizza certificate, spa basket for women with gift card to 
Red Lobster and more. Slip ‘n’ Slide pool and sprinkler 
for kids while adults do other stuff. Best dressed in or¬ 
ange wins a surprise gift. Volunteers needed. POC: 
Sarah Gonzales, 319-4885. 

Reiay for Life yard saie, 8 a.m., lower parking lot of 
Stithton Baptist Church, 95 Park Avenue, Radcliff, next 
to Walmart. POC: 351-1415. 

Isaiah Alonso Foundation second annual Birthday Bash, 
noon- 7 p.m., Colvin Community Center, 230 Freedoms 
Way, Radcliff; family friendly activities with bake sale, 
carnival games, food auction, raffles, magic show, bal¬ 
loon animals, face painting and more. Red Cross blood 
drive and Be the Match Bone Marrow Drive. To sponsor, 
donate or volunteer, call Cheryl Alonso, 300-5329. 

Rummage sale, 8 a.m.-l p.m., Radcliff United 
Methodist Church, 275 South Woodland Drive, Radcliff, 
behind the post office, sponsored by Radcliff United 
Methodist Women. Proceeds 
benefit mission projects. 

POC: Suzanne Tigger, 351- 
8218 or setigges@insight 
bb.com. 



FORD 


Dorothy May Ford 

Dorothy May Ford was born May 26, 1948, in Green County to the 
late Sam and Nellie Jane Gaddie Ford. She departed this life Thursday, 
April 19, 2012, at her home in Campbellsville, having attained the age 
of 63 years, 10 months and 23 days. 

Dorothy had made a profession of faith in Christ and 
was a member of Mount Union Baptist Church. She was 
a homemaker. 

Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by 
five brothers, Tom, Frank, Richard Lewis, Robert Mar¬ 
shall ‘‘Mont” and David Ford. 

She is survived by one brother, Leo Ford of In¬ 
dianapolis; one sister, Helen Williams of Elizabethtown; 
and a host of other relatives and friends. 

The funeral is at 1 p.m. CDT Saturday, April 28, at Mount Union 
Baptist Church in Greensburg with the Rev. Mike Ash performing the 
eulogy and the Rev. Andre Calhoun as master of ceremony. Interment 
follows in Mount Union Cemetery. 

Visitation begins at 5 p.m. CDT Friday and continues at 7 a.m. CDT 
Saturday at Foster-Toler-Curry Funeral Home in Greensburg. 

Pallbearers are Marqwee Simpson, Joseph Ratcliffe Jr., Kelvin Ford, 
Kendall Ford, Sammy Dunn, Lee Curtis Hunter Jr. and Travis Williams. 
Honorary pallbearers are the staff at Fresenius Medical Care Dialysis 
Center. 

Condolences may be expressed at www.fostertolercurry.com. 

Bobby E. Hart 

Bobby E. Hart, 72, of Elizabethtown, returned to his Heavenly Eather 
on Tuesday, April 24, 2012. 

He was born to the late William Hart and Pearl Williams on Jan. 1, 
1940, in Summit. Bobby was united in marriage to Prances “Cissy” Hart 
on May 3, 1957. Bobby was a born again Christian who 
loved the Lord and attended Hardin County Pirst Inter¬ 
denominational Church. 

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death 
by his sister, Ivena Jaggers; and a son-in-law, Louie 
Hodge. 

He leaves to cherish his memory his wife. Cissy Hart; 
two sons, Bruce (Jeanene) Hart and Bobby (Rhonda) 

Hart; three daughters, Rhonda Hodge, Donita (Tommy) 

Jaggers and Lisa (Michael) Shaheen; seven grandchil¬ 
dren, Chuck (Charity) Hodge, Michael (Christy) Hodge, Bradley (Tif¬ 
fany) Beauchamp, Carrie Jaggers, Derek (Erin) Hart, TaLana Jaggers 
and Kyler Hart; seven great-grandchildren, Caleb, Joshua, Kelsen, Kacie 
and Kamden Hodge, Bryce Hart and Taylor Jaggers; and his furry com¬ 
panion, Prankie. He was the also “favorite uncle” of numerous nieces 
and nephews. 

The funeral is at 4 p.m. Priday at Valley Creek Baptist Church with 
the Rev. Leroy Routt officiating. Burial follows in Valley Creek Cem¬ 
etery. 

Visitation is from noon to 8 p.m. today at Dixon-Atwood & Trow¬ 
bridge Puneral Home in Elizabethtown and continues at 2 p.m. Priday 
at the church. 

To express a condolence and light a memory candle visit 
www.dixonatwood.com. 

Dixon-Atwood & Trowbridge Puneral Home is in charge of arrange¬ 
ments. 

Gary looker 

Gary Tooker, 69, of Elizabethtown, formerly of Missouri, passed 
away Monday, April 23, 2012, at his home. 

Gary played in numerous country music bands in Elizabethtown and 
other cities. 

He is survived by his wife of 50 years, Sandra Tooker; his mother, 
Alice Tooker; seven sons, Todd, Rodd, Troy, Chad, Shane, Trevor and 
Jason Tooker; a sister, Dixie Plinski; and several grandchildren and 
great-grandchildren. 

Cremation was chosen. There will be a memorial service at a later 
date in Illinois. 

To express a condolence and light a memory candle, visit 
www.dixonatwood.com. 

Dixon-Atwood & Trowbridge Puneral Home in Elizabethtown is in 
charge of arrangements. 



HART 


Curtis Duane Hegstad, 53, of Eliza¬ 
bethtown, died Thursday, April 19, 2012. 
A memorial service is at 2 p.m. Saturday 
at New River Worship Center, 179 Blair 
Hill Road, Elizabethtown. 

Rayma Faye Haynes Hubbard, 78, of 
Guston, died Monday, April 23, 2012. 
The funeral is at 11 a.m. EDT Friday at 
Salem Baptist Church with burial to follow 
in Salem Baptist Church Cemetery. 
Visitation is from 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. 
EDT today and continues at 8 a.m. Friday 
at Bruington-Jenkins-Sturgeon Funeral 
Home in Brandenburg. 

The Rev. Willie Jones died Thursday, April 
19, 2012. His life will be celebrated at 11 
a.m. Friday, at Stithton Baptist Church in 
Radcliff. Interment with military honors is 
at 11 a.m. Monday in Kentucky Veterans 
Cemetery-Central in Radcliff. Visitation 
with the family is from 5 to 7 p.m. today 
at New Life Tabernacle Church of God in 
Christ in Radcliff. Ellliott Mortuary in Mad- 
isonville is in charge of arrangements. 
Percell & Sons Funeral Home will assist. 

Jane Ann Allgood Leggett, 64, died 
Monday, April 23, 2012. The funeral is at 
10:30 a.m. today at Kerr Brothers Fu¬ 
neral Home, Harrodsburg Road, Lex¬ 
ington. Visitation continues from 11 a.m. 
to 1 p.m. Saturday at Buck Grove Baptist 
Church in Ekron with a graveside service 
and burial to follow in Buck Grove Baptist 
Church Cemetery. 

Frank Charles Ruff Jr., 66, of Eastview, 
died Thursday April 19, 2012. A memori¬ 
al service is from 5 to 8 p.m. Wednesday, 
May 9, at Pritchard Community Center in 
Elizabethtown. Manakee Funeral Home is 
in charge of arrangements. 

Darrow 0. Smith, 78, of Melbourne, 
Fla., formerly of Radcliff, died Tuesday, 
April 17, 2012, at Holmes Regional Med¬ 
ical Center in Florida. A graveside service 
is at 11 a.m. today at North Hardin 
Memorial Gardens in Radcliff. Nelson- 
Edelen-Bennett Funeral Home in Radcliff 
is in charge of arrangements. 

Pauline 'Peggy’ Johnson Thompson, 92, of 
Brandenburg, died Monday, April 23, 
2012. The funeral is at 10:30 a.m. EDT 
today at First Baptist Church of Bran¬ 
denburg. Burial is in Kentucky Veterans 
Cemetery-Central in Radcliff. Visitation 
continues at 9 a.m. EDT today at the 
church. 

Willis J. Woods, 93, a resident of Irvine 
Health & Rehabilitation Center, died 
Sunday, April 22, 2012. The funeral is at 
1 p.m. today at Warren F. Toler Funeral 
Home Chapel in Irvine; burial in Woods 
Cemetery. 


John Christopher “Chris” Ethridge II, a 

Mississippi-born musician, bassist and 
songwriter who was a founding mem¬ 
ber of the 1960s country-rock band 
“The Elying Burrito Brothers,” has 
died. He was 65. 

Ethridge collaborated with another 
seminal Southern music figure. Gram 
Parsons, on projects including the Ely¬ 
ing Burrito Brothers and International 
Submarine Band, and he co-wrote sev¬ 
eral of Parsons’ solo tunes. 

Ethridge spent eight years on the 
road with Willie Nelson and can be 
heard on the country legend’s 
“Whiskey River.” 


Judge: Ky. must consider single drug executions 


By BRETT 
BARROUQUERE 

The Associated Press 

LOUISVILLE - Ken 

tucky must either switch to 
a single drug to perform 
executions within 90 days 
or prepare to go to trial on 
the claims of death row in¬ 
mates challenging the 
state’s three-drug method 
of carrying out capital pun¬ 
ishment, a judge ruled 
Wednesday. 

In a long-awaited order, 
Eranklin Circuit Judge 
Phillip Shepherd wrote 
that the state’s three-drug 
method may no longer be 
necessary now that other 
states have successfully 
used a single drug to exe¬ 
cute condemned inmates 
and shown that “well-es¬ 
tablished alternatives” ex¬ 
ist for Kentucky. 

The ruling comes about 
20 months after Shepherd 
halted all executions in 
Kentucky. He imposed the 


ban after inmates chal¬ 
lenged the three-drug 
method. Their lawsuit 
asked if the state’s rules for 
carrying out a lethal injec¬ 
tion prohibited use of a sin¬ 
gle drug and if there were 
safeguards against execut¬ 
ing a mentally ill inmate. 

If Kentucky sticks with a 
three-drug method. Shep¬ 
herd wrote, the challenge 
by the inmates will be al¬ 
lowed to go to trial. If 
Kentucky adopts a new 
regulation allowing for a 
one-drug execution, simi¬ 
lar to what is done in 
Arizona, Ohio and other 
states, any claims of cruel 
and unusual punishment 
by the inmates “will be 
rendered moot.” 

Shepherd’s ruling 
comes just months after the 
American Bar Association 
issued a report calling for a 
moratorium on executions 


in Kentucky, in part, be¬ 
cause of the number of cas¬ 
es overturned since the re¬ 
instatement of the death 
penalty in 1976. 

Shelley Catherine John¬ 
son, a spokeswoman for 
the Kentucky Attorney 
General’s Office, said the 
order is being reviewed 
and the Department of 
Corrections will be con¬ 
sulted in “the near future.” 

Kenton County Com¬ 


monwealth’s Attorney Rob 
Sanders, a death penalty 
proponent, said the state 
should heed Shepherd’s 
ruling and go further. 

“I think it would be 
faster, less expensive, and 
prudent for Kentucky to 
adopt new administrative 
regulations that provide 
flexibility in selection of 
the drug or drugs used to 
carry out executions,” 
Sanders said. 


lincontested Divorce 


$300 


Plus 

Court 

Cost 


Nick L. Pearl Attorney at Law 

25 Public Square 270 ' 737'0000 nickpearl@bbteLcom 

Elizabethtown, KY 42701 q(-#| aAAA www.nickpearl.com 

(across from old courthouse) m I U^OO^^UUUU This is a paid advertisement 


More info 

J ONLINE 

POC refers to “point of contact.” 

SUBMiniNG A CALENDAR ITEM 

Calendar announcements are pub¬ 
lished free. Call 505-1751, fax to 
769-6965, or email to 
calendars(®thenewsenterprise.com. 
Items must be submitted at least 
four days prior to the event. The 
News-Enterprise will publish the 
information at its discretion. 
Questions? Call 505-1751. 



SPRING SPECTACULAR 
Huge selection of shrubs and trees 


Qmgeaud. fiawefca. and Manging- 
3iadjket6, ^Bimming with Qalm 


Massive selection of vegetable plants 

• Locally grown in Hardin County • 

141 Shelby Ave., Radcliff, KY 40160 • (270) 351-3004 


Email: greenthumbplants@msn.com • Nancy Capps, Owner 


Consignment Comer 



The Most Innovative Consignment Store 
In The Area Is In E-town! 


Now Accepting Summer Consignments 


My Sisters Consignments & Alterations 

The Pavilion • Suite 400 • 2408 Ring Rd., Elizabethtown 
( 270 ) 982-4455 Mon.-Fri. 10-6; Sat. 10-4; Closed Sunday 




Accepting Spring § 
Consignments & Furniture! ^ 


• New Jewelry & Handbags 

• Designer Clothing & Shoes 

• Furniture & Home Decor 

2486 S. Dixie Blvd., Radcliff 
352-0020 

(Next to Radcliff Electric Supply) 


To Adveitise 
Your 

Consignment 
Store In This 
Section 

Call 769-1200, 
ext. 8354 


Accepting 
Spring & 
Sununer Items 
for Consignment 

Items must be clean, ironed, on 
hangers and good brand names. 


Clearance Sale In Progress 


Ho SECOND LOOK 

Etown's First & Finest Consignment Shop 

1705 N. Dixie (Starlite Center) 
769-1385 


Shop locally 
for the greatest 
bargains! 
















































THE MEWS-E^TTERPRESE 


NEWS 


■mURSPAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


AS 


House GOP 
responds with 
own bill to 
protect women 

By JIM ABKAMS 

The A^ociated fVess 

WASHINGTON - House Republicans deter- 
minod tcj show women voters ihaL they have their in¬ 
terests at heart on Wednesd^ announced plans to re¬ 
new the Violence Against Women Act, the federal 
government’s main domestic violence program, 

I'he GOP proposal set up a possible showdown 
with a somewhat different version that Senate 
Democrats have advanced and has been pending for 
several weeks. The Senate began debate Wednesday 
on the Democratic version talks continued. 

VAWA, first enacted in 11^1, hcLs a history of be¬ 
ing bipartisan and noncontrovei ial, but that’s 
changed this election year. Democrats have accused 
Republicans of waging a war on women, and 
Republicans, led by presumptive presidential nomi¬ 
nee Mitt Romney, have responded by emphasirmg 
theh sensitivity to w^omen’s issues. 

The Senate bill has til sponsors, mcluding eight 
Republicans, hut parts of ii have met rt distance fiom 
others in the GOP. 

Sen. Chuck Grassley^ R-Iowa, joined by Sen. K^y 
Bailey Hutchison, RTexas, is preparing an altenialive 
that would eliminate several Democratic provisions, 
including those to set aside visas for illegal immi¬ 
grants who are victims of domestic abuse, specify vi¬ 
olence against gays, lesbians and transgenders are 
part of the act and expand the autliorily of Native 
American officials in cases of abuse of Indian women 
by nonindians. 

The base Senate bill would reauthorize VAWA for 
five years with funding of $659.3 million a year, 
down $136.5 million a year from the last VAWA act, 
which expired several months ago* The money goes 
to such programs as legal assistance for victims, en¬ 
forcement of protection orders, transitional housing 
aid and youth prevention progiams- 

Sponsors of the House bill, which is being drafted, 
said it would be close to the Grassley-Hutcmson ap¬ 
proach- It was introduced by 12 GOP women kW' 
makers and three members of the Republican leader¬ 
ship, including Majority I..eader Eric Cantor of 
Virginia* 

“We are not going to be looking at the contiover- 
sial issues that would actually detract from VAWA," 
said Rep. Sandy Adams, R-Fla., the chief sponsor 

Rep, Krish Noem, R-S.D., said that “unfcutimate- 
ly, in Congress there aie some who’d like to make 
this a politicaJ play. They’d like to make a cheap shot 
and try to politicize it in an election yean" 


SUPREME COURT JUSTICES 
SEEM OK WITH MAJOR PART 
OF ARIZONA S TOUGH LAW ON 
llifGAL IMMIGRANTS. Buck 
ing the Obama adminisUa- 
lioii. Supreme Court jus¬ 
tices seemed to find little 

trouble Wednesday with 
/ 

major parts of Arizona’s 
tough immigration law that 
requires police to check the 
legal status of people they 
stop for other reasons. 

But the fate of other 
provisions tliat make 
Arizona state crimes out of 
immigration violations was 
unclear in the court’s final 
argument of the term. 

The latest clash between 
states and the admirdstra* 
fion turns on the extent of 
individual states^ roles in 
dealing with tlie nation’s 
11 million illegal immi* 
grants. Immigration policy 
is essentially under the fed* 
eral government’s control, 
but a half-dozen Repub¬ 
lican -d om I nated states 
have passed their own re¬ 
strictions out of fhistration 
with what they call Wash¬ 
ington’s inaction to combat 
an illegal flotid* 

Civil rights gioups say 
Uie Arizona law and lliose 
in some other states en¬ 
courage racial profiling 
and ethnic stereotyping, 
and debate over such laws 
could have an impact on 
this fall’s elections. More 
than 2tKJ protesters gath¬ 
ered outside the court, 
most of them opposed to 
the Arizona law. 

RUBIO OUTLINES FOREIGN 
POLICY VISION AMID SPECU- 
UTION HE GOULD BE 
ROMNEY’S CHOICE FOR VR 

Sen. Marco Rubio outlined 
his vision Wednesday of a 
more muscular Ameiicaii 
foreign policy, ihe latest 
salvo in his effort to elevate 
his profile as Republican 
presidential candidate Mitt 
Romney begins his search 
for a running mate. 

The Florida Republic¬ 
an’s half-hour speech at the 
centrist Brookings Insti¬ 
tution came four weeks af¬ 
ter he endorsed Romney 


Order NOW at niagaztne.catspause.com 



The Cats' Pause was there for every moment 
in Kentucky's epic season, and now you can 
relive all of the glory from one of the greatest 
seasons in college basketball history! 

This 136.page book, produced 
by The Cats' Pause, captures 
Kentucky's epic season with 
beautiful color photographs, and 
stories from each game. From 
Big Blue Madness to Blue Orleans 
national champions, we cover it all. 

Cost is only $10 {plus $3 postage, 

& tax). The book is available for 
immediate delivery, so order your 
copy today! 


HOW TO ORDER 

1. Go to m^gazind.catspause.oom 

2 . Click on ^2012 Natlon^il 
Champs book only"" 

2* Or^ to include a subscription 
to The Cats' Pause click on 'The 
Cats' Pause Magazine'', and 
select 'Tlan 2 - 2012 National 
Champs" 


THE NEWS IN 8HIEF 


and Lwo days after cani- 
paigning with him. He also 
recently has spoken of a 
new immigration proposal 
that breaks ranks with 
some in his own party* 

Both in Washington and 
around the country, the 
40-year-old Cuban-Amed- 
can is pushing himself for- 
ward as a fresh conserva¬ 
tive, 

‘"Global problems do re¬ 
quire international coali¬ 
tions. On that point this ad¬ 
ministration Is correct," 
Rubio told a crowd of aJ- 
most 200 academics, poli¬ 
cymakers and diplomats. 
""But effective international 
coalitions don’t form them¬ 
selves, They need to be in- 
sdgaied and led, and more 
often than not, they can 
only be instigated and led 
by us. And that is what this 
administration doesn’t un¬ 
derstand*" 

Introduced by Sen. Joe 
Lieberman, the Demo¬ 
cratic vice presidential can¬ 
didate in 20(X), Rubio did 
not address whether he’s 


seeking the same office. 
The freshman lawmaker 
frequently has been men¬ 
tioned for a Republican 
Party struggling to im¬ 
prove its standing with 
Hispanic voters. 

SPEAKER SAYS HOUSE WIU 
VOTE FRIDAY OK STUDENT 
LOAN BILL, PAID FOR WITH 
HEALTH CARE CUTS. The 

House will vote Friday on 
a Republican bill prevent¬ 
ing interest rates on federal 
student loans from dou¬ 


bling this summer, paid for 
by cutting money from 
President Obama’s health 
care law, House Speaker 
John Boehner said. 

The abrupt announce¬ 
ment by Boehner, R-Ohio, 
came with Obama and 
congressional Democrats 
clamoring to prevent to¬ 
day's 3*4 pcTCcni interest 
rates on subsidized Staff¬ 
ord student loans from au¬ 
tomatically increasing to 
6,3 percent on July k 

-AP 


r 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 


SAVE OVER $1^ 


Buy Our #1 Breakfast 

TWO E 00 S emy s^le, hoih browns, toast & jerlly, 
with ham. bacon or sawsage. 

Add coffee 6< 



for just 


Linirted time 


3900 N. I>ixie Hwy & Wilson Rd 
Elizabethtown, KV 49701 
(270)769-0739 

Monday diru Friday only, anytirne of the day. Open at 7 AM 



Put yourself in good hands! 


Center for 
Orthopaedic & 
Sports Medicine 


pand6ra’ 


bTL^riinj; iiivfr from S25 


Clark 

Jewc 


ewelers 


Serving 53 yeJir# 

;> 15 KV Huiir* S10 W. FVpbf 

Rardsfmvn, KV fJii?;il5erli(ciivn. KV 


PANDORA Gift Set - April 26"'-May la** 

Huy ths? PANEX.>kA CheirlshtHl Mo[ht?rS Clft Set t<ine 
PANfDQRA clasp bracelet, two sunburst clips, the MOM 
c.h,inii, find trhnTTTi viiSucd al £35 m less! lor $200.’ 
whilfl i;uppEif« fjsl. Scf our smrft iat 

Lbud^EiJ iiA PM. rou.KHn' D iwvj * r.ViiiiuiiAiAi' 




/ 

Ted B. Rogers, MD 


William Y. Oh, MD 


Shoulder and Knee Arthroscopy 

Hip and Knee Arthroplasty 

Sports Medicine and Sports 
Injuries, including ACL repair 

Fracture Care 

Compression Neuropathies 

Arthroscopy of the shoulder, knee, 
wrist, ankle and other joints 


Hip and knee replacement, 
including new anterior approach 

Hand injuries and arthritis 
management with finger joint 
replacement 

Carpal tunnel syndrome and other 
nerve compressions 

Acl tears, rotator cuff tears, labral 
tears 


F 





TWIN LAKES 


S' MFOrr -,. C^NTfR 


NOW SHIPPING! 


Cave-Bland Medical Complex I 9)2 Wallace Ave. Suite 104 
Leitchfield, KY 42754 I (270)230-0124 I www.tlrmc.com 

























A6 


The News-Entekprise 



THURSDAY, APRIL SR, 2012 



Volume 37, Issue 96 


EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS 
R. CHRIS ORDWAY BEN SHEROAN 

Publisher Editor 


SARAH REDDOCH JEFF D’ALESSIO 

Editorial Page Editor County News Editor 


LARRY JOBE SARAH BERKSHIRE 

Advertising Sales Director Features editor 

MAJ. GEN. TERRY KENDRA STEWART 

TUCKER, Ret. Public member 

Public member 



Florida shooting 
case should not 
alter laws here 

ISSUE: ‘Stand Your Ground’laws 
OUR VIEW: Kentucky law should remain intact 


In some states, they’re 
called “stand your ground” 
laws. In Kentucky and others, 
it’s referred to as “no duty to 
retreat.” 

Regardless of the terminol¬ 
ogy, the 26 or so states that 
have enacted these laws pro¬ 
tect the right of law-abiding 
citizens being attacked to use 
deadly force to protect them¬ 
selves or others from the rea¬ 
sonable threat of death or seri¬ 
ous bodily injury. The law 
says that you can respond in 
self-defense without first hav¬ 
ing to retreat or otherwise at¬ 
tempt to flee from an attacker. 

In the shadow of the con¬ 
tinuing controversy surround¬ 
ing the Feb. 26 shooting death 
of Trayvon Martin in Sanford, 
Fla., an alliance of politicians 
and civil rights organizations 
including the NAACP, Na¬ 
tional Urban League, Color of 
Change and National Action 
Network seek to take away 
this right. Led by New York 
City Mayor Michael Bloom¬ 
berg, the national “Second 
Chance on Shoot First” cam¬ 
paign is calling for a national 
repeal or significant revision 
of such laws. 

Kentucky’s law says “a per¬ 
son who is not engaged in an 
unlawful activity and who is 
attacked in any other place 
where he or she has a right to 
be has no duty to retreat and 
has the right to stand his or 
her ground and meet force 
with force, including deadly 
force, if he or she reasonably 
believes it is necessary to do 
so to prevent death or great 
bodily harm to himself or her¬ 
self or another or to prevent 
the commission of a felony in¬ 
volving the use of force.” 

A law-abiding Kentuckian’s 
right to self-preservation is as 
basic and innate as any right 
can be. It shouldn’t be wa¬ 
tered-down or revoked as a 
result of politicizing the 
tragedy of the Florida shoot¬ 
ing death. 

Although the Second 
Chance campaign mockingly 
characterizes these laws to be 
“shoot first, ask questions lat¬ 
er” legislation, it’s not accu¬ 
rate to view them in that con¬ 
temptuous manner. Such a 
viewpoint presumes and auto¬ 
matically condemns every citi¬ 
zen who lawfully carries a 


concealed weapon for legal 
self-protection to be a blood¬ 
thirsty vigilante. It similarly 
casts protecting homeowners 
who arms themselves within 
their castle to be trigger-hap¬ 
py rednecks out to take the 
law into their own hands. 

This simply isn’t the case 
and court case statistics prove 
it. 

Kentucky lawmakers got it 
right the first time when all 
but nine members in the com¬ 
bined chambers voted in 2006 
to enact what is now KRS 
503.050. 

Kentuckians have no need 
to fear their law-abiding 
neighbors nor should Bloom¬ 
berg and others piling onto a 
tragedy to pull a gun-control 
bandwagon. 

Indeed, it is those among 
us with criminal intent who 
should be feared. Being in a 
position and prepared to law¬ 
fully protect oneself or others 
against a violent attack makes 
sense. 

Just like in the Florida case, 
these laws do not take away 
the ability for prosecutors in 
the justice system to charge 
individuals with a crime. If 
the evidence supports that a 
crime occurred, then an arrest 
and charge is appropriate and 
law enforcement and prosecu¬ 
tors have the responsibility to 
do so and allow the system to 
work. If not, individuals justi¬ 
fiably protecting themselves, 
their family or others should 
find the law on their side, not 
presumed to be guilty, and 
should be immune from the 
undue burden of criminal or 
civil charge. 

In Florida, George Zim¬ 
merman has been arrested 
and charged with second de¬ 
gree homicide because au¬ 
thorities are questioning 
whether Martin was the ag¬ 
gressor. He now awaits trial 
after posting a $150,000 bail 
and being released from jail. 

Regardless of the eventual 
outcome of those charges, 
law-abiding citizens here in 
Kentucky and in other states 
should not pay an unjust price 
in having constitutional rights 
of self-protection taken away 
as a result of this racially 
charged case. 


This editorial represents a consensus of The News-Enterprise editorial hoard 



rosM 

3L 



IN OTHER VIEWS 


The views below are not intended to rfleet the views of the editorial hoard of The News-Enterprise. 

Bug-free drinks at Starbucks 


The Seattle Times 

Quick, which sounds more ap¬ 
petizing? Lycopene, a tomato- 
based extract, or cochineal dye, 
made from crushed bugs? Not a 
difficult question. 

Good news, Starbucks fans. The 
coffee giant has responded to con¬ 
cerns about a tiny beetle used in 
cochineal dye, which is frequently 
used in products like lipstick, yo¬ 
gurt and shampoo, and as it hap¬ 
pens, Starbucks’ strawberry-mixed 
drinks. When customers discov¬ 
ered this, they sounded a collective 
“eeeeeeeeww.” 

Starbucks announced a change 
in a subtle but noticeable blog post. 


This is a welcome example of 
consumer power. A South Carolina 
woman launched an online petition 
on Change.org asking the chain to 
stop using crushed bugs in the dye. 
The petition garnered more than 
6,000 signatures. And, what do you 
know? Their concerns were heard. 

The reaction prompted obvious 
soul-searching at Starbucks, which 
last week announced its strawber¬ 
ry-flavored mixed drinks, raspber¬ 
ry swirl cake and red velvet 
whoopie pie will be bug-free by 
the end of June. 

A point on the board for con¬ 
sumers. 

Distributed by Scripps Howard News 
Service, www.scrippsnews.com. 


CONTACT YOUR U.S. 
REPRESENTATIVE 

Rep. Brett Guthrie, 
R-Bowling Green 

www.guthrie.house.gov/ 
Washington, D.C., office 
308 Cannon House 
Office Building 
Washington, D.C. 20515 
Phone: (202) 225-3501 
Fax: (202) 226-2019 

■ Hardin County regional 
office 

411 W. Lincoln Trail Blvd. 
Radcliff, KY 40160 

■ Warren County regional 
office 

1001 Center St, Suite 
300 

Bowling Green, KY 
42101 

Phone: (270) 842-9896 
Fax: (270) 842-9081 


Rubio may find himself a man 
in the middle with Romney 


N ear the end of her Sun¬ 
day CNN news pro¬ 
gram, “State of the 
Union,” on April 22, 
host Candy Crowley referred 
to the previous week’s news cy¬ 
cle as “the week of the Hispa- 
nics.” 

She had interviewed Sen. 
Marco Rubio, R-Fla., for the 
program and he had denied he 
is pursuing the Republican vice 
presidential nomination. In¬ 
stead, he praised former Flor¬ 
ida Gov. Jeb Bush, whose name 
has surfaced as the new possi¬ 
ble running mate for nominee- 
apparent Mitt Romney. 

But Rubio also praised peo¬ 
ple who seek economic oppor¬ 
tunities for their families, no 
matter how they came to this 
country. He even asked who 
could blame migrants for com¬ 
ing here to earn a living for 
their families when their chan¬ 
ces elsewhere are dismal or 
nonexistent. 

Rubio described bedrock 
family and work values that, in 
practice, have been made ille¬ 
gal in some states when the un¬ 
documented pursue them while 
Congress has done little to find 
pragmatic solutions to immigra¬ 
tion problems. 

Rubio has put himself where 
Romney will be soon, the man 
in the middle. Like Romney, 
Rubio says he stands for one 
thing but approves of public 
policies that won’t solve the 
problems of immigration. 

Rubio, allied with the Tea 
Party movement, is not a flash¬ 
light in a dark cave. In that 
sense, Rubio is a lot like Rom¬ 
ney, who has given extremist 
Arizona anti-immigrant policies 
his blessing, calling the state’s 
draconian measures “a model.” 
There is no room to waffle to a 
moderate position from there. 


o 

7 JOSE DE LA 

) — / ISLA 


And no way to brighten the 
room with that kind of darkness. 

“Hispanic Week” also came 
as analysts worked hard to be¬ 
come instant experts on the im¬ 
portant voter segments that 
may make a difference in the 
November elections: women, 
young people and Latinos. It is 
worth remembering Latinos are 
largely responsible for in¬ 
creased numbers in all three 
key categories. 

In a sense, this year is begin¬ 
ning to look like the 1950 U.S. 
Senate race in California when 
Richard Nixon ran against 
Democratic congresswoman 
Helen Gahagan Douglas. She 
was smeared by the Nixon 
campaign as a Communist, in 
much the same way opponents 
slam President Barack Obama 
as a socialist. 

The public was bamboozled 
by the Nixon campaign’s 
claims against Douglas because 
people become increasingly 
gullible the more insecure they 
feel about the future. The pub¬ 
lic swallowed charges that 
Douglas had even cast Com¬ 
munist-leaning votes in Con¬ 
gress. She was referred to as 
“the pink lady” and she was 
said to be “pink right down to 
her underwear.” Nixon cam¬ 
paign manager Murray 
Chotiner printed flyers about 
Douglas on sheets of pink pa¬ 
per to emphasize the point. 

Tactics like that worked be¬ 
cause the voting public is will¬ 
ing to play dumb and suspend 
reality. There is an immaturity 


Unless Romney makes 
a self-correction of 
Biblical proportions 
and shows he knows 
better, today’s kooks 
and reactionaries will 
stick to him like gum 
on the bottom of his 
shoe. He will never be 
free of them and we 
will never know what 
he really stands for. 


among us that allows politics to 
be a joke taken too far. 

Unless Romney makes a 
self-correction of Biblical pro¬ 
portions and shows he knows 
better, today’s kooks and reac¬ 
tionaries will stick to him like 
gum on the bottom of his shoe. 
He will never be free of them 
and we will never know what 
he really stands for. 

Yet if he does reverse him¬ 
self, he shows he is even more 
cryptic than most thought and 
he lacks a core. 

Rubio was on the verge of 
doing on CNN what Romney 
ought to do. Rubio seems to un¬ 
derstand, at least, that govern¬ 
ment is about helping people. 

Also during “Hispanic 
Week,” Romney campaigned 
in Arizona, which is slipping 
from the GOP side of the 
ledger and might become a 
swing state this year. 

Arizona might then become 
“a model” Romney does not 
like. 

Jose de la Isla writes a weekly 
commentary for Hispanic Link News 
Service. Email him at 
joseisla3@yahoo.com. 


OPINION AND OP-ED PAGES 


The Opinion pages are intended to provide a forum for the 
discussion of issues that affect the area. Editorials are the 
opinions of The News-Enterprise’s editorial board and 
appear in the two left-hand columns of this page. Other 
articles reflect the views of their authors. 



If you have a question, you can 
reach us at (270) 769-2312. 

Or at our mailing address: 408 

W. Dixie Ave., Elizabethtown, 
KY 42701. 


EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR 

Sarah Reddoch. 5051744 

sreddoch@thenewsenterprise.com 

EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS 

R. Chris Ordway. 505-1466 

cordway@thenewsenterprise.com 


BenSheroan . 5051764 

bsheroan@thenewsenterprise.com 

Jeff D’Alessio. 5051757 

jdalessio@thenewsenterprise.com 

Larry Jobe . 505-1409 

ljobe@thenewsenterprise.com 


Sarah Berkshire. 5051745 

sberkshire@thenewsenterprise.com 

PUBLIC MEMBERS 
Kendra Stewart 
Maj. Gen. Terry Tucker, Ret. 



Mail: 408 W. Dixie Ave. 

Elizabethtown 42701 

Email: letters@thenews 
enterprise.com 

Fax: (270) 769-6965 




















































THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


OP-ED/NEWS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


A7 


Can Romney figure out which 
way the cookie crumbles? 


Life is a lottery and — 
as the observant among 
you may have noticed — a 
few fortunate people are 
given winning tickets the 
moment they arrive in the 
world. 

Those with a special 
advantage are often born 
1) wealthy 2) good looking 
3) the sons or daughters of 
distinguished families. 

As for myself, I think 
strike three has been 
called in the great ball- 
game of my life. But this is 
not an outcry of resent¬ 
ment or call to class war¬ 
fare. 

For in regards to 
wealth, I feel lucky to 
have a job that pays for a 
small but nice house and a 
fridge with some beer in 
it. As for good looks, well, 
that would have only 
spoiled my delicate per¬ 
sonality. As for distin¬ 
guished parents, mine 
were not well off but they 
were rich in affection and 
laughter. Their motto was: 
‘‘Who needs money when 
you’re funny?” 

With blessings like that, 
I am content. Indeed, it 
strikes me that if you are a 
graduate of the University 
of Hard Knocks, and have 
a degree of concussion, 
perhaps with an added 
diploma in the breeze¬ 
shooting arts, you have 
learned a thing or two 
about life that money or 
pedigree can’t buy. 

That being so, it is my 
belief that being born with 
every advantage can be a 
terrible disadvantage. 
Which brings us to Mitt 
Romney, the Republican 
presidential candidate, as 
you knew it would. 

The other day the 
wealthy, good-looking son 
of a distinguished family 
came to suburban Pitts¬ 
burgh and met with some 
regular voters and sniffed 
at some cookies that were 
set out for them. 

It is important first to 
understand that cookies 



are sacred totems in the 
Pittsburgh culture. Why, it 
is the custom hereabouts 
that a cookie table be set 
out at wedding receptions. 
Indeed, it is actual 
grounds for divorce in 
Pittsburgh to fail to pro¬ 
vide a cookie table at a 
wedding, which is seen as 
a type of mental cruelty. 

OK, I made that up. Of 
course, it is the lack of the 
chicken dance at a Pitts¬ 
burgh wedding that is 
grounds for a divorce, but 
that does not diminish the 
importance of cookies — 
and anybody that says dif¬ 
ferent is a crumb. 

Moreover, these cook¬ 
ies set out for Romney at 
the Bethel Park Commu¬ 
nity Center were special 
cookies - they came from 
the Bethel Bakery, which 
in local lore is a Valhalla 
of cookies, a sacred place 
where noble sugar and 
flour depart their own 
lives to be baked into 
heroic creations. 

So Romney arrived in 
his aw-gee-shucks-swell 
way, took one look at the 
cookies, and said, “I am 
not sure about these cook¬ 
ies,” and, pressing on 
where angels fear to tread, 
added, “They came from 
the local 7-Eleven bakery 
or whatever.” 

Well, I reckon you 
could have heard a paper 
napkin drop. He might as 
well have come dressed in 
a Philadelphia Flyers jer¬ 
sey. You just don’t diss a 
person’s cookies in these 
parts. 

It was a disturbing inci¬ 
dent. People naturally 
wondered how someone 
who wants to negotiate 
with devious foreign pow¬ 
ers over nuclear weapons 
didn’t know enough to say 
the right thing in a 


straightforward bakery 
goods culture. 

This is why I am so 
glad I was never burdened 
with a privileged upbring¬ 
ing. If it were me, I would 
have just done a Cookie 
Monster impersonation — 
“Cookie! Cookie!” - and 
the ice would be broken 
and I would be elected 
president of the United 
States. 

You see, you don’t get 
anywhere in journalism 
unless you are born with 
the common touch. In this 
business, you must meet 
and learn to get on with 
people from many walks 
of life - the unscrupulous, 
the cynical, the egotistical, 
the mad, the rich, the 
poor, the ignorant. And 
it’s worse if you leave the 
newspaper building. 

To be fair, maybe 
Romney was just trying to 
make a joke, microscopic 
as it may be. But if this 
was a doomed attempt at 
humor, it may be proof 
that Romney is indeed a 
true far-right conservative, 
because an unfunnier 
group of people you 
couldn’t find at a funeral. 

So who needs funny 
because they got money? 
Mitt Romney does, be¬ 
cause without the humor 
that arises naturally out of 
an intimate understanding 
of human nature, he 
seems to lack the common 
touch that all politicians 
must also have to succeed. 

Uh oh! Could it be that 
the Republicans have a 
candidate so lacking in 
empathy and authenticity 
that he can’t figure out 
which way the cookie 
crumbles? “Let them eat 
cake” did not work for the 
rich and beautiful Marie 
Antoinette. And “let them 
eat cookies” is too half- 
baked for a 7-Eleven. 

Reg Henry is a columnist for 
the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. His 
email address is rhenry@post- 
gazette.com. Distributed by 
Scripps Howard News Service. 


Can You Buy A New $1,800 
Furnace For $458? 


Yes, it’s absolutely true, you can 
actually replace your old (and 
probably very inefficient) 
furnace, air conditioner, or heat 
pump as a package for at least 
$1,300 less than you would have 
to pay at any other time. 

MY PROBLEM IS YOUR 
OPPORTUNITY 

Let me explain. 

At the beginning of every year we 
purchase, for the summer, a load 
of air conditioners and heat 
pumps and have to guess how 
many we’ll need to meet the 
demand. Of course we’re never 
exactly right. So, we always have 
some inventory left over until 
the next summer’s cooling 
season. 

These are brand new models. 
And they are NOT seconds or 
‘Blems” or ‘Builder” models. 
They are factory fresh PREMIUM 
air conditioners and heat pumps 
and have a full parts and labor 
warranty. 

HERE’S HOW YOU CAN GET 
A FURNACE FOR $458 

If you buy one of these leftover 
Premium air conditioners or 
heat pumps at last year’s prices 
and have it installed by June 1st 
(but only if one of the sizes I 
have in inventory will fit your 
house, of course), I am giving 
you a high efficiency furnace 
completely installed, for an 
unbelievable low price of only 
$458. 

HERE’S HOW 

Just call Allen’s at 358-3333. 

We will come out and determine 
the availability of the proper size. 
As of right now, I have only 21 
air conditioners and heat pumps 
left over in various sizes and 
efficiencies. When they are gone 
this remarkable offer ends. First 
come, first served! 

We will show you the real world 
price of the air conditioner or 
heat pump that fits your home. 
Then we will show you the 
substantial savings now. And it 
will include all labor, installation 
materials, and a full parts and 
labor warranty on your new 
system. Nothing is left out. 


THE CONCEPT IS SIMPLE 

By letting you win big now, I will 
win at the end of the year. 

I’m betting that if I make you an 
offer that is “irresistable” (at 
least it should be if your furnace 
or air conditioner is over ten 
years old) I will accomplish 
three things: 

1. Get rid of my leftover air 
conditioning inventory. 

2. Help cover my rent, utilities, 
insurance and taxes in the slow 
months. 

3. Pay my professional staff of 15 
technicians to work instead of 
paying them to sit home. 

If I can accomplish these three 
objectives, I will minimize my 
losses, and the rest of the year 
can be a winner. 

NO OBLIGATION 

Even after I completely explain 
the installation there is 
absolutely no obligation. If you 
decide you don’t want to take 
advantage of this spectacular 
savings-that’s OK. I will give you 
a surprise gift worth $50.00 
because you are kind enough to 
read this ad and give me a 
chance to solve my problem. I 
want you to think well of Allen’s 
Air Conditioning & Heating 
even if you don’t buy. 

YOU CAN BUY WITH NO CASH 
You don’t even have to pay me 
right away. I have set up terrific 
financing with competitive rates. 
Consider this, if you decide to 
make monthly investments 
instead of paying cash, the 
amount of your investment 
might be more than offset by the 
savings on your utility bills. It’s 
like “having your cake and 
eating it too”. 


IRONCLAD GUARANTEE 

I’m so confident that you will 
save at least 20% on your 
cooling and heating bills (I’m 
projecting more like 30% to 
50%) that I will pay you Double 
the Difference for one year if 
you don’t. 

There is no way you can lose. 
Your lower utility bills will 
really make a big difference on 
your investment. And I will 
even double your savings if you 
save less than 20%. If these 
premium systems were not 
among the best on the market, I 
couldn’t afford to make such a 
promise. 

WHYTHIS OFFER CANT LAST 
You must act before May 31st! 

Here’s why. 

1.1 only have a limited number 
of matched systems left over. 
When all of the in-stock air 
conditioners and heat pumps 
are sold, that’s it. First come, 
first served! 

2. If I have any of the leftover 
systems on May 31st (although 
I doubt that I will) this offer 
still ends. 

My business always starts 
improving in June and I can sell 
my leftover air conditioners and 
heat pumps this coming 
summer and still come out OK. 
Give Allen’s Air Conditioning 
& Heating a call now at 358- 
3333 and set an appointment 
for your no obligation survey. 
Thank you for reading this 
rather long ad. I hope you will 
profit greatly because of it. 

Warmly, 

David E. Allen 



AIR CONDITIONING - HEATING 
& DUCT CLEANING 


769-2727 • 358-3333 • 369-7700 

^2967 www.allensairconditioning.com ©csg 

Paid Advertisement 


Mexico forest faces fire, 
armed men, squatters 


By MARK STEVENSON 

The Associated Press 

MEXICO CITY - 

Mexico’s largest big-city 
forest park has been dev¬ 
astated by a fire that offi¬ 
cials say was set by 
squatters seeking to take 
over land and worsened 
by the presence of 
armed gangs trying to 
scare off firefighters. 

The fire at the Bosque 
de la Primavera, “Eorest 
of Springtime,” on the 
edge of the western city 
of Guadalajara, has con¬ 
sumed 18,500 acres, , or 
about one-quarter of the 
preserve, officials said 
Wednesday. 

The fire, which began 
over the weekend, has 
sent plumes of smoke 
and ash into Mexico’s 
second-largest city, forc¬ 
ing dozens of schools to 
close. It is the latest chap¬ 
ter in a battle in Mexico 


to save public forests 
from development, log¬ 
ging, pollution and fires 
fueled by droughts. 

“It was started in a 
clandestine dump near a 
squatters’ camp where, 
every year, the inhabi¬ 
tants start fires, clearly 
deliberately, to take over 
park land,” said Alvaro 
Garcia Chavez, the chief 
firefighting official for 
Jalisco state. 

Hernando Rodolfo 
Guerrero, the federal at¬ 
torney general for envi¬ 
ronmental protection, 
said Tuesday there was 
evidence the fire was in¬ 
tentionally set and prom¬ 
ised to bring those re¬ 
sponsible to justice. 

Garcia Chavez said 
authorities had to extin¬ 
guish 14 fires in the last 
year in the same area. 

He said the fire was 
85 percent to 90 percent 
controlled late Wednes¬ 


day, and expressed hope 
it could be fully con¬ 
tained by today. 

This weekend’s blaze 
got out of control be¬ 
cause of unusually dry 
conditions and an accu¬ 
mulation of leaves and 
branches. Environment 
Secretary Juan Elvira 
Quesada said, but added 
that the blaze “did not 
follow the natural pat¬ 
tern of a forest fire.” 

Elvira Quesada said 
real estate developers 
have been trying to build 
on the edges of the park 
and he pledged to try to 
prevent any new con¬ 
struction permits or zon¬ 
ing changes for proper¬ 
ties within the park. 

Garcia Chavez said 
two firefighting teams 
encountered armed 
gangs in the woods over 
the weekend and were 
forced to temporarily 
withdraw. 


A Revolution in Zero Turns 

The Steering Wheel 



Test drive the New Cub 
Cadet Zero Turn Mower 

Z-Force 48S 

Twin Cyl Kohler 
48” Fabricated Deck 
Full Zero Turn response 
with a Steering Wheel 


SALES. INC. 


SALES • PARTS • SERVICE 



203 Peterson Drive, Elizabethtown, KY 42701 • 270-765-2500 


Celebrating 







E-SCRAP RECYCLING EVENT 


APRIL 28, 2012 
8:00 A.M. TO 2:00 P.M. 


AGO Automotive Americas 
1 Auto Glass Drive 

(Leitchfield Road, past Central Hardin High School) 

Hardin County Residents 

(I.D. Required) NO BUSINESSES 

Sponsored by: 


AGC ASAHI GLASS 
AGC Automotive Americas 

Metals a 

vofuy oi Q my uf 





Hardin Coun^ Government 

aKiPtiono' 


02trg 


Computers - desktops, 
laptops, main frames, tablets, 
and M components 

Circuit Boards 
Printers - all types 
Scanners and Copiers 
FAX Machines 
Monitors (CRT and LCD) 
Networking Equipment 
Servers 

Docking Stations 

A/C and D/C Adapters 

RAM/Memory 

Routers/Hubs 

Medical Equipment (non- 

hazardous) 

Power Tools 


Televisions 

Audio and Video Equipment 

Flat Panel Displays 

TV Cable Boxes, Wires, Cords 

Telephones - (LAN line and cell) 

Telecommunications Equipment 

Power Supplies 

Satellite Receivers 

Surge Protectors 

Contained Powder Toner 

Shredders 

Projectors 

Batteries - all types 

UPS Battery Back-ups 

Light Fixtures 

Media (tapes, discs) 

Light Bulbs - all types 


NO appliances such as stoves or refrigerators will be accepted 
































A8 


THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


NEWS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 



Dad who wants to be in kids’ 
loop must try a little harder 


Dear Abby: “Modern 
Dad in Roswell, Ga.” 
(Feb. 26) was put off in¬ 
vitations to his young 
daughters are sent to his 
ex-wife’s home rather 
than to both his and the 
ex-wife’s. He assumes 
the sender is “sexist” and 
suggests the solution for 
children with two house¬ 
holds is to be sent two 
invitations. 

As a parent who in¬ 
vites children to my 
home or to a party, I 
don’t feel I should be re¬ 
sponsible for their par¬ 
ents’ communication dif¬ 
ficulty. Often I am not 
even aware a child has 
two households. The invi¬ 
tation simply goes home 
with the child to wherev¬ 
er he or she is that day. 

Personally, I think 
“Modern Dad” is overly 
sensitive. He needs to re¬ 
alize no one is deliber¬ 
ately snubbing him or 
making assumptions 
about parental roles. 
They are just inviting his 
kids to things, for which 
he should be grateful. 

Did he share his address 
with the inviter? Does he 
make his preference 
clear to parents when 
meeting them? 

