SPORTS, PAGE A6 Rockets, Shipley look to build on success The Sentinel-News Friday, March 15, 2013 www.SentinelNews.com © 2013, The Sentinel-News SPORTS COMING BUSINESS Rockets take aim at district, region titles Carpenter has built success on tobacco Page A6 A famous drug Save cartel story in $570 Shelby County with Wednesday in Neighbors Section B Shelbyville, Ky. UP coupons inside Vol. 173, No. 11, 20 Pages 50¢ TRIPLE S PLANNING COMMISSION Paragon: We will ‘wait and see’ Horizon to present final plans for its outlet mall By TODD MARTIN Sentinel-News Staff Writer tmartin@sentinelnews.com With Horizon Group Properties on the verge of presenting its final development plan to the Triple S Planning Commission, Paragon Outlet Partners, which has been planning a competing outlet mall in the same area, has backed off its plans – at least for now. Paragon had received a zone change for an 80-acre parcel just on the east side of Buck Creek Road, just south of Interstate 64 in Simpsonville, but Robert Brvenik, the principal with Paragon, said his company has slowed down. “There are no updates with our project at this time,” he said Thursday. “Our company has taken a wait-and-see approach with this project.” He added that there are no plans at this time to submit development plans with Triple S. However, Horizon’s plan will be presented to the commission during the regular meeting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the Stratton Center, 215 Washington Street in Shelbyville. Horizon Group’s development is located directly west of Paragon, at the intersection of Buck Creek and Veechdale roads. The company’s final plan has undergone very few changes since first presented to the public. The development calls for a 363,704-square-foot outlet mall on six tracts with two out lots. Triple S, which meets at 6:30 p.m. meeting at Stratton Center, 215 Washington Street in Shelbyville, must PLEASE see OUTLET on Page A5 Pickens is new parks chief Shelby’s lawmakers hopeful for final days State parks regional director will take over on April 1 By LISA KING Sentinel-News Staff Writer lisa@sentinelnews.com A man deeply experienced in managing parks at the state level has been chosen by the Shelby County Parks Board to lead the county’s facilities. After a 2-month search among 17 candidates, parks board chair Hubie Pollett on Tuesday night introduced Shawn Pickens, 33, a regional parks director for the Kentucky Department of Parks in Frankfort, as the county’s new parks chief, replacing Clay Cottongim, who retired in December after 38 years. Pollett said Pickens’ experience in managing state parks during the past decade has given him a broader range of experience than the others. “His enthusiasm and his expertise in dealing with all the parks systems in the state played a huge part in the decision,” Pollett said. “He was in charge of forty-three aquatic centers Staff photo by Lisa King The Shelby County Parks Board on Tuesday approved Shawn Pickens (fourth from left and below) as its new parks director. On hand for the announcement were (from left) former parks director Clay Cottongim (left) and board members Shane Suttor, Ron Creque, chair Hubie Pollett, Angie Pereira, Margo Whisman and Thomas Webb. throughout the state, and he was in charge of the recreational programs in all the state parks as well as personnel. So he is very well qualified.” Pickens said that living and working in Frankfort during the past 6 years has provided him with the opportunity to check out Shelby’s parks, and he said he has liked what he saw. “I have always been interested in Shelby County’s parks and very impressed by what we have here and knew that if anything ever opened up here, I would be very interested,” he said. “I’d stack Shelby County’s parks right up there against any parks system in the state, even Lexington, Louisville, Bowling Green.” “This parks system has Session has fallen short on several key issues By TODD MARTIN Sentinel-News Staff Writer tmartin@sentinelnews.com All over Shelbyville on Wednesday, people were texting each other, calling, and rejoicing when the news broke around 3 p.m. that a new pope finally had been selected. When newly elected Pope Francis appeared on television before a huge crowd in St. Peter’s Square in Rome and asked for his congregation’s prayers, a Shelby County priest said he was overcome with emotion. “In front of one-hundred-thousand people, he bowed his head and said, ‘I want your prayers for me,’ and tears As the Kentucky General Assembly goes into its late-session recess, most of the issues that legislators came into the session looking to resolve remain unresolved. Of the biggest topics coming into the session, only the revamping of how special taxing districts are handled was converted into a bill about which both House and Senate members could agree, but issues such as state pension reform, redistricting, the legalization of industrial hemp and tax reform remain with just a 2-day action period remaining. However, both state Rep. Brad Montell (R-Shelbyville) and state Sen. Paul Hornback (R-Shelbyville) said Thursday that they remain optimistic that a flurry of bills can hit in those final two days. Any bill passed on those final two days, however, would not get a review by the legislature if it were to be vetoed by Gov. Steve Beshear. “I think pension reform is still a possibility. I’m cautiously optimistic that we can get it worked out,” said Montell, who sits on the State Government committee, which oversees the state retirement system. “The governor says he’ll call a special session if we don’t get it worked out, but if there is no movement and agreements on both sides in the next two weeks [during the recess], I hope he doesn’t call the special session, because it will be a waste of time.” Montell said there will be several meetings during these two weeks among House and Senate leadership and Beshear to see if the differences can be addressed. “The disconnect is that the House leadership wants to identify a funding source to pay for the reform, and the Senate leadership has PLEASE see POPE on Page A5 PLEASE see LEGISLATURE on Page A1 PLEASE see PICKENS on Page A5 City, county Shelby says new form trash pope brings hope News of ‘white smoke’ committees that signified the election of Pope Francis was met By LISA KING Sentinel-News Staff Writer lisa@sentinelnews.com with joy, celebration. By LISA KING City and county officials are in the process of putting together committees to explore what actions to take – and how they might work together – concerning solid waste in Shelby County. Magistrate Hubie Pollett, who is one of four magistrates that comprise the Shelby County Fiscal Court’s Legislative Committee, said committee members should be in place by next week. “The mayor has E-mailed [Magistrate] Tony [Carriss] about it, and we are putting our committee together, too,” Pollett said, adding that Shelby County Judge Executive Rusty Newton, who is also chair of the 109 Board, the entity that oversees solidwaste disposal in the county, may head up the county’s committee. Sentinel-News Staff Writer lisa@sentinelnews.com Photo from the Holy See, Newly elected Pope Francis, Jorge Bergoglio of Argentina, is the first Pope from the Americas in the church’s 2,000-year history. PLEASE see TRASH on Page A5 DEATHS WEATHER Friday Mostly cloudy 57/49 Saturday Sunday Showers Showers 53/34 40/36 Virginia Biggers, Shelbyville Alex Chambers, Shelbyville Scattered Shirley Kistner, Shelbyville storms Mary Masters, Waddy 58/29 Etoli McGowan, Shelbyville Monday Photos by Legislative Research Committee Rep. Brad Montell (R-Shelbyville) speaks up in the State Government Committee, where any House pension reform would begin. INDEX Christina Porter, Shelbyville Balford Stephens Jr., Eminence Julie Williams, Shelbyville Page A4 Cops & courts Faith TV Classifieds Youth Looking Back A4 B4,7 B5-6 B8-9 B10 B11 NEWS DIGEST FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS A2 ONLINE: www.SentinelNews.com Shelby unemployment rises but is 4th best in the state Shelby County’s unemployment rate rose in January but was still the fourthbest rate in the Kentucky. Unemployment figures for January, released Thursday by the Kentucky Education and Workforce Development Cabinet, show Shelby with a 6.7 percent jobless rate, which trails only perennially No. 1 Woodford County (5.9), Fayette (6.5) and Oldham (6.6). Shelby’s rate rose to 6.7 percent from the 6.1 in December, but it was well below the 7.8 percent of January 2012. Rates fell year over year in 83 counties. Rounding out the top 10 lowest rates were Madison County, 7 percent; Franklin County, 7.1 percent; Daviess and Scott counties, 7.2 percent each; and Anderson, Hancock and Union counties, 7.3 percent each. Magoffin County recorded the state’s highest unemployment rate, 18.8 percent. Elsewhere in the region, rates were up across the board from December. Spencer County had the next best rate (7.8 percent), followed by Jefferson (8.2), Bullitt (8.6) and Henry (9.0). Unemployment statistics are based on estimates and are compiled to measure trends rather than actually to count people working. Civilian labor force statistics include non-military workers and unemployed Kentuckians who are actively seeking work. They do not include unemployed Kentuckians who have not looked for employment within the past four weeks. The statistics in this news release are not seasonally adjusted to allow for comparisons between United States, state and county figures. Transparency sought for superintendents’ pay State Education Commissioner Terry Holliday supports a recommendation by Auditor Adam Edelen to require superintendent contracts, benefits and evaluations be made available online after a series of school district special examinations found a lack of transparency and oversight. The two men had a joint press conference and issued a statement on Thursday to announce their positions after the Auditor’s office last week released a scandalous special examination that found the former superintendent of Dayton Independent Schools received $224,000 in benefits and pay- The Sentinel-News (No. USPS 492-580) Published each Wednesday and Friday morning at 703 Taylorsville Rd., Shelbyville, Ky., Post office address P.O. Box 399, Shelbyville, Ky. 40066-0399. Phone 633-2526; Fax (502) 633-2618; e-mail, sdoyle@sentinelnews.com; web site, www.sentinelnews.com. Publisher: Kerry Johnson ments over an 8-year period that were not authorized by the school board. An examination released last fall found the former superintendent of the Mason County School District also received compensation in excess of his contract. “When school boards are in the dark about the benefits and payments their own superintendents are receiving, how can the public ever be confident their tax dollars are being spent to provide our children with the world-class education they deserve?” Edelen said. Superintendent salaries are currently posted on the Kentucky Department of Education’s Web site, but more information about superintendent contracts and benefits – such as expense allowances, retirement benefits and tuition assistance – would be needed to give a complete picture of superintendents’ total compensation packages. Baptists support religion bill Stating that he wished “to do all I can to see this bill become law,” Kentucky Baptist Convention Executive Director Paul Chitwood sent a letter to Gov. Steve Beshear this week, urging him to sign House Bill 279, the Religious Freedom Act. “The protection of religious liberty is of vital importance to more than 750,000 Kentucky Baptists and all people of faith in our great state,” Chitwood said in a cover letter to state legislators, The Western Recorder reported. The Religious Freedom Act seeks to strengthen legal protections for religious minorities by restoring “compelling interest” and “least restrictive means” as the legal tests by which the government must prove any action before restricting religious freedom. The bill, proponents argue, brings Kentucky back into line with federal courts, which have used the standard since the 1930s. They argue that the courts can determine if a law “substantially burdens” someone’s religious practices. “All this bill would do is to return long-standing legal protections to the people of faith that the Kentucky Supreme Court took away in a decision last October,” Martin Cothran of The Family Foundation said in a recent press release. 7 p.m. next Tuesday at Painted Stone Elementary’s library. There will be hands-on activities and take-home materials. Childcare will be provided for preschool and older children. A registration form is available from an SCPS preschool teacher or by sending an E-mail to Saylor Aylmer at saylor.aylmer@shelby.kyschools. us. Kindergarten registration is from 9 a.m.-1:30 p.m. March 27 at the six elementary schools and again from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. April 23. At the registration, parents should bring their child for an assessment while they complete required paperwork. To enroll in Kindergarten, the child must be 5 years of age on or before Oct. 1 as verified by a state-certified birth certificate. Certain documents that are needed for registration include state-certified birth certificate, child’s social security card, current immunization records on Kentucky form, physical exam, eye exam, dental exam, proof of residence and student registration form. Proof of current immunizations (vaccines) is required by the Kentucky State Department of Health is required to be presented at the time of registration. The registration process is not complete until all immunizations are current. Proof of residency is required at the time of new student registration. Proof of residence is the child’s home address verified with a copy of a current utility bill. Two proofs of residence are needed. A parent/guardian driver’s license will not be accepted. Bus transportation is available for all students as well as breakfast and lunch. kjohnson@sentinelnews.com Postmaster: Send address changes to Sentinel-News, P.O. Box 399, Shelbyville, Ky. 40066-0399. Second class postage paid at Shelbyville. Annual subscription prices: Shelby, Henry and Spencer County – one year, $48; six months, $27.50; three months, $16; senior citizens, $47; elsewhere in Ky. — one year, $66; six months, $37; three months, $22; out-of-state — one year, $79; six months, $43; three months, $24. This newspaper is recyclable cubcadet.com EXCLUSIVE INNOVATIONS. UNRIVALED PERFORMANCE. Democrats set meeting The Shelby County Democratic Committee will meet at 6:30 p.m. next Tuesday at Stratton Center, 219 Washington St., Shelbyville. All Democrats are welcome. Multi-Purpose board meeting Multi-Purpose Community Action Agency’s board of directors will meet at 1:30 p.m. March 25 at the Spencer County Fiscal Court Room located in Taylorsville. The public is invited to attend. Multi-Purpose CAA provides services in Bullitt, Shelby and Spencer Counties. The Kentucky Press News Service contributed to this report. PUBLIC MEETINGS Shelbyville Water and Sewer Commission meets at 6:30 p.m. Monday at 1059 Washington St. Shelby County Fiscal Court meets at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the Stratton Center, 215 Washington St. Tuesday. Triple S. Planning and Zoning meets at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Stratton Center. The Simpsonville City Commission meets 8:30 a.m. Wednesday at City Hall. The West Shelby Water Board meeting is 8:30 a.m. Thursday at the office, 7101 Shelbyville Road in Simpsonville. Phone 722-8944. Shelbyville City Council meets at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at City Hall, 315 Washington St. CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS The continuation of an article on Page A10 on March 13, about a traffic accident that involved Shelbyville resident Natalie Mudd, may have left unclear the relationship between Mudd and another employee of State Farm Insurance. Lacey Lamon, quoted about Mudd’s condition, said she does not know Mudd, although she is employed at the agency where Mudd has worked. The Sentinel-News evaluates for correction or clarification all errors identified by or brought to the attention of the editor. Concerns should be directed to Editor Steve Doyle at sdoyle@sentinelnews.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter Parent academy for schools The Shelby County Public Schools Parent Academy is offering a free workshop, “What can I do to prepare my child for kindergarten,” from 6 to Shelby County elementary schools operate on a regular schedule beginning Aug. 7. The regular school day is 7:40 a.m. to 2:25 p.m. If you have questions, contact 6332375. The Sentinel-News continues to reach out to you with new forms of news delivery. With more than 4,100 friends on Facebook, ranking it among the most popular newspapers on the social networking site, The SentinelNews now also offers news updates on Twitter. 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The Best Buy Seal and other licensed materials are registered certification marks and trademarks of Consumers Digest Communications, LLC, used under license. For award information, visit ConsumersDigest.com. © 2013 Cub Cadet 2013_FULL_LINE_Q_BW ML# 00993 F kf t C t Frankfort Customers 502-227-9889 Web site: Ferrellsllc.com CE# 9673 FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS, SHELBYVILLE, KY. — A3 ODYSSEY OF THE MIND 3 Shelby teams are headed to world finals Collins, West Middle School, Clear Creek Elementary groups going to Michigan By TODD MARTIN Sentinel-News Staff Writer tmartin@sentinelnews.com West Middle (above) took first place last weekend in the Odyssey of the Mind state competition at Northern Kentucky University with the problem It’s How You Look At It. The team members are (standing, from left) Sophia Mazarakis, Lindsey Overstreet, Miles Megibben, Leslie Overstreet, Emma Lanter, Webb Bates and (seated) Katie Hodge. Collins High School (right) took first place with the problem ARTchitecture: The Musical. The team members are (back row, from left) Jonathan Barnett, Alora Mazarakis, Phillip Burkhardt, Maggie Garratt; (front row) Libby Langlois, Ryan Ruff and (not pictured) Eli Megibben. Photos submitted Clear Creek Elementary took first with the problem It’s How You Look At It. The team members, shown here taking a break at the regional competition, are Ben Judd, Mary Malone, Gabe Conley, Chloe Tate Jackson, Ashleigh Howell and Clay Hardigree. Plan to help fill Backpack By LISA KING Sentinel-News Staff Writer lisa@sentinelnews.com Shelby County schools had 15 teams qualify for the state Odyssey of the Mind competition last weekend at Northern Kentucky University, and three of them took home championships to advance to the world finals in May at Michigan State University. “It was great. We had one team at each level advance, and we had another five teams finish in third place, just missing qualifying for the world finals,” said Teresa Walther, the Talented and Gifted teacher for East and West middle schools. The top two teams qualify for the world finals, and the scores were so close that one Collins team missed second place by just 1.68 points and an East team missed out by just six points. Odyssey of the Mind is a creative problemsolving competition in which teams of seven compete in a long-term performance, a spontaneous answer round and a style category. The long-term problem performance consists of teams working through an issue in a skit that is performed in front of an audience and the judges. The spontaneous round has a group of five answer questions posed by judges. The questions require students to be quick-minded and can range from problem-solving to wordplay. Teams earn style points based on the creativity and the originality of their work. The teams that advanced from Shelby County and the problems they competed in are: Collins – ARTchitecture: The Musical West – It’s How You Look At It Clear Creek – It’s How You Look At It After having four teams qualify for the world finals last year, Walther said she is pleased with the district’s growth and success in the competition. “We’ve grown about every year,” she said. “That’s been a little surprising, because I thought we’d level out. But we’re getting more and more middle and high school teams, and the elementary schools really just started doing it last year.” The Collins team that took first is a group of seasoned veterans who will be making their fourth trip to the world finals. But the West and Clear Creek squads are both new. “The Collins team has stayed together for years,” Walther said. “They may have added a new person last year, but they’re a very creative bunch that needs very little coaching. “The West team, they surprised us a little because they’re all sixth-graders that were competing against mostly eighth-graders. I’m really excited to see them stay together and grow. “Clear Creek is all new, too, and Odyssey of the Mind is relatively new to our elementary schools.” The teams practice on Wednesday’s after school and on the weekends for extra work. The world finals will be May 22-26. We, the Lawrenceburg Alumni of Lincoln Institute, hereby offer a $ 100 Reward for SPORTS TROPHIES that were presented to LINCOLN INSTITUTE during the time it was operated as a school. Finchville Ruritan Club Fish Fry Friday, March 15 • 5:30 to 7:30 pm 5596 Taylorsville Rd. (Hwy. 55, 4 miles south of I-64) IF RETURNED, NO QUESTIONS WILL BE ASKED. CALL JOHN CUNNINGHAM, CLASS OF 1955, AT 859-213-8871. These trophies will become part of a display at the Whitney Young House for all alumni to see. Fish, wedges, cole slaw, baked beans, cobbler and drink 1 0.00 $ The Shelby County Backpack Helping Project is once again in need of food, and the latest drive to help is being Backpack held by Kentucky Farm Bureau WHAT: Food during an event on Saturday. donations for Agent Mary Jo Newton said the Shelby County KFB trailer would be parked at Backpack Project Shelby County High School Saturday WHEN: Saturday during the Shelby County Chamber of Commerce’s Community Showcase WHERE: to take donations for the organizaChamber’s tion. Community Excellent Service The project, began in 2006 by Showcase at Independent licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association. Reasonable Rates Cristy Meredith, furnishes food for ®Registered marks Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association. SCHS 50+ Years Experience underprivileged elementary school TO MAIL A children to eat on the weekends, Individual DONATION: when they are not able to have Small Business P.O. Box 117, access to meals at school. Farms Shelbyville, KEITH NETHERY 502-633-2812 Newton said she urges everyone, S-Corporations 40066 500 Main St. • Shelbyville, Kentucky whether attending the showcase 9-6 M-F or not, to bring items of food to the trailer. 9-2 Sat “It’s a really big trailer, and we want to fill it,” she said. 99RMIndependent Authorized Agent in Kentucky for Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield. 001KY 921 MAIN STREET • SHELBYVILLE “We’re making a big push to get everybody that attends to bring food for the Backpack program, because they have no food right now.” Needed items include cans of Vienna sausage, soup, Chef Boyardee products, Pop Tarts, cereal bowls, cereal bars, fruit cups, and snacks, such as peanut-butter and crackers, chips, Rice-Crispy treats, pudding and similar items. Newton said food should be in pull-top containers, If you didn’t use H&R Block, bring in your so children can open them easily. return for a FREE Second Look® Review. “It can be any flip-top We can uncover differences which may item,” she said. lead to bigger refunds.ª We’ll look back up Since Backpack’s estabto 3 years. Bring in your 2009, 2010, 2011 lishment, many different and 2012 returns for a Second Look today. organizations and businesses We are all about service have conducted food drives. * Now offering Pick-up & Delivery for ¶At participating offices. Fees apply if you have us file a corrected or amended return. ªResults may vary. All tax situations are Newton said several churches different. Expires April 30, 2013.OBTP# B13696 ©2012 HRB Tax Group, Inc. are also doing so, including all Simpsonville Residence or Business Shelby Christian Church. People also may bring food * We can text you when your car is to either of Shelby County’s ready two Kentucky Farm Bureau offices, at 1201 Mount Eden 6986 Shelbyville Road • Simpsonville, KY 40067 Road or at 6999 Shelbyville 502-722-5980 • Text: 502-220-4004 Road. www.simpsonvilleautomotive.com Monetary donations may also be made by mailing a Text 2013 to receive check to the Shelby County Governor’s Square, Shelbyville, KY 40065 n 502-633-5950 Backpack Project, P.O. Box 117, Shelbyville, 40066. 5630 Main St, Eminence, KY 40011 n 502-8454-163 Expires 5-31-13 INDIVIDUAL, FAMILY AND SENIOR HEALTH PLANS HAGER TAX Serving Shelby and surrounding counties since 1959 921 Main St. 633-0584 FREE SECOND LOOK® REVIEW¶ (502) 722-5980 Doing more to keep your family going than simply Àxing what is broken! 10% off labor A4 — SENTINEL-NEWS, SHELBYVILLE, KY., FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013 OBITUARY COPS & COURTS Longtime paper delivery man dies suddenly Paperwork causes Bruner’s new hearing By LISA KING Alex Chambers had been with The Sentinel-News for 40 years. By LISA KING Sentinel-News Staff Writer lisa@sentinelnews.com Alex Chambers Jr., a longtime newspaper delivery man, who had worked for The Sentinel-News for 40 years, died suddenly Wednesday at Jewish Hospital in Louisville. Chambers, 74, a Shelbyville resident, also had worked in maintenance at Jewish Hospital Shelbyville for 50 years. Chambers worked in the very early morning hours, collecting newspapers after they had been assembled for circulation and delivering them to post offices and retail outlets around the county. On Wednesday, he had been delayed in that task by an equipment Alex Chambers Jr. failure at the newspaper’s production facility in Shepherdsville and, after waiting for a few hours for delivery of the papers to the offices on Taylorsville Road, he departed for what he said would be a brief period. He stopped at Walgreens on Taylorsville Road and collapsed there. He was rushed to Jewish Hospital Shelbyville and then on to Louisville. Cause of death was a brain aneurism. Sentinel-News Publisher Kerry Johnson expressed sorrow at Chambers’ passing. “Alex was a treasure, one of those employees who does such a reliable, consistent job, and has been doing it for years,” he said. “We will miss him.” Former Sentinel-News Publisher Jim Edelen also expressed his sadness when he heard about Chambers’ death, and echoed many of the same sentiments about Chambers’ dedication to his job. “When I started at the paper in seventy-five, he was already on the job, and I didn’t meet him for weeks and weeks,” Edelen said. “He was a very quiet fellow. When I finally got to know him, I found he was just a very calm, capable person, and he just did a super job for us all these years. We never had to check on him, or do anything. We just automatically knew we could depend on him. He was the best employee we ever had.” A native of Shelby County, son of the late Anna Elizabeth Johnson and Alex Chambers Sr., he was a handyman who loved to tinker with old cars and was a collector of anything vintage and old, family members said. He was very involved in African-American history and enjoyed collecting old photographs and passing on history to friends and family. He was an honorary member of The Hornet Club and a member of the Church of God of America. He was married to the late Dora Mae Young Chambers and had two daughters, Theresa Harris and Cheryl Graves, and two sons, Victor Young and Kendrick Chambers, five grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Sentinel-News Staff Writer lisa@sentinelnews.com Mark Bruner, charged with the brutal beating of a woman left by the side of the road, is scheduled for a status hearing on Monday in Shelby County Circuit Court. Bruner was scheduled to have stood a jury trial this past Monday, but that was postponed because some needed paperwork was not in place, said Shelby County Assistant Commonwealth Attorney Melanie Carroll, who is hanMark dling the case. “I think everything we were waiting on is now available,” she said. Bruner, 38, of Taylorsville was indicted last year by a Shelby County Grand Jury on charges of first-degree assault and tampering with physical evidence against him in connection with the beating of Denisse Escareno on Nov. 5, 2011. Bruner has pleaded not guilty to the charge of firstdegree assault, a Class B felony, punishable by 10 to 20 years in prison. His public defender, Melanie Lowe-Stratton, was not available for comment, but Carroll she does not expect Bruner to enter a guilty plea n Monday, especially given that no plea agreements have been discussed. SHELBY COUNTY SHERIFF’S REPORTS DUI Russell D. Show, 36, of 6540 Zaring Mill Road was arrested Jan. 11 on Zaring Mill Road and charged with operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol or drugs, first offense and leaving the scene of an accident. Adalberto Gaspas-Leon, 29, of 1239 Huntington Lane in Louisville was arrested Jan. 20 at Taylorsville and Brunnerstown roads and charged with operating a motor vehicle under the influence and no operator’s license. He was also served with a Jefferson County warrant for an unstated charge. Melvin E. Gaines Jr., 46, of Ada Avenue was arrested Jan. 20 at 819 Buck Creek Road and charged with operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol or drugs, first offense, careless driving, first-degree possession of a controlled substance (drug unspecified) and having a prescription controlled substance not in a proper container. No operator’s license Mavin Alexander Tian Orozco, 21, of Midland Boulevard was arrested Jan. 18 on Main Street and charged with no operator’s license and careless driving. Shelby resident named top Lexington firefighter By LISA KING Sentinel-News Staff Writer lisa@sentinelnews.com Justin Myatt, a Lexington firefighter who lives in Shelbyville, was nominated for Firefighter of the Year with that department. His nomination last month stemmed from taking excellent care of fire hose for the entire department. He is in charge of inventory, repair and ordering hose for all of Lexington’s 23 stations. He did not win, but his wife, Kim, said it was still a big honor because only four were nominated out of 500 Justin Myatt firefighters. The award was announced Feb. 2 in Lexington. Myatt has been with the Lexington Fire Department since 2005 and worked as volunteer firefighter in Shelby County briefly before moving 6 years ago to Shelbyville with his wife and daughter, Shelby. Myatt and his wife are from Shelby County and are 2000 and 2001 graduates of Shelby County High School, respectively. DEATH NOTICES Virginia ‘Polly’ Biggers Shirley A. Kistner Virginia “Polly” Biggers, 90, died Wednesday, March 13, 2013, at the Jewish Hospital in Shelbyville. She was a native of Shelby County and was preceded in death by her husband, Morris L. Biggers; and her son, William Joseph Broughton. She is survived by her daughter, Pat Broughton Brown of Bagdad; her step-daughter, Pamela Biggers Walls of Waddy; her half-sister, Faye Hughes Dadisman of Shelbyville; her half-brothers, Roy Hughes and Eddie Hughes, both of Shelbyville. Services will be 2 p.m. Monday at the Shannon Funeral Home. Visitation is 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday at the funeral home. Burial is in Grove Hill Cemetery. Expressions of sympathy can be made to WHAS Crusade For Children. Shirley A. Kistner, 86, of Shelbyville, died Sunday, March 10, 2013, at Masonic Home Shelbyville. A native of Shelby County, she was the daughter of the late John William and Mary Alice Searcy Spaulding, and the widow of Charles M. “Mert” Kistner. She was preceded in death by two sons, Larry Wilson and Terry Moffett. Survivors include her grandson, Ted Moffett of Shelbyville, her stepson, Jim Kistner of Shelbyville; her stepdaughter, Joan Willoughby of Sellersburg, Ind.; her daughter-in-law, Geraldine Moffett of Shelbyville. Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Friday at the HallTaylor Funeral Home of Shelbyville. Interment will be in the Grove Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be from 11 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. Expressions of sympathy may take the form of contributions to the American Lung Association and online condolences may be expressed at www.halltaylorfuneralhomes.com. Alex Chambers, Jr. Alex Chambers Jr., 74, Shelbyville, died Wednesday, March 13, 2013, at Jewish Hospital in Louisville. A native of Shelby County, he was the son of the late Anna Elizabeth Johnson and Alex Chambers Sr. He worked in facility maintenance at the Old King’s Daughters Hospital in Shelbyville, now known as Jewish Hospital, for more than 50 years. He also worked for The Sentinel-News in newspaper distribution for 40 years. He was a handyman and would be on call for anyone to repair what was broken. He loved to tinker with old cars and was a collector of anything vintage and old. He was also very involved in Black History, collecting old photographs and passing on history to friends and family. He was a Kentucky Colonel, an honorary member of The Hornet Club and a member of the Church of God of America. In addition to his parents, his wife, Dora Mae Young Chambers, two brothers, Willie Chambers and Rev. James Chambers and one sister, Beulah Clemmonts, preceded him in death. Survivors include two daughters, Theresa Chambers (Anthony) Harris of Louisville and Cheryl (Charles) Graves of Frankfort; two sons, Victor (Amy) Young of Edinburgh, Ind. and Kendrick Chambers of Shelbyville; four sisters, Naomi Hundley of Louisville and Gladys Chambers, Betty Harris and Gayle Patterson, all of Shelbyville; two brothers, Edward (Martha) Chambers of Shelbyville and Perry (Joanne) Johnson of Frankfort; five grandchildren; five greatgrandchildren and a host of nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at Bethel A.M.E. Church with visitation 6-9 p.m. Friday at the church. Burial will follow at Calvary Cemetery. Arrangements have been entrusted to MortonBeckley Funeral Directors. On-line condolences may be expressed at www.morton-beckley.com. Etolia Stewart McGowan Etolia Stewart McGowan, 90, of Shelbyville, died Thursday, March 14, 2013, at Signature Healthcare of Spencer County in Taylorsville. Arrangements are pending at the Hall-Taylor Funeral Home of Shelbyville. “There have not been any offers,” she said. Carroll said that what probably would happen Monday is that a new trial date would be set. Bruner was arrested 10 days after Escareno, 24, was found beaten, stabbed and barely alive by passersby on the side of Mount Eden Road about 2 miles south of Interstate 64. Escareno, 24, was in a coma at the University of Louisville Hospital until Christmas Day 2011, when she opened her eyes. She has remained unresponsive, however, and was taken home to Arizona in February 2012 by Bruner her mother, Norma Zapien, who said doctors told her that her daughter never would recover mental awareness. Police have said Bruner had picked up Escareno in his truck while she was walking to a cellular-phone store on that Saturday afternoon and that she left the store with him. They haven’t said why he might have beaten her. Detectives said in court that Escareno was stabbed with a screwdriver in the chest and in the hip area. Her other serious injury was a deep indentation in the area of her right eyebrow, which, they said, she could have received by jumping from Bruner’s vehicle. Bruner remains lodged at the Shelby County Detention Center under a $100,000 bond. Mary Louise Masters Mary Louise Masters, 92, of Waddy, died Saturday, March 9, 2013 at her home. She was a member of Waddy Christian Church and a farmer. She was preceded in death by her parents, Everett and Sallie Frye, her husband, Carl Wallace Masters Sr., daughter in law, Elaine Masters, sister, Sue Martha Burriss and sister-in-law, Elizabeth McQuillen. She is survived by her sons, Wallace “Wally” Masters; Bobby Masters (Barbara) of Waddy; grandchildren, Lisa Roadcap (Steve), Simpsonville; Steve Goins, Robert Goins (Kelley); Kim Peyton (Jerry); Shane Masters, all of Waddy; great grandchildren, Lily Roadcap, Grant Roadcap, Emily Goins, Zach Goins, Jackson Goins, Michael Jesse, Lauren Jesse and Ozrik Masters; sister in law, Dorothy Knoppe, Shelbyville and dear friend, Loretta Stewart of Waddy. Funeral services will be 1 P.M. Thursday, March 14, 2013 at the Shannon Funeral Home with Rev. Tina Glosson officiating. Visitation will be 2-8 P.M. Wednesday at the funeral home. Burial will be in Grove Hill Cemetery. Expressions of sympathy may be made to Waddy Christian Church, P. O. Box 2, Waddy, KY 40076. Christine King Porter Christine King Porter, 91, of Shelbyville, KY and formerly of Scottsville, KY, died Saturday, March 9, 2013 at the Masonic Home of Shelbyville. The Macon County, TN native was a retired co-owner of Porter’s Cleaners, former clerk for Patterson’s and member of Pleasant Ridge Church. She was a daughter of the late Carl Edgar King and Gertrude Weems King and wife of the late Harry Jennings Porter, Jr. She is survived by 1 daughter: Christy Branstetter and husband, Mike, Shelbyville, KY; 2 grandchildren: Terri Alsept and husband, Aaron and Jay Branstetter and wife, Wendi; 1 step granddaughter: Melissa Steger and husband, Howard; 1 great granddaughter: Baylee Branstetter; 5 step great grandchildren; She was preceded in death by 1 brother and 1 sister. Funeral services will be 11:00 a.m. Thursday, March 14, 2013 at Goad Funeral Home with Bro. Shane Britt and Shirley Creasy officiating and burial in Crescent Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be 5:00 to 8:00 p.m. Wednesday and after 7:00 a.m. Thursday until funeral time at Goad Funeral Home. Expressions of sympathy may take the form of donations to Pleasant Ridge Church. Donations may be made at Goad Funeral Home. www.goadfh.com Balford Henry ‘Steve’ Stephens Jr. Balford Henry “Steve” Stephens Jr., age 83 of Eminence, died Friday, March 1, 2013, in Shelbyville. He was born January 5, 1930, on Tennessee Ridge, near Parksville, Ky. in Boyle County. He was the son of the late Balford Henry Stephens Sr. and Margaret L. Wilson. Steve left the farm to serve our country in the United States Navy in 1948. He was a crew member of the USS Franklin D. Roosevelt (CVB/ CVA/CV42) air-craft carrier. After three years of active duty, he served in the Naval Reserve for another three years. After his tour of duty in the Navy, Steve worked several jobs until he settled at Anaconda Wire and Cable at La Grange where he retired twenty-eight years later. Being too active to permanently retire, Steve worked several other jobs before permanent retirement in 2009 due to a degenerative disc disorder. His last position was an assistant Pest-Control Technician with FPC Pest Control. Steve loved the outdoors, was an avid golfer, fisherman, and hunter. He played golf at least two days a week until 2009. He was most proud of his walk with Jesus Christ! In his later years he got reconnected and rededicated his life to God. He was a very active member of Henry Christian Church where he served as an usher and served on the Property Committee, whether it was parking cars, landscaping, trimming shrubbery, or the official “hugger,” Steve was there to serve. He was also a member of Brother Nick Coleman’s Sunday School Class and very much appreciated the visits at the hospital and nursing home from Brother Nick and Brother Ed Berry as well as several other members of the Church. He is survived by his a son: Winford Brewer (and wife Judy); four daughters: Nancy Simpson, Elizabeth Stivers (Danny), Darlene Brewer (Greg Fitzgerald), and Pam Martin; and close friend, Jerry Martin. In addition, he is survived by seven grandchildren, four great-grand children, several nieces and nephews, and many, many friends that meant so much through the years. If you knew Balford Stephens and didn’t like him, it was your fault. Steve’s funeral was held 1 p.m. Wednesday, March 6, 2013 at Sholar Funeral Home of Pleasureville. Rev. Ed Berry, pastor of Henry Christian Church officiated, with Rev. Nick Coleman assisting. Burial was in the Stephens – Wilson Family Cemetery at Tennessee Ridge, Parksville, Ky. Honorary pallbearers were Waldo Simpson Jr., Carl Tingle, Danny Brewer, Chris Banta, Clinton Stivers and Jeremy Clark. Expressions of sympathy may take the form of contributions in Steve’s name to the Henry Christian Church, STF Fund, 136 Castle Highway, Eminence, KY 40019. Online condolences may be expressed at sholarfuneralhome. com. Julie Lynn Williams Julie Lynn Williams, 51, died Thursday, March 7, 2013, at Jewish Hospital Shelbyville. A native of Shelby County, she was the daughter of the late Sue Evans. Survivors include her son, Matthew Williams of Shelbyville (Stephanie); father Randy Williams (Judy) of Simpsonville; brothers, Bobby Williams (Verna) of Scottsville, Eddie Williams (Debbie) of Shelbyville and Mike Williams (Jan) of Franklin; and a very close friend, Terri West and two sons Anthony and Kevin. A time of sharing stories of Julie with the family and friends will be from 2 to 7 p.m. on Saturday March 16, 2013 at the Bagdad Ruritan Club. FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS, SHELBYVILLE, KY. — A5 OUTLET: Horizon’s plans to be heard Tuesday continued from Page A1 approve the details of this plan so the company can move forward with construction. The Simpsonville City Commission, which approved a zone change to accommodate the mall plan, does not have to approve these final details. The biggest difference from the original plan is the removal of one out lot from the perimeter of the property facing Buck Creek Road. Horizon Vice President Tom Rumptz, who is in charge of the project, said that removal had a lot to do with the road-widening project on Buck Creek Road. He said that given the amount of right-a-way needed, the out lots were going to be too small. The request does include one waiver: to increase the height of light poles to 33 feet instead of the standard 25 feet set by zoning regulations. The increase would allow the company to use fewer poles, and Horizon’s dark-sky lighting requirements exceed Triple S’ current regulations. The company employs only lights that direct lighting down, and light lines remain on its property, reducing light pollution. Light pole height changes are not unusual requests. The Kroger Marketplace asked for and received permission to use 40-foot poles. This is the last step Horizon faces before beginning to move ground and prepare the site for the construction, which Rumptz has said it plans to have finished by late summer 2014. The project coincides with the widening of Buck Creek Road between U.S. 60 and just south of I-64, and Horizon will reroute Veechdale Road south from its current intersection with Buck Creek. Horizon began in 2011 the process of working with Simpsonville and Triple S officials in 2011 and has received a zone change and a permit from the Army Corps of Engineers to fill a portion of a PICKENS: New parks director continued from Page A1 great potential. It’s already great; I think it can be even greater. It has a great foundation, there’s master plans for all the major sites, so it can only go from great to great. We just have to get more community support, which we already have a ton of, to keep moving forward.” Pollett said the board considered five finalists, with two of them being from Kentucky. “We got down to five we were going to interview, but one dropped out,” he said. “One was from New Hampshire, one was from South Carolina and two, including Shawn, were from Kentucky.” Cottongim was part of the group who chose his successor, and he heartily endorsed Pickens for the position that has a salary of $40,000. “I think he [Pickens] will be an excellent asset for our parks,” Cottongim said. “Not only does he come to us very experienced, but he is a good person, a people person, and I think he will fit in very well. I think he’ll do his best to meet the needs of the community.” That’s high praise coming from a man who took Shelby’s parks system from three ball fields, when he started out in 1978, just 8 years after the establishment of the parks board, and expanded it into what it is today: 12 parks that encompass more than 812 acres. The latest most recent is the 70-plus-acre expansion to the nearly 400 acres of Shelby Trails Park, an equestrian and nature facility in Todds Point, which opened in 2001. Moving up But Pickens has an extensive resume. After graduating from Marshall University with a degree in parks and rec management, Pickens, a native of Kenova, W.Va., where his parents, John and Prudy Pickens still live, began his career in 2001 at Lake Cumberland State Park. He moved in 2003 to Rough River State Resort Park in Grayson County, near Leitchfield, where he stayed for three years as aquatics and recreation director, also serving as media spokesperson. “Then I was promoted to parks central office in Frankfort in 2006, which is where I still am,” Pickens said. “I had several positions there, starting as special events and aquatics director for the entire state parks system, then I moved up to regional recreation coordinator for a section of the state. For the past year, I’ve been the assistant director of recreation and historic sites, so I’ve gotten further into management and evaluation issues and performance plans, as I have begun to deal with more aspects of parks.” New director’s goals Cottongim had said when he retired that he would like to see the next director continue on with his vision for Shelby’s parks, which includes even more expansion, and Pickens said that is his main goal. “One of the main goals, which is a consensus from the board and from Clay, is expansion,” Pickens said. “We just need some more land to expand some athletic fields, and also just to protect the natural environment, because Shelbyville is growing, and Louisville is expanding our way, too, so green space is very important, because that is very valuable as cities expand. So I think that’s our number one goal, to keep expanding and keep the parks moving forward.” Pickens, who will take the helm April 1 from R.H. Bennett, who has been serving as interim parks director for more than a month, said he plans to move his family, wife, Pamela, and 16-month-old son, Zane, to Shelby County as soon as he can. “I’m extremely excited and looking forward to it very much,” he said. “Shelby County is a great place to call home, and I hope to retire here.” 6.5-acre lake and surrounding wetlands and ephemeral streams for the development. Also at the meeting, the commission will consider: A development plan for R.E.P. Rents on Haven Hill Road. The 14,300-square-foot equipment rental facility is requesting waivers on outdoor storage surface (from paved to gravel), waiving the landscape screening requirements around the outdoor storage and reducing the primary building exterior surface materials requirement to 30 percent. The property is zoned Light Industrial. An amended final planned unit development for French Quarters, on Clifton Court. The request is to amend the PUD to create separate lots for each of the 24 dwelling units. The property is zoned Medium Density Residential (R-3). WHAT THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY ACCOMPLISHED Although most of the major topics – pension reform, redistricting, tax reform, industrialized hemp – were not among the bills passed on to Gov. Steve Beshear by the House and Senate, Kentucky’s legislators did move 107 bills looking to be signed into law, and more could be added in the session’s final two days, March 25-26. State Sen. Paul Hornback (R-Shelbyville) said he is optimistic that his two bills – on legalizing industrial hemp and on telecommunications restructuring – could be heard and voted on in the House. “I think if they can be heard, if the House leadership will allow it, then they would pass,” he said. State Rep. Brad Montell (R-Shelbyville) said he is also holding out hope that the pension reform, one of the most important topics heading into the 2013 regular session, can be finished without a special session. “It’s still a possibility, and I’m cautiously optimistic that we can get it worked out,” he said. “I think we’ve accomplished some good things, but without pension reform, I don’t know how you can call this session a success.” Some of the bills sent to the governor by the House and Senate this session are: The Pill Mill Bill: House Bill 217 will clean-up some unintended issues from last year’s bill, which was heavily criticized as too broad and complicated. The changes include exempting hospitals and long-term care facilities from some prescription regulations; requiring physical and mental examinations only when appropriate to patient’s medical complaints; and allowing a 14-day exemption for surgical patients to receive appropriate pain medication. Dropout age: Allowing local public school districts to increase the dropout age to 18. Taxing districts: Providing some transparency with special taxing districts. The bill would require any tax increases to have a public hearing at the county’s fiscal court meeting. Coyote hunting: Would allow coyotes to be hunted year around with no limits, and allow baiting and electronic calls to attract coyotes. Educator evaluation: Would require the Kentucky Board of Education to establish a statewide system of evaluation for all certified employees [those working with students]. Ale-8-One: Establish Ale-8-One as the original Kentucky soft drink. Honor Sergeant Charles Floyd: Would declare Aug. 20, 2013, Sergeant Charles Floyd Day in the commonwealth in honor of the valued member of the Lewis and Clark expedition who perished on the journey. -- TODD MARTIN A subdivision plat for the Sheets Farm Divided at 297 Scott Station Road. The request is to amend the plat to adjust the property line between tracts 1A-4 and 1A-5 and to include a 16.8-foot side yard waiver. The property is zoned Agricultural. A subdivision plat for Village Plaza Shopping Center, lots 6, 7 and 7A on Church View Street. The request is to reconfigure the lots and dedicate the right-of-way for the extension of Church View Street into a cul-de-sac. The property is zoned Highway Commercial (C-4). A subdivision of the Ruhl Farm Divided. The request is to divide the property into six tracts. The property is zoned Agricultural. A subdivision regulation text amendment on Article 6 of the Variance, Enforcement and Penalties for Violation. LEGISLATURE: Optimistic continued from Page A1 not been receptive to the House’s ideas of funding,” Montell said. The Senate’s stance has been to vote on and secure policy changes, while working on funding sources while working through the budget process next year. “If we can find a funding source that we agree on, I’m all for it,” Montell said. “But if not, I can’t think of a reason we shouldn’t look at putting policy in place.” Hornback said the clock is ticking on pension reform. “That’s probably the biggest problem out there, and every year we wait it adds to what we have to pay off in the future,” he said. To fund the system fully, it’s expected the state would need $100 million to $120 million from the general fund next year and similar amounts in the coming years. The higher amount would boost investment returns and possibly allow for lower future payments. Hornback also has two controversial bills still hanging that he hopes will be brought up during the final two days. “The hemp bill and the telecommunications bill, I think will come back up,” he said. “We’ll discuss them between now and the twenty-fifth, and I think they’ll either come back up for a vote or be killed.” The hemp bill would make it legal for Kentucky famers to grow industrial hemp if the federal legislation banning the crop is lifted. Kentucky’s Congressional delegation is supporting such a move. Just before the recess an amendment was added to Hornback’s bill by House Majority Floor Leader Rocky Adkins (D-Sandy Hook), establishing a 5-year research program in which hemp growers are licensed by state police; registering hemp processors; and creating tax credits for growers and processors of industrial hemp. The telecommunications bill would allow phone companies to stop being required to provide land-line phone service to new customers if the area has adequate cell phone service or high-speed Internet service that is capable of providing phone service unless that community has less than 5,000 households. “I believe both bills bring revenue and jobs to the state, and if they’re presented to the House for a vote, they will pass,” he said. Both Hornback and Montell say they believe at this point that a special session, which must be called by Beshear and can only work on topics of his choice – for instance, pension of redistricting – is bad idea, unless concessions are made during the 2-week recess. “Unless a deal is already brokered, there’s no point in calling a special session,” Hornback said. “I know the members of the Senate are doing everything they can to avoid a special session. If we can’t agree on it in a regular session, we won’t agree on it in a special session.” During these 2 weeks, Beshear will review the remainder of 107 bills passed in the session with the option to veto. The legislature, when it reconvenes for March 25-25, will the revue to vetoed bills and possibly take action on other bills. TRASH: No consensus yet continued from Page A1 Newton’s involvement is desired to keep the 109 Board involved in workshops and discussions between the two committees, Pollett said. The discussions might focus on getting better rates by joint bidding and common billing procedures. The decision to establish the committees stemmed from an hour-long joint workshop by city and county officials on March 6, when officials discussed how the two governments might work together on the issue of curbside trash and recycling for all residents in the city and county (Simpsonville already has a garbage-only service). At that time, Carriss proposed to council members to form either a single committee, composed of both city and county officials, or a committee from each governmental body to work jointly to explore the issue. Carriss distributed a handout outlining six possible options for curbside pickup plans, that included different variations of plans with the two governments working together on plans, aided by an interlocal agreement, to each entity providing its own plan separately, but at the same time, doing so in conjunction with what the other was providing. The issue of curbside pickup emerged during a series of public meetings by the 109 Board about its plans to build a $2.5 million facility on Windhurst Way in Shelbyville. The board purchased 25 acres there last year for $655,000 and has spent $130,000 developing plans for the new complex, which would replace the Convenience Center in Waddy and the Recycling Center on 7th Street. Use of the facility may require a 3-to-5-cent usage fee for disposal of household trash. Pollett said the committees expect to begin meeting in a week or so. POPE: Millions across the world, including Shelby, optimistic about Francis continued from Page A1 fell from my eyes, and I dropped to my knees in prayer,” said Mike Tobin, pastor of the Church of the Annunciation. “Let us pray in silence, this your prayer for me,” said Pope Francis, who is Argentine Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio. Tobin made the observation, as has been noted worldwide, that Francis is the first pope from the Americas – in fact the first nonEuropean pope since the 700s – the first Jesuit pope and the first pope to take the name of Francis. The fact that Bergoglio chose the name Francis, drawing connections to the humble 13th-century saint who saw his calling as trying to rebuild the church in a time of turmoil, is especially meaningful to Tobin. “How much more can you demonstrate that you want to be a shepherd rather than a monarch?” he said. Attention worldwide had been on the Vatican, where a conclave of cardinals had gathered to elect the successor for Pope Benedict, many watching for the telltale white smoke to be released from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel, signifying a complete election. Phyllis Sower, principal of Our Lady of Guadalupe Academy in Simpsonville, said the announcement that a pope had been elected caused a sensation among her students Wednesday afternoon. “We all gathered around the TV the moment we heard that white smoke had appeared; we had been live streaming it since it started on Tuesday,” she said. “The children were excited; the adults were excited. We were just all watching with great expectations, were very pleased with the selection of the new pope.” Sower, like Tobin, remarked on the pope’s humility, caring and holiness. “It’s surprising that he’s nonEuropean, but it’s wonderful to have a pope from this side of the Atlantic,” she said, expressing surprise echoed by many who expected that one of several other prominent cardinals would be elected. Francis, the son of middleclass Italian immigrants, is a long-time archbishop of Buenos Aires who has spent nearly his entire career in Argentina, overseeing churches there. He is well known for his humility, living very simply, without indulging in luxuries, even riding the bus to work, cooking his own meals and regularly visiting the slums that surround Argentina’s capital. He nearly become pope in 2005, gaining the second-highest vote total in several rounds of voting in the conclave that elected Pope Benedict XVI, 85, who resigned suddenly and unexpectedly in February, citing ill health and an inability to continue to lead the church. The last pope to resign was Pope Gregory XII in 1415, who stepped down to end the “Great Western Schism,” during which there were rival claims to the papal throne. In 1294, Pope Celestine V resigned after only five months, saying that he preferred the simple life of a monk to the majesty of being pope. There has been some speculation that Pope Benedict might have chosen this particular time to resign to ensure a new pope would be in place for Easter. Shelbyville resident Gary Walls, a member of Annunciation, said that the timing of the election of a new pope has awed him for personal reasons, as his son had previously given him a gift of a trip to Rome for Easter. “To think that I will be there during this time – well, it’s just too amazing for words,” he said. Shelby County Judge-Executive Rob Rothenburger, who is also a Catholic, said that in watching the new pope’s first speech to the crowd, he felt like the pope was, in his own way, sending a message of hope for the future of the Catholic Church, which has been riddled with scandal. “I was thinking last night about how the pope, in reciting the Lord’s Prayer, put an emphasis on ‘forgive us for our trespasses,’” he said. “To me, that means that, yes, we need to remember what happened in the past, but it’s time to move on. “I think that’s exactly what is needed in the Catholic Church. We shouldn’t forget what happened, but it’s time to move on and come together once again as Catholics.” Rothenburger said he thinks the new pope is an excellent choice for both North and South America, as the Latino population comprises 40 percent of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics. “There is a growing Latino population in the United States, and we are closely tied with South America, and the Latino Community is deeply entrenched in Catholicism,” he said. Tobin said having a Latin American pope means a great deal to the Latino population in Shelby County. “Out of nine-hundred and fifty families in our parish, four hundred are Hispanic,” he said. Francis will be installed officially on Tuesday, on the feast of St. Joseph. FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013 SPORTS A6 The Sentinel-News • Online: www.SentinelNews.com/sports BASEBALL: SHELBY COUNTY PREVIEW Rockets’ ‘pups’ are no underdogs Roettger: Team has ‘added expectations’ Shelby County at a glance Coach: Bart “Rudy” Roettger Roster By JOSH COOK Sentinel-News Sports Reporter jcook@sentinelnews.com After a couple of years of being the underdogs, the Shelby County baseball team should be back among the big dogs in the 8th Region this season. “It seems like only yesterday our program relied on putting a bunch of unproven young pups on the field,” Rockets Coach Bart “Rudy” Roettger said. “Two years and thirty-nine wins later, those same kids are now proven winners.” Shelby County returns 16 lettermen from a team that went 23-14 – a 7-victory improvement from 2011 – and upset county-rival Collins, 10-8, in 11 innings in the 30th District Tournament semifinals to advance to the 8th Region tourney. “With such experience comes added expectations,” said Roettger, whose team lost, 5-2, to Henry County in the first round of the regional. “We are very fortunate to have ten kids who started at least half our games and the majority of our innings back on the mound from last year to handle the lofty