Pirates Win 5-4 / Sports 1 - Creative Circle Media Solutions

40
Reaching 110,000 Readers in Print and Online www.chronline.com $1 Thursday, May 17, 2012 www.facebook.com/ thecentraliachronicle Find Us on Facebook @chronline Follow Us on Twitter Science Project Sparks UFO Reports in Chehalis / Main 15 Deaths Parker, Tari, 83, Onalaska Jones, Joy Cecilia, 68, Rochester Cheney, Mina J., 71, Centralia Gleason, Roscoe, 98, Morton Barber, Joyce, 81, Tacoma Eye on the Sky The Chronicle, Serving The Greater Lewis County Area Since 1889 Weather TONIGHT: Low 40 TOMORROW: High 59 Few Showers see details on page Main 2 Weather picture by Jonah Johnson, 4th Grade, Boistfort School 120-Year-Old Chehalis Trees to Be Felled Main 3 Veterans Honored at Ceremony in Centralia Main 5 Adna Upsets Napavine to Seal State Berth Pirates Win 5-4 / Sports 1 Attack of the ‘Space Invaders’ Outdoors: Sports 2 Teen Swimmer Found Dead Family and Friends Mourn After Drowning on Chehalis River Claims Life of Rochester Student By Stephanie Schendel [email protected] The 16-year-old Roch- ester High School student who drowned Tuesday while trying to swim across the Chehalis River will be re- membered by his family and classmates for his contagious smile and love for basketball. Search and rescue teams retrieved the body of Chris Puentes Garay midday Wednesday, 50 yards down- stream from where he disap- peared 19 hours earlier. Puentes Garay, who only used the last name Puentes, according to family mem- bers, was swimming with his 14-year-old brother just south of Rochester near In- dependence Road when he appearead to have trouble staying above water, said La- nette Dyer, spokesperson for the West Thurston Regional Fire Authority. Puentes’ brother told emergency personnel that Puentes didn’t call for help, but began bobbing up and down. Puentes’ brother alerted the two young wom- en who were swimming with them to call for help. Emergency personnel re- sponded shortly after 5 p.m., minutes after Puentes disap- peared under the water. Search and rescue teams from around the region re- sponded and searched until about 9 p.m. Tuesday when it got too dark to continue. The search began again 9 a.m. Wednesday, and early ‘‘The water is so cold and it really can take you by surprise.’’ Lanette Dyer West Thurston Fire Authority please see FOUND, page Main 12 Chris Geier / [email protected] Friends of Chris Puentes Garay, including one who was swimming with him when he drowned, far left, and Rochester High School Principal Matt Ishler, right, react to the news that Garay’s body was found 50 yards from where he was last seen attempting to swim across the Chehalis River south of Rochester. ‘No matter how he felt, he always had a smile.’ A Thurston County Sherif's Oice search and res- cue diver prepares to search a portion of the Che- halis River south of Rochester Tuesday evening. CH471151cz.cg

Transcript of Pirates Win 5-4 / Sports 1 - Creative Circle Media Solutions

Reaching 110,000 Readers in Print and Online — www.chronline.com

$1

Thursday, May 17, 2012

www.facebook.com/thecentraliachronicle

Find Us on Facebook

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Science Project Sparks UFO Reports in Chehalis/

Main 15

DeathsParker, Tari, 83, OnalaskaJones, Joy Cecilia, 68,

RochesterCheney, Mina J., 71, CentraliaGleason, Roscoe, 98, MortonBarber, Joyce, 81, Tacoma

Eye on the Sky The Chronicle, Serving The Greater

Lewis County Area Since 1889WeatherTONIGHT: Low 40

TOMORROW: High 59 Few Showers

see details on page Main 2

Weather picture by Jonah Johnson, 4th Grade, Boistfort School

120-Year-Old Chehalis Trees to Be Felled Main 3

Veterans Honored at Ceremony in CentraliaMain 5

Adna Upsets Napavine to Seal State BerthPirates Win 5-4 / Sports 1

Attack of the ‘Space Invaders’Outdoors: Sports 2

Teen Swimmer Found Dead

Family and Friends Mourn After Drowning on Chehalis River Claims Life of Rochester StudentBy Stephanie Schendel

[email protected]

The 16-year-old Roch-ester High School student who drowned Tuesday while trying to swim across the Chehalis River will be re-membered by his family and classmates for his contagious smile and love for basketball.

Search and rescue teams retrieved the body of Chris Puentes Garay midday Wednesday, 50 yards down-stream from where he disap-peared 19 hours earlier.

Puentes Garay, who only used the last name Puentes, according to family mem-bers, was swimming with his 14-year-old brother just south of Rochester near In-dependence Road when he

appearead to have trouble staying above water, said La-nette Dyer, spokesperson for the West Thurston Regional Fire Authority.

Puentes’ brother told emergency personnel that Puentes didn’t call for help, but began bobbing up and down. Puentes’ brother alerted the two young wom-en who were swimming with them to call for help.

Emergency personnel re-sponded shortly after 5 p.m., minutes after Puentes disap-peared under the water.

Search and rescue teams from around the region re-sponded and searched until about 9 p.m. Tuesday when it got too dark to continue.

The search began again 9 a.m. Wednesday, and early

‘‘The water is so cold and it really can take you by surprise.’’

Lanette Dyer

West Thurston Fire Authority

please see FOUND, page Main 12

Chris Geier / [email protected]

Friends of Chris Puentes Garay, including one who was swimming with him when he drowned, far left, and Rochester High School Principal Matt Ishler, right, react to

the news that Garay’s body was found 50 yards from where he was last seen attempting to swim across the Chehalis River south of Rochester.

‘No matter how he felt, he always had a smile.’

A Thurston County Sherif's Oice search and res-

cue diver prepares to search a portion of the Che-

halis River south of Rochester Tuesday evening.

CH471151cz.cg

Pollen Forecast

National Cities

City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx

Anchorage 58/38 pc 54/39 pc

Boise 65/42 s 71/44 s

Boston 70/54 s 76/54 s

Dallas 88/66 s 89/67 s

Honolulu 86/71 pc 86/69 s

Las Vegas 90/73 s 94/75 s

Nashville 85/62 s 87/62 s

Phoenix 96/68 s 96/69 s

St. Louis 86/66 s 88/69 s

Salt Lake City 67/48 t 69/51 s

San Francisco 68/50 s 69/51 s

Washington, DC 78/54 s 80/55 s

5-Day Forecast for the Lewis County Area

40s

30s

20s

10s

90s

80s

70s

60s

50s

100s

110s

0s

Cold Front Stationary Front Warm Front Low Pressure High Pressure

L H

This map shows high temperatures,type of precipitation expected andlocation of frontal systems at noon.

L

L H

L

Centralia Regional Weather

Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; pc/partly cloudy;

r/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers;

sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy

New

5/20First

5/28

Full

6/4

Last

6/11

Tonight

Few Showers

40º

Friday

Few Showers

59º 40º

Saturday

Partly Cloudy

69º 44º

Sunday

Mostly Cloudy

69º 49º

Monday

Mostly Cloudy

63º 49º

National Map

Area Conditions

City Hi/Lo Prcp.

City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx

Baghdad 102/75 s 103/75 s

Beijing 88/56 s 87/56 s

London 58/43 pc 59/43 pc

Mexico City 79/56 t 80/56 t

Moscow 68/54 s 72/54 s

City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx

New Delhi 104/83 s 107/83 s

Paris 67/51 sh 68/51 sh

Rio de Janeiro 73/64 sh 73/64 sh

Rome 74/50 s 72/50 s

Sydney 72/49 s 72/49 s

World Cities

City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx

Bremerton 59/44 sh 63/47 pc

Ocean Shores 53/45 sh 57/47 mc

Olympia 60/41 sh 68/45 pc

City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx

Spokane 65/37 s 68/39 s

Tri Cities 70/42 s 73/44 s

Wenatchee 69/46 s 74/47 s

Regional Cities

Sun and Moon

Fri.

Fri. Sat. Fri. Sat.

Fri. Sat. Fri. Sat.

Sat.

Yesterday

Sunset tonight . . . . . . . . . . .8:43 p.m.

Sunrise tomorrow . . . . . . . . .5:33 a.m.

Moonrise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4:12 a.m.

Moonset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:54 p.m.

Allergen Friday Saturday

Trees High High

Grass None None

Weeds Medium Medium

Mold None None

River Stages

Gauge Flood 24 hr.

Height Stage Change

Chehalis at Mellen St.

50.22 65.0 -1.48

Skookumchuck at Pearl St.

73.91 85.0 -0.02

Cowlitz at Packwood

4.25 10.5 -0.47

Cowlitz at Randle

10.61 18.0 -0.53

Cowlitz at Mayfield Dam

10.00 ---- +0.10

TemperatureYesterday’s High . . . . . . . . .66

Yesterday’s Low . . . . . . . . .39

Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . .68

Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . . .46

Record High . . . . . .89 in 1985

Record Low . . . . . . .36 in 1960

PrecipitationYesterday . . . . . . . . . . . . .0.00"

Month to date . . . . . . . . .1.17"

Normal month to date . . .1.37"

Year to date . . . . . . . . . .20.91"

Normal year to date . . . .21.78"

Centralia

40/59

Longview

44/59

Portland

45/63

Olympia

41/60

Port Angeles

42/58

Chehalis

39/60

Tacoma

43/60

Seattle

45/60

Bellingham

45/59

Brewster

42/71

Ellensburg

40/61

Yakima

40/66

Vancouver

44/62 The Dalles

41/65

Data reported from Centralia

Shown is tomorrow’s

weather. Temperatures

are tonight’s lows and

tomorrow’s highs.

Forecast map for May 18, 2012

Main 2 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012FROM THE FRONT PAGE / WEATHER

The Weather Almanac

Packwood 68/35 0.00

Pe Ell 39/66 0.00

Rochester 49/42 0.00

Toledo 72/34 0.00

Napavine 52/39 0.00

Thursday, May 17Culture Fair, Centralia Christian

School fifth-grade class, 9 a.m.-2:45 p.m. and 6:30-8 p.m., school gymnasium, book fair, 6:30-8 p.m.

