Adna Wins Districts Remembrance Claquato Event Marks Memorial Day / Main 3 Pirates Head to State After Toppling Toutle Lake / Sports

$1 Early Week Edition Tuesday, Reaching 110,000 Readers in Print and Online — www.chronline.com May 27, 2014

Anna DeTray, W.F. West Zoe Sayler, W.F. West Anna Scheibmier, Centralia Christopher Martin, Centralia Shayna Woods, Centralia Top 20

Nathan Sherfey, W.F. West Scholars Tyler Beairsto, Centralia The 2014 graduates of W.F. West and Centralia high schools will soon don their gowns and mortarboards as they mark the completion of one stage of life and move on to the next. Centralia students graduate June 6; W.F. West graduation is June 7. Today, we recognize the top Tiger and Bearcat graduates as we salute every member of the Class of 2014. / See back page Anthony Painter, W.F. West Nicholaus Martin, Centralia Lillian Albright, Centralia

Keesha Matz, W.F. West Nicole Bach, W.F. West Noelle Bedford, W.F. West Taylor Canfield, Centralia Ashley Phelps, Centralia

Dakota White, W.F. West Lindsey Giffey, W.F. West Rachel Tennant, W.F. West Rachel Mecham, Centralia Collin Westenhaver, Centralia

The Chronicle, Serving The Greater Weather Wheeling and Dealing Deaths Lewis County Area Since 1889 TONIGHT: Low 46 Internet Outage, Explosion Can’t Kellogg, Michael Follow Us on Twitter TOMORROW: High 64 Stop Crowds at Flea Market / Main 4 Stephen, 68, @chronline Showers likely Centralia see details on page Main 2 Find Us on Facebook www.facebook.com/ Weather picture by Tilynn thecentraliachronicle Everts, Onalaska Main 2 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 COMMUNITY CALENDAR / WEATHER

Community Calendar Editor’s Best Bet Today WHAT’S HAPPENING? Bingo, Chehalis Moose Lodge, doors open at 4:30 p.m., game starts at 6:30 If you have an event you p.m.; food available, (360) 736-9030 would like included in the Health and Hope Medical Outreach, Community Calendar, please free medical clinic, 5:30-8:30 p.m., email your information to Northwest Pediatrics, 1911 Cooks Hill [email protected]. Road, Centralia, for those whose income Include a daytime telephone is less than 200 percent of the poverty number where you can be level, (360) 623-1485 reached. Public Agencies There is no charge for these listings. Centralia City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 118 W. Maple St., Centralia, (360) For questions about 330-7670 calendar items, call Doug Napavine City Council, 6 p.m., Blosser at The Chronicle, (360) Napavine City Hall, 407 Birch St., (360) 807-8238. 262-3547, ext. 213 Lyceum to Take Look at Gender, Sexuality Lewis County Planning Commission, meeting canceled, (360) 740-1284 Public Agencies Sid Jordan Peterson will generate dialogue about contem- Chehalis City Council, 5 p.m, City Joint Oversight Board for the Func- present “Put This on the (Map),” porary issues. Hall council chamber, 350 N. Market tional Consolidation, 6:30 p.m., River- a video documentary project A consultant to youth-serv- Blvd., Chehalis, agendas available at side Fire Authority Harrison Avenue Sta- http://ci.chehalis.wa.us/meetings, (360) tion, Centralia, (360) 345-3225 capturing the narratives of LG- ing organizations, Peterson has 345-1042 Timberland Regional LIbrary Board BTQ young people in Washing- been involved in founding sever- ton state, at a Lyceum program al community organizations and Libraries of Trustees, 7 p.m., Raymond Timber- land Library, 507 Duryea St., Raymond at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Centra- groups, including Three Wings Teen Writing Group, for teens, 5:30 lia College. and the Vera Project, and is the p.m., Chehalis Libraries Peterson provides an audi- co-owner of Revelry Media and Organizations LEGO Club, for children, 3 p.m., ence with a local look at critical Methods, the producer of “Put Tenino issues and examines the chang- This On The (Map).” Forest Grange, 3397 Jackson High- ing dynamics of gender and sex- She is a licensed attorney way, 7 p.m. Organizations uality in Washington. The au- with a background in interna- Senior Song Birds, 9:50 a.m., Twin Chehalis Valley Evening Garden Club, Cities Senior Center, 2545 National Ave., 7 p.m., call for meeting location, (360) dience will also learn about the tional human rights and has Chehalis, (360) 740-4199 748-6189 filmmaking process and how studied and worked abroad in Centralia Bridge Club, 6:30 p.m., Take Off Pounds Sensibly, 10:15 a.m., video can serve as an effective Europe and . Unity Church, 800 S. Pearl St., Centralia, Assembly of God church, 702 SE First St., tool for engaging young people Lyceum is free and may also (360) 748-1753, [email protected] Winlock in community-based research be taken at Humanities 286, one Cowlitz Prairie Grange, business and education. credit. Lyceum classes are held Support Groups meeting 7:30 p.m., potluck dessert to follow, (360) 864-2023 Peterson is a community in WAH 103 or, if more space is NAMI Lewis County Connections educator and filmmaker with needed, Corbet Theatre. Support Group, 5:30-7 p.m., Twin Cities United Women in Business, 5:30 Senior Center, (360) 880-8070 or sher- p.m., Kit Carson banquet room, Chehalis, more than a decade of experi- For more information, call [email protected] (360) 388-5252 ence working as a youth advo- Jody Peterson, (360) 736-9391, NAMI Support Group, 2-3:15 p.m., cate in Washington state. Uti- ext 209, or email her at jpeter- Centralia Timberland Library, for Support Groups lizing documentary video to [email protected]. families of mentally ill persons, (360) Domestic violence support group, 736-2073 5:30-7 p.m., 125 NW Chehalis Ave., Che- halis, sponsored by Human Response Network, (360) 748-6601 Wednesday, May 28 Support Groups Public Agencies Overeaters Anonymous, 5:30-6:30 Lewis-Mason-Thurston Area Agency Bingo, doors open 5 p.m., bingo Thursday, May 29 p.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, 1209 on Aging, Council of Governments, 2 starts 6:30 p.m., Forest Grange, 3397 N. Scheuber Road, Centralia, (360) p.m., 2404 Heritage Court SW, Suite A, Jackson Highway, Chehalis Open mic, 6:30 p.m., Matrix Coffee- 736-9268 Olympia, (360) 664-3162, ext. 112, (888) Games Night, 5:30-9 p.m., Matrix Cof- house, Chehalis, (360) 740-0492 545-0910, ext. 112, or email Rebecca. feehouse, Chehalis, free, (360) 740-0492 “Let’s Grow a Garden,” 10-11:30 [email protected] Winlock Farmers Market, 9 a.m.-3 a.m., 4162 Jackson Highway, free, (360) Friday, May 30 p.m., Winlock Events Plaza on Kerron 262-0525 Libraries Oregon Trail music and dancing, Street, (360) 785-4817 CC Grow, farmers market, noon-3 Chehalis library will be closed, staff p.m., Centralia College, across from open mic with Side Kicks Band, 7 p.m., Bailey Peters, state FFA president, Cowlitz Prairie Grange, (360) 864-2023 training presentation on trip to South Africa, Health & Wellness Center, (360) 736- 7:30 p.m., Cowlitz Prairie Grange, Jack- 9391, ext. 650 Bob Garcia and Melodies Recycled Support Groups Basket making workshop, 10 a.m., Band, 7-9:30 p.m., Twin Cities Senior son Highway and Tucker Road, Toledo, H.O.P.E., all addictions, 7:30-9 p.m., (360) 304-0779 or (360) 262-3696 White Pass Country Museum, 12990 U.S. Center, $5, (360) 262-3041 Highway 12, instructor Carolyn Snedigar, Lewis County Farmers Market, 10 Heritage Baptist Church of Tenino, 1315 Public meeting, “Chehalis Basin Sussex Ave. E., Tenino, (360) 480-0592, reservations required, (360) 494-4422 a.m.-3 p.m., corner of Pearl and Maple Strategy: Reducing Flood Damage and [email protected] Enhancing Aquatic Species,” 4-9 p.m., streets, Centralia, (360) 736-8977, dojo@ Organizations Life Recovery Group, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Veterans Memorial Museum, 100 SW compprime.com Veterans Way, Chehalis, email kghalam- Chehalis-Centralia Cribbage Club, Eclectics, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., Scatter Creek Dayspring Baptist Church, 2088 Jackson [email protected] or call (206) 6:30 p.m., Chehalis Moose Lodge, 1400 Grill, Lucky Eagle Casino, (360) 273-2000, Highway, Chehalis, (360) 748-3401 792-4058 Grand Ave., Centralia, (360) 485-2852 ext. 301 The Weather Almanac

5-Day Forecast for the Lewis County Area River Stages National Map Gauge Flood 24 hr. Forecast map for May 27, 2014 Today Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Height Stage Change Chehalis at Mellen St. 110s L 50.19 65.0 +0.04 100s L Skookumchuck at Pearl St. 90s 73.77 85.0 +0.06 80s 70s Cowlitz at Packwood 60s 4.39 10.5 +0.13 H 50s Cowlitz at Randle Few Showers Showers Likely Few Showers Partly Cloudy Mostly Sunny 40s L 8.37 18.0 -0.02 30s L 66º 46º 64º 48º 66º 46º 70º 49º 73º 50º Cowlitz at Mayield Dam 20s 5.10 ---- +0.06 10s This map shows high temperatures, 0s type of precipitation expected and location of frontal systems at noon. Almanac Regional Weather Sun and Moon L H Cold Front Stationary Front Warm Front Low Pressure High Pressure Data reported from Centralia Sunrise today ...... 5:24 a.m. Temperature Bellingham Brewster Sunset tonight ...... 8:53 p.m. Yesterday’s High ...... 64 Moonrise ...... 4:58 a.m. National Cities Yesterday’s Low ...... 54 63/50 79/48 Moonset...... 7:56 p.m. Normal High ...... 70 Port Angeles Today Wed. Normal Low...... 48 59/49 City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx Record High ...... 92 in 1936 Seattle Anchorage 56/47 pc 58/46 sh Record Low...... 34 in 1940 67/50 Boise 84/51 s 76/44 s Precipitation Olympia Ellensburg New First Full Last Boston 68/49 sh 57/47 sh Yesterday ...... 0.03" 67/47 67/45 5/28 6/5 6/12 6/19 Dallas 79/67 t 83/69 mc Month to date ...... 2.93" Tacoma Honolulu 89/74 ra 88/74 s Normal month to date ...2.17" Centralia 66/49 Pollen Forecast Las Vegas 103/81 s 100/79 s Year to date...... 24.51" 66/46 Yakima Nashville 89/66 t 87/65 t Normal year to date ....22.58" Chehalis Allergen Today Sunday Phoenix 106/80 s 106/81 s 70/47 Longview 65/46 Trees None None St. Louis 87/68 t 85/69 t Salt Lake City 90/65 s 92/62 s AreaWe Want Conditions Your Photos 67/47 Grass None None Shown is today's Weeds Very High High San Francisco 69/51 s 74/53 s Yesterday weather. Temperatures Mold None None Washington, DC 86/67 t 82/57 t Portland 69/47 The Dallesare today's highs and CitySend in your weather-related Hi/Lo Prcp. photo- graphs to The Chronicle for our Voices 70/49 69/47 tonight's lows. World Cities page. Send them to voices@chronline. com. Include name, date and descrip- Today Wed. Today Wed. tion of the photograph. Regional Cities City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx Today Wed. Today Wed. Baghdad 106/77 s 103/79 s New Delhi 108/82 s 110/81 s City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx Beijing 93/61 pc 100/66 s Paris 66/48 sh 67/49 pc Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; pc/partly Bremerton 65/50 sh 65/51 sh Spokane 73/46 s 67/42 t 60/54 sh 64/53 sh Rio de Janeiro 74/65 sh 72/63 sh cloudy; r/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; Ocean Shores 60/52 sh 60/52 sh Tri Cities 75/51 s 72/48 sh Mexico City 76/57 t 74/55 t Rome 70/57 pc 73/57 pc sh/showers; sn/snow; t/thunderstorms Olympia 67/47 sh 65/49 sh Wenatchee 75/53 s 69/48 t Moscow 80/56 s 75/57 pc Sydney 78/60 pc 73/51 s

The Glass Guru™ ROCHESTERLUMBER P R i N T SERVICES IT’S WHAT WE DO! Moisture Removal We Provide You With Scratch Removal A Variety Of Products Insulation Vapor Barrier.. Screws Bolts 3’ Painted 40 year Armor Tech Water Stain Removal . 17 colors $ 25/lf To Help Promote ChroniclePrinting_1x2_140109 MOISTURE IN YOUR WINDOWS? Sliding Door Hardware . 24’ Trusses 2 CH520207sl.cg Your Business! Window Replacements

Don’t Replace. RESTORE for Less! CH520397.ca.cg Blueprints . and of course all the lumber! 3’ Painted 25 year Sunguard Guaranteed Repair Process! New Glass, Windows, Withe & Green $ 99/lf Doors, Screens 8’, 10’ & 12’ in stock 1 CALL TODAY! SELLING POLE BARN KITS SINCE 1988 360-740-7777 Free & MORE! Check out our website: rochesterlumber.net 19523 Sargent Rd SW Jack Tavares • 360-807-8716 Estimates Open Mon-Fri 7am-5:30pm Sat 7am-5pm Closed Sundays Rochester WA Chronicleprinting.net Chehalis, WA 98532 Learn More At 360.273.5213 #GLASSGC871JS TheGlassGuruofChehalis.com • Main 3 LOCAL The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Pete Caster / [email protected] Women hold their hands over their hearts after laying a wreath in front of the lag pole during a Memorial Day service at Claquato Cemetery west of Chehalis on Monday. The wreaths were laid by dozens of local veterans organizations to honor fallen soldiers. Community Pays Homage to Veterans at Claquato Cemetery STARS AND STRIPES: Crowd Gathers West of Chehalis for Annual ‘‘I haven’t had a TV in Memorial Day Ceremony 10 years because when By Dameon Pesanti I came home I couldn’t [email protected] stand my brothers and Minutes before the national anthem, the overcast sky broke sisters being talked open Monday and sunlight about as statistics.’’ beamed down on the crowd ob- serving Memorial Day at Cla- quato Cemetery. Brian Hill At least 150 people gathered staff sergeant More than 150 people attend the Memorial Day service at Claquato Cemetery west of Chehalis on Monday afternoon. around the central flagpole to remember and honor those who Baker closed his benediction and have died in the line of service to said, “Let us never forget those The audience murmured in their country. who gave their lives so we may affirmation. Among the crowd, David enjoy ours.” Staff Sgt. Brian Hill spoke and Susan Sherman looked on. At the ceremony’s close, a Susan’s father survived Pearl after the invocation. He said he has admired the military since group of veterans fired off a gun Harbor. David’s father, a World salute. Susan Sherman cried War II veteran, and third in a he’d fought wildfires alongside soldiers as a young man, but he softly against David while a five-generation military family, trumpeter played at the rear of recently died and will be buried didn’t join the service until his early 30s. For him, the mean- the crowd. in June, not far from where the Many people used the morn- service was held. ing of Memorial Day completely ing to clean the headstones and “This is our first time here,” changed after he took a medivac David said. “We weren’t aware of flight full of injured soldiers and offer flowers in memory of the it before. But this year has a spe- four coffins loaded to the rear deceased. cial meaning because of dad, and from Fallujah, Iraq, to . At the family plot, 92-year- we’ve come out to pay tribute to Those who were able to stand old Jean Parnel stood perched all the soldiers.” stood and saluted as the coffins against her cane, watching her In a tense moment, singer were loaded and and later un- grandson Cameron scrub the Bud Poyns, a Marine Corps World War II veteran and member of the Centralia Danika Macomber struggled to loaded. moss from her daughter Eva Ste- American Legion Post 17 Honor Guard, plays a bugle during the Memorial Day remember the lyrics of the Na- “I have a tremendous sense venson’s marble headstone. Ceremony at Claquato Cemetery on Monday afternoon. tional Anthem, but in a galvaniz- of guilt because I survived,” he “I don’t know what I was do- ing gesture, the crowd quickly said. “I haven’t had a TV in 10 ing when I ordered it. It stains,” three years since the graves were picked up tune and sang in har- years because when I came home Jean said, watching as Cameron cleaned, but Jean wasn’t sure if mony. I couldn’t stand my brothers and used a cup of water to wipe sudsy she’d be able to make it this Me- “I think it worked out nicely sisters being talked about as sta- cleaner away from his aunt’s morial Day. Summer with all of us singing together,” tistics.” white stone. “I had given up hope that I’d retired Army Chaplain Stan Bak- After he spoke, several mili- Her husband, Harry, and be able to come out, but Camer- er told the crowd. “God works in tary and community groups laid son, Andrew, lie buried next to on here was so nice to bring me,” Special! mysterious ways, doesn’t he?” wreaths at the flag. Chaplain her daughter. It had been about she said. at Thorbeckes Fitlife Centers! Veterans Memorial Museum to Honor D-Day Survivors Single Paid in full SEEKING SURVIVORS: On June 6, a family member of Parshall will give the bottle 3 Month Museum Hopes to George Narozonick, of Olym- Those Who Helped in “This may be one of the last times pia. Narozonick was 18 when Membership he worked on a Navy landing Turning Point Battle for the general public to come and craft that carried troopers to the Will Come Forward shores of Normandy. Narozo- 99 listen to one who was there and nick will speak at the commemo- By The Chronicle $99 + tax hear his story in his own words. It ration. The Veterans Memorial Mu- “This may be one of the last Expires 5/31/2014 seum in Chehalis will host a is our obligation to support and times for the general public to *Must be 18+years commemorative event on June 6 honor these men.” come and listen to one who was *Must have valid local address to honor those who served dur- there and hear his story in his ing the Battle of Normandy on own words,” said Lee Grimes, the historic battle’s 70th anniver- Lee Grimes co-founder of the museum and sary. museum founder and former director its former director, in a press re- The event will feature speech- lease. “It is our obligation to sup- es by D-Day veterans and trib- port and honor these men.” utes to those who served during The museum is seeking vet- the Battle of Normandy, known Battle of Normandy, which led While in , Parshall got erans who served during the as Operation Overlord, as well to the eventual surrender of Ger- a bottle of red wine and desig- Battle of Normandy to attend to Centralia 360 as the storming of the beaches in man forces. nated it as the “last man” bottle, be honored. Anyone who knows 736-1683 Operation Neptune. Twenty years ago, Centra- meaning it would be awarded to a D-Day survivor, call the mu- There will also be a Power- lia resident Clifton Parshall at- the last surviving D-Day veteran. seum at (360) 740-8875 or by Chehalis 360 Point presentation about the tended the 50th anniversary Parshall, a Navy veteran, died email at infor@veteransmuse- 748-3744 significance of D-Day and the commemoration at Normandy. in 2007 at age 84. um.org. CH520689bw.db Main 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 LOCAL Charges in 2010 Drive-By Shooting in Chehalis Dropped BACK TO PRISON: Andrew serving a 160-year prison sen- witnesses involved in the 2010 after someone in a red Chevrolet fire on a trailer where seven peo- tence for a gang-related shooting offense would cooperate, and Blazer fired a handgun toward ple were sleeping inside. Morales-Loberg is in Yakima County. one of them had been deported a group of people, missing the No one was injured, but due Already Serving a 160- Andrew Morales-Loberg was to Mexico. Furthermore, Mo- group but striking a parked car. to the firearm enhancements on in Department of Corrections rales-Loberg is already serving The shooting was report- the first-degree assault charges, Year Prison Sentence custody for more than two years an extremely long sentence. edly gang-related, and authori- Morales received a long sentence. for a Gang-Related before he requested to be trans- “Obviously, we’d like to hold ties concluded four people were Meyer previously said Mo- ported back to Lewis County to him accountable for what he did involved, including Morales- rales-Loberg was transported Shooting in Yakima resolve the outstanding warrant here, but we don’t have the wit- Loberg. The three others were back in the Lewis County Jail By Stephanie Schendel for the Chehalis drive-by shooting. nesses and we’re not going to eventually apprehended, but the from DOC custody at his own Prosecutors last week, how- waste the resources,” Meyer said. charges were dismissed. request to resolve the outstand- [email protected] ever, dropped the charge, though In 2010, authorities say Morales-Loberg, however, was ing warrant. Prisoners serving Lewis County prosecutors it can be refiled if new evidence 19-year-old Morales-Loberg, not caught until he was involved prison sentences with outstand- dropped a 2010 drive-by shoot- comes to light. who also went by Jaime Lopez, in another gang-related shooting ing warrants in other jurisdic- ing charge last week against a Lewis County Prosecutor was involved in a drive-by shoot- in Yakima County in March 2011. tions have fewer privileges than former Chehalis man already Jonathan Meyer said none of the ing on Southwest William Street He and his accomplices opened those who don’t, he said. A Weekend of Wheeling and Dealing at the Packwood Market DEALS: Vendors and Bargain Hunters Flood East County Town for Four Days of Haggling By Dameon Pesanti [email protected] PACKWOOD — Over Me- morial Day weekend, Packwood transforms from a sleepy moun- tain town into a Cascadian ver- sion of the Turkish Grand Bazaar. Like salmon moving up- stream, thousands of bargain hunters combed a river of ven- dors and the shopping tribu- taries branching off from U.S. Highway 12 and into adjacent fields. About midway up the road, an overweight and middle- aged Captain America hawked bottles of water from a wagon. The weekend was both a packrat’s dream and a recover- ing shopaholic’s worst nightmare. But for Packwood, it’s a boon for area businesses, according to the local visitor center’s Execu- tive Director CJ Neer. “For the liquor stores, the gro- cers in town, and the restaurants Dameon Pesanti / [email protected] in town, this will make or break Vendors sold a huge variety of antiques during the Packwood Flea Market. One vendor sold currency from across the world and a large sword bound in a leather sheath. the rest of the year for them,” Neer said. Most of the area businesses will take at least a small hit this time. For most of Saturday, the busiest day of the market, Inter- net and phone service was down through all of Packwood. No one could process a card or take money from an ATM. The day before, a propane tank exploded inside someone’s RV, startling vendors but causing no injuries. “Those were big talk around all the vendors,” vendor Bob Carlyle said. “It’s like we were stranded and I thought it may be terrorism.” Carlyle’s booth specialized in vintage logging equipment Lines were long at every ATM on Sunday in Packwood. On Saturday, no one was Shoppers rummage though piles of clothing at a large tent during the Packwood and memorabilia iconic to the able to withdraw money due to a phone and Internet outage in the area. Flea Market Sunday afternoon. American West. Every booth has its schtick to draw the crowds. the year. Last year, he practically Light bottle. By then, the crowd For Carlyle, it’s the two huge elk couldn’t sell a pair of logging was so thin and worn out he got mounts looming above his tent tongs. This weekend, they were it for a steal. and a bear pelt lying inside. Just the first thing to go, and he saw “Everybody’s here looking for about everyone dickers with him, other pairs sell for up to $600 at a treasure you can’t live without,” but the worst are the antique the auction down the street. he said. “We get here at noon, but dealers trying to grind him down. The trick to getting a deal is late night is the best.” “They’re like sharks,” he said. to be patient, according to Pack- Like a Las Vegas buffet, the “They’re real crafty and some wood flea market and auction Packwood Flea Market has just people just get high on getting veteran Steve Schroder. As of about everything you could ever their way.” Sunday afternoon, his wife had want. The hardest part is limit- Water bottles and umbrellas only bid and won a set of pillows. ing yourself, and, for the unini- are by far his most reliable sales, Last year, he waited until 2 a.m. tiated, worrying if you could’ve but everything else changes with to bid on a huge antique Coors got a better deal next door. News in Brief

sic Teachers Association and the Applications are due by June Lewis County Music Music Teachers National Associ- 30. Call Barbara at (360) 736- Teachers Association ation. The group hosts two honor 2180 for more information. recitals, the Piano Play-A-Thon For more info about the Lew- Offering Student Grant and the Ribbon Festival in addi- is County Music Teachers Asso- By The Chronicle tion to a piano adjudication. ciation, visit www.lcmta.org. The Lewis County Music Teachers Association is once again offering the Dorothy Park- er Memorial Grant to students wanting to study music in the t Cu upcoming school year. Grea isine Any student in first grade through a senior in high school whose family qualifies as low- Father’s Day CH521342sl.jd income status can apply for the Bufet scholarship. 95 Requirements are a desire +tax Bufet and commitment to study, sup- $17 Items port of a parent or guardian, all Day Change proximity to an LCMTA teacher, Daily! access to an instrument and a need for financial assistance. 12-9pm The LCMTA is affiliated Vegetable with the Washington State Mu- All You Can Eat Pakora Saturday,  May 31 Vegan, Vegetarian, Lamb, Tandori Chicken Seafood, Chicken, Goat 11am-3pm Fruit, Salad & Dessert Church 1201 NW    Lousiana  News Meals include Naan Bread & Beverage

CH521969sl.ke Chehalis,   WA 98532 in The Chronicle 360-807-4258 Butter Chicken 315 N. Tower Ave. Zucchini Saturday Centralia • Main 5 LOCAL The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Climber Recalls Rainier Blizzard The Chronicle is published Tuesday and Thursday evenings and Saturday mornings by Lafromboise Communications, Inc. MISSED OR LATE PAPER? That Trapped Group 50 Years Ago Delivery deadlines: Tuesday and Thursday ...... 5:30 p.m. Saturday ...... 7:30 a.m. MEMORIAL DAY 1964: feet. Please call your carrier or district manager directly. Stewart peered out of the For all other issues please call our after hours customer Harrowing Day Nearly opening. The air was sucked out service line at (360) 807-7676 for current delivery status and to leave messages (next business day Became Final Holiday his lungs. response). “At 14,000 feet, it felt like 80 for Washington Man and miles an hour,” he said of the TO SUBSCRIBE Five Partners wind. “And it would knock you To start a new subscription or to schedule a vacation over.” stop or restart, visit www.chronline.com or call cus- By Colleen Wright tomer service at 807-8203 or (800) 562-6084, ext. He ventured out with the 1203. Monday - Friday ...... 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. The Seattle Times wands. His left thumb turned purple and solid; it was frostbit- TO PLACE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Tom Stewart and five other ten. alpine climbers caught in an Call 807-8203 or (800) 562-6084, ext. 1203, or visit An hour later, the others www.chronline.com. unexpected blizzard spent two reached a consensus to rope up Monday - Friday ...... 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. nights huddled in a steam cave at and join Stewart on the journey Classified / Legals / Obituary Manager the summit of Mount Rainier. downward, he said. Amanda Curry ...... 736-3311 ext. 1277 The next morning, Stew- Once they crossed the crater, [email protected] ard ventured out. He stabbed a the storm lifted. Park rangers climbing wand into the snowed- OFFICE LOCATION AND HOURS and concerned friends, includ- out landscape. He took 50 and 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia ing Fred Fenske, a Boeing co- stuck another wand. Another 50 Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. worker of Stewart’s, spotted the paces, another wand — a signal climbers through telescopes at SUBSCRIPTION RATES for park rangers. Disappointment Cleaver. “I figured that if they came Newsstand weekday rate ...... $1 “I happened to hear about and we all died, they’d know Newsstand weekend rate ...... $1 their circumstance and so I Home delivery where to find us,” Stewart, now jumped in the car and raced One month ...... $12.90 76, recalled of the events 50 years down there,” said Fenske, 81, of Three months ...... $35.15 ago. Olympia. Six months ...... $65.15 Framed landscape portraits Fenske and other rescuers One year ...... $122 of majestic mountain ranges — met the group above Camp Muir. By mail to Washington and Oregon/Other States many that Stewart photographed The two burned men were air- One month ...... $17.05 / $19.60 — chronicle his conquests on the lifted out. Before walking down Three months ...... $50.50 / $58.80 walls of his Des Moines home, Six months ...... $99.15 / $115.40 the mountain, Stewart stuck his where he remembered his rescue One year ...... $194 / $227.45 thumb in a warm cup of coffee. after being stranded over Memo- Online subscriptions to chronline.com “They all looked pretty ex- rial Day weekend in 1964. One day ...... $2 hausted,” Fenske recalled. On his coffee table sits an al- One month ...... $8 Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times The party reached the guard bum of yellowing clippings from One year ...... $84 Des Moines resident Tom Stewart, 76, demonstrates how to carry climbing tools. station at the bottom of Rainier The Seattle Times and the Seattle Print subscribers always have full access to chronline.com. Fifty years ago, he was rescued of Mount Rainier after a ierce snowstorm pinned about dusk. Post-Intelligencer. Striking head- Subscriptions are non-refundable but the printed sub- him and ive other exhausted climbers at the summit for two nights. Stewart said he was as scared scriptions can be started and stopped for vacations or lines on front pages read “2 Res- as he’d ever been on a mountain, when extended breaks in service are requested. Balances cued Climbers Describe Ordeal may be held on account or can be donated to Newspapers hut 10,000 feet up at Camp Muir. to Camp Muir. The men chose to but he remained unfazed by his ‘Cave Hot Enough to Boil An in Education. brush with death. Just a week Egg,’ ” and “Mt. Rainier Climb- They expected cloudy skies for stay on the summit at 14,411 feet. later, he and two of his fellow res- BACK ISSUES ers Call White-Out Serious.” the start of climbing season, and One suggested they spend cued climbers prepared for a six- At 26 years old, Stewart was to be home by Sunday evening. the night in a steam cave. All but Limited copies of back issues of The Chronicle are avail- week-long trip to Mount Logan able at $1 per copy. Back issues greater than two weeks no stranger to the mountains. A “We were definitely not ex- Stewart agreed with the plan. in ’s Yukon. old are $2 per issue. Texas Tech graduate who moved pecting to be trapped on the top,” “That didn’t sound good to “The worst I had was a frozen to Seattle to work as a Boeing en- Stewart said. me,” Stewart said. “I was arguing THE NEWSROOM thumb,” Stewart said. gineer, Stewart joined the Moun- The next morning, the six the whole way.” For news tips, corrections or story ideas, please contact taineers two years earlier and men climbed the icefall and ap- Sunday night passed, and so the appropriate person listed below. took climbing classes at the Uni- proached the lower lip of a crater did Monday. One man had an REGIONAL EXECUTIVE EDITOR versity of Washington. He had about a quarter-mile across. To apple, others had a few snacks, Michael Wagar ...... 807-8234 summited Rainier half a dozen the southwest, Stewart could see but Stewart had eaten his ration [email protected] a storm brewing and suggested — a concentrated mixture of fat Editor times before his Memorial Day Eric Schwartz ...... 807-8224 weekend trip up the Nisqually the men turn back. and protein — on Saturday night. May 23 - May 29 “You could see that there was Overnight, two of the men [email protected] Icefall. Rio 2 $4 • PG Sports Editor On that Saturday, Stewart bad news coming,” he said. suffered burns from the sulfu- 12:00 pm (Sat., Sun. & Mon.) Aaron VanTuyl ...... 807-8229 and five other men made ad- But some of the others in- rous caves. The apple was baked. 3:00 pm (Sat., Sun. & Mon.) [email protected] equate preparations. They read sisted on reaching the summit The men awoke Tuesday Visuals Editor the paper for weather condi- just a few hundred feet above. By morning to find the opening he Lego Movie $4 • PG Pete Caster ...... 807-8232 tions and packed the essentials noon, they reached the top but of the steam cave clogged with 6:00 pm (Fri., Sat., Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., hurs.) [email protected] for a one-night stay in a stone decided it was too late to go back snow. It took hours to dig out 20 CH520395cz.db Police, Fire, Courts, Environment, Divergent $4 • PG13 East Lewis County Communities 12:30 pm (Wed. Early Bird Matinee) Stephanie Schendel ...... 807-8208 News in Brief 9:00 pm (Fri., Sat., Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., hurs.) [email protected] $3 Dollar Tuesdays: All movies, minor Centralia/Chehalis Government, Health, with parent at or before 6:00pm West and Central Lewis County Communities move toward the main part of Man Injured After Teen Airlifted After $12.75 Beer, Burger, Movie: Wednesday Kyle Spurr ...... 807-8239 Minor with parent before 7 pm only the house, Underdahl said. $4.00 All Ages • Under 11 - $1 [email protected] 112 N. Tower Ave. • Centralia Crash Near Napavine The man closed the door to Truck Rolls Over Him (360) 736-1634 Business, Education, Tourism, Religion, By The Chronicle slow the spread of the fire, then South Lewis County Communities went outside with the boy and in Centralia Chris Brewer ...... 807-8235 A Tacoma man was trans- his mother, he said. By The Chronicle [email protected] ported to Providence Centralia As firefighters responded to Sports, News and Photography Hospital after a one-car crash A teenage boy was airlifted to the residence, the man used a Harborview Medical Center in Brandon Hansen ...... 807-8227 on Interstate 5 early Saturday [email protected] fire extinguisher and a garden Seattle after he was crushed by a morning about 3 miles south Death Notices, What’s Happening, hose to try and keep the fire un- pickup truck late Friday night in of Napavine, according to the der control. Opinion, Letters to the Editor, Voices Centralia, according to Centralia Doug Blosser ...... 807-8238 Washington State Patrol. When firefighters arrived, The driver and sole occupant police. [email protected] smoke was pouring out of the The owner of the truck was [email protected] of the maroon 1994 Buick, Er- read windows and eaves. Fire nest G. Hartwig, was not wear- attempting to hook a fifth-wheel [email protected] crews were able to contain the trailer onto it when the truck ac- Church News ing a seat belt, according to the blaze to the rear of the residence, State Patrol. cidently rolled back too far, ac- [email protected] ...... 807-8217 which was an enclosed travel Senior Media Developer The 56-year-old was driving cording to police. The teen was trailer built into the house, Un- Brittany Voie ...... 807-8225 northbound in the left lane on standing in between the trailer derdahl said. [email protected] I-5 when the Buick left the road and the truck and was knocked Fire crews were able to save down and crushed. THE CHRONICLE and struck the jersey barrier near the majority of the residence as milepost 69, according to the The incident, which occurred PUBLISHER well as the family’s belongings, State Patrol. The Buick rolled at 11:15 p.m. on the 800 block of Christine Fossett ...... 807-8200 he said. No one was injured. twice and came to a rest on its West Pear Street, is still under in- [email protected] The fire may have been top in the left lane. vestigation. Sales Director caused by a candle. Brian Watson ...... 807-8219 The crash caused the rear About 20 firefighters from [email protected] wheel to come off the vehicle and Have an the Vader and Ryderwood area, CH520544sl.cg Circulation Manager go into the southbound lanes in addition to personnel from iPad? Anita Freeborn ...... 807-8243 where it was struck by a second [email protected] vehicle, according to the State the Winlock and Toledo area fire departments, responded. app.chronline.com Specialty Publications Manager, Family, LIFE Patrol. Chantel Wilson ...... 807-8213 Hartwig will be cited for [email protected] wheels off the roadway. The Design Director Buick was destroyed in the crash Kelli Erb ...... 807-8211 and towed from the scene. [email protected] Looking for a home loan? LAFROMBOISE COMMUNICATIONS, INC Vader Child Alerts When you move into your new home, you’ll need PRESIDENT, COO Christine Fossett ...... 807-8200 Father to House Fire some things you never thought of before. That’s [email protected] By The Chronicle why TwinStar Credit Union will give you a Business Manager Mary Jackson ...... 807-8207 No one was hurt after a Va- $250 git card to Ace Hardware when you der house caught fire Thursday [email protected] close on your home loan with TwinStar. Ask Director of Production and IT night, according to Cowlitz- for our local home loan expert in Centralia, Jon Bennett ...... 807-8222 Lewis Fire District 20. [email protected] Rick Borovec, NMLS 613953 at 360.486.3769, Three people were home Printing and Distribution ...... 807-8716 when the blaze started, said or in Chehalis, Alan Pust, NMLS 613958 at FAX NUMBERS Chief Richard Underdahl. A boy 360.486.3765. was playing on the computer in Advertising Fax ...... 736-1568 the back part of the residence Classified/Circulation Fax ...... 807-8258 when he noticed the flames and Obituaries ...... 807-8258