goals our upperclassmen have set this season.” Six seniors and five juniors will lead the way – and five sophomores should contribute too – for the Rockets, who begin their season at 5 p.m. today at Louisville Moore. Among those is senior pitcher-infielder Kam Bruner, who has committed to play at Spalding University next year. Bruner, who will move from first base to second this season, batted .431, had 44 hits (including 14 doubles and three home runs), 40 RBIs (the most in the program since 2001) and scored 30 runs on his way to earning all-region honors. The other seniors are catcher Kevin Veeley, leftfielder Kyle Durbin, centerfielder Austin Rhodes, outfielder-pitcher Nathan Hayes and pitcher Tyler Eades. Staff photo by Josh Cook Veeley, who led the team in RBIs as a sophomore, missed the second half of last Shelby County senior second baseman-pitcher Kam Bruner, who batted .431 with 44 season after tearing his ACL. He’s slated hits and 40 RBIs last season, is back to lead the Rockets this season. Shelby County to hit cleanup this year. opens its season at 5 p.m. today at Louisville Moore. “Kevin has worked very hard to get “I will put Kipp up against any player in the innings on the mound. back into playing shape,” Roettger said of Holmes, meanwhile, will help anchor the outVeeley, who had three hits in Shelby’s scrimmage state,” Roettger said of Moore, who also had a 4-3 field. against Franklin County last Saturday. “His pre- record on the mound in 2012. “His athleticism is off the charts,” Roettger The other juniors include first baseman-outseason at-bats have been very good.” Eades, the team’s ace as a sophomore, was fielder-pitcher Dillon Boone, right fielder Zach said. “He has been around baseball his whole life. plagued by injuries last season, when he went Holmes, outfielder Alex Bradley and infielder- He knows the game as well as anyone. We are looking for big things for Zach this year.” 2-0 with a 2.63 earned-run average. However he’s pitcher David Fitzgerald. The quintet of sophomores includes third Boone, entering his third year as a starter, will healthy to start this spring. “Tyler’s work ethic has put him in position to move up to the No. 2 spot in the batting order baseman Kyler Dugle, first baseman-designated hitter Steven Standafer, infielder Joe Crisp, utilityafter hitting cleanup last season. have a big year,” Roettger said. “He’s a great situational hitter,” Roettger said. man Cam Veeley and catcher Dallas Wills. The junior class is led by shortstop-pitcher Kipp Dugle, entering his third season as a starter, Moore, who hit .408, scored 49 runs and stole 36 “He has improved greatly from last year.” Boone also went 3-1 with 26 strikeouts in 21 bases in earning all-region honors last season. Please see ROCKETS on Page A7 TRACK & FIELD: COLLINS PREVIEW INF-P Kam Bruner (senior); OF-P Kyle Durbin (senior); P-UTIL Tyler Eades (senior); OF-P Nathan Hayes (senior); C-OF Austin Rhodes (senior); C-P Kevin Veeley (senior); P-UTIL Dillon Boone (junior); OF Alex Bradley (junior); P-INF David Fitzgerald (junior); OF-P Zach Holmes (junior); INF-P Kipp Moore (junior); UTIL Joe Crisp (sophomore); INF-P Kyler Dugle (sophomore); INF-P Steven Standafer (sophomore); UTIL Cameron Veeley (sophomore); C Dallas Wills (sophomore); INF Taylor Crawford (freshman); OF-P Riley Everson (freshman); INF-P Matthew Gammon (freshman); UTIL Chase Likes (freshman); UTIL Spencer Shouse (freshman). Schedule MARCH 15 – at Moore, 8 p.m.; 16 – at Dunbar, noon; 22 – OLDHAM COUNTY, 8 p.m.; 23 – at Thomas Nelson, noon; 26 – WILLIAMSTOWN, 6 p.m.; 28 – GALLATIN COUNTY, 5:30 p.m.; 29 – NORTH BULLITT, 5:30 p.m.; 30 – at Powell County, noon; vs. Letcher County Central at Powell County, 2:30 p.m. APRIL 2 – at North Hardin, 5:30 p.m.; 3 – at Carroll County, 5 p.m.; 5 – ROWAN COUNTY, noon; 6 – BULTER COUNTY, noon; 9 – OWEN COUNTY, 7:30 p.m.; 10 – at Henry County, 5:30 p.m.; 11 – vs. Tates Creek at Harrison County, 7:30 p.m.; 13 – vs. Conner at Harrison County, 12:30 p.m.; 16 – at Anderson County, 8 p.m.; 17 – MOORE, 5:30 p.m.; 19 – vs. Covington at St. Henry, 6 p.m.; 20 – at St. Henry, 10 am.; vs. Pleasure Ridge Park at St. Henry, 12:30 p.m.; 23 – FAIRDALE, 5:30 p.m.; 24 – SENECA, 5:30 p.m.; 27 – OAK HILLS (OHIO), 4 p.m.; WESTERN HILLS, 5:30 p.m.; 30 – at Spencer County, 5:30 p.m. MAY 1 – FRANKLIN COUNTY, 5:30 p.m.; 2 – SIMON KENTON, 6 p.m.; 3 – at Grant County, 6 p.m.; 6 – at Western Hills, 6 p.m.; 8 – COLLINS, 8 p.m.; 11 – at Southern, 2:30 p.m.; 14 – at Bullitt Central, 5:30 p.m.; 15 – ATHERTON, 8 p.m.; 17 – at South Oldham, 7:30 p.m. TRACK & FIELD: SHELBY COUNTY PREVIEW A Karas will lead Rockets revved and ready – as has been case Shipley, Barry, vets lead teams Shelby County at a glance Coach: Nick Edwards. Distance runner tops Titans’ contingent By JOSH COOK Sentinel-News Sports Reporter jcook@sentinelnews.com By JOSH COOK Sentinel-News Sports Reporter jcook@sentinelnews.com The Collins track & field teams return many of its top athletes – including one state champion – from last season. “We’ve got most of our people back. I think we’ll be competitive,” Coach Jerry Lucas said. Collins was competitive last season, when its girls’ team finished seventh and its boys’ squad eighth in the difficult Class AA, Region 3 meet. “It’s such a strong region [that] you know if you are competitive in the region you can compete at Staff photo by Josh Cook state,” said Lucas, whose team opens up Tuesday at Shelby Collins eighth-grader Gabby County. Karas is the defending Karas leads girls Eighth-grader Gabby Karas, a 2-time state cross-country champ, captured her first state title in track last season – winning the 1,600-meter run. She will be the favorite to defend her title in that event, and she may run the 3,200 as well. “Gabby works her butt off,” Lucas said. “I certainly expect her to have a great season.” Karas leads a distance contingent that includes most of the crosscountry team, including seniors Maria Cozzens and Adrienne Holtzworth and sophomores Sinead Maharrey, Elizabeth McGuire and Brandi Pratt, who sat out crosscountry season with an injury. The Titans’ other strength should be the sprints. Freshman The Shelby County track & field teams return one state champion as well as an ample amount of athletes from squads that finished in the top five in the region. The boys, led by eventual 300-meter hurdle state champ Zach Shipley, placed fourth at the Class AA, Region 3 meet last year. “We’re looking pretty decent on the track, but in the field we’re kind of young,” Rockets Coach Nick Edwards said. The Shelby girls finished fifth at the region last season, and Edwards said, they could contend for a spot in the top three this spring. Shipley not boys’ only star Class AA state champ in the 1,600-meter run. Sarah Erhard and Lee Johnson and junior Brittney Smith will lead the way there. “They had decent seasons last year, I fully expect them all to have good years,” Lucas said. Boys’ team developing The Titans’ only points at the state meet last season came from their sixth-place-finishing 3,200 relay team. Half of that foursome (senior Nolan Petty and junior Justin Downs) returns. The other two spots will be filled by other members of the Collins’ cross-country team that finished eighth in Please see TITANS on Page A7 Staff photo by Josh Cook Shelby County senior Zach Shipley is the defending Class AA state champ in the 300-meter hurdles. Shipley won the 300 hurdles in 39.41 seconds at last year’s state meet. “He’s looking to improve on what he did last year,” Edwards said. “It’ll probably take something in the thirty-eights to win it this year.” Shipley’s classmate, Michael Barry, should contend for the state title in the 110 hurdles. He Please see SCHS on Page A7 Rosters BOYS Michael Barry (senior); Chris Brown (senior); Zach Brown (senior); Hoyt Everson (senior); Logan Hull (senior); Deric Hyman (senior); Chase Manica (senior); Stuart Orange (senior); Eduardo Sandoval (senior); Zach Shipley (senior); Alex Dunn (junior); Shane Hart (junior); Michael Ingram (junior); Tevin Taylor (junior); Dalton Thompson (junior); Greg Abarientos (sophomore); Destry Aldridge (sophomore); Trey Biram (sophomore); Tanner Bryant (sophomore); Mason Daugherty (sophomore); Bobby Desmond (sophomore); Michael Gollar (sophomore); Alex Goodwin (sophomore); Jacob Gowin (sophomore); Breamon Harris (sophomore); Tristan King (sophomore); Cody Ledford (sophomore); Mikah Mattingly (sophomore); Michael Metts (sophomore); Garrett Perry (sophomore); Earl Stoudemire (sophomore); Justin Sturgeon (sophomore); Cameron Weeks (sophomore); Britton Woolwine (sophomore); Luke Brown (freshman); Jack Daugherty (freshman); Ben Greenwell (freshman); Ethan Patterson (freshman); Michael Perry (freshman); Clayton Tyler (freshman). GIRLS Jamie Bradley (senior); Samantha Orange (senior); Abby Siegel (senior); Gina Stanula (senior); Taylor Webb (senior); Kate Schaefer (junior); Nikki Simmons (junior); Lauren Wilms (junior); Kayce Byrnside (sophomore); Olivia Matlin (sophomore); Cali Mills (sophomore); Claire Schaefer (sophomore); Alexis Shepard (sophomore); Autumn Wall (sophomore); Lauren DeEsch (freshman); Justus Martin (freshman); Alivia Smith (freshman); Madison Todd (freshman); Suzanne Gayle (8th). Schedule MARCH 19 – ALL-COMERS; 23 – at Western Hills’ Wolverine Open; 26 – ALL-COMERS; 30 – Lenny Lyles Invitational at Central. APRIL 13 – at Male Invitational; 20 – Heart of the Bluegrass at the University of Kentucky; 26-27 – Eastern Relays at the University of Louisville. MAY 2 – Sundown Invitational at Oldham County. FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS, SHELBYVILLE, KY. — A7 FRIDAY NOTEBOOK Wells will play in all-star game SPORTS DIGEST By JOSH COOK Sentinel-News Sports Reporter jcook@sentinelnews.com Collins senior standout Aaliyah Wells has been selected to play in the 2013 Kentucky Association of Basketball Coaches’ East/West Senior AllStar Game. Wells, who averaged 20.1 points and 10 rebounds for the Titans in their recently completed 16-15 season, will play for the West squad (which will be made up of players in Regions 1-8) during the March 16 game at Warren Central High School in Bowling Green. She and Walton-Verona’s Courtney Sandlin will represent the 8th Region. Sandlin was named the KABC’s 8th Region’s Player of the Year earlier this week, and Wells finished second. Bruner commits to Spalding Shelby County senior Kam Bruner has committed to play baseball at Spalding University. “I would like to thank [Rockets] coach [Bart] Rudy [Roettger], [Devin] Hicks, [Mike] Moore, JR Wiley and Coach [Roy] Bailey, which all I’ve played for,” said Bruner, who hit .431 with three home runs and 40 RBIs while scoring 30 runs for the Rockets last season. He added that Roettger has “done a lot for me.” Webb commits to Bellarmine Shelby County senior Taylor Webb has committed to run track and cross country for Bellarmine University and will sign with the Knights on Monday in the SCHS library. Webb finished fifth as a sophomore and 12th as a junior at the Class AA state cross-country meet but missed this past season after having hip surgery. She is Photo submitted Cornerstone Christian cheerleaders Kelley Berry (left) and Callie Rose (right) were named to the Kentucky Christian Athletic Association all-state team after the state competition last Saturday. returning to the track, though, this spring after last year finishing 13th in the 3,200 at the state track meet. Thomas rolling Shelby County sophomore Madison Thomas finished second to reigning Kentucky high school girls’ golf state champ Anna Hack in the Golfweek Junior Tour’s Midwest Region spring season-opening event, which took place March 3 at GreyStone Golf Club in Dickson, Tenn., just outside Nashville. Thomas fired a 2-under-par 70, one shot behind Hack, in the girls’ 15-19 division. She had six birdies in her round. This weekend’s event is at Champion Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville. Titan wins mascot contest Collins’ Titans were chosen as the best mascot in the state in an online vote by Kentucky High School Hoops (http://www. kyhsh.blogspot.com/). The Titans topped the Nicholas County Bluejackets in the final vote in the Mascot Sweet 16. Collins beat Hopkins County Central’s Storm, 162-9, in the first round, Apollo’s Eagles, 117-30, in the quarterfinals and Wayne County’s Cardinals, 165-25, in the semifinals. In the final, which featured 5,268 votes, the Titans beat the Bluejackets, 3,173-2,095. Staff photo by Josh Cook Collins junior Derek Stivers returns a shot during his 6-7, 6-1, 6-1 victory at No. 1 singles Tuesday during the Titans’ 4-1 victory over Anderson County at Clear Creek Park. No. 25 Collins softball team goes down hard in opener The Collins softball team, ranked No. 25 in the Kentucky Softball Coaches Association preseason poll, fell to sixth-ranked Oldham County in its season-opener Wednesday. The Colonels clobbered the Titans, 11-0, in five innings in Buckner. Oldham County pitcher Jessica Leanhart limited Collins to two hits and struck out nine. She also helped her cause by going 3-for-3. Lindsey Ketcham and Alex Baker had the Titans’ only hits. Collins plays at North Oldham at noon Saturday and hosts Western Hills at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. BOYS’ TENNIS: Collins wins ROCKETS: First home game Tuesday continued from Page A6 batted .310 and hit safely in 15 of the team’s final 17 games last season. Meanwhile the 6-foot-6 Standafer, who saw increased playing time around midseason last year, had two hits and three RBIs in the Rockets’ preseason scrimmage. “He is blessed with power and the ability to drive in runs,” Roettger said. “If Steven hits it consistently, he has to play.” A handful of freshmen could also contribute, among them Riley Everson and utilitymen Chase Likes and Spencer Shouse. The Rockets’ pitching staff will consist of Eades, Moore, Boone, Dugle, Bruner and Hayes. Shelby County, which plays at No. 13 Paul Dunbar at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, hosts Whitefield Academy at 6 p.m. Tuesday. “Our team expects to win every time they set foot on the field,” Roettger said. “They know how to win and they know the little things it requires to get the job done.” TITANS: Smith a welcome addition continued from Page A6 Collins at a glance the state. One is likely to be senior Devon Fielding, who was seventh at the state cross-country meet. “That relay team could be pretty special this year,” Collins distance coach Stephen Drawbaugh said. Additionally Downs placed third in the 800 at the Mason-Dixon Games earlier this month. Another member of the cross-country team, freshman Jacob Hershberger, ran well at that event. Drawbaugh said he’ll contribute in the 1,600 and 3,200. Newcomer Terez Smith also had a good showing at Mason-Dixon, placing eighth in the high jump and 11th in the 60 hurdles just a few days after his basketball season ended. “He hadn’t done it in two years, but he looked really good in the high jump and hurdles,” Lucas said. “It’s going to be fun coaching him.” In the sprints the Titans will be paced by juniors Masai Whyte, Lawson Page, Nathan Sames, Elijah Jones, Dashane King and Ryan Watkins, a transfer from Louisville Eastern. Jones should also help in the jumps. In the throwing events Lucas is looking for big things from juniors Kris Jones, Mark Bradford and Sames, as well as freshman Kyle Goss. Coach: Jerry Lucas. Rosters Boys Dvontre Coleman (senior); Blake Ellis (senior); Devon Fielding (senior); Terez Smith (senior); Nolan Petty (senior); Michael Peed (senior); Mark Bradford (junior); Michael Goss (junior); Elijah Jones (junior); Kris Jones (junior); Dashane King (junior); Lawson Page (junior); Jordan Parker (junior); Nathan Sames (junior); Alex Sells (junior); Stevie Smith (junior); Cody Thompson (junior); Masai Whyte (junior); Ryan Watkins (junior); Justin Downs (junior); Devin Douthitt (sophomore); Gabriel Nash (sophomore); Michael Nash (sophomore); Neil Plante (sophomore); Lucas Raymond (sophomore); Wyatt Williamson (sophomore); Devin Watkins (sophomore); Kolton Alvey (freshman); Trei Axline (freshman); Carter Baralt (freshman); Leland Cardwell (freshman); Jacob Dale (freshman); Kyle Goss (freshman); Jacob Hershberger (freshman); Jalen Stone (freshman); Ryan Welch (freshman); Ryan Hunter (freshman). Girls Maria Cozzens (senior); Adrienne Holtzworth (senior); Brittney Smith (junior); Sarah Erhard (sophomore); Lee Johnson (sophomore); Jessica League (sophomore); Courtney Lee (sophomore); Sinead Maharrey (sophomore); Elizabeth McGuire (sophomore); Eli Megibben (sophomore); Brandi Pratt (sophomore); Sabrina Pratt (sophomore); ShaiAnn Moorman (sophomore); Mackenzie Boone (freshman); Evonie Daugherty (freshman); Kenedi Harris (freshman); Gabby Karas (8th). Schedule MARCH 19 – at Shelby County All-Comers; 26 – at Shelby County All-Comers. APRIL 9 – ALL-COMERS; 16 – ALL-COMERS; 23 – OLDHAM DUAL/TRI MEET; 27 – at Walden Invitational. MAY 2 – at Sundown Invitational at Oldham County. SCHS: Bradley leads girls’ team continued from Page A6 won the 60 hurdles event in the Mason-Dixon Games earlier this month after only one practice. He also will compete in the pole vault (for which the field at Robert Doyle Stadium is now equipped). Those two also will return to team up with senior Stuart Orange and sophomore Jacob Gowin in the 1,600 relay (that foursome finished 11th at the state meet). “They have the potential to place really high,” Edwards said. Orange, who finished fourth at the state in the 800 as a sophomore then narrowly missed qualifying for state in that event last spring, is dropping down to the 400 this season. He also will join Barry in the pole vault, and Gowin should be the team’s top high jumper. Senior sprinter Chase Manica is also back. He is one of three (Barry and Shipley are the others) returning from the Rockets’ 400 and 800 relay teams (they finished fifth and 13th, respectively, at the state meet). Senior Logan Hull will lead Shelby’s distance contingent. “He ended the season pretty well last year. Hopefully he can build on that,” Edwards said. Edwards is also hoping to build up his field events, which were hit hard by graduation. Senior Deric Hyman and sophomore Garrett Perry will lead the Rockets in the throwing event, while several will try the long and triple jumps. Almost all girls back The Rockets return almost everyone from last season. “The strongest part of girls’ team is our throwers,” Edwards said. Senior Jamie Bradley, the defending region champ in the discus and shot put (she was 11th and 15th, respectively, in those events at state), leads the way there. She finished second in the shot put at the Mason-Dixon Games earlier this month. “She has a shot at winning the state title in the discus, that’s our goal for her,” Edwards said. Senior Samantha Orange will compete in the pole vault. Another of the Rockets’ strengths will be their relays. Seniors Abby Siegel and Gina Stanula, junior Kate Schaefer, sophomore Cali Mills and freshman Madison Todd will lead the way there. Siegel, Stanula, Mills and Schaefer were third in the 800 relay at the Mason-Dixon Games. Siegel, Todd, Mills and Schaefer were 14th in that event at state last year. Shelby’s distance group will be led by senior Taylor Webb and sophomore Kayce Byrnside, both of whom are battling injuries. Webb, who has committed to Bellarmine University, was fifth in the 3,200 as a sophomore and 13th last season. “The key with our distance girls is staying healthy,” Edwards said. The Rockets open the season Tuesday in their all-comers meet. The Titans won their season-opening match, defeating visiting Anderson County, 4-1, Tuesday afternoon at Clear Creek Park by winning two singles matches and both doubles matches. At No. 1 singles junior Derek Stivers was victorious, 6-7, 6-1, 6-1. Collins also picked up a victory at No. 3 singles via default. At No. 1 doubles senior Wil Johnson and sophomore Cy Dutton combined for a 6-4, 6-2 victory. Junior Conner Caspar and seventh-grader Jared Baltzell teamed up for a 6-2, 6-0 triumph at No. 2 doubles. The Titans play at North Oldham on Monday before hosting Western Hills on Tuesday. GIRLS’ TENNIS: Titans fall to Bearcats Visiting Anderson County won, 3-2, Tuesday afternoon at Clear Creek Park. The Titans’ triumphs came at Nos. 2 and 3 singles. Eighth-grader Eliza Davis needed three sets, 6-7 (5-7), 7-5, 1-0 (12-10), to win at No. 2 singles. Meanwhile seventh-grader Tatum Watson was victorious, 7-5, 6-3, at No. 3 singles. “It was excellent, if not a cold opening match,” Coach Jeff Stein said. “I was very proud of how my team conducted themselves and battled hard.” Collins plays at North Oldham on Monday before hosting Western Hills on Tuesday. Compiled by Josh Cook SCOREBOARD Baseball KENTUCKY HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL COACHES ASSOCIATION TOP 25 1. Woodford County 2. Henderson County 3. Pleasure Ridge Park 4. Tates Creek 5. Lexington Catholic 6. St. Xavier 7. Newport Central Catholic 8. Lafayette 9. Central Hardin 10. Harrison County 11. Trinity 12. Lexington Christian 13. Paul Dunbar 14. Male 15. West Jessamine 16. Russell County 17. Muhlenberg County 18. Union County 19. Ashland Blazer 20. Lone Oak 21. Madison Central 22. Daviess County 23. Collins 24. Bowling Green 25. Bishop Brossart Softball OLDHAM COUNTY 11, COLLINS 0 Collins 000 00 – 0 2 5 Oldham Co. 400 7X – 11 12 0 Lauren Shepherd, Hannah Renfro (4) and Alex Baker. Jessica Leanhart and Rebecca Wishnevski. W – Leanhart (1-0). UPCOMING SCHEDULE Today 5 p.m.: High school girls’ tennis, Frankfort at Shelby County. 5 p.m.: High school baseball, Shelby County at Moore. 6 p.m.: High school baseball, Meade County at Collins. Saturday 11 a.m.: High school baseball, Jeffersontown at Collins. 12 p.m.: High school softball, Collins at North Oldham. 2:30 p.m.: High school baseball, Shelby County at Paul Dunbar. Monday 5 p.m.: High school boys’ tennis, North Bullitt at Shelby County. 5 p.m.: High school boys & girls’ tennis, Collins at North Oldham. 6 p.m.: High school baseball, Southern at Collins. Tuesday 5 p.m.: High school boys’ tennis, Shelby County at South Oldham. 5 p.m.: High school boys & girls’ tennis, Western Hills at Collins. 5:30 p.m.: High school track & field, Collins, Shelby County at Shelby County’s All-Comers meet. 5:30 p.m.: High school softball, Western Hills at Collins. 5:30 p.m.: High school softball, Manual at Shelby County. 6 p.m.: High school baseball, Whitefield Academy at Shelby County. 8:30 p.m.: High school baseball, Trinity at Collins. L – Shepherd (0-1). 2B – Baker (CHS), Rayne Shelton (OC), Cynthia Leaton (OC), Taylor Sheller (OC). Records – Collins 0-1, Oldham County 1-0. Boys’ tennis COLLINS 4, ANDERSON COUNTY 1 At Clear Creek park Singles No. 1 – Derek Stivers (CHS) def. Ty Glover (AC) 6-7, 6-1, 6-1; No. 2 Brandon Boggs (AC) def. Luke Noel (CHS) 6-2, 6-2; No. 3 – Collins won by default. Doubles No. 1 – Wil Johnson-Cy Dutton (CHS) def. Josh Fugate-Nathan Pulcifer (AC) 6-4, 6-2; No. 2 – Conner Caspar-Jared Baltzell (CHS) def. Noah Goodlett-Brock Johnson 6-2, 6-0. Girls’ tennis ANDERSON COUNTY 3, COLLINS 2 At Clear Creek Park Singles No. 1 – Hannah Lewis (AC) def. Ashley Quinn (CHS) 6-3, 6-1; No. 2 – Eliza Davis (CHS) def. Breanna Chesser (AC) 6-7 (5-7), 7-5, 1-0 (12-10); No. 3 – Tatum Watson (CHS) def. Rebekah Cardwell 7-5, 6-3. Doubles No. 1 – Hannah Wampler-Amanda Wampler (AC) def. Ashton SchneiderBrianna Suggs (CHS) 6-0, 6-0; No. 2 – Jacy Isaacs-Hannah Baker (AC) def. Delann Dischinger-Kayley Smith (CHS) 6-0, 6-3. COLLEGE WATCH Eric Standafer The SCHS grad is a junior first baseman on the St. Catharine College baseball team. Through Wednesday he had played in 16 games, starting 11, for the Patriots (177). He was batting .412 with 14 hits (including 5 doubles) and 12 runs scored. He also had a slugging percentage of .559. In Tuesday’s 17-2 victory over Mid-Continent, Standafer had four hits, including a solo home run. 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See store for details on special promotions on these specialty beds. FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013 INSIDE Farm, B3 Easter events, B7 Arts & weekend, B8 Looking back, B11 BUSINESS The Sentinel-News • Online: www.SentinelNews.com/Business SHELBY SUCCESS STORIES BRIEFCASE Beware basketball businesses that might steal your money Don’t doubt the big business of the NCAA Basketball Tournament. In fact, it has drawn the attention of the Better Business Bureau in Louisville. BBB issued an alert to advise fans to check out ticket offers before investing their money in the tournament, warning that some merchandise is stolen and counterfeit and that some tickets advertised in public forums such as Craigslist are in fact bogus. Craigslist has thousands of sports tickets listed, but the site offers no guarantees, and sellers don’t have to provide identification to list tickets. If you decide to try buying a ticket outside the event, remember that there are no refunds or guarantees there, either. Official NCAA ticket information is available at http://www.ncaa.com/ tickets. To find lists of reputable, secondary market ticket firms that provide buyer protections, including moneyback guarantees if tickets are fake, you can visit www. bbb.org. On some sites, sellers also must provide credit card numbers so the site can charge a seller’s card for the cost of replacement tickets if they sell fake tickets. There also are lodging scams at tournament sites, and BBB advises that fans ask lots of questions about package deals, especially those that market tickets with the hotel room. Dean joins staff of Hair Flair Salon Brooke Bryant Dean will join the staff of Hair Flair Salon, located at 488 Frankfort Road in Shelbyville, beginning Tuesday. Dean has been a licensed cosmetologist for 13 years and is experienced in cuts for women, men and children and also is experienced in color, perms, waxing and special-occasion up dos. She will be open for appointments Tuesday through Saturday, with late nights available, and can be reached at 502-437-0176. Walk-ins are also Dean welcome. Dean and her three sons, Ty, Bryant and Knox, live in Shelbyville. Jewish foundation names 2 directors The Jewish Hospital & St. Mary’s Foundation, part of KentuckyOne Health, has named Kathey Golightly Sanders and Matthew Williams as directors of major gifts. Sanders has more than 20 years of fundraising experience. She most recently served as director of development for Nativity Academy at St. Boniface. Before that, she spent more than a decade as a fundraising consultant for nonprofit organizations. Sanders Sanders holds a bachelor’s degree from Oklahoma Baptist University and a master of divinity from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Williams has worked in major gifts and development for nearly a decade. Most recently, he was the director of major gifts at the Louis D. Brandeis School of Law at the University of Louisville. Williams has a bachelor’s degree and a master’s of Williams business administration from GardnerWebb University in North Carolina. Bulletin Board The Shelby County Chamber of Commerce will host its 2013 Community Showcase from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at Shelby County High School. For more information, contact Johnna Maier at 633-1636 or Johnna@shelbycountykychamber.com or visit http://business.shelbycountykychamber.com/Events/ details/2013-community-showcase-299. The Chamber will have its monthly morning mixer at 7:30-9:30 a.m. Monday at Torrey Smith Realty on Main Street in Shelbyville. The Shelby County Board of Realtors will hold its monthly luncheon at 11:30 a.m. Thursday at the Kentucky Farm Bureau’s conference room. RSVP to ShebyvilleBoardofRealtors@gmail.com. The Shelby County Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring a breakfast with state Sen. Paul Hornback (R-Shelbyville) and state Rep. Brad Montell (R-Shelbyville) at 8-9:30 a.m. April 18 at Stratton Community Center, 215 Washington St. in Shelbyville. Find out what happened in the 2013 legislative session and what it means for you. Admission is $20 for chamber members and $30 for prospective members. For more information, contact Johnna Maier at 6331636 or send an E-mail to Johnna@shelbycountykychamber.com. HJW Career & Financial Literacy Institute, Inc. of Shelbyville, in partnership with Metro United Way, will be hosting the volunteer income tax assistance/ tax counseling for the 2013 tax year in Shelby and Oldham Counties. This program is to assist families with free income tax preparation that meet the requirements for receiving the earned income tax credit. For tax year 2012, this amount is generally $50,000 and below. Also tax preparation is free for the elderly, aged 60 and older. The sites will be open Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and certain Saturdays until April 15. For more information, call 647-3027 or 558-0762. Bits & bytes Kelly Services is partnering with Amazon – formerly Zappos Fulfillment Centers, Inc. – to fill 1,400 job opportunities in Shepherdsville. There are job fairs at 9 a.m.