“Peace Corps‚ Ecuador,” Centralia Col-lege East Lyceum Series, presentation by Andrea Durham, noon-12:50 p.m., Roxy Theater, Morton, 496-5022

Open mic, 6:30-10:30 p.m., Matrix Coffeehouse, Chehalis, donation

Libraries

The Knitting Circle, 4-6 p.m., Salkum Timberland Library, 985-2148

Support Groups

“Up From Grief,” for those grieving the loss of a loved one, 1-2:30 p.m., As-sured Home Hospice, second floor, 1821 Cooks Hill Road, 330-2640

Overeaters Anonymous, 5:30-6:30 p.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church,1209 N. Scheuber Road, Cen-tralia, 736-9268

Senior Centers

Low impact exercise, 9-11 a.m., Ole-qua Senior Center

Cook’s choice lunch and bingo, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Olequa Senior Center

Computers level 2, 9-11:30 a.m., To-ledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Low-impact exercise class, 3:30-4:30 p.m., Toledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Watercolor class, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., To-ledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Pool tournament, 1 p.m., Twin Cities Senior Center, 748-0061

Dance day, 10-11:45 a.m., Twin Cities Senior Center, 748-0061

Lunch, noon, $3 suggested donation, Twin Cities Senior Center, 748-0061

Pinochle, 11 a.m., Morton Senior Cen-ter, 496-3230

Nutrition lunch, noon, $3 suggest-ed donation, Morton Senior Center, 496-3231

Zumba, 6-7 p.m., Toledo Senior Cen-ter, 864-2112

Open pool, 9 a.m., Toledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Cook’s choice lunch, 11:30 a.m., To-ledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Wood carving class, 1-3 p.m., Toledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Quilt class, 1-3 p.m., Toledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Women’s pool, 10 a.m., Packwood Senior Center, 494-6331

Sit and Be Fit, 11 a.m., Packwood Se-nior Center, 494-6331

Organizations

American Legion Post 508, potluck and meeting, 6 p.m., Onalaska First Church of God

Onalaska American Legion Post 508, 6 p.m. potluck, 7 p.m. meeting, Onalas-ka First Church of God, 978-5368

Friday, May 18

Acoustic Jazz Soul Duo to Perform in Chehalis

Northern California’s eclec-tic acoustic, jazz-soul duo, Al-lison Scull and Victor Martin, will perform at 7 p.m. Friday at the Riverside Golf Course and Bistro, Chehalis.

Their acoustic sound com-bines the songs, vocals and gui-tar work of a singer-songwriter with old-school jazz saxophone melodies and great vocal har-monies. According to Jim Dyar of Enjoy Magazine, they blend

“elements of folk, jazz, blues, Eu-ropean and Latin music, all of which translates into a laid-back, vibe that tends to put people at ease.”

As a duo, Allison and Victor have shared the stage with Tuck and Patti, Walter “Wolfman” Washington, Craig Chaquico, blues legend John Hammond, Acoustic Alchemy and The Blind Boys of Alabama.

They have released three CDs: “From the Back Burner” (2002), “Allison Scull and Victor Martin Live” (2006) and “Cool like the Breeze” (2010). See www.allisonandvictor.com to listen to music samples.

The Riverside Golf Course & Bistro is located at 1451 N.W. Airport Road. For additional in-formation, call 748-8182.

‘Spring Bling Again’ Coming to Holiday Inn Express

Courtyard Salon & Spa and Ciao Bella are again combining beauty and fashion the their an-nual “Spring Bling Again” event 5-8 p.m. Friday at the Holiday Inn Express, Chehalis.

“Spring Bling Again” will showcase the newest in spring fashions and latest in hair, nails, make-up, skin, massage, perma-nent make-up and more.

New this year is a focus on fitness with a demonstration from Beachbody Coach Teri Walker.

CalendarCommunity

Editor’s Best Bet

In connection with the release of a new CD called “Leaning,” the Voetberg Family is giving a concert Saturday, May 19, at Cen-tralia College’s Corbet Theatre.

At the 6:30 p.m. concert, the Voetbergs will be playing all the songs on the new CD.

Tickets are $8 for adults, $5 for kids 14 and under, and $30 for families. They may be pur-chased at the Cuppa Joe drive-

through coffee locations in Centralia and Chehalis. Those who would like to purchase tick-ets online may do so at https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/240880.

Those who would like to have tickets held at will call may call (360) 304-2950 or email [email protected].

The new CD will be available at the concert for $15.

There will be one-night-only specials for guests, as well as many giveaways and a chance to win two grand prizes.

The first 50 guests will re-ceive swag bags, filled with goodies.

Participants may walk red carpet and have their picture taken with friends.

A DJ will be playing for those who want to dance.

There is no admission charge. Additional information may be obtained by calling 520-3034.

Benefit to Help Girl With Eye Illness

A benefit and car show for 10-year-old Hannah Bodine, Elma, will be held Friday through Sunday at the Chehalis Moose Lodge.

Hannah has a rare eye disease, keratoconus, which is causing her to go blind. She needs an operation, which can only be done at Mount Sinai Hospital, Los Angeles.

She is the daughter of Jen-nifer Fisk and Brandon Bodine.

The Bodine family is from the Centralia-Adna area.

On Friday, May 18, the Women of the Moose will have food baskets available from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.

A spaghetti feed will be held at the lodge 2-6 p.m. on Saturday, May 19. Also on Saturday will be a live/silent auction, featur-ing Jerry Owens, at 5 p.m. The day’s events will conclude with a dance by Sunryze at 7 p.m.

On Sunday, May 20, the Women of the Moose will serve breakfast from 9 a.m. to 11 am.

Cost of all these events is $5 except for the dance, which is $6.

A car show will be at the lodge all three days.

Items for the auctions will be on display Friday.

Those who want more in-formation or want to make a donation for the auction may call Harvey or Dianna Chappell, (360) 489-5203.

The Chehalis Moose Lodge is located at 1400 Grand Ave., Cen-tralia.

Voetbergs to Perform; New CD Released

Voetberg family / Courtesy photo

The Voetberg family will perform Saturday, May 19, at Centralia College’s Corbet

Theatre in connection with the release of a new CD called “Leaning.”

please see CALENDAR, page Main 9

CH470985sl.d

b

Thurs. & Fri. Nights(Reservations Recommended)

Prime Rib Dinner Come in for lunch & try our

Hot Pastrami

or Reuben!

(360) 736-77605945 PRATHER ROAD | CENTRALIA, WA 98531

RETAIL LOCATION FOR DICK�S BREWING COMPANY

app.chronline.com

CH471299cf.ke

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Main 3LOCALS

DOWNTOWN CHEHALIS:

Century-Old Trees Seen to Have Potential to Cause Injury or Damage

By Kyle Spurr

[email protected]

The four elm trees between Westminster Presbyterian Church and Market Boulevard in Chehalis will be removed this weekend by Kastle Tree Service.

The trees, which belong to the Presbyterian church, are over 120 years old and Pastor Brian North said the church has noticed the trees declining in health over the past few years.

“They are not healthy,” North said, “and we would be better off taking them down in a con-trolled way.”

The church’s buildings and grounds commission brought in an arborist about five years ago to remove limbs and use two cables to support a large limb

hanging over the church.After the heavy snow and ice

storms this winter, other large limbs had also fallen from the trees.

Due to the trees beginning to die and potentially causing in-jury or property damage, North said the church decided to take the trees down.

“It’s not what we wish to do,” North said. “But it is what we need to do.”

In order to remove the elm trees, the church needed a right-of-way permit from the city.

Public Works Director Herta Fairbanks said the trees are on church property, but are also by a city-owned right-of-way.

“The church asked for a right-of-way permit to channel the flow of traffic a little differently,” Fairbanks said.

While Kastle Tree Service, based in Cinebar, works on the tree removal Saturday and Sun-day, no traffic lanes will be closed.

Fairbanks said cones will be set up and a few yellow dura posts will be taken out to leave more room for the crews.

Kastle Tree Service Owner Ken Lenz said his crew will take all the limbs and brush off the trees on Saturday and then re-move the bulk of trees on Sun-day after the church service.

The tree service will bring an 85-foot lift, bucket truck and chipper truck.

The tree removal will cost the church $6,000 from funds donated by members.

Once the elm trees are re-

moved, North said the church plans to eventually plant new trees. The church has to follow the city’s guidelines to fit the new trees into the community, he said.

Jean Bluhm, the Presbyte-rian church’s historian, said she has seen pictures of the elm

trees being planted before 1890, the same year the church pur-chased the property. The church itself was built in 1907.

“(The elm trees) are treasured by the congregation,” Bluhm said.

•••

Kyle Spurr: (360) 807-8239

Four Historic Elm Trees to be Removed This Weekend

Chris Geier / [email protected]

Four elm trees on Market Boulevard in Chehalis will soon be cut down due to their

age and the threat of falling limbs.

‘‘It’s not what we wish to do, but it is what we

need to do.’’

Brian North

church pastor

May 5 – July 8

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CH471798cz.cg

PFD Board Reviewing Recent Feasibility LegislationOVERSIGHT: Law Would Take Effect June 7

By Bianca Fortis

[email protected]

Members of the Lewis Coun-ty Public Facilities District board are trying to determine whether legisla-tion passed by lawmakers in March would affect the pro-posed Lewis County Event Center and Sports Com-plex.

Board members on Tuesday discussed the legislation, which was signed March 1 by Gov. Chris Gregoire.

The law would take effect June 7.

According to the bill, an in-

dependent financial feasibility review is required to be per-formed prior to the long-term lease, purchase or development of a facility.

Lewis County Treasurer and treasurer of the PFD board Rose Bowman said the wording is un-clear as to how it applies to the Lewis County PFD.