I believe it’s presump¬ 
tuous to expect someone 
to send two invitations to 
the same child. And I 
agree with you, Abby, 
that “Dad” needs to im¬ 
prove communication 
with his ex-wife so he no 
longer feels he is being 
prevented from being an 
“active parent.” — Regu¬ 
lar Mom in Tennessee 

■ Dear Regular 
Mom: A majority of 
readers agreed that more 
sharing of information 


JEANNIE 
PHILLIPS V 1 


between the girls’ moth¬ 
er and “Dad” will solve 
his problem. Other par¬ 
ents’ comments: 

Dear Abby: Friends, 
acquaintances and profes¬ 
sionals should not have to 
go out of their way to 
cover all the bases. Given 
the number of divorced, 
remarried and otherwise 
situated families, more 
than a single contact 
point becomes burden¬ 
some for those trying to 
complete business or is¬ 
sue simple invitations. - 
Agreeing with Abby in 
Sevema Park, Md. 

Dear Abby: I know 
from organizing school 
activities often only one 
parent supplies an email 
address to the school, 
and it’s usually the mom. 
If “Modern Dad’s” ex- 
wife would cooperate by 
sending him a list of 
email addresses of those 
most likely to issue in¬ 
vites, he could send out a 
polite message sharing 
his contact information 
with those other parents. 
Also, if he reaches out to 
help arrange carpools or 
organize social outings - 
which usually is a 
“mom” job - he’ll be¬ 
come an added member 
of “the group.” - Non- 
Sexist Mom in Illinois 

Dear Abby is written by 
Abigail Van Buren, also 
known as Jeanne Phillips, 
and was founded by her 
mother, Pauline Phillips. 

Write Dear Abby at 
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. 
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 
90069. Universal Press 
Syndicate. 


‘TWEEN 12 &20 


‘Because I said so’debate 


Dr. Wallace: You stat¬ 
ed parents should not tell 
a teen “because I said so” 
when they’re asking why 
a request has been de¬ 
nied. I disagree. Parents 
are the boss and in con¬ 
trol, and when I tell my 
two kids “because I said 
so,” that’s all there is to it. 
If they utter one word af¬ 
ter they have been told 
this, they get put on re¬ 
striction for a week. Be¬ 
lieve me when I tell you 
“because I said so” is ef¬ 
fective. Just ask my kids. 

- Mother, Tampa, Fla. 

■ Mother: I believe 
fully parents are the boss 
and need to be in control 
of their children. But I 
also know there are many 
ways to be an effective 
parent. While the “be¬ 
cause I said so” philoso¬ 
phy apparently works 
with your children, at 
least on the immediate 
level of exerting your will 
in specific circumstances, 
the children miss the ben¬ 
efit of your reasoning and 
thus, a chance to learn. It 
seems like a method of 
last resort, when you’re 
too tired or impatient to 
explain yourself further. 

Let’s say your daugh¬ 
ter asks permission to go 
to the mall with several 
friends and you tell her 
no. She asks, “Why not?” 
and you reply, “Because I 
said so.” 

Your daughter’s friend 
Margo asks her mother 
the same question and is 
told no. When she asks 
why, her mother says she 
doesn’t think the mall is a 
good place to hang out 
because it isn’t fair to the 
shops in the mall to have 
a bunch of teens milling 
around with very little 
money to spend. 

In both cases, the teen 
is not permitted to go to 
the mall, but I feel Margo 
can deal with the disap¬ 
pointment better than 
your daughter. She real¬ 
izes her mother respects 
her enough to explain 


^ t ROBERT 
1 , WALLACE 

her reasoning and knows 
the decision is not simply 
an arbitrary one. 

CONFUCniS WAS A WISE 
MAN. Dr. Wallace: I really 
liked this boy named 
Ken, and we had been 
going steady for two 
months. We had lots of 
fun and got along really 
well. He was lovey- 
dovey, but I wouldn’t 
have sex with him be¬ 
cause I am still a virgin. 
Then one day, he just 
suddenly dumped me be¬ 
cause I wouldn’t give in 
and have sex with him. 

I realize he couldn’t 
have really cared for me 
if he only wanted sex, but 
it hurts my feelings to see 
him walking around hand 
in hand with another girl. 

Sometimes I feel I 
made a mistake letting 
him go, but other times, I 
tell myself I still have my 
self-respect and I’m glad I 
chose to remain a virgin. 

I know you will agree 
with me, and I want to 
thank you for advising 
young girls they need to 
think twice about “giving 
in” to a guy who proba¬ 
bly does not have their 
best interests at heart. — 
Nameless, Dallas, Texas 
■ Nameless: Your let¬ 
ter reminds me of the sto¬ 
ry about two tears float¬ 
ing down a river side by 
side. The first tear said to 
the second tear, “I’m the 
tear of the woman who 
lost her man.” The sec¬ 
ond tear replied, “I’m the 
tear of the woman who 
found him.” 

I think these were 
words of wisdom from 
Confucius. If you ponder 
his words, they will com¬ 
fort you. 

Email Dr. Robert Wallace at 
rwallace @galesburg.net 
Distributed by Creators 
Syndicate Inc. 


Neighbors 


Radcliff Woman’s 
Club members 
celebrate Greek 
culture 

Greek culture was cel¬ 
ebrated at the April 9 
meeting of the Radcliff 
Woman’s Club. Refresh¬ 
ments consisted of the 
Mediterranean diet, fruit, 
vegetables and heart- 
healthy sandwiches. 

The program was how 
to prepare baklava, 
Greece’s most famous 
dessert. International 
chairwoman Anne Au¬ 
brey, chef Maria Bell, 
who with the assistance 
of exchange student Yu- 
cheng Zhan, and occa¬ 
sionally club members 
pitching in, demonstrated 
the steps in making 
baklava. 

While preparing the 
baklava. Bell spoke about 
the Pacific International 
Exchange program Zhan 
represents. She men¬ 
tioned it was a slight ad¬ 
justment for him to live in 
the United States with a 
population of 300 million 
and China with a popula¬ 
tion of 1.3 billion. 

The business portion 
of the meeting was con¬ 
ducted while members 
enjoyed the baklava. 
Barbara Proffitt thanked 



Above, members observe 
while Chef Maria Beii 
prepares the bakiava. 

Right, door prizes were won 
by Arveeda Gordon, ieft, 
and Pat Nucciteiii. 


members for their sup¬ 
port in the Realtors lun¬ 
cheon. Sheila Enyart 
gave an update on the 
outdoor furniture project 
for the library. Julie Al¬ 
dridge of CLP 99 asked 
for help in serving at its 
fundraising luncheon. 
Members agreed to bake 
cookies for the May 19 
Hooray for Heroes event. 



Miller speaks to Stitchers Quilt Guild members 


The Stitchers Quilt 
Guild had Bonita Hayes 
Miller, an agent with 
Kentucky Farm Bureau 
Insurance, as guest spea¬ 
ker at the March meet¬ 
ing. Members learned 
everything they needed 
to know about insuring 
their quilts. Many quilts 
were shown during 
show and tell. 

Stitchers meetings 
are from 6:30 to 9 p.m. 
the last Wednesday of 
the month at the Hardin 
County Extension Ser¬ 
vice office. 




Above, Betty Percifield shows one of her 
finished quiits. Left, Gioria Ashton with a quiit 
she made in a workshop whiie wintering in 
Arizona. 


POHED FEW GARDEN CLUB MEMBERS MEET 

The Potted Few Garden Ciub met in Aprii at the home of Renate 
Gosser with Linda Novak as co-hostess. The program was 
“Herbs: Spice of the Worid” and presented by Amy Aidenderfer 
from the UK Cooperative Extension Office in Eiizabethtown. She 
shared much information about how to raise, harvest, dry, store 
and cook with herbs. She aiso encouraged the members to 
attend the Master Piant Fair from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 12 at 
the Extension office at 201 Peterson Drive in Eiizabethtown. 
Ciub members were invited to journey after the meeting to 
Saunders Springs for the dedication of a pine tree in memory of 
deceased member Nancy Howeii. The May 16 Potted Few 
meeting is a fieid trip to Cathedrai Gardens, 1314 Hebron 
Church Road, Henryviiie, ind. After the tour, members wiii enjoy 
box iunches prepared by hostesses Bonnie Gunter and Bonnie 
Lush. To attend, make a reservation with ciub president 
Anneiiese Knoii, 352-0484. 





CUB SCOUTS HAVE 
RAINGUnER REGAHA 

Rineyviiie Pack 600 heid it’s annuai 
Raingutter Regatta. Pictured with 
Cubmaster Shawn Saitmarsh are, 
front row, Steven Barnes, Kase 
VanBiijenburgh, Tyier Meyer; back 
row, Wiii Waiters, Noah Thomas, 
Seth Saitmarsh and Ethan Jones. 



GETTiNG iT TO US 

■ Neighbors submissions should be typed or 
legible. The information should be clear and 
concise. Include a name and daytime phone 
number in case of questions. We reserve the 
right to edit. 

■ Submissions and photos can be emailed 
to: 

celebrations@thenewsenterprise.com — 
engagements, births, birthdays, anniver¬ 
saries and five generations, 
or 

clubs@thenewsenterprise.com — All club 
news, including calendar listings for club 


activities, military news, and all other general 
news submissions. 

■ If email is not available, fax the item(s) to 
769-6965, drop them off or mail to 408 W. 
Dixie Ave., Elizabethtown, KY 42701. Office 
hours are from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday 
through Friday. There is an after-hours drop box. 

WHAT ABOUT PHOTOS? 

■ Photos sent by email should be in .jpg for¬ 
mat. Original black and white or color prints 
are accepted. 

■ To have photos returned, include a self- 
addressed stamped envelope; otherwise, the 


photo can be picked up at the front desk up 
to one month following publication. 

■ Be sure to identify the people in the 
photo. 

■ The News-Enterprise cannot guarantee all 
photos will be published. 

WHAT ARE THE DEADLINES? 

Neighbors runs daily and items will publish 
first-come, first-serve on a space-available 
basis. Celebrations get first priority to pub¬ 
lish on schedule. 

QUESTIONS? Call 505-1751 






























































A9 


THE News-Enterprise 



BUSINESS & AGRICULTURE 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


Fed forecast: More growth, 
lower unemployment 


Senate nears 
passage of 
bill to slow 
postal cuts 

By HOPE YEN 

The Associated Press 

WASHINGTON - A 

Senate bill aimed at saving 
the U.S. Postal Service would 
make it harder to close thou¬ 
sands of low-revenue post of¬ 
fices and end Saturday mail 
delivery - steps the strug¬ 
gling agency says are needed 
to reduce billions in debt and 
become profitable again. 

The measure takes steps to 
help the mail agency avert 
bankruptcy as early as this 
fall, giving it a cash infusion 
of $11 billion to pay off debt 
and reduce costs by offering 
retirement incentives to 
100,000 employees. But the 
bill sidesteps most controver¬ 
sial decisions on postal clos¬ 
ings, buying time for law¬ 
makers who would rather 
avoid the wrath of con¬ 
stituencies in an election 
year. 

The Senate was scheduled 
to vote as early as Wednes¬ 
day on a final bill, after first 
considering amendments 
that in part could restrict the 
Postal Service from further 
cuts to first-class mail deliv¬ 
ery. On Tuesday, senators 
agreed to tack on amend¬ 
ments that would bar the 
shuttering of rural post offices 
for a year, give afflicted com¬ 
munities new avenues of ap¬ 
peal and prevent any closings 
before the November elec¬ 
tions. 

The final bill was expect¬ 
ed to pass the Senate but 
faces an uncertain future. 
The House has yet to begin 
consideration of a different 
version of a postal bill, which 
seeks to create a national 
commission that would make 
major decisions on postal 
cuts and make it easier to 
eliminate Saturday delivery. 
The commission, which 
would have authority to do 
away with no-layoff clauses 
in postal employee contracts, 
is fiercely opposed by postal 
unions. 

Postmaster General Pat¬ 
rick Donahoe criticized the 
Senate bill as a short-term an¬ 
swer and called the Postal 
Service’s business model 
"broken.” 


By MARTIN CRUTSINGER 

AP Economics Writer 

WASHINGTON - The Fed¬ 
eral Reserve has boosted its out¬ 
look for U.S. economic growth this 
year and is slightly more optimistic 
about the unemployment rate, re¬ 
flecting improvements in recent 
months. 

In an updated forecast Wed¬ 
nesday, the Fed predicted the econ¬ 
omy will grow between 2.4 percent 
and 2.9 percent in 2012. That com¬ 
pares favorably with its forecast in 
January, when it estimated growth 
this year between 2.2 percent and 
2.7 percent. 

The Fed estimates that unem¬ 
ployment, now at a three-year low 
of 8.2 percent, will be between 7.8 
percent and 8 percent at year’s end. 
That compares with its forecast in 
January, when it estimated an un¬ 
employment rate as high as 8.5 per¬ 
cent at the end of 2012. 

The Fed has slightly increased its 
estimate for inflation by year’s end: 
between 1.9 percent and 2 percent. 
In January, it predicted inflation in 
a lower range: 1.4 percent to 1.8 
percent. 

Still, the higher inflation forecast 
is lower than the Fed’s official 2 


Orders for durable 
goods plunge 

Orders for long-lasting factory 
goods fell by the largest amount in 
three years last month, mostly be¬ 
cause demand for commercial air¬ 
craft plummeted. But companies 
also ordered less machinery and 
other equipment, a sign manufac¬ 
turing output may slow. — AP 

percent target for inflation. And in 
its statement, the Fed said it expect¬ 
ed higher oil and gasoline prices 
this year to result in only a tempo¬ 
rary boost in inflation. 

In January, the Fed for the first 
time included forecasts for where 
its officials saw its key policy lever, 
the federal funds rate, headed. 

In the new forecast, 11 Fed offi¬ 
cials expect the first interest rate 
hike will not occur until 2014 or lat¬ 
er, the same number who said so in 
January. But no official is looking 
for the first rate hike to occur as late 
as 2016; in January, two Fed offi¬ 
cials had put the first rate hike that 
far out. 

The number of Fed officials who 
expect a rate increase to occur this 
year remained the same at three. 


UNDER CONSTRUCTION 



BEN SHEROAN/The News-Enterprise 


Minit Mart is building a new convenience store of approxi¬ 
mately 5,000-square feet at 
South Dixie Boulevard and Cen¬ 
tennial Drive in Radciiff. Jerry 
Goff, the company's director of 
operations, said the store shouid 
open in June with a Godfather's 
Pizza and O’Deiis breakfast and 
sandwiches inside. Total con¬ 
struction is expected to cost 
$1.2 miliion, Goff said. It will be 
the Bowling Green-based 
company's 32nd location and second in Hardin County. Marian 
Tarter Co. of Brownsvilie is handling construction. 



Under Construction 
highlights building projects 
around the area. 


Pay for debt, not credit repair 


Dear Debt Adviser: I have 
been working diligently to repair 
my credit. I think I am doing all 
the right things, but it just doesn’t 
seem to be having an impact. 

I have opened two major credit 
cards with a secured line of credit 
because my score was so low. One 
card has a credit limit of $350 and 
the other $1,250.1 keep them al¬ 
most paid off. Furthermore, I have 
been enrolled in a credit repair 
program for about seven months. 
I’ve seen many things removed 
from my account. However, they 
seem to reappear as a different ac¬ 
count with a different collection 
agency. 

If the account shows that the 
debt was charged off, but pur¬ 
chased by another lender, whom 
should I pay: the original creditor 
or the collection company? This 
whole process is very difficult. My 
credit repair company tells me not 
to pay anything off. I just want to 
repair my credit the right way. 
Please help! - Martha 

■ Dear Martha: I have no 
doubt you have been diligent. 
Unfortunately, you have taken a 
wrong turn and, as we say in New 
England, you can’t get there from 
here. 

I don’t recommend using credit 
repair companies or debt settle¬ 
ment companies. Both are expen¬ 
sive, offer little and can get you in 
a mess of trouble. I suggest you 
check the Federal Trade Com¬ 
mission’s website to learn more 
about your rights and protections 



STEVE 

BUCCI 


when dealing with a credit repair 
company. The Credit Repair 
Organizations Act was passed 
specifically to protect the public 
from unfair or deceptive advertis¬ 
ing and business practices by 
credit repair organizations. 

The money you’re spending for 
credit repair would be better used 
to pay off some of your old debt. 
Many services provided by the 
credit repair company are things 
you could have done yourself for 
free. 

For example, the items you 
have seen disappear and then 
reappear on credit reports were 
most likely removed because the 
credit repair company disputed 
the item with the credit bureaus. 
You can file a dispute with the 
credit bureaus simply and for no 
charge. Once an item is disputed, 
the company reporting the item 
must provide proof that the debt 
is valid and belongs to the person 
on whose report it appears. Once 
they provide the data, the item 
reappears on your report. If a col¬ 
lector doesn’t have the proper 
debt documentation, the credit 
bureau is required to remove the 
item permanently. 


Repairing damaged credit does 
not happen quickly. If you have 
been late with payments, had ac¬ 
counts charged off, had a judg¬ 
ment issued or filed for bankrupt¬ 
cy, the stain will show up on your 
credit report for seven to 10 years, 
depending on the issue. But the 
good news is most people who 
view your credit report will give 
much more weight to how you 
have managed your credit in the 
last two years. So the positive in¬ 
formation you are adding with 
your new credit accounts will help 
improve your credit over time. As 
long as you pay all your current 
accounts on time and as agreed, 
your credit will slowly improve. 

To pay your charged-off ac¬ 
counts, contact the collector who 
reports the debt as owed. Request 
verification of the debt and then 
work out a payment plan. 

Paying your outstanding debts 
accomplishes several things: 

■ You have met your obliga¬ 
tion, and the collection process 
will cease. 

■ Anyone reviewing your cred¬ 
it report - future lenders, employ¬ 
ers, landlords and insurers - will 
want to see that you eventually 
paid what you owed, even if it 
was late. 

■ You will know you did the 
right thing. 

Steve Bucci is the author of “Credit 
Management Kit for Dummies.” Email 
debtadviser@bankrate.com. Distributed 

by Scripps Howard News Service. 



STARTUPS 

Grants available 
for veterans 

Veterans who live in 
Kentucky and want to start 
a business that would hire 
other veterans are invited 
to apply for one of five en¬ 
trepreneurship grants fund¬ 
ed by the Kentucky De¬ 
partment of Veterans Af¬ 
fairs Trust Fund. 

The program consists of 
the Kauffman Fasttrac 
training course, which 


meets one night a week for 
10 weeks, 12 once-a-month 
meetings with a business 
mentor and up to $2,500 in 
business-related reimburse¬ 
ments. 

More information and 
applications for the Vet¬ 
eran’s Business Startup Pro¬ 
gram are available at busi¬ 
ness.louisville.edu/vetstart 

The deadline to apply is 
midnight June 29. Tech¬ 
nology related and draft 
business plans are pre¬ 
ferred. 


Staff report 


UQIQSQIP WEDNESDAY 

APPLE’S BLOWOUT QUARTER PROPELS NASDAQ TO BIG GAIN.. 

The Nasdaq composite index shot 2 percent higher Wed¬ 
nesday, powered by a surge in Apple. The iPhone maker’s 
stock climbed $50 after the company once again blew past 
Wall Street’s profit forecasts. 

With Apple’s help, the technology-focused Nasdaq post¬ 
ed its best day this year. 

Apple, the biggest component of the index by far, 
climbed 8.9 percent after reporting that its earnings dou¬ 
bled in the first three months of the year. The company 
sold 35 million iPhones, twice as many as in the same quar¬ 
ter a year ago. 


Local stocks 

How stocks of local and statewide interest fared Wednesday as compiled by 
The Wright Legacy Group. 


Company Price 

Cardinal Health (CAH) 41.61 

Churchill Downs (CHDN) 58.57 

Corning Inc. (GLW) 14.30 

Dow Chemical (DOW) 36.08 

Rrst FncI Svcs Corp. (FFKY) 3.57 

Ford Motor Co. (F) 11.73 

General Electric (GE) 19.45 

Humana Inc. (HUM) 88.73 

Lexmark (LXK) 29.73 

Papa John’s (PZZA) 39.98 

PNC Fin. Svcs (PNC) 66.26 

United Parcel Service (UPS) 79.65 

Verizon Comms (VZ) 39.48 

Wal-Mart Stores (WMT) 57.36 

Yum! Brands (YUM) 72.75 


Change 

Volume 

52wkL-H 

+0.37 

1,381,866 

37.53-47.06 

-0.93 

108,029 

36.67-60.00 

+0.95 

38,079,760 

11.51-22.05 

+1.45 

16,304,130 

20.61-42.23 

+0.07 

4,124 

1.00-5.17 

+0.34 

45,122,889 

9.05-15.87 

-0.09 

48,024,063 

14.02-21.00 

-0.11 

1,351,862 

65.20-96.46 

-0.71 

2,621,275 

25.87-38.34 

+0.46 

202,642 

26.95-40.82 

+0.69 

3,541,646 

42.70-66.27 

+0.19 

3,316,267 

60.74-81.79 

-0.02 

12,561,866 

32.28-40.48 

-0.41 

27,976,321 

48.31-62.63 

+0.51 

4,210,946 

47.15-74.44 


A DAY ON WALL STREET 


April 25 2012 13.500 

Dow Jones 

industrials _ 

+S9.16 a/ 11-500 

13.090 72 , j , , 10,500 

W D J F M A 


Pet. change from previoLis: -i-0.69% High 13,105.70 Low 12,993.60 
April 25, 2012 

Nasdaq 
composite 

+68.03 
3,029.63 

Pet. change from 

April 25, 2012 1.S00 

Standard & 

Poors 500 

-1-18.72 

T390.69 r j 1 1 1 1.100 

N D J F M A 

Pet change from previous: +1.36% High 1,391.37 Low 1,372 11 




N D J F M 
previous: +2.30% High 3,031.41 


Low 3,010.57 


AP 


[ 2m OPINIONS ARE PRICELESS, GET ONE!] 



The Wricht 
Legacy Group, llc 

A Registered Investment Advisory Firm 


1104 Julianna Court, Elizabethtown, KY 

270 - 723-0333 

www.wrightlegacygroup.com 



Opening bids for Thursday, April 26, by elevators/mills to farmers: 



U.S. No. 2 

U.S. No. 2 

U.S. No. 1 

U.S. No. 2 


Yellow 

White 

Yeiiow 

Soft Red 


Corn 

Corn 

Soybeans 

Winter 

Wheat 

Trend: 

Down 5-8 

Down 7 

Up 12-13 

Down 8 

Louisville 

6.31 


14.75 

6.22 

Pennyrile 

6.43 

7.71 

14.74 

6.27 




(Milling Quality) 

6.16 

Purchase 

6.36 


14.79 


Central Bluegrass 
Cumberland Lake 

5.73-6.24 


14.17-14.53 

5.77 

Mammoth Cave 

6.33-6.46 


14.64-14.68 

5.96-6.17 

Lincoln Trail 

6.10-6.26 


14.40 



U.S. No. 2 

U.S. No. 2 




Milo 

Feed 




Extra Heavy Barley 



Trend: 

No bid 

Unchanged 



Mammoth Cave 


4.00 



Opening contract prices for new crop delivery: 




U.S. No. 2 

U.S. No. 1 

U.S. No. 2 Soft 



Yellow 

Yeiiow 

Red Winter 



Corn 

Soybeans 

Wheat 


Louisville 

5.05 

13.44 

6.27 


Pennyrile 

5.26 

13.51 

6.17 



(Milling Quality) 

6.15 


Purchase 

5.29 

13.50 

6.30 


Central Bluegrass 

5.00-5.13 

13.36 

5.79-5.92 


Mammoth Cave 

5.17-5.23 

13.36-13.41 

5.91-5.97 



U.S. No 2 U.S. No 2 
White Corn Feed Barley 

Pennyrile 5.83 

Mammoth Cave 


Source: USDA-Kentucky Department of Agriculture Market News, Louisville 



John Deere 


LIMESTONE FARM LAWN 
WORKSITE 

801 NEW GLENDALE ROAD 
ELIZABETHTOWN, KY. 42702-1145 

(270) 769-2341 • (888) 769-2341 































































Pulsew- 


The News-Entcrprise 

THURSDAY, APRtL !012 


Misfit pirates take the big screen 




‘The Pirates! 
Band of Misfits’ 


The pirates, left to rights Pirate with Gout, Surptisingiy Curvaceous Pirate, Aihlne Pirate, Pirate Who Ukes Kittens and Sunsets, 
Pirate w\th Prosthetics and Pirate with Accerdien, in 'The Pirates! Band of fl/fisflts." Pirate Captain. 


Bated PG for mild action, rude 
humor and some language 
Beiease date: April 27 
Runtime: 38 minutes 


CREATIVE, BUT MEDIOCRE 


By BECCA OWSLEY 

bowKlcy^ihcniiwscntcipriso.foiii 

la “The Pirates! Band of Misfits,” a 
shipload of crazy pirates are on a mission 
for their captain, aptly named Pirate 
Captain, to win the Pirate of the Year 
Award, Along the way they have a hard 
time acquiring enough treasure for him to 
win until they meet a conniving scientist, 
Charles Darwin, who tricks them into 
thinking they will win treasuie. 

Think “The Office” on the high seas and 
you might have a good idea of this crew. 

While many of the backgrounds for the 
film are computer generated, for the most 
part the visuals in this movie are clayma* 
tion. Claymation uses stop motion ani^ 
motion, meaning characters and other ele¬ 
ments are made of clay and moved, ever so 
slightly, frame by frame, to give the illusion 
of animation when shown on screen ^ 

Needless to say^ if s rarely used in ani^ 
mation but is a creative-looking process. 

The movie is directed bv Peter fjord, 
who also brought the clay characters of 
“Chicken Run” and die duo Wallace and 
Gromit to life. 

The film has a few intellectual jokes hid¬ 
den in the dialogue. There are references to 
people iuid events of Victorian limes that 
will pull in historical humor for adults and 
kids might not know why weVe laughing. 

There also are a couple things parents 
might w^ant to blow about before viewing 
the film. There are moments of bad lan¬ 
guage. The language flies by quickly^ but if 
that's something you want your bds to 
avoid, you should blow it's in tliere. 

The characters also are pirates, so they 


do pirate things like light, drink and plun¬ 
der. 

The best part about the him i.s the voice¬ 
acting, An animated film might be the only 
way Hugh Grant (“Did You Heai- About 
the Motgaj^s?”) w^ill ever be able to pull off 
being a pirate as he voices Pirate Captain- 

His number two, The Pii ate with a Scarf, 
is voiced by Martin Freeman who appears 
as Watson on BBC's ''Sherlock” and soon 
will appeal' as Bilbo Baggins in “The Hob¬ 
bit: An Unexpected Journey.” 

The scheming scientist Charles Darwin 
is voiced by the tenth Doctor in BBC^s 
“Doctor Who,” David Tennant. 

All the voice actors suited their charac¬ 
ters, Other voices include Imelda Staunton 
(“Hany Potter and the Deallily Hallows 
Pari 1”), Jeremy Piven (TV's "^Entourage”), 
Salma Hayek (“Pusa in Boots”), Brian 


Blessed (“A te xander "), 

Brendan Glecson ("Harry 
Potter and the Deathly HaJlow's 
Part 1”) and “Today" show weath¬ 
erman A1 Roker. 

The names of the pirates 
also aie entertaining and add to 
the misfil tide. It's as if all the pi¬ 
rate names had mn out and 
this crew got what was left. 

Pilate with Gout, The 
Surprisingly Curvaceous 
Pii-ate and The Pirate 
WTio likes Sunsets and 
Kittens are just a few 
examples. 

Even with tal¬ 
ented voices and 
artistry in the 
animation, tlie 
film is lacking. 

It is fiinny in 
parts and 
seemed to 
hold the atten¬ 
tion of children in 
a recent screening. 

It's just not spectacular 
There isn’t another ani¬ 
mated film in theaters 
until “Madagascar 3” and 
“Brave" in June, 

It doeSj however, have 
smashing soundtrack- 


Becca can fac reached 

505-1741, For mnvSe reviews visit her 
reporter page on Facebook at 
wwwiacebookicom/pages/ Becca 

owsx^ymnmmh 


Faith told through fiction 


ronically, sometimes faith and a 
love of science fiction can go 
hand and hand. 

C.S. Lewis and J,RR. Tol¬ 
kien, two giants of literature 
cuid faith, express Iheir faith well in 
the form of fiction. 

Ijewis is a noted apologist for the 
Christian faith and author of one of 
the most loved fantasy book series 
of all time, “The Chionicles of Nar¬ 
nia.” The series has fans outside of 
Christianity but Ije\vis' faith is evi¬ 
dent as Aslan the lion takes on the 
sin of Edward by dying in his place 
to spare liim, coming to life again 
because the e\il of the queen can¬ 
not defeat him. 

J,R.R. Tolkien ha^ another widely 
read series now’ famous in film, 

“The Lord of the Ring's.” Tolben 
and l..ov\is were friends and while 
Tolkien^s Christian themes are not 
as obvious as he critiqued Lewis' to 
be, ffiey are still there. His letters 
and other writings explain how his 
faith is embedded into the series. 

The tw'o authors began this jour¬ 
ney of writing epic adventoes in 
discussions of what they liked to 
read, fairv' stories a£ they called 
them. They felt a void in the litera¬ 
ture of their time and decided to 
take it upon themselves to write 
something they'd like to read. 

Then faith kicked in* They were 
both enthralled with the stories in 
the Bible, which they both held to 
be tme and the core of their lives, 
lliey wanted to create modern 
imaginative stories that had Chris¬ 


tian themes embed¬ 
ded in them that 
may spark an interest 
in the Bible for 
someone. 

What they created 
were two of the most 
imaginative and cre- 
__p-- ative works of our 
DtlibA time* Many who at- 
OWSLEY tend Comic Con 

dressed as hotjbils 
might miss the author's point. But 
readers like me, who see all the 
themes ajtd allegories to faith, get 
excited. 

I'he sci-fi genre explores the 
height of imagination. 1 believe if 
God created those crazy fish on the 
bottom of the ocean that light up in 
funky colors, he has an amazing 
and perfect imagination. 

Admittedly, much of the realm of 
science fiction drifts away from 
faitli. But the crazy thing is even 
some of the other sci-li works are all 
seeking some sort of higher power 
or truth. Often they find these 
things in something alien or a mysti¬ 
cal force, but they aie always left 
searching. 

In writing.s by Christians in this 
genre, the search ends Avith God 
and no fuilher searching is neces¬ 
sary, They are stories of sacrifice, 
conviction and triumph. 

If you’ve read many of my 
columns you may have already 
guessed Tm a Christian - a Bible- 
believingj churcli-goiiig, theolog)'- 
loving Christian* 


Now, as a follower ofjesus, 1 am 
also a major fan of die science fic¬ 
tion and Fantasy genre. 

Fm a fan of “Star Wars,” LOTR, 
comic book movies and much of 
the sc' fi genre. In a strange way, 
the creative adventure exploring 
a large and \a.st universe beyond 
my ell always points me back to 
God Ju t like with Lewis and 
Tolben the creative journey gives 
me a fanciful allegoiy pointing to¬ 
ward the truth of God. 

While writing a bit of Christian 
sci-fi on the side, 1 will never pro¬ 
fess to be as good as the genius of 
Lewis and Tolkien, hut I understand 
how dieii writings profess and 
strengthen their faith. Sometime,'! 
their works even bring me to tears. 

Soj Tni a nerd. And as a nerd I 
enjoy expressing my Mth through 
writings about such things* If my 
book is ever published, it will reveal 
the main character coming to a faith 
in Christ while wheedling a sword 
and leading a band of Secret war¬ 
riors who fight evil beings in the 
dark nights in the streets of London, 
Thai all makes since in my head, 
hopefully It wHl in print as weU* 
Walk through the wardrobe or 
take a step into Middle Earth and 
see if you can find the message two 
giants of literature tried to express 
through their writings. If you 
haven’t noticed It before, you might 
be surprised, 

Becjca Owsley can Imj 
reached at (270) 505-1741 or 
bowdey^tiienewsenterpme.coni* 




‘Anything Goes’... 
but audition first 


Youth Theatre of Hardin County 
looks to fill roles Friday, Saturday 


'Ilie News-EnterprisB 

The Youth Theatre of 
Hardin County will hold 
auditions for its 41st pro* 
ducticin^ “Anything Goes,” 
frojn 5 to 9 p.ni. Friday 
and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m* Sa- 
tuiday at Hai diri County 
Schools PerFoiming Art5 
Center al John Heurdin 
High School. 

Hardin County resi¬ 
dents in grades sixth 
through 12th are eligible. 
A $35 membership fee 
and completed contmet 
are required before the 
audition. 


Th ose audit! on i ng 
need only attend one day 
and must stay the hill 
four hours. 'Hie selected 
music, readings and 
dance steps are taught 
the day of the audition 
and a snack is provided. 

Show dates for “Any¬ 
thing Goes" are July 13 
through 15 and 19 
through 21. 

Eric Pope directs the 
production, which is cho¬ 
reographed by Carol Za- 
gar. Kim Strange is mu¬ 
sical diiector. 

For more infonnation, 
cal] 765*5421. 


COMING TOMORROW... 

■ Photographer Leon Howlett 
releases book, "Kentucky 
Bourbon Experience" 

■ Entertainment caiendar 

■ Where They're Playing calendar 

























THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


NEWS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


A11 


INCOME: Berry 
referred to rankings 
as ‘solid’ 

Continued from A1 

$34,074. 

Thomas Bail, a public 
affairs representative for 
the Bureau of Economic 
Analysis, said Hardin 
County’s per capita per¬ 
sonal income ranking 
dropped primarily because 
the state’s total personal in¬ 
come growth was out¬ 
paced by its population 
growth. According to the 


report, Hardin County’s 
personal income grew 2.5 
percent from $3.46 billion 
in 2009 to $3.55 billion in 
2010, Bail said. Buring 
that time, the county’s 
population grew by about 
5.67 percent, from 101,254 
residents to 106,999, ac¬ 
cording to the report. 

The county’s level of 
personal income growth 
was good enough to place 
it fifth in the state behind 
Jefferson, Fayette, Kenton 
and Boone counties, and 
Bail said Hardin County’s 
level of personal income is 
not unusual for its size. 


Meade and LaRue 
counties were ranked 33rd 
and 65th, respectively, in 
the state for total personal 
income. 

Though Jefferson and 
Fayette counties recorded 
only modest growth rates 
in total personal income of 
0.87 percent and 1.57 per¬ 
cent, respectively, their 
population and personal 
income levels are consid¬ 
erably larger than Hardin 
County’s. Jefferson Coun¬ 
ty’s personal income grew 
from $29 billion to $29.2 
billion while Fayette 
County’s personal income 


grew from $11.1 billion to 
$11.2 billion, according to 
the report. 

Kenton County, on the 
other hand, recorded a 
3.63 percent growth rate in 
personal income while 
Boone County’s personal 
income grew by 4.31 per¬ 
cent, according to the re¬ 
port. 

Hardin Judge-Execu¬ 
tive Harry Berry expressed 
satisfaction with the num¬ 
bers and said the rankings 
were ‘‘solid” considering 
the surge from the Base 
Realignment and Closure 
initiative at Fort Knox has 


come to an end. 

“It sounds like pretty 
good numbers,” Berry 
said. “We knew we could 
not stay on top forever.” 

The Elizabethtown Met¬ 
ropolitan Statistical Area, 
which includes Hardin and 
FaRue counties, has been 
the top-ranked MSA in re¬ 
cent years for personal in¬ 
come and gross domestic 
product growth, and Berry 
said it can be difficult to 
sustain that success. 

If the county and MSA 
can remain close to the top 
in state and national rank¬ 
ings, he said, it is cause for 


celebration, likening it to 
the success of the Universi¬ 
ty of Kentucky men’s bas¬ 
ketball team. 

“If UK sustains its place 
in basketball standings, I 
think (fans) would be pret¬ 
ty happy,” he said. 

According to the Bu¬ 
reau of Economic Analy¬ 
sis, 990 of the 1,035 coun¬ 
ties in the southeast region, 
which includes Kentucky, 
recorded growth in both 
personal income and per 
capita personal income in 
2010. 

Marty Finley can be 
reached at (270) 505-1762. 


WRECK: Charges 
related to meth lab 
are pending 

Continued from A1 


Bavid Stallins as critical 
and Matthew Stallins as 
stable. 

Both men are from 
Elizabethtown, police said. 

According to a news re¬ 
lease from Kentucky State 
Police Post 4 in Elizabeth¬ 
town, emergency officials 
responded around 3 p.m. 
to the 1200 block of Boone 
Road. 

Police said the Honda 
Accord was northbound 
when, for unknown rea¬ 
sons, it left the roadway on 
the right shoulder and 


struck a tree. Its three oc¬ 
cupants were not wearing 
seat belts. 

Norman Chaffins, pub¬ 
lic affairs officer at Post 4, 
said if the driver and pas¬ 
sengers had been wearing 
seat belts, their injuries 
may have been less severe. 

If the car hit the tree at 
a speed of 55 mph, Chaf¬ 
fins explained, the bodies 
struck the dashboard at the 
same speed. 

“There’s no doubt,” he 
said. “That seat belt’s go¬ 
ing to stop them from im¬ 
pacting the car.” 

As officials worked the 
scene, materials related to 
methamphetamine manu¬ 
facturing were discovered 
inside the vehicle, police 
said. 

Ron Eckart, director of 


the Greater Hardin Coun¬ 
ty Narcotics Task Force, 
said investigators found a 
one-step lab, two HCL gas 
generators and some fin¬ 
ished meth product. 

A one-step or shake- 
and-bake lab is a portable 
method consisting of a 
sealed container used to 
combine ingredients such 
as lithium metal and lye 
and induce a chemical re¬ 
action needed to turn the 
products into metham¬ 
phetamine. The sealed 
container typically is a 
plastic bottle. 

Eckart said HCL gener¬ 
ators are plastic bottles 
used to turn liquid meth¬ 
amphetamine into a solid 
when it’s done cooking. 

The danger of the one- 
step method is the fumes 


caused by the chemical re¬ 
action taking place inside 
the sealed container, he 
said. 

“If they don’t relieve the 
pressure every so often, it 
could cause an explosion, 
start a fire,” Eckart said. 

The containers found at 
the scene were tightly 
sealed, he said, and no 
leaks were evident. 

Whether the meth lab 
in the vehicle played a role 
in the wreck is unknown at 
this time, Chaffins said, but 
it is a possibility. 

KSP is investigating the 
wreck while the task force 
is investigating the meth 

A Gift To Open 
Again And Again,., 


Cali 7sa-i2TO *ni. locmvT 


materials. Charges related 
to the possible meth lab 
are pending. 

KSP and task force in¬ 
vestigators were assisted 
on scene Tuesday by Har¬ 


din County EMS, Eliza¬ 
bethtown Fire Bepartment 
and Rineyville Fire Be¬ 
partment. 

Sarah Bennett can be 
reached at (270) 505-1750. 


NOW OPEN! 



EEK-END 

ONDERS 

Thrift & Resale Store 


Suite 174, E’town Plaza, 
Elizabethtown, KY 42701 




Where Thrift & Quality make “CENTS” 


Hours: Monday 10AM to 5PM 
Tues.-Thurs. 10AM-4PM • Friday 9AM to 4PM 
Closed Saturday and Sunday 


MAYBERRY: Event 
likely to be repeated 
if it’s successful 

Continued from A1 


Broadway said there has 
been a lot of camaraderie 
between the city and com¬ 
munity organizations be¬ 
cause she contacted all 
area organizations asking 
them to sponsor various as¬ 
pects of the festivities, such 
as a pie-judging contest 
and a bounce house. 

“The Andy Griffith 
Show” is important to 
many members of the Vine 
Grove community, Broad¬ 
way said. 

“Every one of his shows 
would teach you something 
about morals or character,” 
she said. 

She thinks most Vine 
Grove residents want the 
values to continue to be 
practiced and honored. 

Broadway hopes visitors 


have fun and feel as if 
they’ve been transported to 
Mayberry. 

“It’s going to be great,” 
she said. 


She expects the city will 
repeat the event if it’s suc¬ 
cessful. 

Amber Coulter can be 
reached at (270) 505-1746. 



Awning Sale! 


SufiS^ WSm 

mHAOA^ AWNINGS 

Enjoy Instant Shade & Comfort 
All Summer and SAVE $200! 

We're your hoinetewn aulhorized SunSetter Oealer, 
offering profoaslonal Inotallalion. 


Griffith Fencing & Awning 
Eastview, KY 42732 
Toll Free; 1-8a0-67S-O9O6, Ext. 71732 


For your FREE COn$Mltation Oall nOw. Or 9 O IO 
wwwJQcalounsotloroom and uae Ext. 71732 


Sonder 




iftols wtr xio'*' _ 






_ (ca 

uoowtoyooraccooht ^ IJ 


ft 


^aWngNews-LaRueCo 

———---FCATURW • 



Today-»Ne« 

0>.R.E- 

aieaMtt^ ^ , MoiWnfl 

County to _ 

w-r'S.C 


How Many 
People Read 
The News- 
Enterprise 
Online? 




ntCoMnC* 

(Wito- 



March 2012 


Visits 177,976 


Thank you for using The News-Enterprise Online 
to reach your present and future customers. 

Advertising in ThE NeWS-ENTERPRISE 




cii270-769-1200 

to place your advertisement today. 


*Source, Google Analytics. 


MASTER COMMISSIONER SALES 

To comply with the orders of the Hardin Circuit Court, the Commissioner will sell the property described in 
the following actions on Thursday, MAY 10. 2012 at the hour of 10:00 a.m. at the Hardin County Justice 
Center, 120 East Dixie Ave., Elizabethtown, Kentucky. Said property shall be sold to raise the amounts 
hereinafter set forth, together with interest and the costs of the action, and upon the following terms and 
conditions; 

(A) AT THE TIME OF SALE, the successful bidder shall either pay cash or make a deposit of 10% of the 
purchase price with the balance on a credit of thirty (30) days UNLESS otherwise provided below. In the 
event the successful bidder desires or elects to credit the balance, he or she will be required to post bond and 
furnish an acceptable surety thereon. The down payment. IN ADDITION to either a letter of credit or 
acceptable surety, must be produced AT THE TIME OF THE SALE. Said bond and/or letter of credit 
shall oe for the unpaid purchase price and bear interest at the rate of twelve percent (12%) per annum from 
the date of sale until paid. 

(B) The purchaser snail be required to assume and pay all taxes or assessments upon the property for the 
current tax year, 2012 and thereafter. The Master Commissioner will make a good faith effort to obtain and 
pay all taxes or assessments upon the property for prior years; however, this can not be guaranteed. 

(C) All properties are sold subject to the Judgment and Order of Sale in each case which should be reviewed 
carefully PRIOR to purchase. The Judgment and Order of Sale can be reviewed at the Hardin Circuit Clerk’s 
Office, 120 E. Dixie, Elizabethtown, KY. 

(D) The Master Commissioner DOES NOT obtain a title search or investigate for further liens on the 
properties listed below nor conduct or authorize a survey of the property. ** The purchaser is responsible for 
title searches and/or any additional liens not named in the ludgment and Order of Sale and for the results of 

any good and accurate survey of the property. 

(E) The Master Commissioner does not have access to the properties listed below and therefore makes no 
representation or warranty of any kind as to the conditions of these properties. 


SALE NO. 1 

Green Tree Servicing LLC vs. Riley E. Goodman, et al. (ll-CI-2387) - amount of Judgment: $167,272.23 plus 
interest and costs. 

7994 RINEYVILLE RD., RINEYVILLE, KY 

Being Lot 60, Section 4, of Bryan Acres Estate to Hardin County, Kentucky, as shown in Plat Cabinet 1, Sheet 
1992, in the Office of the Hardin County Court Clerk. 

Subject to any and all easements, restrictions, conditions, and legal highways of record and/or in existence. 
Being the same property conveyed from Derek Butler and Christina Butler, husband and wife, to Riley E. 
Goodman, a sin^e person, by virtue of a deed dated 2-13-2007 and recorded 2-15-2007 at Deed Book 1218 
Page 342 of the Hardin County, Kentucky real estate records. 

SALE NO. 2 

US Bank National Association vs. Jeffrey M. Farmer, et al. (ll-CI-831) - amount of Judgment: $224,266.10 
plus interest and costs. 

400 MICHIGAN AVE., ELIZABETHTOWN, KY 

Being Lot 53 in Freeman Creek Estates, Section 3, per plat of same recorded in Plat Cabinet 1, Sheet 1529 in 
Hardin County Clerk’s Office. 

Being the same property conveyed to Jeffrey M. Farmer and Melissa Leanne Farmer, husband and wife, who 
acquired title, with rights of survivorship, by virtue of a deed from Ryanland Development, a partnership, 
dated July 17, 2003, filed August 5, 2003, recorded in Deed Book 1083 Page 257, County Clerk’s Office, 
Hardin County, Kentucky. 

Subject to any and all easements, restrictions, conditions, and legal highways of record and/or in existence. 

SALE NO. 3 

Bank of America, NA vs. Chung Ja Rauchfuss, et al. (lO-CI-1438) - amount of Judgment: $78,706.88 plus 
interest and costs. 

236 OAK RIDGE DRIVE, RADCLIFF, KY 

Being Lot 31 IN MacLyndee Acres Subdivision to Radcliff, Hardin County, Kentucky per revised plat of said 
subdivision, recorded in Plat Book 5, Pages 5 and 6, in the Office of the Hardin County Clerk. 

Being the same property conveyed to Gerhard Rauchfuss and Chung Ja Rauchfuss, his wife, by virtue of a 
deed from Radcliff Homes, Inc., dated June 17, 1974, filed June 21, 1974, filed June 21, 1974, recorded in 
Deed Book 265 Page 328, County Clerk’s Office, Hardin County, Kentucky, and by the death of Gerhard 
Rauchfuss on November 21, 1994. 

Subject to any and all easements, restrictions, conditions, and legal highways of record and/or in existence. 

SALE NO. 4 

Wells Fargo Bank vs. Otis Arnold, et al. (ll-CI-2326) - amount of Judgment: $124,714.03 plus interest and 
145 APPLEWOOD LANE, ELIZABETHTOWN, KY 

Being Lot 39B of Applewood Subdivision, per plat of said subdivision recorded in Plat Cabinet 1, Sheet 
3657, in the Office of the Clerk of Hardin County, Kentucky. 

Being the same property conveyed to Otis Arnold, unmarried, who acquired title by virtue of a deed from 
William O. Shultz and Rita K. Shultz, husband and wife, dated April 24, 2009, filed April 29, 2009, recorded 
in Deed Book 1293, Page 108, County Clerk’s Office, Hardin County, Kentucky. 

Subject to restrictions, conditions and covenants and to all legal highways and easements. 

SALE NO. 5 

PNC Mortgage vs. Darryl O. Chapman, et al. {ll-CI-1885) - amount of Judgment: $206,837.46 plus interest 
3.rid costs 

1707 WOOLDRIDGE FERRY RD., ELIZABETHTOWN, KY 
Being Lot 5 of Wooldridge Hills Subdivision to Hardin County, Kentucky, per plat of said subdivision of 
record in Plat Cabinet 1, Sheet 217-B in the Office of the Hardin County Court Clerk. 

Being the same property conveyed to Darryl O. Chapman, a single person, from Bererly Yvonne House and 
Michael House, wife and husband, by Deed dated October 23, 2006 and recorded October 25, 2006 in Deed 
Book 1206 Page 788 in the Office of the Hardin County Court Clerk. 

TERMS: $5000.00 DOWN AT THE TIME OF THE SALE IN ADDITION TO EITHER A LETTER OF CREDIT 
OR ACCEPTABLE SURETY. BALANCE DUE WITHIN 60 DAYS. 

SALE NO. 6 

GMAC Mortgage LLC vs. Donna P. Hayes, et al. (ll-CI-2321) - amount of Judgment: $127,248.05 plus 
interest and costs. 

846 EAST MAIN ST., VINE GROVE, KY 

Being Lot 3, Hayes Estate Subdivision to Vine Grove, Hardin County, Kentucky, per Plat of same recorded in 
Plat Cabinet 1, Sheet 1946 in the Office of the Hardin County Court Clerk. 

Being the same property conveyed to Donna P. Hayes and William R. Hayes aka William R. Hayes, Jr., wife 
and husband, by Deed dated December 14, 2009 and recorded December 15, 2009 in Deed Book 1314 Page 
605 in the Office of the Hardin County Court Clerk. 

TERMS: $5000.00 DOWN AT THE TIME OF THE SALE IN ADDITION TO EITHER A LETTER OF CREDIT 
OR ACCEPTABLE SURETY. BALANCE DUE WITHIN 60 DAYS. 

SALE NO. 7 

The Bank of New York Mellon vs. Jermaine Drayton, et al. (ll-CI-1917) - amount of Judgment: $335,843,22 
plus interest and costs. 