-4 p.m. today and noon to 4 on Saturday at the Amazon/Zappos Hiring Center in Shepherdsville. For more information visit wwww.Kellyhero.com. Average retail gasoline prices in Louisville have fallen 7.2 cents per gallon in the past week, averaging $3.58 per gallon as of Sunday, according to GasBuddy’s daily survey of 644 gas outlets in Louisville. This compares with the national average that has fallen 3.2 cents per gallon in the last week to $3.66. Briefcase is compiled from press releases and other information submitted to The Sentinel-News. The Kentucky Press News Service contributed to this report. Information and photos may be E-mailed to sharonw@SentinelNews.com. The deadline is noon Wednesday. B AN OCCASIONAL SERIES Taking tobacco down a new road REMEMBER: Walt Carpenter FULL NAME: Walton T. Carpenter JOB TITLE: Senior Vice President of Strategy and Marketing at R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. EDUCATION: Shelby County High School (1970); Indiana University, degree in political science (1974) and Master of Business Administration Indiana University (1979).HOMETOWN: Simpsonville NOW LIVES: Winston-Salem AGE: 60 FAMILY: Wife, Monica, daughters Lauren Irving and Allison About the series The Sentinel-News will profile Shelby County natives and former residents who have established business success elsewhere. If you have a suggestion for someone to be considered, send an E-mail to sdoyle@ sentinelnews.com. Simpsonville native Walt Carpenter didn’t grow up on a tobacco farm, but he has helped set the future of the tobacco business. By LISA KING Sentinel-News Staff Writer • lisa@sentinelnews.com A t first glance, Walt Carpenter, who will retire later this year after 25 years with R.J. Reynolds, may not seem to fit the profile for a tobacco company executive. Although he grew up in Shelby County, he wasn’t one of the many of his day who lived on a tobacco farm or belonged to the Future Farmers of America. “I didn’t grow up on a farm, but I grew up around them, and so many of my friends were farm kids that I felt comfortable around tobacco,” he said, adding that he spent many happy hours as boy playing basketball in his friend’s hayloft. “Growing up, I had a lot of friends that worked in that area, and as a business and marketing person, it’s fascinating.” Carpenter, 60, who stills refers to Simpsonville as home even though he has lived all over the United States and even in England, is senior vice president of strategy and marketing for R.J. Reynolds, and he has used that fascination to lead his company in new directions as the cigarette industry has declined. “Strategy and planning sounds kind of vague, but the department I’ve run for years here concentrates basically on business analytics. “We do market research, analysis and forecast- PLEASE see CARPENTER on Page B2 Staff photo by Steve Doyle CVS begins work on new site The corner of U.S. 60 and Freedom’s Way has been a planned commercial site for several years, with CVS being an anchor tenant. This week that work finally got under way, with signs placed and a bulldozer clearing trees on the property. There was much activity on Wednesday and Thursday, although the condemned Wesley Aparments have not been removed. Showcase continues to grow More merchants, more attendees and music STAFF REPORT The Shelby County Chamber of Commerce’s long-running Community Showcase figures to have its biggest year yet on Saturday, when vendors and marketers spread their wares and messages in the Mike Casey Gymnasium at Shelby County High School. This 11th annual event, which allows companies – 55 have signed up this year – to set up tables and booths to market themselves to community members who browse, pick up goodies and get a card checked off so they can enter to win prizes, begins at 9 a.m. About 900 to 1,000 attended in 2012, and Chamber Executive Director Shelley Goodwin said she hopes to improve on that. “The showcase continues to grow each year,” she said, “in numbers of attendees, exhibitors and other participants [such as performers].” Chamber officials stress, too, that this event isn’t simply for adults. There are inflatables and other activities for children, entertainment and a whole bevy of those prizes. “Our members have great things to share,” Goodwin said. “We offer many fantastic prizes, good food and special entertainment from the community and fun activities for children” Community Showcase WHAT: Shelby County Chamber of Commerce merchant show WHEN: 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Saturday WHERE: Mike Casey Gymnasium, Shelby County High School ADMISSION: Free PLEASE see SHOWCASE on Page B2 Call Nathan Franklin 633-2310 Nathan.Franklin@kyfb.com B2 — SENTINEL-NEWS, SHELBYVILLE, KY., FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013 SHOWCASE: 11th annual event is Saturday CARPENTER: Finds a continued from Page B1 career in tobacco And the prizes keep getting better, too. For instance, participants who manage to get each vendor to check their contest cards enter a drawing to win a new iPad as the grand prize. There are other electronics and gift certificates for adults, and students (K-12) can enter to win a Kindle Fire or Kindle Paperwhite. There also will be music in the air. From an occasional performance by a school choir in past years, the Showcase has grown into a veritable concert among several local choirs and singing groups, including the Shelby County Community Children’s Choir and groups from several schools. “We invite past performers and school groups to perform, but this year we also had some groups contact us about participating,” Goodwin said. “We want this event to showcase all the great things Shelby County has to offer from business to recreation to local talent. “We know there are many activities going on this Saturday, but we encourage folks to take a few minutes to stop by and see what Shelby County has to offer. There is something for everyone.” continued from Page B1 ing, and that information gets fed to the management group that uses it for decision-making,” he said. Some of those decisions have included how to cope as more and more people have stopped smoking and fewer young people are taking up the habit, a trend that has led the company to turn to other tobacco products as the numbers of smokers continues to decrease, Carpenter said. “The number of cigarettes sold in the U.S. today is less than half what was sold in 1981,” he said. “So the company has been looking to go in different directions. We bought a company called American Snuff, which is a growing category, and we are also looking at other tobacco products that are essentially substitutable for cigarettes. “We are always trying to figure out ways we can continue to grow the company given the fact that our main line of business is declining.” The early years Photo submitted Farm Bureau’s “Food Check-Out Day” State Sen. Paul Hornback (R-Shelbyville, at right) received a basket of Kentucky-made products from Phyllis Amyx, chair of the Kentucky Farm Bureau Women’s Committee, on Feb. 20. The basket was presented in honor of “Food Check-Out Day,” which the Farm Bureau hosts each year in mid-February to mark the date when the average American has earned enough income to meet the annual cost of food. The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that at about 10 percent of a person’s disposable income. Photo submitted Employees honored at Purnell Five employees at F.B. Purnell Sausage Company were honored for working 21-plus years with no unexcused absences. Celebrating were Bob Purnell (from left), Todd Purnell, Neives Olvera for 21 years, James “Shorty“ Allen for 21 Years, Danny Casey for 28 years, Allen Leake for 27 years, Danny Cottrell for 25 years and Allen Purnell. For the first decade or so after gradating from Indiana University in 1974 – he returned in 1979 to complete an MBA – armed with a marketing degree and what he called a ton of youthful enthusiasm, Carpenter landed positions with a variety of companies around the country, including L’eggs in Winston-Salem, N.C., Heublein, an alcoholic beverage distributor, in Hartford, Conn., and Frito-Lay in Dallas, before finally coming to rest in 1988 with Brown & Williamson Tobacco in Louisville, where he was group product director. He was promoted to divisional vice president of value brands in 1994 and appointed divisional vice president of strategy and planning in 1996. Brown & Williamson merged with R.J. Reynolds in 2004 to create a parent company, Reynolds American, with R.J. Reynolds remaining a subsidiary. So it was back to Winston-Salem for Carpenter, who headed up a marketing team for R.J. Reynolds as vice president of strategy and planning. He was promoted in 2006 to senior vice president of strategy and planning and in 2007 assumed his current position. He said he considers the high point of his career being selected in 2000 to head up a marketing team in Brown & Williamson’s home base in London – although his wife, Monica, and their two daughters, Lauren and Allison, remained in Louisville while the girls attended Sacred Heart Academy. He made many transatlantic weekend getaways. “Brown and Williamson was owned by British American Tobacco, and I lived in London from late 2000 to early 2003, doing much the same thing I had done with the company in Louisville, just on a global scale,” he said. “The tobacco industry has always been fascinating to me because it’s an historically important product that is tied up not only with U.S. history, but with history as well,” he said. “It’s big, it’s important, it’s interesting, and it’s controversial. What more could you ask for?” An exciting year ahead As Carpenter has learned, one should careful what one asks for, because now, he’s got it – an entire year full of new challenges as he prepares to shift from the business arena to a whirlwind of family activities that would make anyone’s head swim. His daughter Lauren is expecting his first grandchild, and her younger sister, Allison, is preparing to graduate from Georgetown University in May and planning to be married June 1, and his retirement is coming up in just a few months. The Carpenters spent this past weekend in Chicago with Lauren, who went into premature labor and who, he said, will have to remain hospitalized until she is at least 34 weeks along. Carpenter admitted to bragging rights concerning both his daughters, both of whom graduated from Duke University and both of whom obtained MBAs, Lauren from Vanderbilt and Allison from Georgetown. Both girls, who are three years apart in age, were named Miss Sacred Heart Academy in Louisville. And both are married to, or will marry, attorneys: Lauren is married to Jim Irving, and Allison is engaged to Josh Oyster. Carpenter said he is looking forward to moving back to Louisville after he retires to be near his father, James Carpenter, who lives at Amber Oaks in Shelbyville. “Mom [Sally] passed away a few years ago, and since I’m an only kid – although we have dear friends from Simpsonville Baptist Church who help look after him – there’s really no one else in the family to take care of him,” he said. “So I’m looking forward to being able to spend more time with him.” Carpenter chuckled when talking about another great love of his that he is looking forward to indulging more after he retires, a love about which he has been a bit fickle over the years. “College basketball has always been a great love of mine,” he said. “I grew up a Kentucky fan. I mean, everybody was in Shelby County in those days, but once I went to IU, I changed my allegiance, and then when the kids went to Duke, I picked up a rooting interest there. “It got a little sticky at times, but the good thing about it was, rooting for all those teams, I sure had my share of wins over the years.” REAL ESTATE DEEDS Feb. 9-22 Gary M. and Gwyna M. Haydon to Gary M. and Gwyna M. Haydon, Lot 85, Ken Acres, $1 and considerations Gayle P. and Donna A. Crume to Austin T. and Evelyn R. White, 5.09 acres, Tract 5, Sparrow Farm Pea Ridge East, $112,525 Dominion Homes of Kentucky LTD to Heith L. Ratliff, Lot 75, Cloverbrook Farms, $115,000 Jacqueline Davis Lanham and Daniel J. Lanham to Jacqueline Davis Lanham and Daniel J. Lanham, 58.35 acres, Tract 6, Nethery Farm, $110,000 Jacqueline Davis Lanham to Daniel J. Lanham, 5.228 acres, Lot 6, Kingbrook Commerce Park, $340,000 Gary W. and Carol K. Helbig to Carol Kay Helbig Revocable Trust and Gary W. Helbig Revocable Trust, Lot 7 Orchard Crossing, $115,000 Gary W. and Carol K. Helbig to Carol Kay Helbig Revocable Trust and Gary W. Helbig Revocable Trust, Lot 18 Arbor Green Sec. 1, $85,000 Gary W. and Carol K. Helbig to Carol Kay Helbig Revocable Trust and Gary W. Helbig Revocable Trust, Lot 9, Cross Keys Shores, $95.000 Dennis D. and Melissa Ann Curtsinger to Jim and Ronda O’Donoghue, Tracts 9 and B-C, Timberwood Farms, $485,000 Commonwealth of Kentucky Transportation Cabinet to Wesley Apartments LLC, property on Freedom’s Way, $33,000 Corrine Ruhl Trust to Elmer C. and Betty J. Bolin, Lots 36B, 37, 38, 39, Block C, Greenland Park, $100,000 Shirish Ramkrishna Phulgaonkar to Karen Anne Phulgaonkar. Lot 117, Todds Station, Phase 2, considerations Marilyn K. and Lynn Horn to Marilyn K. Horn, Unit 799 A, Building 11, Lot 35, Gardens of Station Pointe, $1 and considerations Federal National Mortgage Association to Alicia Chandler, Lots 25-26, Long Run Woods, Section 1, $138,000 Temple Homes Inc. to Eric S. and Amy M. Hettinger, Lot 4, Dale Place, $202,000 Bonnie J. Halle to Joseph E. Hall, 15.06 acres on KY 395, considerations James F. Collins to Whelan Living Trust, 2.358 acres on Elmburg Road, $161,493 Sabrina S. Raymond to David E. Raymond, 23.07 acres, Tract 1, Ethel Casey Farm North, considerations STO Properties LLC to Colinmack LLC, Tracts 1-2, CAB 6, SL 233, $1.4 million Stephanie Ann Frick Trust to Deborah F. Magan and Tracy A. Ashcraft, Unit 1, Building 1, Washington Place Condos, $142,150 Federal National Mortgage Association to James C. and Elena Reynolds, Lot 8, Greenwood Court, $47,000 FCentury Bank of Kentucky Inc. to Emilio M. and Tamera M. Soto, 5.01 acres, Tract14, Northfork Manor, $220,000 Lessie J. Barr Estate to Charles Robert Davis, Lot 7, Meadow Run, $1 and considerations Ricky and Loretta Downs to Douglas Hedger, Lot 69, Block 1, Trailwood Lakes, $5,000 Nicholas G. and Amanda Volz to Joseph M. and Victoria R. Michels, Lot 63, Todds Station, Phase 1, $174,250 Erin and William Edwin Hisle Jr. to Nathan R. and Courtney S. Poole, Lot 38, Weissinger Estates, Section 3, $306,500 Julie L. Broughton to Erin E. and William E. Hisle Jr., 2.18 acres, Tract 1, Berger Farm East, $525,000 Mary Ann Perry to Mary Ann and Christopher Michael Perry, 51 acres, corner of Mulberry Church Road, $1 and considerations Woodfield Inc. to AKL Custom Homes LLC, Lot 30, Meadowbrook, Section 3, Phase 3, $27,000 Angela Adams to Daniel w. Adams, Tract 1, CAB 7, SL 109, $133,700 Steven W. and Charlene B. Clark to Steven W. and Charlene B. Clark, 2.078 acres on Pleasureville Road, $1 and considerations Jessica L. and David E. Sekulski Jr. to Tyler Broyles, Lot 23, Woodfield, Section 1, $131,900 Federal National Mortgage Association to Lucinda and Franklin J. Morgan, 4.29 acres, Lot 1, Tract 3, Martin Farm, $70,000 Kathleen Ann Hinds Lincoln, Maxine Lincoln, Tom Lincoln, George S. Hinds Jr., Buddy Hinds and Amy Gail Hinds Vest to Christi Eye and Jody Eye Pimentel, Lot 15, Fieldstone Acres No. 3, $83,000 James A. and Lois G. Newton to James M. and Lois G. Newton Trust, Lot 78, Meadowbrook No. 1, $50,000 Dominion Homes of Kentucky LTD to Kelly J. and Russell A. Kahmann, $170,156 Federal National Mortgage Association to Nicholas and Leslie Cipiti, Tract 4, Heaton Farm, $138,000 Local weather updated throughout the day at sentinelnews.com FARM FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS B3 ONLINE: www.SentinelNews.com/Agriculture AG REPORT Ready for early spring edibles Tuesday is celebration of National Agriculture Day avoid pest problems. managed to get stem to protect the developing tubers. I For most gardeners, it through the always plant on the deep side so I don’t is not too much to ask whole season have to hill the plants as much. In the that they hand pick eating only our Once the seed potatoes are planted Garden pests on a regular basis ,mulch them to moderate soil moisture, store of potatoes in order to protect their control weeds and to protect the develfrom the garden potato crops, but there only because of the oping tubers from sun exposure. If the are some biological con- tubers are exposed to direct sunlight, generous offerings of Jeneen trols (i.e. Spinosad) that they turn green and take on a slight sweet potatoes from can help offset larger two other gardeners. I toxicity (they won’t kill you, though!). Wiche infestations of pests. love it when I can go You can harvest small potatoes Using floating row from harvest to plant(called “new” potatoes) after the plants covers as an insect barrier early in ing and still have a few potatoes left in have finished blooming in the summer, season does a world of good in terms of storage. but for larger potatoes suitable for protecting plants from Colorado potato Home-grown potatoes, even the old storage, allow plants to reach maturity. beetles, leaf hoppers and flea beetles. ones in their slightly shriveled state, Harvest potatoes for storage about 3 Hand-picking pests and dropping them are far superior then the kind that weeks after the tops of the plants have come in a plastic bag. I am really ready into a bucket of water is a reasonable completely died back. proposition, too. to get my hands in the soil, and plantRub off excess dirt and cure your When you are ready to plant, cut ing potatoes is just the thing to get the potatoes in a ventilated and shaded the seed potatoes into sections, making season rolling. (don’t leave them in the sun) area for a sure that each section has two or three First thing first: While I always couple of weeks before storing indoors. healthy buds or “eyes.” These eyes shoot for a mid-March planting of (For successful, long storage you must become the roots and stems. selected seed potatoes, we must conallow the tops to die back, and you You can usually get four good pieces must air cure them.) sider the condition of the soil. Don’t from each seed potato. On average 5 start digging if the soil is too wet. Be Rinse any excess dirt from the pounds of seed potato will plant out a patient and only work once the soil is potato before storage to prevent desic50-foot row. Plant your seed potatoes friable. cation, and do not store them in the in furrows, about 12 inches apart and Select potato varieties that complerefrigerator. about 3-5 inches deep – shallow for fast ment the way you cook. The most versatile varieties include favorites such as emergence, deeper for less hilling duty. Check out gardening columnist Jeneen A long thin furrow makes it easier to Yukon Gold and Red Cloud. Both are Wiche’s work at www.SwallowRailFarm. great harvested early as “new” potatoes harvest later in the summer. com. You can find her columns also at I plant deeper when the spring or harvested late for storage. www.SentinelNews.com/agriculture. warm-up has been brisk and shallower She answers questions once a month in If you have a history of pest probwhen there is still a chill to the soil. A lems in the potato patch, then Island SentinelNewsPlus. To submit a question, Sunshine and Prince Hairy prove most couple of weeks after the foliage has send an E-mail to jwiche@shelbybb.net and emerged, start hilling soil around the resistant. Elba and Butte are good type “Sentinel-News” in the subject field. mashed or baked. Caribe and Carola are best roasted or fried, and the fingerling potatoes are ideal for roasting whole. Potatoes will grow in most soil types, however, working compost into the 7973 S. Waddy Road - $47,500 1559 Locust Grove Road - $394,900 planting furrows is recom4 BR., 1 BA., 1 1/2 NEW LISTING NEW LISTING Very nice brick home on 18 acres minutes mended to improve drainage away from I-64. Home features a nice eat in Story Frame Home in and provide additional nutrikitchen, living room, good sized bedrooms Harrisonville. SELLand baths. The basement includes a huge ents. Composted manure ING AS IS: Good rec & family room, media/theatre room, Country Home. will provide the fertilizer bedrooms & bath. Views from the wrap Jimmy Willard around deck is one of a kind with small pond and plenty of wildlife. The property requirements throughout the 502-321-1111 or has nice creek frontage on Guist Creek. Also, a 30x80 metal barn with electric growing season. Mie Sloan and water, great for possible livestock or horses, or equipment storage. During the growing 502-321-0561 Shawn Willard 502-553-1880 season, once the stems and 850 Rockbridge Road - $369,000 352 Rockbridge Road - $81,900 foliage have emerged, you Brick ranch home with 5+ acres. The Great location! Very nice can provide additional nutriREDUCED 1st floor has 3 BRs with 2 full BA, large 1218 sq. ft. brick ranch with MOTIVATED SELLER ents to the plants by spraymaster suite with Jacuzzi tub and walk3 BR and 1 full BA. New winin shower. Formal DR, large eat-in kit. w/ ing liquid seaweed or fish dows and gutters in 2010, all appliances including washer/dryer. emulsion. Research suggests FR with FP, LR, ceiling fans thru-out. carpet and roof in 2012. Finished walk-out bsmt. w/ 2 BRs, 1 full BA, den and rec. room combination. 2 car Home features a rear deck that fish emulsion deters garage, above ground pool. Horse Barn & arena. Six stalls including full size foaling and a 1 car carport. Back deer grazing and some insect stall, hay loft & tack room. Large indoor riding arena with attached garage or shop. 3 yard is partially fenced. Only minutes to I-64 and Shelbyville. fenced paddocks with board & mesh. 1 1/2 miles from I-64 exit 35. City water. problems, as well. Potatoes Rick Simpson 502-529-9169 Barry Smith 502-682-0586 are in the nightshade family 2158 Midland Trail - $139,900 2162 Midland Trail - $119,900 and therefore poisonous to Great floor plan to this Hard to find a nice many animals, so browsing home. Open kitchen and ranch home with 5 should not be too much of an eat in area, 3 big bedbedrooms, but this issue. Colorado potato beetles rooms with an oversized home has it! Huge are of more concern. master including a whirlkitchen and laundry pool tub and double vanity. A huge recreational room that used area. This home has Rotating your crop is to be a garage gives this home extra living space. A nice sun- an unfinished basement as well. Great location and essential for potatoes (and room is in the rear of the home to enjoy the views year around. the home is in great shape. Make offer today. other vegetables in the Shawn Willard 502-553-1880 Shawn Willard 502-553-1880 nightshade family, like See all our Listing and auctions at tomatoes) if you want to www.hbarrysmith.com Kentucky Farm Bureau will be celebrating National Agriculture Day on Tuesday to highlight the benefits of America’s food system on the national quality of life. “The commitment, hard work and innovation of our farmers provides us with a stable supply of highquality, affordable food,” KFB President Mark Haney said in a release announcing the celebration. “National Agriculture Day is an excellent opportunity for all Americans to learn more about the farmers who contribute so much to our nation’s prosperity and quality of life.” Agriculture provides components of almost everything people eat, use and wear on a daily basis – and is increasingly contributing to consumer demand for alternative fuels and other bio-products – and organizers of the National Ag Day program want Americans to understand food sources, the role of agriculture and understand the industry. According to KFB, today’s farmers grow twice as much food as their parents did but use less land, water and energy to do so. About 90 percent of those farms are still operated by families or individuals today. Additionally, an estimated 20 percent of U.S. farm production is exported to other nations and, according to government statistics, agriculture is one of the few remaining industries with a positive balance of trade. This production comes from the 2.2 million farms currently operating in America and accounts for more than 24 million jobs nationwide. Kentucky’s economy is strongly supported by agriculture as well. Only four other states have more farms than the 87,000 found in Kentucky, and farming accounts for more than 270,000 jobs statewide. Crop disaster program deadline The Farm Service Agency’s Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) provides financial assistance to producers of non-insurable crops when low yields, loss of inventory or prevented planting occur due to a natural disaster. The upcoming deadlines to file an application for natural disaster protection under the NAP are today and May 1. The crops for today’s deadline are: beans, beets, broccoli, cabbage, cantaloupe, carrots, cauliflower, corn, corn-hybrid seed, cucumbers, eggplant, gourds, greens, herbs, lettuce, onions, peas, peppers, popcorn, potatoes, pumpkins, radish, sorghum, sorghum-grain, soybeans, squash, strawberries, sunflowers, sweet potatoes, tobacco-burley, tobacco-dark air, tobacco-fire cured, tomatoes, turnips, and watermelons. Eligible producers must apply for coverage at the FSA office on Breighton Place in Shelbyville. Bulletin board The Shelby County Cooperative Extension Service is offering classes on food gardening that runs each Wednesday from 10 to 11:30 a.m. through April 10. The classes are free, but seating is limited, so you must reserve a spot by Tuesday. To reserve your space, call 633-4593. The University of Kentucky Horticulture Department will present a fruit grower orchard meeting on April 11 at Matt Gajdzik’s Mulberry Orchard. Lunch is included. Mulberry Orchard is located at 1330 Mulberry Pike. For more information or to preregister lunch (by April 9), call Mary Ann Kelley at 270-365-7541, Ext. 216, between 9 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. The Kentucky Ag Report is compiled weekly from news releases distributed by Keeton Communications, the Kentucky Press News Service. JUST LISTED 4143 MT EDEN RD Ranch home with a full finished walkout lower level has 4 bedrooms and 4 full baths. 5 acres , 40x60 building. Convenient location. Great Rm w/ built-in bookcases, fireplace. Hardwood floors. Florida Room w/ tongue & groove wood walls. Kit is huge w/ a bay window. Main level Master Suite. Finished walkout w/ extra storage, 2 bedrooms, full bath and a huge FR w/ fireplace, patio, 3 level deck. $389,900 CALL CHERYL HOOD @ 777-0875 I JUST LISTED JUST LISTED JUST LISTED 324 LINKS DR CARDINAL CLUB 4 Bedroom, 2.5 bath home in Cardinal Club Subd. Golf course development with pool and clubhouse. This home boasts an open floor plan with lots of space for entertaining. Over 2600 sf of finished living area and unfinished basement. $299,000 CALL CHRISTI EYE @ 548-0801 2810 CROPPER RD Quality built casual floor plan on 5.76 ACRES. Over 2600 sf, 3 bdrms & 3 baths. Hardwood floors. Master w/ built-in entertainment bookcases, his & hers walk-in closets. Eatin Kitchen has bar area. Cherry cabinets, hardwood floors, walk-in pantry. Office area w/ built-ins, FR /Sunroom all open to Kitchen. Finished walkout with Family Rm, ventless gas fireplace, built-in cabinetry, storage room, 2 large hobby or playrooms and 3rd full bath. 2.5 car garage Tiered patio, trees, creek, black top drive. $324,500 CALL JULIE KINSOLVING @ 682-4313 651 REED LN 25 minutes from The Summit in Louisville in beautiful Western Shelby County. Sitting on 9 gorgeous, wooded acres this 3 bedroom, 3.5 home is absolutley perfect for the animal lover, gardener and hobbyist. Multi level deck with built in seating and patio overlook the pool. Post and beam construction, bead board, hardwood floors and custom cabinetry, unique study with hardwood flooring and a half bath. 2.5 car garage Finished bsmt. Two outbuildings and a small barn. $349,999 CALL KRISTIN MATHIS @ 220-0764 LARRY K. ROGERS REALTY, INC. LARRY K. ROGERS REALTY, INC. LARRY K. ROGERS REALTY, INC. JUST LISTED JUST LISTED JUST LISTED NEW LISTING 1220 ANDERSON LANE 102 ADAIR AVE Unbelievable charm and in lovely downtown. Large trees, brick patio w/ fp, fenced areas, detached garage. With over 2900 sq ft, 4 bdrms & 2.5 baths. Formal LR w/ fireplace and tiled sun porch, formal DR w/ wainscoting, Kitchen has newer countertops, desk area and all beautifully repainted. Family Rm all recently painted and floors refinished. Bsmt, 2 HVAC systems-upstairs unit has just been replaced. Walking distance to downtown. $209,900 CALL JULIE KINSOLVING @ 682-4313 118 WHISPERING PINES PERSIMMON RIDGE Beautiful patio home in great area! This 2 bedroom, 2 bath patio home has over 1900 sq ft, granite countertops in Kitchen, hardwood flooring, crown molding & chairrail in Dining Rm. Monthly maintenance fee includes landscaping, irrigation, snow removal and master insurance policy. $259,900 CALL LARRY K ROGERS @682-0707 Brick home on 2 Acres. Updates include New Roof, New Windows, New French Doors, New Concrete Patio, New Flooring, plus more.†3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, over 1600 sq. ft.† Priced to sell at $169,900. A jewel on 101 ACRES located between Lexington and Louisville. Magnificently restored 1790’s stone home with complimentary additions. Original mantels in the stone home, luxurious master suite, DR with slate floor, sun room. Mature landscaping throughout the brick patios and sidewalks. This compound has a main residence, Custom Built Cottage and a 2nd Guest Home. Horse improvements: 10 stall barn built in 2002, 2 large frame runin sheds with 7 stalls and 3 additional run-in sheds. Large garage/ workshop, equipment building and Hartley Botanic greenhouse. What a treasure nestled in the Heart of Horse Country. $3,938,000 CALL LARRY K ROGERS @ 682-0707 82 HEINSVILLE RD - $169,900 ERIKA WILLIAMS 487-1441 Performance Realty LARRY K. ROGERS REALTY, INC. LARRY K. ROGERS REALTY, INC. LARRY K. ROGERS REALTY, INC. LARRY K. ROGERS REALTY, INC. This new Real Estate Page runs in 30 Stonecrest Ct. Suite 100, Shelbyville every Friday. Call your sales representative at 633-4987 to reserve your spot. OPEN SUNDAY 3/17 • 2-4 PM 5 ACRES IN MAJESTIC OAKS Beautifully gently rolling 5 acres with a stocked pond & 7 miles of horse tracts in the gated, equestrian community of Majestic Oaks located in Simpsonville, Ky. Underground utilities include electric, natural gas and city water. Protected deed restrictions. Helen Daugherty 65 Lizas Circle Stunning, custom-built estate on 5 acres is in the gated, equestrian community ( 7 miles of riding trails). 8501 sq. ft., located on a cul-desac. 5 BRs and 5 BAs. 1st and 2nd floor master suites. Large Sunroom off great room and kitchen. Laundry room on main level. Finished basement with FR, full kitchen, media area, dining area, full bath W/D hook ups and another room that can be used as a bedroom. 