“The Washington State Trade Center has 150 leases, vendors and so forth to run centers,” she said. “The Depart-ment is not excited about hav-ing to review every lease. They don’t believe that’s what the Legislature meant.”

The board is working with the Department of Commerce to see if the legislation does apply.

Board members have said even if the PFD is covered under the legislation, it would not have a major impact on the event cen-ter being built.

The legislation came about

because of the Town Toyota Center in Wenatchee, a 4,300-seat arena owned and managed by a public facilities district.

Last December the arena went into default and is expect-ed to lose $400,000 this year.

The state bailed out the are-

na by loaning the PFD money for bond payments. In April Wenatchee voters approved a 0.2 percent sales tax increase to re-pay the loan.

Bowman said the Wenatchee PFD didn’t structure their fi-nancing appropriately.

“The structure depended heavily on building revenues to pay back their debt,” she said.

“That was a huge mistake.”•••

Bianca Fortis: (360) 807-8245, twitter.com/biancafortis and face-book.com/biancafortis

THE LANGUAGE FROM THE LEGISLATUREA new section is added to chapter 35.57 RCW to read as follows:

An independent financial feasibility review under this section is required to be performed prior to any of the following events:

• The formation of a public facilities district under this chapter;

• The issuance of any indebtedness, excluding the issuance of obligations to refund or replace such indebt-edness, by a public facilities district under this chapter; or

• The long-term lease, purchase, or development of a facility under RCW 35.57.020.

The independent financial feasibility review required by this section must be conducted by the depart-ment of commerce through the municipal research and services center under RCW 43.110.030 or under a contract with another entity under the authority of RCW 43.110.080. The review must examine the potential costs to be incurred by the public facility district and the adequacy of revenues or expected revenues to meet those costs. The cost of the independent financial feasibility review must be borne by the public facility district or the local government proposing to form a public facility district.

The independent financial feasibility review, upon completion, must be a public document and must be submitted to the governor, the state treasurer, the state auditor, the public facility district and participating local political subdivisions, and appropriate committees of the legislature.Rose Bowman

PFD tresurer

By Amy Nile

[email protected]

The Chehalis School District has received $1 million energy efficiency grant. The Office of Superintendent of Public In-struction has awarded 14 school districts similar grants, totaling $5.9 million statewide.

The funds will help the dis-tricts improve long-term energy efficiency and save on opera-tional costs.

“The brick-and-mortar im-provements and the savings from reduced long-term operat-ing costs make this type of pro-gram one of the best kinds,” said Superintendent of Public In-struction Randy Dorn. “We are seeing large and small districts compete for money to replace old boilers, add insulation and get rid of outdated lighting. It’s all part of making the learning environment the best it can be.”

The Chehalis School District will use the funds to upgrade to high-efficiency lighting and windows, install time clocks for boiler controls and retrofit water fixtures to reduce consumption.

“Without the grant, we would be unable to make these up-grades in the foreseeable future,” said Heather Pinkerton, director of business and operations for the Chehalis School District.

The project will cost an es-timated $1,145,623. In addition to the $1 million from OSPI, the Lewis County Public Utility Dis-trict has pledged some $80,000 to the project.

The district will save about $40,000 in annual energy sav-ings once the upgrades are com-plete.

OSPI awarded $20 million to 43 projects in March as part of the capital budget. These 14 districts did not receive grants at that time. Since then, the state Legislature allocated an addi-tional $40 million through the 2012 Jobs Now Act. OSPI will award another $14 million in November and the remaining

$20 million the following Febru-ary.

To qualify for these funds, school districts must conduct an investment-grade audit of their school facilities to determine what improvements will save the most energy and be most benefi-cial overall.

•••

Amy Nile: (360) 807-8235

Chehalis School District Gets $1 Million for Energy Efficiency

DISTRICTS RECEIVING THE STATE ENERGY

AWARDS STATEWIDE• Chehalis• Evaline• Issaquah• Kennewick• Marysville• Northshore• Ocosta• Pasco• Reardan-Edwall• South Kitsap• Spokane• Tahoma• Wenatchee• Yakima

CHEHALIS SCHOOL DISTRICT ENERGY

UPGRADES:R.E. Bennett Elementary, Olym-pic Elementary, Chehalis Middle School and W.F. West High School — Lighting: Replace inefficient lighting with high ef-ficiency units

Olympic Elementary School — Window Upgrade: Replace single pane non-insulated wood and thermally unbroken alumi-num frame windows with high efficiency windows.

Olympic Elementary and Cas-cade Elementary — Heating, ventilation and air conditioning: Install new digital time clock with outdoor air temperature based start capability for boiler control in place of existing me-chanical timer.

Main 4 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012LOCAL

By Austin Jenkins

Public Radio Northwest News Network

Five years ago, the state ruled that Great Wolf Lodge in South Thurston County was exempt from most state taxes because it was partly owned by the Cheha-lis Tribe.

Thurston County officials challenged that conclusion and won round one against the tribe in federal court. Now, internal state documents show that the lawyer at the Washington De-partment of Revenue who wrote the ruling exempting the resort had his own doubts. A former colleague said the lawyer felt pressure from above to find Great Wolf eligible for favorable tax treatment potentially worth tens of millions of dollars.

In late 2006, there was a meeting at the Department of Revenue in the office of then-Deputy Director Leslie Cush-man. The meeting was attended by an agency lawyer named Mark Bohe.

Last year, Bohe wrote an in-ternal memo about that meet-ing. He wrote that when he arrived for the meeting, an at-torney for the Chehalis tribe, Harry Chesnin, was already there. Bohe said his boss assured Chesnin her agency would find Great Wolf Lodge exempt from state taxes.

Bohe writes that Cushman instructed him to work with the tribal attorney to “develop the best possible fact pattern” to do that.

INTERNAL EMAILS SHOW Bohe and Chesnin did indeed work closely to establish a set of facts about the partnership between the tribe and the Wisconsin-based non-tribal resort com-pany.

In one email, Bohe even advised Chesnin on how to structure the business deal to strengthen the tribe’s position that the project was not taxable. Chesnin — who no longer works for the tribe — turned down a request for his version of events.

In February 2007, Bohe is-sued an official ruling that ex-empted the indoor water park from state excise taxes.

Bohe still works for the agen-cy and would not agree to an interview. But fellow lawyer Jim Winterstein – now retired from the Department of Revenue – said Bohe was uneasy about his ruling on Great Wolf Lodge.

“Basically, he told me that the conclusion that he reached he didn’t really agree with, but he did it because he knew Leslie wanted that conclusion,” Win-terstein said.

In 2007, Cushman was a deputy director and tribal liai-son at the Department of Rev-enue. That year, Cushman ap-peared before a panel of state lawmakers on the House State Government and Tribal Affairs Committee. And this is how she described the role of the Depart-ment of Revenue:

“We collect taxes and state law requires that we tax to the full extent of the law. That means full enforcement and fair enforcement of the law and we construe exemptions narrowly.”

But Winterstein said – in his observation – that when tribes were involved, Cushman’s bark didn’t have much bite.

“There was never any doubt in my mind that she was pro-tribe,” he said.

It’s a bias Cushman denies. She has since gone to work for the Puyallup Tribe near Tacoma. In an email, Cushman said that if she had a bias back then it was to “follow the law.”

Washington administra-tive code does clearly state the Department of Revenue should construe “liberally in favor of … Indians.” But the code also said that non-Indians doing business in Indian country are “generally” subject to tax.

CUSHMAN DENIES SHE ordered Bohe to find in favor of the tribe. She calls the charge “ridiculous” and “untrue.”

Revenue spokesman Mike Gowrylow defends the agency’s ruling.

“It was our best first impres-sion based on the facts available to us,” he said.

Whatever happened behind the scenes, the decision to ex-empt Great Wolf Lodge could

set a big precedent, said Patricia Costello, the former Thurston County tax assessor. She said this isn’t about the Chehalis tribe, but about the out-of-state resort company.

“It would mean that any corporation could come to the State of Washington, talk to one of the tribes, go in business with them and be tax-exempt,” Costello said. “And that’s what would have happened if they get away with this.”

In U.S. District court fil-ings, the Chehalis tribe makes the opposite case. It argues that taxing partnerships between tribes and non-tribal companies would chill future joint ventures designed to give tribes self-suffi-ciency.

WHEN THE CHEHALIS INDIAN Tribe and Great Wolf Resorts teamed up, they formed a Del-aware-based Limited Liability Corporation, or LLC. The De-partment of Revenue’s tax rul-ing notes that typically joint ventures between a tribe and a non-tribal entity do not enjoy the favorable tax treatment re-served for tribes.

Costello is more blunt.“It is a for-profit corporation

that does not qualify for an ex-emption,” she said. “Period.”

And in 2010, a federal court judge in Tacoma agreed. Judge Benjamin Settle ruled that Great Wolf Lodge is mostly a non-tribal business. And that’s why he said Costello did have the au-thority to levy property taxes.

Inside the Washington De-partment of Revenue, the case was closely watched. Inter-nal emails show that after the Settle’s ruling, Bohe lobbied to reverse course. In one email ex-change, he called his tax exemp-tion “so flawed that I believe it needs to be withdrawn.”

He wasn’t the only one. Around the same time, Winter-stein wrote a memo to his boss,

Brad Flaherty, who is now direc-tor of the Department of Rev-enue. It essentially said, If I had known what the judge was privy to, I would not have concluded that the resort was exempt from property taxes.

Winterstein is now unequiv-ocal about Great Wolf Lodge.

“I don’t have any doubt at this point that it is taxable,” he said.

GOWRYLOW SAID the depart-ment’s policy, when litigation is ongoing, is to wait for the final outcome before considering a change of course.

“If in fact the facts are differ-ent than presented to us we can assess back taxes,” he said. “We have not lost that ability.”

But the case has dragged on longer than revenue expected. As a result, the agency’s ability to collect back taxes is running up against a four year statute of limitations. Documents show the state attorney general’s of-fice has advised the agency to obtain waivers to extend that

window.Great Wolf Resorts wouldn’t

comment on the Lodge’s tax-exempt status nor would anyone affiliated with the water park.