told his father. CH521967cz.cg Newsroom Fax ...... 736-4796 The fire occurred at 7 p.m. TwinStarCU.com 125th VOLUME, 134th ISSUE Thursday on the 100 block of En- THE CHRONICLE (USPS - 142260) chanted Valley Drive. *Offer applies to conventional irst mortgage loans for the purpose of purchasing a one-to-four family owner POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Chronicle, The Vader man went to the occupied property. Apply May 1 – June 30, 2014 and close within 90 days to receive offer. Offer ends after 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia, WA 98531. back of the residence and saw June 30, 2014, or after 60 Ace Hardware gift cards have been awarded; whichever occurs irst. The Chronicle is published three times a week at 321 N. Pearl St., Cen- flames in the back room start to tralia, WA, 98531-0580. Periodicals postage paid at: Centralia, WA. Main 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Columnists, Our Views, Richard Lafromboise, Publisher, 1966-1968 Christine Fossett, President J.R. Lafromboise, President, 1968-2011 and Publisher Opinion Letters to the Editor Jenifer Lafromboise Falcon, Chairman Basinwide Protection Still Only Acceptable Flood Solution As leaders from throughout Our Views thority, continue to research the the history of Lewis County and the Chehalis River Basin move PUBLIC MEETING potential impacts of such a proj- its century-long struggle against forward in crafting a united the past has been our collective PLANNED WEDNESDAY ect on aquatic species. flooding. Cooperation between flood mitigation proposal for insistence that an interstate fix The amount of money need- governments throughout the ba- the governor’s office, a simple not act as the ending to the story Findings from the recent ed would require an enormous sin is at an all-time high as the fact deserves repeating. of flood control. two-day flood workshop will be presented to the public to- act of support from the state Flood Authority and Governor’s Any solution to the chronic During a two-day workshop Legislature. State Rep. Richard Work Group stand together to at the Veterans Memorial Mu- morrow from 4 to 9 p.m. at the flooding that afflicts our region Veterans Memorial Museum in DeBolt, R-Chehalis, continues to address the issue. must look at the basin as a whole, seum in Chehalis, Washington work hard on that front, team- It’s time for meaningful ac- State Department of Transpor- Chehalis. not only Interstate 5. ing up with other legislators tion, and dozens of local leaders tation engineer Bart Gernhart The interstate holds financial noted that using levees and walls from across the state on legisla- are working to make that hap- importance to state industry as is still anything but settled. Vari- tion that could provide some pen. Whatever the end product to protect Interstate 5 would ous estimates range from $265 it acts as a major vein of com- push up to 6 inches of water to $3.4 billion for projects focusing is, we assert once more what million to $708 million, depend- merce, carrying tons of goods 571 homes and businesses in the on flooding, stormwater and many of our officials already up and down the corridor. Even Twin Cities in a flood similar to ing on the type of dam and the water shortages. know: It must be a basinwide a brief closure of the interstate that of 2007. amount of material that could In previous comments to approach that protects farms, through Lewis County can cost In concert with other proj- be salvaged for use at the site of The Chronicle, DeBolt estimated homes and businesses, not only businesses millions of dollars. ects, such as a water retention construction. that between $400 million and a system of walls and levees built The ability to keep it open dam on the upper Chehalis There are certainly other $700 million of that amount around Interstate 5. and operational during major River, such an impact could be considerations to be made. could go toward the Chehalis The solution must protect the flood events is obviously im- mitigated. Experts, financed by the River Basin. people of the basin, not simply portant. Less clear to some in The cost of such a structure Chehalis River Basin Flood Au- These are important times in those who drive through it.

COMMENTARY: Highlighting Lewis County State FFA President, a Centralia Graduate, Recaps South Africa Visit

A Centralia High School she visited the shantytown of valedictorian from 2013 has Soweto, where dozens of poor spent the past year visiting 160 children lived beneath rusted schools and traveling to Dela- metal roofs shoved together to ware, Oregon, Idaho, California, form boxes. Kentucky, Georgia, Washington, “The first part of our trip a lot D.C., and most recently South of us were complaining because Africa. in our hotel they only gave us It’s all part of the role 15 minutes of free wi-fi,” Peters 18-year-old Bailey Peters as- said. “And something like that sumed as Washington state’s seems so little when you go into FFA president. a town like Soweto and these During little kids don’t know where visits to rural their next meal is coming from and urban and they don’t have shoes on schools, the their feet.” COMMENTARY: About Business young woman Despite their poverty, she with poise and said, “These children are some personality has of the happiest children that I’ve discussed op- ever seen…. They found joy in Fossil Fuel Benefits Taken for Granted portunities for things that we can’t buy.” growing agri- By Julie McDonald After her visit to Soweto, she cultural prod- said, “I know that I really start by Those Seeking to Eliminate Them ucts in back- to value things a lot more.” yard gardens, woodshops, and Each student had to raise Let’s face it. We’re spoiled. and embrace the idea of “clean” The National Geographic greenhouses, and encouraged $6,000 to pay for the trip, and Even in our tough economy, energy. Oil, coal, diesel fuel and series “Life Below Zero” follows schools without FFA programs Peters said the community ral- most Americans enjoy a myriad even natural gas? Ick. several people who live near the to adopt them. lied to her support by providing of conveniences we take for But consider: The paper Arctic Circle in Alaska. Some are Peters, a former Little Miss the entire amount. granted. you’re reading was produced 100 miles from the nearest town; Friendly, showed slides and gave “We’re so lucky to live in We awake to a warm house, and transported using fossil fuel. no roads, no convenience stores, a presentation Thursday to the Lewis County where the com- turn night into day with the flip Same goes for the clothes you’re no Home Depot. They haul wa- Lewis County Republican Club munity supports you and, you of a light switch, jump into a wearing and the chair you’re sit- ter from a stream and heat with at Woodland Estates in Cheha- know, pushes us to grow and hot shower, get ting in, your food, your car, your wood; they fish, trap and hunt lis. It was her 12th local presen- to be leaders,” she said. “Lewis County is so supportive of its dressed and house and your workplace. Look for food. tation about the 10-day trip she youth.” grab a cup of around you. But even so, their lives de- took to South Africa in January Peters, who gave up her state fresh-brewed So, when government of- pend on fossil fuel. with 81 other FFA state officers. FFA president’s role a week ago, coffee before ficials or the Sierra Club talk They cook with wood — She’s giving the presentation heading to work about eliminating fossil fuel, we again Wednesday evening at the plans to enroll at Centralia Col- sometimes propane — and use lege and later transfer to Wash- in our car or should understand what that gas to run their snowmobiles Cowlitz Prairie Grange. on the bus. On means. After a 16-hour flight, stu- ington State University to study and the generators that power agriculture education. After the way home, According to the U.S. Energy their lights and emergency ra- dents visited agricultural, beef, sheep and poultry farms and working for a seed company or we stop at the By Don Brunell Information Administration, dios. grocery store more than 90 percent of the even a crocodile farm where another agricultural business, Up there, the daily train with Peters intends to work as an to pick up a few energy we use comes from fossil its diesel engine isn’t a nuisance; reptiles are raised for their valu- able skins. They toured a seed ag instructor in Lewis County items from the 40,000 choices fuels and nuclear power (an- it’s a lifeline — the only way to company and a new John Deere shepherding an FFA chapter of offered there. other energy source the Sierra get fuel, supplies and medicine, factory that distributes equip- her own. What do all these things have Club wants to eliminate — and the only way to get to a doctor. ment to 23 countries. in common? They are made pos- they’re not crazy about hydro- My point is this: Because we They saw a huge statue of sible by fossil fuels. But we have power either, which produces have so much, we think little Seeking D-Day Veterans Nelson Mandela, the nation’s become so accustomed to these most of our electricity in Wash- On June 6, 1944, the beaches about it. Because we don’t real- first black president who lived creature comforts that we no ington). of Normandy in France were ize how much we depend on as a prisoner for 27 years after longer associate them with fossil If we eliminate those energy stormed by 176,000 Allied fossil fuel, we imagine we can do opposing white rule. He wisely fuels. sources, how will the Princess troops in a military opera- without it. said, “The greatest glory in liv- Like the fairy-tale “Princess and the Pea fare without all her tion that changed the course Before we embrace public ing lies not in never falling, but and the Pea,” we have the luxury creature comforts? How will we? of World War II. The Veterans policies and campaigns that in rising every time we fall.” of being discomforted by the During power outages, news- Memorial Museum is seeking will eliminate 90 percent of our The students participated smallest things. In that story, casts are filled with images of veterans who served during Op- energy, perhaps we should spend in a safari, spending the night the heroine’s royal pedigree is miserable families huddled in eration Overlord. If you know a week living “Life Below Zero” in tribal huts and watching na- secretly tested by hiding a pea cold, dark houses. We think it’s of a surviving D-Day veteran, to see how we like it. Hopefully, tives dance and sing in a circle under 20 mattresses and 20 terrible to live that way for a few please contact the museum at then we can focus on how to around a fire. In the morning, feather beds. She is proven to be days. (360) 740-8875 or by email at apply our knowledge and tech- Peters said as she watched the of royal blood when she emerges Are we willing to live that nology to use fossil fuels more [email protected]. the next morning after a sleep- way permanently? It would be sun rise, giraffes sauntered past. ••• cleanly and efficiently. “That was a moment when it less night, complaining about nice if solar and wind power ••• Julie McDonald, a personal his- was like — I’m living in the Lion the uncomfortable bed. could fill the gap but they can’t Don Brunell is the former presi- torian and former journalist who That’s us. We have become — and never will. King!” she exclaimed. She also lives in Toledo, owns Chapters of Life, dent of the Washington Association saw wart hogs, lions and other the Princess and the Pea. People who live a subsistence of Business. He now writes a regu- a company dedicated to preserving We grimace at the mere lifestyle have a very different lar column for The Columbian in African wildlife. family stories. She may be reached at thought of “dirty” fossil fuels view of fossil fuels. Vancouver. Her best day occurred when [email protected].

Editorial Mission Statement Letters Policy To Send Your Letter Questions n We will strive to be the voice of reason for the n Please type opinions, if possible, and limit let- n Address letters and commentaries to “Our n For questions on a letter call Doug Blosser at peaceful settlement of conflict and contention ters to 500 words. Shorter letters get preference. Readers’ Opinions.” Please sign them and include 807-8238 or toll-free, 1-800-562-6084, ext. 1238. on key local issues. We will work to be fair at all Contributors are limited to publication of one your full address and daytime telephone number for verification and any questions. Send them to times and to provide a balance of opinions. We item every two weeks, with exceptions as war- Editorials will make our opinion pages available for public 321 N. Pearl, Centralia, WA 98531. E-mail letters can ranted. Items submitted are subject to editing and be sent to [email protected]. n Editor Eric Schwartz can be reached at (360) discussion of vital issues and events affecting will become the property of this newspaper. Po- 807-8224, or by e-mail at eschwartz@chronline. the quality of life in Lewis County and adjoining etry is not accepted. com. regions. When necessary, we will be willing to take a tough, definitive stance on a controver- sial issue. • Main 7 NORTHWEST / LOCAL The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 Rail Officials Explain Inspection Process After Derailments QUESTIONS: As Oil Looms on the Horizon, Rail Officials Describe Process “Safety is our number one priority. The of Monitoring Corridor occurrence of three incidents on the same rail By Brionna Friedrich line operated by the same carrier merits an The Daily World investigation. Our investigation will identify After three trains derailed in just more than two weeks in the root causes of the accidents and we will Grays Harbor County, and an- take all appropriate enforcement actions.” other slipped off the rails north of Centralia late Wednesday, more and more questions are Mike England being asked about safety proce- Federal Railroad Administration spokesman dures on the Puget Sound & Pa- cific railroad. The Federal Railroad Ad- ministration is investigating the braces for the bridge. had to be designed for that.” Grays Harbor incidents, along “You put what they call sway In order to determine which with Genesee & Wyoming, braces just to shore it up and tracks the Federal Railroad Ad- PSAP’s parent company. make sure it doesn’t sway back ministration should inspect, the Railroad Administration and forth,” he explained. “You agency uses a “safety allocation Public Affairs Specialist Mike probably put five times the model.” England said he can’t comment amount of braces you actually “It factors in a lot of things,” on ongoing investigations and need to shore it up. You might FRA spokesman England said. declined to give an estimate have one worn … it has noth- “It factors in, obviously, the on how long the investigations ing to do with the ability to hold amount of rail traffic, what’s be- might take. weight of the bridge, it just kind ing shipped, is it oil versus grain, “That’s hard to say, the length of keeps it in the line.” population of a particular area. of investigations varies widely Rust on the metal compo- … It takes several factors into depending on the severity, com- nents of the bridges is another account and based on that we plexity, etc.,” he said. “They take common concern, but Linn said determine how we allocate our an average of six months, but a little rust can be a good thing. manpower.” I don’t think this one will take “A lot of bridges are designed FRA inspectors will audit the that long.” to rust,” he said. “You get that inspection reports and do “spot “Safety is our No. 1 priority,” first layer of rust and it protects checks” of the track, England England said. “The occurrence the bridge. It doesn’t allow any said. of three incidents on the same more rust.” Local inspectors “have to rail line operated by the same Linn recalled some century- keep those records, every week carrier merits an investigation. old bridges in Rapid City, S.D., they’re doing the inspections,” Our investigation will identify he inspected. Linn said. The federal inspectors the root causes of the accidents Pete Caster / “They just have a nice thin review those reports at least an- and we will take all appropriate [email protected] nually. A 12-foot section of damaged rail sits near the Foron Road crossing north of coat of rust on them, but other enforcement actions. In addition, than that they look pretty much “They’ll make sure you’re we will conduct a thorough ex- Centralia as rail oicials responded to a possible derailment north of Centralia getting the milepost you’re sup- early Thursday morning. While the rail was severely damaged, no train cars were like they were when they were amination of the track owned by posed to, you’re complying with lipped over. No materials or products were spilled. put in,” he said. Puget Sound & Pacific Railroad Old bridges designed for the frequency you’re supposed to in the Montesano area to ensure steam engines may actually be do,” Linn said. the track integrity is sound and the rail that you can’t see that, liams said bridges are inspected sturdier than if they were re- The PSAP track was last in- to determine if further compli- over time, can cause the rail to annually, but the appearance of placed with a modern design, spected by the FRA April 29, the ance or enforcement actions are stress and break,” Williams said. the bridge may be deceiving to Williams added. same day as the first derailment warranted.” “The ultrasonic shoots sound laypeople. in Aberdeen. Before that, it was G&W Senior Vice President waves into the rail at three dif- “The cosmetic appearance FRA Role inspected on Jan. 24, 23, 22, 8 of Engineering Scott Linn and ferent angles, and each angle of a railroad bridge has noth- and 7. Director of Corporate Com- looks for a specific type of de- ing to do with its suitability to “Bridges that were designed “Right now they’re transport- munications Michael Williams fect,” Linn said. “It will go down carry the traffic,” he said. “So, for steam locomotives are actu- ing grain,” England said. “If they talked with The Daily World this to the bottom of the rail and it for example, we just had a case ally way overbuilt for today’s rail were to start transporting haz- week about track inspection pro- will bounce back clean if there’s where maybe a couple compo- traffic,” he said. “The steam lo- ardous materials or oil, obviously cedures. nothing there.” nents of a wooden truss are de- comotives imparted greater im- that track would be subject to The frequency of inspections An induction test does the teriorated and people will be all pact loads to the bridges, so they greater scrutiny by the FRA.” required by federal law are based same thing with a magnetic field. concerned about it and call the more on speed than the com- If those tests reveal irregularities, TV news, and it’s a part of the modity being shipped, Linn ex- inspectors head out with hand- bridge that has nothing to do plained. Sharon Care Center held equipment and locate the with load-bearing structure. So “What drives the frequency of defect. The rail defect tests are no matter how many times we tests is the tonnage, how many “Great care at a Great place” conducted by a third-party com- assure people the bridge was just

cars go over the track, and the CH520205.sl.cg pany. inspected and it’s perfectly safe, You and Your family can count on us! speed that they run,” he said. people don’t believe it. That’s Trust the care of your loved one “Really what drives the inspec- Crude Oil why trained engineers need to to those who CARE! tion frequency by the track in- make these assessments.” spection, is the speed, that’s the Williams said Genesee & Linn said those non-load- Serving Lewis County seniors since 1998. big driver.” Wyoming also has other require- bearing components might be Join Us For A Complimentary Tour And Lunch “The maximum speed on the ments for unit trains — those portions of a walkway meant 1509 Harrison Ave., Centralia PSAP is 25 mph, so they’re re- longer than 60 cars — which car- for railroad employees, or sway (360) 736-0112 quired to inspect it once a week,” ry crude oil, including doubling he continued, with a minimum the weekly inspections. three-day interval between in- “In addition to the twice-a- spections. week inspections, we also in- Chron Linn said PSAP employs two spect in advance of each crude Visit line.com inspectors, who are supervised oil train,” Williams said. “De- by a road master. pending on the volume of crude & check out these advertisers “You have to physically tra- oil trains or hazardous material, verse the entire line, and usually we run the geometry cars up to it’s an individual, and he has to quarterly.” have certain qualifications to be The geometry tests are run able to inspect track. He goes in at least twice yearly, he added, a high rail vehicle, like a pick- along with rail defect tests up to up truck,” traveling from 5 to 10 quarterly. mph. The maximum speed on “He has a whole set of FRA G&W tracks for trains carrying requirements that deal with the crude oil is 25 mph, already the distance between the rails — top speed on PSAP tracks. Wil- that’s called gauge,” Linn contin- liams noted that’s “considerably ued. “There’s certain tolerances slower than the speeds at which TYLER RENTAL that are allowed from a design recent crude oil train derail- perspective for gauge” as well as ments have occurred on other alignment, whether one rail is Brand Names railroads.” Big Savings lower than the other. That’s true in cases like Lac “If the standard is beyond Megantic, , where a run- what is allowed for 25 mph he away crude oil train reached either has to reduce the speed to speeds of about 63 mph before where he is in compliance, or he derailing and exploding, killing has to fix the track to where he is 47 people. A more recent explo- Sharon Care in compliance, or he has to close sive derailment in Lynchburg, the track,” Linn said. “He has Va., however, involved a crude Center no choice, he has to do that. He oil train traveling at 24 mph, ac- Van Cleve doesn’t have to ask anybody.” cording to the CSX railroad. Tracks are also inspected In February, the U.S. Depart- with geometry cars, which simu- ment of Transportation came to late the weight of a laden car and an agreement with rail industry take measurements of the same leaders on some voluntary re- thing an inspector would. In- strictions that would go into ef- spectors watch the results in real fect July 1, including adopting time. higher safety standards for tank “Almost like a heartbeat chart,” cars and a top speed of 40 mph Linn said. “As it goes down the for trains laden with crude oil track, it’s got little lines that show traveling through major cities. where you’re in compliance and Williams said G&W is com- not in compliance. If they come mitted to meeting those require- CH519955bw.cg across something that’s alarming ments in addition to their own or way out of standard, they’ll internal standards. Sticklin stop and look at it.” At least once per year, the rail- Funeral Chapel road conducts two different tests Bridges designed to detect flaws inside The condition of local rail Interested in advertising on Lewis County’s most the rails themselves: ultrasonic bridges is a perennial topic of and induction testing. discussion at public meetings traficked website? Call (360) 807-8219 for details. “There can be defects inside on crude-by-rail concerns. Wil- Main 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 Records Sirens, Court Records, Lotteries, Commodities Crews Search for 5-Year-Old Boy Who Fell Into Cispus river SEArCH AND rESCUE: searching for a 5-year-old Ta- the riverbank and fell in. He time of year. Randle and Toledo fire depart- - - coma boy who fell into the Cis was wearing a helmet and pro The Tacoma man was able ments responded to the area Crews Are Looking For pus River Monday afternoon. tective riding gear. to reach the shore after being to search for the boy Monday a Tacoma Boy Who Fell The boy and his family were The boy’s father, a 32-year- swept down the river approxi- night, according to the sher- camping over the weekend at a old Tacoma man, ran to the riv- mately half a mile, according to iff’s office. They resumed the Into Swift-Moving River campground along the Cispus er and jumped in after his son, the sheriff’s office. search this morning. Monday Afternoon River, located about 10 miles but he was unable to reach him A search and rescue team The search teams believe from Randle, according to the before the boy was swept away, made up of sheriff’s depu- they found the boy’s helmet By Stephanie Schendel Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. according to the sheriff’s office. ties, swift water rescue experts, that was snagged on a log jam - [email protected] The boy was riding his mo The water is extremely cold Packwood Search and Rescue about one mile down the river torcycle around the camp when and the river’s current is fast team, Thurston County divers from where the boy fell in, ac- Dive teams are currently it appears he got too close to due to snow melt during this and fire personnel from the cording to the sheriff’s office. Sex Offenders to Live in Chehalis, Thurston County By The Chronicle convicted in 2005 of communi- tive gestures with his tongue. Bower is described as a Paul A. Lancaster, 59, plead- A level three sex offender cation with a minor for immor- The year after that, at age 18, 5-foot-11, 280-pound white ed guilty to fourth-degree as- al purposes, luring with sexual he pulled his car up next to a man with brown hair and hazel sault with sexual motivation has indicated he will live on the - 100 block of Meier Road in Che- motivation and two counts of different 12-year-old girl walk eyes. after he sexually assaulted a halis, according indecent exposure. ing to school, according to the 40-year-old woman in 1994 in The offenses occurred over sheriff’s office. He asked if she A LEVEL TWO Lewis County, according to the to the Lewis - - - the course of three years, ac wanted to get in his car. When sex offender Thurston County Sheriff’s Of County Sher cording to the sheriff’s office. she looked at him, he had his will be living fice. Later that same year, he iff’s Office. He exposed his genitals to a genitals exposed. as a transient pleaded guilty in Lewis County Brad C. 7-year-old girl in 2003. The In 2009, Bower was also ar- in Thurston to first-degree rape of a child for Bower, now 28, following year, he followed rested for second-degree assault, County, ac- sexually assaulting a 4-year-old recently moved a 12-year-old girl in a store according to the sheriff’s office. cording to a girl. Lancaster was sentenced to to Lewis Coun- and tried to speak to her. He Due to his criminal history, he notification eight years in prison. ty, according eventually brushed by her and is considered to be a high risk from the Thur- He is described as a 5-foot- to the sheriff’s Brad C. Bower squeezed her rear end and con- to the community and a public ston County Paul A. Lancaster 8, 160-pound white man with office. He was Sex Offender tinued to make sexually sugges- notification is required. Sheriff’s Office. Sex Offender brown hair and hazel eyes. Sirens CENTrALIA POLICE DEPArTMENT Centralia, was cited and released • Edmund L. Hill, 56, of • A bike was reported stolen - Tough Guy at the Skate Park for third-degree theft after he al Centralia, was arrested and at 11 a.m. Saturday on the 900 Negligent Driving legedly stole landscaping stones booked into jail for suspicion block of West Walnut Street. • Anthony W. Wells, 27, of from the 600 block of Centralia of driving under the influence, • A man who accidentally - drove his car off the road near Tenino, was arrested for suspi College Boulevard at 9:30 a.m. driving with a suspended license Trespass North Pearl Street and Cindy cion of disorderly conduct after Friday. and operating a vehicle without • Trina K. Arthur, 37, of Road and struck a hedge was he allegedly attempted to pick an ignition interlock. Hill was Lakewood, was issued a crimi- cited for negligent driving at 8 a fight with several youths at arrested at 7 p.m. Sunday on the Vehicle Prowl nal citation for trespassing on p.m. Monday. the skate park on the 700 block 500 block of Madison Street. of Harrison Avenue at 1:15 p.m • Items were stolen out of a the 1900 block of Johnson Road at 10 p.m. Saturday. ••• Saturday. vehicle on East Pine Street and Assault North Tower Avenue sometime Assault By The Chronicle Staff • Brandon K. Phelps, 30, Man Kicks Police for ‘No reason’ during the night. The vehicle • Police are investigating an Please call news reporter Stepha- prowl was reported at 4:12 p.m. Centralia, was arrested and assault that occurred early Sun- • Police responded to a re- nie Schendel with news tips. She can Sunday. booked into jail for suspicion day morning on East Locust be reached at 807-8208 or sschen- ported domestic dispute on the of second-degree assault after - Street. [email protected]. 3200 block of Fords Prairie Av he allegedly choked his live-in enue at 12:13 a.m. Sunday and Attempted Burglary - - girlfriend at about 9 p.m. Sun placed Alfredo Lopez-Menbre • Someone attempted to force day. g on Vacat no, 44, of Oakville, under ar- - in ion entry into a vacant house on the • Kayla M. Coy, 24, of Che Go ? rest. While in handcuffs, police 1000 block of E Street by kicking halis, was arrested and booked say he “kicked an officer for no in the back door. The would-be into jail for suspicion of fourth- Don’t Just Stop Your reason.” He subsequently was burglar was unable to get into degree assault on the 1300 block Papers, Donate Them booked into jail for third-degree the house and nothing was tak- of Alexander Street shortly af- To NIE! felony assault. en. The attempted burglary was ter 2 a.m. Monday. Stolen Stones For More Information or to Donate, reported at 10:45 a.m. Sunday. Call Customer Service at • Dale R. Brotherson, 53, of DUI Stolen Bike 360-807-8203 Newspapers In Education

Crime Stoppers of Lewis County Crime 1003 Week of May 11, 2014 Crime Stoppers of Lewis County and the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office are seeking your assistance in a burglary investigation. Between 7:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. on April 17 in the 100 block of Kennicott Road, Chehalis, someone entered the house through the carport, and then stole the following items: Available for single copy • Two HP Laptops (1 with a 17-inch monitor and Quadcore MV6 processor) sales in Randle at • Acer Android tablet, Model A-500 • Sony Playstation 3 • Cascade Peaks • Apple TV box (used for streaming) • 17 black Americana figurines – antiques • Fischer’s Shopping Center

• Five Smokey the Bear figurines – antiques Randle2x3cf.db • Three jewelry holders (one black and white; one leopard print; black, • Randle One Stop shape of a dress) • 150 1960s era flower pins (assorted shapes and sizes) • Gene & Barb’s Grocery • Semiprecious and costume jewelry, including necklaces, bracelets, broaches, turquoise, amethyst • Six boxes of comic books in plastic sleeves, including Superman, Archie, Batman, Spiderman, The Hulk and others • Hard shell suitcases • Various keys, and Japanese and U.S. coins The approximate value is estimated at more than $ 7,900. If you have information about the location of these items or the person responsible for the theft, don’t delay. Call right away. Crime Stoppers will pay up to $1,000 for informationSimple leading Direct to the Cremation For: clearance of this crime or any other crime. Call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-748-6422 or report online Savings at www.lewiscountycrimestoppers.org. Remember, you never have to leave your name. Tipsters 3555, 3558, 3563, 3571, 3575, 3578, please call Crime Stoppers for reward information. Public Service Announcement Choose Funeral Alternatives Death Notices Hit 5:01-03-10-17-26 The Chronicle seeks to be accu- for quality service CH521482sl.cg Next cashpot: $310,000 rate and fair in all its reporting. If • MICHAEL STEPHEN KELLOGG, 68, Centralia, Match 4: 01-08-15-20 you find an error or believe a news at a better price. died Monday, May 12, at Providence St. item is incorrect, please call the Daily Game: 4-6-6 Rob Painter ~ Manager Ken Dahl & John Miller ~ Owners Peter Hospital, Olympia. A celebration Keno: 01-06-10-16-18-20-23-26-30- newsroom as soon as possible at 360.807.4468 • FuneralAlternatives.org •• Serving Lewis County of life will be at noon Sunday at the 32-36-38-45-46-60-61-63-68-70-71 807-8224, between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Oakview Grange, 2715 N. Pearl St., Cen- Monday through Friday. tralia, with a lunch to follow. Arrange- ments are under the direction of Sticklin Funeral Chapel, Centralia. Commodities Gas in Washington — $3.65 (AAA of

Washington)

Lotteries Crude Oil — 104.13 per barrel (CME WE ARE YOUR RESOURCE FOR COMPLETE FUNERAL, CREMATION & PRENEED SERVICES Group) Washington’s Monday Games Gold — $1,267 (Monex)  Simple Direct Cremation For: Silver — $19.06 (Monex) Serving All of Lewis Powerball:  Next jackpot: $152 million & Cowlitz Counties

Mega Millions: Corrections Please call us for more CH520355ca.db Next jackpot: $20 million In a Thursday Life section story Lotto: 02-16-21-32-33-44 titled “One Tough Group,” Luke Potter information Next jackpot: $3.6 million was incorrectly identified. Rob Painter ~ Manager Ken Dahl & John Miller ~ Owners

Fir Lawn Funeral Chapel 351 5th Street Toledo, Washington (360) 864-2101

• Main 9 NORTHWEST The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 State Makes Naturopaths Part of Medicaid Expansion Network CHANGES: Washington Joins Vermont and Oregon in Allowing Naturopaths to Receive Reimbursements By Rachel La Corte The Associated Press OLYMPIA — Amanda Lewis and her husband use a naturo- pathic doctor, covered by their private insurance plan, as their primary care provider. But up until this year, Lewis had to pay $95 a visit for her young son be- cause naturopaths in Washing- ton state weren't authorized to be part of the Medicaid plan under which he was covered. That out-of-pocket cost was reduced to zero after Washing- ton officials moved to change the rules that had previously excluded naturopaths from the health insurance program for low-income patients. "We were ecstatic," said Lewis, an office manager for an auto- motive body shop who lives in