36x42 4stall barn with tack room, shower stall, feed room and loft. 4 board fencing surrounds home and paddock. Community has 2 lakes for fishing and boating and picnic area. 3500 ZARING MILL ROAD $415,000 WOW! Spacious 4 bedroom, walkout on 13+ acres. Come take a look at a very livable home and register to win $300 Home Depot gift card. Helen Daugherty Realtor Realtor 502-425-4200 502-425-4200 Associates Associates Call: 376-2712 cell Carolyn and Bob Walters Realtors 600 N. Hurstbourne Parkway Suite 200, Louisville, KY 40222 FAITH FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS B4 ONLINE: www.SentinelNews.com/Faith CHURCH NEWS Annunciation A Lenten fish fry will be from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. today in the community center. If you know of anyone who is sick or homebound, wants pastoral care, interested in learning more about the Catholic faith or becoming Catholic, call 633-1547. Bagdad Baptist Bagdad Baptist welcomes J.D. Miller, guest pianist and worship leader, on Sunday. The March sermon series for 11 a.m. Sunday will be The Bible, an epic miniseries that can be viewed on the History Channel at 8 p.m. Sundays. The youth are studying the book of James on Wednesday nights in a new class called Going Deeper. Bible Explorers Club meets at Heritage Elementary on Mondays after school. Burks Branch Baptist youth meeting. Wednesday night prayer meeting and youth meetings begin at 6:30. Clay Street Baptist The Central District workshop for ushers, nurses and greeters will be Saturday. Registration will be from 9 to 10 a.m. A continental breakfast will be served during registration. Workshops will be from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m., and lunch will be served immediately following the workshops. RSVP to Robert Ellis Sr. at 502-633-5922 or csbcadmn@ gmail.com or to Brenda Davis at bdavis2828@insightbb.com. Cropper Baptist Fifth Sunday services will be March 24 because of Easter. The youth are planning to attend the winter jam on Saturday at Rupp Arena. The cost is $10 per person. Segular services begin with Sunday school at 9:50 a.m. followed by worship services at 11. The choir will meet for cantata rehearsal immediately following the worship service. Acteens will meet at 6 p.m. on Wednesdays, Young Musicians at 6:20, prayer meeting at 6:30 and choir practice at 7. Dover Baptist Centenary United Methodist Team Kids meets at 6 p.m. Sundays. The youth are planning to attend Winter Jam in Lexington on Saturday. Contact Phillip Herrell. WMU is collecting items for the Touched Twice Clinic. Deadline to bring items to church is March 24. From the “Defining Moments” sermon series, the message for this Sunday will be titled “A Life Changing Encounter.” Kids Korner is from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturday. Frankfort District United Methodist Women’s Spiritual Mini-Growth Retreat will be at the Midway UMC, beginning at 9:30 a.m. Saturday. Congregational care/serve meeting will be at 12:15 p.m. Sunday, to discuss several ministry events. Worship planning meeting will be at 10 a.m. Monday. The Ladies Lunch Bunch will meet at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday at the church to travel to Frankfort for lunch at the Meeting House. Centennial Baptist Centennial Baptist Church Women’s month theme is “Women Choosing God’s Way in Prayer.” The speaker for Sunday will be Etta Beach. Sunday school is at 9:30 a.m., morning service at 11. Christiansburg Baptist WMU luncheon will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the home of Joanne Fidell. A joint worship service and “singspiration” will be March 24 at Buffalo Lick. A fellowship meal will begin at 6:30 p.m. March 27. Services begin at 9:45 a.m. on Sundays with Sunday school, and worship begins at 11. Evening worship hour begins at 6 for prayer and Sunday School is at 9:50 a.m. Morning worship is at 11 a.m., with Ray Cummins bringing God’s word. The fifth Sunday song service is at 6 p.m. on March 24, because of Easter. Elmburg Baptist Finchville Baptist A fish fry and silent auction will be from 5 to 8 p.m. March 23 in the Fellowship Hall. A yard sale will be from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. on April 19 and 20. The collection will continue until April 18. All proceeds from the auction and sale will be given to the Guatemala team. Call 502-834-7973. First Baptist Shelbyville Rev. Wesley Ditts, director of missions of the Long Run Association, is the guest speaker at both the 8:30 and 11 a.m. services Sunday. Mark and Melissa Hobson, missionaries to Colombia currently on U.S. sabbatical, will baptize their daughter. Bible fellowship is at 9:45 a.m. The Shelby County and Collins High School orchestras will perform at 6 p.m. Monday in the Relevant Blend Cafe (student room) on the second floor. Mary McGillen will direct the two student ensembles in preparation for their Kentucky Music Educator Association (KMEA) performances in late March. The public is invited to this free concert. Next Level is at 5 p.m. on Wednesday, with a meal at 5 p.m. Rev. Jerry Tracy continues with his study on the book of Ephesians at 6 p.m. in Elsey Chapel. Student and children ministries are also available. Contact amcdonald@fbcshelbyville. com. Young at Heart goes to Crescent Place, 148 Allen Drive, “Breakfast Bingo,” meeting there at 9:30 a.m. on Thursday. Contact Daisy Baxter at 6334836 or Lori Zepeda at 633-6622. No YAH luncheon on Thursday. Crescent Place Bible study is at 1 p.m., then Crestview at 2 p.m. with a devotional. First Christian All youth in grades 6-12 are invited to youth group on Sunday afternoons from 5 to 7 p.m. The Shelby County Children’s Community Choir (SC3) will present its concert, “On Broadway,” at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free. The church is a collection site for Edge Outreach Shoes for Water. FCC is also collecting used hearing-aid batteries, coupons – current or expired, cancelled postage stamps, pop tops from aluminum cans and current magazines for mission projects. Kroger gift cards may be purchased from the church. The weekly sermons may be read online at www.davidcharlton.blogspot.com. The prayer chapel is open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. Two worship services are held each Sunday at 9 a.m. and 11 in the sanctuary. Sunday school begins at 9:45 a.m. First Presbyterian Good Grief is meeting for lunch at Beef O’Brady’s after worship on Sunday to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. The group invites all church members and friends to join them. Call ahead and make your reservation with Beef O’Brady’s. Contact Barbara Troyer. Arriba Ninos tutoring continues to meet on Mondays at First Christian Church, beginning with dinner at 6 p.m. Tutoring is 6:307:30 p.m. Anyone interested in tutoring one evening or all sessions may call 633-2693. Cub Scouts meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Boy Scouts at 7 p.m. Adult choir rehearsal is at 7:15 p.m. Wednesday. Complete the Disaster Preparedness/Response Survey and the Internet/Facebook questionnaires, both included in the March issue of The First Word, and return them to the church office. If you did not receive a First Word, blank forms are available at the church. The Backpack Project is in desperate need of donations. Monetary donations can be made out to Shelby County Backpack Project, P.O. Box 117, Shelbyville, 40066. Items needed are: soup or Chef Boyardee, Vienna sausage, individual fruit cups, Pop Tarts, individual cereals, cereal bars, peanut butter and crackers, Granola bars, Rice Krispie treats, individual apple sauce cups, juice boxes, Capri Sun, water bottles and fruit snacks. Everything needs to be packaged individually. Place these items in the Love Sunday baskets. Highland Baptist The M&M’s meet at 11 a.m. Thursday, with a potluck lunch for a Bible study on Ephesians 2. The Women of Missions groups are collecting items for the Touched Twice Clinic on April 13. Free AARP tax filing service will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Mondays and Thursdays through April 15. Contact Betty or Marvin Rogers, at 502-487-1612, for an appointment. Living Waters There will be a singles’ St. Patrick’s Day party at 6:30 p.m. Friday in the Streams Café at the church. Bring one side dish and sign up at the information counter in the sanctuary. Phil Wynn, senior pastor of New Life Church in Barbourville, will be guest speaker at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. The Honduras Mission Team is hosting a fundraiser lunch on March 24, following the morning service. The cost is by donation. To help with the Touched Twice free medical clinic on April 13, volunteer online at www.shelbytouchedtwice.com. New Beginning Pentecostal J.D. Bird of the Trinity Church of Holiness from Detroit will be the guest at 11:30 a.m. Sunday. Sunday school is at 10:30 a.m., Sunday morning service 11:30 and 5:30 p.m. Sunday. New Covenant Missionary service will be at 6 p.m. Sunday. Guest speaker will be sister Dana Gaines of Bates Memorial Church in Louisville. Olive Branch United Methodist Services are Sunday school at 10 a.m., morning worship at 11 a.m., evening service at 6 p.m. Shelby Congregational Methodist The usher board will have an afternoon program at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. Guest speaker will be minister Geraldine Spencer. Simpsonville Baptist A celebration choir musical, Grace, greater than we deserve, more than we imagine, will begin at 10:30 a.m. March 24 at Simpsonville Baptist Church. Community USO Senior Social will be at 4 p.m. April 13. RSVP to 7225246, ext. 18. Open play men’s basketball will be on Sundays. Ages 13-30 play at 1-2:30 p.m. and ages 30 and older at 2:30-4 p.m. The father-daughter dance will begin at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets are $15 each, and that includes the speaker, entertainment, dinner and the daughter’s gift. For tickets, call 7225246 ext 15. Simpsonville Christian The church now has sermon videos online at http://simpsonvillecc.org. This week’s sermon by Joey Pusateri is “The Old and the New” (Isaiah 43: 16-21). There are three Sunday school classes: traditional (adult) at 9:45 a.m.; young adult at 10 a.m.; and preschoolers at 10 a.m. Worship is at 10:50 a.m. A nursery and children’s church (ages 4 to 12) is provided. Other activities include a yoga class from 5 to 6 p.m. on Fridays, followed by youth group from 6 to 8 p.m. Simpsonville United Methodist The March community outreach project will be Shelby Touched Twice Clinic on April 13 at Shelbyville First Baptist Church. Sunday is collection day for toiletry items: shampoo, deodorant, toothbrushes, toothpaste, shaving cream, razors, soap, combs and hairbrushes. United Methodist Women’s Spiritual Growth Mini Retreat is Saturday at Midway UMC. The speaker is Tina Patterson, director of Wesley Foundation at Kentucky State University. Meetings begin at 9:30 a.m. AA meeting is at 11:30 a.m. every Tuesday in basement. Hartz to Hearts Quilters meet at 10 a.m. on Friday in Fellowship hall St. James Episcopal Choral Evensong will be presented on Sunday by the choir, joined with the Full Circle Singers, at 5 p.m. Refreshments will be served afterwards in Parish Hall. Vestry will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday. The Eucharist is celebrated each Sunday at 10 a.m. and each Wednesday at 12:15 p.m. Child care is available on Sunday. Clothing, shoes and bedding continue to be collected for those in need. Waddy Baptist Sunday school begins each Sunday morning at 9:45, with the weekly worship service at 11. The youth will serve a potato bar luncheon after the service Sunday as a fundraiser for summer camp. Call 829-5164. For more listings, visit www. sentinelnews.com/faith. CHURCH DIRECTORY Shelbyville Community Church Full Gospel Grace Assembly of God 520 Mt. Eden Road • Shelbyville Pastor J. Darrell Biram - 633-4377 Welcomes You to Come and Worship the Lord With Us 3267 Shelbyville Rd • Shelbyville, Ky (Across From Claudia Sanders Restaurant) Sunday School 9:30am Wednesday Bible Study & Children’s Activities 7pm Sunday Worship 10:35am & 6pm Nursery Provided For all Services Sun. School ........ 10 a.m. Sun. Evening ......... 6 p.m. Sun. Worship........11 a.m. Wed. Evening.......6:30 p.m. Ray & Marie Lutes, pastors Catholic Church of the Annunciation Saint John Chrysostom Sunday Mass 8:00 AM & 10:30 AM Saturday Mass 5:30 PM Monday - Friday Mass 8:00 AM Hispanic Mass 12:30 PM Sunday Father Mike Tobin 105 Main Street,- Shelbyville 633-1547 Educational Bldg. - 107 Main Street, Shelbyville 633-0833 The Lighthouse Baptist Church First Presbyterian Church Shelbyville Seventh-day Adventist Church 696 Frankfort Road • Shelbyville (502) 437-0118 629 Main Street www.presbyterian-church.com Phone 633-2693 WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 AM SATURDAY BIBLE STUDY 9:30 AM Call church for transportation, leave message. Sunday School 9:30 • Worship 10:30 • Children’s Church 10:30 • Wednesday Night 7:00 ...the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God. (Exodus 20.10) Pastor Doug Na’a Phone 647-3921 4401 Frankfort Road www.Shelbyville24.adventistchurchconnect.org Simpsonville Christian Church HOLY CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday: Holy Communion 10:00 a.m. 7002 Shelbyville Road • Simpsonville • 722-8995 Childcare provided Sunday School 9:45 am Worship Celebration 10:50 am Sunday School - 9:45 AM Worship Service - 11 AM 181 OLD SEVEN MILE PIKE, SHELBYVILLE Wednesday: Holy Communion 12:15 p.m. email stjamesshelbyville@gmail.com Main & Third Street - 633-2718 www.simpsonvillecc.org OFFICE: 647-3696 Pastor Daniel Guagenti SIMPSONVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Highland Baptist Church 105 First Street 722-8962 Rev. Lenny Marr First Worship Service 8:45am Sunday School 9:45am Second Worship Service 10:45am Visit our Web Page: www.gbgm-umc.org/simpsonvilleumc RHEMA CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY Alive and active 561 Rockbridge Road Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Wednesday for all ages 502-633-7888 Worship 10:30 a.m. 7:00 p.m. Kno wC hris t ... e Ch rist Kno wn Mak 511 Mount Eden Road (P.O. Box 104) Shelbyville, KY 40066-0104 www.highlandbaptistky.com Sunday Morning Bible Study - 9:30AM Sunday Worship Services - 8:15AM, 10:30AM and 6:00PM Wednesday Night Activities - 7PM Pastor Terry L. Yeager FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Disciples Of Christ “A family of faith that values, equally the leadership of both women and men.” 175 Years of Service (1830 - 2005) 9:00 a.m. - Early Service 9:45 a.m. - Church School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 1000 Eminence Pike 502-633-3345 Dave Charlton, Senior Minister www.Àrstchristianchurch1.homestead.com Love God, Love People, Make Disciples SUNDAY CONTEMPORARY WORSHIP ...............................8:48 AM SUNDAY SCHOOL ................ ALL AGES .........................10:00 AM SUNDAY TRADITIONAL WORSHIP ..................................11:00 AM Sunday Mornings at 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Wednesday Evenings at 7:00 p.m. Signing for Hearing Impaired at 11:00 am service For More Information call 502.633.5975 WEDNESDAY MINISTRIES CATERED DINNER ..........................................................6:00 PM CHILDREN, YOUTH, ADULT CLASSES ................... 6:30 - 7:50 PM Rev. Willard Knipp, Senior Pastor Nursery Available Handicap Accessible Phone: 633-4510 429 Main Street, Shelbyville, KY 40065 centenaryumc@insightbb.com • www.shelbyvillemethodist.com www.shelbyvillebaptist.com 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 12:00 12:30 MARCH 19, 2013 11:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 MARCH 20, 2013 News Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline News Late Show Letterman Ferguson WAVE 3 Tonight Show w/Leno J. Fallon Seinfeld King ’70s Show ’70s Show Two Men Big Bang 30 Rock Friends 30 Rock The Office The Office Jim World Ky Life GED Bluegrass Louisville Performance Funny Home Videos Rules Rules Word Alive Healing Paid Prog. “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” Cougar Conan Conan Å College Basketball Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU (:01) Army Wives (12:02) Dance Moms Storage Storage Storage Storage Prince Prince The 700 Club Å Tenants Ur. Tarzan Tenants Tenants Friends Friends Friends Friends Southland “Off Duty” Boston’s Finest Å SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å 19 Kids and Count Little People Income Property ’ Income Property ’ Ult. Soldier Challenge Pawn Pawn Chelsea E! News Chelsea Daily Colbert Tosh.0 The Je King King The King of Queens 11:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 12:00 12:30 MARCH 21, 2013 11:30 WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM Ent Inside Ed. Wife Swap ’ Å News Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline Grey’s Anatomy (N) (:02) Scandal (N) ’ 2013 NCAA Basketball Tournament 2013 NCAA Basketball Tournament News Letterman News News Commun Parks The Office 1600 Penn Law & Order: SVU WAVE 3 Tonight Show w/Leno J. Fallon News Rules The Vampire Diaries Beauty and the Beast How I Met Friends Seinfeld King ’70s Show ’70s Show Two Men Big Bang American Idol (N) News Sports Two Men Big Bang 30 Rock Friends Glee (N) ’ Fam. Guy King/Hill Rules Rules 30 Rock The Office The Office Jim White Collar Å White Collar Å World Kentucky GED Louisville Doc Martin ’ Å PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Antiques Roadshow Market Warriors ’ Jour.-WellBeing Kentucky Bluegrass Field of Dreams Homestretch Decade of Diff. Jubilee ’ Å Funny Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met News Videos Funny Home Videos Rules Rules Word Alive Healing Paid Prog. Without a Trace ’ Without a Trace ’ Without a Trace ’ Criminal Minds Å Constan Comic Freak Immortal Comic Freak Immortal Comic Freak The Walking Dead Å 2013 NCAA Basketball Tournament 2013 NCAA Basketball Tournament Second Round: Teams TBA. (N) Conan Å Cheerleading Cheerleading NASCAR SportCtr Baseball Tonight (N) NFL Live Å NFL Live Å Law & Order: SVU NCIS “False Witness” NCIS “Recruited” ’ NCIS “Freedom” ’ Psych Å (DVS) NCIS ’ Å Preachers’ Daughters TBA Project Runway Å Dance Moms Å Project Runway Å Project Runway (N) Å (:01) Bates Motel (12:01) The First 48 After the First 48 (N) The First 48 Å The First 48 Å The First 48 (N) Å ›› “Happy Gilmore” (1996) Adam Sandler. ›› “Happy Gilmore” (1996) Adam Sandler. Prince Prince The 700 Club Å “Tokyo Drift” Bellator MMA Live ’ iMPACT Wrestling (N) ’ Å Bellator MMA Live (N) ’ (Live) Sponge. Drake Wendell Wendell Full H’se Full H’se Nanny Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends 2013 NCAA Basketball Tournament 2013 NCAA Basketball Tournament Monday Mornings (N) Å Tignes. From Tignes, France. (N Same-day Tape) SportsCenter SportsCenter (N) Winter X Games Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes What Not to Wear (N) What Not to Wear ’ Hunt Intl Hunters Rehab Rehab Hunters Hunt Intl Hawaii Hawaii Rehab Rehab Income Property ’ Big Rig Bounty Larry the Cable Guy Swamp People (N) Swamp People Å Swamp People Å Swamp People Å The Soup Burning Playing With Fire After Late After Late Chelsea E! News Chelsea E! News (N) Colbert Daily Sunny Sunny Work. Tosh.0 Ben Show Nathan Daily Colbert Tosh.0 Tosh.0 King The King of Queens TV LAND Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Cleveland Cleveland King 7:00 THURSDAY EVENING WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM Ent Inside Ed. Middle Neighbors Mod Fam Suburg. News Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline Nashville ’ WLKY Road To The Survivor: Caramoan CSI: Crime Scene News Late Show Letterman Ferguson Criminal Minds (N) ’ ’ (N) News News Whitney Whitney Law & Order: SVU WAVE 3 Tonight Show w/Leno J. Fallon Chicago Fire News Rules How I Met Friends Seinfeld King ’70s Show ’70s Show Arrow (N) ’ Å Supernatural (N) ’ Two Men Big Bang American Idol “Finalists Compete” (N) Å News Sports Two Men Big Bang 30 Rock Friends Rules Rules 30 Rock The Office The Office Jim Fam. Guy King/Hill NUMB3RS “Blackout” NUMB3RS ’ Å Secrets of the Dead World Ky Life GED Decisions PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Nature ’ Å NOVA Å (DVS) Conversations Henry Clay and the Cassius Clay Call War Vintage Woodsongs ’ Å Studio 89 Å Funny Home Videos Rules Rules Rules Rules WGN News at Nine Funny Home Videos Rules Rules Cis. Kid The Saint Word Alive Healing Paid Prog. WWE Main Event (N) Zorro ’ Cold Squad ’ ››› “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” (2002) Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen. “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Å Men-Work Conan College Basketball College Basketball SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene NCIS “Two-Faced” NCIS “Newborn King” Psych (N) NCIS “Baltimore” ’ Preachers’ Daughters (12:02) Dance Moms Preachers’ Daughters Dance Moms Å Dance Moms The girls prepare for a tribute. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. (:01) Bates Motel Duck D. Duck D. ›› “A Walk to Remember” (2002) Prince Prince (6:30) ›› “The Last Song” (2010, Drama) The 700 Club Å Wildest Police Videos ›› “The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift” (2006) Lucas Black. (10:51) ›› “Piranha” (2010) Premiere. ’ Sponge. Drake Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Nanny Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends › “Law Abiding Citizen” (2009) Jamie Foxx. Boston’s Finest (N) Boston’s Finest Å Southland ’ Å Southland (N) Å SportCtr NBA NBA Basketball Brooklyn Nets at Dallas Mavericks. (N) Winter X Games Tignes. From Tignes, France. Å Addiction Addiction Hoard-Buried Hoard-Buried Addiction Addiction Hoard-Buried Addiction Addiction Property Brothers Cousins Cousins Hunt Intl Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers (N) Hunters Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn America’s Book Pawn Pawn The Bible The Jews are enslaved in Babylon. (N) Kourtney-Kim Kourtney-Kim The Soup Burning Chelsea E! News Chelsea E! News Colbert Daily Chappelle Work. South Pk South Pk Work. Tosh.0 Daily Colbert Work. South Pk King The King of Queens TV LAND Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Cleveland Cleveland King 7:00 WEDNESDAY EVENING WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM Ent Inside Ed. Splash ’ Å Dancing With Stars (:01) Body of Proof Wheel Jeopardy! NCIS “Seek” (N) ’ NCIS: Los Angeles Golden Boy (N) Å News News Betty Betty Go On ’ Normal Smash (N) ’ Å News Rules Justin Timberlake Beauty and the Beast How I Met Friends Two Men Big Bang Hell’s Kitchen (N) New Girl Mindy News Sports Fam. Guy King/Hill Rules Rules House ’ Å House ’ Å ›› “Okie Noodling” PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Jubilee ’ Å Frontline ’ Å Appalshop at 40 Time on the River Portraits On Bended Knee: Night Rider Funny Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds ’ ››› “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” (2002) Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen. Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Cougar Big Bang College Basketball College Basketball Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Preachers’ Daughters Dance Moms The girls prepare for a tribute. Dance Moms Å Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Twisted “Pilot” (N) Pretty Little Liars ’ Pretty Little Liars ’ Pretty Little Liars ’ Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Tenants Ur. Tarzan Sponge. Drake Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Nanny Nanny Castle “Linchpin” Castle ’ Å Castle ’ Å Castle ’ Å SportCtr College Basketball College Basketball DC Cupcakes: Baby 19 Kids and Count 19 Kids and Count Little People Hunt Intl Hunters Buying and Selling Hunters Hunt Intl Income Property (N) (N) Å Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Top Gear Vikings Å (N) ›› (2006) Jeff Bridges. Playing With Fire E! News “Stick It” Colbert Daily The Je Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 (N) The Je Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Cleveland Cleveland TV LAND 7:30 * 47 27 25 * * 40 22 2 * * 44 33 18 3 * * 41 34 13 4 * * 35 14 36 15 * 48 45 37 10 5 * * 46 30 28 26 23 19 6 * 42 24 16 7 * 38 20 8 * * 31 11 * 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. “Mike & Molly” actress (2) Start of a vowel list Prefix for run or heat Cain’s victim Actress Gertz Initials for Dickens’ orphan boy DOWN 1. __ Sidle; role on “CSI” 5. “__ __ Dancer, Your Life Is Calling”; 1986 Richard Pryor movie 9. Nerd 10. Lopsided 12. “__ Dalmatians”; 1961 film 13. Actor Jack __ of old Westerns 16. Frank Sinatra’s third 17. Initials for Popeye’s love 18. Role on “The Good Wife” 20. “Star Wars: Episode __ — Return of the Jedi” 21. Vane letters 23. __ Patrick Harris 25. Suffix for text or percent 26. FBI crime lab evidence 27. Marienthal, for one 28. Tease 29. 1980 Karl Malden series 30. Actress Barbara 32. Gold, in the lab 33. Actress Jean __ 38. Initials for MacDonald’s co-star Eddy 39. “The A-Team” actor (2) 41. Root beer topper 42. Suffix for long or strong 43. Take the helm 45. Dolls meant to be tickled 47. Mr. Mostel 48. Person, place or thing ACROSS Paul Guilfoyle’s role Role on “Law & Order: SVU” (2) Singer Celine “An American __”; animated film about Fievel Michael J. Fox’s age Initials for Carney “Anchors __”; 1945 Gene Kelly movie Role on “Touched by an Angel” __ Fitzgerald “__ Is Sleeping”; 1990 Judge Reinhold movie Donaldson & Waterston Brooklyn team Jackson Five hairdo Rosie’s initials “__ Femme Nikita” “The __”; 2006 remake for Julia Stiles Peg for Els Large flightless bird Noah Wyle’s series, once Olivier’s initials CROSSWORD SOLUTION 40. 42. 44. 46. 29. 31. 34. 35. 36. 37. 19. 22. 24. 14. 15. 18. 7. 8. 9. 11. The identity of the featured celebrity is found within the answers in the puzzle. In order to take the TV Challenge, unscramble the letters noted with asterisks within the puzzle. 43 39 32 29 21 17 12 9 1 CROSSWORD PUZZLE T A I L N E T S 7:00 L I R O J O J O AT I L AM M I C I A V N E I DNA R I B E DE L OW N AM E S E LMO NOUN TUESDAY EVENING S ARA DWE E B I O I E OO AL N S EW I L E E L I S KAG AU HA MR T F S T E E R Z E RO Solution Julianna Margulies 7:00 7:30 8:00 1:00 1:30 The Chew Access H. Bold Days of our Lives Trisha Goddard Rachael Ray Maury GED Pre GED One Bywords 7:30 8:00 2:30 8:30 9:30 3:00 3:30 9:00 9:30 Katie Steve Harvey The Dr. Oz Show Bill Cunningham Dr. Phil Law Order: CI Cat in the Curious Looking at Painting 10:00 10:30 4:30 10:00 10:30 WHAS11 News Young & Restless Ellen DeGeneres Maury News News The Ricki Lake Show Arthur WordGirl Varied Programs 4:00 The Doctors Let’s Make a Deal Today Baggage Baggage Millionaire Millionaire Judge Mathis Sesame Street 11:00 11:30 11:00 News News WAVE 3 Cheaters Jdg Judy Raymond Wild Kratt 5:00 12:00 12:30 6:30 News ABC News CBS News News TMZ Insider Jdg Judy News King/Hill Fam. Guy News Business Varied Programs 6:00 News WLKY News at Noon America Wave The People’s Court FamFeud FamFeud Jerry Springer WordWrld Clifford 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 12:00 12:30 11:30 12:00 12:30 MARCH 16, 2013 11:30 MARCH 15, 2013 News News Wave 3 Dish Nat. Jdg Judy How I Met Electric Ky Life 5:30 The View The Price Is Right Wave 3 News Midday Judge Divorce Jdg Judy News Steve Wilkos Show Tiger Sid Good Morning Good Morning Good Mrn Courtside Hanna Ocean Explore Rescue Big East SEC WLKY News Doodle. Doodle. Busytown College Basketball CBS This Morning: Saturday (N) ’ Å Wave LazyTown Noodle Chica Pajanimal Poppy Cat Justin Paid Prog. MLS Soc Today “Brides in Waiting.” (N) ’ Nanoboy Nanoboy Sonic X Sonic X Trans Justice Justice WWE Yu-Gi-Oh! Yu-Gi-Oh! Scotty ’Til Death Real Life Icons Eco Co. J. Hanna Aqua Kids Animal McCarver Anti-Aging WDRB in the Morning (N) Adven. Wild Am. Into Wild Big World Muffin Top? System! Paid Prog. Paid Prog. No Flame Old House Hazelton Curious Cat in the Super Dinosaur Thomas Angelina Paint This Blenko Behind the Scenes Å Dyer Wishes Fulfilled Louisville Round. Indepen. Hall Crafting Tradition Kentucky Collectibles Louisville’s Own Ali Kentucky Muse Å Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Zula Patrl Pearlie Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Drop Lbs! Paid Prog. 21 Live Red-Blue Red-Blue Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman ›› “Seven Ways From Sundown” (1960) “Enter the Dragon” Home Im Home Im Payne Browns There Jim Rules Rules (:15) › “My Baby’s Daddy” (2004) Å Nation Basketball NBA English Premier League Soccer SportCtr College Basketball ››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Steve Carell. Å Cook Safe Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Yng- Skin Psych “Lassie Jerky” Back Fat? Smile Williams Paid Prog. Body Paid Prog. Paid Prog. WEN Hair Double Preachers’ Daughters Client Criminal Minds “JJ” Flipping Boston (N) Criminal Minds Å Flip This House Å Flipping Boston Å Criminal Minds Å ›› “Shorts” (2009) Jon Cryer. Premiere. ›› “Hocus Pocus” (1993) Bette Midler. Boy... “Harry Potter-Chamber” ››› “Independence Day” (1996) ’ Defrosting Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Insanity! Xtreme Horse. Trucks! Muscle Parents Parents Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Turtles Turtles Parents Sponge. “Strike” ’ ’ Å Monday Mornings Law & Order Southland “Off Duty” Law & Order Dallas Law & Order (N) Å Å Å Å (N) (Live) College GameDay SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter Paid Prog. TRIA Insanity! Yng- Skin Moving Up ’ Å Moving Up ’ Å Moving Up ’ Å Moving Up ’ Å Disaster Bryan Buying and Selling Property Property BathCrash BathCrash YardCrash Kit. Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty Kourtney-Kim Kourtney-Kim The Soup E! Special E! News (N) Fashion Police The Soup E! Special Paid Prog. Skincare Comedy Paul F. Tompkins “Walk Hard: Dewey Cox” (:40) ›› “Coneheads” (1993) Dan Aykroyd. 3’s Co. 3’s Co. 3’s Co. 3’s Co. 3’s Co. 3’s Co. Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne TV LAND Three’s Company WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM 7:00 SATURDAY MORNING 7:00 2:00 General Hospital The Talk Varied America Extra Steve Wilkos Show The Jeff Probst Show Judge B. Judge B. Super Dinosaur Varied Programs 9:00 Great Day Live! Anderson Live Today The People’s Court Live With Kelly The 700 Club Super Dinosaur 20 21 26 27 30 33 35 36 40 41 42 43 44 50 51 54 56 59 65 - WGN-A - WBNA - AMC - TBS - ESPN2 - USA - LIFE - A&E - FAM - SPIKE - NICK - TNT - ESPN - TLC - HGTV - HIS - E! - COM - TV LAND FRIDAY MARCH 15, 2013 7:30 p.m. (WHAS) Inside Edition (N) ’ Å (WLKY) Jeopardy! (N) ’ Å (WAVE) WAVE 3 News at 7:30 (N) (WBKI) College Basketball “Big 12 Tournament, First Semifinal: Teams TBA” (N) (Live) (WDRB) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (WMYO) King of the Hill ’ Å (AMC) Movie ›› “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen” (2003, Fantasy) Å (TBS) Seinfeld ’ Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (TLC) Say Yes to the Dress: Atlanta ’ Å (HGTV) Spontaneous Construction (N) Å 7:57 p.m. (COM) Tosh.0 Å 8:00 p.m. (WHAS) Last Man Standing (N) ’Å (WLKY) Undercover Boss (N) ’ Å (WAVE) Fashion Star (N) ’ (WDRB) Kitchen Nightmares (N) ’ Å (DVS) (WMYO) Monk ’ (Part 1 of 2) Å (KET) Comment on Kentucky ’ Å (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (WBNA) Cold Case ’ Å (TBS) Family Guy ’ Å (USA) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’Å (LIFE) Hoarders Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (TLC) Four Weddings (N) ’ Å (HGTV) I Brake for Yard Sales Å (HIS) American Pickers Å 8:28 p.m. (COM) Tosh.0 Å 8:30 p.m. (KET) McLaughlin Group (N) (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (TBS) Movie ››› “Hitch” (2005, RomanceComedy) Å (DVS) (A&E) Storage Wars Å 8:31 p.m. (WHAS) Malibu Country (N) ’ Å 8:58 p.m. (COM) Workaholics Å 9:00 p.m. (WHAS) Shark Tank ’ Å (DVS) (WLKY) Hawaii Five-0 ’ Å (WAVE) Grimm (N) ’ Å (DVS) (WDRB) Touch (N) ’ Å (WMYO) Monk ’ (Part 2 of 2) Å (KET) Viewers’ Choice (KET2) Henry Clay and the Struggle for the Union ’ Å Continued on page 2 (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (WBNA) Cold Case ’ Å (USA) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’Å (LIFE) Hoarders Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (ESPN) College Basketball “Big East Tournament, Second Semifinal: Teams TBA” (N) (Live) (TLC) Say Yes to the Dress: Atlanta (N) ’Å (HGTV) Flea Market Flip (N) Å (HIS) American Pickers Å 9:29 p.m. (COM) Tosh.0 Å SATURDAY MARCH 16, 2013 7:30 p.m. (WBKI) Futurama ’ Å (WDRB) Two and a Half Men ’ Å (WMYO) The Simpsons ’ Å (TBS) The King of Queens ’ Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (SPIKE) Auction Hunters ’ (HIS) Pawn Stars Å 8:00 p.m. (WHAS) Celebrity Wife Swap ’Å (WLKY) CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ’ Å (DVS) (WAVE) American Ninja Warrior (N) Å (WBKI) Movie ››› “Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow” (2004, Adventure) (WDRB) Cops (N) ’ (PA) Å (WMYO) Seinfeld ’ Å (KET) Magic Moments: The Best of 50s Pop ’ Å (KET2) Roads Home: Life and Times of A.B. “Happy” Chandler Å (WGN-A) America’s Funniest Home Videos ’Å (WBNA) House ’ Å (AMC) Movie ›› “Godzilla” (1998, Science Fiction) Premiere. (TBS) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (USA) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’Å (LIFE) Movie ›› “Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail” (2009, Comedy) Premiere. Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (SPIKE) Auction Hunters ’ (ESPN) To Be Announced HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK Cable Channels 10 - WMYO 13 - KET 15 - KET2 3 - WAVE/NBC Cable 6 32 - WLKY/CBS Cable 5 11 - WHAS/ABC Cable 4 34 - WBKI/CW Cable 7 41 - WDRB/FOX Cable 9 58 - WMYO/MNT Cable 10 Broadcast Channels Channel Line-up March 15 - 21, 2013 This Week on TV Ent Inside Ed. Last Man Malibu News Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline Shark Tank ’ (:01) 20/20 (N) Å Wheel Jeopardy! Undercover Boss (N) News Late Show Letterman Ferguson Blue Bloods (N) Å Hawaii Five-0 Å News News Rock Center WAVE 3 Tonight Show w/Leno J. Fallon Fashion Star (N) ’ Grimm (N) ’ News College Basketball College Basketball Nikita (N) ’ Å Two Men Big Bang Kitchen Nightmares News Sports Two Men Big Bang 30 Rock Friends Touch “Ghosts” (N) Fam. Guy King/Hill Rules Rules 30 Rock The Office The Office Jim Monk Å Monk Å World Ky Life Muddy Waters PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Comment McL’ghlin Viewers’ Choice Henry Clay and the Appalshop at 40 Film. Hollywood Jubilee ’ Å Kentucky Life Å Funny Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met News NBA Basketball Chicago Bulls at Golden State Warriors. The Awakening The Coun Taber Cold Case ’ Å Cold Case ’ Å Cold Case ’ Å Cold Case ’ Å ›› “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen” (2003) Enter The Walking Dead Freak Freak Comic Comic There There There There Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy ››› “Hitch” (2005) Will Smith. Å (DVS) ATP Tennis College Basketball: ACC Tournament College Basketball: ACC Tournament Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene (:01) Army Wives (12:01) Hoarders Hoarders Å Hoarders Å Hoarders Å Hoarders Å Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Prince Prince The 700 Club Å ››› “Independence Day” (1996) Will Smith, Bill Pullman. ’ (5:30) ››› “The Green Mile” (1999) Tom Hanks, David Morse. ’ Turtles Turtles Turtles Turtles Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends (12:06) Friends Å ›› “The Librarian: Quest for the Spear” “Librarian: Return to King Solomon’s Mine” The Mentalist Å Dallas Å College Basketball College Basketball College Basketball Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Borrowed Borrowed Say Yes Say Yes Borrowed Borrowed Four Weddings (N) Dream Spont. Brake for Yard Sales Flea Mar Flea Mar Hunters Hunt Intl Hunt Intl Hunt Intl Flea Mar Flea Mar American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers 1880’s 1880’s American Pickers After Late After Late Fashion Police Chelsea E! News Chelsea E! News (N) Fashion Police (N) Colbert Daily Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Work. Tosh.0 Zack-Miri (9:59) ›› “Dinner for Schmucks” (2010) Steve Carell. Cosby Cosby Cosby Raymond Raymond Cleveland Cleveland King King The King of Queens TV LAND Cosby WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM FRIDAY EVENING WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 8:30 Good Morning America CBS This Morning Today Court Justice Judge Mathis WDRB in the Morning Judge Divorce Dr. Phil Arthur Martha Curious Cat in the Varied Programs WEEKDAY AFTERNOON WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WEEKDAY MORNING Sentinel-News The 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 6:00 6:30 MARCH 16, 2013 5:30 College Basketball College Basketball News PostABC Basketball College Basketball College Basketball College Basketball News News MLS Soccer: United at Red Bulls PGA Tour Golf Tampa Bay Championship, Third Round. (N) Å ›› “Hannah Montana: The Movie” (2009) Griffith Griffith Da Vinci’s Inquest The Collector Å The Border ’ Best Mop Derm Big Bang Big Bang Friends Friends “The Fifth Commandment” (2009) Rick Yune. Bones ’ Å Home. Hometime Jim Judge B. Jdg Judy Jdg Judy How I Met How I Met Leverage Å Simpsons Simpsons Tenors: Lead With-Heart Celtic Woman Antiques Roadshow ’ Å (12:00) Dr. Wayne Dyer: Wishes Fulfilled ’ Kentucky State Fair Gentleman/ Kentucky Headwaters All Star Bluegrass Celebration Woods. Jubilee ’ Å Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI MLB Preseason Baseball Kansas City Royals at Chicago Cubs. (N) Paid Prog. Tummy Cook Safe Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Two-Two Babar ’ Willa’s Dragon Hillbillies House “Unfaithful” ’ ›› “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen” (2003) ›› “Hulk” (2003, Fantasy) Eric Bana. Å (12:00) “Enter the Dragon” (1973) ››› “Hitch” (2005) Will Smith. Å (DVS) Raymond Friends Friends Friends Friends King King Basketball NASCAR NASCAR Racing College Basketball Basketball Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU ›› “Not Easily Broken” (2009) Å ››› “Selena” (1997) Å Client “Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story” Å Storage Storage The First 48 Å The First 48 Å The First 48 Å The First 48 Å The First 48 Å ››› “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” (2009) Daniel Radcliffe. (11:30) “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets” “Independence Day” (:15) ››› “The Green Mile” (1999) Tom Hanks. A guard thinks an inmate has a supernatural power to heal. ’ Rangers Sponge. Parents Parents Parents Parents Victorious Victorious iCarly ’ Å Sponge. Sponge. ›› “Journey to the Center of the Earth” ››› “King Kong” (2005) Naomi Watts, Jack Black. Å Boston’s Finest Å College Basketball College Basketball College Basketball Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Love It or List It Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunt Intl Big Rig Bounty Swamp People Å Swamp People Å Swamp People Å Swamp People Å Swamp People Å Kourtney-Kim Kourtney-Kim Kourtney-Kim Kourtney-Kim Kourtney-Kim Fashion Police “Walk Hard” Dinner (1:59) ›› “Major League” (1989) Tom Berenger. Å (:26) ›› “Malibu’s Most Wanted” (2003) 1:00 SATURDAY AFTERNOON WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 MARCH 16, 2013 TV LAND Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls 7:30 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 MARCH 17, 2013 Entertainment ’Night Celebrity Wife Swap News Inside Ed. Criminal Minds Å 20/20 “The Camera Never Lies” (N) ’ Å College Basketball CSI: Crime Scene News Sports 48 Hours (N) Å Criminal Minds ’ The Closer Å Medical Paid Prog. Ninja Warrior Saturday Night Live WAVE 3 Chicago Fire ’ (:29) Saturday Night Live Å ›› “8 Heads in a Duffel Bag” (1997) Futurama Futurama “Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow” Cheaters ’ Å Two Men Two Men Cops (N) Cops The Following News Sports Big Bang Two Men 30S 30 Rock Simpsons Simpsons Seinfeld Raymond Rules Rules Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Star Wars: Clone “Queen-Damned” Celtic Woman Acoustic 60s Pop, Rock & Soul (My Music) ’ Å Magic Moments: The Best of 50s Pop Å Roads Smoke Louisville’s Own Ali Henry Clay and the Woodsongs ’ Å Kentucky Life National parks in the state. ’ Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos WGN News at Nine Bones ’ Å Bones ’ Å Salvo Arekion Paid Prog. Taber House “Here Kitty” Psych “Think Tank” House ’ Å House ’ Å ›› “Godzilla” (1998) Matthew Broderick, Jean Reno. Premiere. › “Gone in Sixty Seconds” (2000) Å (5:00) ›› “Hulk” ›› “Why Did I Get Married?” King King Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Cougar College Basketball College Basketball College Basketball Basketball ››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Å Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU “Madea Goes to Jail” (5:30) “Selena” (1997) ›› “Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail” “Pastor Brown” (2009, Drama) Å Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage ››› “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” (2005) ›› “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2” (2008) ›› “Serendipity” Auction Auction Auction Auction Auction Auction Diggers Diggers Diggers Diggers Auction Auction Sponge. Sponge. Wendell Marvin Ninjas Wendell See Dad Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends ››› “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring” (2001) Å (DVS) (:45) “Journey to the Center of the Earth” Deep College Basketball TBA College Basketball College Basketball Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life House Hunters Reno Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn › “License to Wed” (2007) Robin Williams. ›› “There’s Something About Mary” (1998) E! News Burning ››› “I Love You, Man” (2009) Paul Rudd. (6:28) ›› “Dinner for Schmucks” (2010) (:02) ›› “Zack and Miri Make a Porno” King The King of Queens 7:00 SATURDAY EVENING WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM 8:00 TV LAND Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls King 7:30 News Good Morning This Week Wealth Mass Recipe Food MyDest. SEC WLKY News WLKY News Kds News Road to Final CBS News Sunday Morning (N) Face the Nation (N) Wave Sunday Sunrise Today (N) ’ Å Southeast Wave 10 Minute Skincare Skincare Hockey Meet the Press (N) Mass-Air Watch Mystery Pets.TV Hollywood Animal Mad Traveler Farmer Paid Prog. “Fifth Command” Fox News Sunday In Touch Dining Discoveries Estate NASCAR WDRB in the Morning (N) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. 10 Minute WHAD Rescue Dog Tales DragonFly Cook Safe Baptist Worship “Hannah Montana” Curious Cat in the Super Dinosaur Tiger Sid Viewers’ Choice Kentucky Bluegrass Louisville Comment Renee S. One Great Conversations Ky Life Time Cap KY Muse Homer Paid Prog. Facts Key/David Beyond Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Cook Safe Paid Prog. ›› “O” (2001, Drama) Mekhi Phifer. Å Van Impe In Search Van Impe Fellow P. Stone Religious J. Osteen Bates Evangel Presents Live Worship ››› “The Usual Suspects” (1995) Stephen Baldwin. ›› “Hulk” (2003) Eric Bana. Mad Men Å The Killing ’ Å ›› “Meet the Browns” (2008) Tyler Perry. Home Im Home Im Home Im Friends Friends Friends Friends Cougar SEC Storied Basketball NBA Outside Reporters Basketball NASCAR Now (N) SportsCenter (N) Cook Safe Jeremiah Miracles J. Osteen NCIS “Bete Noir” ’ NCIS “Heart Break” NCIS “Silver War” ’ NCIS ’ Å In Touch Get Sub D Jeremiah J. Osteen Skincare Double Come “Unanswered Prayers” (2010) Eric Close. Criminal Minds “JJ” Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å ››› “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” (2009) Daniel Radcliffe. Boy... Boy... “Sisterhood of Traveling Pants” Paid Prog. Insanity! Paid Prog. Insanity! Xtreme Horse. Trucks! Muscle Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Parents Parents Rangers Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Turtles Turtles Parents Parents Law & Order “Fed” Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Law & Order ’ Outside Reporters SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å Basketball SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter Å Dr. Fred Price Yng- Skin Paid Prog. Four Weddings Å Four Weddings Å Four Weddings Å Four Weddings Å Income Income Income Income Income Income Income Income Property Brothers Love It or List It Modern Marvels American American American American American American American American Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Fashion Police Kourtney-Kim The Soup ›› “There’s Something About Mary” (1998) E! News (N) Insanity Workout Comedy John Mulaney (11:55) “Coneheads” (:28) ›› “Major League” (1989) Tom Berenger. Å Cosby Cosby Cosby Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne 7:00 SUNDAY MORNING WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM TV LAND (:12) The Cosby Show Continued on page 3 (WAVE) WAVE 3 News at 7:30 (N) (WBKI) Rules of Engagement ’ Å (WDRB) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (WMYO) King of the Hill ’ Å (KET2) Local Traveler ’ Å (TBS) Seinfeld ’ Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (TLC) Long Island Medium ’ Å 7:57 p.m. (COM) Futurama ’ Å 8:00 p.m. (WHAS) Dancing With the Stars (Season Premiere) (N) (Live) ’ Å (WLKY) How I Met Your Mother (N) ’ Å (WAVE) The Biggest Loser (Season Finale) (N) (Live) ’ Å (WBKI) The Carrie Diaries (N) ’ Å (WDRB) Bones (N) ’ (PA) Å (DVS) (WMYO) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’Å (KET) Kentucky Tonight ’ Å (KET2) In Performance at the Governor’s Mansion Å (WGN-A) America’s Funniest Home Videos ’Å (WBNA) Criminal Minds ’ Å (TBS) Family Guy ’ Å (USA) WWE Monday Night RAW (N) (Live) ’Å (LIFE) The Bible Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (SPIKE) Movie ›› “Transporter 3” (2008, Action) ’ (ESPN) NBA Basketball “Miami Heat at Boston Celtics” (N) (Live) (TLC) Gypsy Sisters: Extra Bling (N) ’ Å (HGTV) Love It or List It Å (HIS) American Pickers Å 8:28 p.m. (COM) Futurama ’ Å 8:30 p.m. (WLKY) Rules of Engagement (N) ’ Å (TBS) Family Guy ’ Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å 8:58 p.m. (COM) South Park Å 9:00 p.m. (WLKY) 2 Broke Girls (N) ’ Å (WBKI) Hart of Dixie ’ Å (WDRB) The Following (N) ’ (PA) Å (DVS) (WMYO) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’Å (KET) Education Matters ’ Å (KET2) Silas House: Visiting Author ’ Å (WGN-A) America’s Funniest Home Videos ’Å (WBNA) Criminal Minds ’ Å (TBS) Family Guy ’ Å (A&E) Storage Wars (N) Å (HGTV) Love It or List It (N) Å (HIS) American Pickers Å 9:08 p.m. (TLC) Gypsy Sisters: Extra Bling (N) ’ Å 9:29 p.m. (COM) South Park Å TUESDAY MARCH 19, 2013 7:30 p.m. (WHAS) Inside Edition (N) ’ Å (WLKY) Jeopardy! (N) ’ Å (WAVE) WAVE 3 News at 7:30 (N) (WBKI) Rules of Engagement ’ Å (WDRB) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (WMYO) King of the Hill ’ Å (TBS) Seinfeld ’ (Part 1 of 2) Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (SPIKE) World’s Worst Tenants ’ (ESPN) College Basketball “NIT Tournament, First Round: Teams TBA” (N) (Live) Å (HGTV) House Hunters Å (HIS) Pawn Stars Å (COM) The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Å 8:00 p.m. (WHAS) Splash (Series Premiere) (N) ’ Å (WLKY) NCIS (N) ’ Å (DVS) (WAVE) Betty White’s Off Their Rockers ’Å (WBKI) The iHeartRadio Album Release Party With Justin Timberlake (N) ’ Å (WDRB) Hell’s Kitchen (N) ’ (PA) Å (DVS) (WMYO) House ’ Å HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK (TLC) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ’ Å (HGTV) Love It or List It Å (HIS) Pawn Stars Å 8:30 p.m. (WDRB) Cops ’ (PA) Å (WMYO) Everybody Loves Raymond ’ Å (KET2) Smoketown: A Tradition to Treasure Å (TBS) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (SPIKE) Auction Hunters ’ (ESPN) College Basketball “Big East Tournament, Final: Teams TBA” (N) (Live) (HIS) Pawn Stars Å 9:00 p.m. (WHAS) 20/20 (N) ’ Å (WLKY) Criminal Minds ’ Å (DVS) (WAVE) Chicago Fire ’ Å (DVS) (WDRB) The Following ’ (PA) Å (DVS) (WMYO) Rules of Engagement ’ Å (KET2) Louisville’s Own Ali Å (WGN-A) America’s Funniest Home Videos ’Å (WBNA) House ’ Å (TBS) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (USA) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’Å (A&E) Storage Wars New York Å (SPIKE) Auction Hunters (N) ’ (TLC) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries (N) ’Å (HGTV) Love It or List It Å (HIS) Pawn Stars Å (COM) Movie ››› “I Love You, Man” (2009, Comedy) Å SUNDAY MARCH 17, 2013 7:30 p.m. (WDRB) The Cleveland Show (N) ’ Å (DVS) (KET2) All Star Bluegrass Celebration ’ Å (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (A&E) Duck Dynasty Å (HGTV) House Hunters International Å 8:00 p.m. (WHAS) Once Upon a Time (N) ’Å (WLKY) The Amazing Race (N) ’ Å (WBKI) Movie ››› “At Close Range” (1986, Crime Drama) (WDRB) The Simpsons (N) ’ Å (DVS) (WMYO) Movie ›‡ “Death Wish 4: The Crackdown” (1987, Crime Drama) (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (WBNA) Monk ’ Å (AMC) The Walking Dead Å (TBS) Movie ››‡ “Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself” (2009, Comedy-Drama) Å (DVS) (USA) NCIS ’ Å (DVS) (A&E) Duck Dynasty Å (SPIKE) Bar Rescue ’ (TLC) Gypsy Sisters ’ Å (HGTV) Extreme Homes (N) Å (HIS) The Bible (N) Å (COM) Movie ›‡ “Grandma’s Boy” (2006, Comedy) Å 8:30 p.m. (WDRB) The Cleveland Show (N) ’ (PA) Å (DVS) (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (A&E) Duck Dynasty Å 9:00 p.m. (WHAS) Revenge (N) ’ Å (WLKY) The Good Wife (N) ’ Å (WAVE) All-Star Celebrity Apprentice (N) ’Å (WDRB) Family Guy (N) ’ Å (DVS) (KET2) Crafting Tradition Å (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (WBNA) Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ Å (AMC) The Walking Dead (N) Å (USA) NCIS ’ Å (DVS) (LIFE) Army Wives (N) Å (A&E) Duck Dynasty Å (SPIKE) Bar Rescue ’ (ESPN) 30 for 30 (N) (TLC) Gypsy Sisters (N) ’ Å (HGTV) Hawaii Life Å MONDAY MARCH 18, 2013 7:30 p.m. (WHAS) Inside Edition (N) ’ Å (WLKY) Jeopardy! (N) ’ Å 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 6:00 6:30 MARCH 17, 2013 5:30 College Basketball NBA ABC News NBA Basketball: Knicks at Clippers College Basketball College Basketball Selection Show News News NHL Hockey: Bruins at Penguins PGA Tour Golf Tampa Bay Championship, Final Round. (N) Å ›› “Jersey Girl” (2004) Ben Affleck. “Fifth Command” Cook Safe Urban ’70s Show ’70s Show King King Paid Prog. Griffith Seinfeld (12:30) NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: Food City 500. (N Subject to Blackout) CSI: Miami ’ Å ››› “Dan in Real Life” (2007) Dane Cook › “Death Wish 3” “Hannah Montana” Bones ’ Å Private Practice Å Viewers’ Choice (10:00) Viewers’ Choice Popular programs from public television’s pledge are rebroadcast. Headwaters Lincoln Call War Kentucky Ky Life Henry Clay and the Kentucky Life Å ›› “Jersey Girl” (2004) Ben Affleck. Å Funny Home Videos MLB Preseason Baseball Chicago Cubs at Oakland Athletics. (N) Paid Prog. Derm Derma Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Chef K Chefs Louisville Monk ’ Å Monk Break-in. Å › “Gone in Sixty Seconds” (2000) Nicolas Cage. Å ›› “Godzilla” (1998) Matthew Broderick. (11:30) ›› “Hulk” (2003) Å ›› “Daddy’s Little Girls” (2007) Å ›› “Why Did I Get Married?” (2007) Tyler Perry. Å “Why Did I Get Married Too?” MLS Soccer Houston Dynamo at FC Dallas. ATP Tennis BNP Paribas Open: Men’s and Women’s Finals. From Indian Wells, Calif. (N) NCIS “Untouchable” NCIS “Broken Bird” NCIS “Iceman” Å NCIS “Tribes” Å NCIS “Smoked” ’ NCIS ’ Å ››› “Selena” (1997, Biography) Jennifer Lopez. Å (12:30) “Come Early Morning” “Pastor Brown” (2009, Drama) Å Duck D. Duck D. Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å ›› “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2” (2008) ›› “P.S. I Love You” (2007, Romance) Hilary Swank. “Sisterhood-Trav” Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Winx Club Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. ›› “The Librarian: Quest for the Spear” “Librarian: Return to King Solomon’s Mine” “Librarian: Curs” Law & Order ’ College Basketball SportsCenter (N) Bracketology (N) (Live) Å Borrowed Borrowed Gypsy Sisters Å Four Weddings Å Four Weddings Å Gypsy Sisters Å Gypsy Sisters Å Love It or List It Love It or List It Love It or List It Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars The Bible Noah endures God’s wrath. Å The Bible Å › “License to Wed” (2007) Robin Williams. Burning Burning Giuliana & Bill Giuliana & Bill Giuliana & Bill (11:55) “Coneheads” “I Love You, Man” (1:56) ›› “Malibu’s Most Wanted” (2003) (3:56) ›› “Waiting...” (2005, Comedy) Å 1:00 SUNDAY AFTERNOON WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 MARCH 17, 2013 TV LAND Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls 7:30 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 MARCH 18, 2013 Funny Home Videos Once Upon a Time News Castle (:01) Red Widow (N) Revenge (N) ’ Å (:35) Castle ’ Å The Amazing Race News News 60 Minutes (N) Å The Mentalist (N) ’ The Good Wife (N) ’ Access Hollywood ’ WAVE 3 News at 11 Extra (N) ’ Å Dateline NBC (N) ’ Å All-Star Celebrity Apprentice (N) ’ Å ››› “At Close Range” (1986) Sean Penn. Review Griffith Insider ’Til Death Futurama Futurama TMZ (N) ’ Å Burgers Cleveland Simpsons Cleveland Fam. Guy Burgers News Sports Basketball Big Bang Two Men 30 Rock › “Death Wish 4: The Crackdown” (1987) › “Death Wish V: The Face of Death” The Office The Office (6:00) “Death Wish 3” Wash Inside (6:00) Viewers’ Choice Popular programs from public television’s pledge are rebroadcast. Globe Trekker ’ KY Muse All Star Bluegrass Celebration Crafting Tradition Bluegrass Time Cap KY Muse MasterOur Kentucky Å Bloopers! How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met News Replay 30 Rock 30 Rock Rules Rules Law Order: CI Hillbillies Red-Blue SportsTalk Live Thee Paid Prog. Monk Murder. Å Monk ’ Å (5:00) “Godzilla” The Walking Dead The Walking Dead The Walking Dead (N) (:01) Talking Dead (N) The Walking Dead ›› “Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself” (2009) › “Our Family Wedding” (2010) Å “Married Too?” Browns 30 for 30 (N) NHRA Drag Racing Gatornationals. From Gainesville, Fla. Å College GameNight (N) Å NCIS “Untouchable” NCIS “Thirst” ’ NCIS “Silver War” ’ NCIS ’ Å NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS Å (DVS) ›› “Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail” (:01) “Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail” The Client List (N) Army Wives (N) Å Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. ›› “Twilight” (2008) Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson. ›› “Twilight” (2008) Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson. J. Osteen K. Shook (:01) Car Lot Rescue (12:01) Bar Rescue Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue (N) ’ ›› “Scooby-Doo” (2002, Comedy) ’ Å Sponge. Sponge. Wendell See Dad Friends Friends Friends ’ Å ›››› “The Dark Knight” (2008) Christian Bale. Å (DVS) “Librarian: Curs” (:15) ›› “Resident Evil: Extinction” (2007) SportCtr 30 for 30 (N) Bracketology (N) (Live) Å SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å Welcome to Myrtle Welcome to Myrtle Gypsy Sisters Å Gypsy Sisters Å Gypsy Sisters Å Gypsy Sisters (N) ’ Hunters Hunt Intl Hawaii Hawaii House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl Hawaii Hawaii Extreme Homes (N) (12:01) The Bible The Bible The Jews are enslaved in Babylon. (6:00) The Bible Å (:01) Vikings Å Vikings (N) Å Giuliana & Bill Kourtney-Kim Playing With Fire Kourtney-Kim Playing With Fire Giuliana & Bill (N) › “Grandma’s Boy” (2006) Doris Roberts. “I Love You, Man” Tosh.0 Work. Daniel Tosh: Serious South Pk Waiting... King The King of Queens 7:00 SUNDAY EVENING WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM 8:00 TV LAND Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls King 7:30 Ent Inside Ed. Dancing With the Stars ’ (Live) Å News Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline (:01) Castle (N) Å Wheel Jeopardy! How I Met Rules Broke Girl Mike News Selection Monday Ferguson Hawaii Five-0 (N) ’ News News WAVE 3 Tonight Show w/Leno J. Fallon The Biggest Loser The winner is announced. (:01) Deception ’ News Rules How I Met Friends Seinfeld King ’70s Show ’70s Show The Carrie Diaries (N) Hart of Dixie Å Two Men Big Bang Bones (N) ’ (PA) News Sports Two Men Big Bang 30 Rock Friends The Following (N) Fam. Guy King/Hill Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Rules Rules 30 Rock The Office The Office Jim Celtic Pilgrimage World Ky Life GED MotorWk PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Kentucky Tonight ’ Education Matters ’ Exploring Local Performance Silas House Gov. Awards-Arts KY Muse Frst Flwrs Kentucky Tonight ’ Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos WGN News at Nine Funny Home Videos Rules Rules Word Alive Healing Derm Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å ››› “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” (2002) Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen. “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan Å Men-Work Conan Numbers Nation SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) ESPN Tournament Challenge (N) (Live) Å NCIS: Los Angeles CSI: Crime Scene NCIS ’ Å WWE Monday Night RAW (N) ’ (Live) Å Preachers’ Daughters (:01) The Client List (12:02) The Bible The Bible The Jews are enslaved in Babylon. (6:00) The Bible Å Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage (10:55) Bates Motel Storage Storage Bates Motel Å ›› “You Again” (2010) Kristen Bell. Secret-Teen Secret-Teen Prince Prince The 700 Club Å ›› “Transporter 3” (2008, Action) Jason Statham. ’ “The Transporter 2” (:45) › “Crank: High Voltage” (2009) Jason Statham. ’ Sponge. Drake Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Nanny Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends Monday Mornings Monday Mornings (N) (:01) Dallas Å Castle ’ Å Castle ’ Å Dallas (N) Å Women’s Selection NBA Basketball Miami Heat at Boston Celtics. (N) (Live) NBA Basketball New York Knicks at Utah Jazz. (N) (Live) Medium Medium Gypsy Sisters: Extra (:08) Gypsy Sisters: Extra Bling Gypsy Sisters: Extra Gypsy Sisters: Extra Gypsy Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It, Too Love It or List It Love It or List It (N) American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers Chasing Kourtney-Kim Burning After Late Chelsea E! News Chelsea E! News (N) Colbert Daily Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert South Pk The Je King The King of Queens 7:00 MONDAY EVENING WHAS WLKY WAVE WBKI WDRB WMYO KET KET2 WGN-A WBNA AMC TBS ESPN2 USA LIFE A&E FAM SPIKE NICK TNT ESPN TLC HGTV HIS E! COM TV LAND Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Cleveland Cleveland King (WAVE) Whitney ’ Å (DVS) (WGN-A) Rules of Engagement ’ Å (TBS) Family Guy ’ Å (A&E) Duck Dynasty Å (HGTV) Cousins on Call Å (HIS) Pawn Stars Å (COM) Workaholics Å 9:00 p.m. (WHAS) Modern Family ’ Å (DVS) (WLKY) Criminal Minds (N) ’ Å (DVS) (WAVE) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (N) ’ Å (DVS) (WBKI) Supernatural (N) ’ Å (WMYO) NUMB3RS ’ Å (KET) NOVA ’ Å (DVS) (KET2) Cassius Marcellus Clay: An Audacious American ’ Å (WGN-A) Rules of Engagement ’ Å (WBNA) The Saint (TBS) Family Guy ’ Å (USA) NCIS ’ Å (DVS) (LIFE) Dance Moms Å (A&E) Duck Dynasty Å (TLC) Hoarding: Buried Alive (N) ’ Å (HGTV) Property Brothers (N) Å (HIS) The Bible Å (COM) South Park Å THURSDAY MARCH 21, 2013 7:30 p.m. (WHAS) Inside Edition (N) ’ Å (WAVE) WAVE 3 News at 7:30 (N) (WBKI) Rules of Engagement ’ Å (WDRB) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (WMYO) King of the Hill ’ Å (AMC) The Walking Dead Å (TLC) Say Yes to the Dress ’ Å (HGTV) House Hunters Å (COM) The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Å 8:00 p.m. (WHAS) Wife Swap (Season Premiere) (N) ’ Å (WAVE) Community (N) ’ Å (WBKI) The Vampire Diaries (N) ’ Å (WDRB) American Idol (N) (Live) ’ Å (WMYO) White Collar ’ (Part 1 of 2) Å (KET) Antiques Roadshow ’ (Part 3 of 3) Å (KET2) Kentucky Afield ’ Å (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (WBNA) Without a Trace ’ Å (USA) NCIS ’ Å (LIFE) Project Runway Å (A&E) The First 48 Å (SPIKE) iMPACT Wrestling (N) ’ Å (TLC) Say Yes to the Dress ’ Å (HGTV) Income Property ’ Å (HIS) Swamp People Å (COM) It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia Å 8:30 p.m. (WAVE) Parks and Recreation ’ Å (DVS) (KET2) Bluegrass and Backroads ’ Å (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (TLC) Say Yes to the Dress ’ Å (COM) It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia Å 9:00 p.m. (WHAS) Grey’s Anatomy (N) ’Å (WAVE) The Office ’ (Part 1 of 2) Å (DVS) (WBKI) Beauty and the Beast (N) ’ Å (WDRB) Glee (N) ’ Å (DVS) (WMYO) White Collar ’ (Part 2 of 2) Å (KET) Doc Martin ’ Å (KET2) Ashland’s Field of Dreams Å (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (WBNA) Without a Trace ’ Å (AMC) Comic Book Men (N) Å (USA) NCIS ’ Å (LIFE) Project Runway (N) Å (A&E) The First 48 (N) Å (TLC) Say Yes to the Dress ’ Å (HGTV) Rehab Addict Å (HIS) Swamp People (N) Å (COM) Workaholics Å 9:15 p.m. (TBS) 2013 NCAA Basketball Tournament “Second Round: Teams TBA” (N) (Live) HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK (KET) Jubilee ’ Å (KET2) Time on the River Å (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (WBNA) Criminal Minds ’ Å (DVS) (TBS) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (USA) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’Å (LIFE) Dance Moms (N) Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (SPIKE) World’s Worst Tenants ’ (TLC) 19 Kids and Counting: Duggars Do Asia ’ (Part 1 of 3) Å (HGTV) Buying and Selling Å (HIS) Pawn Stars Å (COM) The Jeselnik Offensive Å 8:30 p.m. (WAVE) Betty White’s Off Their Rockers (Season Finale) (N) ’ Å (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (TBS) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (SPIKE) World’s Worst Tenants ’ (HIS) Pawn Stars Å (COM) Tosh.0 Å 9:00 p.m. (WHAS) Dancing With the Stars (N) ’ Å (WLKY) NCIS: Los Angeles (N) ’ (Part 1 of 2) Å (DVS) (WAVE) Go On ’ Å (DVS) (WBKI) Beauty and the Beast ’ Å (WDRB) New Girl (N) ’ Å (DVS) (WMYO) House ’ Å (KET) Movie ››‡ “Okie Noodling” (2001, Documentary) ’ Å (KET2) John Morgan’s Portraits of Kentucky Å (WGN-A) How I Met Your Mother ’ Å (WBNA) Criminal Minds ’ Å (DVS) (TBS) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (USA) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’Å (A&E) Storage Wars Å (SPIKE) World’s Worst Tenants ’ (TLC) 19 Kids and Counting: Duggars Do Asia (N) ’ (Part 2 of 3) Å (HGTV) Income Property (N) ’ Å (HIS) Top Gear (N) Å (COM) Tosh.0 Å WEDNESDAY MARCH 20, 2013 7:30 p.m. (WHAS) Inside Edition (N) ’ Å (WAVE) WAVE 3 News at 7:30 (N) (WBKI) Rules of Engagement ’ Å (WDRB) The Big Bang Theory ’ Å (WMYO) King of the Hill ’ Å (WBNA) The Cisco Kid (TBS) Seinfeld ’ (Part 2 of 2) Å (A&E) Duck Dynasty Å (ESPN) NBA Countdown (N) (Live) (TLC) My Strange Addiction ’ Å (HIS) Pawn Stars Å (COM) The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Å 8:00 p.m. (WHAS) The Middle ’ Å (DVS) (WLKY) Survivor: Caramoan — Fans vs. Favorites (N) ’ Å (WAVE) Whitney (N) ’ Å (DVS) (WBKI) Arrow (N) ’ Å (WDRB) American Idol (N) (Live) ’ Å (WMYO) NUMB3RS ’ Å (KET) Nature ’ Å (KET2) Henry Clay and the Struggle for the Union ’ Å (WGN-A) Rules of Engagement ’ Å (WBNA) WWE Main Event (N) ’ (TBS) Family Guy ’ Å (USA) NCIS ’ Å (DVS) (LIFE) Dance Moms Å (A&E) Duck Dynasty Å (SPIKE) Movie ››‡ “The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift” (2006, Action) ’ (ESPN) NBA Basketball “Brooklyn Nets at Dallas Mavericks” (N) (Live) (TLC) Hoarding: Buried Alive ’ Å (HGTV) Cousins on Call (N) Å (HIS) Pawn Stars Å (COM) Chappelle’s Show Å 8:30 p.m. (WHAS) The Neighbors (N) ’ Å (DVS) FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS, SHELBYVILLE, KY. — B7 EASTER SERVICES Annunciation Holy Week schedule Holy Thursday: 6:45 p.m., penance service, 7 p.m., mass; Good Friday: 1 p.m., 7 Last Words Meditation, 3 p.m., Celebration of the Passion, 4-4:45 p.m., penance service, 5 p.m., Living Way of the Cross, 7 p.m., prayer, 8 p.m., penance service; Holy Saturday: 8:30 p.m., Easter vigil mass; Easter Sunday masses, 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m., and 12:30 p.m. (Spanish). Bagdad Baptist services Bagdad Baptist will have an outdoor sunrise service at 7:15 on Easter Sunday, March 31. Sunday school will be at 10 a.m. and the Easter sermon, “Journey from Darkness to Light,” from “The Bible” series will be at 11. Burks Branch Baptist Easter Cantata Burks Branch Baptist Church will celebrate Easter beginning with the Easter Cantata, To the Risen King on Sunday morning during the worship services at 11 a.m. on March 24. There will be an evening service on Good Friday followed by a potluck fellowship at 6 p.m. on March 29. The Women On Mission will sell homemade cakes to raise money for the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering at this fellowship. An Easter Egg Hunt will be at the church on at 2 p.m. on March 30. Easter Sunday Services with begin with a sunrise service at 7 a.m. in the east yard of the church. Sunday School will begin at 9:50 a.m. and worship service at 11 a.m. Centennial Baptist The fifth Sunday at Centennial Baptist Church will be the Easter sunrise service, starting at 7 a.m., with breakfast following the service. Sunday school is at 9:30 a.m., morning service at 11, and Easter Egg Hunt after the morning service. The church is located at 808 Heinsville Road in Christiansburg. Easter at Christiansburg Baptist Easter cantata will be presented with observance of the Lord’s supper during morning worship on March 31, Easter Sunday. Visit www.christiansburgbaptistchurch.org. Egg hunt at Colonial Hall An Easter egg hunt will be at 2 p.m. on March 30 at Colonial Hall. For more information, visit www.simpsonvillebaptist.com. Cropper Baptist collecting Easter eggs and candy Cropper Baptist Church is collecting donations of plastic Easter eggs and candy for the Easter Egg Hunt at 11 a.m. on March 30. Good Friday service at 7 p.m. on March 29. For more information, contact Carrie Trotta. Elmburg Baptist There will be an Easter egg hunt at 3 p.m. March 30. Bring candy-filled plastic eggs for the hunt by March 24. Sunrise service will begin at 7 a.m. on Easter, followed by a potluck breakfast. Sunday school will begin at 9 a.m. with Easter worship service at 10 a.m. Finchville Baptist The Easter Egg Hunt for Finchville Baptist will be from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on March 30 at Finchville Park. Help is needed with the hunt by donating individually wrapped candy that will fit into plastic eggs. And pray for this event to reach our community in an awesome way. The Easter cantata, Arise, My Love, by Bradley Knight, will be presented by the adult choir on Palm Sunday, March 24, during the 11 a.m. worship hour, followed by a potluck meal in Fellowship Hall. The church will furnish fried chicken and beverages. Bring a favorite dish and/ or dessert and a friend. There will only be one service. The Easter schedule will include sunrise service at Finchville park (the church sanctuary in case of rain) at 6:45 a.m.; deacons will cook breakfast for everyone at 7:15 a.m.; worship service at 8:40 a.m.; connect groups (Sunday School for all ages) at 9:45 a.m.; and morning worship service at 11 a.m. First Baptist Shelbyville Palm Sunday will begin at 11 a.m. March 24, with a musical cantata, It Is Finished, directed by Rev. Gene Wright, presented by the choir and orchestra, in the sanctuary. There will be no 8:30 service this day. For more information, contact gwright@fbcshelbyville.com. First Christian egg hunt The Easter Egg Hunt is at 1 p.m. on March 23. The Maundy Thursday service is at 7 p.m. on March 28. The Sunrise Service is at 7:30 a.m. Easter morning. The sunrise breakfast will be served after the service. The cost is only $6 per person. Highland Baptist Good Friday service will begin at 7 p.m. March 29. The Lord’s Supper will be observed. Easter Eggstravaganza will be at 10:30 a.m. March 30, with a children’s Easter egg hunt. Sunrise service will be at 7:15 a.m. on Easter Sunday, March 31 at Clear Creek Park (Colonel Sanders Pavilion), breakfast at the church at 8:30 a.m., Bible study at 9:30 a.m. and worship at 10:30 a.m. Holy Cross Lutheran Lenten services will be held at Holy Cross Lutheran Church each Wednesday during Lent. The vesper services begin at 7 p.m. on Wednesday and continue March 13 and 20. Holy week schedule will be Palm Sunday service at 11 a.m. March 24; Maundy Thursday service with communion at 7 p.m. March 28, with a prayer vigil to follow the service; Good Friday service at 7 p.m. March 29; Easter Sunday service at 11 a.m. on March 31. For more information, call 647-3696. The church is located at 181 Old Seven Mile Pike (at the corner of KY 53 South). Mt. Vernon services Sunrise Easter service will be at 7 a.m. on March 31 at the church. Sunrise service at Olive Branch Olive Branch United Methodist Church will have its sunrise service from 7 to 9 a.m. March 31. Breakfast will be served, with Sunday school at 10 a.m. and Easter service at 11. The Easter Egg hunt at Olive Branch will be this Sunday, immediately following the Morning Worship. Pigeon Fork Baptist Pigeon Fork Baptist will have an Easter egg hunt after the 11 a.m. morning service on March 31. All children are invited to attend. Maundy Thursday service will be at 7 p.m. March 28 at the church. The church is located on KY 1472 in Waddy. Chinese New year Simpsonville Baptist services Students in Leigh Anne Jessee’s firstgrade class at Cornerstone Christian Academy celebrated Chinese New Year with fun activities, creating paper dragons and parading down the halls. The “Chinese” first-grade class (photo at top) with teacher Leigh Anne Jessee. The class (above left) parades through the halls in hats with paper dragons. Opal Best (above right) marched in the parade. Owen Burke (left) works on creating a dragon. Simpsonville Baptist Church will have a celebration choir musical, Grace, Greater Than We Deserve, More Than We Imagine, at 10:30 a.m. on March 24. An Easter Eggslosion community egg hunt will be at 1 p.m. on March 30 at Simpsonville Park for all children through fifth grade. For more information, visit www.simpsonvillebaptist.com. Simpsonville United Methodist services The Easter schedule for Simpsonville United Methodist will be Maundy Thursday Service at 7 p.m. at Simpsonville United Methodist; a community Good Friday service at 7 p.m. at Simpsonville Christian Church. Easter Sunday at Simpsonville United Methodist will be a sunrise service at 7 a.m., light breakfast at 8 a.m., Easter egg hunt at 10 a.m. and Easter services at 10:45 a.m. Easter season at St. James On Palm Sunday, the Procession of Palms will begin in Parish Hall at 10 a.m. at St. James Episcopal Church and proceed into the sanctuary. Maundy Thursday service will be held at 7 p.m.; Good Friday service will be at 6 p.m. and the Easter Festival Service will be at 10 a.m. Waddy Christian good Friday Good Friday service will be at 7 p.m. March 29 at the church. Photos submitted Submission deadlines TAKE THE EZ The Sentinel-News publishes announcements free of charge. Information can be e-mailed to sharonw@ sentinelnews. com. We’ve just found your best match. PAY NO CHECKS NO STAMPS NO Searching for a job online doesn’t have to be hard. With KyJobs.net you’ve got Real-Time Job Matching™ technology on your side to help find the right job for you! When you create your profile we’ll compare your qualifications to over 10,000 listings, and match you to employers to get you hired fast. WAY TAKE 12 MONTHS TO PAY for your subscription to The Sentinel-News with automatic monthly payments of $4.00 charged to your debit/ credit card. So go ahead, take the EZ way out! Only BILLS $4.00 EZ PAY DEBIT/CREDIT CARD BILLING Create your profile by April 21 and you could win $100. If you’re the 300th person to register you win an iPad Mini!* /month Local Trade Area Only. Print and Online. YES, CONVERT MY SUBSCRIPTION TO EZ PAY! I UNDERSTAND MY DEBIT/CREDIT CARD WILL BE DEDUCTED MONTHLY. CARD #_____________________ EXP. DATE _______ CVC #________ SIGNATURE NAME Call ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP E-MAIL 633-4987 *Between February 20th and March 21st we will hold a drawing for $100; between now and April 21st another $100 will be given away. PLUS the lucky person that creates the 300th profile on the new site will receive an iPad Mini. Everyone will be eligible to win the cash and the iPad Mini. PHONE Yes! I authorize The Sentinel-News to instruct my credit card company to debit my credit card and account as I have requested above. I understand that in order to qualify for this promotion I must remain an EZ Pay subscriber for one year. If anytime after one year I wish to discontinue this payment service I will notify The Sentinel-News 30 days in advance to give the company reasonable opportunity to act on it. I also understand no statement will be sent as a reminder that my subscription is being paid through my bank account. Discontinuing this service will not stop my subscription, but only changes my method of payment. Local delivery only. MAIL TO: THE SENTINEL-NEWS, ATTN.: CIRCULATION DEPT. • P.O. BOX 399, SHELBYVILLE, KY 40065 • 502-633-2526 WEEKEND/ARTS FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS B8 ONLINE: www.SentinelNews.com/Arts Middle-school performers Tammy Oerther conducts the East Middle School band as part of an Arts & Humanities Concert Showcase called HoliFestiPalooza 2012, which featured sixth- and seventh-7th grade chorus, band and orchestra members and the EMS drama team. “The students did an amazing job in all of their performances and should be commended for a job well done,” EMS teacher Julie Bauscher said. The teachers involved in this event were Oerther, Marcie Wright (chorus), Bauscher (drama) and Debbie Sowell (art). Photo submitted WEEKEND DATEBOOK Cultural arts display The Louisville Area Cultural Arts Display will be open to the public at the Shelby County Extension Office, 1117 Frankfort Road, from 1 until 2 p.m. today. For more information, call 633-4593. SCCT presents ‘Eleemosynary’ Shelby County Community Theatre presents an interpretive reading of Eleemosynary, written by Lee Blessing and directed by David Pilkinton. Performances will be at 7:30 p.m. on today and Saturday and at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets are $15 adults, $12 seniors and $10 students. For reservations, call 502-633-0242. The theater is located at 801 Main Street in Shelbyville. Eleemosynary is part of SCCT’s Upstairs at 801 series. Finchville Ruritan fish fries The Finchville Ruritan Club will host a fish fry from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. today and March 22 at the Finchville Community Center on KY 55. The menu includes fish, wedges, slaw, rolls, cobbler and a drink for $10. Baked beans will be available on Feb. 15. For more information, send an E-mail to grannykathy1957@bellsouth.net. Relay for Life pageant The second annual Relay for Life Pageant will be from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Collins High School auditorium. The tiny tots, Ms. Relay and survivor pageants are open to all counties. The registration fee is $25, and a survivor pageant is free. For more information, contact shelbycorelaypageant@gmail.com or 502-594-7140. Arts and crafts show An arts and crafts show will be from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. Saturday at Shelby Christian Church. For more information, contact Carrie Edington at 502529-2396 or send an E-mail to cedington79@ gmail.com. BB/BS Bowl for Kids Big Brothers Big Sisters of Kentuckiana, which serves Shelby County, will host its Bowl For Kids’ Sake fundraiser from noon to 2 p.m. Saturday at ARTS BULLETIN BOARD Incredible Dave’s, located at 9236 Westport Road in Louisville, and from 1 to 3 p.m. March 23 at Rose Bowl, located at 2217 Goldsmith Lane in Louisville. To sign up or for more information call Alex Spoelker, direct Line 502-753-3745, office 502-587-0494 ext 130 or cell 502-432-0791. Chamber showcase The Shelby County Chamber of Commerce will host the 2013 Community Showcase from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at Shelby County High School. For more information, contact Johnna Maier at 6331636 or Johnna@shelbycountykychamber.com or visit http://business.shelbycountykychamber.com/ Events/details/2013-community-showcase-299. Critter Corner at Red Orchard Critter Corner will be from 2 to 3 p.m. Saturday at Red Orchard Park. A Second Chances Wildlife Center director and educator will read specially handpicked books about bats and flying squirrels. For more information, visit www.facebook.com/ clearcreektrailblazers or clearcreektrailblazers@ hotmail.com. Kids Korner Centenary United Methodist Church hosts Kids Korner at 10 a.m.-noon on Saturday for K-fifth grade children who are on the free/reduced meals program. The children enter the facility from the 5thand- Washington Street door and are given an opportunity to share in games, crafts, stories and fellowship before enjoying a hot meal and being sent home with a take-home-snack-sack. There will be special activities for parents. For those who do not have transportation, call 633-4510 by noon Friday. Animal conservation event Learn how to turn a backyard into an urban habitat for rabbits, squirrels, birds and butterflies during the “Save the Bunnies” family fun day from 11 a.m. to noon Saturday in the Hudson Room of the Shelby County Public Library. Joy Fitzgerald, from the conservation education department of the Kentucky Fish and Wildlife Resources, will be the featured speaker. She will be bringing her pet bunny to meet The Sentinel Wayne’s Junk Removal FREE BARN CATS TO GOOD HOME Call 502-647-9291 FREE BED BUG INSPECTIONS! We offer Bed Bug Protection! Call Star Pest Control for all your pest solutions. Call 502-633-0707 WILL HAUL YOUR U N W A N T E D A P P L I A N C E S OR METAL AWAY (air conditioners & wire fences, & mowers) for free. Call 502-655-1921. 2002 Ford Taurus runs good, $2300 OBO. 2001 Lincoln Continental, hail damage, runs good, clean, low miles, $3900 OBO. Call 502-352-0102 1992 CHEVY 1/2 TON 4WD truck. Good shape, sell or trade. Call 502-667-2357 Want to buy junk cars, trucks & scrap metal Call 502-314-0822 or 502-829-0507 TOYOTA HEAD LIGHTS 1995 - 1997 $50 each Call 502-459-7622 ELI MILLER LOGGING Master Logger Certified. Specializing in select cutting. Call 270-5242967. LOOKING TO BUY JUNK CARS. Paying Top Cash. Free pick up on appliances. Call 502-773-0755 Father/daughter dance A father-daughter dance will begin at 6 p.m. Sunday at Simpsonville Baptist Church. Tickets are $15 each and includes the speaker, entertainment, dinner and the daughter’s gift. For tickets, call 722-5246 ext 15. For more information, visit www.simpsonvillebaptist.com. Grady Nutt event at Graefenburg Graefenburg Baptist Church will host “Raising Grady” event at 6 p.m. Sunday to honor Grady Nutt, a beloved former pastor at the church who went on to be a successful comedian, most widely known through his running appearance on the hit show Hee Haw. Family members, former church members and folks from all over are attending to remember Nutt’s life and legacy. For more information, contact Philip Meade at 502-829-5324 or philip@gbcfamily.com. SC3 concert Shelby County Community Children’s Choir will present its next concert, “On Broadway,” at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at First Christian Church in Shelbyville. Admission is free. SCCT auditions Shelby County Community Theatre is holding additional auditions for An Evening Of Culture (Faith County II) from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Monday. Roles are available for men and women, ages 30 and up. Performance dates are May 31 and June 1, 2, 7, 8 and 9. The theater is located at 801 Main Street in Shelbyville. For more information, call 502-633-0222. The play is directed by Donnie Hagy. Eco-Movie Night at Red Orchard Eco-Movie Night will be at 6-8 p.m. on Monday in the Miller Outdoor Education Center. Each month will feature an environmental documentary to engage, educate and inspire about various environmental issues. For more information, visit www. facebook.com/clearcreektrailblazers or clearcreektrailblazers@hotmail.com. News Classifieds FREE Teeth Brushing with any grooming purchase 183 Alpine Dr. 502-220-4887 REGISTERED TOY AUSTRIALIAN SHEPARD Blue Merle male, tail docked. Ready for new home $550 502-3210874 Local Groomer Crystal Dempsy NOW OPEN Owners Linda Jamison & Crystal Dempsy FREE Nail Grinding with Purchase Of Any Grooming/Bath Service For The Month Of March 633-1004 TINSLEY & SON EXCAVATING Midland Blvd. Find the perfect job in The Sentinel-News Classifieds. TAIL LIGHTS FOR CAVALIER Skylark cars & Camero $50 per set. Call 502-459-7622 SC3’s ‘Broadway” show on Sunday Like Disney show tunes or maybe some Four Seasons music? The Shelby County Community Children’s Choir will hae a little bit of both in its next concert, “On Broadway,” which is at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at First Christian Church in Shelbyville. SC3 is comprised of students from across Shelby County. Admission is free. For more listings of arts and entertainment events, visit We provide hauling containers. We Will Be At: SOUTHERN STATES 623 S. 7TH - SHELBYVILLE Mar. 16th • 9am-10am Call 633-3017 Ken Jacobs Bowling Green, KY 270-842-2555 3 NEW, IN BOX 1 - CUP COFFEE MAKERS $50 each OBO. Call 502-529-6660 KODAK EASY SHARE CAMERA Z760, still in box, lightly used, like new, takes great pictures, comes with extra battery, charger, and all cords and instruction book $65. Call 502-321-8688 LOTS OF NASCAR (DIE CAST) cars for sale. Vari ous prices. Call 502-667-2357 LUCENT PARTNER TELEPHONE system. Includes seven parnter phones, three analog phones, will handle 16 phones and voicemail $400 OBO. Call 502-829-5359 KING EMPIRE ALTO SAXOPHONE lacquered finish, plush lined carrying case, mouth piece with cover, and reed. Great condition, $300. Call 502-655-2715 ROUND ROLL BALES of hay 4’ x 5’, stored inside, 502-477-2723. 2002 HONDA SHADOW Spirit size 1100 For sale. Call 502-667-2357 DOG HOUSE (like new) for medium size dog, $50. Call 502-459-7622 PRESTO COOL TOUCH electric griddle in the box, used only twice $12. Call 502-437-5437 STEEL GARAGE DOOR 7’x9’ $325. 502-459-7622 HUNTER GREEN COUCH, reclines on both ends, excellent condition $100. Call 502-330-6619 OAK TV/ STEREO CABINET with lots of storage. Holds up to a 32’’ flat TV. 5x5, great condition $50. Call 502-655-2715 SIMMONS BEAUTY REST mattress set, king size, top of the line luxury memory foam. Individual coil count. Incased, new $500. Call 502-487-0952 COMPOUND BOW, ALL ACCESSORIES great shape, call for info. Will trade. Call 502-667-2357 News Classifieds CRAZY CATCH DEREK JETER Signature series $50. Call 502-655-2715 OUTSIDE TV CABLE UHV, VHF 300 OHM, 65 ft., $20. Call 502-4597622 VERY PRETTY SOFA smoke free home, good condition $100. OAK TA BLE newly re f i n i s h e d with 6 chairs $350. SOLID MAPLE BUFFET 2 top glass doors, drawer, two bottom doors $200. Call 502-829-5359 15 FOOT FIBERGLASS CANOE good condition. $350 Call 502-593-8517 or 502-727-6221 Want To Place An Ad? Call: 633-4987 2 RESISTOL COWBOY HATS black, size 7 1/4 other silver belly size 7 1/4 still in box. Excellent condition. $150 for both. Call 502-321-8688 (502) 220-0955 13, 14, & 15’’ RIMS & HUB CAPS $12 each. Call 502-459-7622 ROTORS FOR FORD PICK UP TRUCK 6 lug, 2006 - 2009. Front $50 each, rear $20 each. Call 502-459-7622 Shelby County Community Theatre presents an interpretive reading of Eleemosynary, written by Lee Blessing and directed by David Pilkinton. Performances will be March 15 and 16 at 7:30 p.m. and March 17 at 2:30 p.m. For reservations, ca11 502-633-0242. Eleemosynary is part of SCCT’s Upstairs at 801 series. The theatre is located at 801 Main Street in Shelbyville. STORM DOOR 36’’ Anderson, Full view, white $135. 502-459-7622 ROUGH & FINISH GRADING DUMP TRUCKS-FILL DIRT, ROCK, ETC, SNOW REMOVAL & SALT ENGINE ANALYZER like new $60. Call 502-459-7622 1990 GRAND MARQUIS all original, in good shape. Sell or trade. Call 502-667-2357 Interpretive reading at theater Professional Dog Grooming 3 - P265 60 R18 USED TIRES $25 each. Call 502-459-7622 WHITE PIT BULL male, neutered. Approx. 65 lbs. Call 515-865-6705 Graefenburg Baptist Church will host “Raising Grady” event at 6 p.m. Sunday to honor Grady Nutt, a beloved former pastor at the church who went on to be a successful comedian. Nutt was known most widely through his running appearance on the hit show Hee Haw. Family members, former church members and folks from all over are attending to remember Nutt’s life and legacy. For more information, contact Philip Meade at 502-829-5324 or philip@gbcfamily.com. LIVE FISH FOR STOCKING PONDS SCREENED TOPSOIL 2 - 4WD CHEVY TRANSFER CASES for sale. Make offer. Call 502-667-2357 Pastor-turned-comedian Nutt to be honored at his old church The Sentinel Fuzzy Dog Salon 1989 GMC SAFARI VAN runs good, well maintained. $1100. Call 502-747-5124 LOST 1 YEAR OLD White west highland puppy,male. Lost around Southlawn/ Eastview Cr. area. Deaf dog, very friendly, micro chipped, not groomed, shaggy. Wearing blue & green collar with bones on it. Call 502-633-4336 the kids. For more information, contact 633-3803. TWO MOTORCYCLE HELMETS $50 both or $25 each or trade. Call 502-667-2357 Lose Something? Look in The Sentinel-News Classifieds 2 PAIR MENS/ TONY LAMA COWBOY BOOTS size 9D/ worn very little, $100 for both pairs. Call 502-321-8688 BRAND NEW WOOD BURNING STOVE with blower. Call 502-6672357 DISPLAY CABINET, LIGHTED 6 ft tall by 3 ft square, glass top, $250. Call 502-459-7622 GLASS VASES USED FOR WEDDING RECEPTION $3 each/ 20. Call 502-829-5253 Lots 4 Tots Kids Consignment Sale BEAUTIFUL - BLACK OPEN SHELVES with drawer like new. 35’’w x 14’’d x 56’’ h, $200. Call 502-437-5437 BEAUTIFUL LEATHER CHAIR $200. Call 502-437-5437 BEAUTIFUL Lot of Grain Handmade solid oak 42x42 pedestal table, 4 chairs, 2 arm. $500. Call 502-437-5437 At the Shelby County Fairgrounds Sale dates: March 14-16 Thursday - Friday 10am-6pm Saturday 8am-5pm (half price day) Womens and teens: clothes, shoes and accessories. Kids clothes NB-16, shoes, games, toys, pack n plays, highchairs, holiday, books, movies, bumbos, carseats, strollers, puzzles, swings, bouncers and much more! www.lots4totssale.com Call 633-4987 to Place Your Ad. FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS, SHELBYVILLE, KY. — B9 CSR & ASSISTANT MANAGER FOR WORLD FINANCE FT w/ good benefits. Must have good credit, clean background & dependable transportation. Office exp. nec. Call 502-647-5940 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW! TMC Transportation needs 25 Trainees! Earn $800 per week! No Experience Needed! CDL & Job Ready in just 15 days! 1-888-424-9415. Shelbyville-Shelby County Parks & Recreation seeking an After School Camp Counselor. Position is 2pm – 6pm, Monday thru Friday. Also will need to be open to work on days when Shelby County Public schools are closed. Applicant should have a clean driving record for transporting children. Application and job description may be obtained at Family Activity Center office at Clear Creek Park, 717 Burks Branch Rd., Shelbyville, KY . Equal Opportunity Employer. WINTER SPECIAL!! $250 first month’s rent!! Cola Common Apartments Now leasing 2 & 3 bedrooms. All appliances furnished, washer/ dryer hookup. We pay water, sewer & trash. Call 502-647-2411 SHELBY COUNTY: Bagdad area, Cedarmore Rd. 2 - 5 acre lots $30,000 each. 96 acre tract $210,000. 3 - 5 acre tracts, nice building lots with small creek and tree lines $49,900 each. Shawn W i l l a rd 502-553-1880 SHARE EXPENSES nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath, clean furnished house. $135/ week includes: utiliThelaundry. Sentinel ties, cable, Simpsonville 502-758-4848 Legal 300 Notices KID’S PLAY CHILDCARE now enrolling all ages. Call 502-633-9663 There will be a North Central District Board of Health meeting on March 27, 2013. This meeting will be held at the North Central District Health Department 1020 Henry Clay Street, Shelbyville, KY 40065 beginning at 11:30 a.m. This meeting is open to the public. The Sentinel News Classifieds Pursuant to KRS 359.210 to 359.250 A+ Self Storage will satisfy it’s facility owner’s lien through private sale with offers accepted at 2110 Frankfort Rd. at 12:00 noon on Wednesday, March 27, 2013. Owner reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Cash only sale of the following tenants property: Brooke Jeffries Unit #33, Davita Dixon & Rick Kingsolver Unit #A61, A60 & A63. DUPLEX FOR SALE: Each side has 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, patio & deck, outside storage room, stove, refrigerator, dishwasher & washer/ dryer hookup, big yard, off street parking. Located in Frankfort. Both sides are rented for total of $1125 per month. $125,000 OBO. Call 502-875-3826. Energetic Individual wanted for a part time Office Managerial Duties. Must be a self starter and a quick learner. Must be proficient with Quick Books and Excell. Please mail resume to Blitz Builders P.O. Box 458 Shelbyville, KY 40066 or email to rebeccakirts@blitzbuilders.com 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATH apartment off exit 35, $795/ month. Call Paul 502-386-7325. HAZELLAWN DR.: 1BR, 1BA apt., stove & refrigerator furnished. $405 rent, $405 deposit. Call Moffett Realty at 502-633-5274 HAPARTMENTS I-POINT 1 & 2 BR Apts. Clubhouse w/Business Center, Free Movie Rentals, Fitness & Laundry Room LOCATED BEHIND KROGER - HI-POINT SHOPPING CENTER 900 Lakeview Drive 633-1922 Your Place! Our Pleasure! OPENINGS AVAILABLE for Shift Manager, cook & front counter service. Stop by Fire Fresh BBQ at 81 Jeanie Dr. Shelbyville for an application. Office Hours: Mon. 8:30am-7:00pm Tues.-Fri.: 8:30am-4:30pm Sat. 9:00am - 3:00pm After Hours by Appointment The prices are DYNAMITE FARMS FOR SALE 246 acre farm 2 miles east of Shelbyville, KY 60% tillable, large creek, lots of trees, development potential. $998,000 398 acre farm 4 miles south of Shelbyville, beautiful ridge land, crop ground, lake and lot of trees. $1,592,000 132 acres gently rolling farm zoned X-2 and AG. One of Shelby Counties most productive farms. Lo cated on Seven Mile Pike. Will divide. 