The Chehalis Tribe is appeal-ing the federal court ruling that Thurston County can levy prop-erty taxes on the resort. The tribe argues it’s the 51 percent majority owner of the Limited Liability Corporation that owns the resort. The Chehalis also say the county’s property tax in-fringes on the tribe’s sovereign authority. The two sides are cur-rently in mediation.

•••

Austin Jenkins is a reporter for the Public Radio Northwest News Network. His work airs on KPLU and KUOW, among other public radio stations. Contact him at [email protected].

Lawyer Who Ruled Great Wolf Lodge Exempt From State Taxes Had His Doubts

The Chronicle, file photo

Kalayha Cochran, Seattle, and Scott Cochran, Seattle, hit the pool at the end of the

River Canyon waterslide in June 2011 at the Grand Mound Great Wolf Lodge. The

Great Wolf Lodge was granted tax exempt status despite concerns of the lawyer

who granted the status.

‘‘Basically, he told me that the conclusion that he reached he didn’t really agree with, but

he did it because he knew Leslie wanted that conclusion.’’

Jim Winterstein,

attorney

GUILTY PLEAS: Ulises

Carrillo-Cruz is Fourth

Man to Admit Guilt

in Shooting Incident

By Kyle Spurr

[email protected]

Ulises Carrillo-Cruz, 20, who shot Genevieve Purser, 28, during a gang-related con-frontation Nov. 27 outside the Edison Terrace Apartments on

North Ash Street in Centralia, was sentenced to 13 months in prison Monday afternoon after pleading guilty to second-de-gree assault.

With his sentencing, Carril-lo-Cruz becomes the fourth per-son to plead guilty from the Ash Street shooting.

According to court records:His brother, Rolando Car-

rillo-Cruz, 25, was sentenced Feb. 1 to six months in jail af-ter pleading guilty to rendering criminal assistance.

Javier E. Martinez and Fran-cisco J. Robles, both 18, have also pleaded guilty to rendering criminal assistance.

Martinez will be sentenced June 7 at 1:50 p.m. and Robles will be sentenced on May 30 at 10 a.m. They are currently out of custody.

The three men helped Ulises hide a handgun after he shot Purser in the shoulder outside the Centralia apartment com-plex.

Purser was treated at Har-

borview Medical Center in Se-attle for a non-life-threatening injury following the shooting, police said.

After the shooting that oc-curred at about 1:15 p.m., police found a 9 mm handgun hidden in bushes behind the apartment complex.

Rolando Carrillo-Cruz was reportedly the intended target of a drive-by shooting on South-west Williams Avenue in Che-halis in August 2010.

Man Connected to Gang-Related Shooting in Centralia Sentenced to 13 Months

MIXED RESULTS: Net Job Loss of 300 Statewide, But Jobless Rate Drops to 8.1 Percent

By Amy Nile

[email protected]

Washington lost an estimat-ed 300 jobs from March to April statewide, according to numbers recently released from the fed-eral Bureau of Labor Statistics. However, the BLS estimates that Washington gained 38,300 jobs from April 2011 to April 2012.

“The trouble is we haven’t been able to gain much traction,” said Jim Vleming, a labor mar-ket economist for Lewis, Grays Harbor, Pacific, Mason and Thurston counties. “It’s a slow climb back up to where we were.”

The seasonally adjusted un-

employment rate fell from 8.3 percent in March to an estimated 8.1 percent in April, according to the Employment Security De-partment’s figures. The state had a 9.3 percent rate in April 2011.

Lewis County had the third highest unemployment rate in the state in March at 14.1 per-cent. Grays Harbor County showed a slightly higher 14.2 percent and Thurston County faired better at 8.4 percent.

The survey that calculates the unemployment rate showed job gains, while the survey that calculates job numbers showed a loss, producing the mixed results.

“It’s always confounding when the surveys produce con-tradictory results,” said Dave Wallace, senior economist at Washington’s Employment Se-curity Department. “Based on experience over the past several

months, the job numbers are likely to be revised.”

The Employment Security Department will release infor-mation more specific to counties

Tuesday.“I expect the unemployment

rate to drop and some better numbers for Lewis County,” Vleming said.

Washington Loses Jobs While Unemployment Falls

Cascade Family Medical Welcomes Two New Practitioners.

Stephen Fischer

Physicians Assistant

Maggie Hennessey

Nurse Pratitioner

Stephen began his practice nearly 30 years ago. He has worked at Washington Orthopaedic, St. Peter’s Neurosurgery and Steck Medical Group

She can see patients of all ages.

1740 Cooks Hill Road

Centralia, WA

360-736-7623

They are both currently accepting new patients. Be sure to schedule an appointment today!

Kenneth Perko, MD • Eric DeMun, MD • Christopher Yarter, MD

CH

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CH471538b

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Member: $40 ppNon-Member: $50 pp

Havin’ a Ball

Camp Splash

Over the Edge

Laser-mania

STARTS

JUNE 26th

Come in and register today!

Centralia 360 736-1683Chehalis 360 748-3744

Rochester 360 273-0457www.thorbeckes.com

(10% off for siblings)Fees due at time of registration. Deadline for registration is the Friday before each camp.

There is a limited number of campers per camp. We encourage early sign ups to secure

your spot. Valid for 2012 Camps Only.

ThorbeckesSummer-time

Camps2012

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Main 5LocaL

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The Chronicle is published three times a week at 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia, WA, 98531-0580. Periodicals postage paid at: Centralia, WA.

no arrests� Toxicology Report Could Take up to Two Months to Complete

by stephanie schendel

[email protected]

The Lewis County Sheriff 's Office has identified the person who allegedly provided alcohol to a 16-year-old Chehalis boy who was run over by a vehicle and killed early Saturday morn-ing while reportedly lying on a road.

Detectives are still investigat-ing the death of Tyler Gonzalez and an arrest is not imminent, according to a statement from the Lewis County Sheriff ’s Of-fice, which has not released the name of the person suspected of

providing alcohol to the teen.Gonzalez, a W.F. West High

School sophomore, was lying in a rural stretch of roadway wear-ing dark clothing when a driver rounded a slight curve and hit him at about 2:30 a.m.

The Lewis County Coroner’s Office ruled earlier this week that the cause of death is acci-dental, caused by multiple inter-nal injuries from being struck by a vehicle.

Gonzalez was one of many juveniles who were drinking al-cohol at a residence earlier that night near the place where he died, according to a statement released by the Lewis County Sheriff 's Office. Gonzalez left the party, and for unknown rea-sons, lay down in the roadway

where he was struck and killed by the vehicle.

Detectives interviewed other individuals who were with him that night and have learned who provided the alcohol to the ju-veniles, according to the state-ment. Detectives from the Lewis County Sheriff 's Office are still investigating the circumstances of Gonzalez's death.

“We are investigating it,” Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said.

“We are still too early to say what may come of that, and we also have to wait for the toxicology.”

The toxicology results, which will tell if Gonzalez had alco-hol in his system when he died, could take up to two months to come back from the lab, accord-ing to the statement.

Brown said they believe there was more than one person involved in providing the alco-hol.

“This is another sad and trag-ic incident involving alcohol and juveniles," Sheriff Steve Man-sfield said in the press release.

"Poor decisions and choices were made with the end result being the loss of a young man’s life. The consequences of underage drinking continue to serve as a solemn reminder of how quickly people’s lives and families can be destroyed and altered forever.”

The driver, a 50-year-old Onalaska woman, is not be-lieved to be at fault for the col-lision and will not be facing charges, according to the Wash-ington State Patrol.

Sheriff: Alcohol Provided to Teen Killed in Roadway

vigiL pLannedW.F. West High School

students will hold a vigil for Tyler Shawn Gonzalez, the 16-year-old student who died early Saturday morn-ing after being struck by a vehicle. The vigil will take place at 7 p.m. at Bearcat Stadium in Chehalis.

In addition to a vigil, the school will also hold a “spa-ghetti feed” next Thursday, May 24, to raise money to help Gonzalez’s family pay for the funeral costs. A $5 donation is suggested per plate.

by amy nile

[email protected]

The Camp Murray Honor Guard presented a memorial service Wednesday at Sticklin Funeral Chapel in Centralia for Lewis County veterans who had not previously received military honors.

“A lot of people can’t afford funerals and haven’t received military honors,” said Jim Marden, who served in the Navy during the Vietnam War. “So it amounts to respect and dignity for serving the country.”

The Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 2200 and the Ameri-can Legion posts 17 and 22 host-ed the event.

Chaplain Earl Nordby led

former and active service mem-bers along with nine community members in prayer.

Korean War veteran Bob Terrell read more than 60 names of deceased Lewis County area veterans and a soldier rang a bell after each one.

The honor guard presented a flag to Joanne Evans, who at-tended to honor her late hus-band, Robert Evans, and her friend Tom Sothard.

“It brought back a lot of mem-ories,” she said.

Marden said all counties are holding similar services and the names read go into a Depart-ment of Defense database.

“It’s to make sure all men and women that served are men-tioned and honored,” he said. “It

brings closure for a lot of people.”Terrell said veterans of Viet-

nam and Korea did not receive much public appreciation and he likes all of the support for to-day’s veterans, despite the con-

troversy surrounding the wars. “People don’t realize, people

in the service are protecting their country whether they be-lieve in (the mission) or not,” said the Air Force veteran.

Lewis County Area Veterans Receive Military Honors at Funeral Home

Amy Nile / [email protected]

Camp Murray Honor Guard soldiers fold a lag to memorialize Lewis County vet-

erans who had not previously received military honors at a service Wednesday at

Sticklin Funeral Chapel in Centralia.

neW state autHorization� Higher Education Costs Increase $450 a Year

by amy nile

[email protected]

Resident tuition at the state’s two-year colleges will rise about 12 percent for full-time students and 11 percent for those taking classes part-time starting this fall.