Sultan, Washington, and is due Elaine Thompson / The Associated Press to have her second child in Au- In this Wednesday photo, Dr. Stacy Bowker, right, a naturopath doctor, treats patient Elizabeth Fijalka at her oice in Snohomish. Naturopathic doctors are licensed in gust. She said that she and her more than a dozen states, including Washington, but only three have allowed them to be part of the Medicaid system. When naturopaths were added to the list of husband's combined salary is providers who can receive Medicaid reimbursements, it joined Vermont and Oregon. at a threshold where they don't qualify for Medicaid, but their Washington state, though he said 16-month-old son does qualify. there's no data yet on how many "We don't have to stress about have decided to join Medicaid. setting aside that money for the Only 17 states and the Dis- budget." trict of Columbia have licensed Naturopathic doctors are naturopathic doctors, the most licensed in more than a dozen recent state being ear- states, including Washington, lier this year. And while the na- but only three have allowed tional group is making a licens- them to be part of the Medicaid ing push in several more states system. When naturopaths were this year, its other focus is on added to the list of providers trying to get naturopaths cov- who can receive Medicaid reim- ered under Medicare, the federal bursements, Washington joined program for those 65 and older. Vermont and Oregon. But, supporters said that As states that expanded eli- Medicaid acceptance, while lim- gibility under the Affordable ited to so few states, is a good Care Act see the number of step. newly insured people on Medic- "Certainly, it allows patients aid steadily increase, naturopath more choice," May said. "It al- groups say they can help address lows a broader group of patients, nationwide concerns about doc- who otherwise have never been tor shortages. likely to afford naturopathic care, "The profession is still too to get it." small to entirely fill that gap Washington state is among of primary care providers, but 26 states that have expanded we're one of the answers," said eligibility to Medicaid to people Jud Richland, CEO of the Ameri- who earn less than 138 percent of Amanda Lewis, left, and her husband Ivan look on as their son Fletcher, 1, wanders away from them to get a closer look at can Association of Naturopathic the federal poverty line, or about the camera while being photographed in Mukilteo. The family has long used a naturopathic doctor, covered by their private Physicians. $16,104 a year for a single adult. insurance plan, as their primary care provider. But up until this year, Lewis had to pay $95 a visit for her young son because Naturopathic medicine fo- Previously there was no Med- naturopaths in Washington state weren't authorized to be part of the Medicaid plan that he was covered under. cuses on prevention and overall icaid program for nondisabled health primarily through the use childless adults between the ages of natural therapies, though na- of 18 and 65. new health exchange started up. ficials with the state Health Care of calls from people with Med- turopathic doctors in Washing- The number of people en- Washington officials moved to Authority say that about 200 na- icaid because of the awareness ton state can write prescriptions rolled for Medicaid in Wash- change the rules excluding natu- turopaths are enrolled in Med- that we are covered," Bowker for many traditional medica- ington state, previously at 1.2 ropaths from Medicaid last year. icaid either through the state, or said. "I've had some people who tions, like antibiotics, as well. million, has jumped by 450,000 Lewis and her family go to through the five Medicaid-man- were really thrilled and really Washington Association of adults since Oct. 1. About Snohomish Valley Holistic Med- aged care plans in the state. excited. They had been waiting Naturopathic Physicians execu- 300,000 of those enrollees were icine's Dr. Stacy Bowker, who is Bowker said she's taken on for the day when they could see tive director Robert May said newly eligible for the program, a Medicaid provider through the eight to 10 new Medicaid pa- a naturopathic doctor, because that there are more than 800 li- while the rest were previously eli- state, and is also credentialed tients since the start of the year. they were frustrated with their censed naturopathic doctors in gible but did not sign up until the through Molina Healthcare. Of- "We definitely had an influx options." Big Stakes in Bitter Ongoing Debate Over Fish Consumption Rates SCALE OF BATTLE: ment of Ecology, adding: "People for the Democratic governor, 125 and 225 grams of fish a day. consumption rate, would result are worried about what we might who has made the environment a Oregon set its rate at 175 grams in "unmeasurable incremental Obscure Number Has do. Are we going to be protective central issue but also has shown a day, the highest for a U.S. state. health benefits, and predictable Ramifications for enough? Are we going to drive a willingness to accommodate While a higher fish rate economic turmoil." business out of the state? That companies like Boeing Co. The would make standards more They say some standards be- Businesses and Those ups the ante." aerospace giant in March raised stringent, Ecology is also con- ing debated would drive busi- Seeking Lower Limits Meanwhile, the regional concerns to Inslee that the pro- sidering changing another factor nesses out of state. They note that head of the U.S. Environmental posals "will have unintended in the complicated formula that technology doesn't exist in some on Toxic Pollutants Protection Agency has warned consequences for continued Boe- would likely make standards less cases to limit certain pollutants, Allowed in Water the state that the EPA intends to ing production in the state." stringent. The proposal would though environmental groups take over the process if the state Inslee spokesman David increase by tenfold the excess argue that the standards would SEATTLE (AP) — A bitter doesn't finalize a rule by the 2014. Postman said the governor be- cancer risk rate from certain drive technological innovations. fight over how much fish people And a coalition of environmental lieves a balance is possible and cancer-causing chemicals. The state is also considering eat — and thus how clean Wash- groups is asking a federal judge "that's what he's working for." The Northwest Indian issuing variances — temporary ington waters should be — has in Seattle to get the EPA to step For years, the state has Fisheries Commission, Puget waivers from the rules — al- pitted tribes, commercial fisher- in and force the state to complete known it needs to update its fish Soundkeeper Alliance and oth- lowing businesses and munici- men and environmental groups a rule or to do it themselves. consumption rate, which federal ers groups have told Inslee that a palities that discharge pollutants against Boeing, business groups The state missed its own regulators say doesn't sufficiently less-protective cancer risk level is into waterways as many as 40 and municipalities. March deadline to release a draft protect those who eat the most unacceptable, and would dispro- years in some cases to meet the The state Department of rule. With "strong guidance" fish, particularly Native Ameri- portionately harm those who eat standards, though they would be Ecology appears ready to boost from Gov. Jay Inslee, the state cans and Pacific Islanders. the most fish. They worry that required to report progress peri- the current fish consumption is still deliberating and may not Studies have shown Washing- a higher cancer risk level would odically. rate, an obscure number that has have a draft rule until later this ton residents eat more fish than offset gains elsewhere. "We think variances are a huge ramifications for the state summer, Susewind said. other people nationwide, but the The Association of Wash- powerful tool going forward," because it drives water qual- Inslee has gotten personally state currently assumes people ington Business, local govern- Susewind said. ity standards. A higher number involved in the issue, calling a eat about 6 ½ grams a day — or ments such as Everett and others, Critics of variances have means fewer toxic pollutants taskforce representing tribal, about a small fillet once a month. meanwhile, have told Inslee that urged Inslee not to give polluters would be allowed in waters. business and environmental in- The state is now certain to boost keeping the cancer risk factor at too much time or too many ways "So much is at stake," said terests to advise him. that amount, and is considering its current rate is "unacceptable" to opt out of following the new Kelly Susewind with the Depart- It's a political balancing act a fish consumption rate between and, coupled with a high fish rules. News in Brief

Dustin F. Brown, veered onto a parked cars and then a barrier life jacket. He was rafting Sun- Truck Plows Into sidewalk before 2 a.m. Monday fence that kept it from plunging Rafter Dies After Falling day afternoon in a group with a Four People, Kills and hit three pedestrians. The over a 10- to 15-foot drop. Into Skykomish River company based out of Peshastin. three were believed to be in sta- Police say a crowd surround- The Snohomish County Sher- One in Bellingham ble condition at a local hospital. ed the truck and pulled the driv- GOLD BAR (AP) — A rafter iff’s Office responded at about BELLINGHAM (AP) — Po- The truck then plowed er out, detaining him as police from Seattle has died after falling 3:45 p.m. to a report of the rafter lice say a large pickup truck sped through a chained-off parking arrived. Brown, of Bellingham, into the Skykomish River east of being given CPR after going into out of control in downtown Bell- lot, killing a 37-year-old man. was arrested for investigation of Gold Bar during a rafting trip. the water near Boulder Drop. ingham overnight, striking four The truck also hit a sport-utility vehicular homicide and vehicu- The Daily Herald reported The Snohomish County Med- people and killing one of them. vehicle with three people inside, lar assault. that the 35-year-old man had re- ical Examiner’s Office is expected Bellingham police say the but officers say the passengers Police say they believe he had portedly been wearing appropri- to determine the cause of death truck, driven by 27-year-old were not hurt. The truck hit two been drinking. ate gear, including a helmet and and to release the man’s name. Main 10 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 Nation/World Nation in Brief World in Brief Tornado Hits North Pakistani Woman Dakota Oil Workers Nigerian Defense Chief: Stoned to Death by Camp; Nine Hurt Her Own Family WATFORD CITY, N.D. (AP) LAHORE, Pakistan (AP) — A — A tornado struck a work- Abducted Girls Located woman was stoned to death by her ers camp in North Dakota’s oil own family in front of a Pakistani patch on Monday, injuring nine RESCUE PROBLEM: gotiation the sole option, but a Jonathan’s reluctance to ac- high court today for marrying the people, including one critically, human rights activist close to cept offered help for weeks is man she loved, police and a de- and destroying eight trailers Military Afraid Girls negotiators said a deal to swap seen as unwillingness to have fense lawyer said. where workers had been living, Will Be Killed if Force the girls for detained Boko Ha- outsiders looking in on what is Nearly 20 members of the an emergency management of- Is Used to Save Them ram members was agreed last considered a very corrupt force. woman’s family, including her ficial said. week and then scuttled at the last Soldiers have told The As- father and brothers, attacked her The twister touched down By Michelle Faul minute by President Goodluck sociated Press that they are not and her husband with batons and Jonathan. properly paid, are dumped in at around 7:50 p.m. at a camp The Associated Press bricks in broad daylight before about 5 miles south of Watford The activist who is close to dangerous bush with no sup- a crowd of onlookers in front of City, the National Weather Ser- ABUJA, Nigeria — Nigeria’s those mediating between Boko plies and that the Boko Haram the high court of Lahore, said po- vice reported. Watford City is in military has located nearly 300 Haram extremists and gov- extremists holding the girls are lice official Naseem Butt. He said the west of the state and about 30 school girls abducted by Islamic ernment officials said the girls better equipped than they are. Farzana Parveen, 25, had married miles southeast of Williston, the extremists but fears using force would have been freed last week Some soldiers have said offi- Mohammad Iqbal, with whom she city at the heart of the state’s oil to try to free them could get Monday. cers enriching themselves off the had been engaged for years in op- boom. them killed, the country’s chief Jonathan had already told defense budget have no interest position to her family. McKenzie County Emergen- of defense said Monday. British officials that he would in halting the five-year-old up- Her father had filed an abduc- cy Management Director Jerry Air Marshal Alex Badeh told not consider an exchange. The rising that has killed thousands. tion case against her husband, Samuelson said the crews were demonstrators supporting the source spoke on condition of Soldiers near mutiny earlier which the couple was contesting, sifting through a large amount much criticized military that Ni- anonymity because of the sensi- this month fired on the car of her lawyer Mustafa Kharal said. of debris at the camp, but that he gerian troops can save the girls. tivity of the issue. a commanding officer come to Arranged marriages are the was confident that nobody was But he added, “We can’t go and Nigeria’s military and gov- pay his respects to the bodies of norm among conservative Paki- missing. He said there were a lot kill our girls in the name of try- ernment have faced national and 12 soldiers who their colleagues stanis, who view marriage for love more trailers at the camp just a ing to get them back.” international outrage over their said were unnecessarily killed as a transgression. few days ago, so the situation He spoke to thousands of failure to rescue the girls seized by the insurgents in a night-time could have been a lot worse had demonstrators who marched to by Boko Haram militants from ambush. it happened earlier. Defense Ministry headquarters a remote northeastern school six The military also is accused After Long Wait, in Abuja, the capital. Many were weeks ago. of killing thousands of detainees Releases brought in on buses, indicating it President Jonathan was held illegally in their barracks, Median CEO Pay Crosses was an organized event. forced this month to accept some by shooting, some by tor- Jet Data $10 Million in 2013 Asked by reporters where international help. American ture and many starved to death KUALA LUMPUR, Malay- they had found the girls, Badeh planes have been searching for or asphyxiated in overcrowded NEW YORK (AP) — They’re sia (AP) — Close to three months refused to elaborate. the girls and Britain, France, Is- cells. after the Malaysian jetliner disap- the $10 million men and women. “We want our girls back. I can rael and other countries have More than 300 teenagers Propelled by a soaring stock peared, the government today re- tell you we can do it. Our mili- sent experts in surveillance and were abducted from their school market, the median pay pack- leased reams of raw satellite data tary can do it. But where they are hostage negotiation. in the town Chibok on April 15. age for a CEO rose above eight it used to determine that the flight held, can we go with force?” he A U.S. Defense Department Police say 53 escaped on their figures for the first time last ended in the southern Indian asked the crowd. spokesman said the department own and 276 remain captive. year. The head of a typical large Ocean, a step long demanded by People roared back, “No!” cannot confirm the reports A Boko Haram video has public company earned a record the families of some of the passen- “If we go with force what will about the Nigerian girls at this shown some of the girls reciting $10.5 million, an increase of 8.8 gers on board. happen?” Badeh asked. point. The official, who was not Quranic verses in Arabic and percent from $9.6 million in But while the 45 pages of infor- “They will die,” the demon- authorized to speak publicly two of them explaining why they 2012, according to an Associated mation may help satisfy a desire strators responded. about the situation, spoke on Press/Equilar pay study. had converted from Christianity for more transparency in a much That appeared to leave ne- background. Last year was the fourth to Islam in captivity. criticized investigation, experts straight that CEO compensation say it’s unlikely to solve the mys- rose following a decline during tery of Flight 370 — or give much the Great Recession. The median comfort to relatives stuck between CEO pay package climbed more Memorial Day Memories grieving and the faintest hope, no than 50 percent over that stretch. matter how unlikely, their loved A chief executive now makes ones might still be alive. about 257 times the average “It’s a whole lot of stuff that is worker’s salary, up sharply from not very important to know,” said 181 times in 2009. Michael Exner, a satellite engineer who has been independently re- searching the calculations. “There GOP Pressing Obama are probably two or three pages of important stuff, the rest is just to Confront Russia noise. It doesn’t add any value to Over Nuclear Arms our understanding.” WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress is stepping up pressure Chemical Weapons on the White House to confront Russia over allegations that it is Inspectors Attacked cheating on a key nuclear arms in Syria treaty — a faceoff that could further strain U.S.-Moscow re- DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — A lations and dampen President convoy of chemical weapons in- Barack Obama’s hopes to add spectors came under attack today deeper cuts in nuclear arsenals to while traveling to the site of a sus- his legacy. pected chlorine gas attack in Syria, Butting heads with Russian but all staff members were safe, President Vladimir Putin over the international watchdog agency compliance with a 26-year-old said. treaty to eliminate an entire class Jacquelyn Martin / The Associated Press The Organization for the Pro- of nuclear weapons is not some- Former Army Sgt. Anthony Brown, 31, of Arlington, Virginia, wipes away tears as he visits his best friend, Army Sgt. Scott hibition of Chemical Weapons has thing that fits into Obama’s “re- Kirkpatrick, on Memorial Day at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington Monday. Kirkpatrick died serving in Iraq in been working with the United Na- set” with Russia, which already 2007 at the age of 27, and is buried in Section 60, where many of the soldiers who died in Iraq and Afghanistan are tions to oversee the destruction of was stalled after Russia granted buried. the Syrian government’s stockpiles asylum to National Security since September 2013, when Presi- Agency leaker Edward Snowden dent Bashar Assad’s administra- and annexed Ukraine’s Crimean tion acknowledged it has chemical Peninsula. But the issue has been weapons and agreed to give them simmering for a few years and Auto Parts Price-Fixing, Bid- up to avoid the threat of U.S. mili- Republicans on Capitol Hill want tary strikes. Obama to address it head-on. Syria has since destroyed or The Russians are accused of handed over more than 90 percent testing a new ground-launched Rigging Probe Rattles Industry of the weapons and toxic chemi- cals it has formally declared. cruise missile in violation of the By Eric Tucker treaty. division, said in an interview. prosecuting foreign nationals, The Associated Press So far, 34 individuals have the Justice Department has won been charged and 27 companies guilty pleas from a series of Japa- Dozens Reported First Lady Set to WASHINGTON — An in- have pleaded guilty or agreed to nese executives who opted to get Killed in Eastern Respond to School vestigation into price-fixing and do so, the Justice Department their punishment over with rath- bid-rigging in the auto parts says. er than remain under indictment Ukraine Fighting Meal Critics industry has mushroomed into Collectively, they have agreed in their home countries and sub- DONETSK, Ukraine (AP) — WASHINGTON (AP) — the Justice Department’s larg- to pay more than $2.3 billion ject to career-crippling travel re- High-caliber weapons fire echoed First lady Michelle Obama is est criminal antitrust probe ever, in fines. New cases have arisen strictions. sporadically today through the answering Republicans in Con- and it’s not over yet. with regularity, with Attorney Though the techniques and eastern city of Donetsk and the gress who want to roll back The investigation, made pub- General Eric Holder promising strategies sometimes differed, mayor urged residents to stay healthier school meal standards, lic four years ago with FBI raids last September that investigators the executives generally car- home a day after fighting be- holding an event at the White in the area, has led to “would check under every hood ried out the collusion by trading tween Ukrainian troops and House to highlight the success of criminal charges against doz- and kick every tire.” coded emails, meeting at remote separatist rebels reportedly killed the health guidelines. ens of people and companies, The most recent development locations and destroying docu- dozens. The event today is an unusual stretched across continents and came Thursday, when an execu- ments to avoid paper trails. Donetsk mayor Oleksandr move for the first lady, who has reverberated through an indus- tive from a Japanese company With an eye toward eliminat- Lukyanchenko said 40 people, in- largely stayed away from policy try responsible for supplying was charged with conspiring to ing competition and maximiz- cluding two civilians, were killed fights since she lobbied for con- critical car components. fix the prices of heater control ing profits, they exploited an Monday after troops repelled a gressional passage of a child nu- The collusion has also sad- panels sold to Toyota and with industry that experts say is in rebel attempt to seize control of the trition law in 2010. dled U.S. drivers with millions of persuading workers to destroy some ways vulnerable to collu- airport, Ukraine’s second-largest. Sam Kass, director of Mrs. dollars in extra costs. evidence. sion: There are a finite number of Local morgues were overflow- Obama’s Let’s Move initiative to “It’s a very, very safe assump- Officials say the investigation purchasers and suppliers, there’s ing with bodies and rebel leaders combat childhood obesity, said tion that U.S. consumers paid stands out not just for its scope steady pressure among compa- said today that the death toll could a Republican bill that would al- more, and sometimes signifi- but also for the cooperation the nies to cut prices — and car parts, rise up to 100. low schools to opt out of the cantly more, for their automo- authorities have received from unlike certain products that The city of about 1 million was standards is “a real assault” on biles as a result of this conspiracy,” Japan, Australia and other coun- have a great deal of variability, mostly quiet in the afternoon after administration efforts to make Brent Snyder, a deputy assistant tries. are generally standardized and an arson attack in the morning foods healthier for kids. attorney general in the antitrust Despite the challenges of homogeneous. that torched a local hockey rink. The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 • Main 11

6/5/14!

6/5/14

6/5/14

Offer expires 6/5/14.

6/5/14 NEW LOCATION! Twin City Town Center 1527 NW Ave. Chehalis (360) 262-4252 www.miracle-ear-chehalis.com CH521351cz.db Main 12 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 LOCAL / NORTHWEST Judge in Thurston County DUI Case Limited by Legislature CONTROVERSIAL: Many prisonment , because, he said, exactly the same thing.” there was no evidence Goodman Powers also supported Stro- Angry With Light actually tried to prevent Grif- phy’s request that Goodman be Sentence for Man’s “It’s important that the public understands its fin from leaving the vehicle. He allowed to serve his 364-day jail said even if Goodman had been sentence on work release. Work Seventh Drunken role, and the public has a role in giving input convicted of unlawful imprison- release has turned into a popular Driving Arrest through the legislative process.” ment, it would not have raised form of alternative sentencing his offender score enough to in- in recent years, because of over- By Jeremy Pawloski crease his jail time. crowding at the jail. The Olympian Carol Murphy It is typically not allowed for Thurston County judge The offenders who commit a violent Shaun Goodman’s DUI ar- crime. rest the night of Dec. 29 — his The perception that Good- Powers said he believes if seventh such arrest since 1994 — ness owner and has money and based on a defendant’s offender man was getting preferential a defendant with a substance was a doozy. has a fancy car, does that make score. An offender score is cal- treatment in his criminal case abuse issue has an opportunity And so was the reaction when him smarter, you know, than the culated by adding up each of a began in late January. That’s to keep working while serving he was sentenced to work release. average alcoholic? I don’t think defendant’s prior criminal con- when Thurston County Superior his or her sentence, then he has a Goodman, 42, led Olympia so.” victions. Court Judge James Dixon signed duty to allow that person to keep police on a high-speed chase Miller added that Good- Although Goodman had an order allowing Goodman his or her job. Otherwise, a sen- through downtown at speeds man’s sentence confirmed his six prior DUI arrests when he to attend Super Bowl XLVIII in tence could be setting up an of- over 100 miles per hour in his sil- belief that “there’s a two-tiered crashed his Ferrari on Dec. 29, while his criminal fender for relapse once he or she ver 2000 Ferrari F360. As Good- legal system, one for those with he was not eligible to be charged charges were pending. is released. man drove, a terrified passenger money and another for those with felony DUI. But during a hearing in De- “The goal is to have stability in begged to be allowed to get out without.” Felony DUI charges — cember, Dixon denied Good- their lives so that they have a real and finally jumped from the By Friday, a story on the against Goodman or any other man’s request to go to Las Vegas incentive to fight the addiction still-moving car. protest had more than 1,170 defendant — based on multiple to compete in a soccer tourna- and live a sober lifestyle,” Powers Goodman struck a parked comments on Reddit, a popular priors, require four prior DUI or ment. said. car and a home during the pur- social networking website. And related convictions, such as neg- “I would be doing not only Powers said if Goodman had suit. Hours after his arrest, his last week, television news sta- ligent driving, within a 10-year this community, but also you a been sentenced to straight jail blood-alcohol level was 0.16, tions in started span. disservice if I allowed you to go time, he would not have been twice the legal limit for DUI. The featuring stories on how Good- Goodman had three prior to the state of Nevada,” Dixon able to run his business or earn outrage spread quickly May 9, man, in the words of televi- DUI and negligent driving con- said during the Dec. 30 hearing. an income while he was incar- when a judge sentenced Good- sion legal commentator Nancy victions over the past 10 years. “You are not to leave the state of cerated. Powers argued that man to a year Grace, got off “scot-free” for his A felony DUI conviction would Washington.” straight jail time would have of work release crimes. have potentially landed Good- A month later, however, when been a public safety risk because from the Thur- On Monday, Goodman be- man with more mandatory jail Goodman asked to go the Super it would set Goodman up for ston County Jail gan serving his work-release time, or possibly even prison Bowl, neither the judge or the failure in his work and, possibly, for his crimes. sentence, which allows him to time. prosecutor opposed the request. recidivism. Thurston spend 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Mondays Goodman’s most recent con- What had changed? “This way, he still has his life,” County Su- through Saturdays at his busi- victions that could have been Basically, Powers said, it was Powers said. perior Court ness, Vantage Communications, counted against him were in because Goodman had shown “We have to punish, but when Judge Chris- a telecommunications contrac- 2011, 2006 and in 2004, His good behavior while on bail. He we talk about public safety, it’s Shaun Goodman tine Schaller tor. Officials at the Thurston fourth most recent DUI-related had not re-offended, he had fol- not the punishment in most arrested in handed down County Sheriff’s Office said offense was in 1999. lowed the conditions of his re- cases that’s going to keep people December the work-release Goodman’s work release does Goodman’s standard sen- lease, and he had agreed to wear safe in the long run,” Powers said. sentence after not include GPS monitoring. tencing range for his Dec. 29 fel- an ankle bracelet to ensure he “Not when you’re talking about it was jointly recommended by But jail officials have de- ony eluding was between 2 and 6 would not consume alcohol. addiction.” both deputy prosecuting attor- clined to say whether Good- months. His standard sentencing Strophy, Goodman’s attorney, Reflecting on the May 16 pro- ney James Powers and Good- man’s place of employment is his range for the misdemeanor DUI said it is not unusual for a judge tests he set up over Goodman’s man’s defense attorney, Paul home. Goodman’s attorney also was zero to 364 days in jail. to allow a defendant who had sentence, Miller said he does Strophy, as part of a plea agree- refused to say where Goodman posted bail to leave the state for not believe a year of work re- ment. Goodman pleaded guilty is serving his work release. Reactions travel while charges are pending, lease “makes sense.” However, he to misdemeanor DUI and felony because defendants still have the agrees with Powers that Good- attempt to elude a police vehicle. Miller, the organizer of the presumption of innocence. Behind the Sentence protest, said Powers recently ex- man should not be refused com- On May 16, about 25 pick- Goodman’s means and abil- passion just because he drives a eters marched up courthouse Looking through the rear- plained to him that Goodman ity to travel to the Super Bowl view mirror at Goodman’s crim- was sentenced at the high end of Ferrari. hill on Lakeridge Drive to just should not be held against him, “I wish nothing but the best outside the Thurston County inal case reveals many factors the standard range for his misde- Strophy added. He said he rou- that could have led to a harsher meanor DUI. for Shaun,” Miller said. “I feel Courthouse, denouncing what tinely secures orders allowing bad that this came down on him.” they believed to be a lenient sen- sentence. “I was wrong in my initial an- defendants with pending crimi- tence. Some of them, such as the ger toward Judge Schaller,” Mill- nal charges to leave the state for The protesters said Goodman, statutes governing sentencing er said. all sorts of reasons, including A Matter of Law a defendant with the means to guidelines in Washington, were Added defense lawyer Stro- planned vacations. Presiding Thurston County purchase an expensive Italian beyond any judge’s control. phy, “To blame Judge Schaller for “If this had been a construc- Superior Court Judge Carol sports car, and who owns his Powers and Strophy both vig- not sentencing him to more than tion worker driving his pickup Murphy said Friday that one les- own business, would not have re- orously defended Schaller’s deci- 364 days in jail is completely un- and he had been allowed to go to son the public should take from ceived such a light sentence if not sion to implement their mutual fair, because she could not have California for some kind of con- Goodman’s sentencing is that for his money. recommendation that Goodman sentenced him to more than that, vention, it would not have been they have a role in lobbying the “Initially it was just kind of serve 364 days on work release even if she wanted to.” picked up by the media,” Strophy Legislature if they disagree with pure anger,” said Sam Miller, from the Thurston County Jail. Also, Goodman was initially said. the standard sentencing guide- who set up a Facebook page to Powers and Strophy both point held on suspicion of unlawful lines it creates. Every year, the organize the protest. out that 364 days in jail was imprisonment after his arrest, Work Release Legislature tweaks and makes One protester, Lisa Strange, the maximum sentence Good- based on passenger Henry Grif- changes to those guidelines, she summing up the sentiments of man could have received for his fin’s allegation in a 911 call that Powers bristles at the notion said. the protesters, used a bullhorn crimes, based on his offender he asked to get out of Goodman’s that Goodman’s economic sta- “It’s important that the pub- to state that she held Powers and score of 3. Ferrari during the police pursuit. tus had anything to do with his lic understands its role, and the Schaller responsible for Good- In Washington, unless there A judge found probable cause to agreement to recommend work public has a role in giving input man’s sentence. is justification for an exceptional support that accusation during release. through the legislative process,” Strange said judges are un- sentence, judges must for the Goodman’s preliminary appear- “There’s nothing about this she said. “I’m hopeful that the der the delusion that Goodman most part abide by the standard ance. that had anything to do with his public interest might motivate is “going to figure it out. Just sentencing range that the Legis- However, Powers did not money,” Powers said. “If this guy people to get more involved.” because he happens to be a busi- lature designates for each crime, bring a charge of unlawful im- had a minimum-wage job, I’d do

Man Holding Breath in Oregon Tunnel Causes All Backed Up in Centralia Three-Car Crash MANNING, Ore. (AP) — A 19-year-old man told investiga- tors he caused a three-car crash when he fainted while holding his breath as he drove through a tunnel northwest of Portland, Oregon State Police said. Daniel J. Calhon, of Snohom- ish, Washington, told investi- gators he fainted Sunday after- noon while holding his breath in the Highway 26 tunnel near the community of Manning, ac- cording to a news release. His car, a 1990 Toyota Camry, drifted across the centerline and crashed head-on with a Ford Explorer. Both vehicles struck the tun- nel walls before a pickup hit the Camry. Calhon and his passenger, 19-year-old Bradley Meyring, of Edmonds, Washington, suffered non-life-threatening injuries, as did the two people in the Ex- plorer: Thomas Hatch Jr., 67, and Candace Hatch, 61, from Astoria. All four were taken to hospitals. The two people in the pickup were not hurt. Calhon was cited for reckless driving, three counts of reck- less endangerment and fourth- degree assault in Washington County Circuit Court. It was not Editor’s Note: Centralia resident Hank Claycamp occasionally sketches what he sees for The Chronicle. Send feedback and ideas to Claycamp clear if he had a lawyer. at [email protected]. State Police Lt. Gregg Hast- While walking to downtown Centralia from our home at the bottom of Seminary Hill on a recent day, I had to stop and wait for a train. ings said Monday he's not sure It has become a frequent inconvenience in recent years as the number of trains seems to have spiked. The railroad traic lately has in- why Calhon was holding his creased 10-fold with trains carrying oil, coal and wheat cars; Amtrak and container trains add to the mix. It's kind of a hassle, but at least breath, but some people hold it gave me a few moments to sketch a picture. their breaths in tunnels as part of a game or superstition. The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 • Main 13

Columns, Celebrations, Voices Community Conversations

Voice of the People Bearcats Excel in Forensics

Chronicle readers share their thoughts everyday through social media, including Facebook, Twitter and the comment section of Chronline.com. Here are some of the recent highlights of conversation.

Readers react after Kerry Clark — the son of Regi- na Clark, a woman killed in Iraq in 2005 — received a master’s degree from Washington State University on Mother’s Day weekend:

Sherry Haubrick: I miss Regina every day. And I am and always will be proud of Kerry.

Jennifer Sheldon: Rest in peace Regina. You were an awesome person and an amazing softball coach.

Kim Layman Elliott: Yes, great story. Kerry is so open about his life. I’m so proud of him.