130 gently rolling acres, highly tillable, adjoining I-64. Water, sewer, gas, 3 phase electric. One of Shelby Counties finest tracts of Real Estate. Taylor Estes Shelby Co. 49 acres with nice lake, near Jefferson/Oldham county line. Beautiful property divided into 3 tracts. $549,000. H. Barry Smith Realtors & Auctioneers, Barry Smith 502-6820586 INDIAN RIDGE Accepting Applications daily for 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms, during office hours 9:00am-1:00pm Mon., Tues. Thurs. & Fri. (Closed Wed.) Rent based on income for those who qualify with NO APPLICATION FEE. Call the office (502) 633-1182 with questions, located at 501 Indian Ridge. Laundry on site, playground area on site management. Appliances, trash pick up and water furnished. Indian Ridge Apts. is a clean, well maintained and friendly community. We welcome you to come in during office hours, or call for appointments. TTY# 1-800-648-6056 (Hearing & Speech Impaired Only) Drivers Signing Bonus Qualifications: - CDL A – D/T & H end. - Clean MVR - Min. 1 yr. exp. Excellent Benefits Interested applicants please apply in person at: 5012 Campground Rd. Louisville, KY call 812-280-7211 EOE VITRAN EXPRESS Look in The Sentinel-News Classifieds SERVICE CONNECTION News Classifieds To Place Your Ad Call Classifieds or Your Sales Representative 633-4987 Home Improvement STEVE BRUNER HOME REPAIRS COMPLETE HOME MAINTENANCE, LLC Quality Work/Insured Master Carpenter General liability and work comp. insurance 633-5947 487-0697 Contact Keith Yeary 502-682-0048 MICHAEL LENTINI - owner FREE Estimates Fully Insured Phone: 502-633-7992 502-722-9262 or 643-6457 Farm Photography Decks • Room Additions • Basements Doors/Windows • Trim Work • Roofing Repairs • Drywall work, Painting • Pressure Washing • Gutter Cleaning/Repair • Roofing • Barn & Deck Repair • Gutters Installed, Cleaned & Repair • Drywall • Windows & Vinyl Siding • Painting • Small Jobs • Handyman Bob’s Odd Jobs DG GENERAL SERVICES, LLC. • Light Hauling • Clean Up (Basements, Garages, Sheds) • General Lawn Care (Hedge trimming, mowing, brush/small tree cutting & hauling) • Gutter Cleaning • Pressure Washing • Most Odd Jobs! Fast and Dependable! FREE Estimates! Gravel/Dirt, Grading, Bobcat/ Dump Truck, Minor Excavating, Light Hauling/Box Truck, Mowing/ Bushhogging, Snow Plowing Insured. Call Don at 502-645-5556 or 477-0028 Call Bob at 633.1901 or 682.0471 (mobile) LENTINI’S HOME IMPROVEMENT LLC IN BUSINESS SINCE 1999 • Kitchen remodel • Basement finishing • Bathroom remodel • Door & window replacement • Drywall • Roofing Repairs • Etc... Al Bennett Builders Member HBAL Shelby & Spencer • Custom New Homes • Basements Finished • Kitchens Remodeled • Garages • Renovations • Windows • Doors • Decks & More Attention All Farmers On time applying grows bigger profits. Custom applications, service all your crop needs for surrounding areas. Call 502-220-7667 or 502-220-7060 Wedding Photography Portraits - Restoration 502-633-5378 www.gregbiagi.com Lawn & Landscaping Concrete RW MOWING & LANDSCAPING BG Lawn Care Licensed & Insured Reasonable Prices FREE Estimates Christian Owned & Operated Serving Shelby & Surrounding counties Reasonably Priced and Insured Call 502-682-0116 References - Call for free estimate Owner Rex Wise Sr. 502-747-5428 or 502-220-1177 Auto Body ARBOR TRIMS TREE SERVICE Paul Logsdon owner/operator and the 20 years experience TRIMMING - REMOVALS - STUMPS results are LANDSCAPING - TREE PLANTING 502-419-3075 EXPLOSIVE. Buy, sell or Free Estimates trade in the Insured Sentinel-News Buildings Classifieds. Call E & M ADVERTISE IN THIS 633-4987 to CONSTRUCTION, LLC Post Frame SPACE place your ad. Quality Horse Barns & Caregiver – Shelby County Early Head Start OVEC has an opening for a Caregiver at our Shelby County, Early Head Start classroom located in Shelbyville, KY. The Caregiver will assist the Primary Caregiver. Child Development Associate credential for Infant and Toddler required. Two years’ experience in early childhood programs required with a focus on Infants and Toddlers preferred. Salary based on education and experience on OVEC Head Start Salary Schedule. Position closes or until filled. Apply to Human Resources by completing and submitting online application at www.ovec.org. FOR ONLY Residential Buildings Building Additions General Contracting Licensed & Insured Call Ross East $ 502-633-0393 CELL 502-487-1009 42 A 50 500 HENRY CLAY 1 BLOCK SOUTH OF THE COURTHOUSE Complete collision repair for all makes & models. The Latest in “Hi-Tech” Equipment We offer: • Free Estimates • Towing - Rental Car Arrangements Available • Latest in Color Matching • Oven Baked Painting - “We Bake It Before You Take It” • Computer Estimating • Assistance with Insurance Claims We Are The “PREFERRED” Body Shop For Several Leading Insurance Companies ROD MCMURRAY OWNER BOAT REPAIR • Winterize • Fiberglass Repair • Summarize • Custom Painting • Trailer Brakes, Bearings & Seals And other Mechanical, Engine & Outdrive Repair All Major Credit Cards Accepted 633-2244 WEEK EOE DRIVERS/Sweeper Truck Hiring 3rd Shift Non CDL and LABORERS - Able to work Flexible hours Immediate Hire • Full Benefits F/T YR Round work Both positions must be 25 years or older Clean driving record & able to pass DOT physical Apply in person at 11600 Diode Court Louisville, KY 40299 EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER TEMPORARY AGRICULTURAL LABORER 5/1/13 to 1/25/14 – KY0478888 ANTHONY CRABB, SMITHFIELD, KY 2 openings ALL ADS RUN MON., WED. & FRI. ALL ADS RUN MON., WED. & FRI. 4 WEEKS 12 WEEKS 52 WEEKS 4 WEEKS 12 WEEKS 52 WEEKS 1x1 . . . . . . . . $22.25 /week 1x1 . . . . . . . . $22.25 /week 1x2 1x2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $42.50 $42.50 /week /week 2x2 2x2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $83.00 $83.00 /week /week 1x1 . . . . . . . . $19.25 /week 1x1 . . . . . . . . $19.25 /week 1x2 1x2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $36.50 $36.50 /week /week 2x2 2x2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $71.00 $71.00 /week /week 1x1 . . . . . . . . $15.50 /week 1x1 . . . . . . . . $15.50 /week 1x2 1x2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $29.00 $29.00 /week /week 2x2 2x2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $56.00 $56.00 /week /week The prevailing hourly wage or piece rate for the state, agreed upon collective bargaining rate or federal/state min. wage Adverse Effect Wage Rate (AEWR) whichever is higher is guaranteed as a minimum for all work contained in this order, at time work is performed. PLANTING, GROWING AND HARVESTING TOBACCO, WITH 3 MONTHS EXPERIENCE REQUIRED $9.80 hr. 3/4 contract hours guaranteed, all tools and equip. at no charge. Housing provided for those beyond commuting at no cost. Transportation and subsistence pay, after 50% of contract completed. Transport daily to worksite. Must meet production standards listed in job order. Complete information on this job at nearest SWA office (employment office), 860 West Stephen Foester Ave., Bardston, KY, 502-348-8662. Using job order numbers above, to set up interview. Subject to random drug test at employer’s cost, post-employment. The Sentinel News Classifieds SEASONAL CLASS B CDL DRIVER for Crop Production Services Inc. Need valid driver’s license & medical card. Must be News Classifieds able to work Sat.’s & long hours through the Spring. Call 502-633-4585 or apply in person at Crop Production Services in Shelbyville. Lose Something? Tree Service 502-267-0066 APARTMENTS NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Pursuant to KRS-100, the Triple S Board of Adjustments and Appeals will hold a public hearing on Thursday, March 28, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. in the Stratton Center, 215 Washington Street, Shelbyville, Kentucky to hear the following: Docket #693-03-13: Metzger Properties, LLC requests a 3.33 feet front yard sign setback variance for 6791 Shelbyville Road in the City of Simpsonville. The request is from Section 1130.2 of the Zoning Regulations. The property is zoned C and C-4. More information is on file in the Triple S Planning Commission office, 501 Main Street – Courthouse, Shelbyville, KY and may be inspected during regular office hours. Picture it S R U Y You'll love what you find in today's Classifieds. The place to go to...GET YOUR CAREER IN GEAR! To place your ad, call 633-2526. Wednesday, March 20, 2013 • 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Kentucky International Convention Center • Downtown at 4th & Market Sts. Connect at the 19th Annual Louisville Career Expo... Meet with 60+ employers about job and career opportunities. Talk face-to-face to colleges and job training programs about advanced education programs. Use the on-site technology center to immediately complete on-line applications. Attend an Orientation Session to learn about the KentuckianaWorks Pre-apprenticeship training program for individuals interested in careers in the Building Trades & Construction industry. Participate in Expo workshops to learn what Human Resource people look for in candidates, and other helpful job seeker topics. Children not allowed The Louisville Career Expo... in Career Expo Hall. • ADMISSION IS FREE! • Targeted to adults, 18 years of age or over Resumes are strongly encouraged. Professional Dress Required For more information, call 566-3371, or go online at www.lul.org 2013 Career Expo Sponsors: WLKY, Job News, Louisville Gas & Electric and Kentucky Utilities Energy, UPS, Whayne Supply Company, Enterprise Holdings, Galt House Hotel, IN/KY/OH Regional Council of Carpenters, Kelly Services, KentuckianaWorks, KentuckyOne Health, Kroger, Norton Healthcare, TARC The Sentinel News Classifieds 3 ways to place your FREE ads Each item must be $500 or less 1. Email your ad to classifieds@sentinelnews.com or fax to 633-2618 2. Drop off your ad at 703 Taylorsville Road 3. Or mail your ad to FREE Classifieds P.O. Box 399, Shelbyville, KY 40066 *Private Par ty Only! Excludes pets, firewood, hay for sale, good things to eat & limit 5 for sale ads per week. Your Hometown Newspaper P.O. Box 399, Shelbyville, KY 40066 502-633-2526 YOUTH FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS B10 ONLINE: www.SentinelNews.com/Youth Photo by Duanne B. Puckett Odyssey of the Mind Odyssey of the Mind team members were thinking and then rattling off answers to a prompt, based on a timer. The practice question was, “What happens in our world over after over, year after year?” Collins High School students pondering replies were Ryan Ruff, Alora Mazarakis, Jonathan Barnett, Libby Langlois, Phillip Burkhardt and Maggie Garratt. Answers included grass gets cut, world orbits the sun, International Odyssey of the Mind competition, New Year’s resolutions are broken, leaves fall off trees and grow back, sun comes up and birthdays. The Collins High School students on this team qualified to compete in the world finals in May. MENUS: MARCH 18 THROUGH 22 Monday Elementary schools – Breakfast: WG Snack n Waffles, WG Blueberry Muffin, Variety of Cereal, Juice, Fresh Fruit and Milk; Entrées: Chicken Strips, Honey BBQ Pork Bites; Sides: Tossed Salad w/Mandarin Oranges, Sweet Potato Waffle Fries, WG Roll, Banana/Peach Slices, Milk; Condiments: Ketchup, Honey Mustard, BBQ Sauce, Rasp. Vinaigrette Dressing Middle schools – Breakfast: Sausage Biscuit w/Jelly, Yogurt & Crackers, Cereal, Cereal Bar, Muffins, Fresh Fruit or Juice, Milk; Entrées: WG Spaghetti e/Meat Sauce, WG Chicken Patty Sandwich, Ham & Cheese Nemo Box; Sides: Tossed Salad w/Dressing, Sweet Potato Waffle Fries, Green Beans, Lettuce/Tomato, Fresh Apple/Pineapple Tidbits, Milk; Condiments: Honey Mustard, BBQ Sauce, Salad Dressing Tuesday Elementary schools – Breakfast: Ham, Egg & Cheese Biscuit, Cereal Bar, Variety of Cereal, Juice, Fresh Fruit and Milk; Entrées: Mandarin Chicken w/Rice, Turkey & Cheese “Nemo” Sandwich, PBJ Uncrustable & Cheese stick(V); Sides: Oriental Vegetables, Baked Fries, Lettuce/Tomato, Banana/ Peach Slices, Milk; Condiments: Ketchup, Mustard, Salad Dressing Middle schools – Breakfast: Sausage Pancake Bites, WG Breakfast Bun, Cereal, Cereal Bar, Muffins, Fresh Fruit or Juice, Milk; Entrées: Hamburger or Cheeseburger, Hot Dog, PBJ Uncrustable & Cheese Stick; Sides: Vegetarian Baked Beans, Cole Slaw, Lettuce/Tomato/Pickle Slices, Fresh Apple/ Peaches, Milk; Condiments: Mustard/Ketchup/Salad Dressing Wednesday Elementary schools – Breakfast: Breakfast Pizza, WG Apple Muffin, Variety of Cereal, Juice, Fresh Fruit and Milk; Entrées: Hot Dog on Bun, Philly Beef on Bun, Uncrustable & Cheese Stick; Sides: Vegetarian Baked Beans, Cole Slaw, Banana/Applesauce, Milk; Condiments: Ketchup, Mustard Middle schools – Breakfast: Egg & Cheese Biscuit, WG Mini Maple Pancakes, Cereal, Cereal Bar, Muffins, Fresh Fruit or Juice, Milk; Entrées: Vendor Pizza (V) (P), Bosco Stick w/Marinara Sauce, Pretzel & Cheese Sauce; Sides: Tossed Salad, Corn, Fresh Apple, Mandarin Oranges, Milk Thursday Elementary schools – Painted Stone has Vendor Pizza. Breakfast: Sausage Biscuit w/Jelly, WG Banana Muffin, Variety of Cereal, Juice, Fresh Fruit and Milk; Entrées: WG Spaghetti w/Meat Sauce, Chicken Teriyaki Dippers w/Rice; Sides: Tossed Salad, Cooked Carrots, Breadstick, Banana/Mixed Fruit, Milk; Condiments: Ranch Dressing Middle schools – Breakfast: Breakfast Pizza, PBJ Uncrustable, Cereal, Cereal Bar, Muffins, Fresh Fruit or Juice, Milk; Entrées: Honey BBQ Pork Bites (P) w/WG Roll, Chicken Strips w/WG Roll; Sides: Steamed Broccoli, French Fries, Fresh Veggies, Fresh Apple/Mixed Fruit, Milk; Condiments: Mustard, Ketchup, BBQ Sauce, Honey Mustard, Ranch Dressing Friday Elementary schools – Simpsonville has Vendor Pizza. Breakfast: PBJ Uncrustable, WG Chocolate Muffin, Variety of Cereal, Juice, Fresh Fruit and Milk; Entrées: Pizzatas (P), Grilled Cheese; Sides: Corn, Green Beans, Banana/Sliced Pears, Milk Middle schools – Breakfast: WG Chocolate Chip Snack n Waffle, WG Strawberry Pop-tart-Single, Cereal, Cereal Bar, Muffins, Fresh Fruit or Juice, Milk; Entrées: Mandarin Orange Chicken, Teriyaki Chicken Dippers, PBJ Uncrustable & Cheese Stick; Sides: Fresh Baby Carrots, Oriental Vegetables, Rice, Fresh Apple/Pears, Milk; Condiments: Ranch Dressing Photo by Duanne B. Puckett Preservation design As a result of opening the 1939 time capsule discovered during demolition of Northside Elementary, engineering students at Collins High School are designing a display case that could hold the artifacts from the capsule and preserve them for future generations. Two cases were designed. A collaboration between the two will now be designed. One case – shown by Josh Rice (from left), Phillip Burkhardt and Bailey Schneider – was a one-sided trapezoid so that items could be seen by someone short or tall. The museum glass would be sealed with silicone to keep airtight with display levels elevated at an angle for easier viewing. The lighting was directed upward rather than on the items. Presidents Day celebration Photo by Duanne B. Puckett Timeout in the morning Wright Elementary has started grade-level assembly meetings each afternoon to build community among students, like (from left) Josue Rodriguez, Abbigail Didier and Addison Hinkle. Principal Tracey Cline said the pledge of allegiance and school pledge are recited along with points about character education being discussed. There is also a time for sit-and-read, with plans in the future to bring in dance movements. Rocket Power, with Shelby County Public Schools, hosted full daycare for all six elementary schools on Presidents Day. Using the book, Pancakes! Pancakes! by Eric Carle as a theme, the students made pancakes and then had a nutritional challenge and taste test between sugar-free pancake syrup and “lite” pancake syrup. Chef Tina Hurt (right) serves Nichole Diaz, who attends Panther Power. Director Joy Royalty said, “The conclusion was that not only did it have fewer calories, but the sugar-free actually tastes better!” The students watched a book/ video on So You Want to be President? and read various books on different presidents then reported back to the whole group fun facts about them. Photo submitted LOOKING BACK FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013, THE SENTINEL-NEWS B11 ONLINE: www.SentinelNews.com/Looking Back 1943: Shelby woman is 1st female juror Information was gathered from previous years of The Shelby Sentinel, The Shelby News and The Sentinel-News. You can reach the writer at sharonw@sentinelnews.com. If anyone has an old photo that they would like to run with this column bring it and the information into The SentinelNews office or e-mail it to the writer at sharonw@sentinelnews.com. We are also looking for mystery photos. If you have a picture you can’t identify, send it in and we’ll ask our readers for help. 10 years ago, 2003 For efforts to adopt soil-saving methods on their northern Shelby County farms, the fatherson team of Gene and Mark LeCompte were each named Master Conservationist by the Shelby County Soil Conservation District. Mark LeCompte owned and operated Clore Farm Equipment....The Shelby County X-treme Soccer Club under 14 girls finished second in the Oldham County indoor soccer league....Shelbyville’s Dairy Queen received a Level 1 Gold Star Award, a Level 1 Gold Coin Award and a Gold Crown Award at the chain’s Gold Star Banquet held in Louisville....Deaths: Sid Wayne Blackburn, 73; Elva Jewell Cox, 72; Learleen Gividen McNamara, 93. 15 years ago, 1998 Ann Webb, district coordinator, supervised her last Shelby C o u n t y Spelling Bee. The coordinator of the annual event for the past 15 years retired from the Shelby County Public Schools. With her are Carolyn Chesser, one of the judges, and Ernestine Jennings, who served as pronouncer for the competition. Greg Cottrell defeated his final opponent, Stephanie Rumage, when he correctly spelled “slimy”....In 1997, the average cost of a new home in Shelby County was $123,000, $45,000 more than just three years earlier. A new subdivision was being built behind Village Plaza Shopping Center that would allow tenants to buy the homes they had been renting, with the average price of each home at $10,000 to $18,000 less than its building cost.... Shelbyville City Council approved the appointment of Shelbyville Fire Chief Rob Rothenburger to the county 911 Board, to fill the vacancy left when former police Chief John Miller retired....Shelby County center LeNita White, fresh off a season-high 30-point performance in a quarterfinal victory over Oldham County, tore ligaments and chipped a bone in her left knee 1 minute, 35 seconds into the semifinal matchup against Bullitt Central. The Rockets still had enough firepower to knock off the cold-shooting Lady Cougars, 48-36, at South Oldham High....The Mount Eden Ladies’ Auxiliary raised more than $700 to benefit the WHAS Crusade for Children by sponsoring a 10-team charity basketball tournament at East Middle School. The Shelbyville Police Department won the tournament, beating Spencer County Volunteer Fire Department in the championship....Births: Kayleigh Ann Jennings, David Charles Hobbs, Leland Charles Peniamina Cardwell....Deaths: Stanley Heilman Baker Sr., 93; Addie Murphy Burley, 87; Mary Hope White Doss; Kathryn Watts Slucher, 88; Howard Thomas McAllister, 81; Aileen Robins, 76; Paul R. Shish, 49; Martha Shouse Wilson, 66. 25 years ago, 1988 A West Middle School group went to a Jeffersontown motel for a mock United Nations conference to learn more about sharing, diplomacy and working together. During Looking Backward Sharon Warner Senior Production Specialist sharonw@ sentinelnews.com Check out the Looking Back slide show on www. sentinelnews.com their stay, someone broke into several rooms, stealing small amounts of money from several students and $1,200 worth of camera equipment from counselor Carolynne Kleier.... Shelby County High School teacher and soccer and softball coach Janet Childress was inducted into the American Softball Association Louisville Chapter Hall of Fame.... Wilford E. Payne and staff were named the new owners of Saffell Funeral Home, which has been in business in Shelbyville since 1909....The 22 members of the West Middle Speech and Drama Club hoped their gift of gab would produce a state title. The team swamped eight other middle schools in the regional speech tournament in Shepherdsville last month. The victory gave West Middle a berth in the state finals March 19 in Lexington, where the team would compete against 400 students from seven other regions....Connie Baker opened a new craft store, Baker’s Country Crafts, selling a range of pillows, stuffed animals, wood carvings and clocks....Dr. Wayne O. Mortenson and Dr. Michael Barnett merged their dental practices in Shelbyville....Marjorie M o n r o e was named employee of the year at Crestview Health Care Center....February was Black History Month, and Evette Beasley made history as she organized the first Black Achievement Awards Banquet in Shelby County, with 100 people in attendance. The theme was “Looking Back and Moving Forward.”…Irene Brown retired after working for Shelby Rural Electric Cooperative for more than 39 years....Shelby County Rockets went head-to-head in the girls’ 30th District Tournament semifinals and cruised to a 70-39 victory before 500 fans at Anderson County High School....With Shelby County struggling to stay even with Eminence in the first half, Dwayne Crittendon took control of his team’s destiny. He scored 24 of his career-high 29 points in the second half, made 11 of 12 shots and boosted Shelby County to a 68-58 victory n in front of 1,200 fans and into the 30th District Tournament finals....Births: Caitlin Nicole Chowning, Kaylea Elyce Rodgers....Deaths: Robert Owen Collins Sr., 57; John Wesley Stivers, 70; William Alex Lanter, 77; Mary Mossman Kenney, 95; Theadore Huston Ashby Sr., 68; Margaret Moffett Strange, 71; Robert Owen Collins Sr., 57; Belle Willard, 70; Nevelle Rogers, 79; Farris R. (F.R.) Watts, 77. 40 years ago, 1973 Shelbyv i l l e M a y o r Wyman Porter looked over some rough ideas for a welcomehome celebration for Lt. Col. Ben Pollard with SentinelNews reporter Duanne B. Puckett, chairperson of the committee....Lt. Eddie Crossfield escaped injuries when the Air National Guard RF-101 jet crashed at Standiford Field.... The City of Shelbyville’s Police Department moved into new quarters at the corner of 11th and Main streets in the basement of the municipal building.... Shelby County Fiscal Court appointed Otto Ryan as constable for the South Shelby District filling the post vacated by Eugene Lindsey....Deaths: Loma Emeline Taylor, 57; Mary Morton Gray Pinkston, 58; Mrs. Frances S. Kesler. 55 years ago, 1958 Charles W. Kimmel, licensed funeral director and embalmer and a native of Drakesboro, was named the new assistant manager of Hall-Taylor Funeral Home....Bonnie Holmes was named valedictorian of Waddy High School. She attended M o u n t Eden School 8 years before coming to Waddy....The coveted “God and Country Award,” the highest religious award presented by the Boy Scouts of America, was presented to Explorer Scout Woodford Fields, a member of the Simpsonville Christian Church....Ann Miller was chosen as one of the 35 seniors at Western, Kentucky State College, to appear in the 1958 edition of Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities.... Jerry’s Drive In, which is now open, was in the restaurant business in Kentucky for 28 years, and its original type of operation was a 5-cent hamburger stand formerly known as the White Tavern Shops.... Charles E. Connell was elected treasurer of Phi Delta Theta social fraternity at Centre College at Danville....Deaths: John A. Lincoln Sr., 59; Mildred Harrison Jernigan, 56; George Lee Bird, 79; Jasper M. Easley, 79; Sophia Scobee Brewer, 70; Shelby Williams Hawkins, 58; Birdie Reid Ellis, 79; Emma Florence Herndon Hamilton, 82; George W. Durham, 86. 60 years ago, 1953 The Shelbyville Red Devils captured the 30th District basketball title.... Mr. and Mrs. James Taylor announced the birth of a son, John Scott, at King’s Daughters Hospital.... Tommy Cinnamond, 23, and Bobby Arrington, 17, were injured when the car in which they were riding left the road and hit a tree....Garland Williams, 26, a salesman for Collier and Gish, was instantly killed when his car left the road and struck a tree on KY 53. 70 years ago, 1943 Sam D. Weakley Jr., a sophomore in the College of Agriculture and Home Economics at the University of Kentucky, was pledged to Alpha Zeta, honorary agriculture fraternity....The Shelby County Board of Education hired Rev. T.G. Waller of Waddy and Rev. J.T. Tichenor of Louisville to fill teacher vacancies....Shelbyville defeated Gallatin County High, 41-22....Phillip Moesser was elected president of the Shelby County Chamber of Commerce for 1943....Mrs. Clyde Hall was the first female juror ever selected from Shelby County. She was summoned for Federal Court jury service at Frankfort.... Births: Margaret Scott Michael, Ralph David Tindle, Jerry Augustine Neel...Serving our country: Mr. and Mrs. Tim Yancey received a telegram from the War Department that their son, Pvt. Edward Yancey had been missing since Feb. 17....Sgt. James S. Collins was promoted from the rank of corporal.... Ensign J.B. Shrewsbury was promoted to lieutenant The Simpsonville Bobcats defeated Shelbyville, 54-51, to win the 30th District basketball championship. Members of the team were (front row, from left) Billy Sweeney, Charles Simpson, David Tincher, Tommy Allen, Lemuel Wright, Bob Walters; (back row) coach Randel Pelfry, Beverly Crawford, Nick Phillips, Carl Streible, James Fister, Jimmy Gibbs, Jimmy Heady and James Golden, who helped with the team. The photo was taken from the March 13, 1958, issue of The Shelby Sentinel Members of the Shelby County Homemakers Club were honored at Science Hill Inn. They were Mrs. E.D. Vaughn, North Shelby Club; Mrs. Phil McMullen, Mrs. Cephas Allen and Mrs. W.W. Cotton, representing the Olive Branch Club. The hosts for the dinner were (from left) Chuck Caldwell, Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.; Bernice Hedges, Lincoln Department Store; Newton Richardson, the Kroger Co.; Louis O’Bryan, J.J. Newberry Co.; Sam Liss, Lerman Bros.; Harold Maupin, Great A&P Tea Co.; and Harold E. Burge, Winn-Dixie Co. The photos were taken from the March 13, 1958, issue of The Shelby Sentinel. junior grade in U.S. Naval Air Corps....Deaths: Luther Wright, 76; L.G. Hall, 73; William T. Monroe, 82; Virginia Schmitt Lee, 43; Florence Offutt; Truman Earl Richardson, 6-monthold son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Richardson; Beattie Middelton. 80 years ago, 1933 Dr. Charles E. Palmer was elected president of the newly organized County Fish and Game Protective Association....Professor L.C. Sullivan, principal at Shelbyville High School, was recovering from a stroke....E. Guthrie Jesse announced his candidacy for circuit clerk....Deaths: Flossie Hawlow Estes, Mary Jane Hall Thomason, Kate T. Bodkin, Mattie Clark Engle, Calvin C. Carpenter. 90 years ago, 1923 Deaths: J. Doyle, 80; Susie Ritter Bryant; Minnie Thornton, 55; Dorothy Lane Duvall, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy L. Duvall; John Louis Wills, 4-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. John Wills, Cropper. 95 years ago, 1918 Shelby Schools were closed on account of the deep snow and to save fuel....L.G. Smith was elected president of the Business Men’s Association; Ira Pyles, vice president; and T.F. Poynter, secretary- treasurer....Richard W. Nash purchased from C.S. Wills his residence on 8th Street between Clay and Bland Ave. for $4,500....Deaths: Nathan C. Boulware, 72; Mollie Shipman Saunders; J.W. Crosby, 60; Joseph Walker Hornsby; William Dudley Ware, 98; Dr. Alex C. Brown, Sue Elizabeth Frye, Florence C. Worlen; Mary Beall. More online You can find previous editions of Looking Back at www. SentinelNews.com/lookingback or by searching the term “Looking Back.” 85 years ago, 1928 Jesse M. Ingram purchased from the New York Life Insurance Co., a farm of 101 acres on Guist Creek, known as the Estin Scearce place....Judge Charles C. Marshall convened the Shelby Circuit Court in regular February term....The large stock barn and adjoining silo on the farm of Edward T. Tucker, south of Finchville, were destroyed by fire....J. Archie Bell shipped a carload of heavy Springer Jerseys to Tennessee parties at good prices....Deaths: John A. Holton, 75; M. Elizabeth Burton; Edward B. Hall, 68; Jennie Ann Ballou; Mrs. O.T. Kaltenbacher. 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Meal $34.99 (4 pints of Vegetables and 12 Rolls) 12 pc. Meal $27.99 (3 pints of Vegetables and 12 Rolls) Sunday Buffet Adults......................................................$17.95 Children (ages 5-10 years).........................$5.95 3202 Shelbyville Rd., Shelbyville, KY 40065 (502) 633-5600 www.ClaudiaSanders.com B12 — SENTINEL-NEWS, SHELBYVILLE, KY., FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013 33 Woodfield Ct. - $136,900 190 Lincoln Station Dr. - Todds Station - $199,900 718 Hollow Trace - Spring Oaks - $259,900 W NERICE P Cheryl Hood • Charming home - less than 1 mile from I-64 • 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. GR has fp and pergo Áoor • Kitchen has ceramic tile Áoor, covered screen-in porch • Big back yard with nice landscaping. Attic storage Cheryl Hood • So much appeal inside and out. GR fp • Kitchen has hardwood Áoor, stainless back splash • 1980 sq ft, 4 bdrms & 3 full baths. Finished lower level • Deck. Wood privacy fence. Larry K. Rogers • Great location! Backs up to Clear Creek Park • 4 Bdrms, 3.5 Baths and 3900 sf! Updates galore • Roof 2008, HVAC 2012, new hot water heater • Granite counter tops in Kitchen, tiled bath Áoors Larry K. Rogers Realty, Inc. Larry K. Rogers Realty, Inc. Larry K. Rogers Realty, Inc. Cheryl Hood 502-777-0875 Cheryl Hood 502-777-0875 Larry K. Rogers 502-682-0707 4819 Burks Branch Rd. - $259,900 5303 Buck Creek - SOLD 70 Hunter Pointe - SOLD Mike Miller • Priced to sell!!! Walk-out ranch on 5.91 acres • 3 bdrms, 2 baths and 1980 sf in a great location • Walkout unÀnished basement. 4 board fencing • 2 stall barn, tack room, paddock, large deck, brick patio D L O S Julie Kinsolving • Over 5700 sf on 2.18 ACRES • 5 bdrms, 5.5 baths • Finished bsmt, 40x60 Bldg D L O S Julie Kinsolving • Over 6000 sq ft, 5 Bdrms & 4 Baths • 5 lush acres near I-64 • 40x30 Bldg, pool Larry K. Rogers Realty, Inc. Larry K. Rogers Realty, Inc. Larry K. Rogers Realty, Inc. Mike Miller 502-633-8894 Julie Kinsolving 502-682-4313 Julie Kinsolving 502-682-4313 604 OAKCREST DR. - $247,000 ING IST L NEW TRACT 5 AIKEN RD. - $69,900 D URE T A FE 3822 MARELI DR. - $122,900 E RIC P NEW Torrey Smith Back on the market … lovely home on 1 acre in Spring Oaks. Features include 2850 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, vaulted, beamed Great Room with fireplace, huge fenced back yard with in-ground pool. 5 ACRES with 4 board fencing in Hunters Trace located just off Aiken Rd in Shelby County and 5 minutes from Simpsonville, KY. HUGE 1/3 acre lot … 3 bedrooms, 2 ½ baths, 1 car garage. Updates include laminate floors, custom cabinets, New range & dishwasher. Torrey Smith, 502-417-0910 Torrey Smith, 502-417-0910 Torrey Smith, 502-417-0910 410 PADDOCK LN. - $650,000 E RIC P NEW Torrey Smith 167 BONNIEMERE RD. - $99,500 E RIC P NEW Torrey Smith Torrey Smith 12 CHADWICK DR. – $186,900 E RIC P NEW Jennifer Franklin Zach Tipton TAYLORSVILLE Gorgeous home on 8 beautiful acres in the heart of “Saddlebred Country”. 5600 sq ft of living space features hardwoods, renovated gourmet kitchen, luxurious master suite, 3 HVAC units , numerous custom features, 3 car garage, barn with heated tack room, wrap around porch, picturesque setting. Nice 3 bedroom, 1 bath home; 1025 sq ft; new carpet, fresh paint, eat in kitchen with access to back deck; privacy fence. Bank owned property all brick home on 1 acre close to schools and shopping. 15 minutes to Gene Snyder Fway. 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, 2300 sq ft; bonus room above garage. Torrey Smith, 502-417-0910 Jennifer Franklin, 502-220-6083 Zach Tipton, 502-321-4831 991 MORNING GLORY LN. 235 ROLLING RIDGE WAY 1 TRACE LN. ING ING D PEN ING D PEN D PEN April Ethington NEW CONSTRUCTION … Lovely home in Old Mill Village; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, lots of custom features, granite, hardwood flooring, upgrade trim and fixture package, covered back deck. Simpsonville location …. Large corner lot; completely renovated interior; lg 2 car garage, patio and wood deck. April Ethington, owner/agent 502-633-8358 Torrey Smith, 502-417-0910 Zach Tipton, 502-321-4831 700 ASHLAND AVE. 1010 MAGNOLIA AVE. 473 WARRIORS WAY D Torrey Smith D SOL D SOL Joan Hundley Zach Tipton Large patio home with 2 car garage; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1400+ sq ft. SOL Joan Hundley April Ethington HISTORIC SHELBYVILLE. 4 BRS, 2 BAS HISTORIC SHELBYILLE, 2 BR, 1 BA BRAND NEW 3 BR, 2 BA, North Country Subd., Energy Star Rated SOLD $105,000 SOLD $67,500 SOLD $188,500 Joan Hundley, 502-220-1274 Joan Hundley, 502-220-1274 April Ethington, owner/agent, 502-633-8358