Full-time students at Centra-lia College will pay about $458 more, for a total bill of about $4,000 yearly.

Students attending the state’s public four-year universi-ties will face at least a 16 percent increase.

“It is unfortunate that we have increased the burden on students because those who will be impacted are those who in the long run will more likely be in position to stimulate and strengthen the economy,” said Jim Walton, president of Cen-tralia College.

The Washington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges voted to allow the 12

percent increase at all two-year colleges.

The state Legislature au-thorized the tuition hike that follows a 12 percent increase levied last year. However, leg-islators did increase funding for students who receive State Need Grants to cover the new rates.

“Our budget has been cut so drastically over the last four years that the legislators knew our ability to serve students would be severely impacted if they cut us again this year. They chose not to do that and allowed for the tuition increase so we could continue to serve our students without further reduction in service,” Walton said.

Last year, the Legislature adopted a two-year budget that cut $110 million from the com-munity and technical college system, but authorized tuition increases to help make up for the reductions.

The reduction in funding has caused colleges like Cen-tralia’s to not fill all vacant po-sitions, reduce course offerings and increase class sizes.

Centralia College is adopt-ing measures to help students save money like an online library that offers more af-fordable textbooks and pro-grams that allow them to move through school and into work more quickly.

•••

Amy Nile: (360) 807-8235

Centralia College to Raise Tuition 12 Percent

“It is unfortunate that we have increased the

burden on students.’’

Jim Walton

Centralia College president

Mossyrock Community Church

At The Corner Of James And Mossyrock Ave.

Mossyrock, Wa

Pastor Bob Brown 360-983-3747

Friday, May 18th at 7:00 p.m.Cinebar native Ethel Wilson serving in Japan.

Mossyrock resident Ed Stephens serving with Lighthouse Christian Resource Center and Jail Ministry in Chehalis.

Saturday, May 19th11 :30 a.m. Ladies Brunch with Patricia Turner, Tennessee. Lunch provided.

7 :00 p.m. Vincent Price, European Christian Mission.

Sunday, May 20th11 :00 a.m. Past Mossyrock resident Horace Turner serving

with Hiway Biway Christian Crusade in Tennessee.12:00 p.m. Potluck, please join us for fellowship and food.

6:00 p.m. Horace Turner will close our Missionary Conference

Wheelchair Accessible

hat all the peoples of the earth may know that the Lord is God, there is no other.

1 Kings 8:60

Come to a Missionary Conference

Mark Your Calendar: May 18, 19, And 20Th

CH

472024cz.db

Tuesday May 15, 7:00 PM: The GNW Music Tour featuring Grammy nominated “Yarn” FREE to all ages.

Minor with parent before 7 pm only$3 All Ages • Ages 3 and under are FREE

112 N. Tower Ave. • Centralia(360) 736-1634 • mcmenamins.com

May 11th - May 17th

he American Reunion$3 • R

9:00pm (No Tues)

he Lorax$3 • PG13

12:00pm & 3:00pm (Sat & Sun)

CH

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Lockout $3 • PG13

6:00 pm (No Tues)

& 12:30pm (Wed early bird matinee)

Main 6 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012LOCAL

Spring Fling6th Annual

Dinner $20 (tickets available at door)

• Prime Rib or Cornish Game Hens• Silent Auction • Dessert Frenzy

• Live Auction • Live Music

Saturday, May 19th4:30pm to 9:00pm

Twin Cities Senior Center2545 N. National Ave., ChehalisFor more information call Carolyne Nixon

at (360) 520-0772

CH472676cz.cg

CANDIDATE FILINGSAs of 8:15 a.m. today

Congressional District 3

(Lewis, Thurston, Clark, Cowlitz, Klickitat, Pacific, Skamania, Wahkiakum)

Office: U.S. Representative — 2-year term, partisanName Party HometownJaime Herrera Beutler, incumbent R CamasJon T. Haugen D Vancouver

Legislative District #19

(Southwest Lewis, Grays Harbor, Cowlitz, Pacific, Wahkiakum)

Office: State Senator — 4-year term, partisanName Party HometownBrian Hatfield, incumbent D RaymondRick Winsman R Longview

Office: State Representative Position 1 — 2-year term, partisanName Party HometownDean Takko, incumbent D LongviewDixie Kolditz R Cathlamet

Office: State Representative Position 2 — 2-year term, partisanName Party HometownBrian Blake, incumbent D Aberdeen

Legislative District #20

(Lewis, Thurston, Clark, Cowlitz)

Office: State Senator — 4-year term, partisanName Party HometownDan Swecker, incumbent R RochesterJohn E. Braun R ChehalisRae Lowery R La Center

Office: State Representative Position 1 — 2-year term, partisanOffice Party HometownRichard DeBolt, incumbent R Chehalis

Office: State Representative — 2-year term, partisanName Party HometownEd Orcutt, incumbent (18th) R KalamaJohn Morgan R Rochester

Lewis County

Office: Commissioner District 1 — 4-year term, partisanName Party HometownRon Averill, incumbent R CentraliaEdna Fund R Centralia

Office: Commissioner District 2 — 4-year term, partisanName Party HometownBill Schulte, incumbent R Doty

Lewis County Public Utility District

Office: Commissioner District 2 — Nonpartisan Office, 6-year term Name HometownJames H. Hubenthal Chehalis

Office: Court of Appeals, Division 2, District 3(Lewis, Clark, Cowlitz, Pacific, Skamania, Wahkiakum)

Office: Judge Position 1 — 6-year term, nonpartisanName HometownJoel Penoyar, incumbent South Bend

By The Chronicle

A new contender has filed to run against Sen. Dan Swecker, R-Rochester. Rae Lowery, of La Center, filed Wednesday after-noon. Lowery works as a school counselor and also writes chil-dren’s books. John Braun of Chehalis is also running to be the 20th legislative district sena-tor.

On Tuesday Dixie Kolditz of

Cathlamet filed to run against Rep. Dean Takko, D-Longview in the 19th legislative district. Kolditz, a Republican, is origi-nally from South Africa. She be-came a U.S. citizen in 2004 and owns two businesses with her husband, Brighton Enterprises and Open Box Creations.

Check back for Saturday’s edition of The Chronicle for more in-depth coverage of the political candidates.

New Faces Emerge Midway Through Filing Week

FIND MORE INFORMATION ONLINEVisit elections.chronline.com for links to county sites and more infor-

mation about the races.

Lewis County Superior Court

Office: Judge Position 2 — 4-year term, nonpartisanName HometownJames W. Lawler Chehalis

Office: Judge Position 3 — 4-year term, nonpartisanName HometownRichard L. Brosey Chehalis

Thurston County

Office: Commissioner District 1 (central Thurston, including Teni-no) — 4-year term, partisanName Party HometownKaren Rogers D Olympia

Office: Commissioner District 2 (east Thurston) — 4-year term, partisanName Party HometownSandra Romero, incumbent D Lacey

Grays Harbor County

Office: Commissioner District 1 (East Grays Harbor, including Oakville) — 4-year term, partisanName Party HometownTerry Willis, incumbent D MontesanoWes Cormier R Montesano

Mossyrock

Editor’s Note: Until graduation, The Chornicle is recognizing the top grad-uates from area schools. We salute their excellence and offer congratulation to the entire class of 2012.

MOSSYROCK COMMENCEMENT

CEREMONIESGraduation: June 9 at 2 p.m. in

the Mossyrock High School Gym

Number of graduates: 30

Essential info for people bringing guests: Seating is first-come first-served.

Accommodations for the dis-abled/elderly: wheelchair access and floor seating

Baccalaureate: June 6 at 6 p.m. at Mossyrock Assembly of God

Contact: Mossyrock High School, (360) 983-3183

Honoring Top Graduates in Lewis County

Anna StuckiGPA: 3.98

Parents: Elizabeth and Wil-liam Stucki

Activities: Student govern-ment, basketball, volley-ball, pep band, Knowledge Bowl, Future Business Lead-ers of America, church youth group, Young Life Organiza-tion, community food bank, Daughters of the American Revolution Good Citizen

Future plans: Attend the Uni-versity of Portland to study global business

Jessica UllmannGPA: 3.96

Parents: Diana Gish

Activities: Teacher’s assistant, Knowledge Bowl, youth group, Young Life Organization, ju-nior’s bowling league

Future plans: Attend Centra-lia College

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SWW

Seniors • May 2012

SeniorsSouthwest Washington

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A reborn program is looking

for a few good Lewis County

seniors.

he Retired and Senior

Volunteer Program recently

returned to Lewis County

and began recruiting new

volunteers, looking to ill needs

at food banks, shelters and

other charitable organizations.

he program provides citizens

age 55 and older an opportunity

to stay active with organizations

that work with United Way and

other non-proits around the

area.

“hese people from this

generation have a strong sense

of character and values to

share,” RSVP Coordinator

Jennifer hompson said during

a recent interview with he

Chronicle.

RSVP returned to Lewis

County last fall, after the

program previously lost federal

funding and its 36-year-old

director died unexpectedly.

“We had all these seniors

that didn’t know what to do,”

hompson said.

United Way of hurston,

Mason and Lewis Counties got

together to bring RSVP back.

“RSVP went away in Lewis

County and now it’s back.

We can really kick this thing

of,” said Debbie Campbell,

executive director for United

Way of Lewis County.

United Way aims to ind 100

new volunteers locally, though

some of those positions have

already been illed.

he program hopes to

match a volunteer’s area of

interest to an appropriate area

of assistance to address needs

in the community.

“he goal is to ind

something that is enriching,”

hompson said.

In addition to the satisfaction

of community involvement,

the program provides beneits

including supplemental

medical, dental, vision

and liability insurance for

participants while they are

volunteering. RSVP also provides mileage

reimbursement for travel.Organizations not currently

involved with the program

can also apply to host RSVP volunteers.

Organizers hope to open new volunteering opportunities for local seniors in the future.