Photograph submitted by Janelle Williams, W.F. West forensics coach Jacob Schneider, Haley Snyder, Zac Saari, Hannah Schneider, Emily Burton and Hannah Herzog, from left, competed for W.F. Chronline Comments West High School at the National Individual Events Tournament of Champions at Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, Min- nesota. The following comments were submitted by readers of www.chronline.com. All stories are avail- able for reading online. W.F. West Forensics Team Finishes Successful Year; Six Compete at National Event in Minnesota • Story: State Rep. Richard DeBolt Requests $3.4 By Janelle Williams are graduating seniors who have utes. They add vocal and facial Billion for Water Issues Throughout State W.F. West forensics coach been active all four years of high expression as well as movement. school. They have helped the The event rules forbid any The W. F. West forensics team team be very successful all four physical touching of the team CommenTeR: Wild Game Fish Conservation (think speech and debate, not years, increasing the number of members, and they cannot look dead bodies) has had a very suc- awards each year. directly at each other, so staging Once again, Representative DeBolt is attempting this cessful year. The team of about On May 6, six of the team the presentation is quite chal- statewide, water retention legislation to include the esti- 20 members have won more than members left for Minnesota for lenging. mated cost of constructing the ill-advised, Chehalis River 70 awards this year. a National Individual Events The three teams include Hal- dam. Wild Game Fish Conservation International contin- Eight of the team members Tournament of Champions. ey Snyder and Hannah Herzog, ues to oppose this ineffective cash cow that puts residents, Ninety teams competed, and who perform “Vanya and Sonia businesses and natural resources in harm’s way at the ex- Volunteering participation at the tournament and Masha and Spike.” They pense of taxpayers and benefit of elected officials. Also op- was won through a number of won a state championship in posed to the proposed Chehalis River dam are the Quinault Looking for local volunteer competitions over the course of March. The other teams include Indian Nation and Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission. opportunities that align with the year. Jacob Schneider and Zac Saari, Additional statewide fees (taxes) will be levied to fund this your interests? The six students all competed who perform “Fools,” by Neil money grab for yet-to-be-designed projects. Floods pro- United Way of Lewis Coun- in dual interpretation, an event Simon, and Hannah Schneider vide billions of dollars of ecosystem services each and ev- ty’s online Volunteer Center has that requires them to start with and Emily Burton, who perform ery year as they freely distribute ocean-derived and other your answer. a play and cut it down to 10 min- “Arsenic and Old Lace.” nutrients downstream, across floodways and into estuaries. Visit www.volunteerlewis.org The billions of dollars in “costs” associated with naturally- today and make an impact on occurring floods could easily be avoided via wise land use the issues you are most passion- practices — sorely lacking in Lewis County and elsewhere ate about. throughout the Chehalis River basin. BE TRAVEL READY! Featured Volunteer • Story: net-Pens Approved at mayfield Lake Opportunities CommenTeR: Cinebarbarian • Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Southwest Washington is re- I am against the net pens for the following reasons. cruiting community-based vol- 1. Current net pen produced fish at the upstream site of unteers. Most urgent need is for Mayfield lake are notorious for producing damaged and Big Brothers. diseased fish. The phrase “Mayfield fuzzy tailed trout” is in • Be a part of the 78th Annual response to trout seen or caught that have fins either worn Winlock Egg Days and help out away from the pens and or displaying the fungal growth on with the entertainment commit- the fins and backs of these raised trout. tee for the event. 2. Many of the raised trout are full of intestinal worms. • The Evergreen Playhouse These fish are long in size, but often thin and upon further is looking for volunteers to be examination exhibit open bleeding in the digestive track join the cast for the Steam Train and cavity. Such fish that enter the food chain only exacer- Murder Mystery Dinner on May bate the problem. 31st. 3. The location of these net pens will allow the fecal ma- terials from these fish to enter directly into the intake flows Visit www.volunteerlewis.org CH520842sl.jd of Mayfield Powerhouse, thus ending up at the intake of the to respond to these opportuni- • Centralia • • Chehalis • salmon hatchery. Current use of the salmon hatchery is for ties in our community. Give an Hour. Give a Satur- 1211 Harrison 36 N. Market the brooding of all hatchery species. Any outbreak of dis- 736-6603 ease would directly effect both the salmon and trout hatch- day. Give the Gift of YOU. 748-0295 ery stock, across several species of fish, affecting all Cowlitz fishery. There is no ozone plant to treat infected waters that will come in contact with hatchery stock eggs. 4. The Cowlitz River currently has state of the art hatch- ery facilities for raising fish. If an increase in production is Want Lots of Guests? required, then do it there. 5. If for reasons unknown to me, a replacement to the existing hatchery facilities must be utilized there are two Are you hosting a community event, much better alternatives. 5a. Raise the fish in the area between Mayfield Dam and festival or public meeting? Mayfield Powerhouse. This area would at least allow set- tling of fecal materials and facilitate the natural release of Registering your event on chronline.com/calendar will get your event fry through the existing weir system once they are ready to begin the downstream migration. This area is secure from submitted for that calendar and for The Chronicle! the public, free of any other wild run to prevent cross con- tamination and readily available and accessible for feeding. Further, due to the natural enclosure of rocks, there is no To plan your week(end) see the calendar in need for net pens, saving both time, money and cutting down on net abrasion sourced diseases. The Chronicle on page 2 and on the right side of Chronline. 5b. Develop fish passages past the falls on Winston Creek. Doing this one simple item will open more spawning beds than the whole of the Tilton River system. No feed, net Fast • Easy • Efective pens or further labor intensive activities required. This one item is the only way to further enhance a “truly wild run” on the Cowlitz. I believe that the resource can and should be developed further to mediate for the impacts of hydroelectric facilities, 2014 but net pens are a poor excuse for developing habitat. years CH521964cf.db 1889 125 Send your comments, criticisms and feedback to [email protected] for consideration in Voice of the People. The Chronicle Chronline.com Main 14 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 FROM THE FRONT PAGE A Salute to the Twin Cities’ Top Students By The Chronicle wants to take a variety of courses Beairsto tech Day Post-graduation plans: De- The Chronicle salutes our in the hopes of finding an educa- Activities: Post-grad- Tray will spend one or two years area’s graduating high school tional passion. Band, Running uation plans: at Centralia College before trans- seniors. As we do each year, we Start, Future Matz plans to go ferring to a four-year university invite you to meet the top 10 Ashley Phelps Business Lead- to Washington to study sports nutrition. students in Lewis County’s two Parents: Ste- ers of America, State Univer- largest high schools, Centralia phen Phelps and Latinos Unidos, sity and major Rachel Tennant Danette Jones TRiO program in genetics and High School and W.F. West High GPA: 3.97 Activities: Post-grad- cell biology. She School. Tyler Beairsto Keesha Matz Parents: The top students in other dis- National Honor uation plans: Centralia hopes to be- W.F. West Scott and Lisa tricts in The Chronicle's cover- Society, drama, Beairsto plans to come a medical age area will be featured in Sat- choir attend Western researcher. Tennant urday’s edition. Post-grad- Washington University and dou- Activities: uation plans: ble major in Spanish and busi- Zoe Sayler Wind ensemble, Phelps will Ashley Phelps ness. His goal is to enter into a GPA: 4.0 pep band, Na- Centralia CENTRALIA HIGH SCHOOL attend Wash- career in international business. Parents: tional Honor Graduation: June 6, 7:30 p.m., ington State Timothy and Society Rachel Tennant Tiger Stadium University and will become a Taylor Canfield Jennifer Sayler Post-grad- W.F. West Baccalaureate: Wednesday, member of the Honors College Parents: Activities: uation plans: June 4, 7 p.m., Centralia Com- there. She will double major in Darrin and Tra- National Honor Tennant will attend Western munity Church of God zoology and music, with a career cy Canfield Society, Global Washington University to study goal of becoming an exotic vet- Activities: Culture Club, communication science disor- erinarian and traveling to Latin Volleyball, bas- Knowledge ders. She wants to be an audiolo- TOP TEN STUDENTS America. Bowl, theater Zoe Sayler ketball, golf, gist or speech pathologist. Note: Centralia does not in- symphonic Post-grad- W.F. West clude students' grade-point aver- Anna Scheibmeir choir, jazz choir uation plans: ages, instead opting to use a com- Parents: Post-grad- Sayler will attend Stanford Uni- Anthony Painter posite index to compute figures Mark Scheib- uation plans: Taylor Canfield versity and major in human biol- GPA: 3.989 for its top 10 students. meir and Wendy Canfield will at- Centralia ogy. Sayler aspires to become a Parents: Tripp tend Centralia child and adolescent psychiatrist. Cary and Cathie Christopher Martin Activities: College, then transfer to a four- Painter Parents: student govern- year school after two years. She Nathan Sherfey Activities: Fred and Jackie ment, yearbook, hopes to continue playing golf at GPA: 4.0 National Honor Martin tennis, Future Centralia College next year. Parents: Jus- Society, band, Activities: Business Lead- tin and Debrah football, basket- Jazz band, sym- ers of America Anna Scheibmeir Sherfey Anthony Painter Centralia ball, baseball, phonic band, Post-grad- Lillian Albright Activities: Youth Leader- W.F. West uation plans: Future Busi- Parents: Jeff National Honor ship Conference ness Leaders of Scheibmeir will attend Swarth- Society, Key and Hyesoo Al- Post-graduation plans: America, Gay more College, and plans to con- Club, Young bright Painter will head east to Wash- Straight Alli- Christopher Martin tinue her ballet and tennis tal- Activities: Life, Greater ington State University, where he ance, Key Club, Centralia ents. She also hopes to explore Pacific North- Chehalis Food Nathan Sherfey Pep Club, Skills her many academic interests. west Chamber Bank, football, W.F. West plans to major in chemical engi- USA metals, Orchestra, ten- basketball neering. student government Rachel Mecham nis, student Post-graduation plans: Sher- Post-graduation plans: Mar- Parents: government, fey will play college basketball Nicole Bach tin plans to attend Centralia Col- Matthew and Lillian Albright and major in finance/econom- GPA: 3.983 TRiO, Science Centralia lege and pursue a career in engi- Wendy Mecham Club, Phi Theta ics at Willamette University. He Parents: neering. Activities: Kappa hopes to use that degree and a Dave and Lisa Choir, Cispus Post-graduation plans: Al- passion for mission work to help Bach Collin Westenhaver counselor, soc- bright will attend Harvard Uni- other countries recover from di- Activities: Parents: cer, National versity in the fall with a goal of sasters and improve economic Tennis, National Honor Society, Mark and majoring in economics. opportunities. Honor Society, Stephanie West- student govern- wind and jazz enhaver ment Rachel Mecham Dakota White Nicole Bach Activities: Post-gradu- Centralia W.F. WEST HIGH SCHOOL GPA: 4.0 ensembles, pep band, marching W.F. West Theater, wind ation plans: Me- Graduation: Parents: June 7, 6 p.m. at band ensemble, jazz cham plans to attend Brigham W.F. West High School gymna- Brian and Marci Post-graduation plans: band, student Young University this fall to sium White Bach government, study visual communications Baccalaureate: June 1, 5 p.m. Activities: will attend Northwest Nazarene National Honor Collin Westenhaver and minor in business. After col- at Bethel Church Basketball, track, University in Idaho, where she Society, Science Centralia lege, she looks forward to being a football, Nation- will major in secondary math Club, Musical mom and working on a market- Lindsey Giffey al Honor Soci- education and art education. She Theatre Club ing team. GPA: 4.0 ety, Link Crew, hopes to become a math teacher Post-graduation plans: Knowledge Dakota White Parents: W.F. West at the high school level. Westenhaver will attend Pacific Nicholaus Martin Mark and Cher- Bowl, student Lutheran University this fall and Parents: yl Giffey government, Noelle Bedford study physics and Spanish. His Fred and Jackie Boys State Activities: GPA: 3.983 dream is to help design aircraft Martin Biotech Day, Post-graduation plans: for Boeing or NASA. Activities: White will attend Oregon State Parents: Lady Bearcats Clay and Lori Tennis, winter swim team, University, where he plans to Bedford Shayna Woods cheer, symphon- Young Life, Link earn a master's degree in civil en- Parents: ic band, jazz Crew, student Lindsey Giffey gineering. Activities: Alan and Bev- band, Future government W.F. West Cross country, erly Woods Business Lead- Post-grad- Anna DeTray track, Christian Activities: ers of America, Nicholaus Martin uation plans: Giffey will attend GPA: 4.0 Ignite club student gov- National Honor Centralia Washington State University, Parents: Post-grad- ernment, choir, Society, Cispus Noelle Bedford where she will study biochemis- Tom and Jodie uation plans: W.F. West Future Busi- counselor, stu- try. She hopes to attend medical DeTray Bedford will at- ness Leaders of dent government school afterward in order to be- Activities: tend Whitworth America, Na- Post-graduation plans: Mar- National Honor Shayna Woods come a doctor. University, with a goal of earning tional Honor tin will attend Centralia College Society, ASB Society, solo Centralia a bachelor's degree in account- this fall and start on a pre-phys- Keesha Matz board, Lady ensemble, vol- ical therapy path. He hopes this ing. She hopes to work for a large GPA: 4.0 Bearcats basket- leyball will lead him to a doctorate in Anna DeTray company or own her own busi- Parents: Dale and Anne ball, volleyball, W.F. West Post-graduation plans: physical therapy. Link Crew, 4-H ness some day. Woods plans to attend Western Matz Activities: Key Club, Na- Washington University. She has Tyler Beairsto tional Honor Society, Link Crew, Advertise in The Chronicle. Call 360-807-8219. not decided on a major yet, but Parents: Travis and Wendy Lady Bearcats swim team, Bio- News in Brief GraduationFor Centralia Downtown Centralia’s 18th annual An- Anyone interested in spon- tique Fest will take place on July sorship information should con- Association Gears Up for 19 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in addi- tact Jim Elder at (360) 807-1183 Summer tion to July 20 from 10 a.m. to 3 or [email protected]. p.m. Anyone interested in vendor or BIG PICS By The Chronicle Vendors selling antiques and event information should con- The Centralia Downtown As- collectibles from all over the Pa- tact Susan Delaire at (360) 304- sociation has announced plans cific Northwest will participate 9653 or email abundancevin- in the event. There will also be for its most popular summer [email protected]. events, Antique Fest and the vendors selling festival-type food. A Seattle antique appraiser, The fee is $25, which will go Summerfest parade. toward the association’s hanging This year’s July 4 parade will George Higby, will be offering flower basket fund. be sponsored by Windermere appraisals for individual pieces Real Estate in Centralia. Half of at the Compass Pub, located on The Centralia Downtown the sponsorship dollars will go the corner of North Tower Av- Association will also soon be to the Historic Fox Theatre res- enue and Maple Street. launching a new website. toration. The entry fee for the parade Make their pic as big is $25. All the money will go to- 1601 S. Gold Street ward the hanging flower basket Centralia as their achievement! fund. During this year’s parade, the just wood furniture 360-736-3832 Centralia Downtown Associa- Includes a studio head photo tion will honor two people, Terry made into a 3’× 3’ (approx. width) Curry and Boe Wohld, who will both be the grand marshals of corrugated plastic bigpic the parade. Wohld recently re- tired after 33 years of working as the special services officer for Call Sign Pro the Centralia Police Department. to order today! 736-6322 Curry is a long-time local busi- ness owner. TWIN SET $99 95 Those wanting an application FULL $129 +tax for the parade can email down- QUEEN $149 CH520216sl.jd $49. [email protected] or call Now Offering Special Financing for 6 to 24 Months on all Sales Steve Koreis at (360) 219-8192. CH518390hh.jd The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 • Sports 1

Sports editor: Aaron VanTuyl Centralia Splits to End Phone number: 807-8229 / Sports 2 Sports e-mail: [email protected] Baseball Season Saturday’s 2B Baseball Tigers Cruise Past Tri-Cities Prep, Ducks to Final Four SEMIFINALS: Napavine The Jaguars answered with 4 in the sixth, but the Tigers Tops Jaguars 7-6, Ducks countered with the tying and 8-2 to Reach State 2B go-ahead runs in the bottom of the sixth on back-to-back RBI Tournament in Centralia singles from McCarty and Kaleb By The Chronicle Sisson. ADNA — The Tigers slipped Cole Doughty started the past Tri-Cities Prep, 7-6, in first game and struck out five, their regional opener and then with five walks and two hit bat- dropped Toutle Lake, 8-2, in the ters, over five innings of work. quarterfinals here Saturday to Jensen Lindsay then took over advance to the four-team State and faced seven hitters in the fi- 2B Baseball Tournament. nal two frames. As an added bonus, this "Cole battled well enough for year's final four event will be us, and gave us a chance to win," held at Ed Wheeler Field in Cen- Tiger coach Bryan Bullock said. tralia, meaning the Tigers' com- "And Jensen came in and shut the mute to Friday's 4 p.m. semifinal door." against Asotin will be a short Napavine then jumped out one. to a 4-0 lead after an inning of Napavine beat Tri-Cities the Ducks, who had finished in Prep 7-6 in the opening round, a three-way tie for fourth in the taking a 5-2 lead after a 4-run Central 2B League and finished fourth inning highlighted by a third in the District 4 tourna- Jesse Smith / For The Chronicle 2-run homer from Sam Fager- ment. Napavine’s Jensen Lindsay, left, covers third base as Toutle’s Dalton Kent-Phillipps slides in Saturday in Adna during the State ness and a 2-run single by Tyler 2B regional playofs. McCarty. please see NAPAVINE, page S3 Saturday’s 2B Softball Saturday’s 2B Baseball Pirates Return to Final Four By The Chronicle ANACORTES — Cinderella will return to the ball this week- end. Adna, the surprise of last year's playoff field with a run to the state championship game, will be back in the final four after an 11-8 win over La Conner and a 3-2 win over Morton-White Pass in regional round of the 2B playoffs here on Saturday. The wins put Adna (13-10) in Friday's State 2B semifinals at Centralia's Ed Wheeler Field against DeSales — which has won 11 state championships since 2000, and beat the Pirates 5-0 in last year's championship.

please see ADNA, page S3 Saturday’s 1A Baseball Warriors Headed to 1A Semifinals By The Chronicle Brandon Hansen / [email protected] ANACORTES — After a Adna’s Katelyn Pine gets a greeting at home plate after her in the sixth inning of the District 4 2B Softball Tournament championship game against Toutle three-hour bus ride and two Lake Saturday at Fort Borst Park in Centralia. The Pirates would defeat Central 2B League champion Toutle Lake 7-1 to win the district title. games in the regional round of the State 1A baseball playoffs, Rochester is just two wins away from it's second state champion- Pirates Knock Off Ducks for Title ship since 2008. The Warriors won their first regional game CHAMPS: Rolfe Leads against Coupeville, 2-1, before downing fellow SWW 1A Ever- Adna in 7-1 Win Over green foe Hoquiam, 4-1, to ad- Toutle Lake for District 4 vance to Yakima as one of the final four 1A baseball teams. Championship "We've had some pretty high By Luke Kilgore goals going into this year and the [email protected] kids are moving right along with what those goals are," Rochester Going into Saturday's Dis- coach Jerry Striegel said. trict 4 2B Softball Tournament Against Coupeville, Warrior finals, Toutle Lake's softball starting pitcher Dylan Fosnacht club had reigned as champions pitched into the sixth inning for the past two years — leaving before being relieved by Dustin the Pirates, according to pitcher Wilson. The duo held the Wolves Sam Rolfe, as the underdogs. to just five hits in the 2-1 victory. "Absolutely no one expected Meanwhile, Coupeville hurler us to win," Rolfe said, "so we Ben Etzel kept Rochester off bal- really had to just come up and ance until the bottom of the fifth prove everyone wrong." inning. Rolfe and the Lady Pirates "That Etzel kid was a great did just that and ended the Brandon Hansen / [email protected] pitcher," Stiegel said. "Our kids streak, dominating the Ducks Adna’s Haley Minkof slides safely into third base during the District 4 2B Softball Tournament championship game against did a great job battling at the from start to finish at Fort Borst Toutle Lake Saturday at Fort Borst Park in Centralia. plate, especially as the game Park for a 7-1 victory and the wore on." District 4 title. Lake this season or last, losing fending State 2B champs. bri Jimenez. Kendra Stajduhar With the Wolves leading The Ducks went undefeated 8-3 and 1-0 to Toutle Lake dur- Adna drew first blood in blooped a 2-run double and 1-0, Lucas Eastman doubled to in the Central 2B League this ing the regular season. the second inning by taking further escalated the Pirate lead advance a runner to third, and season, and the Pirates hadn't On Saturday, though, Adna advantage of a Toutle error that recorded a win against Toutle was more than ready for the de- resulted in a run by junior Au- please see PIRATES, page S4 please see ROCHESTER, page S3

Fly W.F. West’s The Final Word Hayden Dobyns Rockwell’s Red Sox Painting Sold for $22.6 Million lies out during TV’s Best Bet a State 2A NEW YORK (AP) — A Norman spring training. Baseball Playof Rockwell painting of Boston Red Sox The painting appeared on the cover irst-round players has sold to a private buyer for of the Saturday Evening Post in 1957. An LA Angels at Seattle game against $22.6 million. anonymous owner acquired it in 1986. It re- 7 p.m. Anacortes in “The Rookie (Red Sox Locker Room)” mained in the same private collection since. ROOT Yelm on Satur- led the bidding Thursday at Christie’s It was exhibited this month at Fen- day morning. auction of American art in New York. way Park and the Museum of Fine Arts —See Story S2 “The Rookie” shows Hall of Famer in Boston. It was previously shown at the Ted Williams and other seasoned veter- museum in 2005 and 2008 following Red Pete Caster / [email protected] ans as an awkward newcomer arrives for Sox World Series victories. Sports 2 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 SPORTS

Saturday’s 2A Baseball Split at Regionals Ends Centralia’s Season LONG DAY: Tigers Beat Klahowya on Blaser’s Walk-Off Double; Tumwater Ends Tigers’ Season in 8-1 Loss By Aaron VanTuyl [email protected] The momentum from Cen- tralia’s dramatic win in the open- ing round of the 2A regional playoffs just didn’t quite carry over to the quarterfinals on Sat- urday in Chehalis. Joe Blaser hit a walk-off dou- ble to give the Tigers a 2-1 win over Klahowya in the opening round, but six miscues in the field helped Tumwater to an 8-1 win over the Tigers in the win- ner-to-state game later Saturday afternoon. “It’s unfortunate. I would have liked to see our kids play better baseball, and went down that way,” Tiger coach Rex Ash- more said, “because this one will sting for a while, like that.” To get to that point, and to Tumwater — which had beaten White River, 3-1, in the first Pete Caster / [email protected] round — Centralia had to work Centralia’s Zach Wood slides into second base in an attempt to break up a double play as Tumwater’s Easton Trakel tosses the ball to irst during a State 2A Baseball past Klahowya. Playof quarterinal game in Chehalis on Saturday. Trakel was able to turn the double play, which got Tumwater out of the inning. The opener was scoreless un- til the bottom of the sixth inning, mistakes and don’t make people when Drew Fagerness reached pay for it, you’re not going to base on a walk, moved to second come out on top,” Ashmore said. on a sacrifice bunt and headed to third after two teammates drew “I just wish we could have played walks. Zach Wood then hit a fly better baseball and seen what to center field that was dropped, would have happened at the end.” allowing pinch runner Cody Peters went five innings, with Parker-Sexsmith to cross the four walks and four strikeouts. plate. Centralia, meanwhile, got 2 Two singles and an error for 3 efforts from both Joe Blaser helped Klahowya knot it back and Ty Housden. Centralia’s lone up in the top of the seventh, but run came in the top of the sev- Gavin Kerner led off the bottom enth inning, when Blaser walked of the seventh with a base hit for and scored on a long double to the Tigers. right field by Housden. That brought Blaser to the Those were the only four hits plate, where he worked the count allowed by Tumwater starter Eli- to 3-1 and was awarded first base. jah Hill, who worked seven in- After a discussion on the field nings and struck out five with and a few checks of the count by four walks and a hit batter. the officials, however, Blaser was “Their kid kept us off balance, sent back to the plate to finish his and when we got pitches to hit session, and he promptly lined we just missed them,” Ashmore the next pitch deep into the left- said. center field gap to score Kerner Centralia finished the season and end the game. with a 19-6 record, and gradu- “It was kind of a weird situ- ates seniors Wood, Blaser, Hous- ation,” Blaser said. “I ended up Pete Caster / [email protected] coming back to hit, after they den, John Sharkey and manager The Centralia dugout swarms Joe Blaser after his walk-of double in the bottom of the seventh inning of a State 2A Baseball Tyson Larson. gave me a walk. I wanted to hit Playof irst-round game against Klahowya on Saturday in Chehalis. the whole time, so it worked out “I feel for them, because for me, I guess.” they’re five real good kids who have done a lot for this program,” Zach Wood worked the first and I think the kids were jacked,” with a single, after which two but scoring 5 runs — just one six innings for Centralia, car- Ashmore said. rying a no-hitter into the fifth Ashmore said. “We were pre- infield errors scored a run and of which was earned. All in all, Tumwater, which won the Ev- and tallying four strikeouts with pared, and the kids were ready set the stage for a 2-run single by Centralia committed six errors ergreen 2A Conference regular- three walks and two hits. to go. I don’t fault their effort, we Clayton Boze. in the loss. season title and finished third in Against Tumwater, however, just didn’t make enough plays.” The trend continued “You just can’t do that at this the District 4 2A Baseball Tour- the Tigers wouldn’t get the same Tumwater’s Anthony Correia throughout the game, with Tum- point in the season. You’ve got nament, will face Lake Wash- breaks. led off the bottom of the first in- water notching just three hits off teams that are all pretty similar, ington on Friday at 1 p.m. in the “The walk-off win was nice, ning of quarterfinal matchup of Tiger starter Christian Peters all pretty equal, and you make State 2A semifinals. Anacortes Ends Bearcats’ Season in First Round of Regionals By The Chronicle YELM — The defending State 2A champions’ season came to a close here Saturday morning, with Anacortes handing W.F. West a 10-3 loss in a first-round 2A regional playoff game. The Seagulls scored 7 runs over the fourth, fifth and sixth innings to pull away. Brandon Davis had a pair of hits and drove in a run for W.F. West. Tanner Gueller added an RBI double, and Toby Johnson, Brody Holcomb, Alex Cox and Ryan Steepy each added singles. Elijah Johnson started on the mound for W.F. West and worked into the fourth inning. “Elijah competed today,” Bearcat coach Tommy Elder said of the sophomore. “He didn’t have his best stuff on the hill, but he gave us four fantastic innings, and gave us everything he had.” Anacortes finished with 13 hits in the game. “They’re a very good hit- ting ball club,” Elder said. “We definitely had our chances a few times, with runners on and no- body out, and just weren’t able to take advantage of that today.” W.F. West finished the season with a 15-8 record, after taking third in the Evergreen 2A Con- ference and losing to Centralia in the District 4 championship game. Saturday’s matchup was the final game in the prep ca- reers of W.F. West seniors Guel- ler, Cox, Toby Johnson, Anthony Pete Caster / [email protected] Painter and Bowe McKay. W.F. West’s Toby Johnson looks to corral a throw down to second base during a State 2A irst-round regional game against Anacortes in Yelm on Saturday morning. • Sports 3 SPORTS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Saturday’s 2A Girls Tennis Four Tigers Headed to State 2A Tournament By The Chronicle a set all season as the Tigers’ No. “This is a lot of girls going to LONGVIEW — Centralia se- 2 singles player. state, usually you have a strong nior Anna Scheibmeir has been “Anna and Lillian almost person and some others squeak lonely the past three years she’s had too much fun out there. It in,” Keahey said. “But this is a been to the State 2A Girls Tennis was so unusual to see them hit first, second and a first. Depend- Tournament. so relaxed. Everybody was so re- ing on who they meet, these girls This year, she’ll have compa- laxed today,” Keahey said. “It was have a really good chance to ny. amazing. From how tense, tight place high in state.” The Tigers will be send- and nervous we were on Fri- W.F. West’s Kyla Richards ing four players to the State 2A day, today we were just on point. reached a consolation match to Girls Tennis Tournament at the They were relaxed but focused state against Tumwater’s Laurent and it was fun to watch today.” University of Washington next Brandt, falling 6-2, 6-2. While the singles champion- Friday after Scheibmeir won the “Overall I was very pleased ship was going to end up being District 4 singles title over team- with the way Kyla played,” W.F. Centralia’s either way, Fast and West coach Jack State said. “Lau- mate Lillian Albright, and McK- Foster has a battle against Capi- ren is a tough kid to beat. She’s ailey Fast and Jaycee Foster won tal’s Soo Youn Park and Bailey the District 4 doubles title here Yost. very athletic and I really like the on Saturday at Mint Valley Rac- “Those two had been Fast way that Kyla moved the ball quet Complex. and Foster’s nemesis all season,” around. She made Lauren work “As a group, every year they Keahey said. “They had lost to hard.” didn’t quite make it has been them twice this season, includ- State added that Richards has building up to this,” Centralia ing one time at sub-districts. improved tremendously since coach Deb Keahey said. “This They finally got it together and it last year and they by next year previous year they lost and they was a great match.” she should have enough skills learned. This year they weren’t Centralia’s top doubles squad to beat a played like Brandt next going to lose.” downed Park and Yost by scores year. Scheibmeir defeated her of 6-3, 6-1. The Tigers also took “She’s improved so much teammate Albright 6-1, 6-1. home the team district title as since last year that is she has that Courtesy Photo Scheibmeir has been Centra- they scored 29 points, nearly kind of improvement by next Centralia’s Lillian Albright, McKailey Fast, JC Foster and Anna Scheibmeir will all lia’s tough-to-beat No. 1 singles doubling up second place Wash- year she will be one of the better advance to the State 2A Girls Tennis Tournament next weekend at the University player, while Albright hadn’t lost ougal’s 15 points. players in the league,” State said. of Washington.

Saturday’s 1A Baseball In that frame, Chase McCarthy Rochester leadoff with a single, Larson hit a bunt single and Andy Sommer Continued from Sports 1 hit a double to the right-center field gap that drove home a run. Etzel balked to bring in the War- The outfielder's throw went into riors' first run. Rochester got the the dugout, allowing another go-ahead run when Wilson led Warriors run to score. off the bottom of the sixth with a Hoquiam would manage just triple and Wyatt Singer brought a sixth-inning run off of Wilson. him home with a single. The Grizzlies finished with five Wilson then got out of a bas- hits, while Wilson helped his es-loaded jam in the sixth before own cause at the plate with two retiring the side in the seventh hits, one of which was a double. for the victory. Rochester advances to Yaki- The Warriors then faced a ma for the final four for the first Hoquiam squad to which it had time since 2008, when it won a lost two out of three times dur- state championship. In the semi- ing the regular season. It was finals the Warriors will face another low-scoring regional Naches Valley, a team they've baseball game, but Wilson kept played several times throughout the Grizzlies muzzled with a the years. 10-strikeout performance on the "It's a Billy Walker-coached mound in a 4-1 victory. team, so I expect their kids to be Rochester built a 4-0 lead well-disciplined and good hit- when Josh Larson drove in a run ters," Striegel said. Jesse Smith / For The Chronicle in the second inning and Roch- The Warriors will play the Tenino’s Kaleb Strawn, right, collides with South Whidbey catcher Brent Piehler during 1A regional baseball action in Castle ester added another run before a Rangers at 7 p.m. Friday at Ya- Rock on Saturday. 2-run rally in the top of the sixth. kima's County Stadium.

South Whidbey Ends Beavers’ Season three-hit complete-game effort. Napavine Toutle Lake's 2 runs didn't arrive By The Chronicle Tenino, which had four hits in with a 19-7 record. It was the fi- until the seventh frame. Continued from Sports 1 CASTLE ROCK — The the loss. nal game for Beaver seniors Zack "It was another good outing by Wyatt," Bullock said. "He just Beavers’ season came to a close Tenino loaded the bases in Chamberlain, Kolton McKitrick, Fagerness led off the game really was a bulldog for us on the here Saturday with a 10-5 loss to the fourth and sixth innings, Brayden Hisaw, Kellen Miller, with a double, Lindsay hit a South Whidbey in the regional and left nine runners, total, on Cody Cleeves and Nick O’Brien. mound." 2-run single, Brady Woodrum Fagerness and Sisson each round of the State 1A baseball base. “It’s a great program, and the singled, J.T. Kaut hit an RBI playoffs. “We could have taken control seniors led us the whole way,” finished with two hits against single and Sisson drove in a run Toutle Lake. The Falcons scored 9 runs of that game in the first four in- Hogue, in his first year with with a fielder's choice to wrap Napavine (17-7 overall) will nings, but we didn’t get that hit Tenino, said. “The season itself over the fourth, fifth and sixth the Tigers' big first frame. now take on Asotin in the State that we needed to bust it wide innings to seal the win, but lost was fantastic. For my first year With the big lead to work 2B semifinals. The Tigers' last fi- to Woodland, 1-0, in the quar- open,” Tenino coach Conner being at Tenino I couldn’t be with Napavine freshman Wy- nal four appearance, coinciden- terfinals. Hogue said. “They took advan- happier. We had great support att Stanley went to work on the tally, was a 12-8 win over Asotin Kaleb Strawn and Terran Gil- tage, and we didn’t.” from the community, and the mound, striking out six with in the third/fourth place game of breath each hit RBI singles for Tenino finished the season kids were awesome.” four walks and a hit batter in a the 2009 tournament.

League squad Morton-White Rooklidge said. "He has a knack Adna Pass, a matchup that produced a for getting himself out of tough Pole Buildings more tradition baseball score. situations. He's just a competi- Continued from Sports 1 Adna pulled ahead, 2-1, on an RBI single from David Young tor." On Sale Now! "We've got a lineup full of in the top of the fifth inning, David Young and Tyson kids playing varsity baseball for and added to the lead with a Gray each had two hits, and Mc- Site Prep the first time, and we've had to single from Blaine Latimer, who Closkey added an RBI single win a game to get into districts, Available then moved to second on a bunt in the third inning. Kolb was 2 win a game to get into regionals, and scored on a passed ball to for 2, and James Sword added and win a game to get in the fi- make it 3-1. 24’x24’x10’ nals, with our backs to the wall a double for the Timberwolves, 24’x24’x10’ Morton-White Pass loaded Machine Storage 2 Car Garage in every situation," first-year Pi- the bases with two outs in the which beat Concrete 9-0 in the rate coach Jon Rooklidge said. bottom of the seventh inning first round to reach the quarter- "It's just awesome for the kids." on a series of walks and hit bat- finals. The Pirates won a wild open- ters. The Timberwolves drew er over La Conner on Saturday, Adna and DeSales face • 4” Concrete w/Fibermix Reinforcement a full-count ball four that got • 18” Eave & Gable Framed Overhangs trailing 7-3 after two adventur- past catcher Bryce McCloskey off at 7 p.m. on Friday at Ed • 3’x6’-8” Steel Insulated Walk-In Door ous defensive innings but claw- Wheeler Field. The four-team • Optional Concrete Is Available • (2) 10’x8’ Steel Panel Overhead Doors and rolled to the backstop, au- • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation ing back with 7 runs in the third tomatically scoring the runner tournament concludes on Sat- and finishing with 16 hits. from third to make it 3-2 Adna urday, with the loser facing the 24’x36’x10’ 38’x30’x10’ "It hasn't been easy for us. We and giving MWP's Rylon Kolb Napavine/Asotin loser in the 10 2 Car Garage & Workshop Monitor RV Storage make a lot of mistakes, but the — who had been on second base one thing we've done all year is — a big turn at third and look at a.m. third/fourth place game. we've been able to fight through home. The State 2B championship will all that stuff," Rooklidge said. "You've got arguably the best be played at 1 p.m. • 4” Concrete w/Fibermix Reinforcement "We could have really folded the athlete in the league coming Note • 18” Eave & Gable Framed Overhangs : It was final game for • 4” Concrete w/Fibermix Reinforcement • (1) 12’x12’ Steel Panel Overhead Door tents down 7-3 in the second, but • (2) 10’x8’ Steel Panel Overhead Doors from second base, and he comes Morton-White Pass seniors • (1) 10’x8’ Steel Panel Overhead Door • 3’x6’-8” Steel Insulated Walk-In Door • (1) 3’x8’ Steel Insulated Walk-In Door we answered back. You've got to hard around third — and the • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation like teams that can answer back throw from the catcher back to Kolb, Brian Reynolds, Craig • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation to adversity." the pitcher, covering at home, Lindh, Kalen Dunlap, Tommy 30’x48’x12’ All Buildings Include: Spencer Burdick worked all gets by us," Rooklidge said. "Jar- Seaman, Zach Counts and Jacob RV - Boat - Car & Workshop � 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation � 18 Sidewall seven innings for Adna, strik- ed Olson at first base just backed Weber. Morton-White Pass beat & Trim Colors � Free Estimate � Designed ing out seven with four hits and up the play, dove and stopped Concrete, 9-0, in the first round for 85MPH Wind � Exposure B + 25lb. going 4 for 4 at the plate with an the ball at the mound." Snow Load � Building Plan � Construction of the 2B regionals in Anacortes � Guaranteed Craftmanship RBI. Nolan Balzer went 3 for 4 The simple backup, Rook- • 4” Concrete w/Fibermix Reinforcement 30’x36’ � Permit Service on Saturday, keyed by Kolb’s • (1) 10’x10’ Steel Panel Overhead Door with a double, David Young was lidge said, was a big turning Prices do not include permit cost or sales tax & are based on a level CH520201bw.sw • (1) 10’x8’ Steel Panel Overhead Door accessible building site w/less than 1’ rock fill. Non commercial usage, 3 for 5 with a double and 3 RBIs, point. The next batter up for two-hit pitching performance. • (1) 3’x6’-8” Steel Insulated Walk-In Door price maybe affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Ad and Cole Young went 3 for 3 for MWP hit a pop-fly foul ball, The Timberwolves recorded • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation prices expire one week from publish date. Prices reflect Lewis County only. Adna. Wes Wilson, hitting out which was caught to end the 13 hits in the win, with James Jorstad’s Twin City Metal Buildings of the No. 9 spot, went 2 for 4 game. Sword going 2 for 4 with 3 RBIs. www.twincitymetalbuildings.com with a double and 3 RBIs. Herring worked all seven The La Conner win put Adna innings for Adna, striking out Zach Hanson and Craig Lindh 360-748-1828 • 1-800-394-8038 in the winner-to-state quarterfi- eight with four hits. were both 3 for 4, and Kolb went 1508 Bishop Rd. • Chehalis, WA 98532 nals against fellow Central 2B "He just battled all day," 2 for 4 in the win. Lic#TWINCMB181C5 Sports 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 SPORTS