148, 150, 152 and 154 DARBYWOODS CT., RADCLIFF, KY 
Being Lots 5A, 5B, 5C and 5D of Hunters Ridge Subdivision, Phase 1, to Radcliff, Hardin County, Kentucky, 
per Plat of said Subdivision recorded in Plat Cabinet 1, Sheet 3581 in the Office of the Clerk of Hardin 
County, Kentucky. 

Said property was conveyed to Jermaine Drayton, unmarried, by Highpoint Construction Inc., on October 10, 
2006, by a deed recorded on October 17, 2006 in Deed Book 1206 Page 99 in the Office of the Hardin County 
Court Clerk. 

TERMS: $5000.00 DOWN AT THE TIME OF THE SALE IN ADDITION TO EITHER A LETTER OF CREDIT 
OR ACCEPTABLE SURETY. BALANCE DUE WITHIN 60 DAYS. 

SALE NO. 8 

Kentucky Housing Corp vs. John V. Byrd, et al. (ll-CI-1904) - amount of Judgment: $144,774.83 plus 
interest and costs. 

126 SHIPP LANE, GLENDALE, KY 

Being Lot 7 of CH Craig Farm Subdivision to Glendale, Hardin County, Kentucky, per amended plat of 
record in Plat Cabinet 1, Sheet 3811 in the Office of the County Clerk of Hardin County, Kentucky. 

Being the same property conveyed to John V. Byrd, III and Jeri L. Byrd, husband and wife, by Deed of 
Correction dated January 8, 2008 and recorded on January 14, 2008 in Book 1251 Page 405 in the Office of 
the Hardin County Clerk. 

TERMS: $5000.00 DOWN AT THE TIME OF THE SALE IN ADDITION TO EITHER A LETTER OF CREDIT 
OR ACCEPTABLE SURETY. BALANCE DUE WITHIN 60 DAYS. 

SALE NO. 9 

Kentucky Housing Corp vs. Jenny L. Lewis, et al. (ll-CI-2193) - amount of Judgment: $59,670.04 plus 
interest and costs. 

181 NORTH MAPLE ST., SONORA, KY 

A certain house and Lot in the town of Sonora, Hardin County, Kentucky, lying on the East side of the 
Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company, bounded and described as follows: 

Beginning on the east side on the L&N Railroad line running thence in an easterly direction 179 feet to 
Maple Street 63 feet to an alley; thence running in a westerly direction 179 feet with the north side of an 
alley to the east line of the L&N Railroad; thence in a northerly direction with the East line of the L&N 
Railroad 63 feet to the beginning point, this being bounded on the north by the Wood Graveyard, on the east 
by Maple Street, on the South by an alley, and on the west by the line of the L&N Railroad Company. 

Being the same property conveyed to Jenny L. Lewis, unmarried, by Deed dated December 13, 2002 and 
recorded on December 16, 2002 in Deed Book 1058 Page 164 in the Office of the Hardin County Court Clerk. 
TERMS: $5000.00 DOWN AT THE TIME OF THE SALE IN ADDITION TO EITHER A LETTER OF CREDIT 
OR ACCEPTABLE SURETY. BALANCE DUE WITHIN 60 DAYS. 

PAUL MUSSELWHITE 
MASTER COMMISSIONER 
HARDIN CIRCUIT COURT 
270-234-0715 











































































THEMEW&^EIWERPRISE 


THURSDAY. APRll 2 B, 2012 


A12 


NEWS 



SubiviUtect phew 

Senior Sarah Spencer cleans windows at Radcliff City Kali. 
Some North Hardin students stayed local as part of the Day of 
Service. 

to show a house once was 
located there. 

“It wa$ reaJly ^>atl to see 
w'hat a tornado can do,"* 
she said. 

Senior Christina Moore 
was ea^er to help in the re¬ 
covery efforts, blit she had 
a different take on the town 
than Domschke, in that she 
found it “mind-blowing” 
how much work remains. 

“I was surprised a month 
after there was still so much 
damage," Moore said. 

But what Moore was 
most struck by was llie spiT' 
it of die people. As they 
drove through the damaged 
city, they saw sevei^ signs 
with unflagging messages 
such as “God is sdU good." 

“You saw the hope in 
the people," she said. “And 
that, ril never forget,” 

Kelly CantiBll can be 
reached at (270) 505-1747. 


SERVICE: 
‘You saw the hope 
in the people' 

Continued from AI 


idea to Cannon, “And it 
just kind of went from 
there," she said. 

Cannon said she 
thought Domschke might 
find a handful of people to 
travel with her to the site, 

“But that’s not what Tay¬ 
lor wanted," she said. 

Fifty-one students trav¬ 
eled to Indiana to pick up 
debris from a field, a park¬ 
ing lot and the yard of a 
home. Domschke said the 
town was in better condi¬ 
tion than she expected, but 
seeing the damage still was 
eye-opening. She recalled 
passing a stake in the 
ground with a nimiber on it 



psioici 

After a day of cleaning yp the tomadcHStlichen area surrounding Henryville, Ind., as part of the National Day of Service, 
SI North Hardin soniors return to their bus. 


One senior reflects on day of service 


On a cold, rainy Saturday 
morning, 51 students of my senior 
class braved the weather, ^ve up 
their Thunder over Louisville 
weekend and lost some sleep to 
catch a bus to help residents of 
Henryville, Ind., on the National 
Day of Service. 

As a student on the trip, 1 wit¬ 
nessed events which aftirm what I 
always have believed — North 
Hardin is a school of pride and 
one that truly cares about its tradi¬ 
tion of exceflence. 

As seniors, we really wanted to 
go on this trip and help those in 
need, but a lack of district money 
was going to hinder our dream as 
we couldn’t aftbrd gas for buses. 
Searching for a solution, two of 
our students immediately took to 
a local television station and social 
media sites asking for suppoil and 
donations from the community. 

The next day we witnessed a 
rally of people lined up in our 
school from all around our coin- 
munily to show their support by 
donating money and other items 
so we could m^e a difference. 1 
saw a community come together 
to support a cause and a school, 
proving w'e truly live in a great 
place with great peciple. 

As we boarded the bus and left 
for Hemyville, armed with dona¬ 
tions collected by our AVID III 
students for weeks prior to the 
event, we all felt excited to be 
making a difference in the live.s of 
people who truly needed us. As 


NATE 

YATES 


we entered the afi'ected areas, we 
witnessed the path of dt stmcticjn 
the twister left: debris all over the 
place, students with no place to go 
to school and people who had no 
place to live. I'he eyes of our stu¬ 
dents filled with sadness at the 
devastation they saw before them. 

But, tliat day 1 also witnessed 
something else. We witnessed a 
community becoming closer, a 
community with the chance to re¬ 
build and start over, a community 
brought together by a natural dis¬ 
aster and a town with a spirit that 
could not be broken. 

After we dropped off the dona¬ 
tions, we went to work on the 
clean up. It was there we wit¬ 
nessed the appreciation in the 
eyes of the community a^ we 
helped a farmer pick up debris 
out of his field so he could plant 
his crops in the spring and feed 
his family. Tears came to my eyes 
as we heard a woman’s stoiy 
while cleaning up her back yard 
so her children could go outside 
to play and not fear being cut by 
glass or otlier debris left by their 
bam, completely destroyed by the 
tornado. 

After we completed the work 
we hoarded buses and headed 



home. It was then we witnessed 
the smiling faces of the communi¬ 
ty as we left, and for that I must 
thank Angela Cannon and Taylor 
Domschke for their hard work 
planning the event and getting us 
up there. Without you, all this 
never would have been a reality. I 
know it caused quite a few 
headaches, but I hope the money 
we raised, the donations we sent 
and all the help we gave made it 
worthwhile in the end. 

I witnessed the pride In tlie 
senior class as we crossed the 
bridge back into Kentucky with 
mud all over us and water in our 
shoes, but still, we all were smil¬ 
ing. We had made a difference in 
the lives of the people there and it 
was a moment we are siure to nev¬ 
er forget. 

The trip brought forth two con¬ 
clusions: one, North Hardin High 
School truly is an amazing place 
to send your children with a facul¬ 
ty and students who care about 
others; and two, this .senior class is 
one of which I am proud to be a 
part. 

Henryville taught us responsi¬ 
bility and helped us take a step 
into the real world. Seeing all the 
support and participation filled 
me with pride and I was glad to 
be called a Trojan and a member 
of the North Hardin student body. 

NalE Yates is a sojkiar 
at North Hardin High SdiooL 


LOOKING FOR A NEW PHARMACY? 



Has Your Pharmacy Stopped 
Taking Your Insurance Card? 

IF YOUR PHARMACY HAS 
STOPPED ACCEPTING THE 

Anthem/Express Scripts 
Insurance Card 

COME TO NATION’S MEDICINES 

We Take All Insurance Cards 

The Anthem/Express Scripts Card 

Is GOOD At Nation’s Medicines! 

WE WELCOME YOUR BUSINESS & WOULD 
BE HONORED TO BE YOUR NEW 
HOMETOWN PHARMACY! 


HATIOH’S 

LOW COST 



I^EDICIHES 

PnESCBIFTIQIIS 


790 North Dixie Hwy • Elizabethtown, Ky • (270)737-7880 























The News-Enterprise 

THHSOAV, APRIL 26. 2012 



B1 

CHUCK UCHES. SPORTS EUITOR 

(2701 505-1759 
cjor6s@itri$newserit$ri>rise.com 
Fax; (2701 763-6965 


Central coach recovering from crash 


Brandon Adams, a track 
and football coach, was in 
April 14 motorcyle accident 

By JOSH CLAYWEIi 

jciaywell@lheiiews« ntecpiise com 

The Centra) l^Iardin High School track 
teams have had to adjust to life wit):tout 
head coach Brandon Adams, who was in- 
volved in a serious motorcycle accident 


nearly two weeks ago. 

Adams, also an assistant football coach 
at the school, was in a two-vehicle wreck 
April 14 on the Western Kentucky 
Parkway just west of Elizabethtown, 

According to an accident report fiom 
Kentucky State Police Post 4, the 2 8-year- 
old Adams was westbound on the park¬ 
way when he made a U-tum, He lost con¬ 
trol of his 2003 Suzuki bike and into the 
path of an eastbound Chevrolet SUV. The 
wreck occurred near mile marker 121, 
about 3 miles from White Mills. 


Adams was airlifted to University of 
Louisville Hospital, where he remains hos* 
pitalized. 

“it^s been extremely hard without 
Brandon,” Central Haidin girls’ coach 
Kristina Covington said Wednesday be¬ 
fore leaving for a middle school meet at 
Noith Hardin. “Even though Tm the girls’ 
coach, Brandon did everything and basi¬ 
cally told us what he wanted to do.” 

Covington and assistant coaches Chris 
Boozer and Tim Pennington have been 
keeping things running as smoothly as 


possible in Adams’ absence. 

“It’s been hard on us, but weVe got 
some nice coaches on this team,” 
Covington said^ 

News of the wreck spread quickly 
among area coaches and athletes via 
Facehook and text messaging. Central 
Hardin senior Antoine Keys found out 
what happened from senior teammate 
Jaied Cromartie later that afteiiioon. 

Turn to ADAMS, B6 


Three former 
UK players 
comiig to 
Towne Mall 
this weekend 

Tht Ncws-EntisTpiise 

For the second weekend 
in a row, Tbwne Mall in 
Elizabethtown is expected 
to be filled w^th University 
of Kentucky fans from far 
and wide. 

After former Wildcat 
center and National Player 
of the Year Anthony Davis 
was jn town Fndaj night for 
more than two hours in 
front of more than 3,000 au¬ 
tograph seekers, thret^ of his 
former teammates v\ill be ai 
center stage Friday and 
Saturday. 

On Friday, Doron Lamb 
is scheduled to appear from 
5-8 p.m. A photo package 
($30 ininimum) must be 
purchased prior to havijig 
anything signed. 

On Saturday, Michael 
Kidd-Gilchrist is scheduled 
to appear from 11:30 a.m.- 
L30 p,m, A photo package 
($40 minimum) must be 
purchased prior to having 
anj4hing signed. 

Also Saturday, Darius 
Miller is scheduled to ap¬ 
pear from 5-7 p.m. There is 
a $20 charge for 8x10 pho¬ 
tos. 

Kentucky coach John 
Calipari appeared with the 
NCAA Tournament cham¬ 
pionship hardware earlier 
this month at Shoney’s and 
the North Dixie Kroger in 
Ehzabethtowii. Davis could 
also be returning to Towne 
Mall in a few weeks, ac¬ 
cording to mall manage¬ 
ment. 

For information, call 737- 
ItilO or search for 
“ ShopTo wne M al r on 

twitter or Facebook. 





NEAL CA'RDtN.'IjiE’ 

EUzabethtown fre^hitiart catcher Zehe Pinkham chases a bunt by LaRue Courtly Juaior Cole Hughes during the teams’ March 21 game at Ron Myers Field 
at Panther Baseball Park In Elizabethtown. 


E’town’s Pinkham shines at showcase 


By CHUCK JONES 

cjones^l^lliene ws* ntei prise.com 


Elizabethtown freshman catcher Zeke 
Pinkham knew he had a good workout at a 
recent baseball showcasej but he had no idea 
it went as well as it did until following the 
event. 

Pinkham attended the Baseball 
Factor)'/Baseball America/Under Armour 
National Evaluation Tryouts a! Louisville 
Pleasure Ridge Park High School on April 15 
where he was named tlie Outstajiding Player 
of the camp. 

“It was suiprisLng,” Pinkham said. “1 knew 
I had a good showcase, but it was shocking 
and surprising to be named the Outstanding 
Flayer. It was awesome to get the publicity 
and interviewed* It was a great experience,” 


And to think his father, Bilk nearly didn’t 
take Pinkham to tlie event. 

didn’t take him last yeai- because he was 
only an eighth-CTader, and 1 almost didn’t do 
it this year,” Bill said. kept waiting for him 
after the camp and Zeke is always one of the 
last ones. He usually has to put his catcher’s 
gear up. But 1 kept waiting* 

^He starts walLug tow aid rue and he has 
this grin fiom eai to ear," he added, asked 
what took him so long. He said, 'Dad, I was 
named the Outstanding Player They inter¬ 
viewed me ' He v*as redly excited about it" 
At the tryout pla^eis rok part in an on¬ 
field workout where they performed in front 
of Baseball Factory sc“uts who evaluated 
them on speed, pitching, hitting, defense and 
arm stren^h. Players get 10 swmg.s, field balls 
at their various positions and are timed from 


home to first and in a 50-yard dash. Each 
player is given a. grade in each category, 

Pinkliajn received a 52 for anti strengtli, 
blocking behind the plate and power. He was 
given a 50 for defensive reaction and 48 for 
hittiiig. The -scoufo use a scale where anything 
50 or above is Division-1 level, 55 or above is 
high D4 like the Southeastern Conference or 
the Atlantic Coast Conference, 60 or above is 
Major l^eague level and 70 or above is Major 
League superstar, 

“1 was the first person to go and 1 hit 84 
(miles per hour) on the gun,” Pinkham said. 
“It was one of the quickest ones, including 
pitchers, I hit a few^ out and tliat turned some 
heads, it w'as a good showcase, but 1 didn’t 
expect that." 

Turn (O PINKHAM, B6 


It’s an anxious time for most draftees 



re<;h^r[> iSRew/T?i» J 

Andrew Luck, left, and Robert Griffin III attend an NFL draft reception during 
their visit Wednesday to the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange, 


By DENNIS WAS2AK Jr 

Tht Aisrtriaiod Presj 

NEW YORK - Andrew Luck 
knows exactly where he’s heading, 
and so does Robert Griffin III. 

For the rest of the coilego stars 
preparing for the NFL draft 
tonight, the anxiety is building. 
Nobody is looking forward to the 
green room at Radio City Music 
Hall. 

^It kind of made me a little nerv¬ 
ous when we were talking to the 
commissioner and he said, ‘You’ll 
be back there for an hom and it’ll 
feel like you’ve been hack there for 
five days/” Southern California 
tackle Matt Kalil said ‘‘I’ll be 
sweatin’ up a stonn back there, and 
I want to nave my name called and 
not have to wait too long.” 

He shouldn't have to worry 
much about that. Most mock drafts 
project Kalil to go third overall to 
Minnesota after Luck heads to 
Indianapolis and Griffin to 
Washin^on. But he knows better 
than to put much stock in the pre¬ 
draft chatter. 

“I stopped paying attendon to all 
of that stuff,” said Kalil, attending 
an NFL event at a playground in 
Manhattan. ""No one really has a 
clue. Unless you’re the GM of a 
team^ you don’t really know who a 
team is going to pick^ so you just let 
it ail play out.” 

Tnat’s the approach for the near¬ 
ly two dozen other players who’ll 


be at Radio City and have no idea 
when they might walk onto the 
stage, shake commissioner Roger 
Goodell’s hand and hold up the jer¬ 
sey of the team with whicn they’U 
start their professional career. 

“For Luck and RGIIL they 
kirow what’s going on and they 
know where they’re going to Uve 
and all that kind of stuff," Alabama 
safety Maik Barron said. “A lot of 
us other guys, we Ye sdll wondering 
where we're going to be living for 
the next however many years," 


Griffin, the Heisman Trophy 
winner from Baylor, is comforted 
by already knowing he’ll be a 
member of tire Redskins. But he 
thinks he might actually miss the 
draft-day jitters. Well, at least a little 
bit. 

“It kind of puts youi^lf at ease,"" 
he said, "but it does kind of rob you 
of that natural draftee experience 
where you don’t know where 
you're going and youYe in limbo." 

Turn to PICKS, 


Reds rally by Giants, 4-2 


Thf As^oaatftd Press 

CINCINNATI Scott 
RoIen'’s homer started a 
four-run rally in the seventh 
inning that sent the 
Cincinnati Reds to a 4-2 
victory Wednesday night 
over the San Francisco 
Giants and extending their 
misery at Great Amencan 
Ball l4rk. 

Rolen’s first homer since 
July 6 ended Bany^ Zito^s 
shutout and got into the 
Giant ’ bullpei, which let 
the game get away on a 
ram slaked field. 

Clay Henslev (1-2) threw 
wildl) for ar error after 
slipping as he fielded a 
bunr Jerem) Affeldt^s wild 
pitch allowed the go-ahead 
iiui to score. 

It was another miseiable 
game for the Grant at 
Great American Ball Park, 
Vbhere thev Ve dropped se\ 
en straigm and 12 of 15 
Zito lemarns wmicsj theie 
m SIX starts. 

Jose Arredondo (2-0) 
had one perfect inning, 
Sean Marshall pitched the 
ninth and remained perfect 
m four save chances for the 
Reds, who have won 5 of-6. 

Before the gaine^ the 
Giants put Aubrey Hull on 



ERNEST COLEMANyihc ASSflCiirtCd 

Cincinnati Reds starting 
pHcber Bronson Arroyo throws 
In the first inning of the Reds' 
4-2 win Wednesday night 
against the San Francisco 
Giants in Cincinnati. 

the 15-day disabled list 
while he gets treatment for 
an anxiety attack. Huff left 
the team after having a 
tough time in a game 
Saturday. He could rejoin 
the team in San Francisco 
next weekend. 

Pablo Sandoval singled 
in the third inning, giving 
him a hit in each of the first 
18 games. That matches 
Johnny Rucker’s mark with 
the 1945 New York Giants 
for best season-opening 
streak in franchise history. 















































B2 


THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


SPORTS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


BRIEFLY 


PREP BASEBALL 


SCOREBOARD 


SCORES 

AND 

STATS 


Bethlehem beats LaRue 

The host Bardstown Bethlehem Eagles scored 
eight runs in the first four innings en route to beat¬ 
ing visiting 5th Region rival LaRue County, 8-4 on 
Wednesday. 

The loss snapped the Hawks’ seven-game win¬ 
ning streak. The Hawks (18-5) hadn’t lost since a 
mercy-rule setback to Choctaw in the Florida Beach 
Bash on April 12. 

Senior Slade Owens (4-1) gave up seven hits and 
five earned runs in one-plus inning. He struck out 
one. 

Seniors Jesse Johnson and Trevor Skaggs and 
junior Cole Hughes each had two of LaRue 
County’s nine hits. Johnson had a single, double 
and two RBIs, while Skaggs and Hughes each had 
two singles. 

BETHLEHEM 8, LARUE COUNTY 4 
R H E 

LaRue County 001 030 0 4 9 0 
Bethlehem 420 200 x 814 1 

Slade Owens, Kyle Meredith (2), Steven Carpenter (5) and Trevor 
Skaggs, Owens (3). Jimmy Keating, Brandon Ray ( 6 ) and Blake 
Brangers. WP: Keating. LP: Owens (4-1). 2B: Jesse Johnson (LC), C. 
Ballard (B), Duncan (B). 

UP NEXT: LaRue County plays No. 20 Louisville Trinity at 6 p.m. 

Friday in the Louisville Invitational Tournament at Louisville Southern. 

HORSE RAGING 

Isn’t He Clever withdrawn 
from Derby consideration 

LOUISVILLE — Trainer Steve Asmussen said 
Isn’t He Clever has been withdrawn from consider¬ 
ation for the Kentucky Derby on May 5. 

The 3-year-old gelding sired by Smarty Jones 
had been under the care of trainer Henry 
Dominguez before being sent to Asmussen follow¬ 
ing an eighth-place finish April 14 in the Arkansas 
Derby. 

Isn’t He Clever arrived April 17 at Churchill 
Downs and breezed four furlongs Monday. 

From Staff & Wire Reports 


AROUND THE AREA 


TODAY 


Event 

PREP BASEBALL 

Fort Knox at Elizabethtown 

John Hardin at North Hardin 

Time 

5:30 p.m. 
5:30 p.m. 

Station 

PREP SOFTBALL 

Hancock County at Meade County 

Nelson County at John Hardin 

Central Hardin at Fort Knox 

Louisville PRP at North Hardin 

Taylor County at LaRue County 

5:30 p.m. 
5:30 p.m. 

6 p.m. 

6 p.m. 

6 p.m. 


PREP TENNIS 

Campbellsville at LaRue County 

Fort Knox at Bardstown 

Nelson County at North Hardin 

Elizabethtown at South Oldham 

5 p.m. 

5 p.m. 

5 p.m. 
5:30 p.m. 


FRIDAY 



Event 

PREP BASEBALL 

North Hardin at Breckinridge County 

Elizabethtown at Madison Central 

Louisville Invitational Tournament 

At Southern: LaRue County vs. Louisville Trinity 

At Eastern: Central Hardin vs. Lexington Catholic 
At Eastern: Central Hardin at Louisville Eastern 

Time 

5:30 p.m. 
6:30 p.m. 

6 p.m. 

6 p.m. 

8 p.m. 

Station 

PREP SOFTBALL 

Louisville Western at Fort Knox 

Nelson County at John Hardin 

North Hardin at Greenwood 

Elizabethtown at Taylor County 

5:30 p.m. 
5:30 p.m. 

6 p.m. 
6:30 p.m. 


PREP TENNIS 

North Hardin vs. John Hardin at University Drive 

Kings of Spring 

Boys: Central Hardin, John Hardin 

5 p.m. 

TBA 


PREP TRACK & FIELD 

Elizabethtown Panther Twiiight 

Central Hardin, Elizabethtown, John Hardin, 

Fort Knox, LaRue County, 5:30 p.m. 

Louisviiie Eastern Reiays at the University of Louisviiie 

Meade County, North Hardin TBA 


ON THE AIR 


TODAY 


Event 

Time 

Station 

AUTO RACING 

NASCAR: K&N Pro Series at Richmond, Va. 

Race 

7 p.m. 

SPEED 

BASEBALL 

MLB 

Blue Jays at Orioles 

7 p.m. 

MLB 

Red Sox at White Sox 

Minor League 

8 p.m. 

WGN 

Charlotte at Gwinnett 

Coiiege 

7 p.m. 

CSS 

Alabama vs. South Carolina 

7:30 p.m. 

ESPNU 

BASKETBALL 

NBA 

Knicks at Bobcats 

8 p.m. 

TNT 

Spurs at Warriors 

10:30 p.m. 

TNT 

CYCLING 



Tour de Romandie: Montbeliard, France to Moutier, Switzerland 


Stage 2 

5 p.m. 

NBC Sports 

FOOTBALL 

NFL Draft at New York 

First Round 

8 p.m. 

ESPN 

GOLF 



European PGA Tour: Ballantine’s Championship at Seoui, South Korea 

First Round 

LPGA: Mobiie Bay Ciassic at Prattviiie, Aia. 

9 a.m. 

TGC 

First Round 

PGA Tour: Zurich Ciassic at New Orieans 

12:30 p.m. 

TGC 

First Round 

3 p.m. 

TGC 

HOCKEY 

NHL Piayoffs: Conference Quarterfinais 

Game 7: Senators at Rangers 

7 p.m. 

NBC Sports 

Game 7: Devils at Panthers 

8:30 p.m. 

NHL Network 

SOFTBALL 



Coiiege 

Texas at Texas A&M 

7 p.m. 

ESPN2 

FRIDAY 



Event 

AUTO RACING 

Time 

Station 

NASCAR Sprint Cup at Richmond Va. 

Practice 

Noon 

SPEED 

Final Practice 

2:30 p.m. 

SPEED 

Pole Qualifying 

NASCAR Nationwide Series at Richmond, Va. 

5:30 p.m. 

SPEED 

Pole Qualifying 

4 p.m. 

ESPN2 

Race 

7:30 p.m. 

ESPN2 

BASEBALL 

MLB 

Tigers at Yankees or Cubs at Phillies 

7 p.m. 

MLB 

Astros at Reds 

Coiiege 

7 p.m. 

ESN Ohio 

Bethune-Cookman at North Carolina A&T 

Noon 

ESPNU 

Clemson at Georgia Tech 

7 p.m. 

CSS 

BOXING 

Light Heavyweights 

Grachev (11-0-1) vs. Sillakh (17-0-0) 

10 p.m. 

ESPN2 

Junior Lightweights/Featherweights/Super Middieweights 

Pedraza-Garcia/Del Valle-Martin/Oosthuizen-Johnson 11 p.m. 

SHOW 

CYCLING 



Tour de Romandie: La Neuveviiie to Charmey, Switzeriand 


Stage 3 

5 p.m. 

NBC Sports 

FOOTBALL 

NFL Draft at New York 

Second and Third Rounds 

7 p.m. 

ESPN 

GOLF 



European PGA Tour: Baiiantine’s Championship at Seoui, South Korea 

Second Round 

LPGA: Mobiie Bay Ciassic at Prattviiie, Aia. 

9 a.m. 

TGC 

Second Round 

PGA Tour: Zurich Ciassic at New Orieans 

12:30 p.m. 

TGC 

Second Round 

3 p.m. 

TGC 

HOCKEY 

NHL Piayoffs: Conference Semifinais 

Nashville at Phoenix 

LACROSSE 

TBA 

NBC Sports 


Men’s College: Regular Season 

Duke at Denver 10 p.m. ESPNU 


LOTTERIES 


KENTUCKY 
Wednesday Midday 

Pick 3: 8-9-7 
Pick 4: 2-3-1-8 
Wednesday Evening 
Pick 3: 4-1-7 
Pick 4: 8-1-4-4 

Cash Ball: 2-17-18-22, Cash Ball 9 


Cash Ball Kicker: 3-6-1-1-3 
5 Card Cash: QD-AH-4S7C-5C 

POWERBALL 
Wednesday Evening 

Numbers: 4-25-29-34-43, 
Powerball 29 

Estimated Jackpot: $173 million 
Cash Option: $107.7 million 


BASEBALL 


MLB 

STANDINGS & SCHEDULE 
NATIONAL LEAGUE 


Phoenix 

33 

32 

.508 

8 

3. Lexington Lafayette (2) 

410 

Golden State 

23 

42 

.354 

18 

4. Louisville Mercy (2) 

407 

Sacramento 

21 

44 

.323 

20 

5. Christian County (2) 

379 


East Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

Washington 

14 

4 

.778 

— 

Atlanta 

11 

7 

.611 

3 

New York 

10 

8 

.556 

4 

Philadelphia 

9 

10 

.474 

5V2 

Miami 

7 

10 

.412 

6 V 2 

Central Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

St. Louis 

12 

7 

.632 

— 

Cincinnati 

9 

9 

.500 

2 V 2 

Milwaukee 

9 

10 

.474 

3 

Pittsburgh 

8 

10 

.444 

31/2 

Houston 

7 

12 

.368 

5 

Chicago 

6 

13 

.316 

6 

West Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

Los Angeles 

13 

5 

.722 

— 

Colorado 

9 

9 

.500 

4 

San Francisco 

9 

9 

.500 

4 

Arizona 

9 

10 

.474 

41/2 

San Diego 

5 

14 

.263 

8 V 2 


Tuesday’s Scores 

Pittsburgh 5, Colorado 4 
N.Y. Mets 2, Miami 1 
Cincinnati 9, San Francisco 2 
Chicago Cubs 3, St. Louis 2, 10 innings 
Milwaukee 9, Houston 6 
Philadelphia 8 , Arizona 5 
Washington 3, San Diego 1 
Atlanta 4, L.A. Dodgers 3 

Wednesday’s Scores 
Colorado 2, Pittsburgh 1, 1st game 
Houston 7, Milwaukee 5 
St. Louis 5, Chicago Cubs 1 
Philadelphia 7, Arizona 2 
Pittsburgh 5, Colorado 1, 2nd game 
Washington 7, San Diego 2 
N.Y. Mets 5, Miami 1 
Cincinnati 4, San Francisco 2 
Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, (n) 

Today’s Games 

San Francisco (Vogelsong 0-1) at Cincinnati (Bailey 
1-2), 12:35 p.m. 

Miami (Nolasco 2-0) at N.Y. Mets (Niese 2-0), 1:10 
p.m. 

Washington (E.Jackson 1-1) at San Diego (Volquez 
0-2), 10:05 p.m. 

Friday’s Games 

Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m. 

Arizona at Miami, 7:10 p.m. 

Houston at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m. 

Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m. 

Milwaukee at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m. 

N.Y. Mets at Colorado, 8:40 p.m. 

Washington at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. 

San Diego at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m. 

AMERICAN LEAGUE 


(x-clinched playoff spot, y-clinched division, 
z-clinched conference) 

Tuesday’s Scores 
Atlanta 109, L.A. Clippers 102 
Oklahoma City 118, Sacramento 110 
Boston 78, Miami 66 
New Orleans 83, Golden State 81 
Utah 100, Phoenix 88 

Wednesday’s Scores 
Washington 96, Cleveland 85 
Chicago 92, Indiana 87 
Orlando 102, Charlotte 95 
Denver 106, Oklahoma City 101 
Philadelphia 90, Milwaukee 85 
New York 99, L.A. Clippers 93 
San Antonio at Phoenix, (n) 

Today’s Games 
New Jersey at Toronto, 7 p.m. 

Portland at Utah, 8 p.m. 

Cleveland at Chicago, 8 p.m. 

New Orleans at Houston, 8 p.m. 

Denver at Minnesota, 8 p.m. 

Orlando at Memphis, 8 p.m. 

Dallas at Atlanta, 8 p.m. 

Milwaukee at Boston, 8 p.m. 

New York at Charlotte, 8 p.m. 

Philadelphia at Detroit, 8 p.m. 

Miami at Washington, 8 p.m. 

San Antonio at Golden State, 10:30 p.m. 

L.A. Lakers at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m. 


FOOTBALL 


NFL 

DRAFT 

FIRST ROUND ORDER 
Pick-Team (Note) 

1. Indianapolis 

2. Washington (from St. Louis) 

3. Minnesota 

4. Cleveland 

5. Tampa Bay 

6. St. Louis (from Washington) 

7. Jacksonville 

8. Miami 

9. Carolina 

10. Buffalo 

11. Kansas City 

12. Seattle 

13. Arizona 

14. Dallas 

15. Philadelphia 

16. N.Y. Jets 

17. Cincinnati (from Oakland) 

18. San Diego 

19. Chicago 

20. Tennessee 

21. Cincinnati 


East Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

22. Cleveland (from Atlanta) 

Baltimore 

11 

7 

.611 

— 

23. Detroit 

Tampa Bay 

11 

7 

.611 

— 

24. Pittsburgh 

New York 

10 

7 

.588 

V 2 

25. Denver 

Toronto 

10 

8 

.556 

1 

26. Houston 

Boston 

6 

10 

.375 

4 

27. New Fngland (from New Orleans) 

Central Division 

w 

L 

Pet 

GB 

28. Green Bay 

Cleveland 

9 

7 

.563 

— 

29. Baltimore 

Chicago 

10 

8 

.556 

— 

30. San Francisco 

Detroit 

10 

8 

.556 

— 

31. New Fngland 

Minnesota 

5 

13 

.278 

5 

32. N.Y. Giants 

Kansas City 

4 

14 

.222 

6 

PAST NO. 1 PICKS 

West Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

Year — Player, Team, Position, College 

Texas 

14 

4 

.778 

— 

2011 — Cam Newton, Carolina, QB, Auburn 

Oakland 

10 

10 

.500 

5 

2010 — Sam Bradford, St. Louis, QB, Oklahoma. 

Seattle 

9 

10 

.474 

51/2 

2009 — Matthew Stafford, Detroit, QB, Georgia. 

Los Angeles 

6 

12 

.333 

8 

2008 — Jake Long, Miami, OT, Michigan. 


Tuesday’s Scores 

Cleveland 4, Kansas City 3 
Seattle 7, Detroit 4 
Baltimore 2, Toronto 1 
Tampa Bay 5, L.A. Angels 0 
Texas 2, N.Y. Yankees 0 
Boston 11, Minnesota 2 
Oakland 2, Chicago White Sox 0 

Wednesday’s Scores 

Oakland 5, Chicago White Sox 4, 14 innings 

Kansas City 8 , Cleveland 2 

Seattle 9, Detroit 1 

Baltimore 3, Toronto 0 

Tampa Bay 3, L.A. Angels 2 

N.Y. Yankees at Texas, (n) 

Boston at Minnesota, (n) 

Today’s Games 

Kansas City (Mendoza 0-2) at Cleveland (Tomlin 1- 
1), 12:05 p.m. 

Seattle (Noesi 1-2) at Detroit (Porcello 1-1), 1:05 
p.m. 

L.A. Angels (Williams 1-1) at Tampa Bay (Moore 0- 
1 ), 1:10 p.m. 

Toronto (Hutchison 1-0) at Baltimore (Matusz 0-3), 
7:05 p.m. 

Boston (Doubront 0-0) at Chicago White Sox 
(Humber 1-0), 8:10 p.m. 

Friday’s Games 
Detroit at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m. 

L.A. Angels at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m. 

Oakland at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m. 

Seattle at Toronto, 7:07 p.m. 

Tampa Bay at Texas, 8:05 p.m. 

Boston at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m. 

Kansas City at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m. 

WEDNESDAY’S BOXSCORE 
REDS 4, GIANTS 2 


San Francisco 

ab 

Pagan of 
MeCarr If 


Cincinnati 


r hbi 
5 111 
5 0 20 


ab r h bi 
3110 


Stubbs of 

Valdez ss-2b 3 0 11 

SandovI 3b 4 0 10 Votto lb 3 0 11 

Posey lb 4 0 2 0 Phillips 2b 3 0 0 0 

HSnchz c 3 12 0 Chpmn p 0 0 0 0 

Schrhit rf 4 0 00 Marshll p 00 0 0 

Burriss 2b 2 0 10 Bruce rf 4 0 0 0 

Pill ph 0 0 00 Rolen 3b 3111 

Romo p 0 0 0 0 Ludwck If 4 110 

BCrwfr ss 3 0 10 Hanign c 312 0 

Arias ph-ss 1 0 0 0 Arroyo p 10 0 0 

Zito p 2 0 0 0 Frazier ph 10 10 

Hensly p 0 0 0 0 Hoover p 0 0 0 0 

Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 Arrdnd p 0 0 0 0 

Theriot 2b 1 0 0 0 Harris ph 10 0 0 

Cozart ss 10 0 0 
Totals 30 4 8 3 
100 000 — 2 

000 40x — 4 

E—Hensley (1), Schierholtz (1), Stubbs (1). DP— 
San Francisco 1, Cincinnati 1. LOB—San Francisco 
9, Cincinnati 8 . 2B—Posey (3), Votto ( 6 ). HR— 
Pagan (2), Rolen (1). SB—Me.Cabrera (5). CS— 
Burriss (1). S—Zito, Hanigan. SF—Valdez. 


Totals 34 2101 

San Francisco 001 
Cincinnati 000 


IP H R ER BB SO 


San Francisco 

Zito 6 

Hensley L,l-2 BS,1-2 2-3 


Affeldt 
Romo 

Cincinnati 

Arroyo 

Hoover 

Arredondo W,2-0 
Chapman H,3 
Marshall S,4-4 


1-3 

1 

5 

1 

1 

1 

1 


Zito pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. 
HBP—by Chapman (Pill). WP—Affeldt. 


BASKETBALL 


NBA 

STANDINGS & SCHEDULE 
EASTERN CONFERENCE 


Atlantie Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

y-Boston 

38 

27 

.585 

— 

x-New York 

35 

30 

.538 

3 

x-Philadelphia 

35 

30 

.538 

3 

New Jersey 

22 

43 

.338 

16 

Toronto 

22 

43 

.338 

16 

Southeast Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

y-Miami 

46 

19 

.708 

— 

x-Atlanta 

39 

26 

.600 

7 

x-Orlando 

37 

28 

.569 

9 

Washington 

19 

46 

.292 

27 

Charlotte 

7 

58 

.108 

39 

Central Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

z-Chicago 

49 

16 

.754 

— 

x-Indiana 

42 

24 

.636 

71/2 

Milwaukee 

31 

34 

.477 

18 

Detroit 

24 

41 

.369 

25 

Cleveland 

21 

44 

.323 

28 


WESTERN CONFERENCE 


Southwest Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

z-San Antonio 

48 

16 

.750 

— 

x-Memphis 

40 

25 

.615 

8 V 2 

x-Dallas 

36 

29 

.554 

I 2 V 2 

Houston 

33 

32 

.508 

151/2 

New Orleans 

21 

44 

.323 

271/2 

Northwest Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

y-Oklahoma City 

47 

19 

.712 

— 

x-Denver 

37 

28 

.569 

91/2 

x-Utah 

35 

30 

.538 

111/2 

Portland 

28 

37 

.431 

181/2 

Minnesota 

26 

39 

.400 

201/2 

Paeifie Division 

W 

L 

Pet 

GB 

y-L.A. Lakers 

41 

24 

.631 

— 

x-L.A. Clippers 

40 

26 

.606 

11/2 


2007 — JaMarcus Russell, Oakland, QB, LSU. 
2006 — Mario Williams, Houston, DE, North 
Carolina State. 

2005 — Alex Smith, San Francisco, QB, Utah. 
2004 — Eli Manning, San Diego, QB, Mississippi. 
2003 — Carson Palmer, Cincinnati, QB, Southern 
California. 

2002 — David Carr, Houston, QB, Fresno State. 
2001 — Michael Vick, Atlanta, QB, Virginia Tech. 
2000 — Courtney Brown, Cleveland, DE, Penn 
State. 

1999 — Tim Couch, Cleveland, QB, Kentucky. 

1998 — Peyton Manning, Indianapolis, QB, 
Tennessee. 

1997 — Orlando Pace, St. Louis Rams, T, Ohio 
State. 

1996 — Keyshawn Johnson, New York Jets, WR, 
Southern California. 

1995 — Ki-Jana Carter, Cincinnati, RB, Penn 
State. 

1994 — Dan Wilkinson, Cincinnati, DE, Ohio State. 
1993 — Drew Bledsoe, New England, QB, 
Washington State. 

1992 — Steve Emtman, Indianapolis, DE, 
Washington. 

1991 — Russell Maryland, Dallas, DL, Miami. 
1990 — Jeff George, Indianapolis, QB, Illinois. 
1989 — Troy Aikman, Dallas, QB, UCLA. 

1988 — Aundray Bruce, Atlanta, LB, Auburn. 

1987 — Vinny Testaverde, Tampa Bay, QB, Miami. 
1986 — Bo Jackson, Tampa Bay, RB, Auburn. 

1985 — Bruce Smith, Buffalo, DT, Virginia Tech. 
1984 — Irving Fryar, New England, WR, Nebraska. 
1983 — John Elway, Baltimore, QB, Stanford. 

1982 — Kenneth Sims, New England, DT, Texas. 
1981 — George Rogers, New Orleans, RB, South 
Carolina. 

1980 — Billy Sims, Detroit, RB, Oklahoma. 

1979 — Tom Cousineau, Buffalo, LB, Ohio State. 
1978 — Earl Campbell, Houston, RB, Texas. 

1977 — Ricky Bell, Tampa Bay, RB, Southern 
California. 

1976 — Lee Roy Selmon, Tampa Bay, DE, 
Oklahoma. 

1975 — Steve Bartkowski, Atlanta, QB, California. 
1974 — Ed Jones, Dallas, DE, Tennessee State. 
1973 — John Matuszak, Houston, DE, Tampa. 
1972 — Walt Patulski, Buffalo, DE, Notre Dame. 
1971 — Jim Plunkett, New England, QB, Stanford. 
1970 — Terry Bradshaw, Pittsburgh, QB, Louisiana 
Tech. 

1969 — O.J. Simpson, Buffalo (AFL), RB, Southern 
California. 

1968 — Ron Yary, Minnesota, T, Southern 
California. 

1967 — Bubba Smith, Baltimore, DT, Michigan 
State. 

1966 — Tommy Nobis, Atlanta, LB, Texas. 

1966 — Jim Grabowski, Miami (AFL), RB, Illinois. 
1965 — Tucker Frederickson, N.Y. Giants, RB, 
Auburn. 

1965 — Lawrence Elkins, Houston (AFL), WR, 
Baylor. 

1964 — Dave Parks, San Francisco, WR, Texas 
Tech. 

1964 — Jack Concannon, Boston (AFL), QB, 

Boston College. 

1963 — Terry Baker, Los Angeles, QB, Oregon 
State. 

1963 — Buck Buchanan, Kansas City (AFL), DT, 
Grambling. 

1962 — Ernie Davis, Washington, RB, Syracuse. 
1962 — Roman Gabriel, Oakland (AFL), QB, North 
Carolina State. 

1961 — Tommy Mason, Minnesota, RB, Tulane. 
1961 — Ken Rice, Buffalo (AFL), G, Auburn. 

1960 — Billy Cannon, Los Angeles, RB, LSU. 

1959 — Randy Duncan, Green Bay, QB, Iowa. 

1958 — King Hill, Chicago Cardinals, QB, Rice. 
1957 — Paul Hornung, Green Bay, HB, Notre 
Dame. 

1956 — Gary Click, Pittsburgh, DB, Colorado A&M. 
1955 — George Shaw, Baltimore, QB, Oregon. 
1954 — Bobby Garrett, Cleveland, QB, Stanford. 
1953 — Harry Babcock, San Francisco, WR, 
Georgia. 

1952 — Bill Wade, Los Angeles, QB, Vanderbilt. 
1951 — Kyle Rote, New York Giants, HB, SMU. 
1950 — Leon Hart, Detroit, WR, Notre Dame. 

1949 — Chuck Bednarik, Philadelphia, C, 
Pennsylvania. 

1948 — Harry Gilmer, Washington, QB, Alabama. 
1947 — Bob Fenimore, Chicago Bears, HB, 
Oklahoma A&M. 

1946 — Frank Dancewicz, Boston, QB, Notre 
Dame. 

1945 — Charley Trippi, Chicago Cardinals, HB, 
Georgia. 

1944 — Angelo Bertelli, Boston, QB, Notre Dame. 
1943 — Frank Sinkwich, Detroit, HB, Georgia. 

1942 — Bill Dudley, Pittsburgh, HB, Virginia. 

1941 — Tom Harmon, Chicago Bears, HB, 
Michigan. 

1940 — George Cafego, Chicago Cardinals, HB, 
Tennessee. 

1939 — Ki Aldrich, Chicago Cardinals, C, TCU. 
1938 — Corbett Davis, Cleveland, FB, Indiana. 
1937 — Sam Francis, Philadelphia, FB, Nebraska. 
1936 — Jay Berwanger, Philadelphia, HB, Chicago. 


SOFTBALL 


6. Louisville Assumption (1) 376 

7. Bowling Green Greenwood 333 

8. Louisville Male 288 

9. Owensboro Catholic 279 

10. Green County 253 

11. Scott County 217 

12. Paducah Reidland 157 

13. Ashland Blazer 139 

14. Central Hardin 118 

15. Bowling Green 101 

16. North Laurel 93 

17. Bullitt East 91 

18. Christian Academy-Louisville 90 

19. Paducah Heath 89 

20. Louisville Eastern 78 

20. Louisville Pleasure Ridge Park 78 

22. Grayson County 69 

23. Hopkins County Central 68 

24. Muhlenberg County 64 

25. Livingston Central 41 

Others Receiving Votes: Paducah Lone Oak 40, 
Nicholas County 34, Marshall County 29, Louisville 
Butler 27, Oldham County 23, Franklin County 16, 
Henderson County 16, Meade County 14, Bell 
County 13, Louisville Holy Cross 13, Calloway 
County 12, Glasgow 12, Madisonville-North 
Hopkins 12, Butler County 11, Union County 11, 
South Laurel 9, Walton-Verona 9, Murray 8, Taylor 
County 8, Owensboro Apollo 7, Graves County 6, 
Warren East 3, Boyd County 2, Daviess County 2, 
Bourbon County 2, Boyle County 1, Estill County 1, 
Magoffin County 1. 


TENNiS 


PREP 

COACHES’ TOP 25: APRIL 25 

Rank-Team (FPV) Points 

1. Allen County-Scottsville (15) 489 

2. Louisville Ballard (4) 425 


BOYS’ PREP 

TUESDAY’S SCORES 
TAYLOR COUNTY 4, LARUE COUNTY 1 
Singies 

Mark Harris (TC) def. Keiren Bowen (LC), 6-4, 6-0 
Justin Smith (TC) def. Nick Chantharasinh (LC), 6 - 
1, 6-0 

Gavin Cheng (TC) def. John Michael Lawler (LC), 8 - 
1 

Doubies 

Trevor Sanders/Lucas Pepper (LC) def. Hayden 
McCubbin/Corey Gupton (TC), 6-4, 6-4 
Ben Sharpe/Caleb Wiggington (TC) def. Ryan 
Hornback/Tyler Skaggs (LC), 6-1, 6-2 

GIRLS’ PREP 

TUESDAY’S SCORES 
TAYLOR COUNTY 3, LARUE COUNTY 2 
Singies 

Michelle Seymour (LC) def. Aryn Massengale (TC), 
6-3, 6-1 

Raven Burress (TC) def. Amanda Adyani (LC), 7-6 
(7-5), 6-3 

Kassie Miller (TC) def. Caitlin Lewis (LC), 8-2 

Doubies 

Amelia Miller/Paige Nalley (LC) def. Rachel 
Riggs/Kasandra Richerson (TC), 6-3, 6-3 
Tamy Morerira/Meredith Johnson (TC) def. Haylee 
Best/Madison Lee (LC), 6-4, 6-4 

ATP/WTA 

WEDNESDAY’S SCORES 
NASTASE TiRiAC TROPHY 
Singies 

Second Round 

Daniel Brands, Germany, def. Jurgen Zopp, 

Estonia, 7-6 (3), 6-3. 

Attila Balazs, Hungary, def. Potito Starace, Italy, 6 - 
3, 6-4. 

Xavier Malisse, Belgium, def. Florian Mayer (2), 
Germany, 7-5, 4-6, 6-4. 

Doubies 

First Round 

Michal Mertinak, Slovakia, and Andre Sa, Brazil, 
def. Martin Emmrich, Germany, and Andreas 
Siljestrom, Sweden, 3-6, 6-3, 10-8. 

Robert Lindstedt, Sweden, and Horia Tecau (1), 
Romania, def. Andrei Daescu and Florin Mergea, 
Romania, 4-6, 6-4, 10-2 tiebreak. 

Second Round 

Jeremy Chardy, France, and Lukasz Kubot, Poland, 
def. Treat Conrad Huey, Philippines, and Dominic 
Inglot, Briatin, 3-6, 6-3, 10-7 tiebreak. 

GRAND PRiX DE SAR 
Singies 

Second Round 

Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania, def. Svetlana 
Kuznetsova (2), Russia, 1-6, 7-6 (4), 3-2, retired. 
Petra Cetkovska (3), Czech Republic, def. Timea 
Bacsinszky, Switzerland, 6-3, 6-2. 

Simona Halep (5), Romania, def. Alexandra 
Cadantu, Romania, 6-2, 7-5. 

Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, def. Chanelle 
Scheepers ( 6 ), South Africa, 7-5, 1-6, 6-3. 

Carbine Muguruza Blanco, Spain, def. Patricia 
Mayr-Achleitner, Austria, 6-4, retired. 

Laura Pous-Tio, Spain, def. Arantxa Rus, 
Netherlands, 6-3, 7-5. 