“We’re trying to encourage nonproits to open their doors,” hompson said.

he issue harkens back to the Chehalis River lood of 2007, when the United Way stepped in to become a hub of volunteering and fundraising for a community hit hard by

disaster.

Campbell said the RSVP

program can help provide

essential infrastructure in the

case that disaster strikes and

manpower is needed to operate

donation centers, shelters

and other essential disaster

resources.

hose interested in RSVP

can call United Way of Lewis

County at 748-8100 or visit

www.lewiscountyuw.com.

RSVP: Program Seeks Community Vounteers Ages 55 and Older

Lewis County Regains Senior Volunteer Program

By The Chronicle

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2 • SWW Seniors • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash. Thursday, May 17, 2012

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Food For All: Volunteer at a local food bank as a food handler. Stock and shelve received food shipments. Work with patrons and staff.

Marvelous Mentors: Be a positive inluence on a child in need as a Big Brother or Big Sister. A background check is required.

Great Groceries: Help pick up donated food from local grocery stores for a charity. Must have a driver’s license and be able to lift a moderate amount.

Help the Hungry: Volunteer to pack boxes and repackage goods at a local food bank. Lift, shelve and hand out boxes to grateful clientele.

Know the Net: Share your computer knowledge with the residents of a retirement home. Teach basic computer skills to willing participants.

Find a Friend: Be a companion to a retirement home resident. Make regular visits. Do fun activities and talk about life with someone who appreciates the company.

Good Doggy or Kitty: Share the company of your well-behaved pet with seniors at a nursing home. Bring joy to animal lovers who can no longer care for pets themselves.

Shop ‘til You Drop: Assist nursing home residents on weekly shopping trips. Help navigate the store and reach things off of high shelves.

Contact RSVP Volunteer Coordinator Jennifer Thompson at (360) 943-2773, ext. 21 or visit www.unitedway-thurston.org/RSVP.php to volunteer or ind out more.

By The Chronicle

SWWS

We Understand Health Care Coverage

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How to VolunteerThose interested in RSVP can call United Way of Lewis County at

748-8100 or visit www.lewiscountyuw.com.

Organizations Hosting RSVP Volunteers

Retired & Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP)

These programs are currently looking for volunteers to help with:

AARP of Lewis County

Big Brothers/Big Sisters

Catholic Community Services

Cooks Hill Manor

Greater Chehalis Food Bank

Salvation Army

Somma Food Bank

United Way of Lewis County

Ask Dr. Marion

Q:My mother passed on two years

ago. In the last year or so, my dad

has caught the travel bug, but he

has run out of travel partners.

He’s on a limited budget, and that makes it

a bit difficult. Where can he go to find older

people to travel with? Edna in Alaska, 39

I’m so glad to hear about your dad’s travel interest. he “Golden Years” can be the best time to experience the rest of the world. he good news is that there are organizations that cater to an elder population for travel experiences. One the most well-known groups is Elder Hostel. Realize that this is not usually 4-Star travel. Rather, it is geared towards an older population that may be on a more limited or ixed budget. Travelers stay in down-to-earth locations like college campuses, and the “Ys”. Elder Hostel also allows for speciic needs of the elderly such as more bathroom breaks, rest stops, cofee breaks, and slower-paced adventures. hey are more realistic about and experienced with the endurance and interests of the elderly. It can also be fun for your dad to meet other retirees and/or semi-retirees who have like interests. hey could travel together or experience an educational get-away and/or cultural events in the local area. Finally, most elderly are not inclined to do the “ten cities in ten days” trip, so Elder Hostel’s adventures usually run from a week to not more than three weeks. You can ind them at http://www.elderhostel.com.

Additionally, senior centers and religious organizations will often have day and weekend trips. All of these options need to be explored until your father inds the ones that meet his needs. Each experience usually varies according to time, interests, endurance level, and budget. Happy travels!

---Dr. Marion (Marion Somers, PhD) is the author of "Elder Care Made Easier" and has over 40 years of experience as a geriatric care manager, caregiver, speaker, and expert in all things elder care. She offers practical tools, solutions, and advice to help caregivers everywhere through her book, web site, iPhone apps (Elder 411/911), cross-country speaking tours, and more. She is also the national spokesperson for 3in4 Need More, raising awareness for long-term care planning. Visit www.DrMarion.com for more information.

SWWS

Here are a few tips:

• Ask for generics. If there are generic alternatives to brand name medications available, always ask a physician for those medications instead of their more expensive brand name counterparts. Don't just assume a physician will prescribe generics. Sometimes doctors prescribe brand name medications despite the availability of cheaper and equally efective generic medications.

• "Test drive" a drug irst. Just because a doctor prescribes a drug doesn't mean the patient will respond to that drug. Many men and women ind they are too sensitive to a given medication and stop taking it after just a few days. Unfortunately, they paid for a full prescription and cannot return the pills they don't plan to use. Individuals who have a history of sensitivity to medications should "test drive" a drug irst, ordering just a few pills or asking a physician for samples to see how well the body handles them. his won't necessarily matter for people with lat-dollar copayments (you will essentially have to pay two copayments if the drug proves efective), but those without such a plan can save themselves some money if medication does not work out.

• Buy in bulk. Men and women who have been taking a certain medication for a long time and expect to keep taking it might want to consider buying the medicine in bulk. his can save money; just make sure pills purchased won't surpass their expiration date before you take them.

• Inquire about combination medications. Sometimes medications used to treat the same condition can be purchased as combination pills. his will only require one prescription instead of two.

On a similar note, men and women taking medications for two diferent conditions might also be able to take just one medication that treats both conditions. For instance, some blood pressure medications have proven efective at treating other conditions as well. But don't experiment on your own. Consult your physician about your medications and ask if any of them can be used to efectively serve double-duty and save you money.

• Look for programs that o er relief. here are programs that ofer some relief with regards to paying for prescription medications. Discuss such plans with a physician to determine your eligibility, which might be determined by your age or current prescriptions.

SWW Seniors • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash. Thursday, May 17, 2012 • 3

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For the millions of people who rely on prescription medications every day, the day when a drug faces generic competition is one many

circle on their calendars. hat's because generic prescriptions are often signiicantly less expensive than brand name medications, and consumers are able to save substantial amounts of money once a brand name drug faces generic competition.

But many men and women currently taking a brand name prescription might be quick to point out that, while generic medications cost less, brand name prescriptions often rise in price in the months before they face generic competition. Such was the indings of a 2011 study from the AARP Public Policy Institute that examined the 217 brand name drugs most commonly used by people in Medicare. Prices of drugs facing generic competition in 2010 rose by an average of nearly 14 percent in 2009, an increase that was nearly twice the amount of all other drugs. So while drugs might be more afordable once they can be purchased generically, consumers can expect brand name drug manufacturers to drastically increase their prices in the months prior to facing generic competition, as the manufacturers are, in a way, looking for one last big revenue score before their patents expire.

hat's a troublesome reality for anyone taking a brand name prescription, but especially so for older men and women living on ixed incomes. hough drug manufacturers aren't likely to change their practices, there are still ways men and women can reduce prescription medication costs.

Get

Out!

4 • SWW Seniors • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash. Thursday, May 17, 2012

SWW

Sen

iors

• M

ay 2

012

WHAT:Washington State Senior Games

WHEN:July 26 - 29, 2012

WHERE

Lacey and Additional Locations in

the South Sound

Games Include:Archery, Basketball, Badminton, Bowling

Cowboy Action Shooting, Cycling

Dance, Golf, Pickleball, Pool/8-Ball

Race Walking, Racquetball, 5 & 10K Runs

Shuleboard, Soccer, Softball

Swimming, Table Tennis, Tennis

Track & Field, Volleyball

Want to watch the great competition?

Find the event schedule and details at

pugetsoundgames.com or call the information

line at (360) 413-0148.

MARK YOUR CALENDARS!

Most of us are past our prime and won't be

headed to London this summer to participate in

the Olympic Games. Many seniors — nearly 2000

to be speciic — will however be participating in

the 2012 Washington State Senior Games.

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An old saying, “Just because you can doesn’t mean that you should,” applies to tragic events this week that saw the lives of two young men cut short.

In the first, Tyler Gonza-lez, a 16-year-old Chehalis boy, through circumstances that are still not clear, but that apparently involve alcohol being provided to underage drinkers, ended up lying on a dark country road at 2:30 in the morning. The events are sadly predictable. An Onalaska woman passing through the area simply had no chance to stop as she came around a cor-ner and her headlines finally

illuminated his figure in dark clothing.

The teen died at the scene. As sad as his death is, an added tragedy is the trauma to the driver, who was not at fault but whose life will be scarred even though she did nothing wrong.

Toxicology analysis of Gon-zalez’s blood could take months, but it appears that whoever provided the alcohol could face criminal charges.

Rumors swirl around exactly what happened between the time this youth began drinking and the moment when he ended

up lying in the road in front of a passing car.

What appears clear is that he was provided access to alcohol and chose to drink. Whatever else happened, that decision led to his death.

A second deadly but avoid-able mistake happened on Tues-day as another 16-year-old made a split-second choice to swim with friends across the placid Chehalis River at a popular rec-reation spot south of Rochester.

Although he knew how to swim, he miscalculated the diffi-culty and dangers. Rivers are run-ning cold this year and are much more treacherous than they look.

In another decision that con-tributed to this tragic outcome, Chris Puentes Garay was not wearing a life jacket.

Both of these 16-year-olds were exploring the freedom that comes with approaching adulthood. Like every teen, they didn’t fully understand the pos-sible, even probable, outcomes of their decisions.

Each and every maturing teen must learn lessons that are all-too familiar to those of us who have seen similar prevent-able deaths:

• Life is fragile. It’s easy to put yourself into a situation that is difficult or impossible to

evade when something unex-pected happens.

• Poor decisions often cause harm. You might escape serious consequences, but, then again, you might not.

• Rules exist for a reason. Breaking them might be easy, but that choice might lead to a tragedy that changes one or many lives forever.

We lament the loss of these young men with lives so full of potential. We hope that their untimely deaths will teach their peers these crucial, life-saving lessons.