Saturday’s 1A Softball Racing Johnson Ends Drought at Coca-Cola 600 CONCORD, N.C. (AP) — About the only one not worried about Jimmie Johnson's victory drought this season was the Sprint Cup defending champion. After his dominating show this weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Johnson gave his competitors plenty to worry about. Johnson reached Vic- tory Lane for the first time this season at the Coca- Cola 600, finishing off a dominating week at a track many have called "Jimmie's House." "It's great to win, but believe me, and I promise Brandon Hansen / [email protected] you, all the hype and all Rochester’s Jessica Glacken slides into home during District 4 1A Softball Tournament loser-out action against Hoquiam Saturday at Fort Borst Park in Centralia. Glacken the concern and worry, that was out on the play. was elsewhere. That wasn't in my head," Johnson said. Now, Johnson can think Hoquiam Ends Warriors’ Season in Consolation Semifinals about his record-break- ing seventh Cup win at By The Chronicle errors while being held to four ning before Rochester finally got rior pitcher Jessica Glacken, who Charlotte, about his 13th Rochester’s season came to hits against a Grizzlies team that on the board with a run in the struck out five and went 1 for 3 at straight NASCAR season an end on Saturday with a 5-2 lost just two games in league play top of the fifth. the plate with a double. with a victory or about his this season. The Grizzlies added another Madison Justice was 2 for 4 loss in the District 4 1A Softball fourth 600 victory to trail Hoquiam got a home run in insurance run in the bottom of while Courtney Baird also had a Tournament consolation semi- only Darrell Waltrip's five the first inning by Kayla Hilliard the fifth before Rochester’s Joni hit in the game. in the series' longest race. finals to SWW 1A League Ever- and an RBI by Ashlynn Wake- Lancaster tried to spark a rally in Rochester finished the season green Division runner-up Ho- And maybe throw a scare field in the second to go up 2-0 the sixth inning with an RBI but with a 14-11 record after taking into opponents that John- quiam at Fort Borst Park. early. Katelynn Paladin notched it wasn’t enough. Hoquiam fin- third in the Evergreen Division son's run at top isn't over The Warriors committed five a 2-run homer in the fourth in- ished with six hits against War- Standings. yet. "They know we are awake," Johnson said. "Hopefully, the 48 is head- Pirates ing that way and we can Continued from Sports 1 give other people some- thing to think about." This time, Johnson to 3-0 going into the bottom of swept past Matt Kenseth a fourth frame that saw a solo nine laps from the end and home run from Toutle's Bailey was never pressured after Hockett, but nothing else. that. Johnson earned the Hockett's bomb turned out pole Thursday night, was to be the only response the strong at practice Saturday Ducks could muster against a and led 165 of 400 laps Sun- stifling Adna defense with Rolfe day. in the circle and the surround- Kevin Harvick, who led ing cast behind her. The airtight 100 laps, was second. Kens- defense committed no errors eth finished third with Carl through seven innings to mini- Edwards fourth. Jamie Mc- mize Toutle Lake's opportuni- Murray, the All-Star race ties to close the gap. winner last weekend at the Rolfe locked down a normal- track, was fifth. ly-potent Toutle Lake offense by Kurt Busch's attempt at striking out four while allowing motorsports history ended just four hits without a walk. with 129 laps to go when "It feels really good because he blew an engine. Busch they are an excellent hitting finished sixth in the India- team," Rolfe said. "I tip my hat napolis 500, but could not to them every time we play them complete the 600 and be- and I knew I had to bring my A- come just the second racer game. I was able to stay consis- ever — Tony Stewart was tent with my pitching so it was Brandon Hansen / [email protected] the first — to navigate all easier to — as coach (Sean) Brat- Adna’s Samantha Rolfe delivers a pitch during the irst inning of the District 4 2B Softball Tournament championship game 1,100 miles on auto racing's tain would say — keep my zen." against Toutle Lake Saturday at Fort Borst Park in Centralia. biggest weekend. Rolfe was just as crucial to Harvick had won two of her team's offense as she was in a picture-perfect double play. "It's unbelievable," Raschke "When we do the little things the past three 600s and led in the circle. Rolfe drove in 3 A quick fly out subsequently said. "I am so proud of every one right, we're hard to beat," Ra- 100 laps this time. He fell runs with a 2 for 3 effort at the marked the third and final out of these girls. It was a team ef- schke said. "People can't shut back in the latter stages as plate, including a 2-run homer to crown the Lady Pirates as dis- fort from infield to outfield and down just two players on this he dealt with car problems to highlight a 4-run seventh in- trict champions. from top to bottom of our bat- team. They have to be able to and could not get back to ning that put the game on ice. Rolfe was cited teamwork as ting order. It wasn't just the de- shut down the whole team. the front. Rolfe's shot was preceded by the reason for the dominant play. fense that won it, and it wasn't We've wanted the girls to just "We needed a 700-mile an RBI double from Jimenez. "We have amazing chemistry just the pitching that won it. It keep climbing so we're the best race to get back to where Freshman outfielder Katelyn so it was just another day out on was the whole team that won it, we can be for state, and that's we needed to be," Harvick Pine immediately followed Rolfe the field for us," Rolfe said. "We even the dugout. I've got eight what this team is doing. It all said. with another homer for the final just went out there and played girls in there that never see the comes down to who wants it Brad Keselowski held run of the game. our game. I was very proud of us field and to see them on the more and if we can keep this the lead and appeared to The Pirates finished the ball- for proving that we can do this fence from the first pitch to the team together and focused, we'll have out-pitted Johnson's game in a fashion that summed and we are good enough to play very last was huge." be tough." No. 48 group with a final up their overall defensive perfor- with these kind of teams and With a No. 1 seed in the Adna will take on Colfax at stop 55 laps from the end. mance. A ground ball scooped beat them." State 2B tournament — open- 11 a.m. on Friday in the tour- But a vibration in the Pen- up by Rolfe found it's way to first Pirate coach Mike Raschke ing Friday at Yakima's Gateway nament's first round. Toutle ske machine sent Keselows- base and swiftly back to fresh- shared a similar sentiment about Complex — Adna is in an ideal Lake, on the opposite half of the ki back to the pits and a lap man catcher Lili Glover to tag his team and what he called a position for a title run to bring bracket, will face Tacoma Bap- down. out a streaking Joelle Iverson sweet victory. the golden glove home. tist at 9 a.m. in its opener. Saturday’s 2B Softball Timberwolves Finish Third By The Chronicle nings, allowing just one hit. The District 4 2B Softball "She did a great job," MWP Tournament wrapped up Satur- coach Darin Allen said. "And we day at Fort Borst Park with the started hitting the ball well, and same five teams as last season we move on." headed off to Yakima. Napavine, meanwhile, went Morton-White Pass defeated on to beat Onalaska in the fifth- Onalaska, 10-1, in the consola- place game, putting the same tion semifinals, behind home five teams — Morton-White runs from Darian Atkinson, Pass, Napavine, Pe Ell, Adna and Ashley Kelly and Sharon Hazen, Toutle Lake — from District 4 in with Christine Robbins working the state tournament as last sea- all seven innings in the circle. son. The win secured a spot in Morton-White Pass (17-7) the State 2B Softball Tourna- ment for the Timberwolves, who will take on La Conner at 9 a.m. also moved into the third/fourth on Friday in the first round of place game against Pe Ell, which the State 2B Softball Tourna- had beaten Napavine 9-5 in the ment. Toutle Lake will face Ta- other consolation semifinal. coma Baptist at 9 a.m., Napavine The bats kept working for takes on Northwest Christian MWP, with Kelly knocking two (Colbert) at 11 a.m., Pe Ell plays Brandon Hansen / [email protected] home runs and Hazen and At- Asotin at 11 a.m. and Adna fac- Morton-White Pass’ Christine Robbins delivers a pitch during District 4 2B Softball Tournament action against Pe Ell Saturday kinson, again, homering. es Colfax at 11 a.m. in the first at Fort Borst Park in Centralia. Robbins tossed a one-hit game as MWP won, 12-0. Robbins pitched all five in- round. SPORTS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 • Sports 5

Soccer College Baseball UW to Face Georgia Tech First in Mississippi Regional By Adam Jude The Huskies, picked to The Seattle Times finish 10th in the Pac-12, ended up in second place The Washington baseball with 21-9 conference record. team has gotten a lot of mile- age out of "The Underdog" Meggs reiterated he was dis- card this season. appointed the Huskies, de- Being overlooked Sunday spite being ranked in the top as a host for an NCAA re- 10 for much of the season, gional tournament was the weren't awarded one of 16 latest in a series of perceived bids to host a regional. slights. But that disappointment Monday, the Huskies re- from Sunday evening turned ceived their postseason bid — to elation Monday morning and, yes, they will be racking when the Huskies, watching up some more miles. the NCAA selection show on In the postseason for the television during a breakfast first time since 2004 — Tim Lincecum's freshman year — gathering at their new team the Huskies (39-15) open a facility, leapt from their seats four-team, double-elimina- when "Washington" finally tion regional in Oxford, Miss., flashed on the screen. against Georgia Tech (36-25) When they get to Oxford, at 1 p.m. Pacific time Friday. "We might have the most fun "We've played with a chip you've ever seen a college on our shoulder all year, so By Anne-Marie Sorvin / The Associated Press baseball team have," senior maybe this will be good for outfielder Brian Wolfe said. Seattle Sounders midfielder , left, heads the ball as Vancouver Whitecaps forward Erik Hurtado closes in during us, to get those feelings going Saturday’s game in Vancouver, B.C. The match ended in a 2-2 draw. The UW baseball pro- again," said UW coach Lind- gram has never advanced to say Meggs. "We feel like we the College World Series in have a lot to prove, and we'll Omaha, Neb., but that's the Sounders’ Evans Puts Aside US Team Snub ride that." Host Mississippi (41-18) goal for these Huskies. By Don Ruiz the 56th minute, when central his situation, and he decided it "If we play the game the The Tacoma News Tribune defender Djimi Traore suffered a wasn’t so bad. will play Jacksonville State (36-25) in the second game way we've played it all year hamstring injury. “It’s not a sob story,” Evans long, we could end up in VANCOUVER, B.C. — Brad In that way, Evans’ time at said. “Nobody passed away. It’s Friday evening. Broadcasts of Omaha. We could do that," Evans returned to action with the USA national camp had been part of the game. My career’s not both games are scheduled to Meggs said. Seattle Sounders FC on Saturday, useful because he had trained in over, I’m not leaving the game. I be available on ESPN3.com. just two days after learning that the central defense over the last just signed a new three-year con- he hadn’t made the week. tract. I’ve got nothing else but to national team’s World Cup roster. “I thought Brad did all right,” be proud of what I accomplished Local Bowling Standings Coach Sigi Schmid said. “We needed him. and what we continue to do here Schmid said he consulted Ev- We brought him in the middle in Seattle.” ans about his of the back, and then when we More from the Evans inter- readiness to re- were down 2-1, I felt Brad could view is available at blog.thenew- give us a little more offense, so stribune.com/soccer. turn. And after Notes that conversa- I moved him over to right back : Central defender Chad tion, Schmid and moved Jalil (Anibaba) into Marshall was a late scratch Satur- had some con- the middle.” day after he woke up with an ill- cerns about Evans said he received no ness. ... Schmid had no immedi- Evans’ legs, but none about his explanation from USA coach ate prognosis for either Marshall emotions. Jurgen Klinsmann about why he or Traore. He said forward Chad “I think initially your feel- wasn’t part of the 23-man ros- Barrett had been subbed out in ings are put this in the past and ter that will head to next the 79th minute due to cramps. I want to run around for 90 min- month. He admitted it was “a ... Saturday marked the 200th ca- utes and get after it,” Evans said. tough decision to swallow.” reer MLS game for Sounders for- “Maybe sometimes that’s not the However, Evans stressed that ward Kenny Cooper. ... Sounders smartest thing, so we took the he is happy for Seattle team- FC will continue MLS Reserve smart approach. I told him I felt mates and De- League action at 11 a.m. Monday good and was ready to go.” Andre Yedlin, and everyone else at . ... The Sound- Evans was on the bench at the who made the USA’s final roster. ers return to MLS play Saturday start of the Sounders’ 2-2 draw He also said he used a long when Real Salt Lake visits Cen- at Vancouver. But he came on in airport layover to think about turyLink Field. Late Goal Lets Sounders Escape With a Draw By Don Ruiz The Tacoma News Tribune VANCOUVER, B.C. — Se- attle Sounders FC survived what coach Sigi Schmid called “a com- edy of errors” Saturday, at least well enough to salvage a 2-2 draw with the Vancouver Whitecaps at BC Place. Seattle scored first on a Chad Barrett header and last on a pen- alty kick by Gonzalo Pineda. But in between were the kind of de- fensive lapses that show up on blooper reels. None more so than the goal that put the Whitecaps ahead in the 66th minute, when the Sounders followed a bad play with a horrendous one. It started when midfielder Darryl Dyck / The Associated Press Marco Pappa cleared at ball Seattle Sounders’ Chad Barrett, left, and Vancouver Whitecaps’ Kekuta Manneh, of backward and across his own Gambia, battle for the ball during the first half of an MLS soccer game in Vancouver, goal. No one was there, so goal- , Saturday. keeper Stefan Frei ran out of the penalty area, finally catching up “The moment that I put the right back to them. It’s frustrat- to the ball about a yard from the ball there I was thinking, ‘Well, ing when we gave up our goals touchline. There, he kicked it up how can I shoot it?’ ” Pineda said. and how we gave up our goals.” the pitch, where Vancouver mid- “So then I said, ‘This is the time.’ It took Vancouver only three fielder Gershon Koffie chested it He didn’t expect that.” minutes to equalize. Their goal to his feet and lofted a 40-yard It turned out to be the final came on the individual bril- shot into the open goal before goal in a flowing game that both liance of Erik Hurtado, who Frei could get back into position. teams thought they could have lost Osvaldo Alonso on a sharp “If they beat you, they gotta won. cut into the box, and then liter- beat you on something good,” The Sounders especially re- ally faked Djimi Traore and the Schmid said. “But that whole se- membered the shot Obafemi recovering Alonso off their feet, quence was a comedy of errors.” Martins put off the post in the before finally sending a sharp Frei didn’t deny it. 84th minute. Meanwhile, Van- shot just under the crossbar. “As I come out I realize that couver regretted getting only “We’ve got to stay on our feet I’m pretty far out from the goal,” two of its 24 shots into the net. there,” Schmid said. “So we leave he said. “If I just kick it out then The Whitecaps started like our feet; we actually tackle our they might do a quick throw in, they were shot out of a can- own player. So now I think you so the smart thing would have non. Over the first 10 minutes been just to bang it off of the side they took eight shots before the stay on your feet and you have a board and be sure that the ball Sounders managed their first. better chance of doing well there. ends up back on the field so they However, Seattle was the first And just the timing of it, com- have to wait. Stupid play on my to get one to go in. That came in ing four or five minutes after our part, and then it was a good fin- the 36th minute, when Barrett goal. That’s something that we ish. I’m thankful that my guys headed in a cross from Kenny have got to be a little more reso- were there to clean it up.” Cooper. lute about that.” That cleanup came in the “(The Whitecaps) came out The result kept Seattle (8-3-2) 81st minute, when reserve Cam wanting it,” Barrett said. “You atop the MLS standings, while Weaver drew a foul in the pen- could tell they were really going. Vancouver (4-2-5) extended its alty area. Pineda walked to the I don’t think I touched the ball unbeaten streak to five games. penalty spot and there decided for the first 10 minutes. ... We Seattle also went to 0-0-2 in on a soft chip behind Vancouver came back and were able to score Cascadia Cup play, while the keeper David Ousted. the goal — and then we gave it Whitecaps are 0-0-1. Sports 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 SPORTS

Scoreboard Sports Briefs Preps Texas 26 25 .510 5 5. Edwin Encarnacion, TOR 41 14. Greg Biffle 351 Seattle 25 25 .500 5½ 15. Kyle Larson 344 Clippers’ Alvin Gentry to Interview Local Results Houston 20 32 .385 11½ Wins 16. Austin Dillon 334 Baseball 1. Mark Buehrle, TOR 8 17. Paul Menard 328 With Lakers For Head Coaching Job At Yelm National League 2. Masahiro Tanaka, NYY 7 18. 324 SEAHAWKS 10, BEARCATS 3 2. Rick Porcello, DET 7 19. AJ Allmendinger 314 By Broderick Tuner W.F. West 000 110 1 — 3 7 4 EAST DIV. W L Pct GB 4. Felix Hernandez, SEA 6 20. 312 Anacortes 012 232 x — 10 13 3 28 22 .560 — Times (MCT) Batteries: W.F. West — Elijah John- 27 25 .519 2 4. James Shields, KC 6 21. Clint Bowyer 309 son, Garrett Yarter (4), Anthony Painter Washington 25 26 .490 3½ 22. 303 Add Los Angeles Clippers associate head coach (5) and Tanner Gueller; Anacortes — 22 26 .458 5 Earned Run Average 23. Tony Stewart 299 Medalia and Johnson 24. Jamie McMurray 286 Alvin Gentry to the list of candidates the Los Angeles New York 22 28 .440 6 1. Sonny Gray, OAK 1.99 2. Mark Buehrle, TOR 2.16 25. Casey Mears 282 CENTRAL Lakers plan to interview for their head coaching va- At Chehalis 3. Masahiro Tanaka, NYY 2.29 26. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 258 Milwaukee 30 22 .577 — cancy, the Los Angeles Times has learned. TIGERS 2, EAGLES 1 4. Yu Darvish, TEX 2.35 27. Martin Truex Jr. 251 Klahowya 000 000 1 — 1 4 3 St. Louis 28 23 .549 1½ After talking with Lakers General Manager Mitch 5. Dallas Keuchel, HOU 2.55 28. Danica Patrick 218 Centralia 000 001 1 — 2 4 2 Pittsburgh 23 27 .460 6 29. Justin Allgaier 205 Kupchak by phone Friday, Gentry has an inter- Batteries: Klahowya — Jacob Gotch- 22 27 .449 6½ all and Matt Page; Centralia — Zach National League 30. Michael Annett 179 view with Kupchak and Vice President Jim Buss on 19 30 .388 9½ Wood, Ty Housden (7) and Jacob Batting Average 31. 164 Wednesday to talk about replacing Mike D’Antoni, WEST Monohon 1. Troy Tulowitzki, COL .378 32. David Gilliland 160 according to several NBA executives who were not au- San Francisco 32 19 .627 — 2. Yasiel Puig, LAD .345 33. 152 At Chehalis Los Angeles 28 24 .538 4½ 3. Chase Utley, PHI .337 34. 150 thorized to speak publicly on the matter. THUNDERBIRDS 8, TIGERS 1 Colorado 27 24 .529 5 4. Jonathan Lucroy, MIL .330 35. Reed Sorenson 145 Centralia 000 000 1 — 1 4 6 San Diego 23 29 .442 9½ 5. Charlie Blackmon, COL .323 36. 133 Tumwater 310 103 x — 8 4 2 Arizona 21 32 .396 12 Batteries: Centralia — Christian Pe- 37. 84 ters, Ty Housden (6) and Jacob Mono- Home Runs 38. 82 Sports on the Air hon; Tumwater — Elijah Hill Saturday’s Results 1. Giancarlo Stanton, MIA 15 39. Michael McDowell 63 Cleveland 9, at 0 2. Troy Tulowitzki, COL 14 40. Parker Kligerman 54 TUESDAY, May 27 At Adna at 5, Oakland 2 3. Justin Upton, ATL 13 41. 44 GOLF TIGERS 7, JAGUARS 6 NY Yankees 4, at Chicago White Sox 3 4. Adrian Gonzalez, LAD 12 42. 37 Tri-Cities Pr. 002 040 0 — 6 5 2 at Philadelphia 5, LA Dodgers 3 5. Mark Reynolds, MIL 11 43. 29 2 p.m. Napavine 100 420 x — 7 8 1 Texas 12, at Detroit 2 44. Jeff Burton 27 TGC — NCAA, Division I playoffs, match play Batteries: Tri-Cities Prep — Giest, Colorado 3, at Atlanta 1 Nelson (6) and Harlow; Napavine — Runs Batted In 45. 23 semifinals, at Hutchinson, Kan. Doughty, Jensen Lindsay (6) and Brady Arizona 3, at NY Mets 2 1. Giancarlo Stanton, MIA 49 46. David Stremme 22 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Woodrum at Miami 2, Milwaukee 1 2. Yasiel Puig, LAD 38 47. Timmy Hill 11 4 p.m. at Tampa Bay 6, Boston 5 3. Adrian Gonzalez, LAD 36 48. Dave Blaney 4 At Adna Kansas City 7, at LA Angels 4 3. Troy Tulowitzki, COL 36 ESPN — Boston at Atlanta TIGERS 8, DUCKS 2 St. Louis 6, at Cincinnati 3 5. Paul Goldschmidt, ARI 34 7 p.m. Napavine 400 030 1 — 8 9 1 at Pittsburgh 3, Washington 2 Toutle Lake 000 000 2 — 2 3 3 ESPN — Cincinnati at L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco 2, Minnesota 1 Batteries: Napavine — Wyatt Stanley Wins GOLF ROOT — LA Angels vs. Seattle Houston 9, at Seattle 4 1. Adam Wainwright, STL 8 and Brady Woodrum; Toutle Lake — Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial Anderson, Miller (5) and Brown Chicago Cubs 3, at San Diego 2 2. Zack Greinke, LAD 7 NBA BASKETBALL Professional Golf Association 3. Kyle Lohse, MIL 6 6 p.m. May 22-25, 2014 At Anacortes Sunday’s Results 3. Madison Bumgarner, SF 6 Colonial CC - Ft. Worth, TX | Par 70 TNT — Playoffs, conference finals, game 4, San PIRATES 11, BRAVES 8 at Toronto 3, Oakland 1 3. Alfredo Simon, CIN 6 Antonio at Oklahoma City Adna 127 001 0 — 11 16 5 Texas 12, at Detroit 4 7,204 Yards La Conner 340 010 0 — 8 4 0 Purse: $6,400,0002013 Champion: Milwaukee 7, at Miami 1 Earned Run Average NHL HOCKEY Batteries: Adna — Spencer Boo Weekley Arizona 2, at NY Mets 1 1. Adam Wainwright, STL 1.67 5 p.m. Burdick and Jack Herring, Bryce Mc- (Scott wins 3-hole playoff) at Baltimore 4, Cleveland 2 2. Jeff Samardzija, CHC 1.68 Closkey (2); La Conner — Stewart, Han- Golfer Score NBCSN — Playoffs, conference finals, N.Y. son (7) and James LA Dodgers 6, at Philadelphia 0 3. Julio Teheran, ATL 1.77 1. Adam Scott -9 Rangers at Washington 5, at Pittsburgh 2 4. Johnny Cueto, CIN 1.83 2. Jason Dufner -9 SOCCER At Anacortes at Tampa Bay 8, Boston 5 5. Zack Greinke, LAD 2.01 T3. Nicholas Thompson -8 PIRATES 3, TIMBERWOLVES 2 NY Yankees 7, at Chicago White Sox 1 4:45 p.m. T3. Freddie Jacobson -8 Adna 001 010 1 — 3 8 1 at LA Angels 4, Kansas City 3 ESPN2 — MLS, New York at Kansas City T5. David Lingmerth -7 Morton-WP 001 000 1 — 2 4 0 at San Francisco 8, Minnesota 1 Batteries: Adna — Jack Herring and T5. Ryan Palmer -7 6:55 p.m. Houston 4, at Seattle 1 Bryce McCloskey; Morton-White Pass NHL T5. Brendon Todd -7 at San Diego 4, Chicago Cubs 3 ESPN2 — Men’s national teams, exhibition, — Zach Counts and Brian Reynolds T5. John Senden -7 at NY Mets 4, Arizona 2 Standings United States vs. Azerbaijan, at San Francisco T5. David Toms -7 At Anacortes at Atlanta 7, Colorado 0 CONFERENCE FINALS TENNIS T10. Michael Thompson -6 TIMBERWOLVES 9, LIONS 0 St. Louis 4, at Cincinnati 0 (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) 2 a.m. Conrete 000 000 0 — 0 2 6 EASTERN CONFERENCE T10. Jimmy Walker -6 T10. Kevin Chappell -6 ESPN2 — French Open, second round, at Paris Morton-WP 011 034 0 — 9 13 1 Monday’s Results N.Y. Rangers 3, Montreal 1 Batteries: MWP — Rylon Kolb and T10. Hideki Matsuyama -6 Boston 8, at Atlanta 6 Saturday, May 17: N.Y. Rangers 7, Brian Reynolds; Concrete — Swenson T14. Dustin Johnson -5 Pittsburgh 5, at NY Mets 3 Montreal 2 WEDNESDAY, May 28 and Fichter T14. Graham Delaet -5 Miami 3, at Washington 2 Monday, May 19: NY Rangers 3, GOLF Montreal 1 T14. Jordan Spieth -5 At Castle Rock at Chicago White Sox 6, Cleveland 2 T14. Bo Van Pelt -5 2 p.m. FALCONS 10, BEAVERS 5 Baltimore 7, at Milwaukee 6 Thursday, May 22: Montreal 3, NY T14. Brian Davis -5 Tenino 101 201 0 — 5 4 3 Texas 7, at Minnesota 2 Rangers 2, OT TGC — NCAA, Division I playoffs, match play T14. Chris Kirk -5 S. Whidbey 001 234 x — 10 8 3 NY Yankees 6, at St. Louis 4 Sunday, May 25: NY Rangers 3, Mon- finals, at Hutchinson, Kan. T14. Chris Stroud -5 Batteries: Tenino — Kolton McKit- at Oakland 10, Detroit 0 treal 2, OT 2 a.m. rick, Cody Cleeves (4), Zeb Chamber- T21. David Hearn -4 Chicago Cubs 8, at San Francisco 4 Tuesday, May 27: NY Rangers at lain (5) and Zack Chamberlain; South T21. Bud Cauley -4 TGC — European PGA Tour, Nordea Masters, at Seattle 5, LA Angels 1 Montreal, 5 p.m. Whidbey — Patterson and Piehler T21. George McNeill -4 first round, part I, at Malmo, at Philadelphia 9, Colorado 0 x-Thursday, May 29: Montreal at NY Rangers, 5 p.m. T21. Bill Haas -4 Softball at Toronto 10, Tampa Bay 5 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL T21. Ben Martin -4 At Centralia Houston 9, at Kansas City 2 x-Saturday, May 31: NY Rangers at 10 a.m. T21. Russell Knox -4 PIRATES 7, DUCKS 1 at LA Dodgers 4, Cincinnati 3 Montreal, 5 p.m. T21. William McGirt -4 MLB — Regional coverage, Pittsburgh at N.Y. Adna 010 200 4 — 7 11 0 at Arizona 7, San Diego 5 Toutle Lake 000 100 0 — 1 4 3 WESTERN CONFERENCE T21. Tim Clark -4 Mets or Houston at Kansas City (2 p.m.) Batteries: Adna — Samantha Rolfe T21. Marc Leishman -4 Tuesday’s Games Los Angeles 3, Chicago 1 5 p.m. and Lili Glover; Toutle Lake — Rae T30. Harris English -3 Boston at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Sunday, May 18: Chicago 3, Los An- MLB — Regional coverage, N.Y. Yankees at St. Curry, Ashlynn Dean (7) and Joelle T30. Brendon de Jonge -3 Miami at Washington, 4 p.m. geles 1 Iverson T30. Billy Hurley III -3 Louis or Atlanta at Boston (7 p.m.) Colorado at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Wednesday, May 21: Los Angeles 6, T30. Martin Laird -3 7 p.m. At Centralia Tampa Bay at Toronto, 4 p.m. Chicago 2 T30. Brice Garnett -3 GRIZZLIES 5, WARRIORS 2 Pittsburgh at NY Mets, 4 p.m. Saturday, May 24: Los Angeles 4, ROOT — LA Angels vs. Seattle T30. Heath Slocum -3 Rochester 000 011 0 — 2 4 6 Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 5 p.m. Chicago 3 NBA BASKETBALL Hoquiam 110 210 0 — 5 6 0 T30. Brian Harman -3 Houston at Kansas City, 5 p.m. Monday, May 26: Los Angeles 5, Chi- 5:30 p.m. Batteries: Rochester — Jessica Gla- T30. Chad Campbell -3 Baltimore at Milwaukee, 5 p.m. cago 2 cken and Jaelin Lancaster; Hoquiam — T38. Jerry Kelly -2 ESPN — Playoffs, conference finals, game 5, Texas at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Wednesday, May 28: Los Angeles at Bailee Bradley and Kylie Stewart T38. Josh Teater -2 Miami at Indiana NY Yankees at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. Chicago, 5 p.m. T38. Robert Streb -2 San Diego at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. x-Friday, May 30: Chicago at Los An- NHL HOCKEY T38. Michael Putnam -2 Cincinnati at LA Dodgers, 7 p.m. geles, 6 p.m. 5 p.m. x-Sunday, June 1: Los Angeles at Chi- T38. Danny Lee -2 Local Detroit at Oakland, 7 p.m. NBCSN — Playoffs, conference finals, Los An- cago, 5 p.m. T38. Louis Oosthuizen -2 LA Angels at Seattle, 7 p.m. Local Bowling T38. Robert Allenby -2 geles at Chicago May. 18-May 24 Results Chi. Cubs at San Francisco, 7:15 p.m. T45. Jeff Overton -1 SOCCER FAIRWAY LANES T45. Matt Jones -1 Top 5 Special Rec (2 games) 6:25 p.m. Wednesday’s Games T45. Brandt Snedeker -1 1. Charlie Mitchell 286; 2. Joy Watson Pittsburgh at NY Mets, 10 a.m. NASCAR ESPN2 — Men’s national teams, exhibition, 285; 3. Travis M. 276; 4. Daryl Hull 266; T45. Andrew Loupe -1 Houston at Kansas City, 11 a.m. Results T45. Trevor Immelman -1 Mexico vs. Israel, at Mexico City 5. Jeremy Cunning 253; High Game: Chi. Cubs at San Francisco, 12:45 p.m. Charlie Mitchell 170 NASCAR Spring Cup Series T45. Bryce Molder -1 TENNIS Miami at Washington, 4 p.m. At Charlotte T51. Daniel Summerhays E 2 a.m. Colorado at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Sunday, May 25 T51. Jim Furyk E Tampa Bay at Toronto, 4 p.m. FINAL RESULTS T51. Ken Duke E ESPN2 — French Open, second round, at Paris NBA Atlanta at Boston, 4 p.m. Driver Make T51. Charley Hoffman E Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 5 p.m. 1. Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet T51. Aaron Baddeley E Thursday, May 29 National Basketball Association Baltimore at Milwaukee, 5 p.m. 2. Kevin Harvick Chevrolet T51. Tim Wilkinson E COLLEGE SOFTBALL NBA Playoff Glance Texas at Minnesota, 5 p.m. 3. Matt Kenseth Toyota T57. Brian Gay +1 All Times PDT NY Yankees at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. 4. Carl Edwards Ford T57. Justin Leonard +1 9 a.m. CONFERENCE FINALS San Diego at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. 5. Jamie McMurray Chevrolet T57. J.J. Henry +1 ESPN — World Series, game 1, teams TBD, at (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Detroit at Oakland, 7 p.m. 6. Brian Vickers Toyota EASTERN CONFERENCE T60. Ricky Barnes +2 Oklahoma City LA Angels at Seattle, 7:10 p.m. 7. Jeff Gordon Chevrolet Miami 3, Indiana 1 T60. Steve Flesch +2 Cincinnati at LA Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. 11:30 a.m. Sunday, May 18: Indiana 107, Miami 8. Paul Menard Chevrolet T60. Hunter Mahan +2 ESPN — World Series, game 2, teams TBD, at 96 9. Kyle Busch Toyota T63. Tim Herron +3 Thursday’s Games Tuesday, May 20: Miami 87, Indiana 10. Brad Keselowski Ford T63. Jeff Curl +3 Oklahoma City 83 Texas at Minnesota, 10 a.m. 11. Aric Almirola Ford T63. John Rollins +3 4 p.m. Saturday, May 24: Miami 99, Indiana Detroit at Oakland, 12:35 p.m. 12. Joey Logano Ford T63. Sean O’Hair +3 ESPN2 — World Series, game 3, teams TBD, at 87 NY Mets at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. 13. Tony Stewart Chevrolet T63. Cameron Tringale +3 Oklahoma City Monday, May 26: Miami 102, Indi- Kansas City at Toronto, 4 p.m. 14. Kasey Kahne Chevrolet T68. Scott Langley +4 ana 90 Atlanta at Boston, 4 p.m. 15. Ryan Newman Chevrolet T68. Kyle Stanley +4 6:30 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 28: Miami at In- Baltimore at Houston, 5 p.m. 16. Austin Dillon Chevrolet T70. Davis Love III +5 ESPN2 — World Series, game 4, teams TBD, at diana, 5:30 p.m. San Francisco at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. 17. Clint Bowyer Toyota T70. Jonathan Byrd +5 x-Friday, May 30: Indiana at Miami, Oklahoma City Cincinnati at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. 18. Kyle Larson Chevrolet T70. Vijay Singh +5 5:30 p.m. GOLF LA Angels at Seattle, 7:10 p.m. 19. Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 73. Zach Johnson +6 x-Sunday, June 1: Miami at Indiana, Pittsburgh at LA Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. 20. Trevor Bayne Ford 6 a.m. 5:30 p.m. 74. Briny Baird +7 21. Greg Biffle Ford 75. Boo Weekley +8 TGC — European PGA Tour, Nordea Masters, Friday’s Games WESTERN CONFERENCE 22. Toyota first round, part II, at Malmo, Sweden San Antonio 2, Oklahoma City 1 Colorado at Cleveland, 4 p.m. 23. AJ Allmendinger Chevrolet PGA Tour Money Leaders 11:30 a.m. Minnesota at NY Yankees, 4 p.m. Monday, May 19: San Antonio 122, 24. Casey Mears Chevrolet As of May 27 TGC — PGA Tour, The Memorial Tournament, Oklahoma City 105 Texas at Washington, 4 p.m. 25. Martin Truex Jr. Chevrolet Golfer Amount Wednesday, May 21: San Antonio NY Mets at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. 26. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford 1. Jimmy Walker $4,568,474 first round, at , Ohio 112, Oklahoma City 77 Kansas City at Toronto, 4 p.m. 27. Cole Whitt Toyota 2. Bubba Watson $4,557,079 2 a.m. Sunday, May 25: Oklahoma City 106, Tampa Bay at Boston, 4:10 p.m. 28. Michael Annett Chevrolet 3. Dustin Johnson $3,586,012 TGC — European PGA Tour, Nordea Masters, San Antonio 97 Atlanta at Miami, 4:10 p.m. 29. Marcos Ambrose Ford 4. Matt Kuchar $3,464,302 second round, part I, at Malmo, Sweden Tuesday, May 27: San Antonio at San Diego at Chi. White Sox, 5:10 p.m. 30. Michael McDowell Ford 5. Jordan Spieth $3,201,826 Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. 31. David Ragan Ford 6. Patrick Reed $3,048,426 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL x-Thursday, May 29: Oklahoma City Baltimore at Houston, 5:10 p.m. 32. Brian Scott Chevrolet 7. Jim Furyk $2,839,637 10 a.m. at San Antonio, 6 p.m. San Francisco at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. 33. Alex Bowman Toyota 8. Harris English $2,579,772 x-Saturday, May 31: San Antonio at MLB — Texas at Minnesota Cincinnati at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. 34. Joe Nemechek Toyota Oklahoma City, 5:30 p.m. 9. Chris Kirk $2,408,892 4 p.m. LA Angels at Oakland, 7 p.m. 35. Blake Koch Ford x-Monday, June 2: Oklahoma City at 10. Martin Kaymer $2,318,601 MLB — Regional coverage, Atlanta at Boston San Antonio, 6 p.m. Detroit at Seattle, 7:10 p.m. 36. Chevrolet 11. Zach Johnson $2,300,586 Pittsburgh at LA Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. 37. Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 12. Ryan Moore $2,255,980 or N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia 38. Ryan Truex Toyota 13. Webb Simpson $2,128,755 7 p.m. League Leaders 39. Danica Patrick Chevrolet 14. Matt Every $2,112,825 ROOT — LA Angels vs. Seattle MLB American League 40. Kurt Busch Chevrolet 15. Brendon Todd $2,092,863 Batting Average 41. Josh Wise Chevrolet 16. Sergio Garcia $2,057,866 NBA BASKETBALL Standings 1. Victor Martinez, DET .341 42. Reed Sorenson Chevrolet 17. Gary Woodland $2,029,248 6 p.m. All Times PST 2. Robinson Cano, SEA .332 43. David Gilliland Ford 18. Jason Day $2,010,360 American League TNT — Playoffs, conference finals, game 5, 3. Ian Kinsler, DET .330 19. Graham Delaet $1,978,796 EAST DIV. W L Pct GB Oklahoma City at San Antonio (if necessary) 4. Jose Altuve, HOU .326 Sprint Cup Standings 20. John Senden $1,946,444 Toronto 30 22 .577 — NHL HOCKEY 5. Melky Cabrera, TOR .322 Driver Points 21. Kevin Stadler $1,931,351 New York 27 23 .540 2 1. Joey Logano 378 22. J.B. Holmes $1,865,322 5 p.m. Baltimore 26 23 .531 2½ Home Runs 2. Kevin Harvick 345 23. Rory McIlroy $1,787,840 NBCSN — Playoffs, conference finals, Mon- Tampa Bay 23 29 .442 7 1. Nelson Cruz, BAL 16 3. Jeff Gordon 432 24. Will MacKenzie $1,782,250 treal at N.Y. Rangers (if necessary) Boston 21 29 .420 8 2. Edwin Encarnacion, TOR 15 4. Kyle Busch 408 25. Matt Jones $1,750,931 TENNIS CENTRAL 2. Jose Abreu, CHW 15 5. Carl Edwards 408 26. Kevin Na $1,734,628 Detroit 28 19 .596 — 4. Albert Pujols, LAA 14 6. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 394 27. Charles Howell III $1,724,465 2 a.m. Chicago 26 27 .491 5 5. David Ortiz, BOS 12 7. Jimmie Johnson 388 28. Seung-yul Noh $1,703,172 ESPN2 — French Open, third round, at Paris Kansas City 24 26 .480 5½ 8. Brad Keselowski 361 29. Justin Rose $1,696,179 3 p.m. Minnesota 23 25 .479 5½ Runs Batted In 9. Denny Hamlin 340 30. Keegan Bradley $1,694,859 NBCSN — AMA Motocross, at Sacramento, Cleveland 24 28 .462 6½ 1. Nelson Cruz, BAL 45 10. Kurt Busch 215 31. Brian Stuard $1,653,918 WEST 2. Miguel Cabrera, DET 42 11. Matt Kenseth 421 32. Russell Henley $1,635,327 Calif. Oakland 31 20 .608 — 2. Brandon Moss, OAK 42 12. Brian Vickers 365 33. Ryan Palmer $1,552,411 Los Angeles 28 22 .560 2½ 2. Jose Abreu, CHW 42 13. Ryan Newman 361 34. Rickie Fowler $1,514,610 2014Inside_BB_09_Layout 1 5/26/14 5:34 PM Page 1