Anabel Medina Garrigues (1), Spain, def. Mandy 
Minella, Luxembourg, 6-2, 6-3. 

Mathilde Johansson, Sweden, def. Shahar Peer ( 8 ), 
Israel, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. 

Doubies 

First Round 

Karolina and Kristyna Pliskova, Czech Republic, 
def. Anastasia Rodionova, Australia, and Arina 
Rodionova (1), Russia, 2-0, retired. 

Kiki Bertens and Arantxa Rus, Netherlands, def. 
Lara Arruabarrena-Vecino, Spain, and Ekaterina 
Ivanova, Russia, 6-2, 6-2. 

Irina-Camelia Begu and Alexandra Cadantu, 
Romania, def. Timea Bacsinszky, Switzerland, and 
Alberta Brianti, Italy, 6-0, 1-6, 10-5 tiebreak. 

Petra Cetkovska, Czech Republic, and Alexandra 
Panova, Russia, def. Fatima Zahrae El Allami and 
Nadia Lalami, Morocco, 6-3, 6-3. 

BARCELONA OPEN 
Singies 

Second Round 

Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. Guillermo Garcia- 
Lopez, Spain, 6-1, 6-2. 

Kevin Anderson (13), South Africa, def. Federico 
Delbonis, Argentina, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5). 

Albert Ramos (17), Spain, def. Benoit Paire, 

France, 6-3, 7-5. 

Kei Nishikori ( 8 ), Japan, def. Mikhail Kukushkin, 
Kazakhstan, 6-3, 4-6, 6-0. 

Feliciano Lopez (7), Spain, def. Flavio Cipolla, Italy, 
6-4, 6-3. 

Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, def. Eduardo Schwank, 
Argentina, 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-4. 

Albert Montanes, Spain, def. Bernard Tomic (15), 
Australia, 6-0, 5-7, 7-5. 

David Ferrer (3), Spain, def. Filip Krajinovic, Serbia, 

6- 0, 6-3. 

Milos Raonic (11), Canada, def. Igor Andreev, 
Russia, 6-4, 6-1. 

Santaigo Giraldo, Colombia, def. Robin Haase, 
Netherlands, 6-4, 6-3. 

Janko Tipsarevic (5), Serbia, def. Victor Hanescu, 
Romania, 7-5, 6-4. 

Frederico Gil, Portugal, def. Joao Sousa, Portugal, 
4-6, 6-4, 6-3. 

Robert Farah, Colombia, def. Pablo Andujar (16), 
Spain, 7-6 ( 8 ), 4-6, 7-5. 

Doubles 

First Round 

Andy and Jamie Murray, Britain, def. Kevin 
Anderson, South Africa, and Frank Moser, 

Germany, 6-4, 6-4. 

Marcel Granollers and Marc Lopez, Spain, def. 
Alejandro Falla and Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, 7-6 
(2), 6-4. 

Second Round 

Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, def. David 
Marrero and Fernando Verdasco, Spain, 5-7, 6-2, 
10-7 tiebreak. 

Oliver Marach and Alexander Peya ( 8 ), Austria, def. 
Mikhail Elgin, Russia, and Denis Istomin, 
Uzbekistan, 6-1, 4-6, 10-7. 

Max Mirnyi, Belgium, and Daniel Nestor (2), 

Canada def. Robin Haase, Netherlands, and Jarkko 
Nieminen, Finland, 4-6, 6-4, 14-12 tiebreak. 
PORSCHE GRAND PRIX 
Singles 

First Round 

Mona Barthel, Germany, def. Ana Ivanovic, Serbia, 

7- 5, 7-6 (4). 

Akgul Amanmuradova, Uzebekistan, def. Dominika 
Cibulkova, Slovakia, 6-2, 5-7, 6-3. 

Caroline Wozniacki ( 6 ), Denmark, def. Jelena 
Jankovic, Serbia, 6-3, 1-0 retired. 

Second Round 

Agnieszka Radwanska (4), Poland, def. Greta Arn, 
Hungary, 6-3, 6-4. 

Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, def. Alize Cornet, 
France, 6-3, 1-0, retired. 

Doubles 

First Round 

Julia Goerges and Anna-Lena Groenefeld, Germany, 
def. Peng Shuai China, and Elena Vesnina (3), 
Russia, 7-6 (2), 6-1. 

Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Russia, and Lucie, 
Safarova, Czech Republic, def. Angelique Kerber 
and Andrea Petkovic, Germany, 6-4, 7-5. 

Nuria Llagostera Vives, Spain, vs. Monica 
Niculescu, Romania, def. Chan Hao-Ching, Taiwan, 
and Rika Fujiwara, Japan, 6-2, 6-3. 












COLLEGE SIGNING 


THE NEWS^EI^fTERPRISE 


SPimTS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


B3 



Elizabethtown’s Kuhn To Oglethorpe University 


ElizabethiQwn High School sonlor Hannah Kuhn signed Monday to ptay sooQor for Oglethorpe 
Uhlvet$Hyt an NCAA DIvisiDn^lll prograin tri Atlanta, Seated, from left, are brother Eli. mother 
Carla, Kuhn and father Dean. Standing are EHS principal Steve Smallwood, EHS coach Jerry 
Crabtree and EHS athletic director Deug Barnes. 

SPORTS CALENDAR 


SPORTS TEAM HOTE: SpofCalwdar a tree servfc«. twt The 
NewsEfiMsrKMise dtpEyimciH cartnat gyarafitt* whM ar 

itunv timcb an itcni wlU rurt. Iiyrrib should t>G sobnniEied lo Tho hl-E 
ipKwls irt|»rtni#rH m froonwr tl^n IhrCEt jjnor to thfr CtAa of 
j«LK event. The i^E sports department has the fi^hl to edU dH 
Spofls Calentfer ftems. p*hm a Sports Calendar Itom. tall 
(270) 505nl7S2. fm it to (270) 70S49GS Pr femSil it IP 
sjsa r tifi h»n B w lia nt«rpii^. E u m. 

APPfftRRNCES 

Odion ty«itn4/Tefr«iic4 Jonos At Towm Matt 

PefFTTcr Untvop&lty of t^nlucky nwn's tasketball plovers Dofoo 
Lamb and Tiarr^nce maIIi be si Elirabcihedwh':^ ToAfte Msll 
from B-fl p.m, Friday- A plialo pMokagb mu^T purchdosd pnof to 
tiBvJng anythtqg signed. For m twin at I cm,, call T3T-(X501. 

HtohoM HkhKiticitmit At Town# ma^f 
P wmer CfilVer&ity of Kentucky men's tasKetbaM piajer MichaeF 
KiffdJSil^bnsT ^11 he *ifl Fti^sbethlneri's Towne Msll from tt:30 
d-m- day- A mirumum psoksge mumt be pur- 
(d>a5ed poor k? havfng anylhing signed. A (reo autographed 6*10 
photo Mitl Ik giviMi to Wie first LOO scirvyce members in unJfofm. Fw 
information. calE 737O&01. 

nerlUB Miller At Tarnnam Mell 

formei University pi hjanhJnh;y men's bttsketbaii player Darius Mnler 
will be a( ^Miaijethtown's Towne Mall from 5-7 p,m. SsDurifayi Thefe 
13 a £20 chafigc for &ilO pixstbs. F^r in-termaiioh. call 737 0601. 

Haw Yarh Giania' Dinn Grunt At Fvrl Hnon 
Mew Vo*K Gjefits safely Oeoe Greet will be at Foil Unei on Mey ^. 
SchKfuie mciUides phy,?icai tiainin^ arvd pneakfgst with the 3/1 
Srigopde OofPbal Team, an autOErafh and picture session at the 
mam post estcbange and a visit with the Fort Kpmx Htgn Sohobl foot¬ 
ball loam. 

Tm>fi<*r* On Tow In Elixabvtfrtown 
westftrn Kemucky univwsity s 'Toppers On Totif wiir sfop ar 
0A2abetb(town Country Club at 3:30 p.rTt. June IS. SchetJuled to 
appeaf are WKU interim alhleilc dirOOtOf Todd Stewafl, head foiVt- 
batJ [fo43di WjIIiv Taggart, haad men's ibatskatbah CE>adi Ray Harper 
and head wuiian'a basketball cOaCb MiCfiella ClwIf'Meazd. 
C^ieerleadere. Toppefeiws and B^e Red, and mofe coaches and 
staff rttombers could appear as well. Members pf the ticket 
office wUI also be on-hand to answer questions and lake orders for 
foplbatl season lickels aod daposAtg for basketball sPaagn ticheitB- 
For ioloTTPalJon, vitrt www.alumlmi.wku.edu/t'DppefsonkiMr. call the 
locat WKU Alumni assoclMlM at (270j 7aSr4393 or omail 
alurnnii^kti.odu. 

RANt|UETS/CllNHERS 

IKfrdi Annual LaRun Cnunty F>i»tSuJI Bb4] Chlchui tfilnner 

The third annual laRue -Counly High School fbmtoall bartwqiue chick¬ 
en dinner is noofra p.m. suoday at LaRue couniy s Sportsmcin 
Lake. Oipo-m of carryout bolh avpilablc. TMo £lO per plats 
charge kneipdes thecten, Kv^ci snies. hemnerrhads dessert, tkead and 
a dfinn. Tickets are avaitphie ihroui;ih. lChS fCHrtbaii pfleyers 
CAMP«/CilNIC» 

CHHS YcHilh f Dotball Cuitlp 

Thu CanitaJ Hardin High ^tpol footbull team wvli have a yoadi 
irom ^ll;30 a.m. Jlhw 5-7 si CHHS, CsoAp is open lo sges 
tS-13 grfl cost IS $50 per camper. Degdiine to regitater is Tuesday, 
for kilprma^ldn, call Rhonda Walters si TeySSSS. 

CHHS Volloviwll Camp 

Tlia Csniful Hsrdin High 3diPol vullavlj^il tsan will Frave a camp 
from A.m.-nouh )une Il-IA kt Srulrr Gym. Co4t Is $50 in 
advance $60 at the door awJ includea a T-shirt. Comp is ofwn to 
those eiTterlpfi grades 3 3. Reglstioilfon forms are avoflable ot local 
elmonlary and middle school v^tl as CHHS- Far information call 
Rjta HightxBUg;! at 2G&3372 or Sill Rinefcer at 401^57, 

GOLF NOTICES 

iWping HArvd of Hope Golf ScramMo 
The Hoping Hond cf Hoix; will heve a solf s;crambf« May 4 at 
flirflhethtown Country Club- Fteg^-strfrl lOo begins at 3 Prm. wrfh n 
Sheldon start b 1 9- Fix Infpnrelroni. opntsot :^er| fh^nqlds aj 
75^3093 or sreynolds&hhhppe.com'. 

CHUMC Golf Gerambio 

Collage HelgjKts Unitod Mcthodlsi Cluiirch will have a oolf scramble 
May 23 PI Lindsey Golf Coyrse, ft-e^isstration begins at 7 e-m. wdti a 
shcriifun stprt eit 8:30- f nUy lee ts $&0 per pi^iyer or $?00 per 
team. DeaOlfre tu enier is F^r-ay 21. Ail proceeds will go to benefit 
me churth's youth group mission trip to Panama, for information, 
call Terr y Coy at 401-1997 uf 9S2-3902 (immings Mily) of 
Coleman iriowielt at 872-6140. 

Rndciif f notary Gnir ificramhio 
The RsdcllfF Rotary golF scramWe will be heW at 9 a-m. June 1 at 
fT&ft KrVOx'S LiOdSOy GOIF Course. Check-iin tS fi 0 : 01 . Jujie 1. LuhCh 
and bevCi pgps w-ili bo provided. FcifSS will be awdsded for fosi, 
tliird, sirth and last piiices, H you don't h-avw A foam, ms wrll tie 
found for you. For inlormaltlori. ceil Mike Eniow at 7668659. 

0ci. 6410. 


HHNS Hall &t Famw 

The Pforin Hnfdln High Schaol Athletic hhpI of Fame's ihlrd crass will 
tM: nfouctud m Steptombci. Nomirutions will be aocppiliCKl until 
Tuesdey- Nonknatlon forms ere available m the NHH3 main oChoe 
or Af; www.Fiardin .hyScKoolS.iua/nhhs/Blhlelfos/balEoffame/. For 
infwmancm, can Judy Tsishop at 351-3659. 

MEETINGS 
EHS Soyft' Soccflf 

The Elr^BbetFtTown Higb School b^S" Soccer teOm wjII have a meet- 
iitg at 7 p.m. Wedneadoy at Ibe high schodF. Anyone mlerested In 
playing in me fall and th^r parents should stfond. Fdr Informattoo, 
email EH3 Jcwi Parsons atTon.pafsons^town.'kyKhwls.'US. 

PHYSICALS 
HMH Spoffe PKyBlcala 

The Handin MemoriBl Hoipita] Sports Medlclra team wIN offer 
sports pliy^icals May 12 at the Care Rrsl Ur^nt Citra Cerifor 
lion and iho Therapy and Sports Modlctrio Comor at HMH. Cost Is 
$ tC- PhyaiPOle htb open to- high eohpol olhletea Uncluding incoming 
freshmerR and band members from Central Hardin. Eiliebethfown. 
HaM Cowily, John HiXdin, LaRtre Countyn Maads CwNity, Nor Hi 
Handih and North Hardto Chnstion. Physicals will be hold from 7;4& 
9 fl.m. (Ceniml Hardin at Cana ResIl Flr/ahethlown at HMHi, 9-9:30 
(John Hafd-in at Care Rrst; Hart County. LaRue County. Meade 
County North Hanjin Oirtstian at hmh) utkI 9:3^VlO [P4orlh 
Hardin at Care Brst). for mlormaliofi, call 763 7724. 

PLAYERS/COACKES NE£DED 
MMA Yeam -Seeking New Members 
The Braxilian )jii jUsu. Jtido and submission grappUng end F'town 
BMidown MMA foam art: EfierjEy Sports H looking for now membars. 
FOr informatiian, doniaoi JoSih Jdhiisdn at 234-3^1. 

CKY Srulns Foetbart^ 

The Cenirat Kentucky arulns. b 12-Bnd-under ifavel fogrtbadl team, Is 
fo need of ptayers. For Infomnalfon. call Kevin Gritnih at 7363699. 

Fort Knox. HaJIars 

The Fort Knqji Bstlers. a woman's sfow-pvti:^ soRbflU Iwm, fo 
reOfLAiti^g players. All playOrs must have a gOvemri'ient ID card In 
order lo be able in travel wllh (Pw loHm to CeorKis. nohda sifo 
Alabama for miliipry lournamoms. for mformauon, call 
Jurtie Wpdmec St 30&2i64. 

PRACTICES/TRYDUTS 
WHMS siKtivGMdB Gins' Basketball 
The West Haodln MkJOiIp Sdtool slKth-g/ade nidi' boshetbalF team 
will Ftave IryOufo Irom 3:366:15 p.m. Monday and TuwHday. Pfayarf 
arc oskod to anoivd both days oF iryoirts. For informaiiort, -oon-iooi 
WhMG cn^ch rfovtd Robbing nj 662-3924 or email 
davkl.ifobbjns^hardtn.kyschpol&.us. 

REGISTRATIONS 
EABC Babe Ruth Laogue 

The Elizabethtown Area RaeebBlI Commiaaion jq takirig regJstr^ionS 
for Its Babe Rulh (ages 1?. 14 and 15) leaifiuer For Information!. 
wn@irt Jetl Sowmw at jelfre¥^*owrnani@Mrtv;fi*t-net. 

no-ok wrostGng Club Persoiut FitnoH Trafoing 
The No-Ox. Wiesllibg Club wjII offer Personcri rinesipi and spurtE spe^ 
clfic^ training sessions beginning in Mey. FertlcFpants cen traming 
ootfon-one wth a iram^ or In group seWfion^ m a private gyoi No- 
Ok Is also otlcrlng prtvafo- and group wrosillng lessocia for all ages. 
Fiir inforniet£Or>, conUdST Joo 6urraugjlia et 272-S4S6 or 
ne_rM_wtesUinsgyehOT.com. 

SWIMMING NDtICEB 
6i«lm lessons 

Tfio E'lbwn DoIfhos swiinmnfg looni ore oFfoniig swinwinng les;aons 
Shis spring and surnmer. Sessions will be held May 29 and July 2- 
fo€ informatton, visi| www.elowndolphlnsjcom. 

TWRNAMENTG 
CornhulO Fvr Unltod Why 

5wppe Nissan is hosting, h cornhofo towmpment May Entry 

fee [a £!□ par team. Entry fees for oil pleyots plus il ,000.00 will 
be donated lo the winners' united Way charny of choice, feams 
ailao art encoLKOged to gel pfodgos from family and frfonds to go 
lowwfrf their Chosen charrty. For infarmatisn. vjsit 
www.swopeoh-antycomhorte.com. 

WAlJt$/frUN& 

American fled Cros* Fof t Kivox 9K Run Per TTt« Red 

The sewnth aF«nu«J AmtrricSn Red CtuSs Run F(f The Red 5K iS 
Moy ±2 on fort KrtOjc. FOf rnformation, visit www.activo.com. 

AmHun Jo BFertr SK 

The Addison Jo BiaIr 5K witl be held May 19 In Glendale. AN pru- 
ceeds go te benefit the Kosair ctHidren'e Hbsprlal. Ail perUcipenls 
who rogjister by May 4 will rocthvo a T-shirt and goodie bag^ 
Parliqipiinls must regisfor online at www.a^tive.-CMm. For mformp- 
tfon, en->all infq^addisuniuWairorg- 



Switch to Easy Pay TODAY and we will send 
you a $10 Wal-Mart Gift Card!" 


Easy Pay 

Because life is 
Hectic Enough! 


□ $10.95' per month 
Sunday-Friday 

□ $6.45'per month 
Sunday Only 

Naine;__ 

Addross:_ 


Cify:,^_ 

State:_ 

Zip: _ 

P1:tona: 


E-mail fr«i44rwii:_ 


/ authorize monthfy payments from my: 

n Credit Card n Debit Card 

n Bonic Droll (End udo voided chock and sign bolQw} 

Charge my: nCroditCard H Debit Card 

Card type: nvisa :!l MasterCard H Discover "I AMEX 

Card Humber:_ 

E)ipiration Dfite:_ 

Name on Card:_ 

Sig nature;_ 


I I Check here to receive epeeiaE email off era from The Newa-Enlerpriae. 


'TEtdii b -nkd WfM dobilatf tram ■ chKUrtfJ accbtinl, -cud m- dkfait dwni EAiy Pay d^bU-OldiMlAkWIi dra [iiifii ^jpiWiEifliWr Dn Ih* 17tfa wvefy 
mwtfi- F vn^MjtAtid M ikMMWAC Will be Still 041 ffwlo^ iiW nty $MbKrrtfltlw Ft hiifl pgrtfl; ihHMiflh ct#dtt*i}|f^rtfik Htwfli If Sftyii w sftt* om 
cilu^r yHt I ‘Nrioli la db^wulmid ihU ;|uyeiwM utvipo I will n^ify Tho fRMS-Ejnupflu 39 tfiiyt In mNiii» in tyva tho campAJiy itJ^onAlia o^niinlEy ta 
act on irt. OlstcVilHiang thn Eiiy lOpUcVi will Ool flap my NdWt'E^duf pdiei 4ubicr.rptkin, it utif ChfeAgdu tWf tTHttkid at jwpndrtt. £iay ^ option ii ntkrt 

for Fbwi *aivwy tiw flmy. 

^Qna yedf cwmnJtnwnl le Ou Euy Pity plm Ii nqiiked ba bi efiglUii Ear Elv nlfi unificHa. ran cefllHeau will ba rullad \n wneha irtw lUsi ptynunl lo 

VTlllidu Ihrougli Euy 

Oall g7i>*S0S-177a or moli to; 

Nowo-EnterprfGe Ctroulation Departmenl 

^ ^ Etiiiibethtown. KY 42701 to sign itp for Easy Fay! j 


The News-Enterprise 


Convert your current 
subscription 

to Easy Pay or sign up for a 
new subscription on the 
Easy Pay pian and we wili 
take care of the rest! 


Mb Up For Easy Pay! 





2012 GMC Acadia 


2012 GMC Acadia 


MSRP...$39,640.00 

Discount..$4,645.00 

Rebate.$2,000.00 


Sale Price 

* 32 , 995.00 

USAA Members get another $750.00 off! 


Sale Price 

S'?'? QQK on 

#7230050A. 5,611 miles | 

USAA Members get another $750.00 off! 


MSRP..$42,185.00 

Discount....$6,190.00 

Rebate.$2,000.00 


2012 Buick Lacrosse 

MSRP.$32,110.00 

Discount..,..$4,115.00 

Rebate..,.$1,000.00 


Sale Price 

* 26 , 995.00 

USAA MemZjers^eto/iot/fer ^750.00 off! 

2012 Buick Lacrosse 

MSRP.$32,110.00 

Discount.$4,115,00 

Rebate..,..$1,000.00 


Sale Price 

* 26 , 995.00 

USAA Members get another $750.00 off. 




2012 GMC Terrain 


MSRP.$26,.51.5.00 

Discount.$4,000.00 


Sale Price 

* 22 , 515.00 

USAA Members get another $750.00 off! 



2012 GMC Terrain 


MSRP..$35,125.00 

Discount.$4,130.00 

Sale Price 

* 30 , 995.00 

USAA Members get another $750.00 off 



Sam Swope Buick GMC 

6770 Dixie Highway inlouisviue 

TOLL FREE 1-877-535-9944 

SALES HOWL M0N.-FRI. 9A-ill^ SAT. OA-OP; aOSED SUM. 

WWW.SAMSWOPE.COM 

Just 9 Short drtv 0 up Dixie Highway from Ft. Krtoxi 

CSMCm ^ BUICK 

‘PMC9 fenacts Rii reuafog tniat mav tnis vehicse, Hg 5I reti@i^ m not cofnuatibi? with M^nutactufer supports finance 

If Specral aiB-diesked pIdBse GOdiHjcf us for th? deiaJla. 
































































































B4 


THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


SPORTS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


RECREATION ROUNDUP & BLUEGRASS OUTDOORS 

BASEBALL 



Blaze First In Marion County 


The Kentucky Blaze, an under-11 travel baseball team, won the the Central Kentucky Spring 
Classic this past weekend in Marion County. Front row, from ieft, are Chase Eimore, Wiii 
Dando, Reece McEifresh and Garrett Ashiock. Middie row are Chance Peterson, Briiey Hadiey, 
Jacob Hobbs, Carson Crump and Cade Bruington. Back row are coaches Stace McEifresh, 
Abby Peterson and Rob Bruington. Not pictured are Tyier Wood and Coieman Ciark. 



EABC Haii Of Fame Inductees 


From left, Lon Galvin, Joe Roberts and L.A. Medley pose with commissioner Don Hill of the 
Elizabethtown Area Baseball Commission after Gthey were inducted into the EABC Hall of 
Fame last week during the EABC’s opening ceremony at University Drive Park. 





Herb Jones Chevrolet Donates $500 To EABC 


Left, commissioner Don Hill of the Elizabethtown Area Baseball Commission receives a $500 check from Mark Jones of Herb Jones Chevrolet, right, during the EABC’s opening ceremony last 
week. Right, Mark Jones and Jesse Jones of Herb Jones Chevrolet pose with some Mariners and Cubs players. 


HUNTING 

Midnight Monday is Kentucky eik hunt deadiine 


www.KDFWR.org 

FRANKFORT - The deadline to ap¬ 
ply for Kentucky’s hunt of a lifetime is fast 
approaching. 

Hunters have until midnight Monday 
to apply for a Kentucky elk hunt. The quo¬ 
ta hunt drawing for an elk permit is open 
to residents and non-residents. 

Kentucky will issue 900 general quota 
hunt permits this year, an increase of 100 
permits over the 2011 season. Kentucky’s 
elk herd is expected to surpass 10,000 by 
fall. 

While there’s no sure thing in hunting. 


Kentucky does offer phenomenal odds for 
hunters. 

‘‘Kentucky’s success rate for hunters is 
higher than you’ll see for wild elk practi¬ 
cally anywhere else,” said Tina Brunjes, 
deer and elk program coordinator for the 
Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife 
Resources. “If hunters put in a little effort, 
they will see elk. If they put in a little more 
effort, they will take an elk.” 

Last year, 93 percent of bull elk 
hunters, 73 percent of cow elk hunters us¬ 
ing a firearm, 68 percent of archery 
hunters and 37 percent of cow elk archery 
hunters were successful. 


Brunjes said this should be a superb 
season for hunters wishing to put the high¬ 
est quality meat on their family’s table. 

“We had no real winter and no shortage 
of groceries for the animals,” she said. “We 
should be set up for big, healthy animals 
coming into the hunting season and a lot 
of them.” 

Kentucky has more elk than all the 
states east of the Mississippi River com¬ 
bined. The state’s 16-county elk restora¬ 
tion zone encompasses more than 4 mil¬ 
lion acres, nearly twice the size of 
Yellowstone National Park. More than half 
a million acres are open to public hunting 


for elk in Kentucky. 

Hunters can select from among four dif¬ 
ferent elk permits: Firearms bull, archery 
bull, firearms cow elk or archery cow elk. 
While hunters may apply for two different 
permits, they can only be drawn for one of 
those permits. Each application costs $10. 

Kentucky Fish and Wildlife will issue 
135 permits to hunt a bull with a firearm 
through the general quota hunt this sea¬ 
son. The department will issue 90 bull 
archery permits, 265 cow elk archery per¬ 
mits and 410 cow elk gun permits. A sepa¬ 
rate youth-only drawing will allow five 
young hunters to take a bull or a cow. 


FISHING 



Cardin’s Walleye 


Mark Cardin caught this 28-inch, 6.5-pound walleye this 
month in the Nolin River. 


WE WANT YOUR RESULTS AND PHOTOS! 

There are four ways to turn in sports scores and 
photos: 

■ E-MAIL: to sports®thenewsenterprise.com. 

We accept Word (.doc), Notepad (.txt), JPEG (Jpg) 
and bitmap (.bmp) files. 

■ FAX: (270) 769-6965. Please write “Sports” on all 
pages. 

■ MAIL: The News-Enterprise Sports Department, 
408 West Dixie Avenue, Elizabethtown, KY 42701. 

■ IN PERSON: At our office (address listed above). 
Office hours are from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. 
There is a drop box to the right prior to entering 
the second door for use during non-office hours. 

All submitted items must be received before noon 
Wednesday prior to Thursday’s publication. 

All items must have a contact name, phone number 
and first and last names of all participants. The N- 
E has the right to edit/crop all items. The N-E also 
has the right to hold items for publication because 
of space or time constraints. 

Photos should be of championship, runner-up or 
third-place individuals or teams. 

No phoned-in, handwritten, all-caps or items older 
than 45 days will be taken. 

For photos to be returned, submittee must turn in 
a self-addressed stamped envelope. 

For information, caii Josh Ciayweii 
at (270) 505-1752 

RESULTS 


HUNTING 



Casteel’s Turkey 


Coleman Casteel of Elizabethtown took his first tukey with a 
20-gauge shotgun. 


BASEBALL 


EABC 

6-YEAR-OLD LEAGUE 
ASTROS 3, CARDINALS 2 

Astros: Wyatt McAdams IB; Kasey 
Hospelhorn IB; Jackson Lee 2-lB; 
Bryan Murray IB; Landon Wood IB; 
Haylie Duffy IB; Clifton Beesley IB. 
Cardinals: Christian Taylor IB; Adrian 
Dykes IB; Greyson Hainer IB; Jake 
Williams IB; Connor Lynch IB. 
PEANUT LEAGUE 
REDS 8, YANKEES 5 
Reds: Tyler Todd 2-lB; Conner 
Kingrey IB, 3-2B; Kaden Ferguson 3- 


IB; Hendrix Thomas IB; Bryce Estes 
2-lB; Nathan Nett IB; Stephen Pike 
IB; Kendal Bryce IB. Yankees: Devin 
Owens IB; Jackson Clark 3-lB; Drew 
Dawson IB, 2B; J.J. Crabtree IB. 

RED SOX 14, CARDINALS 3 
Red Sox: Jason Towell IB, 2B; Clint 
Chambliss 2-lB, 2B; Kaden Ray 3- 
2B; Cody Jenkinson IB, 2-2B; Raygen 
Kerrick IB, 3B; Ashton Spires IB; 
Logan Smylie IB; Brandon Shearer 
IB; Zach Berger IB. Cardinals: Trey 
Prather IB; T.J. Allen IB; Bailey 
Moore IB; Logan Thompson IB; 
Brandon Lee IB, 2B. 

RED SOX 13, YANKEES 10 
Red Sox: Clint Chambliss 3-lB; 

Kaden Ray 3-lB; Luke Preston 2-lB; 


Ashton Spires IB; Cody Jenkinson 2- 
IB; Raygen Kerrick IB, 2B; Noah 
Crabtree IB; Brandon Shearer IB; 
Zach Berger IB. Yankees: Jackson 
Clark IB, 2B, 3B; Drew Dawson IB; 
Alex Bridgewater 3-lB; Brian Adams 
2-lB; James Crabtree 2-lB; Davin 
Owens 2-lB; John Ediin 2-lB. 

ROYALS 11, YANKEES 4 
Royals: Camden Cox 3-lB; Anthony 
Bowen 2-lB; Evan Shelton 2B; Cyrus 
Lewis 2-2B; Nick Kerr 2-lB, 2B; 
Kaden Williams 2-2B; Dylan Martin 2- 
IB; Jarrett Kerr 2-lB; Logan Rockwell 
2B; Devin Buchanon IB. Yankees: 
Devin Owens IB; Jackson Clark IB; 
Drew Dawson IB, 2B; Alex Brennan 
2B; Bryan Ammons IB. 


REDS 18, CUBS 6 

Reds: Tyler Todd IB; Karen Ferguson 
2-lB, 2B; Conner Kingrey 2-lB, 2B; 
Hendrix Thomas 2-lB, 2B; Bryce 
Estes 2-lB; Nathan Nett 2-lB; 

Mason Schlenker 3-lB; Stephen Pike 
IB; Kendal Bryce 2-lB; Andrew Bost 
IB. 

MINOR LEAGUE 
REDS 4, RED SOX 2 

Reds: Carson Yates 2B; Jacob 
Norwood IB; Brandon Parsons IB. 
Red Sox: Caleb Turner IB; Nolan 
Francis IB, 2B, 3B; Caleb Adams IB; 
Ben Hargan IB. WP: Wyatt 
Huntsinger. 

RANGERS 7, PADRES 2 

Rangers: Trace Barnes 2-lB; Cam 


Smith 2B; Bryce Pruitt 2-3B; Isiah 
Geer 2-lB; Max Pearl IB. Padres: 
Jansen Wilson IB; Bradley Schraeke 
IB. WP: Cam Smith. 

RANGERS 8, YANKEES 7 
Rangers: Trace Barnes IB; Mannie 
Wimberly 2B; Isiah Geer IB; Max 
Pearl 2-lB. Yankees: Eli Brown IB; 
Camden Williams 2-lB; Jay Banks 
IB. WP: Bryce Pruitt. 

ORIOLES 8, PADRES 1 
Orioles: Spencer Brandenburg IB, 
2B; Tyler Sharp 2-lB; Ty Been HR; 
Max Moore IB; Josh McGowan IB. 
Padres: Jansen Williams 3B; Cody 
Games 2B; Ryan Pyles IB, 3B. WP: 
Spencer Brandenburg. 

BRAVES 13, REDS 3 


Braves: Clay Goodman 2-lB; Seth 
Madison IB; Bradley Lackey 3B; 
LaSteven Cleaver 2-lB; Kyle Smith 
IB, 2B; Alandre Murphy IB; Gabriel 
Graham 2B; Cristian Lewis IB. Reds: 
Cameron McCubbins IB; Jake Reed 
IB; Ben Kiger IB. WP: Bradley 
Lackey. 

MAJOR LEAGUE 
TIGERS 7, BRAVES 6 

Tigers: Garrett Ashiock IB; Logan 
Dozer IB; Harrison Moore 2B; Ben 
Godfrey 3B, HR; Jacob Hobbs IB; 
Dalton McMillan IB. Braves: Brendan 
Grider IB; Jordan Smallwood 2B; 
Chase Kerr IB, 2B; Peter Kingman 2- 
IB; Nathan Anderson IB; Bobby 
Sweeny IB. WP: Ben Godfrey. 









































































THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


SPORTS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


B5 


AUTO RAGING 


Smith believes 
changes will 
better Bristol 

By JENNA FRYER 

The Associated Press 

BRISTOL, Tenn. - Flanked 
by billboards declaring ‘Tans 
Spoke ... We Listened,” track op¬ 
erator Bruton Smith unveiled 
changes Wednesday to Bristol 
Motor Speedway that he believes 
will return the excitement to the 
once-beloved bullring. 

“We are modifying what we 
have, and I really believe we are 
doing the right thing,” Smith 
said. “I didn’t want to create a 
train wreck with what we are do¬ 
ing, so we are just modifying 
what we have. I think it’s going to 
be a lot better than what it was, it 
will be exciting and we do think 
that we’ll win over all of these 
race fans to our side on this. They 
are going to love it, and chances 
are we’ll have a complete sellout 
here in August.” 

A grinding process will re¬ 
move the top lane from the con¬ 
crete surface, and the progressive 
banking currently located in the 
corners will be knocked down. A 
2007 repaving of the 0.533-mile 
oval widened the track’s racing 
groove, which gave drivers 
enough room to race side-by-side 
and avoid the constant bumping 
and banging fans adored. 

Once one of the toughest tick¬ 
ets in all of professional sports, at¬ 
tendance has waned since the 
2007 reconfiguration. The speed¬ 
way said it seats 160,000, but at¬ 
tendance for the March 18 race 
appeared half full. 

Frustrated by the turnout. 
Smith and his Speedway 
Motorsports Inc. officials solicit¬ 
ed feedback from fans via social 
media. Although he was con¬ 
vinced he needed to change the 
track, he waited on the results of 
the unofficial surveys. 

Initially, response was nearly 
unanimous that fans wanted him 
to tear up the track. But, after an¬ 
nouncing he’d made up his mind 
to do something, opinion shifted 
to leave it alone. 

In the end, the aggregate of 
public opinion was roughly 60 
percent in favor of leaving the 
track alone. The most outspoken 
group was the drivers, who 
seemed largely in favor of Smith 
leaving Bristol alone. 

“I’ve had driver after driver 
tell me don’t touch it, talking 
about Bristol, and that the last 
race was the greatest race they’ve 
ever seen,” Smith said. “We are 
trying to satisfy both sides, and 
we believe we are doing the right 
thing. We’ve got to go with that.” 

NASCAR Hall of Famer 
Darrell Waltrip, a 12-time Bristol 
winner, said there’s a fine line be¬ 
tween pleasing the drivers and 
the fans. 

“They (the drivers) like the 
race track, they like the way it is,” 
he said. “It’s a more fun track 
than it was under the old config¬ 
uration, and fun usually leads to 
better racing, or at least you 
would expect it to. But apparent¬ 
ly, because the track is wider, 
smoother, and with the progres¬ 
sive banking, it’s given the driv¬ 
ers too many options. You never 
had any options here in the past. 
The only option was to gouge 
and poke somebody out of the 
way. When that was taken it 
away, it made it a lot easier on 
the drivers.” 



ORLIN WAGNER/The Associated Press 

Denny Hamlin celebrates in victory lane after winning Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at 
Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kan. 

Hamlin picking up wins, 
pressing out biscuits 


By PETE lACOBELLI 

The Associated Press 

DARLINGTON, S.C. - Denny Hamlin’s 
on such a winning roll this NASCAR season, 
even his biscuits turned out great. 

Hamlin won last week at Kansas 
Speedway, his second Sprint Cup victory of 
the year. Now, Hamlin is heading to 
Richmond, one of his favorite layouts. It’s a 
place where he’s won two of the past four 
races and usually where he kicks his season 
into high gear. 

Hamlin is eager to keep things going. 
“Nothing says I can’t win four, five in a row 
here the next few weeks,” he said Wednesday. 
“It just seems like there are a bunch of good 
tracks here for us.” 

These days, almost anything Hamlin gets a 
hand in becomes a success. 

He’s having one of his best starts since join¬ 
ing the Sprint Cup series full time in 2006, 
winning at Phoenix and Kansas and posting 
top fives at Daytona and Bristol. He’s fifth in 
points and, with two wins, already has his 
eyes on NASCAR’s championship chase. 

Earlier this month, Hamlin caddied for 
good friend Bubba Watson in the Masters’ 
par-3 tournament - a few days before Watson 
won the green jacket. “He’s just a good ‘ole 
golfer,” Hamlin said. 

Hamlin was all smiles again Wednesday, 
stopping by Darlington on his way to 
Richmond to visit fans and find out firsthand 
how to make biscuits at Bojangles. The fast- 
food chain recently signed a five-year deal to 
become the Southern 500’s title sponsor and 
Hamlin eagerly stuck his washed hands into 
the dough to press out the flaky biscuits. 

Hamlin also worked the front counter, 
dishing out chicken, mashed potatoes and 
gravy to the lunchtime crowd. When one cus¬ 
tomer thanked him for a good biscuit, Hamlin 
grinned with pride. 

“I made it myself,” he answered. 

Hamlin feels ready to press out a several 
more wins the same way. 

“I’ve never gone to Richmond on a win,” 
said Hamlin, who was born in Florida but 
grew up in Chesterfield, Va. “It’s always been 
where our momentum boost is winning at 
Richmond.” 

It will be a jam-packed weekend for 
Hamlin, who hosts the fifth Denny Hamlin 
Short Track Showdown tonight. The race in¬ 
cludes past JGR teammate Tony Stewart and 
current teammates Kyle Busch and Joey 
Logano. Hamlin said the money raised will 
help raise awareness and funding for the spe¬ 
cific needs of individuals afflicted with cystic 
fibrosis along with other programs that sup¬ 
port chronically ill children and underprivi¬ 
leged youth. 


Hamlin was on hand last week to donate 
$150,000 from his foundation to Children’s 
Hospital of Richmond at VCU. 

The donation “just shows how much our 
foundation has grown, how much this (chari¬ 
ty) race has grown over the last few years and 
we’re so excited about the outlook. We’re try¬ 
ing to schedule even more events to help raise 
some more money,” Hamlin said. “It’s a slow 
process, but we’re getting there.” 

Hamlin’s also close to reeling in golf’s 
Watson for a NASCAR ride. He got the 
Masters champion a fire suit and helmet. “I 
tell him he might as well go ahead and strap 
in,” Hamlin said. 

Hamlin credits much of his team’s hot start 
to new crew chief Darian Grubb, who joined 
JGR this offseason and went to work on the 
car while Hamlin took an extended break 
from the race shop with some rest and golf in 
Scottsdale, Ariz. 

“Different strokes for different folks,” 
Hamlin said. “Some people get focused for 
racing by being in the shop for two straight 
weeks before the season starts. For me, it’s to 
not even see a race car before Daytona.” 

The 30-year-old Hamlin had been racing 
full-speed since he was 8. “I just needed a cou¬ 
ple of months to get away from it,” he said. 

Hamlin acknowledged he’s still learning 
Grubb’s style and thought it might take until 
June before the team clicked with a victory. 
Things have worked quickly, giving the team 
a chance to test sets ups at venues in the 10- 
race title chase this fall and allowing Hamlin 
to gain a confidence he’s never felt before. 

Hamlin won eight races in 2010, yet re¬ 
membered an exhausted team worn down by 
a grueling season. Hamlin sees plenty of ener¬ 
gized faces from the No. 11 team during race 
weeks. 

“It’s really come together,” he said. 

Hamlin pulled off another milestone with 
last week’s victory, making the No. 11 car the 
winningest number in NASCAR history with 
its 199th all-time win. The list of drivers who 
took No. 11 to victory lane is a who’s who of 
greats like Parnelli Jones, Junior Johnson, 
Bobby Allison, Ned Jarrett, Mario Andretti, 
Buddy Baker, Gale Yarborough, Darrell 
Waltrip and Bill Elliott. 

Hamlin’s latest win gave him another goal 
to chase — reaching No. 200 before the 
Hendrick Motorsports quartet of Jimmie 
Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and 
Kasey Kahne post that program’s 200th win. 

“It’s going to be tough to hold back four 
good cars like they’ve got,” he said. “But I’d 
love to get to 200 before they do.” 

The way Hamlin’s going, nothing seems 
impossible. 


THIS WEEKEND’S RACES 

CAPITAL CITY 400 
Site: Richmond, Va. 

Schedule: Friday, practice (Speed, noon-3:30 
p.m.), qualifying (Speed, 5:30-7 p.m.); 
Saturday, race, 7:30 p.m. (FOX, 7-11 p.m.). 
Track: Richmond International Raceway (oval, 
0.75 miles). 

Race distance: 300 miles, 400 laps. 

Last year: Kyle Busch won the spring race for 
the third straight year, stretching his final 
tank of gas 107 laps. Joe Gibbs Racing team¬ 
mate Denny Flamlin was second. 

Last week: Flamlin raced to his second victo¬ 
ry of the season, holding off Martin Truex Jr. 
at Kansas Speedway. Flamlin also won in 
Phoenix. 

Fast facts: Flamlin, from nearby Chesterfield, 
won the 2009 and 2010 September races at 
the track. Fle also will compete in the Denny 
Flamlin Short Track Showdown on Thursday 
night (Speed, 8:30-10 p.m.). The charity race 
for late model stock cars benefits the Virginia 
driver’s foundation. ... Kevin Flarvick won at 
the track last September. ... Kyle Busch won 
the 2009 and 2010 spring events. Fle’s win¬ 
less in 20 races. ... Defending series champi¬ 
on Tony Stewart also has two victories in the 
first eight races. ... Brad Keselowski won at 
Bristol in the first short-track race of the year. 
... Texas winner Greg Biffle leads the season 
standings, 15 points ahead of Truex. ... 
Richard Petty won a record 13 times at 
Richmond. 

VIRGINIA 529 COLLEGE SAVINGS 250 
Site: Richmond, Va. 

Schedule: Friday, practice, qualifying (ESPN2, 
4-5:30 p.m.); race, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN2, 7-10 
p.m.). 

Track: Richmond International Raceway (oval, 
0.75 miles). 

Race distance: 187.5 miles, 250 laps. 

Last year: Denny Flamlin dominated on his 
hometown track, beating Paul Menard in the 
race that ended under caution. 

Last race: Defending series champion Ricky 
Stenhouse Jr. won at Texas on April 13 for 
Roush Fenway’s fourth straight Nationwide 
victory at the track. 

Fast facts: Action sports star Travis Pastrana 
will make his Nationwide debut, driving for 
RAB Racing in an alliance with Michael 
Waltrip Racing. ... Elliott Sadler, from 
Emporia, Va., leads the season standings, 
four points ahead of Stenhouse. Sadler has 
two victories this season. ... Flamlin is racing 
along with fellow Cup drivers Kevin Flarvick, 
Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano, Kasey Kahne 
and Kurt Busch. Flarvick and Mark Martin 
share the series record with five Richmond 
victories. ... Kyle Busch, the winner at the 
track in September, is skipping the race. ... 
Ryan Blaney, the 18-year-old son of NASCAR 
driver Dave Blaney, also is making his 
Nationwide debut. 

SAG PAULO INDY 300 
Site: Sao Paulo. 

Schedule: Friday, practice; Saturday, practice, 
qualifying (NBC Sports Network, 6-7 p.m.); 
Sunday, race, 11:30 a.m. (NBC Sports 
Channel, 11 a.m.-2 p.m.). 

Track: Streets of Sao Paulo (street course, 
2.536 miles). 

Race distance: 195.2 miles, 75 laps. 

Last year: Penske Racing’s Will Power won 
the rained-delayed race for the second of his 
six 2011 victories. The Australian also won at 
the track in 2010. 

Last race: Power raced to his second straight 
victory to keep Penske perfect in three races 
this season, winning at Long Beach on April 
15. 

Fast facts: The race is the fourth of the sea¬ 
son. Flelio Castroneves won the opener at St. 
Petersburg, and Power swept the Birmingham 
and Long Beach races. ... Brazil’s Rubens 
Barrichello is racing for KV Racing Technology 
in his first IndyCar season. Fle won 11 times 
in 19 seasons in Formula One. ... The 11- 
turn circuit features a nearly mile-long 
straightaway and runs through the Anhembi 
Sambadrome, a stadium-like venue that is 
the site of Carnival parades. 

NHRA SPRING NATIONALS 
Site: Baytown, Texas. 

Schedule: Friday, qualifying; Saturday, qualify¬ 
ing (ESPN2, 6-8 p.m.); Sunday, final elimina¬ 
tions (ESPN2, 7-10 p.m.). 

Track: Royal Purple Raceway. 

Last year: Del Worsham won the Top Fuel 
final en route to the season title, beating Al- 
Anabi teammate Larry Dixon. Worsham 
retired after the season. Jeff Arend (Funny 
Car), Vincent Nobile (Pro Stock) and Flines 
(Pro Stock Motorcycle) also won. 

Last event: Robert Flight won the NFIRA Four- 
Wide Nationals in Concord, N.C., on April 15 
to become the fifth Funny Car driver to win 
four straight races. Spencer Massey (Top 
Fuel) and Greg Anderson (Pro Stock) also 
won. 

Fast facts: Flight is attempting to tie the 
Funny Car season record of five straight victo¬ 
ries set by Don Prudhomme in 1976 and 
matched by Cruz Pedregon in 1992 and John 
Force in 1993 and 1994. Prudhomme holds 
the overall record of seven consecutive victo¬ 
ries, winning the last two races in 1975 and 
the first five in 1976. John Force Racing has 
won all six Funny Car races this season, with 
Force taking the season-opening 
Winternationals. Flight has 27 career victo¬ 
ries. 

KENTUCKIANA FORD DEALERS 200 
Site: Salem, Ind. 

Schedule: Sunday, race. 

Track: Salem Speedway. 

GRAND PRIX OF MIAMI 
Site: Flomestead, Fla. 

Schedule: Sunday, race (Speed, 1-4 p.m.). 
Track: Flomestead Miami Speedway. 


COLLEGE FOOTBALL 


Arkansas focused on immediate future with Smith 


By KURT VOIGT 

The Associated Press 

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - Arkansas 
athletic director Jeff Long’s hiring of John 
L. Smith for the next 10 months provided 
an unconventional, and perhaps tempo¬ 
rary, solution to a problem that came with 
coach Bobby Petrino’s sudden and scan¬ 
dal-ridden exit. 

Smith’s return after a five-month ab¬ 
sence from the Razorbacks also effectively 
signaled the program is all in for a season 
many expect to include a national champi¬ 
onship run. And the Razorbacks couldn’t 
be more relieved to have found Petrino’s 
replacement in the form of the well-liked 
and outgoing Smith, who served as an as¬ 
sistant at the school for the past three sea¬ 
sons. 

“I think it’s going to go great,” Arkansas 
running back Knile Davis said. “A lot of 
people look at it differently because 
they’re on the outside looking in. They 
don’t necessarily know what’s going on 
behind these doors. 


“I think it was a great decision and I’m 
ready to run with it, not matter what the 
result is, but I think it’s going to be a great 
result.” 

The hiring of the 63-year-old Smith, 
who had left to become coach at his alma 
mater, Weber State, in December, allowed 
Arkansas to keep together a group of assis¬ 
tant coaches the players had lobbied for 
with Long. It also allowed for the least 
amount of transition as possible in the 
post-Petrino era. 

Long faced a difficult decision following 
Petrino’s firing April 10 after Petrino ad¬ 
mitted to an affair with a woman he later 
hired as his assistant. 

The timing of the coaching search was 
one of Long’s biggest problems, with 
many candidates already well into spring 
practice with their own teams. Long also 
had to balance the current players’ hopes 
for the upcoming season with the long¬ 
term interests of the program. 

In the end. Long believed he found the 
right answer to all his concerns despite 
some rumblings among fans and pundits 


that he missed out on a “home run” hire 
by choosing Smith. 

“Anytime there is a hire, there will be 
fans that question that hire. I get that,” 
Long said. “I get that’s part of being a fan. 
But the thing I’ve been hearing, they’re ex¬ 
cited. They believe in this team. They be¬ 
lieve we have a special year in front of us. 
I think coach Smith will win them over 
time.” 

Several candidates told Long during the 
search that they would have interest fol¬ 
lowing the season. While Long said he will 
consider Smith and any other interested 
Arkansas assistant after the season, he also 
included a clause in Smith’s $875,000 con¬ 
tract that allows him to reassign Smith to a 
“non-coaching position at any time.” 

The clause would allow Long to hire a 
new head coach before the end of Smith’s 
contract. 

Right now, though. Long isn’t looking 
quite that far ahead. 