That would be an enduring and powerful legacy.

Columnists, Our Views, Letters to the Editor

Ability and Access Do Not Equal InvincibilityOur Views

Letters to the Editor

OpinionMain 7 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012

Think You’re Being Watched? You’re RightTo the editor: If you have the feeling that you are being watched, you probably are not paranoid. Welcome to the National Security Surveillance State. A recent book, “The Daily You,” by Joseph Turow, shows how ads, discounts, news and entertainment are being personalized on the basis of data being collected and coordinated by powerful but not well-known media agencies. When you fill out a survey, swipe your card at Safeway, down-load a Groupon coupon or Google any information on the Internet, these media agencies are developing an individualized profile of you despite their claim that this process is anonymous. Recently, William Binney, who worked for the National Security Agency for almost 40 years, warned how the NSA is building the largest spy center in the country in Bluffdale, Utah. He states that the government has already collected and stored 20 trillion pieces of telephonic and Internet communication of U.S. citizens. Using programs that they have developed, if they want to focus on you, they can call up any former and future forms of communi-cation between you and members of your social network. The House of Representatives recently passed the Cyber Intel-ligence Sharing and Protection Act, which would make legal any sharing, unbeknown to you, of any online and private communica-tions with government agencies, which the NSA is already doing. Within a month of 9/11, Congress passed the Patriot Act, which authorized expanded surveillance by the government, expanded co-vert actions within the country and overseas, created shadow arrest programs, and the military based interrogation and detention pro-gram that is centered at Guantanamo, Cuba. President Obama now has and uses power that President Bush didn’t dare. He has used his power to order the death of U.S citizens without court review or trial. He signed the National Defense Au-thorization Act of 2012, which authorizes the U.S. military to arrest and indefinitely detain anyone suspected of assisting terrorists. In many ways, the effect of these changes has been to militarize all U.S. police departments. The Seattle Police Department obtained one of 700 recent permits from the federal government given to gov-ernment and law enforcement agencies in this country to spy on U.S. citizens by Predator drones. One way to stop the advertising media from tracking you is to install the free Do Not Track program from www.donottrack.us. Encourage your U.S. senator to vote against the Senate version of CISPA. Obama has stated that he would veto CISPA but he also said he would veto the National Defense Authorization Act and then signed it into law. You can also contact www.torproject.org. The Tor Project has a free download that will protect you from a common form of Inter-net surveillance known as “traffic analysis.” It will help you main-tain real anonymity on the Internet. Another place to find useful information is at www.eff.org. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has a Surveillance Self-Defense site to help educate us all about the law and the technology being used by corporate government to spy on and manipulate us.

Larry KerschnerCentralia

20TH DISTRICTLewis County and

Southwestern Thurston County

State Sen. Dan SweckerP.O. Box 40482Olympia, Wash. 98504-0482phone: (360) 786-7638fax: (360) 786-7819email: [email protected]

State Rep. Richard DeBoltP.O. Box 40600Olympia, Wash. 98504-0600phone: (360) 786-7896fax: (360) 786-7871email: [email protected]

State Rep. Gary AlexanderP.O. Box 40600Olympia, Wash. 98504-0600phone: (360) 786-7990fax: (360) 709-0212email: [email protected]

CONGRESSU.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell511 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg.Washington, D.C. 20510phone: (202) 224-3441fax: (202) 228-0514email: http://cantwell.senate.gov/contact

U.S. Sen. Patty Murray173 Russell Senate Office Bldg.Washington, D.C. 20510phone: (866) 481-9186fax: (202) 224-0238email: http://murray.senate.gov/email

U.S. Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler3rd Congressional District1130 Longworth House Office Bldg.Washington, D.C. 20515phone: (202) 225-3536fax: (202) 225-3478email: herrerabeutler.house.gov

Vancouver Office:750 Anderson St., Suite BVancouver, Wash. 98661

HOW TO REACH ELECTED OFFICIALS

By Kathleen Melhart

A stroll through downtown Centralia or Chehalis will find a vast array of unique and cre-ative businesses and business owners.

You can run your fingers along a beautiful piece of history in antique stores, taste the fin-est wines or libations, or sample varieties of delicious dishes, des-serts, gourmet sandwiches and the best roasted coffees.

If you need a perfect gift, there are boutiques, jewelry stores, books, lotions, beauty makeovers and therapies to bring a smile to yours or an-other’s face.

These independent business own-ers work hard, keeping their businesses thriving and providing qual-ity service to their customers.

Debra Welsh of “Debbie’s” boutique, 119 W. Magnolia in Centralia, considers her store to be a new kid on the block among the more established businesses.

Nestled next to the grand Lewis and Clark Hotel, one might almost miss this fabulous gem tucked neatly away into our historic buildings’ architecture. Once inside, you’ll find a warm welcoming display of boutique life from the well-orchestrated windows to the warmth of per-sonal service you receive.

I asked Debbie, why a bou-tique? She looked around her store with great pride and said,

“I am following a dream and loving it.”

When I first met Debbie, I had never been able to purchase from a boutique, as I had lost a lot of weight. My dear friend surprised me with a gorgeous top for my birthday from her boutique.

Debbie wrapped it up in this beautiful bag with a pink bow and wanted me to open it in front of her store, pulling out her camera for a picture. When I opened it she cried, she was so excited for me.

That is the kind of person she is and the kind of experience you get when you visit her shop. She is about making shopping fun, making a moment or a memory.

This story could simply be about a lovely boutique, but this is also about a business owner with heart. Debbie wanted to make it clear that the soul of our downtown is based on chari-table giving and the events that draw patrons to our businesses not only to have “A Girls Night Out” but give something back to the community.

Debbie has been involved

with many charities and fund-raisers.

When asked about her chari-table contributions, she gave me a big smile and said, “I don’t think I have ever turned anyone down who has come in and asked me to donate something from my shop for a charity.”

Debbie told me that charities have always been important to her and the community support is the driving reason. She has lived in the community for the majority of her life, married and raised her four children here. She told me it was important to teach her children to always give back and now that they are adults, she is seeing that the importance of that lesson has come full-circle.

She feels strongly that busi-nesses, merchants and helpers be applauded for their sup-port in making our downtown events a success and contribut-ing to much needed charities.

She is part of the upcoming “Sundress to Impress” fashion show, lunch and silent auc-tion this Sunday at noon in the beautifully renovated Lewis and Clark Hotel.

It’s sure to be a great event for mothers, daughters, sisters, aunts and grandmas.

Tickets are $25 with $5 go-ing to United Way. Lunch will be catered by Boccata, desserts by Tegarden. Tickets for the catered meal must be sold by Friday; stop by the boutique to pick them up. For information, contact Debbie at 269-6033.

This is a story about one in-credible business and business owner in downtown Centralia, but I know that there are several businesses that have their own stories to tell and great services to offer and I encourage each one of you to step up, and share your story and keep Lewis County thriving.

•••

Kathleen Melhart is a writer and lifelong Centralia resident. She and her husband have three chil-dren. She enjoys writing and learn-ing about new people, new places, but most of all getting to the heart of the matter.

Downtown Centralia Business Is a Wonderful Place to Visit

GUEST COMMENTARY: New Kid on the Block

Richard Lafromboise, Publisher, 1966-1968J.R. Lafromboise, President, 1968-2011Jenifer Lafromboise Falcon, Chairman

Dennis R. Waller, President, CEOChristine Fossett, PublisherBrian Mittge, Editor-in-Chief

Editorial Mission Statementn We will strive to be the voice of reason for the

peaceful settlement of conflict and contention

on key local issues. We will work to be fair at all

times and to provide a balance of opinions. We

will make our opinion pages available for public

discussion of vital issues and events affecting

the quality of life in Lewis County and adjoining

regions. When necessary, we will be willing to

take a tough, definitive stance on a controver-

sial issue.

Letters Policyn Please type opinions, if possible, and limit letters

to 500 words. Shorter letters get preference. Con-

tributors are limited to publication of one item

every two weeks, with exceptions as warranted.

Items submitted are subject to editing and will

become the property of this newspaper. Poetry is

not accepted.

To Send Your Lettern Address letters and commentaries to “Our Readers’ Opinions.” Please sign them and include your full address and daytime telephone number for verification and any questions. Send them to 321 N. Pearl, Centralia, WA 98531. E-mail letters can be sent to [email protected].

Questionsn For questions on a letter call Doug Blosser at

807-8238 or toll-free, 1-800-562-6084, ext. 1238.

Editorials n Editor-in-Chief Brian Mittge can be reached by e-mail at [email protected] or at (360) 807-8234.

Editorial Boardn Brian Mittge, Editor-in-Chief

n Dennis Waller, President

n Christine Fossett, Publisher

n Jeff Andersen, Printing General Manager

n Rosie O’Connor, Human Resources Director

Debra Welsh

LotteriesWashington’s Tuesday GamesMega Millions: 10 11 12 14 24 06 x04

Next jackpot: $12 million

Match 4: 01-03-08-10

Daily Game: 9 9 3

Keno: 04 06 07 09 12 13 19 24 27 30 35 47 49 50 62 65 73 74 75 78

Washington’s Wednesday GamesPowerball: 03 07 21 28 43 02

Next jackpot: $100 million

Lotto: 03 05 20 23 35 39

Next jackpot: $10.8 million

Hit 5: 14 16 26 33 38

Next cashpot: $170,000

Match 4: 02-04-16-20

Daily Game: 2 5 8

Keno: 16 18 19 21 26 27 29 37 38 40 50 58 60 64 65 69 70 71 72 74

Recent Local Winners

Match 4 — William C. Workman, B & D Market, Centralia, $10,000

Note: Listed are winning tickets of $1,000 or more purchased in Lewis County and south Thurston County.