SPORTS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 • Sports 7

Compiled by Charlie Miller. Follow Charlie on Twitter @AthlonCharlie or email him at [email protected]

1. Giants Cool in the clutch: .281 with runners in scoring position, 2 outs. San Francisco at St. Louis 2. A’s Won last 10 when scoring three or more runs. Two of the best teams in the National •Typically, lineup stability is a sign of offen- 3. Brewers Lost seven of last 12. League will face off in a four-game series this sive success. Managers who find a lineup that weekend. Heading into the week, the Giants works will stick with it, as teams on a roll rarely 4. Tigers Best road record in the majors (14-7). own the best record in baseball. The Cardi- change things up. That isn’t the case with the 5. Rockies 6-16 when Rox fail to score six runs on the road. nals have won nine of their last 11 and are Milwaukee Brewers this season. Manager Ron 6. Braves 334 ABs with runners in scoring position is fewest in majors. within a game and a half of the NL Central- Roenicke has used 42 different lineups in 51 7. Dodgers Batting just .217 vs. lefties. leading Brewers. Last season, the Redbirds games this season, including a new lineup in 8. Angels One of three teams to draw 1,000,000 fans this season. were off the charts with a .300 batting aver- each of the last 19 games through Sunday. 9. Blue Jays Best offense in the majors in May. age with runners in scoring position. This sea- •Twice last week players went deep in a 10. Cardinals Won nine of 11 with only three home runs. son, both the Cardinals and the Giants are game four times. No, it didn’t happen in the batting just .242 in that situation. The pitching majors, but Arizona farmhand Jon Griffin hit 11. Yankees David Robertson on pace for 33 saves as Mo’s replacement. matchup to watch will be Friday night when four bombs on May 21 for Double-A Mobile at 12. Orioles Zach Britton becoming an effective closer for Baltimore. San Francisco ace Madison Bumgarner will the Tennessee Smokies. The clouts were part of 13. Marlins Best home record in majors (20-8); worst home attendance in NL. face Cy Young candidate Adam Wainwright. six in three games for the slugging first base- 14. Nationals Nats batting .245, opponents .251. Atlanta at Miami man. Not to be outdone, Mike Ford of the 15. Royals Cleanup hitters have just 11 extra-base hits this season. Charleston RiverDogs in the Yankees’ system, Runs will be difficult to come by this 16. Rangers Not Beltre, not Fielder, but Alex Rios is team’s best weapon. hit four homers against the Hickory Crawdads weekend in Miami. This series features two 17. Mariners Robinson Cano hitting .323, rest of team .222. on May 25. Only four times in the 2000s has a of the best pitching staffs and offenses that major leaguer hit four home runs in a single 18. White Sox Team batting .261 with Jose Abreu, .262 without him. are struggling. Few expect the Marlins to stay game. Josh Hamilton of the Rangers was the 19. Rays Scuffling Rays happy to see struggling Red Sox come to town. in the NL East race deep into the season, but last to accomplish it on May 8, 2012. 20. Padres Cleanup hitters batting .174 with five homers and 21 RBIs. Miami has an opportunity for a huge confi- • Catcher Drew Butera of the Dodgers 21. Mets Lost eight of 11 since reaching .500 mark May 13. dence boost with a series win over the first- place Braves. caught Josh Beckett’s no-hitter last Sunday 22. Reds Bats are slumping, fewest runs in majors in May. against the Phillies. The backup backstop was 23. Phillies No-hit on Sunday, held clinic for kids on Monday. Hmm. Los Angeles Angels at Oakland also behind the plate in 2011 when Francisco The surging Angels expect to have Josh 24. Twins Managed just four runs and hit .158 in three games in San Fran. Liriano, then of Minnesota, pitched a no-no Hamilton back this week when they face the against the White Sox. Liriano and Beckett are 25. Indians Won three extra-inning games last week. division-leading A’s in Oakland. Hamilton was scheduled to face each other on Friday. 26. Pirates Begin tough 10-game road trip this week. batting .444 through the first eight games • There are 11 clubs with playoff droughts 27. Diamondbacks On the upswing, 11-9 so far in May. when he was sidelined with a thumb injury. of four years or longer. Kansas City fans have 28. Red Sox Losers of 10 in a row for the first time since 1994. Oakland has terrific starting pitching led by suffered the longest having not reached the 29. Astros Youngster George Springer gives fans glimpse of future. ace Sonny Gray, who will pitch on Sunday. The postseason since winning the World Series in 30. Cubs -12 wins/losses; -6 runs/runs allowed. Oakland bullpen has been suspect, as has the 1985. As MLB passes the quarter pole of the Nelson Cruz Athlon Sports Angels’ relief corps. season, it appears that the Blue Jays, Rockies and Angels may have the best shot at ending the suffering. Team (last playoff appearance) Drought Kansas City Royals (1985) 28 Toronto Blue Jays (1993) 20 2017 National League All-Stars Seattle Mariners (2001) 12 Miami Marlins (2003) 10 Houston Astros (2005) 8 While the 2014 All-Star Game is still Michael Wacha, SP, St. Louis New York Mets (2006) 7 more than a month away, we’ll take a Having supplanted fellow All- San Diego Padres (2006) 7 quick glimpse into the future and proj- Star Adam Wainwright as the Chicago Cubs (2008) 5 ect the 2017 All-Star lineups. Which Redbirds’ ace, Wacha is the Chicago White Sox (2008) 5 prospects will continue to rise and be- manager’s choice to start for the (2009) 4 come the best players in their leagues? senior circuit. Los Angeles Angels (2009) 4 Which veterans will continue to per- form at high standards? This week, the Reserves National League. Next week, the AL. Buster Posey, C, San Francisco Nelson Cruz, Baltimore With the emergence of first base- The Orioles have been rewarded for their pa- Yasiel Puig, RF, man Brandon Belt, and Posey’s tience in waiting until the eve of spring train- In 2017, Puig will be exasperating his insistence to stay behind the ing to sign the free agent Cruz. Last week, the plate, we’ll assume that Posey outfielder/DH hit safely in all seven games and manager with concentration lapses had at least one run and one RBI in all but one and annoying old-timers with some of will be catching in 2017. contest. He batted .455 with a 1.672 OPS and his antics, but he’ll also be one of the Christian Bethancourt, C, Atlanta led the AL with nine runs scored. most productive players in the NL. The Atlanta rising star will make Oscar Taveras, LF, St. Louis the team as a third catcher. Anthony Rizzo, 1B, Chicago Cubs Athlon Sports While fans in St. Louis are getting Kris Bryant (left) of the Cubs will play in his first All-Star Game in 2017. By that time, Andrew Dallas Keuchel, Houston restless, the Redbirds are resisting the Surrounded by a better lineup — McCutchen of Pittsburgh will be an All-Star veteran. In his first start last week, Keuchel came within temptation of rushing him to the bigs. which should be the case by 2017 one out of a complete game in Houston’s 5-2 Freddie Freeman, 1B, Atlanta — the first baseman will hit con- Gregory Polanco, OF, Pittsburgh Clayton Kershaw, SP, L.A. Dodgers win at Los Angeles. He improved in his next The Braves’ first baseman will be sistently at an All-Star level. start, going one out farther, defeating the The future star for Pittsburgh should There will likely be another Cy squarely in his prime in 2017 and best Paul Goldschmidt, 1B, Arizona Mariners 4-1 at Seattle. In the complete game make his debut with the big club later Young award in Kershaw’s future among NL first sackers. Goldschmidt and Freeman may finish he allowed just four hits, no walks and no this summer. prior to 2017. Giancarlo Stanton, DH, Miami 1-2 in MVP voting before this decade earned runs. Jean Segura, SS, Milwaukee Matt Harvey, SP, New York Mets He’ll be an All-Star for many seasons is over. The Brewers’ shortstop will be the Harvey joins Fernandez and Wain- regardless which logo is on his chest. Starlin Castro, 2B, Chicago Brew Crew’s sole representative on wright as Tommy John surgery sur- Jonathan Lucroy, Milwaukee Andrew McCutchen, CF, Pittsburgh Moved off of short by Javier Baez, Castro will struggle at third before the 2017 team. vivors turned All-Stars. The Brewers’ catcher has been the team’s The 2013 MVP will likely win an- Jose Fernandez, SP, Miami Gerrit Cole, SP, Pittsburgh most consistent performer all season. That other trophy before 2017. finding a home at second. The Marlins will handle Fernandez The Pirates’ ace will have multiple was certainly true last week. Of his 14 hits, Anthony Rendon, 3B, Washington Nolan Arenado, 3B, Colorado eight were doubles. Now hitting in the No. 3 Arenado is already the best defensive with care in 2015-16 after Tommy All-Star appearances by 2017. The 2011 first-round pick continues John surgery this year. Miami will ease Alex Wood, SP, Atlanta spot in the Brewers’ order, Lucroy raised his to develop, and with Ryan Zimmer- third baseman in the league. By 2017, average last week from .299 to .331, now him back into the rotation in 2017 as The lefthander continues to pitch well man injured, he’s been given the op- he may be the best offensive third base- third in the National League. his first huge post-surgery season. for one of the best teams in the NL. portunity to play third base everyday. man as well. But Rendon will get more Adam Wainwright, SP, St. Louis Madison Bumgarner, SP, San Francisco Alex Guerrero, 2B, Los Angeles Dodgers respect from the fans at the ballot box. The veteran will have won multiple The lefthander form North Carolina The native of Cuba has followed in Kris Bryant, 3B, Chicago Cubs Adam Wainwright, St. Louis Cy Young awards by 2017 and have will be only 27 at the 2017 Classic. Yasiel Puig’s footsteps in Los Angeles. The poster child for the Cubs’ re- Just when you think Wainwright can’t get any an All-Star start to accompany his Craig Kimbrel, CL, Atlanta He’ll start at least one All-Star Game building program, Bryant will not dis- better, he tosses a one-hit shutout over the Di- multiple World Series rings. The Braves’ closer will still be among amondbacks with no walks. Then follows that Andrelton Simmons, SS, Atlanta appoint fans on the North Side. Max Fried, SP, San Diego the best in 2017. performance with eight shutout innings at The defensive whiz will be a main- Aledmys Diaz, SS, St. Louis Cincinnati, giving up five hits, one walk and In his first experience outside of The newest ace of the San Diego Trevor Rosenthal, CL, St. Louis stay at short for the NL as he wows Padres will be the teams’ only repre- ties his career-best with 12 strikeouts fans with his glove and cannon arm. Cuba, Diaz is hitting better than .300 The Cardinals will toy with moving sentative. Rosenthal into the rotation, but clos- Devin Mesoraco, C, Cincinnati and slugging over .500 at Double-A Cole Hamels, SP, Philadelphia ing suits him better than starting. The Reds traded reliable catcher Ryan Springfield. The Cardinals insist he is As is the case with Fried, Hamels Aroldis Chapman, CL, Cincinnati Mike Montgomery, SP, Tampa Bay their shortstop of the very near future. Hanigan over the winter to make makes the team because every team Lest you think the pitching pipeline is drying up room for their rising star. Mesoraco Justin Upton, OF, Atlanta The Cuban Missile will still be firing for Tampa Bay, lefthander Mike Montgomery The 2017 All-Star Game will be must be represented. The last-place darts well into the latter part of this has responded well with a .377 bat- Phillies will have few candidates. has found success at Triple-A. He’s 6-1 with a ting average and 1.099 OPS. played a month before Upton turns 30. decade. 3.47 ERA and 1.158 WHIP.

May 28, 1951 8 Wins for Mark Buehrle of the Toronto Blue Jays. The veteran lefthander captured his eighth win Last Sunday, Derek Jeter col- Rising star Willie Mays of the New York Giants ends on May 22, the earliest date in his career he has won eight games. The long-time hurler for the lected four hits in a game for the an 0-12 skid to start his career with his first home Chicago White Sox earned his eighth win in 2002 on May 24, the only other time he has won eight 45th time in his career. Can you run. It comes off Hall of Famer Warren Spahn of the games in the first two months. On eight different occasions his eighth win has come in July, name the only active player with more 4- Boston Braves. The clout represents the only run off once in August. hit games? of Spahn as the Braves win 4-1. 441 Hits for the Yankees this season, also the number of hits for Yankees’ opponents this June 1, 1975 season. Nolan Ryan of the California Angels stymies the Bal- 6 Starts this season by Adam Wainwright of the St. Louis Cardinals in which he timore Orioles for the fourth no-hitter of his career. has pitched seven innings or more and allowed no runs. The Angels get nine hits, but manage just one run, 1 Walk drawn by St. Louis farmhand Aledmys Diaz in 80 plate appearances at which came in the third inning. Ryan walks four and Double-A Springfield.

strikes out nine, improving his record to 9-3 on the

On-base percentage for Cincinnati leadoff hitters this season, last in the majors. career. Fame of Hall his in games 4-hit 50 owns

season. .281

TRIVIA ANSWER: .415 On-base percentage for Cincinnati leadoff hitters last season, best in the majors. Suzuki Ichiro teammate Jeter’s Athlon Sports

Advertise here and be seen. Call today 807-8203 Sports 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 SPORTS

MLB Mariners Back to .500 With 5-1 Win Over Angels YOUNG GUN: Newcomer Works Into Sixth Inning of Mariners’ Memorial Day Win Over Angels By Ryan Divish The Seattle Times It’s difficult to imagine where the Mariners’ season would be if not for the late acquisition of Chris Young. But with the continued injury issues and individual struggles in the starting rotation, it’s safe to say Seattle wouldn’t be sitting at .500 with a 25-25 record with- out him. Young gave the Mariners an- other solid start at Safeco Field on a Monday afternoon, taking advantage of early run support and carrying a no-hitter into the sixth inning in Seattle’s 5-1 vic- tory over the Los Angeles Angels. Young threw 6 ⅓ innings, al- lowing just one run on two hits, while striking out five and walk- ing three to improve to 4-2. He continued his success at spacious Safeco Field — a place he’s never lost. In four starts in Seattle this season, he’s allowed just five runs in 27⅓ innings pitched for a 1.65 earned-run average, while opposing hitters are mustering just a .141 batting average against him. Elaine Thompson / The Associated Press “I was trying to find an adjec- Seattle Mariners closer Fernando Rodney, right, is embraced by catcher Mike Zunino after the team beat the Los Angeles Angels on Monday in Seattle. The Mariners tive for this guy today,” manager won 5-1. Lloyd McClendon said. “What a godsend for this rotation. He’s Young carried a no-hitter Robinson Cano. The free-agent just been tremendous.” into the sixth inning. The only acquisition delivered, singling up Young signed with the Mari- base runner over the first five the middle to score Jones and al- ners with on March 27 with four innings was a leadoff walk to low Saunders to advance to third. days remaining in spring train- David Freese in the second. But Justin Smoak’s hard ground ball ing. At the time, Hisashi Iwa- a lineout double play to end the to third allowed Saunders to trot kuma and Taijuan Walker were inning kept Young facing the recovering from injuries, Roenis home to make it 2-0. minimum. The Mariners pushed it to Elias was an untested and un- “I had a nice rhythm,” Young proved commodity and veter- 5-0 in the second inning. Dustin said. “I just tried to be aggressive Ackley singled, stole second and ans Randy Wolf and Scott Baker in the strike zone early.” then advanced on Nick Frank- both opted out of their minor- With one out in the sixth, league contracts. It left the Mari- Kole Calhoun lined a single up lin’s soft ground ball. With ners in desperate need of an arm the middle over to break up the two outs, it looked like Skaggs for the rotation. Two days after no-hit bid. would get out of the inning un- Wolf left over a contract dispute, “I try not to get caught up in scathed. But shortstop Erick Ay- the Mariners signed Young, who results early,” Young said. “They bar couldn’t come up with Jones’ was released by Washington two hit some balls hard early that soft grounder, committing an er- days before. could have easily been hits. I was ror and allowing Ackley to score. He had been a one-time all- aware of it, but you don’t expect The error became more costly star, but he also had missed most to throw no-hitters.” when Saunders hammered a tri- of the 2013 season after having Young’s only run allowed ple to right to score Jones. Cano a complicated shoulder surgery came in the seventh inning. He followed with another single up that required part of one of his gave up a leadoff home run to the middle to score Saunders. In- ribs to be removed. Albert Pujols. Young faced two stead of a 2-0 game, the Angels “I really didn’t know what to more batters in the inning, get- were down 5-0. expect,” McClendon said. “It’s ting Freese to pop out and walk- “We’d rather be lucky than just unbelievable. And he con- ing Raul Ibanez. good sometimes,” McClendon tinues to make me say, ‘it’s un- McClendon called on the said. “We got a break with those believable.’ As for expectations, bullpen to finish the game. first two hits of the game and I really didn’t have many. And Elaine Thompson / The Associated Press Charlie Furbush got two outs having Robby come up to the if I did, I’d say he’s far exceeded in the seventh, Danny Farquhar Seattle starting pitcher Chris Young throws against the Los Angeles Angels in the plate.” them.” sixth inning of a baseball game Monday in Seattle. The Mariners won 5-1. pitched a perfect eighth and Fer- There were a few less than nando Rodney had a drama-free To Skaggs’ credit, he didn’t stellar starts, but Young has been ninth inning to secure the win. allow another run and just one steady while others have strug- Of course, the situation has “I try not evaluate it at this All of the offense came in the more hit — Cano’s third of the gled. worked out well for Young. There point,” he said. “I love it here. I’m first two innings against Angels’ day — before being lifted after “He’s filled a huge hole for us,” was a chance he might have had grateful for the opportunity and starter Tyler Skaggs. the seventh inning. said catcher Mike Zunino said. to start the season in the minor I want to continue to make the James Jones led off the game Cano finished 3 for 4 and “He’s come in and given us great leagues if the Mariners hadn’t most of it. The Mariners took a with an infield single and Mi- upped his batting average to .332 starts every fifth day. He’s done have come calling with a $1.5 chance on me and I want to re- chael Saunders followed with a — second best in the American such a good job for us. “ million contract. ward them for it.” bunt single to put runners on for League. NFL Seahawks Head Into Phase Three of the Offseason with 10 Workout Sessions By Bob Condotta were part of a seven-man rota- Carpenter shows why the team season. But the battle for back- year of just what they have in The Seattle Times tion up front that allowed the drafted him in the first round up spots became especially in- Michael, who gained 79 yards Seahawks to mix and match in 2011? teresting when Seattle traded for on 18 carries in three games RENTON — The suits and personnel liberally based on Carpenter has started 26 Terrelle Pryor and then added in 2013. More refined block- ties from the visit last week to the scheme of the opponent, as regular-season games the past former Washington star Keith ing and mastery of the running the White House will be re- well as keep each player fresh three years, and also started the Price in the offseason to join scheme will be particularly key placed by more familiar garb through the Super Bowl. No Se- Super Bowl at left guard. So, he the other two holdovers from for Michael this year. this week for the Seattle Se- attle defensive lineman played has been far from a bust. Still, 2013 — veteran backup Tarva- 5) Who returns punts? ahawks. more than 57 percent of the the perception is that this is ris Jackson and third-teamer B.J. This has been a question Tuesday, the Seahawks begin snaps a year ago. something of a make-or-break Daniels. Seattle almost certainly since , who was Phase Three of their offseason That might not be pos- year for Carpenter, especially won't keep more than three for ninth in the NFL last year at 11.5 program with the first of 10 Or- sible this year with just four of after the Seahawks declined to the season (though Price and yards per attempt, signed with ganized Training Activities the those seven back — ends Mi- pick up the option on his con- Daniels would each have prac- Detroit as a free agent. Free agen- team will conduct between now chael Bennett and tract for 2015. The Seahawks tice-squad eligibility) and went cy and the draft didn't produce and June 12. and tackles said that was largely a proce- through training camp last sea- an obvious replacement, though The noncontact workouts, and Tony McDaniel — each dural, salary-cap decision, and son with just three. And for now, there are plenty of candidates. in fact, will be the first time the of whom might be called on to the team can still re-sign him the team insists Pryor is a quar- Richard Sherman was listed team has been able to go 11-on- play more. later if it wants. But Seattle let terback only. as the backup punt returner at 11, offense vs. defense, since the The hope, though, is that veteran Paul McQuistan, who 4) Is the end of the season, and re- Super Bowl. And as such, the some younger players, such as shared the left guard spot with ready to take the next step? ceiver could be workouts mark another signifi- , Jesse Williams, Carpenter last season, depart Michael, the team's first among other veterans to also cant step on the road toward Jordan Hill and Benson May- via free agency, and that job is choice in the 2013 draft at get a look. Second-round choice attempting to make another owa, will progress to a point now Carpenter's to take con- No.62 overall, played sparingly Paul Richardson figures also to White House trip necessary a where they can also play some trol of for good. A positive early last season behind Marshawn be a candidate, though he didn't year from now. meaningful snaps without a real sign is that offensive line coach Lynch and at tail- really do it at Colorado. The As OTAs begin, then, here's drop off. said during the draft back. He was one of a handful player on the roster with the a look at five key questions fac- Also of intrigue is how much that Carpenter is in shape and of rookies who were essentially most NFL history of returning ing the Seahawks: the team will use healthy and that he is expecting redshirted a year ago, the team punts is free-agent signee Phil- 1) Can the team replicate as a rush end. The team's first- a big year from the former Ala- not really needing them in 2013. lip Adams, who had 37 returns the defensive line rotation it round choice in 2012, he played bama star. But with Lynch's contract run- since 2010 while playing for the had a year ago without the primarily strongside linebacker 3) How will the backup ning for just two more seasons Raiders and the 49ers. Another departed , Chris in 2013. But there have been quarterback battle shake out? (and set for a $9 million cap hit free-agent cornerback, A.J. Jef- Clemons and Clinton McDon- hints he could be used more as Seattle has as secure of a in 2015 when the team might be ferson, was one of the nation's ald? a rush end this year to help pick starting quarterback situation looking for some salary cap re- top kickoff returners while at Those three, all either re- up some of the slack there. as there is in the NFL with Rus- lief), the Seahawks will need to Fresno State and could also get leased or lost via free agency, 2) Is this the year James sell Wilson back for his third begin getting a good sense this a look. The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday May 27, 2014

Life editor: Chantel Wilson Phone number: 807-8213 Life e-mail: [email protected]

How to Make Your Own Poptails GIN ZING Add the Pimm’s and ginger beer or lemonade. Let cool completely. Makes 6 pops Divide the strawberries, apple slices Cocktails2 ½ cups chopped cucumber and mint leaves among six frozen ice 1 cup elderflower cordial pop molds. Pour over the Pimm’s mix- ½ cup gin ture and insert the sticks. Place the cucumber and elderflower Place molds in the freezer for 6 hours, cordial in a food processor or blender until frozen solid. and blitz until smooth. Per pop: 76 calories (1 percent from fat), Pass the mixture through a fine mesh trace total fat (no saturated fat), no cholesterol, on a Stick strainer into a bowl and stir half of the 14 grams carbohydrates, trace protein, 3 milli- pulp in the sieve back into the cucum- grams sodium, trace dietary fiber. ber and elderflower juice. Mix in the gin By Jill Wendholt Silva until well combined, then pour into six THE JALISCITO The Kansas City Star frozen ice pop molds. Place the molds in the freezer. Let set This is one of Laura Fyfe’s favorite In the wake of the craft cocktail movement, could poptails be far behind? for 3 hours, give it a good stir, insert the recipes. “Poptails” (Octopus, $12.99) is the clever name for tipsy adult ice pops in- sticks and allow to freeze solid (about 4 Makes 6 slushes fused with a jigger of booze. The cookbook that recently crossed my desk is the more hours) or leave overnight. ½ cup super-fine sugar brainchild of London-based food stylist Laura Fyfe. Per pop: 160 calories (10 percent from fat), Grated zest of 1 lime I was initially intrigued by the idea of freezing alcohol, something that can trace total fat (no saturated fat), no cholesterol, 1 ⅓ cup lime juice (3 to 4 limes) be difficult to do. “You have to go easy,” Fyfe told me in a telephone interview gram carbohydrates, trace protein, 2 milligrams 2 cups chopped watermelon regarding the amount used to spike each recipe, “but they still have quite a sodium, trace dietary fiber. 6 tablespoons tequila kick.” 2 tablespoons Grand Marnier Indeed, it’s a delicate ratio. Still, Fyfe’s ice pops are saucy even though they Put the sugar and lime zest in a sauce- have only 4 tablespoons of alcohol per recipe. “Freezing dulls the flavors of the Pomegranate, Vanilla and Vodka pan with 1 cup water. Place over low heat. ingredient so the alcohol tastes stronger than if you mixed it in a glass,” she Makes 4 pops Gently bring to a simmer, allowing the said. ½ vanilla bean sugar to dissolve. Let bubble gently for 5 I made three flavors: the super-green cucumber Gin Zing, a tasty Pome- ¼ cup super-fine sugar minutes, remove from the heat and pour granate, Vanilla and Vodka and an English Summer Cup with slices of apple, 1½ cups pomegranate juice in the lime juice. strawberry and mint. The recipes are simple, delicious and complex, just the 4 tablespoons vodka Place the chopped watermelon in a sort of layering of flavors we demand from our favorite cocktails. Scrape the seeds from the vanilla food processor or blender, add the lime But I must admit that during our photo shoot, more than half of the ice bean and place pod and seeds in a sauce- syrup, tequila, Grand Marnier and agave pops refused to unmold when pulled by the handle. When life gives you lem- pan with the sugar and ½ cup water. nectar and blitz until well combined. ons, make slush instead. When I asked Fyfe about my dilemma, she said she Slowly bring to a boil, allowing the sugar Pour into a freezer-safe container, always uses traditional wooden sticks. to dissolve. Let simmer gently for 5 min- cover, and place in the freezer for up to 6 On closer inspection I realized every frosty photo in Fyfe’s book was styled utes, then remove from the heat. Allow hours, giving it a good stir every 2 hours. with traditional wooden sticks. A quick Google search revealed all kinds of to infuse for 30 minutes. Remove from the freezer, blitz in a food poptails out there — check out endlesssimmer.com and Pin- Remove the vanilla pod from the processor or blender, and pour into terest — and all of them on wooden sticks. (And I thought syrup and mix in the pomegranate juice glasses. Allow to thaw a little (approxi- that was strictly an aesthetic choice, since none of the recipes and vodka. Pour into four frozen ice pop mately 10 minutes), then serve. specify wooden sticks over the plastic sticks that typically molds. Per slush: 136 calories (2 percent from fat), come with the molds sold at nearly every department store Place the molds in the freezer. Let set trace total fat (no saturated fat), no cholesterol, this time of year.) for 2 hours, insert the sticks and allow 24 grams carbohydrates, trace protein, 2 milli- “Wooden sticks are much better,” Fyfe told me, “because to freeze until completely solid (about 4 grams sodium, trace dietary fiber. they hold and offer a bit more friction.” more hours). She also advises dipping the molds in hot water to help Per pop: 135 calories (1 percent from fat), get just enough melt to loosen the ice pop. trace total fat (no saturated fat), no cholesterol, BEE’S KNEES Like Fyfe, plenty of folks are getting on the poptail 26 grams carbohydrates, trace protein, 11 milli- Makes 6 pops bandwagon as a novel way to beat the summer heat. Food grams sodium, no dietary fiber. 2 tablespoons honey & Wine Magazine’s July issue features Mojito-Water- 4 tablespoons whiskey melon Pops. Lindsay Laricks of Little Freshie, a Kansas 2 cups ginger beer ENGLISH SUMMER CUP Put the honey and whiskey into a City, Mo., area business that sells handcrafted sodas and Makes 6 pops all-natural snow cones, says she sees the trend. “I get re- bowl and, using a small whisk, mix to- ¼ cup superfine sugar gether until well combined. Gradually quests for it all the time,” she says. “It’s my number one 4 tablespoons Pimm’s gin-based li- question.” whisk in the ginger beer, making sure quor that everything is thoroughly blended. And remember: If your poptail fails, there’s no rea- 1 cup ginger beer (or lemonade) son not to slurp it up as a snow cone or slush instead. Pour into six ice pop molds and place ¼ cup sliced strawberries in the freezer. After 2 hours, give each ¼ cup sliced apples one a good stir. Freeze for another 2 18 small mint leaves hours, stir and insert the sticks. Return For a do-it-yourself frozen treat, Place the sugar and ½ cup water in a to the freezer and freeze for another 2 saucepan and slowly bring to a boil, al- hours, until completely solid. you can use these Zipzicle pouches lowing the sugar to dissolve. Let simmer Per pop: 76 calories (none from fat), no fat, gently for 5 minutes, then remove from no cholesterol, 15 grams carbohydrates, no pro- to freeze your creations in. the heat. tein, 11 milligrams sodium, trace dietary fiber. For a Grilling Crowd