“Certainly, there will be people search¬ 
ing us out and seeking us out as there was 
prior to my decision,” Long said. “I’ll be 


receptive to those. I’ll also be gathering in¬ 
formation on my own. I’ve been around 
college athletics for 30 years and know 
that coaches and have those contacts. It 
will give me a chance to evaluate people 
and really look at what I think we need go¬ 
ing forward to continue to build on the 
success we’ve had here.” 

Smith, for his part, said he is open to be¬ 
coming a long-term solution as head coach 
for the Razorbacks. However, he also real¬ 
izes the pressure that’s on him to win right 
away with a team that finished last season 
ranked No. 5 and is 21-5 over the last two 
seasons. 

“That’s a decision that only the season 
is going to dictate what goes on after this,” 
Smith said. “I think that’s the way it is in 
the coaching profession. You better get 
used to that being in the coaching profes¬ 
sion, because there’s never going to be 
anything guaranteed down the road, as 
you know. You could goof it up and all the 
sudden you’re out the door.” 






















THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


SPORTS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


NBA 


stern: World Peace’s past weighed in suspension 



The Associated Press 

NEW YORK - NBA commissioner 
David Stern said Wednesday the elbow 
Metta World Peace used to give James 
Harden a concussion was ‘‘recklessly 
thrown” and the Los Angeles Lakers for¬ 
ward’s history absolutely weighed into 
the suspension. 

Stern suspended World Peace for sev¬ 
en games Tuesday, a penalty that could 
force him out of the entire first round of 
the playoffs, for the elbow he delivered 
to Harden’s head in a game against 
Oklahoma City on Sunday. 

Stern said during a conference call 
that he took many things into account, 
including World Peace’s numerous past 
troubles. World Peace, who changed his 
name from Ron Artest, received an 86- 
game suspension in 2004 — the longest 
ban for an on-court incident in NBA his¬ 
tory — for jumping into the stands at the 
Palace of Auburn Hills in the Detroit 
suburbs to fight fans. 

“In fact if it had been somebody that 
got tangled up and threw an errant el¬ 
bow, would that have been different than 
this? You bet it would have been,” Stern 
said. “It’s really very serious stuff and it 
does take in account the fact that the per¬ 
petrator is who he is and has the record 
that he has, and this called for in our 
view a very stiff penalty and we think 
that seven games, which only includes 
one regular-season game, is such a stiff 
penalty.” 

Stern also was clear that he didn’t buy 
World Peace’s explanation that he acci- 

REED SAXON/The Associated Press 

Los Angeles Lakers forward Metta World 
Peace gives an elbow to Oklahoma City 
Thunder guard James Harden, rear, during 
their game Sunday In Los Angeles. On 
Wednesday, NBA commissioner David Stern 
said World Peace’s past played an Issue 
when his seven-game suspension was 
announced Tuesday. 


dentally struck Harden, who was cleared 
to play Wednesday but held out of the 
Thunder’s season finale. 

“I believe that it was recklessly thrown 
and I believe that in looking at the re¬ 
plays again and again that he should 
have known that James was up against 
him, and some would argue that he had 
to have known,” Stern said. 

After the Lakers’ practice Wednesday 
in California, World Peace acknowl¬ 
edged he’d thrown a “brutal” elbow 
while celebrating after a dunk. He had 
previously apologized for the hit. 

“I was just way too emotional,” he 
said. “It seemed like anger but it was a lot 
of passion involved. But it was erratic. It 
was erratic fire, it was erratic passion. It 
was way too much.” 

Stern was vague and occasionally de¬ 
fensive when asked how he decided on 
the length of the ban. He called the 
process “some combination of art and 
science.” 

“We look at the previous penalties, we 
look at who’s involved in the altercation, 
we do take into account the seriousness 
of the injury and a variety of whatever 
else is in the atmosphere, and then it just 
becomes my job to decide what it should 
be,” Stern said. 

Stern said he felt that seven games 
now, knowing only one of them will be 
in the regular season, was a move severe 
penalty than if it came during another 
part of the season. 

“I think the seven was larger than 
some people might have thought just 
from an elbow, and I think that in many 
cases people who thought that this was 
so horrible that it should result in a life¬ 
time ban,” he said. “But at the end of the 
day, I have to close the door and say, 
‘OK, what is justice here and what’s fair¬ 
ness here,’ and I came up with seven.” 


Bengals’ Nugent signs offer 

CINCINNATI - Kicker Mike Nugent signed his one-year 
tender offer as the Cincinnati Bengals’ franchise player 
Wednesday. 

Nugent recovered from knee surgery and set team records 
with 132 points and 33 field goals last season, helping the 
Bengals to a wild card playoff spot. He was an unrestricted free 
agent after the season, but the Bengals used their franchise tag 
on him March 2. 

Coach Marvin Lewis said the team will continue negotiating 
on a multiyear deal with Nugent. 

Nugent is an eighth-year player out of Ohio State. The team 
voted him as its 2011 Ed Block Courage Award winner after he 
came back from a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his right 
knee, suffered in the second half of the 2010 season. 

Webster convicted of Ohio sex charges 

CINCINNATI - Former Cincinnati Bengals linebacker 
Nate Webster was convicted Wednesday of sex-related charges 
involving the teenage daughter of a former assistant coach for 
the Cincinnati team. 

A jury in Cincinnati found Webster, 34, guilty of four counts 
of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor. Jurors found him not 
guilty of three other charges: gross sexual imposition, sexual 
battery and a fifth count of unlawful sexual conduct with a mi¬ 
nor. The jury deliberated for about six hours before reaching 
the verdict. 

Prosecutors said Webster had sexual contact with the girl in 


2009 when she was 15 and threatened to harm her if she told 
anyone. Webster admits having sex with the girl the next year, 
when she was 16, the legal age of consent in Ohio, but denies 
that the sexual relations began earlier than that. 

Webster was taken into custody after the verdict. 

“We obviously are disappointed with the verdict in some re¬ 
spects,” Webster’s attorney, Gregory Samms said after court. 
He said they plan to file an appeal after sentencing, but said he 
could not comment on specific issues being considered for the 
appeal. 

Samms said the girl lied when she said she was 15 at the time 
she and Webster began having sex. Prosecutors said Webster 
told police that he had sex with the girl when she was 15 and 
played tapes of those interviews in court, but Samms said 
Webster was mistaken about the dates in his earlier statements. 

Hamilton County assistant prosecutor Seth Tieger declined 
to comment on the verdict or other aspects of the case prior to 
sentencing, scheduled for June 6. 

The prosecutor’s office said Webster could be sentenced to 
up to 20 years in prison. Webster could have faced up to 36V2 
years in prison if he had been convicted on all counts. 

The former Bengals player turned down a proposed plea 
deal prior to the trial that would have required him to serve four 
years in prison, a prosecutor’s spokesman said. 

Webster played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 2000-03 
and for the Bengals in 2004-05. He finished his career with the 
Denver Broncos from 2006-08. 

The Associated Press 


PICKS: aren’t really known 
after Colts and Redskins 

Continued from B1 


Added South Carolina defensive end 
Melvin Ingram: “Yeah, I guess that would 
be kind of different. You won’t get that 
adrenaline of, ‘Oh, man. I hope they pick 
me,’ when you know where you’re going.” 

Luck will go No. 1 overall to 
Indianapolis after a terrific career at 
Stanford. Like Griffin, he is also expected 
to step right into a starting job as a rookie. 

“I guess it’s nice, but there’s always 
competition in football and if I go out 
there and lay an egg and I’m not the best 
quarterback out there, I hope they don’t 
start me,” Luck said. “I’m excited, though. 
I’m going to go out there and hopefully 
play, obviously, and put my best foot for¬ 
ward and enjoy all the guys.” 

Luck, the son of former NFL quarter¬ 
back Oliver Luck, acknowledged that it 
was a “relief” to know he’ll be going to the 
Colts - even if they’re starting from 
scratch after they released Peyton 
Manning. 

“Obviously, the slate has been wiped 
somewhat clean with some new coaches 
and some players who have gone or left, 
but I’ll try to come in there and work as 
hard as I can,” Luck said. “If that means 
it’s a rebuilding process, I guess you can la¬ 
bel it as that. The guys I’m sure are work¬ 
ing very hard and I just want to get out 
there and join them.” 

After Luck and Griffin, Texas A&M’s 
Ryan Tannehill is expected to be the next 
quarterback taken — possibly eighth over¬ 
all by Miami, where he’d be reunited with 
Mike Sherman. The new Dolphins offen¬ 
sive coordinator was Tannehill’s head 
coach the last four years. 

“If I did happen to go there, it would be 


good,” said Tannehill, who would com¬ 
pete with starter Matt Moore. “It would 
give me some familiarity with the offense, 
so I think it would help ease the transition 
a little bit.” 

Oklahoma State’s Justin Blackmon will 
likely be the first wide receiver picked, 
possibly as high as No. 4 by Cleveland. 
Notre Dame’s Michael Floyd, Georgia 
Tech’s Stephen Hill and Baylor’s Kendall 
Wright are other receivers who might go 
in the opening round. 

“It’s a great time to come into the 
league if you are a receiver,” said 


Blackmon, a two-time Biletnikoff Award 
winner as college football’s top receiver. 
“More teams are throwing the ball a lot 
more, it’s more wide open than ever on of¬ 
fense.” 

Other players who could be top-10 
picks are Ingram, Alabama running back 
Trent Richardson, LSU cornerback Morris 
Claiborne, Mississippi State defensive 
tackle Fletcher Cox and North Carolina 
defensive end Quinton Copies. 

After winning the national champi¬ 
onship in January, Alabama could be a big 
winner in the opening round. Crimson 


Tide teammates Barron, Richardson, line¬ 
backers Courtney Upshaw and Dont’a 
Hightower, and cornerback Dre 
Kirkpatrick could all hear their names 
called tonight. 

“This is a great experience, especially 
when you have a team where we came 
from,” Richardson said. “All these guys are 
going to the draft and we’re all going to be 
in the first round. Alabama set the bar 
high last year when they had four come 
out and all four went in the first round. 
Hopefully we can break that record and 
have five.” 


ADAMS: said he could be 
coming home in the next week 

Continued from B1 


‘Jared texted me and told me about it,” 
Keys said Wednesday afternoon. “I was 
surprised. I went to the hospital the next 
day to see him. Knowing that he was go¬ 
ing to be alright really, really helped me.” 

Central Hardin sophomore Abbie 
Chandler said things have definitely been 
different without Adams running things at 
practice, but that the teams have learned 
to cope with what happened. 

“Coach is a big inspiration,” she said. “I 


always push myself to get his approval. 
Even though he’s the sprints coach and 
I’m a distance runner, it’s always been my 
goal to get a ‘good job’ from Coach 
Adams, something that showed that I was 
really working hard. ... Everybody’s pray¬ 
ing for him. We just need to move on with 
our season, but we really miss him.” 

KSP public affairs officer Norman 
Chaffins confirmed Adams was wearing a 
helmet at the time of the wreck, which ul¬ 
timately saved his life. 

Elizabethtown coach Dickie Jones 
feared the worst when he heard what hap¬ 
pened from one of his assistants. 

“I was just in shock and disbelief when 
I heard about it,” Jones said Wednesday. 


“You never want to hear of an accident of 
that nature happening to anyone, let alone 
anyone you’ve gotten to know and be¬ 
come close with. At that point you’re just 
praying and hoping for the best. 

“I’m glad to hear he’s OK,” he added. 
“We miss him and he’s constantly in our 
thoughts and prayers. It’ll be good to see 
him come home.” 

Adams has a long recovery ahead of 
him, but Covington and other area coach¬ 
es are confident he’ll get through it with no 
issues. 

“Things are going to be OK,” she said. 
“It’s going to be a while for him to recov¬ 
er, but he’s strong minded and strong- 
willed and he’ll be OK.” 


Adams didn’t want to disclose the 
severity of his injuries, but said he expects 
to be able to go home sometime in the 
next week. 

The Bruins and Lady Bruins have ral¬ 
lied around Adams and his family, and 
have grown closer as a team. Keys said the 
athletes have chosen to dedicate the rest of 
this season in Adams’ honor. 

“Those kids have got to be missing him, 
and I hope it brings them closer together 
and they rally around Coach Adams,” 
Jones said. “That’s what I would want to 
see in my team.” 

Josh Clay well can be reached at (270) 505-1752 


PINKHAM: will attend a 
showcase in Illinois in July 

Continued from B1 


Pinkham’s average pop time was 1.9 
seconds. Pop time is measured from the 
time the ball is in catcher’s mitt to ball in 
second baseman or shortstop’s glove. 

Pinkham, who will play this summer for 


the Louisville Baseball Club under-16 
team, received an invitation to the 2012 
Team One Showcase Event. The top play¬ 
ers from the tryouts get the opportunity to 
attend l-of-4 of the showcases across the 
nation. Pinkham will attend the one in 
River Forest, Ill., outside of Chicago, on 
July 16-17. 

Pinkham will go through a series of 
workouts as well as play two games. He is 


also placed on the watch list for the Under 
Armour High School All-American Game 
at Wrigley Field. 

“This drives me even more,” Pinkham 
said. “If I continue to work at it the right 
way, there’s no telling how far I can go.” 

Pinkham is batting .340 with four dou¬ 
bles this season. He has driven in 15 runs 
and has scored 12 times. Pinkham has 
thrown out 15 of the 30 players who have 


attempted to steal. 

“Zeke is definitely talented,” 
Elizabethtown coach Don Pitts said. “But 
it’s not just talent. He works hard. There’s 
no one in this program that puts in more 
hours than Zeke. It’s a year-round thing 
with him. He has some God-given ability, 
but he works hard and that combination 
makes him special.” 

Chuck Jones can be reached at (270) 505-1759 



















THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


SPORTS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


B7 


TENNIS 


Nadal cruises into third round at Barceiona Open 


The Associated Press 

Rafael Nadal overcame a sore knee to 
open his bid for a seventh Barcelona Open 
title with an easy 6-1, 6-2 win over 
Guillermo Garcia Lopez in the second 
round Wednesday. 

Nadal had a bye in the first round after 
defeating Novak Djokovic in the Monte 
Carlo Masters final Sunday and improved 
to 31-1 on the clay in Barcelona after 
breaking his fellow Spaniard six times. 

Nadal had to withdraw before the semi¬ 
finals of last month’s Sony Ericsson Open 
because of a left knee problem. 

Fellow Spaniard David Ferrer needed 
less than an hour to advance to the third 
round by beating Serbian wild card Filip 
Krajinovic 6-0, 6-3. The sixth-ranked 
Ferrer is bidding for his first Godo trophy 
after finishing as the runner up three times. 

Ferrer plays Albert Montanes in the 
next round after the Spaniard saved four 
match points to oust 15th-seeded Bernard 
Tomic 6-0, 5-7, 7-5. 

Canada’s Milos Raonic beat Russia’s 
Igor Andreev 6-4, 6-1, while Japan’s Kei 
Nishikori overcame Mikhail Kukushkin 6- 
3, 4-6, 6-0. 

Seventh-seeded Feliciano Lopez of 


Spain also reached the third round with a 
6-4, 6-3 victory over Italy’s Flavio Cipolla 
and will face Jarkko Nieminen of Finland, 
who won 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-4 over Eduardo 
Schwank of Argentina. 

Kevin Anderson of South Africa, Albert 
Ramos of Spain and Santiago Giraldo of 
Colombia also advanced. 

PORSCHE GRAND PRIX. Mona Barthel of 
Germany rallied to upset Ana Ivanovic of 
Serbia 7-5, 7-6 (4) in the first round in 
Stuttgart, Germany. 

Ivanovic led 5-3 in the first set and held 
three set points on Barthel’s serve. But the 
wild card saved two, then fired an ace to 
turn the match around. 

Agkul Amanmuradova of Uzbekistan 
replaced the injured Daniela Hantuchova 
in the main draw and went on to upset an¬ 
other Slovak, Dominika Cibulkova, 6-2, 5- 
7, 6-3. 

Fourth-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska 
of Poland cruised past qualifier Greta Arn 
of Hungary 6-3, 6-4 to reach the quarterfi¬ 
nals. 

GRAND PRIX SAR. Second-seeded 
Svetlana Kuznetsova is out after retiring 
with a leg injury in the third set of her sec¬ 
ond-round match against Irina-Camelia 
Begu in Fez, Morocco. Former French and 


U.S. Open champion Kuznetsova breezed 
through the first set 6-1, lost the second in 
a tiebreaker and trailed 3-2 in the third 
when she pulled out. 

Sixth-seeded Chanelle Scheepers of 
South Africa lost 7-5, 1-6, 6-3 to 

Dutchwoman Kiki Bertens. 

Third-seeded Petra Cetkovska defeated 
Timea Bacsinszky 6-3, 6-2, and fifth-seed¬ 
ed Simona Halep stopped Alexandra 
Cadantu 6-2, 7-5. Qualifier Carbine 
Muguruza Blanco advanced when Patricia 
Mayr-Achleitner retired after losing the 
first set 6-4. 

NASTASE TIRIAG TROPHY. Defending 
champion Florian Mayer of Germany was 
ousted by Xavier Malisse of Belgium 7-5, 
4-6, 6-4 Wednesday in the second round in 
Bucharest, Romania. 

Malisse advanced to his first quarterfi¬ 
nals of the season. 

Two other unseeded players, both of 
them qualifiers, also reached the quarterfi¬ 
nals in Bucharest. Attila Balazs defeated 
Potito Starace 6-3, 6-4, and Daniel Brands 
downed Jurgen Zopp 7-6 (3), 6-3. 

SERBIA OPEN. Top -ranked Djokovic said 
he will skip the hometown tennis tourna¬ 
ment organized by his family in Belgrade, 
Serbia, next week because of the death of 


his grandfather. 

Djokovic said he felt emotionally 
drained and unable to summon the mental 
strength since his grandfather died last 
week. 

Djokovic lost to second-ranked Rafael 
Nadal in the Monte Carlo Masters final 
Sunday, three days after his grandfather’s 
death. 

SAP OPEN. The Bay Area’s only stop on 
the ATP World Tour will soon be no more. 

The 123-year-old event in San Jose, 
Calif., currently called the SAP Open, is 
moving to Memphis in 2014. The 
Memphis tournament is being sold and 
shifted to Rio de Janeiro. 

The ATP Board of Directors approved 
the sale of the Memphis membership this 
week to IMX for operation of the 500-lev¬ 
el event in Brazil. The ATP will determine 
the calendar and format for the events in 
2014 and 2015 later this year. 

The SAP Open began as the Pacific 
Coast Championships in Monterey in 
1889 and has been played indoors recent¬ 
ly at the home of the NHL’s San Jose 
Sharks in February before dwindling 
crowds. 

The women’s tour still has an annual 
event at Stanford. 


GOLF 


Still a teen, Thompson returns to scene of LPGA collapse 


The Associated Press 

MOBILE, Ala. - Lexi Thompson’s 
last-round Alabama collapse a year ago 
could be a painful memory. Instead, the 
talented Florida teenager turned it into a 
growth experience. 

Thompson is back on the Crossings 
Course at Magnolia Grove for the newly 
named Mobile Bay LPGA Classic starting 
today. In 2011, she shared the lead going 
into the final round and tumbled to 19th 
after a closing 78. 

‘T wouldn’t change that Sunday for any¬ 
thing because I learned so much from it, 
from what I did wrong,” Thompson said. 
‘Tt prepared me for when I got in that po¬ 
sition again. It helped me at Navistar and 
in Dubai. I learned a lot from it and now 
I’m I know a little more about how to fin¬ 
ish it. It was disappointing. It took me a 
few days to get over it. But I learned so 
much from that Sunday by not winning, so 
much more probably than if I had won.” 

Veteran Maria Hjorth finished with her 
second straight 67 to win the then-Avnet 
LPGA Classic. 

Thompson definitely built on the expe¬ 
rience, enjoying an entirely different expe¬ 
rience in her next Alabama event. She 


Clarke hopes recent 
marriage revives career 

The Associated Press 

SEOUL, Korea - Darren Clarke 
hopes he can start a winning stretch 
when the Ballantine’s Championship 
gets under way near Seoul today. 

Clarke is looking to end a run of poor 
finishes since his victory in the British 
Open last summer. 

In European Tour events, his best fin¬ 
ish was 20th at the Volvo Champions in 

won the Navistar LPGA Classic in subur¬ 
ban Montgomery by five strokes in 
September to become the youngest LPGA 
tournament winner at age 16. 

‘‘It was a really good feeling, just getting 
that confidence and knowing I can win,” 
said Thompson, who also won the Ladies 
European Tour’s Dubai Ladies Masters in 
December. “It gave me the confidence go¬ 
ing into every tournament, knowing that I 
can win and wanting that feeling again.” 

Twelve days after she wrapped up her 
first win, LPGA Tour commissioner Mike 


South Africa in January. He missed the 
cut at the Honda Classic in his only U.S. 
PGA Tour event this year. 

He’s hoping his luck will turn after his 
recent marriage on a beach in the 
Bahamas. 

Clarke has not played the hilly course, 
but said he’s gotten advice from a friend 
- last year’s winner Lee Westwood, who 
won’t return to defend the title after tak¬ 
ing the Asian Tour’s Indonesian Open 
last weekend. 

Clarke’s main rivals in the field will be 
Ian Poulter and Adam Scott. 

Whan approved Thompson’s petition to 
become the LPGA Tour’s youngest mem¬ 
ber. That remains her only career Top 10. 
She missed the cut last weekend at the 
LPGA LOTTE Championship in Hawaii. 

Thompson won’t have to contend with 
at least two top players this weekend in the 
$1.25 million tournament where the win¬ 
ner gets $187,500. Ai Miyazato, fresh from 
a win, and top-ranked Yani Tseng are skip¬ 
ping the Alabama event. 

Tseng has won three of the first seven 
tournaments this year. 


Hjorth returns to the site of her fifth 
LPGA victory after what turned into a fun 
family trip last year. Husband Shaun 
McBride carried her bag and then-2-year- 
old daughter Emily was on hand. 

“It’s always great to be back at a place 
where you’ve won obviously, and defend¬ 
ing is always special,” Hjorth said. 
“There’s obviously a lot of memories that 
come back. You go out there and play and 
you see a lot of shots that you hit last year 
and you still see a lot of putts that you 
made from the tournament. 

“And obviously a lot of great memories 
with my husband on the bag and my 
daughter ... so it was a nice family get to¬ 
gether for the week. Having a win as well 
was even more amazing.” 

She’s had a slow start in 2012, missing 
the cut in two of her six events. Her best 
finish so far is a 25th-place tie at the HSBC 
Women’s Champions in Singapore. 

“I feel pretty good about my game and 
I’ve worked hard on it, especially my put¬ 
ting,” Hjorth said. “Hopefully it will come 
together. I feel it’s very close, and coming 
out here and having good memories, 
hopefully that will bring my game up a lit¬ 
tle bit and have a good finish.” 



[iCeniuci^ 


Agricultural 

Farm Equipment.060 

Farmers Market.061 

Feed, Seed & Hay.059 

Horses.057 

Lawn & Garden.046 

Livestock.058 

Machinery & Toois.048 

Pet Services.056 

Pets.055 

Automotive 

Auto Parts & Services.040 

Autos.035 

Autos Wanted.039 

Boats.070 

Giassic Gars.034 

Motorcycies & ATVs.080 

RVs & Campers.065 

Sport Utiiity Vehicies.037 

Trucks.036 

Vans.038 


FIND AN AD 

Real Estate Employment 


Apartments for Rent.120 

Auctions.050 

Commerciai Property.122 

Lots & Acreage.132 

Mobiie Home Lots 

& Parks.105 

Mobiie Home Rentais.110 

Manufactured 

Home Saies.115 

Reai Estate Rentais.125 

Reai Estate Saies.130 

Reai Estate Wanted.131 


Business Opportunities.100 

Education.093 

Empioyment.095 

Empioyment Wanted.096 

Job Training.094 

Merchandise 


Odds & Ends 

items Wanted.195 

Legai Notices.300 

Legai Services.007 

Loans.008 

Lost Items.020 

Memory.012 


Vacation Homes.127 

Room Mate Wanted.199 

Yard Sales 

Yard & Garage Saies.090 



Odds & Ends 

Estate Sales.951 

Sporting Goods 
Jeweiry 

OfTice Equipment 
TVs & Eiectronics 


Antiques. 

.083 

Firewood 

Cemetery Piets 
Musicai instruments.. 


Announcements. 

.002 


Appliances. 

.081 

.084 

Arts & Crafts. 

.088 

Music Lessons. 

.084 

Buildin£! Materials. 

.086 

Notices..................... 

.006 

Business & Service Directorv.210 

Personais.. 

.001 

Card of Thanks. 

.010 

Services & Repairs 

.045 

Child Care. 

.097 

Situations Wanted_ 

.200 

Christmas Items. 

.089 

Storage Units. 

.101 

Computers & Services.... 

.033 

Travei. 

.003 

Entertainment. 

.014 

Utiiity Traiiers. 

.064 

Found items. 

.025 



Free items.. 

.015 , 



Good Things To Eat. 

.087 ^ 



Happy Ads. 

.005 



Home Furnishings. 

...082 


■ Mr 

Home improvement. 

.047 





> 


Neiwdi^ 

TO PLACE AN AD 769-1200 oxt. 8601 


WHEN TO GALL Reader (line) Ads 

FOR ADS APPEARING: CALL BY 3:30 PM: 

Wednesday.Tuesday 

Thursday.Wednesday 

Friday.Thursday 

Sunday.Friday 

Monday.Friday 

Display Ads 

FOR ADS APPEARING: CALL BY 5:00 PM: 

Wednesday.Monday 

Thursday.Tuesday 

Friday.Wednesday 

Sunday.Thursday 

Monday.Thursday 

Tuesday.Friday 





>4+- 'Vti 



E-mall Your Ad 

kyGiass@thenewsenterprise.Goni 

Fax Your Ad 

270-765-7318 or 
1-866-632-9237 

Place Your Ad 
Online Yourself 

www.thenewsenterprise.Goni 
We Accept: 




Kentucky 

Classified Network 









*1 Personals 0 Travel 

0 Notices 0 

Notices 

0 Loans 

*10 Free Items 

^0 Free Items 

^0 Free Items 

BANKRUPTCY, DIVCRCE, *AVCID TRAVEL and va- 



*AVCID ADVANCED Fee 

AMERICAN PIT BULL reg- 

FREE TC A GCCD HCME 

LUCY 3 1/2 year old Labra- 


WORK INJURIES. Kelley 
Law Offices, E’town, 
769-2368. Divorce, Fee: 
Uncontested no children 
$300, children $350. CLI¬ 
ENT PAYS COURT COST 
AND EXPENSES. A debt 
relief agency. This is an 
advertisement. 


cation scams. There are no 
“free rides”. For free infor¬ 
mation write the Federal 
Trade Commission at 
Washington, D.C., 20580. 


6 


Notices 


RETIRED GENTLEMftN. 

6' 19Q lb& |jk>e$ to- pfay 
goiT. fi$Nng, travel, etc 
Like to meet lady. 62 plus, 
for friendship and long 
term rei^tianahip S$nd 
repJtes to The Ng^ En¬ 
terprise. Bo?t I 408 west 
Dixie Avenue. Eliza¬ 
bethtown. KY 42701. 



$S PAYIMG CASH $$ 

for your junk csr&. trucks 
and farm equipment 
S200 for ar>y complete au¬ 
tomobile or truck. Wiil 
pick up af your conven- 
iertce. Call (270) 
234^206. Also, free re- 
mcrvali of abandoned au- 
to$. 


Outreach Ministry will have 
G-Dog and Elder Jim Wil¬ 
liams ministering on Sun¬ 
day, April 29, 4:30pm at 
Commonwealth Lodge, 708 
East Dixie, Elizabethtown. 
You will be blessed and 
have a good time in the 
LORD with G-Dog and 
Elder Jim. A free meal, gro¬ 
ceries, clothes and etc. will 
be provided. If you haven’t 
smiled or laughed lately, 
come and be blessed, they 
touch the hearts of all ages. 


CARRY CONCEALED 
Deadly Wespone CJae& 
b^ing herd oo Saturday. 
April 28. Sam. For more 
inform alien. caN (270) 
662-5341 Of 307-3666 
ask for Donald 




ITS A HUGE BINGO 
SPECrAt at Southland 
Ihis Tuesday, May 1st! 

S500 SingiGs, 

3500 Odd/Even. 3500 Tri¬ 
ple. $1,000 Coverall ^ 
much more. 2360 S. 
Dixie. Radcliff (270) 
352-4640 Sponsored by 
Martin Co. Pet ProtedHon 
Org. 0956. 



OVER $63 

worlh of Coupon 
Savings in 

The 

News Enterprise 

Sunday, 

April 29th 

Call Today to 
Subscribe 
{270)505-1770 


loan scams. It’s illegal for 
companies doing business 
by phone to promise you a 
loan and ask you to pay for 
it before they deliver. For 
free information, write to the 
Federal Trade Commission, 
Washington, D.C., 20580. 


15 


Free Items 


9 SMALL BRED PUPPIES, 

would like the puppies to be 
spay and neutered, need 
good homes. Call 270- 
589-3496. 

A PAIR OF RED BLOOD 
HOUNDS- 1 male, 1 fe¬ 
male, up to date on shots, 
free to good home, serious 
inquires. 270-324-3880 
ADULT FEMALE BEAGLE/ 
BASSETT. Two years old. 
Call 270-234-6335 

FREE PUPPIES 

St Bernard/Lab mixed, 6 
weeks old. Beautiful 
puppies 

Call 270-737-7976 any 
time. 


istered, male, neutered 
born 2008, free to good 
home. Great with kids. 
Please call 270-304-5535 

ANIMAL REFUGE CEN¬ 
TER trying to adopt adora¬ 
ble kittens & puppies into 
good loving homes. Very 
reasonable adoption fee 
which includes: spay & neu¬ 
ter & all vaccinations. For 
more information call (270) 
877-6064. 

BORDER COLLIE - Male, 8 
months old, LOVES people 
& children!! Call (270) 
735-3452. 

Calico Cats two, great 
mousers, spayed, and 
Two Male Black Cats., 

neutered, loving cats, good 
with other animals and kids, 
all cats are about 5 yrs old. 
Call 270-234-6335 

DACHSHUND LAB MIX, 

12 months old, male, free to 
good home. Call 270- 
304-9325 leave message. 


10 Month old Cat, she is 
very lovable, loves kids and 
she is also pregnant with 
kittens. 270-317-0398 
FREE TO A GOOD HOME 
Yellow Lab mixed male, 
great family dog, loves kids. 
270-369-7393 Leave Mes¬ 
sage! 

FREE TO GOOD HOME 2 

Dogs, one German Shep¬ 
herd male. One white 
(partial Australian Shep¬ 
herd) with black spots, very 
gentle. Call 270-766-7560. 
GOLDEN RETRIEVER 2 
year female, answer to An¬ 
nie. good with kids and 
other animals, moved and 
cant take her. Free to good 
home. Call 270-862-3516 
or 270-734-1736. 


IF YOU HAVE ANY 
LEFT OVER 
YARD SALE ITEMS: 
□I any other jfema you 
don't want. 

Free pick up at 
your wnvemeoce. 
Call Denise 
270-401-2 E25. 


doodle, sheds but very little 
when kept clipped, anxiety 
issues, doesn’t do well 
when left alone, requires 
fence in yard, usually does 
do good with other dogs, 
does better with older chil¬ 
dren, housebroken, UTD on 
vaccines, spay and micro- 
chipped. Loves attention, 
needs a special forever 
home. 270-872-4693 

MALE BLACK LAB 4 year 
old, up to date on shots, to 
good loving home. Call 
270-351-3393. 

PUG - Brown with black 
face, female, 2-3 years old, 
spayed, shots up to date. 
Good with children. Fenced 
yard required. Only to a 
good home. Call (270) 
234-9037. 

PUPPIES 7 weeks old and 
ready for a new home. 
Should be medium size 
dogs. Cecilia area. Call 270 
862 3005 































































































































































THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 



"1J Free Items 

Autos 

*25,000 & Up 

Autos 

'5,000 to *9,999 

SUVs 

*25,000 & Up 

45 

Services & 
Repairs 

Livestock 

Motorcycles/ATVs 
*15,000 to *19.999 

Recreation 


RESCUE PEKINGNESE 

blond in color, 1 or 2 yrs 
old, really sweet, good 
w/kids. FREETO AGOOD 
HOME ONLY!! 
270-312-3726 


WILL PICKUP FURNI 
TUFE used v^sher 5 
dryers appliances junk 
cars foj our Church Food 
Bank. Items need to be in 
■good condiHOfTi Can {27Q) 
763-7956. 


WOODLAND WILDLIFE 

with baby everything sea¬ 
son, right at our door step. 
Is in need of Gerber 
chicken, meat or turkey, 
Esbilac puppy milk replace¬ 
ment powder, we have lots 
of bunnies with more com¬ 
ing in everyday, can & dry 
cat food, kitten milk re¬ 
placement, unsalted pea¬ 
nuts, rabbit food, bird seed, 
cat litter, cleaning supplies, 
unscented toliet paper. Call 
270-351-3509 


20 


Lost 


BOXER Two year old male, 
neutered, has micochip 
brindle with white feet and 
chest. No collar, answers to 
Motley. Lost in vicinity 1 
mile south of The Pilot Sta¬ 
tion in Glendale on Sat Apr 
21. Call 270-369-7023.or 
270 -312-2005. 
CHIHUAHUA - tan & white 
in color, name is Charlie. 
Lost Thursday, June 27, 
2008 in the Tom Brown Es¬ 
tates area. About 10-12 
lbs. Wearing a flea collar. 
(270) 828-5019. Reward. 



DACHSHUND mal« 

to Oscar, missing 
since Apr 18 in vicinity of 
351 El Dorado St SonOEa. 
Three yr old child masing 
him very much. QU 
27CM01-3516_ 

GRAY TABBY Cat - 
spaded and declawed in 
Rineyville near Dollar Gen¬ 
eral. 270-763-9957 
LADIES GOLD WATCH 
somewhere between 
Walgreens and Aldi’s in 
E’town. Reward, semimetal 
value. Please Call 270- 
769-5790. 

MISSING!! DRUSSEL 
GRIFFON male dog, last 
seen Fri. April 20th in the 
area of Whispering Hills, 
brown and weighs about 7 
pds. Missing front teeth. 
270-352-0583 
SIAMESE BLUE SEAL Cat 
(gray w/dark ears, blue 
eyes, male) lost in 600 
block of Sunrise Lane in 
E’town. Very special pet of 
a USN sailor. 270 
(723-4385) 270 (765-4860) 
SMALL BLACK POODLE - 
male, lost from 1790 Smith 
Mill Rd., Cecilia. Very old. 
On medications. Call (270) 
862-5251. 



SMALL YORKie IVISSING 
Uom Av^ome Rea Market 
On 4/22/12. Needs Ids o1 
care. Si00 revrard vilh nc 
questions asked. Red anc 
Gold femaje 27C^50^Q392 

25 Found 

CHIHUAHU^^Senind 

in Sunrise Ln. area. Must 
identify to claim. Call (270) 
766-8295. 

FEMALE LAB MIX, found 
near Danny’s Tobacco, 
brown, black & white. Call 
to identify 270-312-1311 
FOUND, ONE LIGHT 
Brown Bull Terrier in the 
area of Peterson Place and 
Macintosh. Very sweet dis¬ 
position, gray collar, no 
tags. Contact John at 
502-422-0881 for more in¬ 
formation 

GOLDEN RETRIEVER, 
male in the Cecilia area. 
270-735-7665 
MALE PUG tan with black 
ears. No collar, found in 
vicinty of Bentcreek Dr Apr 
21. Call 270 304 1859 or 
270 401 2271 

PIT BULL MALE, dark tan, 
found in vicinity of Vertrees. 
Very friendly dog good with 
people and other animals. 
Call 270-234-6335 
TOOL FOUND in Elizabeth- 
town, please call to identify 
270-358-4449 


Classic 

Cars 



1966 FORD THUNDER 
BIRD with white 

leather interior, tilt steering 
wheel, air con^^tionmq. 39C 
V8 engine, clean inside anc 
out. Starts eveiy time anc 
runs great S6500 Cal 
270769-7794_ 

35 

CHEV^MPA^^^005- 

$7,995. Call Radcliff Auto 
Sales Inc. 270-351-4585 
CHEVY MALIBU LT - 
2011, loaded, $15,988. Dan 
Powers GM Center, (270) 
756-5212. 

FORD FUSION -2009- 
$15,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 


CHEVY TRAVERSE LT 

-2011- 6k miles $26,988. 
Dan Powers GM Center, 
(270) 756-5212. 

CHRYSLER 300C - 2010, 
leather, local trade, 1 
owner, $27,895. Alex Mont¬ 
gomery, (270) 465-8113. 
HONDA ACCORD 

CROSSTOUR 2011, 
loaded, $28,995. Alex Mont¬ 
gomery, (270) 465-8113. 

Autos 

^20,000 to ^24,999 

2007 JEEP WRANGLER 
UNLIMITED SAHARA - 
W/WARRANTY!! $21,900 
61K MILES SILVER RWD 
AUTO PWR LOCKS & 
WINDOWS CRUISE ABS 
RUNNING BOARDS TINT 
2 SOFT-TOPS (STOCK 
AND BESTOP SLANT) 
$2K ROCKSTAR & NITTO 
WHEEL PKG NEOPRENE 
SEAT COVERS PLUS $2K 
WARRANTY THRU 86K 
MILES ORJUN2016IKBB 
= $20.5K + $4.5K IN OP¬ 
TIONS = U SAVE $3K! 
678.325.9344 
JAMYRDA@GMAIL.COM 

INFINITI G35 -2008- 

$20,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 

Autos 

^15,000 to ’19,999 

CHEVROLET HHR LT 
-2011- $15,995, Cecilia 
Auto Sales, 270-737-5845 

CHEVY CRUZE -2011- 
$19,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 
CHEVY CRUZE ECO 
-2012- 1500 miles, like new 
$18,988. Dan Powers GM 
Center, (270) 756-5212. 

CHEVY IMPALALT -2010, 
leather seats, 27,000 miles, 
$19,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 

CHEVY MALIBU LT 

2011, leather, sunroof, 
$19,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 

CHEVY MALIBU LTZ 

-2011- 13k miles loaded. 
$19,988. Dan Powers GM 
Center, (270) 756-5212. 

CHEVY TRAILBLAZER 

2009 26k miles $16,988 
Dan Powers 270-756-5212 

CHEVY TRAILBLAZER 

2009, 26k miles, $16,988 
Dan Powers Chevorlet 
270-756-5212 

CHRYSLER 300 - 2010 - 
local trade, 47,000 miles, 
$19,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 

CHRYSLER SEBRING - 

2008, leather, loaded, con¬ 
vertible, $15,980. Alex 
Montgomery, (270) 

465-8113. 

DODGE AVENGER SXT 
-2012- $17,995, Cecilia 
Auto Sales, 270-737-5845 
FORD MUSTANG - 2008 - 
loaded, 47,000 miles, cd, 
cruise, $16,995. Alex Mont¬ 
gomery, (270) 465-8113. 

GMC SIERRA 2010 auto, 
air, cruise, only 6k miles 
$15,988 Dan Powers 
270-756-5212 

MERCURY MILAN -2010- 
$16,950. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 
TOYOTA AVALON- 2008- 
$19,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 

Autos 

»10,000 to ’U,999 

BUICK LUCERNE - 2008 - 
loaded!! $10,900. Call Elite 
Auto Group, 270-358-0750 
CADILLAC CTS -2006- 
$13,995, Cecilia Auto 
Sales, 270-737-5845 
CHEVROLET AVEO LT 
-2005- $10,995, Cecilia 
Auto Sales, 270-737-5845 

CHEVY IMPALA - 2006 - 
leather, loaded, $12,980. 
Alex Montgomery, (270) 
465-8113. 

CHEVY IMPALA LT -2012- 
10k miles. $18,988. Dan 
Powers GM Center, (270) 
756-5212. 

CHEVY MALIBU - 2008 - 
loaded, air, auto, cd, 
$10,880. Alex Montgomery, 
(270) 465-8113. 

CHEVY SONIC GT -2011- 
loaded $17,988. Dan 
Powers GM Center, (270) 
756-5212. 

FORD F150 - 2007 - Ext. 
Cab, XLT, 4x4, $14,995. 
Herb Jones Auto Group, 
(270) 765-2123. 

FORD FUSION - 2008 - 
nice car, $11,995. Herb 
Jones Auto Group, (270) 
765-2123. 

HYUNDAI TIBURON GT 

-2007- $10,995. Call 

Pinkham Lincoln Auto, 
270-737-2460 

KIA RIO LX -2011- 
$14,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 

MERCURY SABLE -2008- 
$14,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460. 

PONTIAC G6 - 2009 - 4 
door, 4 cylinder, $12,995. 
Herb Jones Auto Group, 
(270) 765-2123. 

PONTIAC GRAND PRIX - 

2008, $12,988. Dan Powers 
GM Center, (270) 
756-5212. 

PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 

2008, 4 door, GT, Sunroof, 
Leather, 50k miles, $12,988 
Dan Powers Chevorlet 
270-756-5212 

Autos 

’5,000 to '9,999 

BMW 328i -1999-$6,995. 
Call Radcliff Auto Sales 
Inc., 270-351-4585. 

CHEVY AVEO - 2007 - 
loaded, air, auto, cd, 
$9,992. Alex Montgomery, 
(270) 465-8113. 

CHEVY CAMARO - 1996 - 
loaded, power locks & win¬ 
dows, $8,995. Alex Mont¬ 
gomery, (270) 465-8113. 

CHEVY IMPALA- 2004- 
$5,995. Call Radcliff Auto 
Sales Inc. 270-351-4585 


CHEVY MONTE CARLO 

2004, loaded, air, auto, cd, 
$9,480. Alex Montgomery, 
(270) 465-8113. 
CHRYSLER 300M -2001- 
$5,995. Call Radcliff Auto 
Sales Inc. 270-351-4585 
PONTIAC BONNEVILLE - 
2003- $7,995. Call Radcliff 
Auto Sales Inc. 270- 
351-4585 



PONTIAC FIERO SE 

1986 94.27Sk miles. VS 
Silver, eutomalic. powr 
windowe. sunroof, om 
owner, goon condirion 
$3250 CaN Paula 

270-723-1895 


Autos 

Up to '4,999 

MAZDA 626 -2000- $3,995. 
Call Radcliff Auto Sales Inc. 
270-351-4585. 

MERCURY COUGAR 
-2000- $3,995. Call Radcliff 
Auto Sales Inc. 
270-351-4585 
PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 
2001. 193 K miles. 4 door. 
Good Ac and good Heat. 
V6, 3.1 Engine. New tires & 
good brakes. Power win¬ 
dows. Clear title. The body 
is in good shape except for 
minor faded spots and 
dents, clean Interior, runs 
good. Asking $3200 but will 
take reasonable offers. 
(270)531-1009 
TOYOTA CAMRY -1997- 
$3,495. Call Radcliff Auto 
Sales Inc. 270-351-4585 

Trucks 
»25,000 & Up 
chev^Tre^^^^ 

2005, Duramax diesel, 4x4, 
$28,980. Alex Montgomery, 
(270) 465-8113. 

DODGE RAM 1500 -2011- 
$30,950. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 
FORD F250 LARIAT - 
2007, Diesel, 4x4, loaded 
with leather, $25,900. Elite 
Auto Group, (270) 358-0750 

Trucks 

'20,000 to '24,999 

CHEV^SIWERAD^^- 

2007, $22,988. Dan Powers 
GM Center, (270) 
756-5212. 

CHEVY SILVERADO LT 
CREW CAB -2011- 

$24,995, Cecilia Auto 
Sales, 270-737-5845 
DODGE DUALLY - 2005 - 
1 ton Cummins diesel, 4x4, 
$24,990. Alex Montgomery, 
(270) 465-8113. 

FORD F-150 -2008- 4x4, 
$23,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 
GMC CANYON CREW 
CAB 4X4 -2012- $24,995, 
Cecilia Auto Sales, 
270-737-5845 

Trucks 

'16,000 to '19,999 

chev^so^re^Tab 

2004, LT, 4x4, loaded, 
$15,900. Elite Auto Group, 
(270) 358-0750 
CHEVY SILVERADO LT - 

2008, Ext. cab, 23k miles, 
$19,988. Dan Powers GM 
Center, (270) 756-5212. 
FORD F250 LARIAT DIE- 
SEL 4x4, Ext. Cab., utility 
truck, $18,500. Elite Auto 
Group, (270) 358-0750 
GMC SIERRA 2010, auto, 
air, cruise only 6K miles. 
$15,988. Dan Powers 
Chevorlet 270-756-5212 
GMC SLT DIESEL - 2003 - 
4x4, 2500 series, loaded, 
$16,300. Elite Auto Group, 
(270) 358-0750 

Trucks 

'10,000 to '14,999 

CHEV^^S^^OO^- 

Auto, cd, $14,880. Alex 
Montgomery, (270) 

465-8113. 

CHEVY 1500 EXT. LT - 

2003, 4x4, leather, power, 
$11,500. Elite Auto Group, 
(270) 358-0750 

CHEVY COLORADO 

2004, loaded, sec. system, 
$13,980. Alex Montgomery, 
(270) 465-8113. 

FORD F-150 LARIAT 4X4 
-2004- $10,995. Call Rad¬ 
cliff Auto Sales Inc. 
270-351-4585 
FORD F350 - 2003 - 4x4, 
diesel, cd, tilt, $14,990. Alex 
Montgomery, (270) 

465-8113. 

Trucks 

'6,000 to '9,999 

DODG^^a!St^^999- 

$5,495. Call Radcliff Auto 
Sales Inc. 270-351-4585 
FORD F-150 -1998- $5,495. 
Call Radcliff Auto Sales Inc. 
270-351-4585. 

FORD F250 - 2007 - 
$7,900. Elite Auto Group, 
(270) 358-0750. 

FORD RANGER XLT - 

2001, 4x4, 4.0 V6, power, 
$9,500. Elite Auto Group, 
(270) 358-0750 

GMC SIERRA 1500 SLT 

2002, ext. cab, 4x4, leather, 
$8,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 

WANTED TO BUY 
TOYOTA AVALON 
2000 TO 2004 in excellent 
condition with low miles 
must be a very nice car 
270-312-3355 

Trucks 
Up to '4,999 

CHEVY SILVERADO - 

1999, extended cab, 4x4, 
$4,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 


37 


Sport Utility 
Vehicles 


BUICK ENCLAVE - 2008 
loaded, cruise, tilt, $29,980. 
Alex Montgomery, (270) 
465-8113. 

SUVs 

’20,000 to ’24,999 

CHEV^QUINO)^^009, 

Sport, AWD, $20,988. Dan 
Powers GM Center, (270) 
756-5212. 

FORD ESCAPE 
-2011- $20,050. Call 

Pinkham Lincoln Auto, 
270-737-2460 
FORD FLEX SEL -2010- 
$23,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 
FORD FLEX SEL -2011- 
$24,995, Cecilia Auto 

Sales, 270-737-5845 
NISSAN ROGUE SV 

-2011- $23,995, Cecilia 
Auto Sales, 270-737-5845 

SUVs 

'15,000 to'19,999 

chev^TvaKnch^- 

2007, Extra clean, $19,995. 
Herb Jones Auto Group, 
(270) 765-2123. 

CHEVY EQUINOX - 2010 - 
4 cylinder, front wheel drive, 
$15,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 
FORD EDGE -2009- 
$19,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 
FORD ESCAPE -2009- 
$17,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460 
KIA SOUL - 2011 - 27,000 
miles, new tires, $17,995. 
Herb Jones Auto Group, 
(270) 765-2123. 

NISSAN PATHFINDER - 
2007, 3rd row seat, 
$15,900. Elite Auto Group, 
(270) 358-0750 
TOYOTA RAV4 - 2007 - 
loaded, power locks & win¬ 
dows, $15,980. Alex Mont- 
gomery, (270) 465-8113. 

SUVs 

’10,000 to’t4,999 


2002 JEEP WRANGLER 
JEEP SPORT Red, Man¬ 
ual transmission, pre¬ 
mium sound, glass win¬ 
dows, AC, Tow package. 
New Tires very good 
condition, 94k miles 
$11,450 Call 270 307 
6464 



ZD07 FORD ESCAPE 
XLT $11,000 Great con^ 
ditk^n, tc^wrng, 

only 73K miles, auku, 
cruise, CD, white with 
gray interior, CaD Jack 
at 270-304^672 


JEEP $6«00 2002 Ub- 
crty Renegade. Cactus 
green. 4'Speedl eirta. 3.7 
liter VS. dWD. Cruise. 
Power Vpindowa. AG, 
DuaPOorit airbage. 
AJWFM/cas&ette^D. Fog 
lights. Roof-teountscf light 
bar. Front tow hooks. 
Towing package See 
pics on LoLisville 


NISSAN ROGUE -2009- 
$18,995. Call Pinkham Lin¬ 
coln Auto, 270-737-2460. 


CHEVY EXPRESS 3500 
199^. 15 passenger, ffont 
S rear air. power win¬ 
dows. 54.5CK) Call (270) 
234-S89S 


ELI MILLER LOGGING 

Master Logger Certified. 
Specializing special cutting. 
Call 270-524-2967. 


46 


Lawn & 
Gardens 


HYBRID IRIS SALE 

all colors, mintature. 
medlurin and tall $2.00 ea 
Buy bve and get one tree 
Dealers are welcome, 
C^l 270-737 8687 if no 
answer leave me^Gage 
wll call beck 


SEARS RIDING MOWER 

1 yr old, 26 hp, 54” inch 
cut, hydrostatic drive. 
Cost $1895 new and ask¬ 
ing $1200 Call 

270-737-8466 



WEED EATER ONE 

moctel WE2ei. 2ff' ridng 
mower 2 1/2 years eld, 
ju4t like r^^ 50. 

Ceai 27CP76g-0707 or 
270-312-1075 


46 


Machinery 
* Tools 


MILLER BOBCAT 250 

welder/generator. Less 
than 600 hours $2200. 
MILLER BOBCAT 250 
welder/generator less 
than 200 hours $2850. 
Call 270 737-1912 or 
270-307-8480, leave 
_message._ 


55 f"®*® 


BEAUTIFUL TOY 

YORKIE PUPPIES fof 

sale, 0 v^ks dd. ^hote 
up to date, 3 maleE. 1 fe¬ 
male. CKC registered. 
P^rent$ Oh $500 

each 270-208-1678. 


GERMAN SHEPHERD 
PUPPIES, 

Champion bioodines 
German Meiitage. 
Black 3. tan 

Call 1270) 537-3143 


CHEVY SUBURBAN LT - 

2004, $11,500. Elite Auto 
Group, (270) 358-0750. 
NISSAN MURANO - 2004 - 
all wheel drive, 1 owner, 
$11,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 
PONTIAC TORRENT 
2007, all wheel drive, 
$11,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 

SUVs 

'5,000 to *9.999 

chev^Kze^^ooT- 

loaded, air, cruise, cd, 
$8,980. Alex Montgomery, 
(270) 465-8113. 

CHEVY TRAILBLAZER 
-2005- $7,995. Call Radcliff 
Auto Sales Inc. 270- 
351-4585 

CHRYSLER TOWN & 

Country, 2007, front & rear 
air, $9,900. Elite Auto 
Group, (270) 358-0750 
FORD ESCAPE XLT - 

2005, 4x4, auto, air, $9,900. 
Elite Auto Group, (270) 
358-0750 



ttjite 




POMERANIAN PUPPIES 
iRe^stered, flufV little fur 
balls w/ teddy bear faces. 
(Red sable) (Cream) or 
(Black). Reasonably 
pticed. Ready bD go. 
Call (270) 242-6886. 


POODLES CKC REGIS^ 
TER ED. black, first 
vel checked parel icn site 
$300 each. Call 
2 7 D- 2 7 2 - 1 2 3 0. 
502-299-7449 



JEEP GRAND CHERO¬ 
KEE Laredo, 2001, loaded 
w/equipment, $8,900. Elite 
Auto Group, (270) 358-0750 
SATURN VUE - 2006 - 4 
cylinder, front wheel drive, 
$6,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 

SUVs 

Up to ’4,999 

chev^baiSKze^- 

2003, 2 wheel drive, 

$4,995. Herb Jones Auto 
Group, (270) 765-2123. 
DODGE DURANGO 4X4 
-19999- $4,995. Call Rad¬ 
cliff Auto Sales Inc. 
270-351-4585 
FORD BRONCO 1987 Ed- 
die Bauer Edition, Clean, 
No Rust, Rebuilt Motor, 
Nice Interior, 4 Inch Lift, 
Must Sell, $3500 (or best 
offer) (254)681-0713 

Vans 

'10,000 to'14,999 

CHEvHjpKnDE^006 

TV/DVD, $10,995. Alex 
Montgomery, (270) 

465-8113. 

Vans 

'5,000 to '9,999 

DODG^ARAVA^^OO?, 

beautiful vehicle, $7,900. 
Elite Auto Group, (270) 
358-0750 

Vans 

Up to '4,999 


SIBERIAN HUSKY PUP- 

PIES 7 7/eak otd Stbanan 
Husky puppies. Two sdic 
and oni^ gray/v^ufe: 
No papers. Mother and Fa¬ 
ther on site. $1D0 each 
270-862 3430 w ema 
am b clt>@y ahoo com 



TOY RAT TERRIER 
PUPPIES val checked, 
first shfjia, parents on 
8ite. $200 call (270) 
272-1280 or {602) 
299-7449 


Pet Services 


BL4CK SIMMENTAL/ 
ANGUS 7 bulls. 
SI 000-SI. 200. 4 heiters. 
$975. 12-14 morTtha Call 
Isaac Masdan. (502) 
833»4316. 


SIMMENTAL BULLS 
YEARLING Simmental 
bulls for sale. A.I. sired by 
top bulls. Solid black and 
polled. Ready for Spring 
service. 502-549-3798 


59 


Feed, Seed 
&Hay 



Z0O8 HARLEY 
DAVI DSON/FLHP ROAD 
KING wfl03 C/I engine, 6 
speed, less than 10,000 
miles. Asking $15,500' 
OeO. Call 270-300-8414 
B' 00am - 6 00pm gr 
leave message 


STRAW BALES - S3 
each. IVfcnImum of 25. De¬ 
ll vary available according 
to milaaga Call (270) 
258-0794 


Motorcycles/ATVs 
Up to '4,999 


TUBACCO PLANTS - 

S27S ah aore delivered 
$240 pick up. Ptanta 
ready now Ihru July 
Gall(4Z3) 3Z7-2917 


HONDA SHADOW 750 
CRUISER -2004- garage 
kept, V8H muffler vwsll 
maintained, runs great, 
very sharp vwth lob of es- 
tfsa S3.400 call (270) 
401-3358. 


60 81 

135 MASSEY FERGU- 

JLtX. . maybe converted, white 

SON TRACTOR, Diesel black front $150. 

power fl eteanng. like new 270-735-6015 
tires, axoallent pamt. good 

tractor $4 400 cr best of¬ 
fer Call 275-765-9759 

-^-WASHER 8 DRYER 
FOR SALE— 

BOTH WORK GREATl 
JUST REPLACING WITH 
NEWER ONES. ASKING 
$300 O.e.O- FOR BOTH. 
CALL OR TtXT 

270-307-5275 

256 NEW HOLLAND 
FARM RAKE- Very good 
shape like new Selling 
due to ptooi health $1750. 
270-737-5835 or 

275-401-1234 

850 NEW HOLLAND 
round hay roller w4th mon¬ 
itors 8 roll tabacce 
s-piaycr (270)763-2111 

Oft Home 

Ol. Furnishings 



Round Baler, good condi¬ 
tion $10,000. Shed kept. 
Call 270-766-4183 


61 


Farmers 

Market 


DOG JACK RUSSELL 
2y/o white female, spay 
FREE to exceptional fam¬ 
ily with fenced yard.UTD 
on shots. Playful and 
good with children but 
not other dogs. Needs 
loving family, will make a 
great companion, call 
270-352-5332 after 5:30pm 
if seriously interested in 
adoption. 


HARDIN CO. 
FARMERS 
MARKET 

NOW OPEN 

Saturday, 7am-12prn 
Corner of Peterson 
Dr & Hwy 62 


63 


Farm 

Miscellaneous 


r4NIATURE DACHSMUNC 

CKC Long hair black anc 
tan male 7wks aid ve? 
checked calJ: 317-179S 
$300 


79FORDT-BIRD 85,000 
MtLES. 351 all power, 
nice bu/gandy car. i 
owner $6500. 2 Bush 
Hogs 6ft 8 7 ft 
S3QO-S1000. 2 Tandem 
Axle tr8il$i^ I6ft8 14ft 
Wfffampa I1000-S1200, 3 
poim hitch 6ft di^k $600. 
1200 gal. steel water tank 
$500. John Deer horse 
drawn riding plow $1006 
nice condilion. 5 ft box 
grader blade $450. wood 
Stoves. Buck. Fisher & 
mere. 50 Caliber TC New 
Englander rifte S12S, An- 
ttquee and Glassware 8 
Quilts (270)257-8243 
(270) 547-8952 


150 + 5FT STEEL POET, 
3 fence charger one is so¬ 
lar,. 8hp Briggs £ Stratton 
en^no. oid windows 
weights 5Jb great farm 
gates or hshing. 20 oid 
grasn pans house win¬ 
dows. 270- 368^4997 If no 
ansvfit leav e message. 


80 


Motorcycles 

&ATVS 


MOST MAKES AND 
Model* WE BUY BIKES 
270-763-1109 


Motorcycles/ATVs 
‘15,000 to'19,999 


CHEVY VENTURE -1999- 
$3,995. Call Radcliff Auto 
Sales Inc. 270-351-4585 



ZDO0 HARLEY 
DAVIDSON/FLHP ROAD 
KINGv^lOS C/I engine. 6 
speed, less than 10.000 
miles AsHng $15,500 
OeO Call 270-300-8414 
8.00am - S.OOpm or 
teave meassige. 



KENTUCKYWORKING 
K-9 ACADEMY 

Basic-Advanced 
cKbediEnce 
Mobility Assi&lance 
Seizute Asaiatance 
Glucose Alert 
Area Guarefing 
Handler Protection 
Problem Behavior Solving 
Detection/Tracking/ 
working 

Bnroif your dog today! 
Tra/rted for safe 

Tammy Nugent. Trainer 
Call for appotnlrnsnl 
270-597-5328 
kydoatratnaf^amaif. cam 


Classifieds 

is 

the 

key 

to 

success 




SOLI D O AK ENTER- 
TAINMENT CENTER 

Sheivesfcridp^nd bot¬ 
tom. 12 ft long, includes 
shelves on the side. Call 
275*234^196 


85 


Miscellaneous 


PHIL’S PRODUCE open 

Apr 26. Thur-Fri 10 to 6 & 
Sat 9 to 6. Fresh tomatoes, 
new potatoes, green beans, 
squash, vidalia onions, and 
local strawberries will be 
available. At the corner of 
Mulberry & French St. Call 
Phil Howell, (270) 737-3516 


$3 PAYING CASH $$ 

for your junk cars, trucis 
and farm equipment. 
$250 Tor any complete au* 
tom obi le or iruok. Will 
pick up at your conven¬ 
ience. (275) 234-6256. 
Also. Ires removal of 
abandoned autos. 


ATTENITON PIANO 
TEACHERS. Antique 
Practica Plano for sale 
270-735-2811 


RVs & Campers 
Up to '4,999 
coSma^o^j^S 

Sante Fe, Air conditioning 
and heat strip, 10ft box, 
king on one end and full 
bed on the other, no rips or 
tears in canvas, small 
fridge, indoor and outdoor 
stove, dinette makes a bed. 
$3200 obo. Call at 
502-639-5140 


HOUSE GAS FURNACE 
AND ELECTRIC A/C 
$455 FOR BOTH, 
270^28^319 


METAL DETECTORS; 
Find Your Ttea&ure 
GPid Silver. 
Coirrs. Relics 
Garrett and Fisher 
aveilabl?. 

Call McCoy's 
Z70-T69-50Z2, 


PUB STYLE TABLE with 
4 chaite, $275. MeCtJl- 
idugh 5706 geni&rator. 
$550 Call (270) 
234-9179 


SHOWCASE FOR SALE 

great for Peddlers Mall or 
Flea Market $200, several 
other taste available. (2) 
2600 PSI Honda pressure 
washers motors are great 
but pumps are weakened 
$75 each. 270-769-1444 


WANTED OLO GUITARS 
Gibson. Fendet S Martin 
buying Ferrder Amps, 
CASH PAID!! 
270-735-2209 


Furniture 


LAWN TRACTOR '10 

Troy-Bilt Bronco 42‘ deck 
Hydrostatic drive. 2CIHF 
Kot^er eng.. Elec ignilion. 
$850 del. Ideally oi S75C 
cash/ho del: .avail 5/21 
dake.fernily@wflrdstream n 
et 




87 


Good Things 
To Eat 


ST. CATHARINE FARM, 

Beef & pork: Half or 1001b 
variety box, locally bred, 
born & raised. Antibiotic, 
steroid, hormone free. Now 
accepting Visa/MC. (859) 
805-1278 or 

(859)336-0444. 


TOMATO PLANTS ARE 
READY- Over 25 varie¬ 
ties available Including 
heirloom^. Ortly $1.50 per 
planl:. Volume dteoounts. 
Larry and Peggy Thomas 
EU Z ABETHT OWN-142 2 
Tunnel Hill Rd 
270-769-1578 
270-735-2144 


90 


Yard and 
Garage Sales 


’RINEYVILLE’ 
185 lake 

Rd., April 28th 
8:a0am-? 
MOVING SALE 
Everything must 
go!! Bedroom 
Sets - 

Twin/Q ueen/King. 
China Cabinets, 
Leather Sofa, 
Kitchen Set, Over¬ 
sized Sectional, 
Lamps, Artwork, 
Linens, Etc. 


26 MILE 

YARDSALE 

on hM/y. 86 
in Cecilia all the way 
to Hwy. 60. 
Saturday, April 2Sth. 
Lots of everything for 
everyone 


2009 AMANA Refrigerator 

is black & stainless steel, 
pull out drawer freezer, 
H69xD33xW32. Suggested 
retail is $1499; asking $650. 

Evenings 502-386-3769. 
Daytime 270-268-6191. 

ANTiQUE ROCKER high 
back $60 270-234-0802 


COUCH & LOVESEAT - 

smooth top stove, side by 
side refrigerator, dish- 
washer,31 2-0722, 
763-7956 

CRAFT roiiing tote black 
with pink border $25. 
Brother Printer/Scanner & 
Fax machine $30. AT&T 
base home and cordeless 
headset black $25. Large 
white Lotus flower and 
brass table lamp $40. By 
appointment. Call 

270-763-1999. 


AIR CONDITIONED AT 
BURIED TREASURE. 
ELIZABETHTOWN 
Burning up your money 
on gao driving from one 
yard sale to another gats 
expensive! Rnd the best 
deals & the best quality all 
year long at Buried Treas¬ 
ure Thrift Shop. 326 West 
Dikie Ave in E'towi. 
Thousands dE new & gen^ 
tty used items (w®y too 
much Id list!), even ar^ 
tiques, clothing & de¬ 
signer items are here Tor 
your bargairvhunting fun'' 
WG add hundreds of 
items every single day so 
stop by often! Save big 
$$$ at Buried Treasure 
Wed thru Sat 15am 
-4 pm. i27Q) 365*9465 


And about YARD SALE 
LEFTOVERS and 
DONATIONS too. .!! 
Buried Treasure accepts 
and appreciates dona¬ 
tions of items you are un¬ 
able to soil at YOUR yard 
sale’ Proceeds of the 
shop benefrt Haidn 
County Pet Protection's 
spay/neuter program and 
are ta^ deductible Serv¬ 
ing Hardn County since 
1988. Hardin Ca Pet Pro- 
teefton has helped over 
18.050 antmals m YOUR 
communityl (Not affiliated 
wth any other shop). 

Burred Treasure. 

The Real Deal! 


PEDESTAL TABLE WITH 
CLAW FOOT LEGS, 4 

chairs, asking $150 obo. 
Call 502-264-2169ES 

PORTABLE ELECTRIC 
GENERATOR Coleman 
Portable generator, 5500 
watts, 240/120V. Wheeled 
cart. Less than 10 hours run 
time. $440,270 765-4179 


ELIZABETHTOWN 101 
Diacka Or {tfiroctly bohind 
Wendy’6) ONE DAY 
ONLY Fri, Apr 27, 
9am-3pm. Furniture, 
liners, dishware. plants^ 
antiques, toots, beds, fil¬ 
ing cabrnets. tables, 
shelving books, lots of 
misc. Ram or shine, will 
be in doors if raining 


ELIZABETHTOWN 1411 
AMANDA Jo Dr. Fridas 

only. 8:00-2.00. Moving 
and dcwnsizmg. twin bed, 
chgiRc. beck case, old 7E 
records. antique dining 
rihaim. a mall TV.. klEcher 
lapie. oecorative items anc 
much more 



“ALL NEW NAME 

BRAND Pillowtop Maltri&SE 
selt Full $110 h Queer 
S115. King 5185. Can de- 
Irver. Call iSQg! &64-796e. 

DINING CHAIRS SET of 4 

Dining Chairs, $25 each or 
$90 for the set. Deep plum 
color. Cell Phone: 

769-8364 

For 

TWIN BED & MATTRESS 
Twin Bed with Mattress anc 
ttix Springs for s^e. I r 
Great CdndfctiPn. $150 Oi 
Be$t Offer. Pieaae cai 
(270)-219-9566 oi 

{270I-219-9667 


BUZABETHTOWN 1S7 
Brentwood Dr. off New 
Gfendale Rd. Sat Apr 28 
8am-1pm. TV Furniture 
new queen size bed, misc 
items 



ELIZABETHTOWN 
258 Lakewood Dr Fri & Sal 
Apr 27 & Z8 6am-l2pm. 4 
trres & nms^ stove, ciste 
vrasher, reeliner. sofa, chair 
love seat 8 attorn an, tools. 
2 iron security doors, misc 
Items. 8 much more. 














































































































































































































































































































































































































THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


B9 


M Yard and 
Garage Sales 



ELIZABETHTOWN - 304 
to 2m Silk Oak Ci {off 
Oriole Dr., beliind Wat- 
matyCredit Union). 

Thur-Sat,. April 26th- 
2ath. aam^2pr¥i. S family 

yard saEal Antcque furnE- 
ture, Javwi power eqjip- 
iTiant. Hooda \sm mowr. 
power tools, house wares. 
23rip 50” cut Uector. 
quto f^rts. toys, tv & 
stereo, lots of stirff^' 


lIvTWO 

FAMIIIES 

ELIZABETHTOWN - 406 
Unda LN (Off Pear Or¬ 
chard MUV) Fri, April 37 
6am-2pm a Sal. April 26 
aam-11am. GLEANING 
OUT THE BASEMENT. 
TWO FAMILY OARAGE 
SALE, COME RAIN OR 
SHINE5!t LOTS of 
Clothes & Shoes for AIL 
ages {eepecially size 
12/14 Ladies). Boyd's 
Boars £ Figurines. Furni¬ 
ture. TV stand. MCE 
houselndd items, Prin- 
case comtort^r/ 

Princess Room Dicor, 
TONS of Toys. DVDs, 
CDs, >©OX gomes, home 
d^or. NICE Jewelry &. 
purses. BRAND NEW 
rubber fltampe 5 eciep- 
book Items plus tons of 
misc, Somethirifg lor Eve- 
ryonoMl 



ELIZABETHTOWN - 424 
Park Ave., Fri. Aptil 27tli. 
aem-5pm ^ Seturday. 
A|>ri1 2Slh. Sem-^pm, 
Weed eater, leaf blovwr. 
rugs, car seal Respornics 
breathing machine, chair, 
lov^seat & cttoman cover, 
many other household 
decorating items’ 




ELIZABETHTOWN - 

Sl3 Orchard Dr., FmSat 


Apr,27fh a 2eth, 8am -? 
Fundaraiser Yard Sale for 
Mother & Wife vwth Can¬ 
cer, A3f proceeds vi|l go to 
rhom and donation^ ara 
accepted Something for 
everyone’ 



ELIZABETHTOWN ^ 54 
iVhIton Ave. Fn, Apnl 27th. 
Set April 2ath, 6am - 
1pm. (4) Family Yard 
Sale! 


ELIZABETHTOWN- 72 
Whispering Pine Wey 
East, iHwy 62E to Timber 
Greet, follow signs). Sal. 
April SB 6am New four 
bike auto carnei. very 
nice ^cker furniture, 
large mantle, air hockey 
table, pidures. mirrors, 
games, glassware, rirvans. 
tool be™. TV. womens 
clothing and much more 


0 and read 

ELIZABETHTOWN ■ For¬ 
mally at Harry Qwon 
Trucking, now wll be at 
6D9 Hickory Ln. Satur¬ 
day. April 36th, Sam-? No 
sarly birds pHease! Relay 
tor Life yard sale! Nolhing 
IS priced, just taking do¬ 
nations! BLTs S. coffee 
also available’!' 



ELIZABETHTOWN. 413 
Sunning dale Way in The 
Village at Pine Valley. Fri¬ 
day Only April 27, 9am to 
7. Proceeds benefit The 
Chariet Family. 


ESTATEFSAbESJ 


ESTATE CLEARANCE 
SALE- RadClilT-711 
Seminole Rd. Fn Apr 27 
9am-6pm & Sat Apr 26 
9am-3pni. Antigues: 
trunk. ^assTAnre. lamps 5. 
furmlurs. Roil lop desk, 
chairs. whriSkay barrel fur¬ 
niture: {bar. sofe game ta¬ 
ble. chairs & ottomans), 
pool {siete) 3. me* 
pie tea cart, Christmas 
items, lots of household 
items. 


✓ THIS OUT! 

ETOWFJ 1211 HANCOCK 
DRIVE* behind Central Har¬ 
din 2+ family yard $a'le Sal 
4/28 8am-? Lots cr 

baby/toddler toys, items fo. 
girls & boys, home decor 
clothing books small furni¬ 
ture. a niuch more 


M Yard and 
Garage Sales 


H0D6ENVILLE- 246 & 

243 Forresta Court Huge 
4 family yard sale. Satur¬ 
day April 26 e tld to ? 
Lots of household misceF 
Isneous. 1 retro- table &. 
Chairs antique farm table 
weed eater, electric start 
lavifi mower, set of new 
m at no wrenches Hoover 
steam cleaner, antique 
trundle bed. new portable 
dishwasher. 2002 Chevy 
Cargo Van. new play 
Kitchen 3 amenities, 
womens clothes our- 
tains, furmlurs. braang 
torch, battery charger, 
port awe neater/ar oondi- 
tionar. keyboard wth 
stand ^ bench 


HOWE VALLEY- BEAT 
THE RUSH HWY 86. Fn 
A Sat. 7421 Hardinsburp 
Road (Hwy 66). Bam to 
5pm. Rve family yard 
sale GUNS, new tires 3 
rims, old quiets over lOO 
yea re old back pack 
spfay anhque cashes, too 
much to mention. 



PLANT SALE 143 Fide 
Slone Way Etcwn (off Ba- 
oon creak Rd) panmais, 
old fashion plants, Sal, Api 
20 10am'2pm For into 
270-735.6 a02 



RAD CLIFF- 138 Orange 
Court, off of Jm Prather 
take nght West Vine, turn 
left on Elm Road Sat. 
April 26 Bam to ? EJlipli 
oal. futon, bbq grill, lots of 
baby dothe^ ne^^rn to 
12 months girls, boys 
newborn to 3T. trampo¬ 
line. coffee 3 end tables. 
2 big dog kennete.weed 
eater, wheel barrow lad¬ 
der. lots of miGoallanaous 
items 


RAD CLIFF 1594 CY¬ 


PRESS Dr. 8:00 Saturday 
2G Apr, sectional with bed 
and rcoliner, day bed, bed- 
ding^ dog kettle, doc 
house, buterfly pub tabte 
with 6 chairs, shoes 
boots, coats, some 
womans clothlots □' 
girl teenage clothc^, tor^ 
of nice misc things. 


IfflJlDSALE. 


RADCLIFF UNITED METH¬ 
ODIST Church, 275 S. 
Woodland Dr. The United 
Methodist Women will hold 
a Rummage Sale on Satur¬ 
day, April 28, from 
8am-1pm at the church. 
Proceeds to benefit mis¬ 
sions. 



RINEYVILLE - 117 Sierra 
Hr (LaVsta Subdivision} 
Fri 6 Sat , April 27th S 
20th. 03m-? Somethirvg toi 
everyone! 


HERE 
FIRST! 

RINEYVILLE - Oakwood 
Ct. Cul-de-sac. located off 
Hwy 220.1 mite northeast 
of the 1600/220 turna^ 
bout. Saturday. Apnl 2eth. 
Bam-1pm. Lav;n chair 
cushiorifs. construcEion 
kerosene heater, seed 
spreader. boye bike, 
pamhngs. many kitohan ^ 
miscellanBaus itams. All 
priced to solFt 




Employment 


Employment 


Aliora einplear para 

puesto& de pro- 
duccion / industria 
ligera 

For favor name a 
Dean con la Red de 
Reservas eri al 
270-765^9128 
(Wow hiring for 
produdion/tighi 
industrial posttions 


THE 

RESERVES 

NETWORK 


Pleaaa call Dean wiih 
The Reserves 
Wetwork 
270-765-9120 


* ALL STAR* 

TRUCKING, INC 

OTR DRJVERS 
WANTED 

l/an. 2 yr. experience 

Wo felonies or DUi's 
we Offer: 

* Quality Home Time 

* Competitive pay 

’ Nlatchmg 401K 

* Great benefit pkg. 

* Per diem 

MAKE THE RIGHT 
CHOICE TODAY 
Call Greg 
l-eOO-928-5422 
ext 8415 


ASSISTANT MANAGER 
wanted at VFW Post 
10231 In Vine Grove. Ky 
IVHj$t b* 21 or older. Full 
time poeiton. mghts 3 
Y^ekends. may be as'ked 
to wosk a day oocasion- 
ally Background check 
required. Please call 
{270) 877-2133 or (270) 
877-6556 for more irfor- 
mution Acoeplirig appli¬ 
cations thru Apr. 27th. 

BOOKKEEPER with Quick 
books experience, admin¬ 
istrative, customer service 
positions in local area. If 
you need employment con¬ 
tact Express Employment 
Professionals, 935 N. Mul¬ 
berry or 270-737-4724 
about these positions. 


BUSY LOCAL 
COWSTRUCTION 
COMPANY 
looking for a full time 
Office Assistant. Must 
have good phone ekiire. 
computer typing skills to 
include hAcrosoft Word 
and Excel knowledge. 
Must be atie to multi task 
and adapt to a small 
fice setting where many 
talenrts are required. Sal¬ 
ary negotiable, benefits 
available. Maiil resume 
and salary requirements 
to P.O. Box 431. Eliza¬ 
bethtown Ky 42702. 
Equal Opportunity Em¬ 
ployer 



CDL SchDbl starting 
soon 

Please call for more 
information 
Also needing 
Experienced CDL 
Class A Drivers 
-Reliable home time 
- Consistent freight 
- Ore of the irdustiys 
best pay packages. 

600-644-1060 ext. 144 


CHILD CARE CENTER 
DIRECTOR- RADCLIFF. 
Must meet all'^latallceria- 
ing requirements. Degree 
with GDA or in ECE or * 
12 credit hours in ECE or 
managenient exporrenoe 
+ at least in licensed Child 
care Resumes to; 
acad em vof fear n I na@ 

Comcast . net 

Fax. 317-091-0037. 


*AVOID EMPLOYMENT 
SERVICE SCAMS Don’t 
pay to find work before you 
get the job. For more infor¬ 
mation write the Federal 
Trade Commission at 
Washington, D.C., 20580. 


A COMMUNITY BASED 
PROGRAM vwrking with 
people with disabilities 
seeking applicants for the 
position of full time 
LPN.Ttus position re¬ 
quires oyersighl of med¬ 
ial issue? or conceme. 
medi cation exchange ap¬ 
propriate medication ad¬ 
ministration. quality assur* 
ance wlhin the medical 
department, and any 
otner mecucally related re- 
sponsibiiities as they 
arise Applicants should 
hold a Current nursing li¬ 
cense and would prefera¬ 
bly have $qme e=i penance 
with oversight of a depart¬ 
ment. Applicants should 
be self motivated, haive 
good communication 
skills be detail oiieated 
and be available to work, 
flexible schedule as 
needed /Applications will 
be accepted @ 
WWW, reacar e. com For 
questions, or help v^th (ha 
application process, cell 
(2701 7ti9-6410. EOE 


CCNTEMPCRARY WCR- 
SHIP LEADER College 
Heights United Methodist 
Church, in Elizabethtown, 
KY, is seeking a part-time 
Contemporary Worship 
Leader to begin on or 
around July 1, 2012. This 
position will involve prepar¬ 
ing music for the 9am Con¬ 
temporary Worship service, 
recruiting and developing 
volunteers for music minis¬ 
try, and providing music in 
special services and youth 
ministry functions. We are 
looking for a mature Chris¬ 
tian leader, who is able to 
effectively work with a team 
of volunteers and who is 
willing to be adventurous in 
pursuing our vision to make 
Jesus Christ more impor¬ 
tant than anything else. 
The applicant is required to 
have a High School Di¬ 
ploma, past experience 
leading worship in a con¬ 
temporary setting, and/or a 
Bachelor’s degree with an 
emphasis in music includ¬ 
ing proficiency in either 
piano or guitar. Please 
submit a resume and, if 
available, a DVD, audio file, 
or Internet link of a previous 
performance to: College 
Heights United Methodist 
Church 

710 College Street Road 
Elizabethtown, KY 42701 


AGI SHORE WOOD 
immediate need to hire 
twto Mairttenarto$ T^obm- 
cians on ttis evening shift. 
Interested candidates can 
mail qi e-mail their re¬ 
sume to the address be¬ 
low or it can be faxed. 
AGE Sherswoed, 130D 
West Park Rd. Eliza¬ 
bethtown KY 42702 
270-765-1130 (fax num¬ 
ber) Please no telephone 
calls. AGI Shorewood is 
an oquat opportunity em¬ 
ployer 


Submission Deadline is 
May 27, 2012. For addi¬ 
tional information about the 
church, please visit 
www.collegeheightsumc.co 
m. 


EXPERIENCED 

PREFERRED^ 

COOK needed for Bub's 
Cafe. Part (me. Exceflent 


hours, some experience 
required Come by Bub's 
Cafe intiiQ Roses Shopp¬ 
ing Center 



Employment 


DIESEL MECHANIC 
needed. 

Ist shift 7arT>4pm 
Saturdays mandatory 
Tap pay based an 
experience 

Mack and Volvo 
experience needed 
Engine rebuilding a 
plus 

Rotating after hours 
on call 

Pick up an application 
or send resume to: 

All Star Trucking, 
Inc., 1606 Progress 
Way Ste. B 
Clarksville, In 47129 


✓ THIS OUT! 

DRIVERS WANTED COM¬ 
PANY drivBrs that would 
leva iq thair owrii truck 
and traitor and make rrara 
monay for iheir fairilies. 
Well then we are I he co-m- 
pany fOf you. Sargenl 
Trucking here rn Bardstown, 
Ky la oltorinq fha sato ol 
trucks, and trailers to any 
driver that would love tc 
own their own equ^ment. 
We Imance in hbuge anc 
you own your truck aoc 
trailor in 3-i- years depend¬ 
ing on aquipmant chosen. 
Our dispatchers will ke^p 
your whaels turning anc 
mcney tfovwng. Our Owmer 
Ops ara averaging bat ween 
Si.85 10 $2.00 per nfilo or 
every mto turned at weeks 
end. Most dnvors gross be 
tween 5-6 thousand evgr> 
week. No authority, nc 
probierTi. vife will toa$e you 
onlo our corrpar^v and vvg 
offer many great benelits 
that most corrpanies don'l 
cul toere on ihe road. Frcrr 
fuel di&oounia to aearstants 
with repairs we respect Ihe 
driver. So rt your up foi 
making more money in oui 
industry please call Jasor 
at 502-249-1650. Don'l 
rtis$ out on a Oreat oppor¬ 
tunity. 


EXPERIENCED 

BOOKKEEPER 

for small local company, 
3(1 to40 hours per week. 
State desired Si^lary 
Reply to Box N. 

The NeviS Enterprise. 

40B W Dxio Avo. 
Elis bethtown. Ky 42701 


FLAGSHIP 

TRANSPORTATION 

We are a 

refrrqerated truciqng 
company with positions 
available for Ciasa A-OiR 
drivers with 4+ yrsexp 
and good MVR. 

We Oder 37 cents pw 
mile rai£Q after 90 days, 
qood benefits 
and paid vacations, 
call 5D2-45Z-655T. 


FORKLIFT, Maintenance, 
Painting, Warehouse and 
Manufacturing/Production 
positions available in Hardin 
and surrounding areas. Call 
Express Employment Pro¬ 
fessionals, for more infor¬ 
mation 270-737-4724 or 
visit us at 935 N. Mulberry. 


HEALTHSOUTH LAKE- 
VIEW REH/BILtTATlON 
HOSPITAL has immediate 
opening for; PRN Cook 
PRN Physical Therapist 
PRN Occupational Thera¬ 
pist. PRN Speech Lan¬ 
guage Pathatogiist. Inter¬ 
ested cendidatee apply 
online at www. healthsouth. 
jobs Or emai 

Tina 0e§jqurdy@he3lth 
5Qiith.com 


HTSI is curfchtly looking 
for an aggresave individ¬ 
ual tor the poertion of 
Dispatcher. Must have 
pnor truckmg/dlspatch ex¬ 
perience and able tc work 
in a fast paced envircr>- 
menl. Call {502) 

957-4100 ext 209 or fax 
resume to (502) 
957^171. 


Local Company 
seeks CDL Drivers 

We offer oompetibve 
wQqe walh vacations, 
health irrsurance. 401K 
available. You provide 2 
yeaie expeneace- clean 
MVR end a poeifivs utti- 
lude 000-556-3503 or 
502 340 3503 


MACHINIST CNCfMan- 
uai Mil 6 Lathe experi¬ 
ence preferred inclutln^ 
CMC pfogrammingi 2nd 
Shift Position. Send Re¬ 
sume to Enproteoh Me- 
cnanical Services. Attn: 
Machinist PasrtiQn. 223 
Peterson Drive. Elizaherh- 
tovwi. KY 42701 


MACHINIST NOW AC¬ 
CEPTING APPLICA¬ 
TIONS for expanding ma¬ 
chine Shop looking for 
manual mlll/iathe ma¬ 
chinist vwth 3-5 ym job 
snop expen ence pre^ 
tarred Banefife available 
Fax resume to (270) 
356-0377 


MA C H 1 N IST/C N C 
Opa rat o r/ Pr ogr a m m e r 
Day shift Good benefits 
Pay negotiable. Musi be 
experiertced. Send re¬ 
sume fo: PO BOX 1022. 
Eliza bethtovji. Ky 42702. 



MAD O^H 
COURIER 

Hiring Class A and B driv¬ 
ers immediately Com¬ 
petitive pay, exceilent 
benefits. Home everyday, 
cell 502-331-0330 



Off WB PBBSS 

Tho Ad« mpmrin^ in *^01 «FF THE FftESS*' m brflfld new I 0 tM 
Vau g«l m klt«t irt th^rn «rt Hm FIRST fVAV ttf |MfaliCft1jl«rt. 
To tm >urB ifouw ad im in ’’HOT OTF THE PRESS',, call Te»-12DD beL SfiDI. 


SS PAYING CASH S$ 

for y&ur junk cars, trucks 
and farm equipmenl. 
5200 Tor ar^ complete ao- 
tomobile or truck. Will 
pick up 3t your conven¬ 
ience. call (270) 
234-62D6. Also, free re¬ 
moval of abandoned au¬ 
tos. 


1.5 ^RES set up for 
mobile home lAilh city 
water, electric and septic 
eyatem. Locefod off uixie 
Hwy and U S Hvjy 60 
near Fort Knox. $27,900. 
Financing Available. Call 
351-4977 800-33^331 
WWW, ken tu c k v-land com 


10 ACRES v^(h mobile 
home in Larue Counry, 2 
bedroome. 2 bath^. civ 

w^tor. central heat and 
aif, all electric, new car¬ 
pel. has a large screen 
pofch, setting on 10 roll’ 
ing wooded acres of land. 
Located off Hwy 210 and 
Hwy 462 near the com¬ 
munity of Badger. 
$49,900. Financing Avail¬ 
able for Everyone with a 
reasonable down pay¬ 
ment. CalE 270-351-4977 
or 600-33^^331 
wvwv. ken tu c ky-land. com 


135 MASSEY FERGU¬ 
SON TRACTOR. Diesel 
powers steering, like new 
tire excellent paint good 
tractor 54 400 or bast of¬ 
fer Call27[J./b5-0759 



ZD07 FORD ESCAPE 
XLT $11,006 Great con^ 
ditian, ra^k, tawing, 
only 73K mites, autc^ 
cruise, CD, white with 
gray interiior, CaD Jack 
at 270-304^672 





k. 

OPEN HOUSE, 7009 
Rogers Lane, Sunday 
ApriE 29, 210 4. Jelferson 
Co. 11 miles north of Fort 
Knox, home has been to¬ 
tally redone in^ide/pul. 2 
bed. 1 bath. 1 car garage. 
gi09.9OO. Call Prudential 
Parks & Wetoterg. Dobi 
Davis. 502-548-0805. 


POODLES CKC REGIS’ 
TERED. black, first shots, 
vet checked peret ion eite 
5300 each Call 270- 
272-1200 502-299-7449 


WANTED OLD GUITARS 
Glt39on. Fender 6 Marfm 
atoo ixiying Farfoer Amps. 
CASH PAJDII 
270-735-2209 


Ahora eitptear para 
puestos de pro- 
duociOn / industria 
ligera 

Por favor name a 
Dean corf la Red de 
Reservas en el 
270-765-9128 
(Now hiring for 
product iori/lighi 
industrial posttions 

L 


RESERVES 

NETWORK 


Please call Dean with 
The Reserves 
Network! 
270-765-9128 


BEAUTIFUL TOY 

YORKIE PUPPIES for 
^^lo. 9 weeks c^d. ahet^ 
up 10 date. 3 males. 1 fe¬ 
male. CKC registered. 
Parentc cm $ft$ $6oa 
each 270-266-1676. 


CLOSE TO 

F 1 ; KINOX 

Cto0h ff^lHy peinied. 
2 bedroom apartment, 
foundry on site. 
£426 per month. 
Fpxwod Apartmonte. 
{ZTgj Z72-40Z5 


1612 W CROCUS. Vine 
Grove/Radcliff (right on the 
line). All new appliances, all 
new carpet, flooring, and 
paint. 3 bedroom, 1.5 baths, 
quiet neighborhood, Ig. 
fenced backyard w/storage 
shed. $850/mo with 
$850/dep. Minimum 1 year 
lease. 270-572-3258. 



CUSTOM BUILT HOME 

tor aafo by owner, Larue 
county 3 bed, 3 bath 
1775 ^q ft with full fin¬ 
ished TA^Ikout basement 
with patio. Hardwood, ce¬ 
ramic Die, tola Of $tcrage, 
and too many extras to 
list. One acre lot. vwth 
fenced in yard Great 
neighborhood^? Asking 
S280,006. Dont miss fehia 
opportunity before it is 
listed 'Mth realtor Call 
270-766.9696 


DOUBLE WIDE HOME 

and one aore of land off 
U..S. Hwy 60 near Fort 
Knox 3 bedrooms 2 
baths, cr^ w®ter. central 
beet and air. all electric 
on one acre of land, a 
nice and clean hon'ievwth 
fresh paint and new car¬ 
pet 364 969 Rnonoiag 
available for everyone 
with a reasonable down 
peyment. Gall 351-4977 
or 806-336-6331 
WWW, kentu c ky-land. com 


RADCLIFF- 978 OAK DR. - 

2 bedroom, huge master 
bedroom. Unfinished base¬ 
ment with W/D & freezer. 
Fenced backyard, huge 
wrap around deck. $725 
rent & deposit. 945 Oak 
Dr.- 2 bed, 1 bath, fenced in 
backyard on 1 acre lot with 
walk around porch, $550 
rent & deposit. $200 pet 
deposit non refundable. 
One year lease. Call (270) 
351-7862, (270) 872-8384. 


SHONEYS IS LOOKING 
TO EXPAND OUF staff. 
New Nrirrg experienced, 
ffienciy people for eii po¬ 
sitions. Apply in person 
between 2pm- 4 pm. 
Shoney^. 1640 Executive 
Drive. Etobethown No 
i:^one calls please. 



ETOWN APART ME NTS 
2 bedroom Townhomes 
Large Eat in Kitctien 
HUGE Private Patio 
ETOWN CITY SCHOOL 
Ready to move mi 
On SPECIAL: 

$599 if ACH 
Eio wn apar tments. 00 m 
{270) 266 KENT 

B Find US Oil 

Facebook 


GEORGE HJLLVER 
Have you evert nought 
about what it would be 
like to Cwn your lifor Hav¬ 
ing the time and money to 
do the things t^d(t are 
most impcnarKtto you. 

If I could show you how^l 
Cafi (270) 351 0314 or 
{27DS 072-8139 


HOUSE GAS FURN/CE 
AND ELECTRIC A/C 
$400 FOR BOTH, 
270^28-6319 



OPEN HOUSE SUN APR 

29 FROMZ.Spm 


SUPPORT 
YOUR LOCAL 
FARMERS 

NEW 1,2^3 BDRM 



Located in Elisabethtown. 
270-26S-RENT (7368) 
EtowtiAp art menls.com 
find us on facebook 


■ 'i 




KENTUCKYWORKING 
K-fl ACADEMY 

Basic-Advanced 
CKbecfience 
Mobility nAssi&lance 
Seizure Asaistonce 
Glucose Alert 
Area Guarding 
Hardier Protection 
Problem Behavior Solving 
Detection/Tracking/ 
working 

Bnroif your dog fad^ay.r 
Trafrted Dogs far sa/e 

Tammy Nugent, Trainer 
Call for appointment 
270-597-6328 
k vdQofrarnef@omaf/. com 


ONE ACRE ond Mobile 
Home near Magnolia, 
Ky. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 
city water, oentrel heat 
and air. Located off Hwy 
31E and Hwy 1679 at 
1849 Die Shiboley Road. 
$39.0Ci6. Fmancing Avsil- 
abla with a reasooabiB 
down pay ment Call 
351 - 4977 . 666^336-6331 
WWW, ken tu ck v-land com 


MACHINIST NOW ^- 
CEPTING APPLICA¬ 
TIONS for expanding ma¬ 
chine Shop looking for 
manual mlll/fothe ma¬ 
chinist with 3-5 yrs job 
Shop expen ence pre^ 
ferred Benefits available 
Fax resume to (270) 
358-0377 


MAC H 1 N IST/C N C 
Operator/Pfogrammer. 
Day shift Good benefits 
Pay negotiable. Musi be 
experienced. Send re¬ 
sume fo- PO BOX 1022. 
Eliza bethrovji. Ky 42762 


PRESTIGIOUS SUBDIVI¬ 
SION- 666 Freeman Lake 
Rd. Beautiful classic 
welkout ranch. 5 bed, 3 
bathe, kitchen Wgranile 
coutertop S appliances 
stay, ceramic tile. Formal 
Living, & dining room. 
Hearth rooms v^nfoid 
hardwood flooring, 
stained crown molding. 
Bose surround sound sys¬ 
tem in movie room with 
built in cabinetry. Game 
room with ceramic tiled 
floor, large walk in cedar 
closet, extra large garage 
tor hobbies. New roof and 
heating an air 
conditioning. Perennial 
gardens, lots of mature 
shade trees, within walk¬ 
ing distance to hiking 
trails of Freeman Lake 
$335,000 502-220-56S6 



MAD D^H 
COURIER 

Hiring Class A and B dnv- 
ars immediately Com¬ 
petitive pay, exceilent 
benefits Home everyday 
Cadi 502-331^330 


METER READER Posi¬ 
tion available with oon- 
traofor in Elizabethtown 
area Must be 21 years 
old 8 pass drivir^, drug £ 
background checks. Uni¬ 
forms a work vehicle fur¬ 
nished. Health benefits 
available. BOB If inter¬ 
ested complete online ir^- 
teresl form at; 
https: ifwM. t ru-c nec k c 0 
m/em ploy meetJobintoms 
t aspx 


NOW HIRING 
LICBVJSED 
COSMETOLOGIST 

For Ngh volume salons in 
Elizabethtown and sur¬ 
rounding $ree$- ca^i coet 
Cutters Family Hair Cgie 
000-030-3161 


SHOWCASE FOR SALE 

great for Peddlers Mall or 
Flea Market $200, several 
other taste available. (2) 
2600 PSI Honda pressure 
washers motors are great 
but pumps are weakened 
$75 each. 270-769-1444 


STRAW BALES - 53 
each, minimum of 25. Oe- 
livary avail able according 
to mileaga Call (270) 
268.0794 


HOT OFF THE PRESS 769-1200, EXT. 8601 



Employment 



Employment 


NSU 

CORPORATION 

• 2nd Shift Supervisor 

• HR Assistant 

• Production Engineering 
Specialist 

NSU Corporation in Sonora, KY has immediate 
openings for the above positions. If you are experienced 
in the related fields and want a career with a leading 
automotive parts supplier in Central KY, you may send 
a resume or fill out an application with salary 
requirements at the local employment services or at 
NSU Corporation. NSU Corporation offers a 
competitive salary and excellent benefit package. 

NSU CORPORATION 
9385 SONORA ROAD 
SONORA, KY 42776 



^ American Fuji Seal 

Bardstown, KY 

A leading global supplier in the packaging and 
printing industry located in Bardstown, KY, is 
accepting resumes for 


Production Supervisors 


American Fuji Seal offers an excellent benefits 
and compensation plan, including excellent 
pay, 401k with a Company match, paid 
holidays, paid vacation, flexible spending 
accounts. Company paid life and disability 
insurance. 

Requirements for these Positions include: 

• Associates or Bachelor’s degree preferred 

• Willingness to work any shift or schedule, 
including weekends 

• Previous manufacturing supervisory 
experience 

• Pre-employment screening - drug test, 
background check, physical 

Resumes can be mailed to the following address: 

American Fuji Seal 

1051 BloomHeld Road, Bardstown, KY 40004 
Ref # PS2012-001 

Please no phone calls or walk-ins to American Fuji Seal 

Equal Opportunity Employer 



PRODUCT 

TECHNICIANS 

Metalsa, a global supplier of 
automotive components is 
looking for motivated individuals 
to work in the Elizabethtown, KY 
light truck frame plant. 

These full-time entry-level 
positions will have 
comprehensive production 
responsibilities supporting our 
Assembly, Press and 
Hydroforming departments. 

RESPONSIBILITIES INCLUDE: 

General assembly, equipment and 
forklift operation, material 
handling and parts inspection. 

Candidate must be mechanically 
inclined and have a stable work 
history. Related experience in a 
manufacturing environment a 
plus. High School diploma or 
GED required. 

Metalsa offers competitive wages 
and benefits package. 

interested individuals 

MAY APPLY IN PERSON AT; 

The Pritchard Community Center 
(404 South Mulberry, 
Elizabethtown, KY) 
Monday, May 7, 2012 between 
the hours of 8:30 am and 3:30 pm 

We are an Affirmative Action, 
Equal Opportunity Employer. 
















































































































































































































































































































B10 


THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


QJ Employment 

maryhur?^^o5t?r 

CARE - HUB HOME PAR¬ 
ENT Provides supportive 
services to Satellite famiiies 
participating in the Mocking¬ 
bird Famiiy Modei Constei- 
iation. The Hub Parent de- 
veiops of a community of 
caregivers focused on the 
health, safety, growth and 
permanence of participating 
chiidren whiie engaging in 
caregiver self-care. Must 
live in Eiizabethtown and 
must become a certified 
Maryhurst Foster Parent. 
For more information and to 
appiy, piease visit 
www.maryhurst.org. EOE 


NIELSEN NOW HIRING 

Caii Center Customer Serv¬ 
ice Positions. Appiy oniine 
at www.nielsen.com or 
complete an application in 
person. Nieisen, 555 W. 
Lincoln Trail Blvd., Radcliff, 
KY. For more information 
caii 270-352-0711. 


EXPERIENCED 
PAINTERS NEEDED 

$13 per hour 
Call 270-737^^693. 