Cooking over an open fire is a staple of warm-weather entertaining. Tossing some steaks or vegetables on the grill for a family dinner is usually an easy undertaking. But even the craftiest grill cooks may need to apply some tricks of the trade when grilling food for the masses. Go with hot dogs. Hot dogs are usually precooked and will heat up quickly on the grill. Their small size means they don’t take up much space, and several can fit on the grill at one time.

please see GRILLING, page Life 2 Best of Lewis County Chronline.com Highlighting Reader's Picks for the Best of Lewis County Best of Lewis County

Nominations Begin May 28, 2014 CH522141cw.db Nominate your picks at bestoflc.chronline.com Nominations end on June 15, 2014. Life 2 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday May 27, 2014 LIFE

transfer the meat to an aluminum pan Make steak sandwiches. Grilling for a crowd Grilling when it is nearly done and put it on the is easier when you grill to impart that smoky flavor. Add Make the food go further with less Continued from Life 1 more seasonings to the meat and keep work by cooking ribeye steaks or flank plan with foods that are it warm until guests are ready to dine. steaks on the grill. Slice up the meat precooked or heat up Rent or borrow a second grill. and serve it over garlic bread with melted jack or mozzarella cheese. The quickly. This way you Unless you are working with Precook the food. result will be savory, and such sand- can enjoy more time industrial-sized or commercial You can put bratwurst, hot dogs wiches don’t take much time to create. with your guests. equipment, a standard grill may not or burgers on the grill to partially have enough surface area to cook a lot cook them before the party, then store of food at once. Find a friend or family them in aluminum pans. When guests member who is willing to lend you his arrive, simply reheat the food to the or her grill. Having twice the room right temperature and they’ll be hot means you can cook twice the amount and ready in no time. of food. You also may be able to rent a larger grill for an event. Cook a large piece of meat. Opt for pulled pork. Rather than individual burgers or chicken , think about Start the basics of pulled pork in a barbecuing an entire pig or a roast. In slow cooker so that the meat cooks for many cases, the meat can be set up on several hours under low heat. If you the barbecue early in the morning. By have a smoker, you can opt to use that, the time the evening arrives, but smokers may take longer to cook the meat and require more mainte- nance. If you opt for the slow cooker,

The Thrill of the Grill 6 New Books to Make Your Summer Cookouts Sizzle

By Susan Selasky Best tip: Create organic PERFECT SMOKED CHICKEN vor is achieved. Cool and store with garlic mayo, a lettuce leaf, shaped pizza to fit the heat in an airtight container in the a tomato slice, two patties, as Detroit Free Press Serves: 3 to 4 / Preparation source and be sure to brush refrigerator for up to 10 days. much guacamole as you like, a time: 15 minutes / Total time: It’s time to get your grill on. rolled-out dough generously “From Smokin’ in the Boys’ Room: slice of bacon (torn in half) and Memorial Day — the unofficial 3½ hours Southern Recipes from the Win- with oil to prevent it from stick- Ingredients: more garlic mayo. Serve imme- start of the summer grilling ing to the grates. ningest Woman in Barbecue” by diately. season — is creeping up fast. 1 whole chicken, about 4 Melissa Cookston (Andrews McMeel, pounds From “Weber’s Big Book of Burg- This year, there are tons of new 4 “Smoke & Spice: Cooking $22.99). Not tested. Nutrition infor- ers: The Ultimate Guide to Grilling 3 tablespoons Basic BBQ mation not available. grilling cookbooks out there to with Smoke, the Real Way to Backyard Classics” by Jamie Purvi- get you fired up. With recipes Rub (see below) ance (Sunset, $21.95). Barbecue” ½ cup BBQ Mother Sauce for steaks, pizzas, seafood and By Cheryl and Bill Jamison WEBER’S EXTREME BURGERS Not tested. Nutrition informa- more, there’s a book to suit just (see below) (Harvard Common Press, Serves: 4 / Preparation time: tion not available. about any taste. Here’s a sam- Directions: $24.95) 25 minutes / Total time: 45 pling to whet your appetite. In Prepare a smoker to cook at This is the updated version minutes addition to helpful tips, each 250 degrees with 2 to 3 chunks LAMB STICKS WITH LEMON of Cheryl and Bill Jamison’s Ingredients: features lots of mouth-watering of apple or cherry wood. OUZO BASTE 1994 grilling tome. The barbe- 4 slices thick-cut bacon recipes that’ll make your cook- Using kitchen shears, cut Makes: 24 / Preparation cue masters and James Beard the chicken in half lengthwise outs sizzle this summer. Cookbook award winners com- MAYO time: 40 minutes and remove excess skin and ⅓ cup mayonnaise Total time: 1 hour 1 pletely revised their book to in- fat. Sprinkle the rub over both “Weber’s Big Book of Burg- clude new recipes and full color 1 teaspoon minced garlic Ingredients: ers: The Ultimate Guide to sides of the chicken, then place photographs. There’s more than Kosher salt and freshly 24 fresh rosemary sprigs Grilling Backyard Classics” the chicken in the smoker to 450 recipes from all barbecue re- ground black pepper 2 boneless lamb loins By Jamie Purviance (Sunset, cook for 2 1/2 hours, or until gions of the U.S. The book is di- 2 tablespoons olive oil $21.95) the thigh registers 175 degrees GUACAMOLE vided into sections on beef, pork 1 lemon The thrust of this book is on a meat thermometer. Re- 2 ripe Hass avocados and poultry. The Jamisons also 6 plump cloves garlic, burgers — but not just plain move from the smoker and 1 tablespoon fresh lime cover the craft of true barbecue, minced old beef burgers. Weber grilling lightly brush with the sauce, juice ¼ cup ouzo guru Jaime Purviance covers offering tips on using smoke then place back in the smoker 2 teaspoons minced garlic and cooking foods low and slow. 3 tablespoons honey just about anything that can be for 10 minutes to tighten up the Kosher salt to taste shaped into a patty and served They also address the trend of sauce. Remove from the smok- BURGERS smoking foods indoors. 2 pounds ground chuck Freshly ground black pepper on a bun or a variety of breads er and serve. ½ cup crumbled feta cheese and rolls. There are recipes for Best tip: Have an area for — Ultimate BBQ Rub (80% lean) cutting, prepping and keep- 1 tablespoon Worcester- Directions: beef burgers, chicken and tur- (makes about 2 3/4 cups): In a Preheat the grill to high. ing supplies and sauces at hand clean coffee grinder place 1 cup shire sauce key burgers, shrimp burgers and Take one sprig of rosemary an array of veggie burgers. Hot when cooking outdoors. turbinado sugar and pulse un- ½ teaspoon smoked paprika ½ teaspoon onion powder and peel away about 2 to 3 dogs, sausages, brats and con- 5 til lightly powdered. Transfer “Smokin’ in the Boys’ Room: to a bowl. Add ½ cup granu- 8 thin slices cheddar cheese inches of leaves from the bot- diments also are featured along tom end. Reserve those leaves with drinks and side dishes. Southern Recipes from the Win- lated sugar, ½ cup kosher salt, 1 4 hamburger buns, split ningest Woman in Barbecue” tablespoon onion powder, 2 ta- 4 leaves Boston lettuce for the marinade. Repeat with remaining sprigs. Place sprigs 2 “Gastro Grilling: Fired-up By Melissa Cookston (An- blespoons granulated garlic, 1½ 1 ripe beefsteak tomato, cut in a dish and cover with warm Recipes to Grill Great Every- drews McMeel Publishing, teaspoons cayenne, 1 teaspoon crosswise into 4 slices about water for at least an hour. day Meals” $22.99) finely ground black pepper, 2 ⅓-inch thick By Ted Reader (Pintail, $25) Pitmaster and restaurateur teaspoons dry mustard, ¼ cup Directions: Slice the lamb into 1/2-inch- Ted Reader writes that he Melissa Cookston writes that light chili powder, 1 teaspoon In a skillet over medium thick medallions. You should uses the word “gastro” not to her “barbecue and cooking are ground cumin and ¼ cup plus heat, fry the bacon until crisp, get 24 total. Thread 1 medal- mean pretentious, but rather about building layered tastes 2 tablespoons paprika. Stir well. 10 to 12 minutes, turning occa- lion onto each bottom end of to refer to “the art and science that unite on flavored effect.” Store in an airtight container sionally. Drain on paper towels. the rosemary sprig. Repeat of good eating.” That mantra And her cookbook provides for up to 1 month. Whisk the mayo ingredi- with all medallions and rose- is reflected in the book’s reci- mouth-watering recipes from — BBQ Mother Sauce ents, including ¼ teaspoon salt mary sprigs. Brush each slice of pes (there are more than 135 of the Delta region that do just (makes about 6 cups): In a me- and ¼ teaspoon pepper. lamb on both sides with a little them). The recipes range from that. Cookston also includes her dium saucepan, heat ¼ cup In a small bowl, mash the olive oil and set aside. higher-end dishes like Planked competition recipes, plenty of canola oil over medium heat. avocado and add the lime juice To make the basting sauce, Smoked Burrata Cheese or Cin- tips, stories from the barbecue Add ¾ cup diced sweet onion and garlic. Mash the guaca- zest the lemon and place in a namon-Skewered Scallops with competition circuit and even a and sauté until translucent, mole ingredients, including ½ bowl. Cut the lemon in half Brown Sugar Basting Butter to recipe for cooking a whole hog. about 5 minutes. Turn the heat teaspoon salt and ¼ teaspoon and juice it. Add the juice to simpler ones for steak, chicken, Peppered throughout are reci- to low if the onion is cooking pepper. the zest. Coarsely chop the re- fish and side dishes. Reader pes for injection sauces, glazes, too fast — you don’t want it In a large bowl, mix the served rosemary leaves (about also offers directions and tips seasonings and rubs. caramelized or browned. As ground chuck with the Worces- 1 tablespoon) and add to the for cooking with charcoal and the onion is getting close, add 2 tershire sauce, 1 teaspoon salt, juice. gas grills as well as a variety of 6 “Fire & Smoke: A Pitmas- tablespoons minced garlic and ½ teaspoon pepper, the smoked In a small saucepan, heat wood. ter’s Secrets” cook until lightly golden, about paprika and onion powder, and the remaining oil over medium By Chris Lilly (Clarkson Pot- 2 minutes longer. Add 1 ½ cups then gently form 8 patties of heat. Add the garlic and sauté 1 3 “Pizza on the Grill: 100+ ter, $24.99) ketchup, ½ cup honey, 2 table- equal size, each about ½ -inch to 2 minutes, until tender. Re- Feisty Fire-Roasted Recipes for Chris Lilly set out to share spoons tomato paste, ¼ cup thick and a little wider than the move from the heat; add ouzo, Pizza & More” pitmaster techniques, tips and vinegar, 6 tablespoons packed buns. Refrigerate the patties honey and lemon-rosemary By Elizabeth Karmel & Bob recipes on a scale best suited dark brown sugar, ¼ cup until ready to grill. mixture. Season to taste with Blumer (Taunton Press, $17.95) for backyard grillers. Instead of Worcestershire, 2 teaspoons Prepare the grill for direct kosher salt and black pepper. Grilled pizza can be tricky, offering large-quantity recipes dry mustard, 1 teaspoon cay- cooking over medium-high Set aside. but authors Elizabeth Karmel like many pitmasters do, Lilly enne and 1 teaspoon freshly heat (400-500 degrees). Season the lamb sticks with and Bob Blumer provide all the provides recipes and guidance ground black pepper and stir Grill the patties over direct salt and black pepper. Grill know-how you need for suc- on achieving pitmaster-style well. Slowly add ½ cup wa- medium-high heat, with the lid with the lid open about 1 to 2 cess. They share tips on mak- barbecue using smaller cuts of ter until the sauce reaches the closed, until cooked to medium minutes on one side. Turn the ing dough, including a gluten- meat. There also are tips on how consistency you like. A slightly doneness (about 160 degrees), sticks over and baste with the free option, as well as how to to infuse flavor and get that per- thick consistency is best. Add 6 to 8 minutes, turning once. reserved ouzo lemon baste. Re- shape it for a gas grill versus a fectly charred skin. Included are about 3 tablespoons of the Ul- During the last 30 seconds to move from grill and garnish charcoal one (yes, there’s a dif- more than 100 recipes designed timate BBQ Rub, stir well, and 1 minute of grilling time, place with feta cheese. ference). Several recipes call for to teach people how to grill and taste. The sauce should have a a slice of cheese on each patty “Gastro Grilling: Fired-up Recipes adding nuts, garlic or herbs to smoke foods. Lilly also shares good, well-rounded flavor. Add to melt, and toast the buns, cut to Grill Great Everyday Meals” by the dough. Each recipe includes recipes for rubs, brines and more rub in 1-tablespoon in- side down, over direct heat. Ted Reader (Pintail, $25). Not tested. drinks to serve with the pizzas. glazes. crements until your desired fla- Build each burger on a bun Nutrition information not available. • Life 3 LIFE The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday May 27, 2014 Swipe Right for Ms. Right: The Rise of Dating Apps Barbara Ortutay as well as Tinder. IAC has a mar- AP Technology Writer ket value of just $5.2 billion, less than a third of Twitter’s. NEW YORK — So, a lady Jared Fliesler, general partner walks into a bar ... Wait, scratch at the venture capital fund Ma- that. A lady takes out her phone. trix Partners, believes compa- With a left swipe of her finger she dismisses Alex, 25, and Rob- nies have only just begun to tap ert, 48. She swipes right when a into people’s willingness to “pay” photo of James, 24, pops up. It’s to find love, a phenomenon that a match. James had swiped right extends well beyond dating apps. too. They chat, and make plans After all, he points out, singles to meet. They’re only 3 miles already spend lots of money on apart, after all. texts, calls, drinks, food, gifts Welcome to the new world and everything else associated of dating. As the near-constant with the dating game. use of smartphones proliferates “Despite it being a slightly and as people grow more com- difficult category in which to fortable with disclosing their raise venture funding, consum- location, a new class of mobile ers spend more time, money, dating applications is emerging and mental energy on trying to that spans a range as broad as find love than pretty much any- human desire itself. Millennials, thing in life, and the desire to be busy with school, jobs and so- loved is universal,” says Fliesler. cial lives, say the apps save time “So there will always be demand.” and let users filter out the unde- Creators of some of the more sirables, based on a few photos, ambitious apps say they have words and Facebook connec- tions. their sights set beyond romantic Unlike the dating websites matchmaking to what they call of yore, with endless profiles to “social discovery,” helping people browse and lengthy messages meet business connections, new to compose, newer apps offer a friends while traveling or mov- sense of immediacy and sim- ing to a new city. Tinder’s co- plicity that in many ways har- founder, Justin Mateen, insists kens back to the good old days that his creation is not a hookup of just walking up to a pretty app and wasn’t created to facili- stranger and making small talk. tate one-night stands. As with potential mates, Just don’t tell that to Tinder there’s an array to choose from. users. ChristianMingle will “find “I used Tinder before I found God’s match for you.” Hinge’s out about Hinge and it was promise hinges on its ability creep central, it was just weird,” to hook you up with friends of says Ellard, who lives outside friends. Coffee Meets Bagel, AP Photo / Charles Krupa Boston, runs a startup, works in meanwhile, will present you In this April 23 photo, Melissa Ellard poses showing her Hinge proile on her iPhone, in Foxborough, Mass. Ellard says she jewelry sales and has a fashion with just one potential mate at wouldn’t have gone on a date in the past six months were it not for Hinge, a dating app whose promise hinges on its ability radio segment. “I used it for a noon every day. Dattch, with to hook you up with friends of friends. few months but instead of look- a Pinterest-like interface, is for women seeking women. For ing for someone it was more like system avoids one of the more ous dating, and even finding ney in ‘How I Met Your Mother” a funny joke,” she says. men looking for men, there’s vexing problems of older-gen- new friends while traveling — hook up with people based on Grindr, Jack’d, Scruff, Boyahoy For some, though, Tinder eration dating websites, where are emerging as the use of older looks. But somehow taking that can be liberating. Platt says the and many more. Revealer will users, especially women, can dating websites is moving into same behavior and placing it in let you hear a person’s voice and app “equalizes gender power,” become inundated with mes- the mainstream. A recent Pew a digital context has a stigma at- and notes that he hears as many only show photos if you’re both tached to it. Even though in that sages from unwelcome suitors. study found that some 9 percent of his female students talk about interested. They also offer a generation of U.S. adults say they’ve used context you are more likely to it as male ones. The darling dating app du raised on Google and social me- dating sites or mobile dating get a better match, more infor- “Everyone has the same finger jour is Tinder, helped by its dia a chance to do background apps, up from 3 percent in 2008. mation, a person’s real name.” and ability to click,” he says. “It’s simple interface, a host of celeb- checks on potential mates. Of those who are “single and Even Facebook is getting rity users and a popularity boost “If you are in a bar and a guy looking,” the number jumps in on the action, from a more not like the guy buys the drink.” from Sochi Olympic athletes comes to talk to you, you are im- to 38 percent, according to the platonic angle. Last month, the Jenny Lewin, 21, a student who used it to hook up during mediately going to be freaked 2013 survey. The crowd trends world’s biggest online social net- of Platt’s who’s an intern at San the Winter Games. Francisco-based Coffee Meets Tinder, like many dating out and you don’t want to talk slightly younger, with the largest work launched a feature called to them because they are drunk,” group of users between 25 and “nearby friends,” which lets us- Bagel, thinks it’s inevitable that apps, requires people to log in as dating apps enter the main- using their Facebook profiles, says Melissa Ellard, 23, who uses 44. Clearly, many people have ers see which of their Facebook Hinge and says she wouldn’t grown comfortable with online friends are near them at any stream, they will become more which users say adds a certain accepted and people will be level of trust. Facebook, after all, have gone on a date in the past dating just as they have with given moment. six months were it not for the shopping, banking and booking Despite the growing accep- more open about using them. is built on knowing people’s real “I think a lot of people say identities. Your Tinder photos app. “When you are using the travel over the Internet. tance, the online and app-based that our generation doesn’t are your Facebook photos. Us- app, you get to look at their Cue the cries of “the lost art dating market is small. Research ers can reject or accept potential picture and see background of courtship” and the “rise of firm IBIS World estimates that know how to talk to people face mates with a left or right swipe information. You get to decide hookup culture” from older gen- the dating services industry to face, that we don’t know how of their finger. If both people whether you want to continue it erations, who harbor selective will hit $2.2 billion in revenue to communicate, which I totally swipe right on Tinder, the app or not. When I meet someone, I memories of the more analog this year. Internet conglomer- disagree with,” says Lewin. “I flashes “It’s a match!” and the want to know everything about hookup culture of their youth. ate IAC/InteractiveCorp has would be much more likely to pair can exchange messages. them before I go on a date with “There is a general digital the biggest chunk of the market click a ‘heart’ on Tinder or a Because messages can only them.” fear,” says Glenn Platt, profes- with a 27 percent share. The New ‘like’ on Coffee Meets Bagel to come from a person you’ve While they are still new, dat- sor of interactive media studies York company owns traditional say I am interested in a guy than “right-swiped,” unwanted ad- ing apps — used for anything at Miami University. “People are dating sites such as OKCupid, to walk up to him and say I am vances are filtered out. The from one-night-stands to seri- happy to giggle and watch Bar- Match.com and Chemistry.com, interested.” More Than Fun and Games: iPads Give Autistic Children a Voice By Lucia Benavides Rock Independent School Dis- amount of options, as opposed just as essential as wearing shoes iPads are playing an increas- Austin American-Statesman trict. She has a few students who to what you get with handwrit- when they leave the house. ing role in making that happen.” use iPads in her classroom. ten note cards.” The iPad can do more than The speech-generating devices AUSTIN, Texas — Jaime Zach’s Voice became an of- “With picture books and note just help children with autism can encourage children ages 5 Morin, 9, was diagnosed with ficial organization last May, cards, I got to decide what the communicate; sometimes it can to 8 to develop speaking skills, autism at age 2 and has been giving out their first iPad the kids said,” says Skala. “Now, the facilitate them to talk. Kaiser wrote. nonverbal his whole life. When month before. Their mission is child decides.” “Zach talks now,” Whitworth Jaime’s speech also expand- the therapy he was receiving at to provide iPads to children ages The application recom- says. “It started six months ago, ed since his first interaction school became insufficient, his 3 to 21 with autism spectrum mended by Zach’s Voice is Pro- about a year and a half after he with the iPad. He has started to mother, Lupe Santander, sent disorder who have communica- LoQuo2Go, which costs $219.99 repeat sentences and words after him to Big Sky Pediatric Ther- first got his iPad.” tion disabilities. They take iPad at the iTunes store. The orga- hearing them through the app. apy, where he went for speech According to a study done donations from the community, nization provides its recipients and occupational therapy once by Ann Kaiser, researcher at When he hears a certain pro- as well as money donations to with a gift card that covers the a week. It was there that they Vanderbilt Peabody College of nunciation, he tries to imitate it. use toward buying refurbished cost of whatever app they decide heard of Zach’s Voice, a non- Education and Human Devel- “It opens up their world, their iPads. profit group that provides iPads to download. Jaime chose Lamp opment in Tennessee, children voice can be heard,” Santander to autistic children with com- Zach’s Voice was founded by Words for Life, the program he with autism who are minimally says. “He’s not stuck in his little munication deficiencies. Abby Whitworth, who named had been using with his thera- verbal can “learn to speak later body anymore. It has given him “He can say exactly what the organization after her pist. than previously thought, and confidence.” he wants with the iPad,” says 7-year-old son. Whitworth was ProLoQuo2Go lets its users Santander. “When he first fig- inspired by Zach’s initial inter- add words to the program, such ured it out, the look on his face action with the iPad. Prior to the as family members’ names and Serving was priceless. We could finally Apple product, he used DynaVox, their favorite cartoon charac- LewiS County Pacific understand him, we didn’t have a heavy device that was hard to ters. Adding a button is instan- to say ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ when he program, Whitworth said. Be- taneous, and kids can customize pointed to things.” sides being clunky, it also drew them by taking a picture of the Prosthetics & Orthotics, llc attention to him. With an iPad, word they add. Because children with au- Compassionate Consultation • Locally Owned tism who are nonverbal cannot however, he blends in. “The kids start off using the talk, the thoughts occupying “They’re the coolest kids in app to communicate about the their heads are unable to come school,” says Skala. “The iPad things they love,” says Whit- •Artiicial Limbs • Knee Braces out — that’s where the iPad gives them a social status.” worth. “It’s rewarding and mo- • Leg Braces • Arch Supports comes in. Through the applica- A particular incident at the tivates them to use the program.” tion of their choice, the children grocery store prompted Whit- Zach’s Voice works with • Diabetic Shoes can form sentences by putting worth to spread the positive ef- speech-language therapists at • Repairs & Adjustments together words, which come in fects of the iPad to other fami- different schools to find families the form of buttons and a pic- lies with nonverbal kids in the who would benefit from the pro- • Home Or Ofice Visits ture to match the word. Then, community. While shopping, gram. they play it back for others to she saw an autistic child walk- Parents must promise to use hear. The iPad becomes their ing around with note cards, the iPad strictly for the benefit (360) 330-1602 voice. which he used to communicate. of the autistic child, and no oth- “It facilitates their under- The number of words available er apps are allowed to be down- 1720 Cooks Hill Rd. standing of the world around through this approach, however, loaded. The idea is that the iPad Centralia, Wa Raymond Frieszell, MS, CPO them,” says Danielle Skala, is limited. is to be used as a means to help Licensed Prosthetist/Orthotist functional communication “The iPad lets kids use all the kid communicate and for no Ofice Hours by Appointment classroom teacher at Forest the words they want,” says other purpose. It becomes part MEDICARE • VA • DSHS • L & I • ALL INSURANCES North Elementary in the Round Whitworth. “It’s an unlimited of the child’s everyday activity, CH520384cd.cg Life 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 LIFE

Find answers to the puzzles here on Sudoku Puzzle One Puzzle Two on page Life 7.

Crossword

Celebrity Cipher Today’s clue: N equals Y

“DWTHZS WG ST WZXVCEHZHTL CT MWIH ...

W ZSPH IWMZG LYSL W BCKMJ MWPH LC YSEH

GHHT BYHT W BSG S NCKTR ZST.”

— IVSTDCWG LVKIISKL

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “Americans must honor the brave men and women who gave their lives for the protection of this nation.” — Dan Lipinski © 2014 by NEA, Inc.

Lewis County History of — est. 1845 — Miss Burbee Plans are empty and whereas the pop- were arrested and the wounded door. Deputies said the burglars $1,406 was donated to the city of School Opening ulation is usually about 400, it Greek taken to the hospital. The would have gained little if they Centralia for a security system n 1886, a select school was has dwindled down to 150 with arrested men gave their names were successful. The safe con- for the historic Borst home. Ibeing opened by Miss Ida a school attendance of 22. as Antonio Gelach, Orojio tained personal papers and a Carrie Johnson, recreation Burbee in the east part of Che- “The temporary state of in- Mounca and Frank Visso, and small amount of money.” supervisor, said the home had halis. She planned to charge one activity is not an indication of the name of the Greek who was A similar attempt was made been recently toured by more dollar per month tuition. Mendota’s approaching death, wounded is Gatiano Sessa. at the Randle Tavern with tools than 300 school children. but is rather a short dull spell “The riot occurred at the cor- stolen from Cowlitz Veneer Co. which is experienced annually ner of Fourth and McFadden However, that safe was wheeled at this season of the year. The and all of the men engaged are out of the building and cut open Mill Pond Remembered Mrs. Griffith Rammed by Cow population of the town is usu- employed on the construction near the Cowlitz River Bridge, n 1986, Jan Lindsell, n 1886, Mrs. Griffith, ally mostly a moving class of for- gang that is doing the grading with $600 stolen. Imember of the Carlisle IBoistfort, was recovering eigners. Mendota is one of the on the streets in the vicinity. Lake Task Force, led classes of from being rammed by a cow neatest and best laid out of the “Considering the large num- Onalaska students around the with her horns. small towns of Washington, and ber of shots fired, it is remark- Lake Route Favored site of the once thriving Carlisle “She was trying to drive an during the winter months is an able that noncombatants were n 1961, commissioners Mill. unruly cow and it turned and extremely busy place.” not injured. Many bullets went Ifrom six counties endorsed A half-million dollar restora- struck Mrs. G. with her horns, wild and people living in the the relocation of the White Pass tion had begun on the 18-acre knocking her down and injur- vicinity had reason for being Highway to the lake route. lake. ing her quite badly,” The Lewis Greeks Riot, Bullets Fly alarmed.” “The issues involves relocat- “We want to show the chil- County Bee wrote. “If her boy n 1911, a continuing feud ing some 18 miles of the pres- dren where the mill used to be became more serious as ent White Pass highway because and tell them a little bit about had not reached there just in I Safe Crackers Are One for Two time, she would probably have bullets began to fly at a road Tacoma’s Mossyrock power it,” Lindsell said while leading a been killed.” construction site. n May 1961, safe crackers dam will flood the area between tour of second graders. “A riot of serious proportions Iwere successful in one out Mossyrock and Kosmos,” The William Carlisle Jr. came to occurred in Chehalis yesterday of two attempts in gaining loot. Daily Chronicle wrote. Washington from Wisconsin Mendota Is Dull between 30 Greeks, and as a Robbers tried to break the “Relocating the new highway to join his father to build the n 1911, the town of Mendo- result one man is in the hospi- bank at Fred Powers’ Onalaska along the Cowlitz valley will world’s largest inland saw mill. Ita was very quiet in com- tal seriously wounded and not tavern, but had to be satisfied cost over $19 million. Tacoma, parison to its neighbor Tono. expected to live and three other with $8 in small change and six and others, is urging an alter- “Much in contrast to the rap- foreigners are lodged in the cartons of cigarettes. nate route through Morton — to Mariner Honors Chehalis Girl id progress of Tono, the mining Lewis County jail,” The Centra- “Officers said the thieves cost about $6.5 million.” n 2001, Seattle Mariner town of Mendota is in the midst lia Weekly Chronicle wrote. knocked off the knob on the IJohn Olerud awarded Jack- of their annual dull season,” The “Several of the men were door of the safe,” The Daily ie Guenther, a Chehalis elemen- Centralia Weekly Chronicle armed and for awhile the bul- Chronicle reported. “Failing to Security System Installed tary school pupil, the “Safety All wrote. “The coal mine is run- lets flew thick and fast. The resi- get into the large safe, they then at Borst Home Star” award at Safeco Field. In ning short-handed and only op- dents in the neighborhood were attempted to peel the sides. Both n 1986, through the fund- 2000, Guenther fell off her bi- erating about three days a week, panic stricken and a riot call attempts failed, deputies said. Iraising of the Centra- cycle. Because she was wearing a with an average output of 300 was sent into the sheriff’s office. Entry was gained into the build- lia Centennial organization, helmet, she did not sustain seri- tons per day. Half of the houses The ringleaders in the crowd ing by forcing open the front chaired by Kathleen Campbell, ous head injuries.