NOW ACCB^TING 
RESUMES 
for an Experiertcod 
Liquof stovo Manaiger 
TTii$ position ^|l 
full time with benefits 
Please emaii resurresto: 
amber. fobev@ewj am 

com 

or Tax to: (731} as5-(KT3 


Employment 


MEOIC/IL SECRETARr 

neected for private prac¬ 
tice in Eliaabetfitowm Ex¬ 
perience preferred. Send 
resume to News Enter¬ 
prise BOX JJ Eli2aD0ttl- 
tovwi 


METER I^ADER Posi¬ 
tion avalaUe v^thi oon 
tfsctor in Elizabethtown 
area Muaf 21 years 
old &. pass driving, drug £ 
background checks. Uni* 
Toriris ^ iwork vehicle far- 
nished. Health benefits 
available. EOE If inter* 
esred complete onitne m- 
tere^l form at: 
hllps: //WWW. t ru-c hec k c o 
m/em ploy martJcbirterus 
t aspx 


MOUSER CUSTOM 
CABINIETRYjs seeking 

indlvidoalefor 1^ shift 
production. Sucdessful 
candidates will have a 
hrgh school diploma or 
GED, proven work hi«- 
tory- desire to learn; good 
aUendance record, team 
player attitude; and wll^ 
ingness to wnrk up to 10 
hour days. Experience 
helpful, but not required 
for all jobs We provide 
training Apply in perEon 
Monday - Friday. B:00 am 
- -1 0<J pm: 

Mouser Custom 
Cabinetry 
2112 N. DixieAve.. 
Elizabethtown 


Now Interviewing For 

Sales Posldin 


Opportunity to Earn $75,000+ 

First Year Commissions 
Wiii consider training oniy those 
with o professionoi appearance 
and attitude. 



Call Scott Jameson or 
Bill Pinkhom II for on interview: 

737-2460 


^ American Fuji Seal 

Bardstown, KY 

A leading global supplier in the packaging and 
printing industry located in Bardstown, KY, is 
accepting applications for hourly 


Production Positions 


American Fuji Seal offers an excellent benefits 
and compensation plan, including excellent 
pay, 401k with a Company match, paid 
holidays, paid vacation, flexible spending 
accounts. Company paid life and disability 
insurance. 

Requirements for these Production Positions include: 

• High school diploma or GED 

• Willingness to work any shift or schedule, 
including weekends 

• A TABE score of 11.0 or higher 

• Previous manufacturing experience preferred 

• Pre-employment screening - drug test, 
background check, physical 

Applications will be accepted through 
Friday, May 18th. Applications can be 
submitted at any of the following 
The Work Connection office locations: 

Bardstown, 600 East John Rowan Blvd, 502-331-9675 
Campbellsville, 1320 East Broadway, 270-469-9661 
Elizabethtown, 950 N. Mulberry, Suite 130,270-234-9995 
Lebanon, 549 East Main St., 270-692-0066 
Louisville, 84021/2 Preston Hwy, 502-964-7294 

Please no phone calls or walk-ins 
to American Fuji Seal 

Equal Opportunity Employer 



THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 

OPPORTUNITY 


Need Extra 
Income? 

The News-Enterprise 
has an immediate 
opening for a 

Dock Assistant 
Position 

This position will be 
responsible for 

counting, inserting, 
strapping and 
loading 
preprints. 


QUALIFICATIONS: 

* High School Diploma or equivalent is required 

* Excellent time management skills 

* Valid driver’s license and good driving record 

PHYSICAL REQUIREMENTS: 

* Lifting heavy loads of 30-50 lbs. is required 

WORK SCHEDULE: 

* 11 hours per week 

* Hours will vary and include early morning 
hours, weekend work and flexible daily hours 

Interested persons should 
apply to: 

Peter Denton 
Distribution Manager 
The News-Enterprise 
d08 West Dixie Avenue 
Elizabethtown, KY 42701 


We welcome diversity at The News-Enterprise 
Equal Opportunity Employer 


We recognize and appreciate the benefits of diversity in the 
workplace. Successful applicants will be quality and customer-driven 
and support Landmark’s team-oriented philosophy. Those who share 
in this belief are encouraged to apply. 

The News-Enterprise makes every effort to ensure that in every 
phase of the recruitment and selection process, equal employment 
opportunity is provided to all individuals, regardless of race, color, 
sex, age, creed, sexual orientation, disability, national origin or 
citizenship, or veteran’s status. The News-Enterprise is committed to 
caroling out and complying with all of its EEO and affirmative action 
obligations under applicable federal, state, and local laws and 
regulations. 


95 Employment 95 Employment Employment 

nurs^TrIvat^Tuty 

Nursing positions available 
for RNs and LPNs in KY. 1 h- 
year experience in long 
term or pediatric care. Call 
502-426-4454 between 
8a-5p Mon-Fri for more info! 


POSITIVE WORK 
ENVIRONMENT 
$400+ per week 
College students, 
high school grads & 
others needed due to 
rapid eiKpansio" - up 
10 12 positions availa¬ 
ble full S part time, 
WORK THIS 
SUMMER 
EARN FALL 
TUITION 

Only hard workers 
need apply 
START 

IMMEDIATELY 
For interview call 
(270) 737-9655 
First 100 accepted 
for mSerview 


&kI or 3rd Shift 
TOOL & DIE TECHNICIAN 

Tool S Die tertimcian should be able to trouble 
shoot and repair dies and molds working to meet 
the reeds of JIT produchon strong emphasis on 
die repair, ^reas of dies indude piogresswe. deep 
draw, and high straJ lamination Successful com¬ 
pletion of Apprendue^ip program m Tool and Die, 
plus minimum 5 years experience working in related 
field. This is a second or third shift posibon pay will 
complemenr experience and the successful candi¬ 
date will top out over $22.00/hr. 

Mteuba is a manufacturer of electro-mechanical 
components for the automoCve industry and offers 
an excellent compensation/benefits package. 

Ple^ send resume and salary requirements to: 

MITSUBA OF BARDSTOWN, IHC. 
Attn: HR 

901 Withrow Ct. • Bardstown, KY 40004 

EOE 



extra cash? 

Do you have a computer & 
a good phone presence? 


We are currently looking for 

Independent Contractor Telemarketers 

who will work from their home to renew 
~ newspaper subscriptions. 


Great For 
Retirees 
Or Stay-At- 
Home Moms! 


Mail resume to: 

The News-Enterprise 

408 West Dixie, Elizabethtown, KY 42701 
Attn: Rashana Brodie 



Employment 



Employment 

Wanted 


QUALITY ENGINEER LO- 

CAL manufacturing faciiity 
in Eiizabethtown iooking to 
fili the position of Quaiity 
Engineer. Knowiedge of 
the automotive industry, 
iSO Certification, APQP, 
and PPAP preferred. 
Bacheior’s degree desired. 
3-5 years in Quaiity Man¬ 
agement required. Excel- 
ient communication skiiis 
and strong leadership ability 
a must. Fax resumes to 
270/769-1486 or mail them 
to Attn: Human Resources, 
204 Ring Road, Elizabeth¬ 
town, KY 42701. 


RECEPTIOIMIST needed 
for bti&y physicians office. 
Dytiea Include fiUng. an¬ 
swering phone, prepping 
charts, Must be able 
to mufti task Rease send 
resume to The News En¬ 
terprise. Box DO. 

West Dxie Avenue Eliz^ 
belhlown. KV 42701. 


SERVICE TECH 

NEEDED irking kncflftf- 
edge of trucks or buses. 
Duties include, servicing 
of motor coaches. assisF 
ing £ detailing coaches 
Must be a We to vwrk flexi¬ 
ble hours. Apply in per¬ 
son. Toby Tours. 145 
Carter Ave. Louisville Ky. 
between 8'3Ci3m-4pm. 
(502) 955-e£a0. 


SERVICEMASTH^ 
Commercial 
Cleaning Services 
has posinor^ avaiiaNe 
tor janitorial services in 
She^erdsville. 2nd & 3rd 
shifts end Thursdays & 
Saturdays., E'town. Clean 
background required. 
Must be drug free Cell 
502-957-4565 to inquire 


SHONEYS IS LOOKING 
TO EXPAND our staff. 
Now hiring expeiiented, 
tfiencly people for an po¬ 
sitions Apply in person 
belween 2pnn- 4 pm. 
Shoney^. 1046 Executive 
Drive. Eiizabethown No 
phone calls pleaise. 


TRUCK AND AUTO ME- 
CHAMIC. Louisviile Re¬ 
pair Facilily lopping lor 
meehanio with experience 
in brake, suspension, and 
front end work. Musi havo 
own I obis. Day ^ilt, good 
pay, ber>efil&. Call 
502-584-21^1 


NOW HIRING 
LICBVJSED 
COSMETOLOGIST 

for Ngh vPlume salons in 
Elizabethtown and sur- 
rouncing $rea$. Caii CO^t 
Cuttera Family Heir Csre 
800-830-3101 


SUMMER BABYSITTER, I 

am looking to babysit your 
children May 22- Aug 3. 
Contact me for more info. 
Hunley97@aol.com 


'k'k-k'kifk'k'k'k'k 
KELLVyELL FOOD MAN¬ 
AGEMENT i^ lopking for 
experiericed food serv¬ 
ice managers and food 
service supervisors to 
supervise inmates in 
kitchens at local correc¬ 
tional faoHItJe*. Food 
service experience re¬ 
quired, correctional ex¬ 
perience preferred. 

Must be able lo work 
closely with inmates. 
Must h& to pa&s a 

background chock and 
have dependable trans^ 
pentafion. Must be able 
to work Weekends and 
h ON days. Great oppor¬ 
tunity for advancement. 
Military retiree's and 
veterans are weicome. 
Salary based on experi¬ 
ence- Competitive ben¬ 
efits package. Contact 
Kellwell Foods at 
6D&-464.9 59S or fax re¬ 
sume to 606464-0990, 
Management inquires 
call Randy 5, Cook at 
506-550-4 567 to set up 
an Interview. 



Business 

Opportunities 


GEORGE HILEVER 
Have you ever thought 
about what it would be 
like to own youf life? Hav* 
ing the Nme and morey to 
do the things that are 
most important to you. 

If I could show you hqw^l 
call {270) 351-9314 or 
{27D) 072-ai39 


$$$$$$$$ 


INOEPENDEIMT 
DISTRrBUTOR'S IF yoc 
could earn extra money 
w>tild you? 

The greatest life changing 
oppcriunity to help people 
live healthy live^ threugL 
nutnlion and earn toll time 
pay while werking part time 
ffom home is only a phonE 
call away. Ready to be ir 
business tor yourself but ncr 
by yOUrsetf? fOr 
pointment and moie rntor- 
mation' 

MaitthewDial 

270.3^5-2307 


http://m k<Jal. inya jaetory. cd 
m/ 


mmim 


GET RESULTS 


1 no 

1 UUOpportunities 


*AVOIO FRANCHISE 

Scam: When it comes to 
earnings and locations, 
there are no guarantees. 
For free information about 
buying a biz op or franchise 
without getting scammed, 
write the Federal Trade 
Commission at Washington, 
D.C., 20580. 



Mobile Home 
Rentals 


2 4 3 BEDROOM MO¬ 
BILE homes, singles & 
doubles, locatjed 5 min¬ 
utes from R. Knox, in 
Muldraugh. Available Im- 
mecnately. if you can't pay 
your rent on tma. please 
donT call Mottle Home 
Park. £502) 942-6120. 


2 BR1 BAnll clcc.c/a 

450+290 dep. 

1 BR 1 BAgas/dec. c/a 

4091-200 dep. 

2 BR 2 BA all elec, 

550+300 dep 

3 BR2 BAallerec. c/a 

6SD-I-400 deposit 
Call 270-351.1376 or 
homestead inhDlc.cQm 


4 BDRM, 2 BATH, kit appli¬ 
ances, H- W/D hook up, 
30x50 garage, on 7 acres, 
$995 mo., -H dep. 3057 
Carter Brothers Road, 
Hodgenville. Call (270) 
358-3166. 


ALL UTILITIES PAID - 
Free Cable with HBO, 
$95 per week and up. 
rerrts our FURNISHED 
lyJOTEL ROOMS. $130 
per we«k and up rents our 
FURMSHED MOBILE 
HOMES located in Eto^. 
small depoBits. NO 
LEASE REQUIRED' 
(270^ 769-6771 


HODGENVILLE 2 BED¬ 
ROOM mobile home. 2 
balh. all electric, cental 
aij/haat. w/o honkup. 
rilce yard, residential 
street across from Lincoln 
Jamboree. Also available 
1 bedroom house 
{270)356^4973 


ONE & TWO BED¬ 
ROOMS available with 
etoclric S gas included qr 
pay your own utilities. 
Short lerm lease availa¬ 
ble. Adjacent to Ft. Knox, 
Coniraciors welcorrie. 
CalE (270)351 4247. 


RENT-TO OWN - ft/tobile 
Homes for $300 a month 
and a rea^onabla down 
payment. No Credit: 
Checks Required. LOT 
RENT NOT iNCLUDEDIE 
C^l (502) 694-0804 


Lawn & Garden y|RECTORY 


RETAINING WALLS INSTALLED 


Milby’s Lawn & 
Landscaping 


• FINISH GRADING • BOBCAT WORK 

• LANDSCAPING • PAVERS INSTALLED 


Call 763-7852 

Licensed & Insured 



• Small Landscape Jobs 

• Bed Ring Edging • Mowing 

• Grass Collection Available 


NEAL MCDOWELL, Owner/Operator 

LICENSED & INSURED, Elizabethtown, KY 

270-76341370 ()rt^d//270-723-0472 


Jone^ T ^Broth ers 

LAMD SCAPING 

MOWING 3 FERTILIZING 
SPRING CLEAN-UPS 

Low Price Guarantee!!! 
^^nior and Military Discount 

Call or email for FREE ESTIMATE 

(270) 219-9616 

jonesbrotherslandscaping@live.com 



Specializing in the creation and total 
service of ponds, fountains and all types of 
aquatic landscapes. 


Now selling products and supplies at 
Biuegrass Garden Center on Westport Rd. 
in Eiizabethtown. 


Fish and aquatic plants available. 



• Commercial & Residential 


^ • Mowing, Trimming, Edging (29 ^ 

CO • Landscaping, Landscape Maintenance . — 

CD • Mulching Accent Rock 2 £2 

^ • Fertilizer, Lime m 

CO • Power Seeding, Seed & Straw Blowing ^ 2 

cy • New Yard Installation - Finish Grading ^ (/) 

Q • Gravel Drive Install, Grading ^ in 

^ • Front Loader Work - Bush Hogging JD Q 

^ • Leaf Cleanup & Removal O 







$ 9 
V 




Total Turf Constructors 




Retaining Walls 

Landscaping 

Lawn Mowing & Lawn 

Maintenance Programs 

Free Estimates & Fully Insured 


• Installation, Design And Service 

For Fully Automatic Sprinkler System 

• All Pro Putting Greens 

• Nightscape Lighting 

• Drainage/Erosion Control 

• Certified Backflow Preventer Testing 


270-877-6554 or 270-828-3174 


lrrigation_Plus@hotmail.coin or 
www.irrigationplusky.com 


it/mp£R/f/(;if/uscAmseAPW(i 


Tree Services 

• Orignal L^andscape Deagns 

• Shmbs/Tree Planting 

• Finish Grading 

• Power Seeding/Sod 

• Straw Hewing 
•Fertilimg 


Storm Damage 

Mdching/Accent Rock 
Tree Service 
Stump Remowil 
Trirnrning/Pruriing 

L^ardscape/Lawn Maintenance 
Free Estimates & Fully Insured 

~ (270) 877-5886 
Cell: (270) 272-5153 


MILLER’S 
GREENHOUSE 
& FURNITURE 


Quality Plants - Value Priced Everyday 


It’s Planting 
Time! 

Proven Winner Petunias 
& Superbells, Begonias, 
Geramiums, Fushias, 
Double Impatlens, Waves 
Petunias, Vincas, Pentas, 
Hellotroplums, Succulents, 
Tropicals, Lantanas, 
Grasses, Gerbera Daisies, 
Knock-Out Roses and 
much more! 


Nice Selection of 
Fruit & Shade 
Trees, Shrubs and 
Arborvitaes! 


$10 OFF 


WEEKLY SPECIALS 

Sat., April 28th 6am-10am only 
5” Geraniums 10% Off $2.60 
4-1/2” Begonias 10% Off $2.48 


Sat., May 5th 6am-10amonly 

Perennials 10% Off 
4-1/2” Petunias & Million Belles 
10% Off-ONLY $2.25 

Sat., May 12th 6am-10am only 

Flowers & Vegetables (Mix & Match) 
Flats of 48s $11 

Baskets & Flowering Pouches $1 Off 


Any purchase 
of $50 or more. 

One coupon per visit. Not valid 
with other offers. Excludes 
furniture, trees & shrubs. Must 
present coupon. Expires 6-9-12 


U 


MILLER’S GREENHOUSE 


Will custom plant your containers. 
Call for an appointment! 

Complete line of Amish Cxafted Heirloom 
Home & OfHce Furnishings - custom order 
from our selection of catalogs. 
Quality Furniture - Value Priced Everyday! 

Directions: Exit off 1-65 onto 31W turn left Main Street 
in Munfordville. Turn onto KY Hwy. 88 West. Go 5.5 
miles to Kensinger. Turn right off KY 88 onto Macon 


Kessinger Road for about 2.5 miles. 

Can’t miss us on the left! 


270-524-7684 

2375 Macon Kessinger Rd. Munfordville, KY 













































































































































































































THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


B11 


The News-Enterprise 


Service Directory 


Ceramic Tile 


Ren*s Tile 
& More 


QUALITY THAT SPEAKS FOR ITSELF! 

SPECIALIZING in: 

• Kitchen/Bath Renovation 
& Remodeling 

• Patios & sidewalks 

• Custom Shower Panes 

• Custom Back Splashes 

• Tile Repair & Cleaning 



FREE estimates 
& Fully Insured 

Residential or commercial, 


Contact: Ron Beard (270) 862-9538 cell 766-9032 


Sta^ ^mden. 

lAMIC THE 



Specialises in: 

• Back Splashes 

• Shower Pans 

• Regrout 

• Grout Staining 

• Laminate Flooring 

• Hardwood Flooring 

Interior Design & 
Custom Work 

270-872-9939 


Chimney 




Bailey’s Masomy, Inc. 


Since / 980-^ 

240 W. Dixie Ave., Suite 200 
Elizabethtown 




• CHIMNEY CLEANING/ 

INSPECTIONS • 

• Stainless Liners Installed 
• Tuck pointing • Foundation Repairs 

• Repairing of Fireplaces and Chimneys 

Fully Licensed & Insured - Bonded 
Free Estimates 

We accept all major credit cards 

270-765-0969 

baileysmasonry(a)bbtel.com 
^ www.baileysmasonry.com | 
m 5 Billy J. Bailey, Owner 


Concrete 



EC. 
CONCRETE 


PHASES OF CUSTOM CONCRETE WORK 

iveways ^Stamped 
^Patios -Any Pattern 
^Sidewalks -Any Color Comb. 

Licensed & Insured-20 Years Experience-Great References 

CALL NOW FOR FREE ESTIMATE! 

270-317-4183 


Construction 


L D 8. Son Construction 

iB M w Smbm (SD pin* 


We also do: 


Remodeling, Sunrooms, 
additions, roofs, siding, 
windows & more. 


10% Senior Citizen Discount 
30 Years Experience 
Fully Insured 

Office: (270) 547-5603 
Toll Free: 1-866-828-5241 


Excavating 


Road & Farm Work • Highlift Work 
Backhoe Work • Scraper Work 
Rock & Dirt Hauling • Demolition 
- > Basement & Site PreparationjJ^j 
Grading/Land Clearing 

DURHAM EXCAVATING 

279 S. Wilson • Radcliff, KY 40160 

I COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL I 


70-351-4751 

Moving Dirt since 1971 


www.durhamexcavating.com 



Id Print-Oak-ADyliine 


TO PLACE AN AD TODAY, CALL 270-765-3862 


Electrical I Home Improvement I Pressure Washing 


^ Orea 




ELECTRIC SERVICE 

l[MaetMorstmnct24/7i 



All Types of 

Electrical Repairs 

• Parking Lot Lights 

• Signs • Bucket Work 


RESIDENTIAL - COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL 


Home Energy Audits 

BPI Certified Building Analyst Professional 

standby Generator Systems 

Dealer & Authorized Service for: 



fBRKJGSI 


Dealer 

Geoerotor Syslcmi 


Home Generator Systems 
We Accept: 


(270) 369-7519 
(270) 723-3048 

www.gregriggsinc.com 

UCENSED/mSURED #CE-4733 #ME-4732 


Floor Covering 





COMERINGS 


Carpet • Hardwood 
Laminate • Vinyl • Tile 




NEW ARRIVAL! 


990/SQ.fl. 

^ "^while supplies last 


^Select Styles 
& Colors 



$3.99/sa. 

Includes all materials and labor 


if $8.50/sa.ft. 


61.89/sa.fl. 


^Select 
Styles 

Includes all materials and labor 


^Select Styles 
& Colors 


Includes carpet, pad & labor 



$749/sq. ft. 

Includes wood, paper and labor 


^Select Styles 
& Colors 




$1.99/sa.fL 

Includes vinyl & labor 


^Select Styles 
& Colors 


FINANCING AVAILABLE! 

Up to 12 months SAME AS CASH 


270-877-7223 • 270-73S-7627 

FULLY INSURED • FREE ESTIMATES 

421 Highland Ave. • Yme Grove, KY 40175 


Garage Doors 


Garage door 
professional installation 





Clopay Garage Doors 
authorized dealer 


edoior 


204 Production Drive 
E-town, KY 42701 




Telephone: 
(270) 737-0875 


Home Improvement 


I Jack of All Trades 

i Home Cosmetics 

For Alt Your Remodeling Needs 

• DrywalI *Fully licensed & insured 

•Painting ^References 

•Pressure washing ^Quality Work 
•Decks 


11 

i 


*Clean Job site 


•Windows & Doors 
^ile & Laminate Flooring 


Your satisfaction is our guarantee 





268-0431 ^ 


Aluminum 

Nathan 

Smallwood 

Owner 


• Vinyl Siding & 
Windows 

> Continuous 
Gutters 5”x6” 

• Leaf Free Leaf 
System 

• Awnings & 
Carports 


270-877-5338 • 270-737-1036 


Over 30 Years Experience - Fully Insured 


All Purpose Handyman 

'' '"'"'cail'Me 

Plumbing, Drywall, Painting, 
Basements, Flooring, Ceramic Tile, 
_ Ext Doors and Trim _ ^ 

317-6670 

(Local Call) 

Licensed & Insured 




Over 25 Years Experience 



A 

V 


Clayton 
Construction 
J Company 


www.claytonconstruction.wisebuyingmall.com 

Custom Homes • Room Additions • Remodeling 
Sun Rooms • Garages • Decks • Framing 

All Your Construction Needs^^^^ 

mi Owner Home: 270-737-3967 
James Goldsmith Mobile: 270-317-0572 


PROFESSIONAL 

PRESSURE 

WASHING 


For busy, picky, hard working people 
who don’t want their stuff torn up, 
empty checkbook and hassles. 


We will safely clean your 
siding, decks, overhangs, brick, 
concrete, roofs and windows 

I personally guaremtee 100% that 
you wiU love our work, service and 
crew or you owe us nothing. 

^ Call (270) 287-2348 

" www.thatsallclean.com 


FARNWALD 

Window & Door 


REPLACEMENT WINDOWS 


• Patio • Decks 

• Screeneid & 
Encloseid Porches 


4 & 3 Season^ 
Sunrooms 


We Also Do Remodeling 

5994 Priceville Rd., Munfordville, KY 42765 
Toll Free 1-877-394-0617 

270-531-5743 (Let it ring) 


Commercial • Residential • Insured 

PRESSURE WASHING 

I FREE ESTIMATES I 


Homes - Decks & Driveways (Washed) 

Gas Stations - Steam Cieaning - Heavy Equipment & 
Restaurant Vent Hoods, Fieets, Roofs 






-268-1694 
or 765-6900 bTs 


Remodeling 


Home Improvements, <Va, I 
Remodeling-Repair 


E-town, KY. 
Lie. & Insured 
EPA Certified 


737-8155 

360-1595 


★ Additions ★ Roofing ★ Dry Wall ★ Decks ★ 
★ Room Conversions ★ Vinyl Siding ★ 

★ Replacement Windows ★ Painting ★ 

★ Floor Leveling ★ Concrete etc, etc ★ 

the simple solution 


Mobile Home Repairs Incleded 


WENGERD CONSTRUCTION 


^KENNY’S ^ 

CONSTRUCTION 

“Anything Under A Roof’ 


Specializing in Vinyl Siding, 
Framing, Remodeling, 
Pole Barns and Decks 


FULLY INSURED - 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE . 


270-234-3147 



Services 


POLE BABNSi 



New Homes, Additions, Remodeling, Pole Barns, 
Garages, Metal Roofs, Decks & More! 

FREE ESTIMATES 4 

270-268-1900 4 





Rent a bounce house for 
' your Kid’s Birthday Party, 
Company Picnic cr any 
Special Event! 


Call 270-766-7732 


Moving 


IN TUVIN 

iiouiNe 


Monday - Friday 
9 am - 6 pm 
& Saturday 
5 pm 



Packing supplies available. 

270 - 352-0601 

310 S. Dixie, Radcliff 

1 - 866 - 336 - 30^5 


#03006 


We 

have 

lO’xlO’ 

10’x20’ 



Accepting 
All Major 
Credit 
Cards 


T and C 

Mini-Warehouses 


1270-763-91421 


tGminiwarehousestorage.Gom 


50% OFF First Months Rent 


Paving & Sealing 




FREE 

ESTIMATES 


ALL WORK 
GUARANTEED 


Repair Work • Sealcoating • Parking Lots • Driveways 


ASK ABOUT OUR COUPON OFFER 


No Job Too Large or Small!^ 

PO Box 2523* Elizabethtown, KY 42701 A 

1956 270-737-9300 bTb 


Tree Service 


S & M TREE SERVICES 


¥ Tree Trimming 
¥ Tree Removai 
¥ Stump Removai 
¥ Lot Ciearing 

24 Hr Storm Service 
Crane Service 
• Fully Insured • 

270-862-5684 







‘ Driveway 
■ Resurfacing 

* Seaicoaling 

* ConCTEtc 


'aikiufi Luts 
farnt 
Blacktop 
Repairs 
SuhdlvisioTis 


Free Estimates 


$100. OFF $1500. or more fob 
or $50. OFF $5Q0. or more job 


1 - 270 - 737-0021 


The News-Enterprise 

Classifieds 

Now more options than ever. 



765-3862 
















































































































































































































B12 


THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 



ACROSS 

1 Labyrinth 
choice 
5 Skillets 
9 Half a 
dance? 

12 Lotion 
additive 

13 Fraternal 
baseball 
surname 

14 Attila, e.g. 

15 Unknown 
people 

17 Pismire 

18 Evening 
affair 

19 Depend 
(on) 

21 “And this 
should 
matter to 
me ... 
why?” 

22 Object 

24 “National 

Treasure” 

star 

27 Chart 
format 

28 Super¬ 
man’s 
alias 

31 Melody 

32 Corroded 

33 “Go, 
team!” 

34 Let 
the cat 
out of 
the bag 


36 Badly 

37 Pale 

38 Aristo¬ 
cratic 

40 Ego 
counter¬ 
part 

41 Queenly 
43 Small 

beard 

47 Have 
bills 

48 Puts on 
the line 

51 the 
ramparts 

52 About 
half the 
children 

53 Tiger 
Woods’ 
ex 

54 

Dalloway” 

55 Trade 

56 Logical 


DOWN 

1 Quarter¬ 
back’s 
throw 

2 Choir 
member 

3 Actress 
Spelling 

4 Last car? 

5 Senate 
employee 

6 Hearty 
brew 

7 Neither 
mate 

8 Some 
Japan¬ 
ese 
fare 

9 They 
make 
alter¬ 
ations 

10 Sus¬ 
pended 

11 Initial 
stake 


16 Ultra¬ 
modernist 

20 Squid 
squirt 

22 Marquee 
datum 

23 Com¬ 
mand to 
Rover 

24 “Cash —” 

25 Have 
some¬ 
thing 

26 Farmers 

27 Bucket 

29 “Unh- 
unh” 

30 Your 

35 Feathery 
accessory 

37 Saws 

39 Conse¬ 
crate 

40 Charged 
bit 

41 Leeway 

42 Basin 
accessory 

43 React in 
horror 

44 Anatomi¬ 
cal 

tissue 

45 Ireland 

46 Slave to 
cross¬ 
words? 

49 Without 
delay 

50 “CSI” 
evidence 


Solution time: 25 mins. 



Yesterday’s answer 4-26 




FUBG PIS UKNB JI FQZJB JUB 
ABMKA JBYJ WIGWBQGZGM 
KAWTUIA ABNZBO, SOB 

CQICBQ OZG-JKY OPGJKY. 

Yesterday’s Cryptoquip: WHILE FLOATING ON 
SOME RAGING WHITE WATER, MANY OF THE 
GUYS WERE FOUND GUILTY OF RAFT-DODGING. 

Today’s Cryptoquip Clue: S equals U 



u 

E 

Y 

B 

Y 

Y 

V 

S 

P 

M 

J 

H 

E 

B 

Y 

V 

L 

T 

A 

A 

Q 

D 

0 

L 

I 

T 

G 

D 

B 

Y 

w 

T 

L 

A 

L 

L 

E 

Y 

0 

0 

P 

T 

1 

0 

N 

B 

R 

P 

0 

E 

P 

K 

M 

H 

G 

Z 

K 

I 

F 

D 

B 

0 

Y 

w 

R 

U 

E 

S 

T 

D 

S 

T 

Q 

0 

M 

F 

F 

0 

K 

C 

I 

P 

Z 

0 

N 

K 

I 

I 

F 

D 

B 

Z 

N 

T 

X 

A 

W 

B 

E 

A 

N 

B 

A 

L 

L 

U 

u 

S 

Q 

L 

o(f 

A 

D 

E 

A 

W 

A 

DO 

D 

N 

E 

s 

R 

E 

V 

E 

R 

V 

U 

L 

J 

H 

F 

D 

C 

A 

Y 

W 

V 

G 

T 

A 

I 

S 

Q 

Q 

P 

N 

L 

K 

I 

H 

F 

E 

C 

B 

G 

G 

z 

Y 

S 

W 

V 


Wednesday’s unlisted clue: ORDERS 


Find the listed words in the diagram. They run in all directions - 
forward, backward, up, down and diagonally. 

Thursday’s unlisted clue hint: BASKETBALL’S PICK AND — 


Alley-oop 

Beanball 

Blitz 

Bootleg 


Deke Option 

Dunk Pickoff 

Fadeaway Relay 

Give and go Reverse 

©2012 King Features, Inc. 


Slapshot 
Squeeze play 
Toe drag 


4/26 



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


USPOY 








©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 
All Rights Reserved. 

GITFH 




r \ 








TACIVY 









TCLIHG 









I think) broke Can’t you see 



OETTINC? TO THE 
EMERGENCY ROOM. HE VVA5 
HOPING FOR GOME- 


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


Ans: 




Y_7 


Y_7 



Y^ 

Y^ 




(Answers tomorrow) 

Yesterday’s I ^^^^les: GRUNT ELDER SHRINK APIECE 

^ I Answer: The ships left the port in a — 

CRUISE LINE 


When it comes to wine, get the lead out 


Dear Heloise: In a recent 
letter, a reader inquired 
about removing wine 
residue from a lead-crystal 
decanter. Please do your 
readers a service and warn 
them about a medical direc¬ 
tive stating wine should nev¬ 
er be stored in lead crystal, 
as lead can and will leach 
into the wine. In addition, 
pregnant women are ad¬ 
vised against drinking any¬ 
thing from lead crystal. — 
Barbara C., Scotch Plains, 

NJ. 

■ Barbara, yes, you are 
right. The Food and Drug 
Administration advises that 
lead can leach into wine if 
stored for a long time in the 
decanter. However, it’s OK 
to use this type of decanter 
for serving wine right away. 
Additionally, the FDA rec¬ 
ommends all lead crystal 



HINTS 

FROM 

HELOISE 


should be used with caution, 
especially with children and 
women of childbearing age 
- they should use lead-free 
crystal, if possible. None of 
this information is on the 
FDA website. However, it is 
available when you call the 
FDA (888-463-6332). 

RS.: Many people call all 
crystal “lead crystal” when it 
is not. 

SEASONED SPOONS. Dear 
Heloise: Is there a proper 
way to care for wooden 
kitchen spoons and spatu¬ 
las? Should I “season” 
them? — Debbie B., Struth- 
ers, Ohio 

■ Yes, there is; yes, you 
should; and it’s simple to 


do. Start by washing the 
wood spoons in soap and 
hot water, then let them dry. 
Next, wipe each with miner¬ 
al oil (not olive or vegetable 
oil, because it can become 
rancid). 

Let the spoons sit for a 
couple of hours or over¬ 
night. Next, wipe off the ex¬ 
cess, and they are ready to 
use. 

It’s always a good idea to 
hand-wash wooden items. 
Placing them in the dish¬ 
washer can cause damage 
from the hot water, strong 
detergent and high tempera¬ 
ture of the drying cycle. 

LIPSTICK APPLICATIONS. 

Dear Readers: Have you 
ever wondered how many 
times you can apply lipstick 
from a single, standard 
tube? Manufacturers say 
that a tube of lipstick has ap¬ 


proximately 260 applica¬ 
tions - that equals about 
three months’ worth (if you 
apply lipstick three times a 
day). 

Lipstick has a shelf life of 
one to two years. However, 
if it looks, smells or tastes 
funny, that is an indication 
that the lipstick needs to be 
disposed of. 

PET-FOOD BAG. Dear 
Heloise: I buy the large 
bags of dog and cat food. 
When a bag is empty, I use 
it for trash. It is especially 
handy for heavy, messy 
stuff Before I put it in the 
garbage can, I close the top 
and then staple it shut. — 
Shirley in Harrisburg, Pa. 

Write to Heloise at P.O. Box 
795000, San Antonio, TX 78279- 
5000, or fax to (210) HEL-OISE. 

King Features Syndicate Inc. 



■ People magazine has named 
Beyonce as the World’s Most Beautiful 
Woman for 2012. 

Commenting on her selection, 
Beyonce said “I feel 
more beautiful than 
I’ve ever felt because 
I’ve given birth. I have 
never felt so connect¬ 
ed, never felt like I had 
such a purpose on this 
Earth.” 

Beyonce, who is 
married to rapper Jay- BEYONCE 
Z, gave birth to a 
daughter. Blue Ivy Garter, in January. 

“She’s just the cutest thing,” said the 
Grammy winner, who sings to her 
daughter and claims to “love” chang¬ 
ing diapers. 


■ Police and California child wel¬ 
fare officials who visited Nadya Sule- 
man’S home after someone claimed 
that her 14 children were living in 
squalor say they did not find evidence 
that the children are in any danger. 

La Habra police Sgt. Daniel Barnes 
said officers and Orange County 
Department of Family and Children’s 
Services officials examined Suleman’s 
home in Southern California on Tues¬ 
day and found nothing unusual. 

Entertainment news site TMZ.com 
said Suleman’s hairstylist told police 
the house was a mess and there was 
only one working toilet in the home. 

Suleman became known as Octo- 
mom after she gave birth to eight ba¬ 
bies in January 2009. 


TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: Actress-comedian 
Carol Burnott is 79. Rhythm-and-blues 
singer MaurlCG Williams is 74. Musician 
Duane Eddy is 74. Rock musician Ghrls 
Mars is 51. Actor-singer Michael Damian 
is 50. Actor Jet LI is 49. Rock musician 
Jimmy Stafford (Train) is 48. Actor co 
median Kevin James is 47. Actress 
Marianne Jean-Baptiste is 45. Country 
musician JOG Gaverlee (Yankee Grey) is 
44. Rapper T-BOZ (TLC) is 42. Country 
musician Jay DoMarcUS (Rascal Platts) is 
41. Rock musician Jose PasNIaS 
(Incubus) is 36. Actor Jason Earles is 35. 
Actor Leonard Earl Howze is 35. Actor 
Nyambi Nyambi is 33. Actress Jordana 
Brewster is 32. Actress Stana Katie (TV: 
“Castle”) is 32. Actress MarnettO 
Patterson is 32. Actor Ghannlng Tatum is 
32. Actor Aaron Weeks is 26. 



The Associated Press 



THURSDAY EI/EA//A/G April 26,20n Cable Key; E-E’town/Hardin/Vine Grove/LaRue R/B-Radcliff/Fort Knox/Muldraugh/Brandenburg 



E 

R 

B 

7:00 

7:30 

8:00 

8:30 

9:00 

9:30 

10:00 

10:30 

11:00 

11:30 

12:00 

ijjim 

T 

25 

2 

HCSChalkTalk 

Classroom 

News/Views 

Issues 

Hardin County Fiscal Court Meeting 

ExCELebration Dinner 


3 

6 

3 

WAVE 3 News at 

7(N)(CC) 

WAVE 3 News at 

Community (N) 

(CC) 

30 Rock(N) 

(Live) (CC) 

The Office 

“Fundraiser” (N) 

Parks and Recre¬ 
ation (N) (CC) 

Awake “Game Day” A big football rival- 

WAVE 3 News at 

11M 

(:35) The Tonight Show With Jay 

onn/M\ /m 











WHAS 

11 

4 

11 

Entertainment To¬ 
night “Rush.” 

Inside Edition 

“Spiderwoman” 

Missing Becca recalls details of a past 
case.(N) (CC) 

Grey’s Anatomy The residents take 
the oral boards. (N) (CC) 

(:01) Scandal “Enemy of the State” 

The team helps a dictator. 

WHASIINewsll 

at11(N) 

jjJ5j Nightline (N) 

Jimmy Kimmel 

Live(N) (CC) 

WLKY 

5 

5 

5 

Wheel of Fortune 

(N)(CC) 


jiardy! (N) 

The Big Bang 
Theory (N) (CC) 

(:31) Rules of En¬ 
gagement (N) 

Person of Interest Reese remembers 
his last CIA mission. (N) 

The Mentalist A man turns up dead 
outside a cabaret. (N) (CC) 

WLKY News at 
11:00PM (N) 

(:35) Late ShowW 

man (CC) 

th David Letter- 

WDRB 

12 

9 

12 

Two and a Half 

Men (CC) 

The Big Bang 
Theory (CC) 

American Idol “1 Voted Gff” Contes¬ 
tants face elimination. (N) (CC) 

Touch “Noosphere Rising” Martin 
searches for Teller’s workshop. 

WDRB News at 
Ten (N) 

j:45)WDRB 

Sports 

Two and a Half 

Men (CC) 

30 Rock “Season 

4” (CC) 

The Big Bang 
Theory (CC) 

WBNA 

6 

21 

10 

Cold Case “The Red and the Blue” A 
male singer is murdered. 

Cold Case “Knuckle Up” A college- 
bound man’s disappearance. 

Cold Case “Blackout” A wealthy family 
matriarch’s death. (CC) 

Criminal Minds A killer targets illegal 
immigrants. (CC) 

Word Alive Hosted by Pastor Kevin 
Mcknight. 

The Hour of Heal¬ 
ing 

KET2 

8 

15 

14 

Travel With Kids 

Louisville Life 

The This Cld House Hour (CC) 

Masterpiece Classic “Birdsong” (PA) (CC) 

Michael Graves 

Charlie Rose (N) (CC) 

Tavis Smiley (N) 

WMYO 

16 

10 

16 

The Office “Lec¬ 
ture Circuit” 

Howl Met Your 
Mother (CC) 

Without a Trace “Risen” Missing 
woman’s sexual history. (CC) 

Without a Trace “Wannabe” Boy’s 
blood is found in a lavatory. 

The Office “The 
Secret” (CC) 

King of the Hill 

(ccy 

Family Guy “Boys 
Do Cry” 

Family Guy (CC) 

Law & Qrder: 
Criminal Intent 

WBKO 

13 


13 

WBKO at 6 (N) 

Wheel of Fortune 

(N)(CC) 

Missing Becca recalls details of a past 
case.(N) (CC) 

Grey’s Anatomy The residents take 
the oral boards. (N) (CC) 

(:01) Scandal “Enemy of the State” 

The team helps a dictator. 

WBKCatlO(N) 

jl^Sj Nightline (N) 

Jimmy Kimmel 

Live(N) (CC) 

KET 

X 

13 

4 

PBSNewsHour(N) (CC) 

Antiques Roadshow “Atlanta” 

Doc Martin “Mother Knows Best” 

Horse Power 

Horse Farms 

World News 

Kentucky Life 

GED Connection 





The People’s Court (N) (CC) 

The Vampire Diaries Damon and 
Meredith plan their next move. (N) 

The Secret Circle “Traitor” A crystal is 
stolen. (N) (CC) 

WHAS 10pm 

News on WBKI 

(:35) Inside Edi¬ 
tion (N) (CC) 

It’s Always Sunny 
in Phila. 

(:35) American 

Dad (CC) 

(12:05) American 
Dad((iC) 

WBKI 

7 

7 

17 

WKYT 

18 


7 

Wheel of Fortune 

(N)(CC) 

Jeojiardy! (N) 

IThe Big Bang 
Theory (N)(CC) 

(;31) Rules of En¬ 
gagement (N) 

Person of Interest Reese remembers 
his last CIA mission. (N) 

The Mentalist A man turns up dead 
outside a cabaret. (N) (CC) 

27 Newsfirst (N) 
(CC) 

(:35) Late ShowW 

man (CC) 

th David Letter- 

A&E 

52 

36 

79 

The First 48 “Waterworld” (CC) 

|The First 48 (CC) 

The First 48 (N) (CC) 

The First 48 (N) (CC) 

(:01)The First 48 “Ultimate Price” 

The First 48 

AMC 

53 


46 

CSI: Miami “Double Jeopardy” 

“Apocalypse Now Redux” (2001, War) Marlon Brando, Robert Duvall. An Army agent goes upriver in Cambodia to kill a renegade. (CC) | 

ANIM 

32 

60 

78 

The Blue Planet: Seas of Life 

Wild Russia (CC) 


jWild Russia (CC) 


jWild Russia (CC) 


jWild Russia (CC) 


Wild Russia 

BET 

42 

m 

80 

106 & Park: Top 

“Why Did 1 Get Married?” (2007) Tyler Perry, Janet Jackson, Jill Scott. (CC) 

“Johnson Family Vacation” (2004) Cedric the Entertainer. (CC) 

Wendy Williams 

CMTV 

45 

66 

86 

Jennie Garth 

Melissa &Tye 

“You’ve Got Mail” (1998) Tom Hanks. Two bitter business rivals conduct an online love affair. 

Jennie Garth 

(:33)The Singing I 

3ee (CC) 

CNBC 

23 

39 

27 

The Kudlow Report (N) 

Supermarkets Inc: Inside 

The Costco Craze: Inside the 

The Costco Craze: Inside the 

Mad Money 

Costco Craze 

CNN 

24 

34 

24 

Erin Burnett OutFront (N) 

Anderson Cooper 360 (N) (CC) 

Piers Morgan Tonight (N) 

Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) 

Erin Burnett CutFront 

Piers Morgan 

COMD 

58 

59 

50 

30 Rock (CC) 

30 Rock (CC) 

Futurama (CC) 

Futurama (CC) 

Futurama (CC) 

Futurama (CC) 

South Park 

|Tosh.0(CC) 

Daily Show 

Colbert Report 

(12:01) Tosh.O 

DISC 

33 

38 

62 

Auction Kings 

Auction Kings 

Auction Kings 

Auction Kings 

Jesus Conspiracies (CC) 

Jesus Conspiracies (N) (CC) 

Jesus Conspiracies (CC) 

Conspiracies 

DISN 

99 

29 

67 

Jessie (CC) 

Austin & Ally 

A.N.T. Farm 

“My Babysitter’s a Vampire” (2010) ‘NR’ (CC) 

Jessie (CC) 

Austin & Ally 

Wizards-Place 

Good-Charlie 

Wizards-Place 

E!TV 

56 

56 

49 

|E! News(N) 

The Soup 

Khloe& Lamar 

Khloe& Lamar 

Khloe& Lamar 

Khloe & Lamar 

Khloe & Lamar 

Chelsea Lately 

El News 

ESPN 

35 

44 

31 

SportsCenter 

SportsCenter 

|2012 NFL Draft From New York. (N) (Live) (CC) 

SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) 

ESPN2 

36 

30 

32 

College Softball Texas at Texas A&M. (N) (Live) 


|E:60 

jBaseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) 


SportsCenter 

|MMA Live(N) 

Baseball Ton. 

FAM 

17 

40 

21 

(6:30) “The Pacifier” (2005) Vin Diesel. 

“Gone in Sixty Seconds” (2000, Action) Nicolas Cage, Angelina Jolie. 


The 700 Club (CC) 

Fresh Prince 

FOOD 

57 

46 

73 

Chopped 

Chopped “Have a Heart” 

Chopped “Gwn Itl” 


Sweet Genius “Baby Genius” (N) 

Sweet Genius 

Chopped 

FX 

27 

28 

71 

Two/Half Men 

|Two/HalfMen 

Two/Half Men 

Two/Half Men 

“88 Minutes” (2007, Suspense) Al Pacino, Alicia Witt, Leelee Sobieski. 


“88 Minutes” (2007) Al Pacino. | 

FXNWS 

29 

31 

26 

I FOX Report With Shepard Smith 

iTheC’Reilly Factor (N) (CC) 

Hannity (N) 


On Record, Greta Van Susteren 

The C’Reilly Factor (CC) 

Hannity 

FXSO 

40 

55 

■ 

Cavaliers, Paint 

Cavaliers Live 

NBA Basketball Cleveland Cavaliers at Chicago Bulls. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live) 

Cavaliers Live 

The Best of Pride 

NBA Basketball 

FXSS 

41 

70 

36 

World Poker Tour: Season 10 

World Poker Tour: Season 10 

1 Barfly 

ACC All-Access 

Hockey History in Music City 

The Best of Pride 

World Poker 

GSN 

179 

111 

72 

Deal or No Deal (CC) 

Deal or No Deal (CC) 

Deal or No Deal (CC) 

Deal or No Deal (CC) 

Deal or No Deal (CC) 

Lingo (CC) 

HALL 

77 

m 

48 

Little House on the Prairie (CC) 

Little House on the Prairie (CC) 

Little House on the Prairie (CC) 

Frasier (CC) 

Frasier (CC) 

Frasier (CC) 

Frasier (CC) 

Golden Girls 

HGTV 

49 

51 

77 

Hunters Int’l 

House Hunters 

Million Dollar Rooms (CC) 

Selling LA (CC) |SellingNY 

House Hunters 

Hunters Int’l 

House Hunters 

Hunters Int’l 

Selling LA (CC) 

HIST 

61 

54 

58 

Swamp People “Rebound” (CC) 

Swamp People “Gates of Hell” 

Swamp People “Under Siege” (N) 

Ax Men “Up in Flames” (CC) 

(:01) Modern Marvels (CC) 

Swamp People 

LIFE 

34 

35 

23 

American Pickers (CC) 

American Pickers (CC) 

American Pickers “Trading Up” 

7 Days of Sex (CC) 

Amanda de Cadenet 

Amer. Pickers 

MSNBC 

185 

45 

28 

Hardball With Chris Matthews 

The Ed Show (N) 

The Rachel Maddow Show (N) 

The Last Word 

The Ed Show 

Rachel Maddow 

MTV 

43 

37 

88 

The Substitute 

Ridiculousness 

America’s Best Dance Crew 

Punk’d (CC) 

Punk’d (CC) 

Punk’d (N) (CC) 

Pauly D Project 

Inside Punk’d 

Punk’d (CC) 

Inside Punk’d 

NICK 

39 

42 

68 

SpongeBob 

Fred:The Show 

George Lopez 

George Lopez 

George Lopez 

George Lopez 

George Lopez 

George Lopez 

Friends (CC) 

Friends (CC) 

Friends (CC) 

OWN 

71 

224 

61 

Main Street 

Main Street 

The Cprah Winfrey Show (CC) 

“1 Am” (2010, Documentary) Premiere. 

The Cprah Winfrey Show (CC) 

1 Am 

SPEED 

66 

551 

90 

NASCAR Racing K&N Pro Series: Richmond. (N) 

Denny Hamlin Short Track Showdown “Richmond” 

Am. Trucker 

Am. Trucker 

NASCAR Race Hub 

NASCAR Racing 

SPIKE 

46 

41 

85 

|Jail (CC) 

pail 

(CC) 

Big Easy Just. 