A Simple Novel Ideas

Song The Flood of 

By Russ Mohney Our Hometowns as Reported by The Chronicle $ 99 + Tax I, II, III The Flood of 2007 12 $ 99 Walkin’ Joe 28 $ 98+ tax by Dennis R. Waller Each + Tax 13 W/DVD $ 99 + Tax 9 Book Only $ 95 $ 99 Limited 18 3 DVD Only Quantities Available while Purchase yours today at: supplies last at Available The Chronicle COMICS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 • Life 5

GET FUZZY by Darby Conley NON SEQUITUR by Wiley

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE by Stephan Pastis

HERMAN by Jim Unger

RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary B. Price

DENNIS THE by Hank MENACE Ketcham

DILBERT by Scott Adams

PICKLES by Brian Crane WIZARD OF ID by Parker & Hart

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston CLASSIC PEANUTS by Charles Schulz

HI & LOIS by Greg & Brian Walker BLONDIE by Dean Young & John Marshall

SHOE by Gary Brookins & Susie MacNelly FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves

B.C. by Mastroianni & Hart BEETLE BAILEY by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker Life 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 COMICS

GET FUZZY by Darby Conley NON SEQUITUR by Wiley

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE by Stephan Pastis

HERMAN by Jim Unger

RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary B. Price

DENNIS THE by Hank MENACE Ketcham

DILBERT by Scott Adams

PICKLES by Brian Crane WIZARD OF ID by Parker & Hart

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston CLASSIC PEANUTS by Charles Schulz

HI & LOIS by Greg & Brian Walker BLONDIE by Dean Young & John Marshall

SHOE by Gary Brookins & Susie MacNelly FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves

B.C. by Mastroianni & Hart BEETLE BAILEY by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker • Life 7 LIFE The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014

ADVICE: Dear Abby Woman’s HIV Status Casts Shadow on Budding Romance DEAR ABBY: I’m a 32-year- children. I’m blessed with three old woman who is HIV-positive. perfect grandchildren under the My colleague — who is unaware age of 5. of my status — recently intro- The problem is my sons. Al- duced me to a relative of hers though I raised them carefully who is also lonely and looking with love, they are like teenag- for someone ers. They constantly denigrate to settle down and fight with each other, and Rachel Zoe Takes on with. We measure my time with them on “clicked” and a competitive scale. I no longer seem to comple- want to be involved with their ment each other bickering. Their dad, from whom in every way, I am separated, is not involved. White as Wardrobe Staple although we This has created a sad cloud haven’t had any By Leanne Italie in my otherwise sunny life. I Q: Can all body types and ages wear white? sexual encoun- By Abigail Van Buren need some advice. — TIED IN The Associated Press ter. KNOTS IN My fear is, how do I disclose : It certainly goes across all age groups, so DEAR TIED IN KNOTS: NEW YORK (AP) — It may require a tad A my status without being rejected? more attention to detail, but with care just about the answer is definitely yes for that. For body He seems to have big plans for Have you told your sons how anybody can wear white at just about any time types, there's no doubt that black is more slim- us, which include settling down uncomfortable their sibling quib- of the day or year. ming than white, but I don't think you should and having kids in the future. I bling makes you? If you haven’t, We asked celebrity stylist Rachel Zoe to shy away from white because of your body type. am also worried that he might be you should. And if that doesn’t weigh in on white, with an eye toward women There's ways to wear it. There's a lot of variables. angry with my colleague and not improve the situation, I suggest not convinced it can be a wardrobe staple: There's different silhouettes. believe that she is unaware of my you see them separately. And status. Please help me get out of if that causes problems, please don’t make it YOUR problem. Q: We all have a Little Black Dress, but can Q: How do you figure out which shade of this dilemma. — IN A SPOT IN white works best? SOUTH AFRICA the Little White Dress or outfit be just as versa- DEAR IN A SPOT: DEAR ABBY: Over the past tile? I’ll try, A: You choose your white based on skin but there are no guarantees. 10 years or so, I have noticed a tone. Optic white is much brighter and it some- Much depends upon the strength vast increase in people who talk A: Absolutely! I treat white the same way I while they are yawning. These times has like a pink undertone or a blue under- of this man’s feelings for you. It treat black, unless I'm with my children. I would is very important that you have a “yawn-talkers” are not only rude, so much rather see a pop of white. It's so much tone or a gray undertone. But then there's also frank discussion with him before but also almost impossible to happier. I love it all year round. creamy white and eggshell and winter white. the relationship goes any further. understand. I wouldn’t normally Those whites tend to be a bit warmer. I think we The fact that you are HIV- care, except that a lot of people Q: Are some women afraid of wearing don't get sick of white. It's not a trendy color. positive may be problematic, but do it where I work. white? Should they be? Is it perceived as too it does not mean you cannot have Is it OK to tell them to stop bridal for every day? Q: Where do you stand on wearing white a family together if you wish yawn-talking? Or would I be after Labor Day? It seems many women still ad- in the future. Medications and the rude one in the scenario? — A: I wouldn't recommend necessarily wear- here to that taboo. other medical interventions can WIDE AWAKE IN PENNSYL- ing a long white flowy dress to a wedding. But help keep the virus from being VA NIA on a daily basis, a white sundress, or white A: I go the other way. I wear white all year. I transmitted to your children, and DEAR WIDE AWAKE: It denim. I love white denim. I love a crisp pair wear it in the dead of winter, all shades of white. condoms can protect your part- wouldn’t be rude to ask someone ner. to repeat the statement because of high-waisted white trousers with a T-shirt or If you are upfront about your just a button up. It's so chic. I love a white suit. Q: What is your best advice for wearing you were unable to understand status, the chances are better that what the person was trying to By day it's not bridal at all. white, for women who might be intimidated by he will believe you when you tell the color? say. And, by the way, polite folks him his relative was not aware cover their mouths when they Q: Is it just as easy to go from day to eve- that you have HIV when you A: You have to try. You have to experiment yawn to avoid spraying saliva on ning in white as it is in black? were introduced. In a case like the person in front of them. and see what works best for you. It's always this, honesty is the best policy. ••• A: Yes, absolutely. I think it's as easy wear- about what's your favorite part of your body and always accentuate that part. Obviously white is Dear Abby is written by Abigail ing a white dress in the evening. It's amazing. I DEAR ABBY: I have three Van Buren, also known as Jeanne love it with a messy top knot and a bright lip. It's much less forgiving and typically white shows more. People are scared their skin is too pale, grown sons, all educated, mar- Phillips, and was founded by her great. ried and successful. Their wives mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear you know, white is not good on their skin, but are the daughters I never had, Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. there IS a white for everybody. and I treasure them and their Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Start on Puzzle One on page Life 4. Answers to the Sudoku Puzzle Two puzzles here will be published in Thursday’s paper. Crossword

Answer to Puzzle on Page Life 4

Answer to Puzzle on Page Life 4

Celebrity Cipher Today’s clue: B equals Y

“ZXALLJAZ VYNWT JKZXWDDWD, JFT CW MJD

NWXB OFZWFDW. JVV ZCW JKZXWDDWD O

EFWM MJFZWT ZY TY J LOVR MOZC COR.” —

KJZCWXOFW TWFWANW

SOLUTION TO PUZZLE ON PAGE LIFE 4: “Cinema is an improvement on life ... I make films that I would like to have seen when I was a young man.” — Francois Truffaut © 2014 by NEA, Inc. Life 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Tuesday, May 27, 2014 ENTERTAINMENT

Movies Sports Kids Bets WEDNESDAY EVENING May 28, 2014 CEN CHE 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 KOMO 4 News 6:00pm Dan Lewis, Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! (N) ’ The Middle Frankie The Goldbergs Modern Family The Goldbergs Motive “They Made Me a Criminal” A KOMO 4 News Jimmy Kimmel ABC 4 4 Mary Nam. (N) (CC) (N) ’ (CC) (CC) is arrested. “The Ring” (CC) “ClosetCon ’13” ’ (CC) self-defense case. (N) (CC) (DVS) 11:00pm (N) (CC) Live ’ (CC) NBC Nightly News KING 5 News (N) KING 5 News (N) Evening (N) (CC) Growing Up Fisher Growing Up World Music Awards Honoring excellence in music. (N) ’ (CC) KING 5 News (N) Tonight Show-J. NBC 5 5 (N) (CC) (CC) (CC) (N) ’ Fisher (N) Fallon IND 6 6 Extra (N) (CC) OK! TV (N) (CC) Inside Edition (N) Access Hollyw’d Dr. Phil ’ (CC) KING 5 News at 9 (N) (CC) KING 5 News at 10 (N) (CC) Katie “Unstoppable Women” (N) ’ KIRO 7 Eyewit- CBS Evening Entertainment To- The Insider (N) Hawaii Five-0 “Pukana” An investigation Criminal Minds A young boy disap- CSI: Crime Scene Investigation A KIRO 7 Eyewit- Late Show With CBS 7 7 ness News News/Pelley night (N) (CC) ’ (CC) puts Chin in jeopardy. (CC) pears from his home. (CC) (DVS) body is found during torrential rain. ness News David Letterman PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) Oregon Field Quest Nature “American Eagle” Bald eagle. NOVA “D-Day’s Sunken Secrets” Sunken Allied ships in France. (N) ’ (CC) (DVS) Quest Check, Please! PBS 9 9 Guide ’ (CC) Northwest Family Guy “Blue Family Guy “Pe- The Simpsons The Simpsons Two and a Half Two and a Half Q13 FOX News at 9 Rose, Kelly and Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) How I Met Your How I Met Your MNT 10 10 Harvest, Part 1” tarded” ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Levine. (N) (CC) Mother ’ (CC) Mother ’ (CC) The King of The King of Family Feud ’ Family Feud ’ Arrow “City of Heroes” Felicity and The 100 “The Calm” Bellamy receives Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Trip” The Office “The Rules of Engage- C W 11 11 Queens (CC) Queens ’ (CC) (CC) (CC) Diggle look for Oliver. ’ (CC) an irresistible offer. (N) (CC) Bubble Boy” ’ (CC) Lover” ’ (CC) ment ’ (CC) Start Up ’ (CC) Well Read ’ (CC) Antiques Roadshow “Minneapolis” Antiques Roadshow “Richmond” A Lark Rise to Candleford Embroidered The Bletchley Circle The group lures in The Bletchley Circle The group lures in PBS 12 12 George Elmslie chair. (CC) 1765 Thomas Pitts silver epergne. panel on a grave. ’ (CC) a suspect. ’ (Part 2 of 3) (CC) a suspect. ’ (Part 2 of 3) (CC) Modern Family Modern Family The Big Bang The Big Bang So You Think You Can Dance “Auditions No. 1” (Season Premiere) Dancers audi- Q13 FOX News at 10 (N) (CC) The Arsenio Hall Show Taraji P. Hen- FOX 13 13 “Bad Hair Day” “Phil on Wire” ’ Theory ’ (CC) Theory ’ (CC) tion for the judges. (N) ’ (CC) son; Earth, Wind & Fire. ’ (CC) IND 14 14 Cozelle Linens Around (N) Around the Kitchen (N) Silk Oil of Morocco “Get Gorgeous” The Dress Shop “Get Gorgeous” (N) The Best of ShopHQ (N) Law & Order: Criminal Intent “Rocket Law & Order: Criminal Intent Billion- Cold Case “Daniela” The fate of a run- Cold Case “The House” Prison murder Law & Order: Criminal Intent Death- Law & Order: Criminal Intent “Re- ION 15 15 Man” Affair ends in murder. aire and her son die. ’ (CC) away. ’ (CC) case is reopened. ’ (CC) row prisoner’s scrapbooks. ’ (CC) newal” A heroic police recruit dies. IND 18 18 Marcus and Joni Balanced Living Dr Mike Murdock Z. Levitt Presents K. Copeland Life Today Joyce Meyer Marcus and Joni Joni Lamb Table Reflections KATU News at 6 (N) ’ (CC) Jeopardy! (N) ’ Wheel of Fortune The Middle Frankie The Goldbergs Modern Family The Goldbergs Motive “They Made Me a Criminal” A KATU News at 11 Jimmy Kimmel ABC 22 22 (CC) (N) ’ (CC) is arrested. “The Ring” (CC) “ClosetCon ’13” ’ (CC) self-defense case. (N) (CC) (DVS) (N) ’ (CC) Live ’ (CC) NewsChannel 8 at 6PM (N) (CC) Live at 7 (N) (CC) Inside Edition (N) Growing Up Fisher Growing Up World Music Awards Honoring excellence in music. (N) ’ (CC) NewsChannel 8 at Tonight Show-J. NBC 26 26 ’ (CC) (N) ’ Fisher (N) 11 (N) (CC) Fallon UNI 30 30 Noticias Univisión Noticiero Univis’n De Que Te Quiero, Te Quiero (N) (SS) Lo Que la Vida Me Robó (N) (SS) Qué Pobres Tan Ricos (N) (SS) Noticias Univisión Noticiero Uni 6 O’Clock News (N) Access Hollywood TMZ (N) ’ (CC) So You Think You Can Dance “Auditions No. 1” (Season Premiere) Dancers audi- 10 O’Clock News (N) 11 O’Clock News Everybody Loves FOX 27 27 (N) (CC) tion for the judges. (N) ’ (CC) (N) Raymond (CC) The First 48 “Alias; Duel” A popular Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty ’ Duck Dynasty ’ Duck Dynasty ’ Duck Dynasty ’ Duck Dynasty ’ Duck Dynasty “A- Duck Dynasty ’ Duck Dynasty “Si- Duck Dynasty ’ A&E 52 52 teenager is gunned. ’ (CC) “Redneck Logic” (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) Jase-ent Living” (CC) amese Twins” (CC) AMC 67 67 ››› Die Hard 2 (1990, Action) Bruce Willis, Bonnie Bedelia, William Atherton. ››› Die Hard With a Vengeance (1995, Action) Bruce Willis, Jeremy Irons, Samuel L. Jackson. A New York cop must stop ›› Invincible (2006) Mark Wahlberg. Police hero spots military terrorists at D.C. airport. (CC) a mad bomber’s game of revenge. (CC) The story of football’s Vince Papale. APL 43 43 Call-Wildman Call-Wildman River Monsters: Unhooked ’ (CC) River Monsters: Unhooked ’ (CC) River Monsters: Unhooked ’ (CC) River Monsters: Unhooked ’ (CC) River Monsters: Unhooked ’ (CC) BET 56 56 106 & Park “Top 10 Countdown” (N) ComicView (CC) ComicView (CC) ComicView (CC) ›› The Bodyguard (1992) Kevin Costner, Whitney Houston. Premiere. A bodyguard falls for the singer-actress he must protect. (CC) Million Dollar Listing New York Luis’ Million Dollar Listing New York A Million Dollar Listing New York Luis Million Dollar Listing New York Ryan Million Dollar Listing New York Ryan Watch What Hap- Million Dollar List- BRAVO 66 66 client has a big secret. bombshell is dropped on Luis. travels to Puerto Rico. shoots a trailer for his listing. (N) shoots a trailer for his listing. pens: Live (N) ing New York CBUT 29 29 NHL Hockey Los Angeles Kings at Chicago Blackhawks. (N) (S Live) (CC) CBC News: Vancouver (N) (CC) Dragons’ Den ’ (CC) The National (N) ’ (CC) CBC News Vancouver at 11 (N) C M T 61 61 Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) ››› Rocky II (1979) Sylvester Stallone. Underdog Philly fighter gets another shot at heavyweight champ. (CC) Cops Reloaded Cops Reloaded CNBC 46 46 American Greed “Shipwrecked” American Greed (N) American Greed American Greed American Greed Paid Program 21st Century CNN 44 44 Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown CNN Tonight (N) (Live) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) CNNH 45 45 Anderson Cooper 360 (N) (CC) Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown CNN Tonight South Park “All Tosh.0 (CC) The Colbert Re- The Daily Show Key & Peele (CC) Key & Peele (CC) South Park Jonas South Park Butters’ South Park “Sexual South Park “Tam- The Daily Show The Colbert Re- COM 60 60 About Mormons” port (CC) With Jon Stewart Brothers’ concert. first kiss. Healing” (CC) ing Strange” With Jon Stewart port (CC) D I S 41 41 Liv & Maddie ’ Liv & Maddie ’ Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally ’ Boy Meets World Boy Meets World Jessie ’ (CC) Jessie ’ (CC) Good-Charlie Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally ’ A.N.T. Farm (CC) “Into the Frying Pan” Joe Dual Survival “Glacial Downfall” Joe Dual Survival: Untamed “Journey’s End Dual Survival Joe sets out to locate his Kodiak “Faltering Legend” Two hunters Dual Survival Joe sets out to locate his DSC 8 8 tries to escape from a mineshaft. and Cody’s opposing survival styles. to a New Beginning” (N) (CC) new partner. (N) ’ (CC) arrive in Kodiak. (N) ’ (CC) new partner. ’ (CC) The E! True Hollywood Story Reality E! News (N) E! News Total Divas “Digging A Hole” Brie’s wed- The Soup Come- The Soup Come- Chelsea Lately (N) E! News E! 65 65 television marriages. ’ (CC) ding fast approaches. dian Marc Maron. dian Marc Maron. NBA Basketball Miami Heat at Indiana Pacers. Eastern Conference Final, Game SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) ESPN 32 32 5. From Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. (N) (Live) (CC) ESPN2 33 33 FIFA Special Soccer International Friendly: Mexico vs. Israel. From Mexico City. (N) Olbermann (N) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) NBA Tonight (N) NBA Tonight NASCAR Now (N) FAM 39 39 Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Baby Daddy (N) ›› Confessions of a Shopaholic (2009, Comedy) Isla Fisher, Hugh Dancy. The 700 Club ’ (CC) FNC 48 48 The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor (CC) The Kelly File Hannity On the Record, Greta Van Susteren FOOD 35 35 Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Restaurant: Impossible Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible (N) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive FX 53 53 ›› Horrible Bosses (2011, Comedy) Jason Bateman, Charlie Day, Jason Sudei- ›› Love & Other Drugs (2010, Drama) Jake Gyllenhaal, Anne Hathaway, Oliver Platt. A pharmaceuti- ›› Love & Other Drugs (2010) Jake Gyllenhaal. A pharma- kis. Three oppressed workers plot against their employers. cal salesman romances a free-spirited woman. ceutical salesman romances a free-spirited woman. GOLF 70 70 College Golf NCAA Men’s Championship, Match Play Finals. From Hutchinson, Kan. Golf Central College Golf NCAA Men’s Championship, Match Play Finals. The Waltons “The Family Tree” Eliza- The Waltons “The Ordeal” Elizabeth The Waltons “The Ordeal” The family The Middle Sue The Middle “Royal The Middle “Moth- The Middle “The The Golden Girls The Golden Girls HALL 19 19 beth fibs to a pen pal. (CC) falls from the log pile. (CC) helps Elizabeth walk. (CC) wins a trophy. ’ Wedding” er’s Day II” Prom” ’ (CC) (CC) (CC) HGTV 68 68 Buying and Selling (CC) Buying and Selling “Warren & Jill” Property Brothers “Sandra & Kyle” Property Brothers (CC) House Hunters Hunters Int’l Property Brothers “Stan & Leslie” HIST 37 37 The World Wars “Trial by Fire” The World Wars “A Rising Threat” The World Wars “A Rising Threat” The World Wars War breaks out again under new leaders. (N) (CC) The World Wars “Never Surrender” LI FE 51 51 ›› Anna Nicole (2013, Docudrama) Agnes Bruckner, Martin Landau. (CC) Petals on the Wind (2014, Suspense) Heather Graham, Ellen Burstyn. (CC) Flowers in the Attic (2014, Suspense) Heather Graham, Ellen Burstyn. (CC) MSNBC 47 47 The Rachel Maddow Show (N) The Last Word All In With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews (CC) MTV 63 63 ›› Bring It On: Fight to the Finish Catfish: The TV Show ’ Catfish: The TV Show ’ Catfish: The TV Show “Craig & Zoe” Catfish: The TV Show (N) ’ True Life Ending relationships. (N) NBCS 34 34 NHL Hockey Los Angeles Kings at Chicago Blackhawks. NHL Overtime (N) Heads-Up Poker (Taped) Heads-Up Poker (Taped) Heads-Up Poker (Taped) Heads-Up Poker (Taped) NICK 40 40 SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam & Cat (CC) Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) OXY 50 50 ›› Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins (2008, Comedy) Martin Lawrence. Bad Girls Club: Chicago (CC) Bad Girls Club: Chicago (CC) ››› The Brothers (2001) Morris Chestnut, D.L. Hughley, Bill Bellamy. (CC) R O OT 31 31 MLB Baseball Mariners Pre. MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Seattle Mariners. From Safeco Field in Seattle. (Live) Mariners Post. MLS Soccer SPIKE 57 57 ›› Couples Re- ›› Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006, Comedy) Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly, Sacha One Night Only: An All-Star Comedy Tribute to Don Rickles Honoring come- One Night Only: An All-Star Comedy treat (2009) ’ Baron Cohen. A NASCAR driver has a new rival. ’ (CC) dian Don Rickles. (N) ’ Tribute to Don Rickles ’ SYFY 59 59 American War ›› Pitch Black (2000, Science Fiction) Radha Mitchell, Vin Diesel, Cole Hauser. ›› The Chronicles of Riddick (2004, Science Fiction) Vin Diesel, Colm Feore, Thandie Newton. › Red Planet TBN 20 20 Joseph Prince ’ Living By Faith Praise the Lord (N) (Live) (CC) Always Good Jesse Duplantis MarriageToday Creflo Dollar Seattle Praise the Lord Seinfeld “The Little Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Family Guy ’ The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Deal With It The Conan Actor Simon Helberg; musical TBS 55 55 Jerry” (CC) Comeback” (CC) Money” ’ (CC) (CC) Theory ’ Theory ’ Theory ’ Theory ’ Theory ’ Accident; Laughs. guest Eli Young Band. (CC) TLC 38 38 My 40-Year-Old Child ’ (CC) 40-Year-Old Child: A New Case ’ Girl Who Never Grew ’ (CC) Hayley: World’s Oldest Teenager ’ Women of Homicide ’ (CC) World’s Smallest Man ’ (CC) Castle “The Human Factor” A govern- Castle “Watershed” Beckett reconsiders Castle “Flowers for Your Grave” A novel- Castle “Nanny McDead” A nanny’s body Castle “Hedge Fund Homeboys” Death Hawaii Five-0 The team makes a grue- TNT 54 54 ment whistleblower is murdered. her career. ’ (CC) ist helps police find a killer. ’ is stashed in a dryer. ’ of a teenage boy. (CC) (DVS) some discovery. ’ (CC) (DVS) TOON 42 42 Teen Titans Go! World of Gumball Adventure Time Regular Show King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show American Dad ’ American Dad ’ Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) TRAV 36 36 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food Man v. Food Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Trip Flip (N) (CC) Trip Flip (CC) Baggage Battles Baggage Battles Food Paradise (CC) TRUTV 49 49 Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A Modern Family Modern Family ’ USA 58 58 “Brotherhood” ’ (CC) “Choice” ’ (CC) diplomat is charged with assault. ’ “Father’s Shadow” ’ (CC) (DVS) janitor violently attacks a coach. ’ “Leap Day” ’ (CC) (DVS) VH1 62 62 Hollywood Exes ’ Hollywood Exes ’ Hollywood Exes ’ Hollywood Exes (N) ’ La La’s Life Marrying, Game Hit the Floor ’

Movies Sports Kids Bets THURSDAY EVENING May 29, 2014 CEN CHE 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 KOMO 4 News 6:00pm Dan Lewis, Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! (N) ’ The Bachelorette This Wild Life performs on a date. ’ (CC) Black Box “Forget Me” A soldier strug- KOMO 4 News Jimmy Kimmel ABC 4 4 Mary Nam. (N) (CC) (N) ’ (CC) (CC) gles with an injury. (N) ’ (CC) 11:00pm (N) (CC) Live ’ (CC) NBC Nightly News KING 5 News (N) KING 5 News (N) Evening (N) (CC) Hollywood Game Night Nate Berkus; Undateable “Pilot” Undateable “Pants Last Comic Standing “Invitational 3” KING 5 News (N) Tonight Show-J. NBC 5 5 (N) (CC) (CC) (CC) Adam Devine; Tony Hale. (N) (CC) (N) (CC) Buddies” Advancing to the semi-final round. Fallon IND 6 6 Extra (N) (CC) OK! TV (N) (CC) Inside Edition (N) Access Hollyw’d Dr. Phil ’ (CC) KING 5 News at 9 (N) (CC) KING 5 News at 10 (N) (CC) Katie “Foster Care Parents” (N) ’ KIRO 7 Eyewit- CBS Evening Entertainment To- The Insider (N) The Big Bang The Millers “Miller’s Two and a Half Bad Teacher “Year- Elementary “Tremors” An investigation KIRO 7 Eyewit- Late Show With CBS 7 7 ness News News/Pelley night (N) (CC) ’ (CC) Theory ’ (CC) Mind” (CC) Men ’ (CC) book” (N) goes horribly awry. ’ (CC) ness News David Letterman PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) Pie Check, Please! Foyle’s War “Plan of Attack” Milner Midsomer Murders Family gather years DCI Banks “Bad Boy” Gun in teenage girl’s bedroom. (N) Incredible Health- PBS 9 9 Northwest (N) cracks a fraud case. (CC) after son’s death. (CC) ’ (CC) Joel Family Guy “Blue Family Guy ’ The Simpsons The Simpsons Two and a Half Two and a Half Q13 FOX News at 9 Rose, Kelly and Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (Part 1 How I Met Your How I Met Your MNT 10 10 Harvest, Part 2” (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Levine. (N) (CC) of 2) (CC) Mother ’ (CC) Mother ’ (CC) The King of The King of Family Feud ’ Family Feud ’ The Vampire Diaries Elena moves to The Originals Rebekah arrives in New Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The The Office “Koi Rules of Engage- C W 11 11 Queens ’ (CC) Queens ’ (CC) (CC) (CC) college with Caroline. ’ (CC) Orleans. ’ (CC) Comeback” (CC) Pitch” (CC) Pond” ’ (CC) ment ’ (CC) Northwest Now In the Americas- NOVA “Rat Attack” Explosion in rat D-Day: The Price of Freedom Veterans A Company of Heroes Survivors of Age of Delirium The fall of the Soviet Nature Diving 300 miles off the coast of PBS 12 12 David population. ’ (CC) (DVS) share their survival tales. (CC) Easy Company recall D-Day. (CC) Union. ’ (CC) (DVS) Central America. ’ (CC) (DVS) Modern Family Modern Family The Big Bang The Big Bang Hell’s Kitchen “10 Chefs Again” The Gang Related “Sangre Por Sangre” Q13 FOX News at 10 (N) (CC) The Arsenio Hall Show Marlon Way- FOX 13 13 “Best Men” (CC) “Door to Door” Theory ’ (CC) Theory ’ (CC) teams are reorganized. (N) ’ (PA) Ryan finds himself falling for Jessica. ans; Jared Harris. ’ (CC) IND 14 14 Love, Carson Fashions Silk Oil of Morocco “Get Gorgeous” Exotic Gemstones Rare stones. (N) Tanzanite Jewelry (N) Masterpiece Gems (N) The Best of ShopHQ Ghost Whisperer A girl has an impor- Criminal Minds “Epilogue” Bodies are Criminal Minds Tornadoes expose bod- Criminal Minds “Hope” A woman Gar- Flashpoint “Run to Me” Two young con Flashpoint “Eyes In” Someone hacks ION 15 15 tant gift. ’ (CC) found in a national forest. ’ ies in Kansas. ’ (CC) (DVS) cia knows goes missing. ’ artists. ’ (CC) (DVS) the computer system. ’ IND 18 18 Marcus and Joni The Blessed Life JP Jackson The Green Room K. Copeland Life Today Joyce Meyer Marcus and Joni Joni Lamb Table Reflections KATU News at 6 (N) ’ (CC) Jeopardy! (N) ’ Wheel of Fortune The Bachelorette This Wild Life performs on a date. ’ (CC) Black Box “Forget Me” A soldier strug- KATU News at 11 Jimmy Kimmel ABC 22 22 (CC) (N) ’ (CC) gles with an injury. (N) ’ (CC) (N) ’ (CC) Live ’ (CC) NewsChannel 8 at 6PM (N) (CC) Live at 7 (N) (CC) Inside Edition (N) Hollywood Game Night Nate Berkus; Undateable “Pilot” Undateable “Pants Last Comic Standing “Invitational 3” NewsChannel 8 at Tonight Show-J. NBC 26 26 ’ (CC) Adam Devine; Tony Hale. (N) (CC) (N) (CC) Buddies” Advancing to the semi-final round. 11 (N) (CC) Fallon UNI 30 30 Noticias Univisión Noticiero Univis’n De Que Te Quiero, Te Quiero (N) (SS) Lo Que la Vida Me Robó (N) (SS) Qué Pobres Tan Ricos (N) (SS) Noticias Univisión Noticiero Uni 6 O’Clock News (N) Access Hollywood TMZ (N) ’ (CC) Hell’s Kitchen “10 Chefs Again” The Gang Related “Sangre Por Sangre” 10 O’Clock News (N) 11 O’Clock News Everybody Loves FOX 27 27 (N) (CC) teams are reorganized. (N) ’ (PA) Ryan finds himself falling for Jessica. (N) Raymond (CC) The First 48 A 24-year-old man is shot The First 48 “Cut Down; 9-1-1” The The First 48 A high-school graduate is The First 48 Father shot; mother killed The Killer Speaks A football player The First 48 Migrant worker beaten; car A&E 52 52 in the street. ’ (CC) shooting death of a homeless man. gunned down. ’ (CC) on birthday. (N) ’ (CC) hires a hit man. (N) (CC) wash killing. ’ (CC) AMC 67 67 ››› Die Hard With a Vengeance (1995, Action) Bruce Willis, Jeremy Irons. A ››› The Green Mile (1999, Drama) Tom Hanks, David Morse, Michael Clarke Duncan. A guard thinks an inmate has a supernatural power to heal. (CC) New York cop must stop a mad bomber’s game of revenge. (CC) APL 43 43 North Woods Law “Lost and Found” North Woods Law “Uncuffed 2” ’ North Woods Law: On the Hunt (N) North Woods Law (N) ’ American River Renegades ’ North Woods Law ’ BET 56 56 106 & Park “Top 10 Countdown” (N) Celebration of Gospel 2014 Gospel artists including Yolanda Adams. (CC) ››› The Pursuit of Happyness (2006) Will Smith. Premiere. A man strives for a better life for himself and his son. BRAVO 66 66 The Real House- The Real Housewives of Atlanta “Baby The Real Housewives of Atlanta “Cat- The Real Housewives of Atlanta After The Real Housewives of Atlanta The To Be Announced Watch What Hap- ›››› Titanic wives of Atlanta Momma & Daddy Drama” walks & Cat Fights” (CC) the cameras stop rolling. cast reminisces about the season. pens: Live (N) (1997), Billy Zane CBUT 29 29 NHL Hockey Montreal Canadiens at New York Rangers. (N) (S Live) (CC) CBC News To Be Announced CBC News The National (N) ’ (CC) C M T 61 61 Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) › Wild Hogs (2007) Tim Allen, John Travolta. Four friends take a motorcycle road trip. (CC) Party Down South (N) Party Down South CNBC 46 46 Crime Inc. “Hollywood Robbery” American Greed American Greed American Greed American Greed HealthFood Stevie Wonder CNN 44 44 The Sixties (Series Premiere) (N) The Sixties Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) The Sixties The Sixties Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) CNNH 45 45 Anderson Cooper 360 (N) (CC) The Sixties (Series Premiere) (N) Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files The Sixties The Sixties South Park (CC) Tosh.0 (CC) The Colbert Re- The Daily Show Chappelle’s Show It’s Always Sunny It’s Always Sunny Tosh.0 (CC) Tosh.0 (CC) Tosh.0 (CC) The Daily Show The Colbert Re- COM 60 60 port (CC) With Jon Stewart (CC) in Phila. in Phila. With Jon Stewart port (CC) D I S 41 41 Good-Charlie Good-Charlie Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally ’ Boy Meets World Boy Meets World Jessie ’ (CC) Jessie ’ (CC) Good-Charlie Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally ’ A.N.T. Farm (CC) The Browns Lords of the Car Hoards ’ (CC) Lords of the Car Hoards ’ (CC) Lords of the Car Hoards ’ (CC) Lords of the Car Hoards ’ (CC) Lords of the Car Hoards ’ (CC) DSC 8 8 must make a big decision. ’ (CC) Sex and the City Sex and the City E! News (N) Total Divas “Digging A Hole” Brie’s wed- Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News Chelsea Lately (N) E! News E! 65 65 ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ding fast approaches. Khloé must make a choice. 2014 Scripps National Spelling Bee Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) ESPN 32 32 From National Harbor, Md. (N) (CC) ESPN2 33 33 NCAA Update College Softball NCAA World Series, Game 4: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) Olbermann (N) (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) NBA Tonight (N) Olbermann (CC) FAM 39 39 The Middle (CC) The Middle (CC) ›› Stick It (2006, Comedy-Drama) Jeff Bridges, Missy Peregrym. ›› The Last Song (2010, Drama) Miley Cyrus, Greg Kinnear. The 700 Club ’ (CC) FNC 48 48 The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor (CC) The Kelly File Hannity On the Record, Greta Van Susteren FOOD 35 35 Rewrapped Rewrapped Chopped “Pigging Out” Chopped “G’day, Chefs!” Chopped Canada (N) (N) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive FX 53 53 Two and a Half Two and a Half ››› Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008, Romance-Comedy) Jason Segel, Kristen Bell, Mila Kunis. A Anger Manage- ››› Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008, Romance-Comedy) Jason Segel, Kristen Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) musician encounters his ex and her new lover in Hawaii. ment (N) Bell. A musician encounters his ex and her new lover in Hawaii. GOLF 70 70 PGA Tour Golf Memorial Tournament, First Round. Golf Central PGA Tour Golf Memorial Tournament, First Round. The Waltons “The Return” Cave-in traps The Waltons “The Revelation” John-Boy The Waltons Unhappy Grandma returns The Middle “A The Middle “Errand The Middle ’ (Part The Middle ’ (Part The Golden Girls The Golden Girls HALL 19 19 people in the mine. (CC) tells of his engagement. (CC) home. (CC) Birthday Story” Boy” (CC) 1 of 2) (CC) 2 of 2) (CC) “Rose the Prude” “Transplant” ’ HGTV 68 68 Income Property “Michael & Karen” Hunters Int’l House Hunters Rehab Addict Rehab Addict Fixer Upper (CC) House Hunters Hunters Int’l Fixer Upper (N) (CC) HIST 37 37 (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (N) Pawn Stars (N) Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty LI FE 51 51 Sexting in Suburbia (2012, Drama) Liz Vassey, Jenn Proske. (CC) Dirty Teacher (2013, Suspense) Josie Davis, Cameron Deane Stewart. (CC) Ticket Out (2010, Suspense) Ray Liotta, Alexandra Breckenridge. (CC) MSNBC 47 47 The Rachel Maddow Show (N) The Last Word All In With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews (CC) MTV 63 63 Party Down South ’ Party Down South ’ Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Catfish: The TV Show ’ The Challenge: Free Agents (N) ’ ››› 50/50 (2011) Premiere. ’ NBCS 34 34 NHL Hockey Montreal Canadiens at New York Rangers. NHL Overtime (N) Road to Ferrari Auto Racing Motorcycle Racing Desafio Ruta 40 (N) ’ NICK 40 40 SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam & Cat (CC) Instant Mom ’ See Dad Run ’ Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) OXY 50 50 ››› Cadillac Records (2008, Drama) Adrien Brody. (CC) ›› Burlesque (2010, Drama) Cher. A small-town gal finds her niche at a neoburlesque club. ›› Burlesque (2010, Drama) Cher, Christina Aguilera, Eric Dane. R O OT 31 31 Mariners Access Mariners Pre. MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Seattle Mariners. From Safeco Field in Seattle. (Live) Mariners Post. MLB Baseball: Angels at Mariners Cops ’ (CC) Jail ’ (CC) Cops ’ (CC) Cops “Mardi Gras Cops “Ho! Ho! Ho! Cops “Street Patrol” iMPACT Wrestling (N) ’ (CC) Hungry Investors Two Texas BBQ joints SPIKE 57 57 ’04 No. 1” No. 8” (CC) ’ (CC) compete. ’ SYFY 59 59 ›› Pitch Black ›› The Chronicles of Riddick (2004, Science Fiction) Vin Diesel, Colm Feore, Thandie Newton. ›› Lockout (2012, Science Fiction) Guy Pearce, Maggie Grace. ›› The Mothman Prophecies (2002) TBN 20 20 Joseph Prince ’ Hillsong TV Praise the Lord (N) (Live) (CC) Live-Holy Land Turning Point ’ Changing Yr Life Creflo Dollar Book of Ruth Figure Forest Seinfeld “The Su- Seinfeld “The Pot- Seinfeld “The Eng- Family Guy “Jungle Family Guy “Save Family Guy “Farm- The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan Charles Barkley; Lyle Lovett. TBS 55 55 sie” ’ (CC) hole” ’ (CC) lish Patient” Love” ’ the Clam” er Guy” ’ Theory ’ Theory ’ Theory ’ Theory ’ (CC) TLC 38 38 Extreme Cougar Wives ’ (CC) My Addiction My Addiction Extreme Cougar Wives ’ (CC) My Addiction My Addiction Extreme Cougar Wives ’ (CC) Extreme Cougar Wives ’ (CC) NBA Basketball Oklahoma City Thunder at San Antonio Spurs. Western Conference Final, Game 5. (If Inside the NBA (N) (S Live) (CC) Falling Skies “Journey to Xibalba” The Falling Skies “Brazil” The 2nd Mass Castle ’ (CC) TNT 54 54 necessary). (N) (Live) (CC) mole’s identity is discovered. destroys an Espheni base. (CC) (DVS) TOON 42 42 Teen Titans Go! World of Gumball Adventure Time Regular Show King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show American Dad ’ American Dad ’ Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) TRAV 36 36 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food Man v. Food Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Mysteries at the Museum (N) (CC) Mysteries at the Museum (CC) Mysteries at the Museum (CC) TRUTV 49 49 World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. South Beach Tow South Beach Tow Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A Modern Family Modern Family ’ USA 58 58 “Juvenile” Young murder suspects. Sexual abuse at a private school. ’ killer goes on a rampage in the city. rape victim is arrested for murder. sports reporter is stalked and raped. “The Last Walt” (CC) (DVS) VH1 62 62 Hollywood Exes ’ Hit the Floor ’ Saturday Night Live in the 2000s: Time and Again The show in the 2000s. ››› Point Break (1991, Action) Patrick Swayze, Keanu Reeves. ’