Big Easy Just. 

liMPACTWrestling(N) (CC) 

MMAUncensrd 

Ways to Die 

Blue Mountain 

SYFY 

48 

64 

70 

Grimm “Organ Grinder” (CC) 

Grimm “Tarantella” (CC) 

Grimm Nick discovers a fight club. 

jGrimm (CC) 

Grimm “Plumed Serpent” (CC) 

Fact or Faked 

TBN 

55 

63 

75 

Always Good 

Potter’s Touch 

Behind Scenes 

Joel Osteen 

Joseph Prince 

HillsongTV 

“The Passion of the Christ” (2004, Drama) Jim Caviezel, Monica Bellucci. | 

TBS 

15 

27 

19 

Seinfeld (CC) 

Seinfeld (CC) 

Family Guy 

Family Guy 

Big Bang 

Big Bang 

|Big Bang 

|Big Bang 

Conan (N) (CC) 

TheQffice(CC) 

TLC 

50 

50 

57 

Hoarding: Buried Alive (CC) 

Hoarding: Buried Alive (CC) 

Strange Sex 

Strange Sex 

Strange Sex: The Year’s Best 

Strange Sex 

Strange Sex 

Strange Sex 

TNT 

65 

43 

42 

Bones (CC) 

NBA Basketball New York Knicks at Charlotte Bobcats. (N) (Live) (CC) 

NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Golden State Warriors. (N) j 

TOON 

60 

52 

66 

Adventure Time 

Adventure Time 

MAD 

Regular Show 

King of the Hill 

King of the Hill 

American Dad 

American Dad 

Family Guy 

Family Guy 

Eagleheart (N) 

TRAV 

76 

62 

56 

Man V. Food 

Man V. Food 

Truck Stop USA 

Truck Stop USA 

Sand Masters 

Sand Masters 

Hotel Impossible (CC) 

Bggage Battles 

Bggage Battles 

Sand Masters 

TVL 

59 

65 

54 

(6:52) M*A*S*H 

(:24)M*A*S*H 

Home Improve. 

Home Improve. 

Love-Raymond 

Love-Raymond 

Love-Raymond 

Love-Raymond 

Love-Raymond 

King of Queens 

King of Queens 

USA 

28 

33 

41 

NCIS “Family” (CC) 

NCIS “Ex-File” (CC) 

NCIS “Identity Crisis” (CC) 

NCIS A distraught naval officer. 

In Plain Sight (CC) 

CSI: Cri. Scene 

VH1 

44 

47 

87 

Most Shocking Music Moments 

Couples Therapy 

Tough Love: New Orleans 

Tough Love: New Orleans 

Mob Wives “If Books Could Kill” 

Bsktb Wives 

WGN-A 

14 

20 

18 

America’s Funniest Home Videos 

MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Chicago White Sox. From U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago. (N) (CC) 

News at Nine 

Scrubs (CC) 

Scrubs (CC) 

mm 

150 

77 

291 

(6:10) “That Thing You Do!” 

“The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” (2002, Fantasy) Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen. (CC) 

(:05) “Salt” (2010) Angelina Jolie. (CC) | 


301 

17 

201 

(6:00) “Knight and Day” 

“Horrible Bosses” (2011) Jason Bateman. 

Making Veep 

True Blood Sookie nurtures Eric. 

Frisky Business 

Katie Morgan’s 

Girls (CC) 

HBOP 

302 

18 

202 

(5:45) “X2:X-Men United” 

Game of Thrones (CC) 

“Water for Elephants” (2011) Reese Witherspoon. (CC) 

God-Bigger 

(:40)Veep (CC) 

The A-Team 

HBOS 

303 

76 

203 

(:05) “Something Borrowed” (2011) Ginnifer Goodwin. (CC) 

jRealTimeWith Bill Maher (CC) 

“Big Stan” (2007) Rob Schneider, Jennifer Morrison. (CC) 

Bridesmaids 

MAX 

320 

73 

260 

(5:45) “X-Men: First Class” 

“Arthur” (2011) Russell Brand, Helen Mirren. ‘PG-13’ (CC) 

“Alien” (1979, Science Fiction) Tom Skerritt. ‘R’ (CC) 

Sexual Witch 

SHOW 

340 

16 

221 

“Howto Lose a Guy in 10 Days” 

(7:55) “Flypaper” (2011) Patrick Dempsey. 

|(:25) “Last Night” (2010) KeiraKnightley.‘R’ 

Gigolos (CC) 

Sunset Place 

Sonny 

STARZ 

281 

78 

281 

(6:05) “Moneyball” (2011) Brad Pitt. (:25) “Easy A” (2010) Emma Stone. (CC) 

Magic City (CC) 

“Tron: Legacy” (2010) Jeff Bridges. (CC) | 

TMC 

350 

74 

241 

(6:20) “Circle of Iron”‘R’ 

“Windtalkers” (2002, War) Nicolas Cage. ‘R’ (CC) 


(:15) “The Messenger” (2009, Drama) Ben Foster. ‘R’ (CC) 

All Good Things | 



SHOWTIME CINEMAS, Radcliff, 
351-1519 

“The Lucky One” (PG-13) 
2, 4:30 and 7 p.m. 

“Think Like A Man” (PG- 
13) 2, 4:30 and 7 p.m. 

“Wrath of the Titans” (PG- 
13) 2, 4:30 and 7 p.m. 

“The Cabin in the Woods” 
(R) 2, 4:30 and 7 p.m. 

“The Three Stooges” (PG) 
2, 4:30 and 7 p.m. 


MOVIE PALACE, Elizabethtown 
769-1505 

“The Lucky One” (PG-13) 
2, 4:30, 7 and 9:30 
p.m. 

“Think Like A Man” (PG) 
1:30, 4, 6:30 and 9 
p.m. 

“The Three Stooges" (PG) 
1:30, 4, 6:30 and 9 
p.m. 

“Wrath of the Titans” (PG- 


13) 2 p.m. 

“Wrath of the Titans” 3-D 
(PG-13) 4:30, 7 and 
9:30 p.m. 

“Mirror Mirror" (PG) 1:30, 
4, 6:30 and 9 p.m. 

“The Hunger Games” (PG- 
13) 1:30, 4:30, 6:30, 
7:30 and 9:30 p.m. 

“Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax” 
(PG) 1:30 and 4 p.m. 

“Titanic” 3-D (PG-13) 2 


and 7 p.m. 

“American Reunion” (R) 
1:30, 4, 6:30 and 9 
p.m. 

“21 Jump Street” (R) 2, 
4:30, 7 and 9:30 p.m. 

“The Cabin in the Woods" 
(R) 2, 4:30, 7 and 9:30 
p.m. 

“Lockout” (PG-13) 2, 4:30, 
7 and 9:30 p.m. 



















































































































































































































































































































































































































THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 


B13 


Ziggy/Tom Wilson Family Circus/Jeff Keene 




©POiPJggyardFriendrincTDiabTur^^ 


PHAR^VCY ...we'Re ^ 

-a RUNNiNeA 
1 S^eOALTDCAY: 
euY'TWo 
FR€ 5 CR\ffi 0 NS, 
seroNef^g 








Marmaduke/Brad Anderson 



“Concerning politics, he plays 
no favorites.” 



HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Put more em¬ 
phasis on what you can accom¬ 
plish. Complaining will not help 
you gain the confidence of those 
around you. Strive for stability 
and greater security, and refuse 
to let emotional matters impede 
you or lead you astray. The choic¬ 
es you make now will influence 
your life for years to come. Your 
numbers are 8, 17, 20, 25, 33, 
44, 47. 

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Curb 
your response. You don’t want to 
come across as unpredictable or 
difficult to deal with. Emotions 
will be hard to control, and it’s 
important that you lead with 
charm, grace and good inten¬ 
tions if you want others to re¬ 
spond favorably. OO 

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Do 
something nice for someone you 
love and you will get something 
nice in return. Sharing, caring 
and participating will lead to a 
host of new opportunities and 
friendships. Aggressive pursuits 
will pay off and show your leader¬ 
ship ability. OOOO 

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Do 
something that will lift your spir¬ 
its or build your confidence. A 
personal change to your image 
or the way you do things will draw 
positive attention. Avoid emo¬ 
tional situations that can lead to 
unfounded guilt and unneces¬ 
sary handouts. OOO 


GANGER (June 21-July 22): 

You’ll find it hard to keep the 
peace. Don’t let someone’s lack 
of tact pull you into an argument. 
Take the high road and focus on 
creative projects that will en¬ 
hance the way people view you 
and what you have to offer. OOO 
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Make 
changes that enhance your posi¬ 
tion. You can do things your way 
if you can prove you have a bet¬ 
ter strategy in place. Your input 
will be met with opposition, but if 
you use a little Leo charm you 
will win the battle. OOO 

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You 
have the knowledge and expert¬ 
ise to turn any situation in your 
favor. Get busy making things 
happen instead of Just thinking 
about it. Call in favors from peo¬ 
ple you have worked with in the 
past and something interesting 
will develop. OOOO 

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You’ll 
have plenty to think about and 
discuss when it comes to per¬ 
sonal or professional partner¬ 
ships. Iron out any problems be¬ 
fore you move forward or spend 
money that can add to your 
stress. Love is in the stars. OO 
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): 
Invest in a plan that allows you 
to use your skills and knowledge 
strategically. Networking will lead 
to an opportunity to expand 
something you already are inter¬ 


ested in pursuing. Don’t let 
someone’s Jealousy stand be¬ 
tween you and your goals. 

ooooo 

SAGIHARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): 

Put more time and effort into 
your home, family, and most of 
all, your love life. It’s important 
that you are on the same page 
when it comes to personal 
changes that can alter your 
lifestyle. Compromise will satisfy 
everyone involved. OOO 

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): 
You can learn from someone 
else’s mistake. An investment, 
residential move or expansion of 
personal interests will play a 
positive role in your future plans. 
Expect someone from your past 
to have an influence on the 
choices you make. OOO 

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): 
Discuss your plans for the future 
and make lifestyle changes that 
are conducive to greater security 
and stabilization. It’s up to you to 
call the shots and make the ad¬ 
justments required to reach your 
goals. OOO 

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Let 

experience help you make better 
personal choices. Avoid getting 
into a no-win situation that ends 
in a loss of friendship. Recon¬ 
nect with people you miss or 
have lost touch with. Express 
your regrets and your hopes for 
the future. OOOOO 


Peanuts/Charles Shultz 



Garfield/Jim Davis 


Dilbert/Scott Adams 





SEE, I ^ i 

THERE ISN'T 

SAID THAT J L A NEWSPAPER 

'CAUSE < ( BIG ENOUGH... , 

YOU’RE < 1 


r 



7((]\ 

f 11,/ ‘'A 



o 


^ 

M 1 f\ 




Beetle Bailey/Mort Walker 


DeFlocked/Jeff Corriveau 


YOU SAY CAY CLieWT 
lUeOACLY DRAAIK 
CHOCOCATe MICK OW 
SCHOOL 0R0UWD3, SOT 
THIS 5TlCt PHOTO EROfA 
YOOR SeCURlTY CAMCRA 


SAY5 OTHCRWISC. 



THIS ISNT A PHOTO. 
THIS IS A PICTORC OF 
A BOY U\TH ft HALO 
OVCR H\S ueAD, DRflWW 
, IW BLACK CRAYOW. 
t BADLY, i MIGHT ADD. 




T THIMK X'LL HOLD OAl 
TO THOSF SHOTS OF 
YOUR PR\MC\PfiL K\CK»WG 




Baby Blues/Jerry Scott and Rick Kirkman 


Hi & Lois/Brian and Greg Walker 



Zits/Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman 




Big Nate/Lincoln Peirce 


HRS. Y I'H SORRY, 
CIER- NATE. YOU 

wicKi, \ know the 
CAN I K RULES . y! 
LEAVE 


PETENTION DOESN'T 
END UNTIL M^OO. 

YEAH, BUT 
IT'S ALREADY 
3-53'. r HEAN, 
WHAT'S SEVEN 
HINUTES? 





Stone Soup/Jan Eliot 


Hagar the Horrible/Dik Browne 



TO TlW^ lAlHILE m 

CAN. 



WR& I WHirei^TlLECAN. 

ommij MY family 

PUT^MPINA 

HOMe. 




Frank & Ernest/Bob Ihaves 




Blondie/Dean Young and Denis Lebrun 


soy, THE SOSS REALLY FLIPPED 
our TODAY WITHOUT 
PPOSASLE CAUSE 


EXACTLY,' A SUNCH OF US WERE 
SORT OF MILLING AROUND IN THE 
BREAK ROOM AND HE i 



IF INSTALLING A NEW DIGITAL 
VENDING MACHINE ISN'T JUST 
, BEGGING FOR CURIOUS 



Jeff MacNelly’s Shoe/Chris Cassatt and Gary Brookins 




































































































































































































































































































































































































































B14 


THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012 



1 i C Mobile Home 

1 1 J Sales 

2 & 3 BEDROOM MOBILE 

ion Apartments 

1 lXi For Rent 

ion Apartments 

1 lXi For Rent 

ion Apartments 

1 ZU For Rent 

10 R 

1 C.U Rentals 

130 

230 W. 

Real Estate 
Sales 

MAIN. VINE 

ion 

lOU Sales 

, -if - 

132 

Lots & 
Acreage 


HOMES rent to own. Use 
Your TAX REFUND for 

down payment. Move in 
ready, owner financing. We 
buy mobile homes for 
CASH! Parkside MHP 
(270) 268-3978._ 

3 BEDROOM 2 bath dou¬ 
blewide on 1 acre. All elec¬ 
tric, new carpet, paint, city 
water. Located off US 60 in 
Meade Co. $64,900. Mc- 
Gehee Humphrey & Davis 
Realty 1-800-422-4997 or 
(270) 877-6366. 

3 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH 
singlewide, all electric, city 
water. Country setting. Hwy 
228, Meade County, 
$44,900 McGehee Humph¬ 
rey & Davis Realty 
1-800-422-4997 or (270) 
877-6366. 

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH sin- 
glewide on 1 acre. New 
Carpet, paint, city water, lo¬ 
cated off 1238 in Meade 
Co, near Garrett. $54,900 
McGehee Humphrey & Da¬ 
vis Realty 1-800-422-4997 
or (270) 877-6366. 


3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH 
mobile home in Radcliff 
area for sa3e. wth vinyl 
siictiiig. roof, on lot. 

Owior Financing Call 
270-734-1935 


3 BR 2 BAall oloctric 
A/C & heat 
New carpet and pan t 
Ready TO mtive ini 
2 BR 2 BAall electric 
A/C & heat; r>ew paint 
Ready to move in! 
Call (270J 351-1376 or 
homestead m h pH c.oa m 


FOR SALE BY Ovmer 
2008 Dutch 3BR 2BA 
□oubfevjda iai0 Sq ft 
2v6 dryv^lJ construcflon 
Stainless kitchen applt- 
anoeSr Firaplaoe. Utlliiy 
room Muet 8a Moved 
$61,500 270-735-6268 


HOME FOR SALE. 
Near town. 

We sl 60 buy used homes. 
Clayton Homes. 
of Glasgow. Ky 
270-676-2460. 


NOW A^/AJLABLE - Um- 
itGd Time only New!! 3 
bedroom. 2 baith. vinyl 
si^rg, Bhingle roof! 1st 5 
orders starting at only 
$24.SQD call (502) 
933-2900 


SALEI SALE SALE! 
New Singles under 
$23,699. (Mew Doubles 
under S38.399 FREE De¬ 
livery and Set-up on every 
home. Rnancing availa¬ 
ble OaloM?od Homes 
1-886-280-3898 


SPRING CLEARANCE - 
Save ThotBaMte on 3 4 
S 5 bedrooms - 2011 
holdovers. Free delivery S 
set-up included Cell 
(502) 933-2900. 


WE PAY CASH FOR 
Used Homee Cell 
(502J 933-2900 


120 


Apartments 
For Rent 


—LARGE 2 BEDROOM 
Apartments Located on 
Bell wood Or. Robna Ct.. 
Elisabethtown 2 lull bath$. 
all appliances inducing 
wssher/dryej 1 160 sq it 
Pet standards. $575 rent. 
$456 deposit Call (270) 
785-7436 or 268-0825 


"PIN OAK CT, RAD 
CLIFF 1 bedroom 
townhoua^. irioiudea car¬ 
port. covered paiio, stor¬ 
age. All appliances in¬ 
cluding v^aher dry^r 
$425 rent 8 $350 deposit 
C^l 270-268-0825 


‘Apartments* 

Elizabethtown 
Fort Knox- Radcliff 
No Vacancies 
For Waiting List Email 
Liberty Station Rentals 
at info (g) lsrentals.com 
www.lsrentals.com 


^ELIZABETHTOWN* 
Gl^hvL6w OOurl 

2 bed. 2 bath 
*RADCLIFF‘ 

S4S Atcher 

3 and 1 bed 

/N SPEC/AL*' 
Executive Group 
Property Inc, 

(270) 234-1B20 
leasing@cg-pm com 
ck ec ul ivegr Dupweb. com 


♦LUXURIOUS ONE BED¬ 
ROOM Located at 1820 N 
Mies St irt Bizabethtcvm, 
tile iicor6 in kitchen and 
bath area, microwav e. Ice 
maker, garbage atsp<sai. 
800 sq ft pet standarc^. 
$475 per month $400 de¬ 
posit. Call (270)^268-6825 




TOO HOT? 
come Jump i n 
Qur PQQ\' 


1 8 2 Bedrcoms 
opan Layout 
Pets Wefc&me 
Short * Long Terms 
2 Mnutes From Pcffit 
Outdoor Pool 
Playground For Kids 
Onaiia Storage units 
Anderenn Eeteitec 
270-351-5757 


(1) AVAILABLE 2 BED¬ 
ROOM APARTMENT fur¬ 
nished, good furniture, TV, 
microwave. Washer & 
Dryer, Utilities paid. $650 
month, $450 deposit. (2) 
Also 2 bedroom furnished, 
utilities paid, $550 mo with 
$450 deposit. Convenient 
location 5 minutes to Ft 
Knox. 502-935-0340, or 
502-819-2428. 


♦RADCLIFF - Large 1 bed¬ 
room, all utilities paid. Pet 
standards. Navaho Dr. 
$450 monthly, $350 de- 
posit. Call (270) 268-0825. 


MENTS S450 a month in¬ 
cludes water. Available 
immediately. 5 nrinuteie 
ffom Ft. Knox, located in 
Muidraugh tr you can't 
pay your rent on time, 
please don't call Mobile 
Home Park 502-942-8120 


1300 SO, FT 2 BED¬ 
ROOM, 2 BATH, 15x25 
great ronm. 2 large walk 
in cioeete. utility room, re- 
fiigeratCKT. stove, central 
heat & air. Located on 
South Mantle. $645 
mcnrhty. plu^ deposit 
call (270) 789-5499 


A+ BEAUTIFUL 
SPACIOUS 
2 BEDROOM APT. 

2 bath, on Edgewwd Dr., 
behind hospital. 

$625 per month 
Call (270) 765-5771 


ALL UTILITIES PAD - 
Free CabEe with HBO, 
$95 per week and up, 
rents our FURNISHED 
MOTEL ROOMS. $130 
per week and up rents 
our FURNISHED MO¬ 
BILE HOMES located In 
Etown, smalt depncslts, 
NO LEASE REQUIRED! 
(270) 769-6771 


BARN WOOD LN - ELIZ¬ 
ABETHTOWN located cfT 
pear Orchard Rcf Large 2 
bedroom, v^ier paid 
$475 rent. $400 deposit. 
Pet etandarcfe, (270) 
766-7436 pr (270) 
268-6825 


BRANDY CHASE 
APARTMENTS 

*aean 1 & 2 BR apis 

* Large Townhouses 

* Furn. Exl Stay Apts. 

* Convenient Location 

* Just 5 Min To Post 

* On-site Management 

(270) 352-0606 

trandycfiase^pts. com 


Pin @aic 


VII I A 



BRICK 

TOWNHOMES 

(270) 734-0230 


BROOKRIDGE 

PLACE 

270-352-0750, 

502-000^661 

1 8; 2 bedroom apts 
All utilities paid. 
Onsite laundry. 
Call today to 
make appointment. 


BUCKINGHAM 

CONDOMINIUMS 

APARTMENT RENTALS 
All appliances including 
washer/dryer. 

Pet standards 
8am - 5pm Men - Fri 
900 A David Ct. 
(270) 769-1269 



CARDINAL CREEK 
GREAT LOCATION 

2 bdrt}N2 bath $639 



SILVER CREEK 
3 bdrrTV2 bath. $799 
2 bdrms/2bath. $699 
‘Wood floors 
*W/D hook-up 
(270) 26 8-403 5 
Homesteadre ntaLcom 


CLOSE TO 

FI. KNOX 

Glean frHehly painted 
2 bedreom apartment. 
Feuodry on ate. 
$420 per mcnth. 
Foxwwd Apartment^ 
fZTO) Z72-40Z5 


CONDO, 2 BEDROOM 
2 Bath. Great Location In 
E'tovm cm (270) 
272-4787 


ELIZABETHTOWN 

C/a/'s Points 
Dupl0x0S 

2 bed 2 bath, garage 
Lawn Oara/Oabh incL 
PINE VALLEY 
2 bed, 2 bath 
F umisLied/UnfiJrn 
W/D & cable incEuded 
Executive Group 
Property Mgmt,, Inc, 
(270) 234-1820 

laa£ina@BU-Dm com 
exec u8 iv&grcupweb c am 


ETOWN. 119 E. POPU. 
LAR #2. 1 bedroom. 1 
bath, large kitchen 8. din¬ 
ing araa. washer dryer 
hookup. In quiet neighbor¬ 
hood. city schools, gar¬ 
bage included. Pet stand¬ 
ards 1 yr lease $356 a 
month. (2701 723-6267 



ETOWN APART M E NTS 
2 bedroom Townhomes 
Large Eat in Kitchen 
HUGE Private Patio 
ETOWN CITY SCHOOL 
Ready to move ml 
On SPECIAL: 
$699if ACH 
Eto wnapartments. com 
(276) 288 RENT 

Find MS on 

Facebook 


FORT KNOX/Muldraugh 
1 &R/lBa Basham apt, lo¬ 
cated 1 mile from poet. 
Lrg furn. €; unfum. apts. 
safe, dean and Mlitaiy 
fnendly. Ail utilises incl. in 
rent hetps nthly budget. 
$540 mon On Sfte Mgr 
and Main!.. lowest dep. in 
area 502) 042-3616 
f r vi r@bel isouth. net 


FURNISHED STUDIO Ic^ 
cated in nice area In Rad- 
Clift Pm Oak ct All appii- 
ances including washer ^ 
dryer. Pet standards. All 
utilities- paid $4957mc, 
$306 cecunty deposit 
cm 270-268-0825 


AVAIUBLEP' 

IN ELIZABETHTOWN 
Tyler Park Apartments. 
1103 Lews Dr Ground 
Floar. 1 Bedroom apart¬ 
ments. $350 monthly + 
utilities. Security deposit 
$300. Washer and dryer 
in alt uniEs. Income re¬ 
stricted 270-737-7591 


(Christopheri 

Squark 

Janes Prop. Management 
2 bed 2 bath 
2 bed 1 ba 
1 bed 1 ba 

S miles from ft. Knox 
Radcliff. KY 

WWW. christophersque re. 
com 

270-351-3176 


LARGE 3 BEDROOM 

towfihousa located at 136 
Dartsywoods Ct. 2 tell 
baths. 1 car garage. 
1,300 sq ft. Pet stand¬ 
ards S796 rant a dapoeif 
Cail (270) 268-0825 


NEED A PLACE? 
RENT 

WITH GRACE 

WWW, rcntwitharacc^com 

2 hedroofn 1 1/2 hath 


towtihome Raleigh Drive. 
Etown. $675 month. $5(30 
depcait. 3 bedrcxifu z 
bath hcu&o. Milas Straat. 
city schools. $750 month. 
$506 deposit 2 bedroom 
1 1/2 bath (The Columns) 
Towntwma Wilson Road 
$756 morith $506. Pets 
Welcome. $206 non re¬ 
fundable pet deposit, e^- 
tia $25 per month. Could 
you ple^e visit web site 
or call 270-736-1940 or 
text 270-306-8038. 


NEWLY 
REMODELEDt! 
TOP TO BOTTOM 

Close to Ft Knox, 
2 bedroom. 1 bath, 
W/D hookups, 
Approx, 650 sq ft. 
270-272-37Ba, 


ONE BEDROOM apart¬ 
ment. close to College. 
Weter & garbeg$ uv 
Ciudad. $325 month 8 
$325 deposit. Call be- 
tvffien nudri - Spm. (270) 
769-2711. 


PINE CREST I APART¬ 
MENTS IS accepting ap- 
plications ter lv^ and 
three bedroom apa-rl' 
manls. The rent &. secu¬ 
rity deposit IS based on 
the income for frioae who 
qualify we pay for gas 
heat, water, and trash 
pick up. Nteintenance \% 
provided. There ra & laun¬ 
dry room on the complex. 
Extremely low income ap- 
plica rits are encouraged 
to apply, can apply for an 
apartment between 

S.OOam - 12ooofi ff4onday, 
Tuesday, Thursday, and 
Friday at 504 Vi'&ta Dr. 
Elown, KY. (Closed 
Wednesday. Call 

270-769-Sd45 for more in¬ 
formation. TTY # 
1^00-648-6656 




RADCLIFF 

113 Ash Ct. 

2 bed t.bbath 
garage 
Elmwood Dr, 
/Vewf y remodeied 
2 ted. 1 bath 
Executive Group 
Property Mgmt,, Inc, 
(270) 352-1060 

laasinQ@eo-Dm com 
eygeutiveqroupweh epm 


RINEYVILLE 

Pointers Ct. 

2 bad, 15 bath 
WasharATryar inciuded 
Executive Group 
Property Mgmt,, Inc, 
(270) 352-1060 
lQasing@eg-pm com 
exeo ul ivegroupweh. com 


SUPPORT YOUR 
LOCAL 
FARMERS 

NEW 1,2^3 BDRM 



Located in ElliabethtQVjn. 
270-Z68-RENT (7368) 
EtowoAp art mants.com 
find us Oh facebook 


HERITAGE MANOR At 

North Miles and Colonial 
Dr. Duplex community. 2 & 
3 bedroom w/1 & 2 baths. 
Stove, refrigerator, dish¬ 
washer, laundry hookup. 
Cathedral ceilings, sky¬ 
lights, fireplaces, ceiling 
fan, walk in closets. Chil¬ 
dren welcome. Your own 
private yard and driveway. 
Call 502-708-2550. 


123 


Commercial 

Rent/Lease 


✓ THIS OUT! 

OFFICE SPACE - UlilL 
ties Included. Lease 
terms negotiable. Call 
Jerry □1(270) 737-2485 or 
(270) 737-3897 after 6pm 
at (562) 346^2949 


125 


Real Estate 
Rentals 


•119 WOODS CT.. 

ETOWN located in beau- 
tiful scenic Woods subd- 
vi$!(Jri off Hwy 251. 3 tted- 
rooms, large living room 
8 aning room area, new 
stainless steel appli¬ 
ances. inducing washer 8 
dryer, den. game room, 
large 2 car garage. Pet 
standards. $1,256 

ront/depwit Call (270) 
268.6825 


*IVY POINTE SUODIVL 
SION Elizabethlov^. 168 
Randeii c sated Df. 3 
bedrooms 2 both. 1 car 
garage, fenced yard, 
shed. $675 rentteeposit. 
Pet stendarda Call (276) 
268-6825 


AVAILABIEHOW! 

2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH 
brick house in E'town, 1 
oar garage, Iforit porch, 
located on gusiet ail-<3e- 
sac, 209 Cottrell Larne, 
like new with appliarccs 
and washer S dryer in- 
eludsd, $780 per month, 
plus cteposEt, one year 
lease 270-315-[Xr96 


3 BDRM. 2 bath house, 
kitchen appliances * 
W/D hook up. garage, 
$865 mo + dep. 1555 Wil¬ 
low Way. Radcliff Call 
(270) 358-3166 


3 BR DUPLEX with 1,300 
sq. ft. of living space. All 
rooms are large. 15 min. 
from E’town, 20 min. from 
Leitchfield, $400 mo. Also: 
3 BR, 2 bath house in 
Leitchfield with 2,000 sq. ft. 
of living space and a gar¬ 
age, $600 mo. 242-7590. 


4 BEDROOM House, 2 
% bath. 2 story, excellent 
subdtvisron. Open floor 
plan, modern kitchen with 
Oak cabinet^ hardwoed, 
fireplace, recreation room, 
deck, central heat and air. 
2 car attached garage, 
-3 [}60 sqft quiet sfreet. 
563 Mary tend Court. 
E'tcwn $1306 monthly. 
C^l 276 506-2926. 


QUIET RADCLIFF NEIGH¬ 
BORHOOD 3 bedroom. 1 
bath. Over 1000 sq.ft, in 
quiet Radcliff Neighbor¬ 
hood. All utilities, even 
wireless internet, paid by 
landlord! $650/mo+dep. 
Pets ok. Nice backyard. 
Call 502-835-7621 


33 VALLEY CREEK 
LANE ^ bedroom 2 bath, 
o^ntraf air propans he it, 
appliances. W/D hook up. 
water s garbage included. 
Large yard with cxeek. 
County schools, pet policy 
with pet deposit s956 
rent. $800 deposrt. One 
year leaaa Call (270) 
763-6319 


82 LEACT, RirteyviSle. 3 
bedroom. 2 ftl batlte. 
fireptace. large yard. 2 car 
garage, full unlinished 
basement, pet standarcte. 
$975 rent. $976 deposit 
276-268-0825 


887 AUSTIN DRIVE, 
RADCLIFF 3 bedroom 
1.5 bath Ranch atyia 
home. 1 car g;arage 
fenced in backyard. Pet 
standards $795 rani 
deposit Call (270) 
268-6825 


SPECIAL NEW 2 BED¬ 
ROOM, 2 Bath Brick Apart¬ 
ments, City Schools, Full 
Size Washer & Dryer. Call 
270-982-9296 


CITY SCHOOLS S60 
PARK AVE. Willow Creek 
Subdivision. 4 bedrooms. 

2 1/2 baths, whirlpool tub. 

3 oar gsrage. partially fin¬ 
ished basement termial 
difTdng area. Pet stand¬ 
ards $1,495 rsnf/deposit 
1 year lease Call (270) 
268-6825. 


COUNTRY CHARM, 
CITY Convenience. 2 
bedroom. 1 bath, in EliZfl- 
balhiovrfi. Lsrga lot. at¬ 
tached garage $525 
monthly. 1 year tease 
Deposit fi references re¬ 
quired Pet resincDons. 
(270) 769^9061.234-6526 


ELIZABETHTOWN 11S8 
Hutcherson Ln. 3 BR 2 
BA includes kitchen appli- 
ancs^ with WD hookup 2 
car garage, vaulted ceil¬ 
ings. new carpet, teheed 
back yard Rant $9(X) 
plus cteposit Call 
27tF7e6-1130 


SMALL WAREHOUSE for 

lease with office, $650 
monthly. Call (270) 
766-8263. 


ELIZABETHTOWN 

500-B Lincoln 
3 bed, 2 bath 
221 Alumni Dr. 

3 bed, 2 bath 
Clay's Points 
Duplexes 
3 bed. 2 5 bath, 
garage. Lawii Care/ 
Cable I riel. 

Exe cutive Group 
Properly Mgint.^ Inc. 
(270) 234-1826 

teasinig@0g-pm com 
exec utivegroupweb com 


ELIZABETHTOWN-139 
Botto Avenue. 3 Bedroom 
2 Bath Ranch s1ytehom>e. 
large 2 car garage, large 
yard PET STANDARDS!] 
$895 Rent $895 Ddpoail 
Call (27Q) 26843825 


HODGENVILLE 
3BD/2BT+DEN SOLID 
BRICK RANCH HOME. 
MUST TOUR!! 1200/MO 
1 0 0 0 / D E P . 
EMPLOYMENT/CREDIT 
CHK. CALL KURT @ 
(815)483-1014 


HOUSES, MOBILE 
HOMES 8 
APARTMENTS 
AVAILABLE FOR RENT 
Located in Ffaherty(10 
mmirtes from Ft. Knox 
and E'tuwn) Rent starts at 
$400 8 up 
Call (276) 668-9713 


2 BORM. 2 BATn, 1 Cai 
Garage, Gardan Home. 
121 Mcthtosh Dr Close tc 
John Hardjn High School, ir 
Applevjood Subdiv i$3oni 
Large Private Patio. Vaulted 
ceiling. Extra Large Kitchen. 
Heat Pump. Ceiling Fans. 
Extra Storage. Deposit anc 
Rent S875 (276) 367-2353. 

2 BEDROOM - 1 1/2 bath 
townhouse, central air, 
washer dryer hookup, 
stove, refrigerator, dish¬ 
washer, in Radcliff. 3 BED¬ 
ROOM HOUSE 2 bath, for¬ 
mal dining room, 2 car gar¬ 
age, fenced yard. Pet 
standards. Call (270) 
877-7677. 


RADCLIFF 
1771 Rodney 
3 ted. 1 bath 
107 Jackson St. 

3 bad. 2 bath 
312 Shelton 
3 bad. 2 bath 
520 University 
3 bed. 2 bath 
RINEYVILLE 

160 Fetch It 
3 bed 2 5 tarn 
Executive Group 
Property Mgimt., Inc. 
Calt [270)352-1000 
|ga$ing@eg-pm com 
o'ioc ul I vegroupweb. com 


RADCLIFF - 1790 Holly 
Ct 3 bedroom 1 1/2 
bath full unfinished ba&a- 
ment. large yard, located 
m qfuiet area. Pet stand¬ 
ard^ $795 rent S ddpd^if 
cm (2701 268-6825 


3 BDRM HOME; 1 bath, kit 
appliances, full dry base¬ 
ment. $795 mo + dep. 218 
Walters Ave. Hodgenville. 
Call 270-358-3166. 


130 


Real Estate 
Sales 


5 MINUTES FROM FORT 

KNOX, 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 
bath townhouse, newly re¬ 
modeled, walk out base¬ 
ment to patio. $650 month, 
deposit $650. Deposit due 
at time of contract signing. 
Utilities not included; pet 
standards. Call (270) 
300-8053, (270) 877-7783. 


10 ACRES v^th mobile 
home in Larue CoLinty, 2 
b^driK)m$, 2 bath$. city 
WQtor central heat and 
air. all eleciric. new car¬ 
pel. has a large screen 
pcrfch. setting on 10 rotl- 
ing wooded acres of land. 
Located off Hwy 216 and 
Hwy 4b2 hear the com¬ 
munity of Badger 
$49,600. Flrvancing Avail¬ 
able for Everyone with a 
reasonabte down pay¬ 
ment. Celt 270-351-4977 
or 806-336-6331 
wvtfw.k&rituekv-lan:d.cQfn 


for 

108 CHRISTINE WAY. 
Elisabethtown, KY 3 
bedroom 2 bath cusfom 
built brick rarx:h home 
sits Qfi 10 woDdod ac¬ 
res. With 24O0sq.ft of liv¬ 
ing space. Anderson 
windows 0; doors, cus¬ 
tom buitt maple cabi¬ 
nets. vaulted ceNlng^ 
with open floor plan. 
Famray room Jn base¬ 
ment with poesibte 4th 
bedroompCustom made 
stecpieton pool table, 
propane fireptacc. 
whirpool tub, beautiful 
landscaped yard, 2 car 
att^hed garage,l)oo 
many extras too list. 
Minutes from hospital 
and mall but yet private. 
Open house on .^ril 22 
and April 29th from 
12;D6pm to 6:66pm. Any 
other time call for appL 
Call 276-360-0222 


GROVE on Main St., in 
front of City Hall/next to the 
Gazebo. Complete Re¬ 
model of Early 20th Century 
home. Office and/or resi¬ 
dence, prime commercial 
lot w/city utilities. Built circa 
1906, this home combines 
period craftsmanship with 
all modern conveniences. 
Asking $145,000. Flexible 
Agent/Owner terms. Call 
(270) 735-3581. 


BEAUTIFUL HOME in 
Rlneyville: 3 bedrKKim. 2 
bath 2 car attached and 
24x36 detached 2 car 
garage/wwkshop on 1.09 
acres. $152,900, Call 
Julie. Beef Realty (270) 
300-6607. or 759-3033 



CUSTOM BUILT HOME 
tor eale by owier. Latue 
county 3 bed. 3 bath 
1775 sq ft With full fin¬ 
ished ViQlkciLit basement 
With patio. HardwEMd. ce¬ 
ramic iite, lote of storage, 
and too many extras to 
list. One acre lot. with 
fenced in yard Great 
neighborhood!? Asking 
$286,000. Dont miss this 
OppOrturtity before it IS 
listed wit\\ realtor Call 
276-765-9690 


DOUBLE WIDE HOME 
and one aore of land off 
U.S. Hwy 60 near Fgrt 
Krox 3 bedrooms 2 
baths, city water, central 
heat and air. all electric 
On one acre of land. A 
nic e and clean home wit h 
fresh paint and new car¬ 
pet $64 966 Financing 
available for everyone 
with a reasonable down 
payment. Call 351-4977 
or 800-336-6331 
WWW, kentu ckv-land. com 


NEW HOUSING LOTS - 
Beckley Woods, Hew 
Glendale Rd„ S31.900 
and up. Sante Fe, Off Hwy 
62 East. 1 acre S up. aav- 
eral wooded lots. Com¬ 
mercial lots in Hardin 
Co. Agent Owned, The 
Land S^gje. (270) 
737-6399 


NICE LEVEL BUILDING 
LOT IN DOE VALLEY 

Apcsss to gdr oourse, 
swim and tennis club, 
asking S6Cl(X) 
cm 270-828-8447 


RADCLIFF- 978 OAK DR. - 

2 bedroom, huge master 
bedroom. Unfinished base¬ 
ment with W/D & freezer. 
Fenced backyard, huge 
wrap around deck. $725 
rent & deposit. 945 Oak 
Dr.- 2 bed, 1 bath, fenced in 
backyard on 1 acre lot with 
walk around porch, $550 
rent & deposit. $200 pet 
deposit non refundable. 
One year lease. Call (270) 
351-7862, (270) 872-8384. 

RINEYVILLE 4 BED¬ 
ROOM. 2 bath. 4 bedroom. 
2 bath. 2000+sqft lots of 
room,ranch style home, 
fenced back yard fruit 
trees,and blackberrys 24x 
24 garage on 1.7 acres 
$1200 a month & deposit. 
Other outbuilding also for 
rent 502-377-5133 may do 
option to buy or sell. 


ONE ACRE and Mobile 
Home iteaf Magnolia, 
Ky. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 
city ViStST. central heat 
and air. Located off Hwy 
3iE and Hwy 1079 at 
1849 Die Shibolsy Road. 
$39.600. Financing Avail- 
ablB vilh a reasooablB 
down payruorit Call 
351-4977. 800L336-6331 
WWW, ken tu c k v-land. com 


1.5 A3RES set up for 
mobile home v\*th ci^ 
water electric and septic 
system. Locsted off Dixie 
Hv^y and U S hk'Jy SO 
near Fort Knox. $27,960. 
Financing Available. Call 
351-4977. 800-336-6331 
WWW, ken tu c k v-land. com 


18 MULLIGAN CT. - Doe 

Valley, Meade Co. 2 story 
brick with basement, master 
suite on all three levels, 
huge covered porch & rear 
multi level deck. Quality 
home on wooded double 
golf course lot. Flexible 
Agent/Owner terms & home 
warranty. $299,000, $2,000 
per month lease option. Call 
(270) 735-3581. 



OPEN HOUSE SUN APR 

29 FROM2-5Dm 


PRESTIGIOUS SUBDIVI¬ 
SION. 866 Freeman Lake 
Rd. Beautiful classic 
wslkaut ranch. 5 bed, 3 
baths, kitchen Wgrsnits 
coutertop appliances 
stay, ceramic tile. Formal 
Uving, Bl dining room. 
Hearth rooms vrfinteid 
hanS^/ood flooring, 
stamsd Cfpwi molding. 
Bose surround sound ex¬ 
tern in movie room with 
built m cabinetry. Game 
room with ceramic tiled 
ftooL large walk in cedar 
closet, extra large garage 
tor hobbies. New roof and 
heating an air 
conditiQnrng. Perennial 
gardens, lots of mature 
shade trees, within welk- 
mg distance to hiking 
trills of Fraeman Lake 
$335 000 502-220-5088 


All real estate advertising 
in this newspaper is 
subject to the Fair 
Housing Act which makes 
it illegal to advertise “any 
preference, limitation or 
discrimination based on 
race, color, religion, sex, 
handicap, familial status or 
national origin or an 
intention to make any 
such preference, limitation 
or discrimination.” 

Familial status includes 
children under the age of 
18 living with parents or 
legal custodians, pregnant 
women and people 
securing custody of 
children under 18. 

This newspaper will not 
knowingly accept any 
advertising for real estate 
which is in violation of the 
law. Our readers are 
hereby informed that all 
dwellings advertised in this 
newspaper are available on 
an equal opportunity basis. 
To complain of 
discrimination, call HUD 
toll-free at 1-800-669- 
9777. The toll free 
telephone number for the 
hearing impaired is 1-800- 
927-9275. 




k. 

OPEN HOUSE, TOOft 
Rog&rsi Lanie, Sunday 
April 26, 2 to 4. Jerr^rson 
Co. 11 miles north of Fort 
Krov. home has beer to¬ 
tally redone in£ide/oul. 2 
bed. 1 batti. 1 car garage. 
$69. Call Prudential 
Parks a Weteberg. Dobi 
Davis. 502-548-0885. 


Breck Co., open S 
wooded Very private 
$23,900. $900 down, 

$320 per month. Call 
(270) 5474222: 

1-866^865-5263 website^ 
Ky-landco.ot>fn 


12 1/2 ACRES UPTON 
AREA, very private open 
paeture. all uliUtiee availa¬ 
ble $37 900. $2 300 
down with owner finanq- 
irg Cell (276) 422-1234 



RADCLIFF 414 Univer¬ 
sity Dr 3 bedroom 1 1/2 
Bath. Ml basement fin¬ 
ished, 29ft garage. 

5139.906 
Call 276-872-7267 


33 ACRES Off of Hwy 
1230 In Meade Co., all 
tworjed May ilvide 
12.960 per acie. Call 
(270) 5474222: 

1 866^865 5263 WObSite^ 
KyJandco com 



SI + ACRES 

Hardirt County, 
some vcods. 
large pond, 
great hunting 

The Land Store 
270-737-0399 


RINEYVILLE KY 3 taed^ 
room 3 bath t^oliinibfoafc 
subdivisron. Finished base¬ 
ment. hardwood floors, of¬ 
fice in basement. Jeeeics 
270-734-3176 


FREEMAN GREEN 
CONDO FOR SALE^ 
1BR 2 BA. F/SW/O a ap- 
pirencee 

wfstorage area S pool, 
^h floor wfbalcony Ouiet 
area min. from hospttefl 
coileqe mall 8.1-65 
$73 000 27fF272^MA 


55 ACRES BRECK. CO. 
fenced v^th good barn. 16 
acres wooded, bale need 
pasture. $89,606. $5006 
down. $014 monthly (or) 
30.5 acres lanced, small 
pond, pasture. $49,606. 
$2800 down $397 
monthly . (270) 422-1234 


WOODED LOT- 

in The OfChard for sale. 
.9 of acre $42,600. 
Call Z70-T34-n84 


IQO Lots& 

I OC Acreage 


LET KY LAND OF 
E’TOWN Help You Find the 
Perfect Home or Lot. Many 
Listings to Choose from in 
Central Ky. We Will Buy or 
Trade for Your Property. 
Cash Paid. We Will Finance 
Anyone. Call Ky Land at 
737-2111 or 

1-800-737-6030. 


2 ACRE LOTS - Off Hwy 
86 In Brack Co. County 
v^ter avaiteble $15,900 
I960 down. $166 per 
month. (270) 547-4222: 
1-866^865-5263 web^itO" 
Ky^landcQ cam 


4 WOODED LOTS 
10 ACRES and, up 
Smell cabin on 11 aaee. 
Roanoke area of Larue 
County. 

Okay for mobiles 
A^enf Qvmed 
The Land Store 
270-737-0399 


✓ THIS OUT! 

CALL KV LAND CO. 
OF E TOWN 


INVEST YOUR 
TAX MONEY 
IN LAND OR HOM E 

No CredH Hassles. 
Low - Low Dov^ 
Payments. 

1 to400 acres in over 

1066 looaiicna in Hardin. 

Meade. Hart. Larue. 
Breck. Nelson. Grayson, 
Allen Counties 
12-15 Homes on land 
available, move in within 
24 hourt^ Dsting available 
on web at k v-land .com 
270-737-2111. 


ROUGH RIVER WATER 
Front lots, steiting at 
$14,960 $960 down. 

$15S per month. Call 
(270) 5474222: 

1-866^865-5263 v^baitd^ 
Ky^landcQ com 


300 Legals 300 Le^als 


INVITATION TO BID 
JANITORIAL SUPPLY BID 
2012-2013 

The Hardin County Board of Edneation is 
accepting sealed bids for the pnrehase of 
Janitorial Snpplies for the period of Jnly 1, 2012 
to Jnne 30, 2013. Sealed bids will be accepted at 
the Hardin County Board of Education, 65 W.A. 
Jenkins Rd., Elizabethtown, Kentucky 42701, 
until 2:00 p.m.. May 7, 2012. Bids should be 
sealed, properly identified as a bid by labeling the 
envelope “Janitorial Bid Enclosed” in the lower 
left hand corner, and sent to the attention of 
Jessica Annis, Director of Finance. The bids will 
be opened immediately following the closing time 
and tabulated as soon as possible. The bids will 
be submitted for consideration at the regular 
meeting of the Board of Education on June 21, 
2012, at 6:00 p.m. 

Bid quotation forms, specifications and general 
specifications will be available at the Division of 
Buildings & Grounds, 2490 Leitchfield Rd., in 
Elizabethtown, Ky. Direct any inquiries regarding 
bid procedures or specifications to Patrick Owens, 
Custodial Services Manager, at (270) 769-8881. 


First Federal Savings Bank is accepting bids on 
the following restaurant equipment thru May 3, 
2012 at 9:00 A.M.: 

lea. Captive Aire Exhaust Hood only 12’ 
lea. Captive Aire Exhaust Hood only 10’ 

2ea, Drop in cold wells 

lea. Conveyor Oven 1/2 size 

4ea. atlas s/s cabinets 

lea. Pitco Fryers four well with filter 

lea. Microwave 

lea. Over Shelf 122” 

lea. Overshelf 62” 

lea. Southbend Griddle 60” 

lea. Chargrill 24” 

lea. Refrigerated Chef Base 110” 

4ea. InsertDrawer Warmers 
lea. Hand Sink workstation 
lea. Prep Table 60” 
lea. Prep table 72” 
lea. Duke Five well warmer 
lea. Worktop Freezer 60” 
lea. Worktop Cooler 4 drawer 
lea. Upright Freezer True 
lea, Hatco double strip heater 
45ea. Bar stool Wicker/Cane 
To view the equipment, please call 270-765-2134, 
extension 2332, for an appointment. First Federal 
Savings Bank reserves the right to accept or reject 
any bid. 


Advertisement for Bids 
Hardin County Water District No. 2 
360 Ring Road 

Elizabethtown, Kentucky 42 701 
Separate Sealed BIDS for the construction of 
Contract 23: Springfield Road One Million Gallon 
Composite Elevated Storage Tank will be received 
by the Hardin County Water District No. 2, 360 
Ring Road, Elizabethtown, KY 42701 until 2:00 
PM local time, May 15, 2012 and then publicly 
opened and read aloud. This contract consists of 
construction of the storage tank and 

3.13 ID Urt 0113.11 C 0 S 

Tire CONTRACT DOCUMENTS may be examined 
at the following locations: 

HARDIN COUNTY WATER DISTRICT No. 2, 

360 RING ROAD, ELIZABETHTOWN, KY 42701 
KENVIRONS, INC., 452 VERSAILLES ROAD, 
FRANKFORT, KY 40601 

F. W. DODGE/AGC, 950 CONTRACT STREET, 
LEXINGTON, KY 40505 
Copies of the CONTRACT DOCUMENTS may 
be obtained from Lynn Imaging, 328 Old Vine 
Street, Lexington, KY 40507 (859-226-5850) and 
www.Iynnimaqinq.com upon payment of a 
nonrefundable price of $150.00 for each set plus 
any shipping charges. 

Each Bidder must accompany his bid with a 
Bid Bond in amount of not less than five (5) 

E ercent of the base bid. No Bidder may withdraw 
is bid for a period of ninety (90) days. The 
Bidder awarded the contract shall execute a 
100% Performance Bond and a 100% Payment 
Bond and shall furnish insurance as required, in 
the General Conditions. This contract shall be 
completed within 400 calendar days after date of 
authorization to start work. Liquidated damages 
will be $500 per calendar day. 

Bidders must comply with the President’s 
Executive Order Nos. 11246 and 11375, which 
prohibit discrimination in employment regarding 
race, creed, color, sex, or national origin. Bidders 
must comply with Section 3, Section 109, Title VI 
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Anti-Kickback 
Act and the contract Work Hours Standard Act. 

Any bid that is obviously unbalanced may be 
rejected. The Hardin County Water District No. 2 
reserves the right to reject any and all bids and 
waive informalities. Small, minority and 
women’s businesses and labor surplus area firms 
are encouraged to bid this project. 

By: Michael Bell, Chairman 

Hardin County Water District No. 2