CommoditiesGas in Washington — $4.24 (AAA of

Washington)Crude Oil — $93.47 per barrel (CME

Group)Gold — $1,570 (Monex)Silver — $27.87 (Monex)

RecordsMain 8 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012

CHEHALIS POLICE DEPARTMENT

Malicious Mischief• A victim reported that

someone threw feces in their business’ flower bed and cut open bags of decorative rocks on Northwest State Street at 8:55 a.m. Wednesday.

Toddler Found Wandering• A toddler, about 2 years

old, was found on the side of the road at 9:16 a.m. Wednesday on Southeast Prospect Street and Southeast 11th Street. The child couldn’t talk, but was able to point out its residence and the officer returned the child to their home. The father of the child was sleeping when the child left the house. No charges were filed.

Vehicle Prowl• A victim reported their car

was broken into and their lunch box, phone and sweatshirt were stolen at 8:11 p.m. Wednesday on the 1600 block of Louisiana Avenue.

• A victim reported their car was broken into and their purse, cell phone and wallet were sto-len at 8:11 p.m. Wednesday on the 1500 block of Louisiana Av-enue.

Playing Chicken with a Train• Police responded to a re-

port of a female wearing a lime green shirt and blue jeans play-ing chicken with a train on the 400 block of Prindle Street just before midnight Wednesday. The female jumped out of the way of the train and was trans-ported for a mental evaluation.

Pornography• Someone at an organiza-

tion on Northwest Front Street contacted police at 9:42 a.m. Wednesday to report that a vol-unteer had been viewing por-nography on computers during the weekend.

Disorderly conduct• Police responded to a report

of a disruptive female at a bus

shelter. She was reportedly scar-ing people on the 1600 block of Northwest Louisiana Avenue at 10:35 a.m. A warning was issued.

Burglary• A victim reported a bur-

glary on Southwest Cascade Av-enue at 1:35 p.m. Tuesday. The stolen items were a weedeater valued at $60 and a plastic gas can valued at $12. There are no witnesses or suspects.

Disorderly Shopper• Police responded to a re-

port of a disorderly subject at 6:14 p.m. at Walmart. The man was yelling and screaming at security, and when they tried to detain him he kept attempt-ing to escape and run toward the door. The incident, which was listed by police as a rob-bery, is under investigation and there are no arrests at this time.

LEWIS COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

Burglary• A 38-year-old female vic-

tim reported that several appli-ances, including two fridges, two stoves and a washer, val-ued at $450, were missing from an open carport on a rental property on the 800 block of Bunker Creek Road at 10:40 a.m. Wednesday. The theft oc-curred between May 10 and May 16.

Driving Under the Influence• Eddie L. Chastain, 54,

Chehalis, was arrested and booked for allegedly driving under the influence after he was stopped by deputies for improper lane travel at 1:07 a.m. Thursday on the 1500 block of Highway 603.

Collision• Deputies responded to a

one-vehicle collision on the 200 block of Tennessee Road at 5:03 p.m. Thursday. The driver, a 48-year-old male of Winlock, re-portedly swerved to miss a dog

in the middle of the road and drove into a ditch.

Vicious Dog• Frank Utzler, 63, Pack-

wood was fined after his black lab allegedly bit a 70-year-old Packwood man on the 12000 block of U.S. Highway 12 in Packwood at 1 p.m. Tuesday. The 70-year-old man was trans-ported by ambulance to Morton General Hospital for treatment for puncture wounds.

CENTRALIA POLICE DEPARTMENT

Felony Violation of a Protection Order

• Vadim A. Burya, 23, Cen-tralia, was arrested and booked for allegedly violating a protec-tion order his girlfriend had against him on the 1000 block of South Pearl Street at 1:44 p.m. Wednesday. During the violation, he allegedly assaulted her, which makes the crime a felony.

Possession of Meth• Conrad J. Perry, 29, Cen-

tralia, was arrested and released for alleged possession of meth-amphetamine after allegedly driving negligently on the 2300 block of North Pearl Street. He was seen stuffing something in his pants when he got out of the vehicle.

Marijuana Possession• Daniel E. Shae, 28, Cen-

tralia, was cited for alleged possession of marijuana at 12:51 p.m. Tuesday on the 200 block of North Railroad Av-enue.

• Roy M. Glisson, 21, Centra-lia, was cited for alleged posses-sion of marijuana and driving on a suspended license at 9:35 p.m. Tuesday on the intersection at South Silver Street and West Pear Street.

Protection Order Violation• Francisco T. Lamas, 26,

Sirens, Court Records,Lotteries, Commodities

Sirens

Paid

FRANK B. MATTHEWS

Remembrance

Frank B. Matthews, 70, of Centralia, Wash., passed away peacefully on March 23, 2012 at home.

He leaves behind his wife, Myrna Faye of 27 years and family.

A celebration of life and potluck will be held on May 19 at 12 o�clock at the United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, Wash. In lieu of lowers remembrances and donations are welcome at the memorial.

Please sign the guestbook at

www.legacy.com/chronline.

VIOLET L.

EPPLER

Remembrance

In Memory ofViolet L. Eppler

Violet went to be with the Lord on Oct. 20, 2011. Violet was born April 30, 1923 in Bath, S.D. Come join Andy Mills and Nancy Johnson to honor the memory of their Mother. There will be a graveside service (Memorial) at noon May 19, 2012. The cemetery is located at 5th St. & St Helens St. in Toledo , Wash. There will be a potluck at the Salkum Firehall immediately following the service.

Please sign the guestbook at

www.legacy.com/chronline.

• TARI PARKER, 83, Onalaska, died Sun-day, May 13, at home. At the request of the deceased, no services will be held. Arrangements are under the direction of Cattermole Funeral Home, Winlock.

• JOY CECILIA JONES, 68, Rochester, died Monday, May 7, at Riverside Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Centralia. A memorial service will be at 11 a.m. Friday, May 25, at Sticklin Funeral Chapel, Cen-tralia. A reception will follow at Swede Hall, Rochester. Arrangements are under the direction of Sticklin.

• MINA J. CHENEY, 71, Centralia, died Sun-day, May 13, in Tacoma. A potluck me-morial service will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Morton Senior Center. Arrange-ments are under the direction of Catter-mole Funeral Home, Winlock.

• ROSCOE GLEASON, 98, Morton, died Tuesday, May 15, at home. Viewing will be 3-5 p.m. Friday at Newell-Hoerling’s Mortuary, Centralia, and noon-1 p.m. Saturday at Morton United Methodist Community Church. A funeral service will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at the church. Burial will follow at the Morton Cem-etery. Arrangements are under the direc-tion of Newell-Hoerling’s.

• JOYCE BARBER, 81, Tacoma, formerly of Maytown, died Monday, May 14, at a Taco-ma nursing home. A funeral service will be at 3 p.m. Saturday at Mountain View Cel-ebration of Life Center, 4100 Steilacoom Blvd. S.W., Lakewood. Arrangements are under the direction of Mountain View Fu-neral Home, Lakewood.

Corrections•••

The Chronicle seeks to be ac-curate and fair. If you find an error, please call the newsroom as soon as possible at 807-8224, between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Death Notices

please see SIRENS, page Main 13

In Remembrance

JUDY LOUISE LOVELY

Judy Louise Lovely born Jan. 17, 1945, passed away May 6, 2012.

She is survived by her loving husband of 51 years, LeRoy B. Lovely, three brothers Mike Scholfeild, Donnie Eastman, Kevin Eastman, three kids, Jeanette Schwartz, LeRoy G.

Lovely, Kathy Iverson, 17 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren.

Judy lived life to the fullest. She was kind and loving to each and every person she met. She touched many lives with her love and kindness. She was willing to help in any way she could.

She will be greatly missed by all that have had the pleasure of meeting her.

May God love her as much as she is loved by us all.

There will be a celebration of life for "Judy" on July 4, 2012 in Pe Ell, Wash., at her daughter Jeanette's residence. For more information on the celebration of life, contact Jeanette Schwartz at 360-304-1157.

To view the obituary, please go to chronline.com/obituaries.

In Remembrance

EDWARD R. TURULA

Edward Turula "Saw Mill Ed", 82 went home to be with the Lord on May 10, 2012. Ed was born July 25, 1929 and raised in Winlock where he lived his entire life. Ed owned and operated several of his own businesses: chicken farming, logging and lastly custom saw milling and ire wood cutting where he became

known as �Saw Mill Ed�. Ed had many hobbies, which included gardening, ishing, raising farm animals and his favorite was playing music. Ed played the accordion, guitar, and iddle. Music was his passion. If he wasn�t working, he was playing music. Every night Ed would spend an hour practicing his guitar and accordion. Even his vacations were centered on attending the National Fiddlers contest in Weiser, Idaho. Ed is survived by his wife of 41 years, Rowena; sons, Edward, Edgar, and Edwin; daughters, Lisa and Kathy; 13 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. A memorial service will be held Saturday May 19, 2012, 11:00 a.m. at the �Christian Fellowship of Winlock� church located at 630 Cemetery Road, Winlock WA, 98596.

To view the obituary, please go to chronline.com/obituaries.

In Remembrance

FRED JOSEPH CHAPPELL

Fred Joseph Chappell went to be with the Lord May 10, 2012. Fred was born in Centralia on Aug. 22, 1917, and with the exception of the time he spent serving his country in the Army, he lived in Centralia.

In his early years, Fred worked for the CCC, and after returning to Centralia to work for Power, Saw and Marine. Fred was the co-owner of Centralia Bowl in the 1970s and then worked for Twin City Heating. He was a longtime caretaker at the Centralia First Presbyterian Church, where he was also a member.

He will be remembered for his ability to ix just about anything; he enjoyed working with tools and his hands.

Fred will be remembered

fondly by his wife of 63 years, Lois Chappell, two children, Sheryl (Swain) Clark and David Chappell, four grandchildren, Jason and Lindsay Clark, Christopher and Camille Chappell, two great-grandchildren and many other friends and relatives.

Remembrances can be made in Fred's name to Assured Home and Hospice, 1821 Cooks Hill Road Suite 200, Centralia, WA 98532 or the charity of your choice.

The memorial service will be held at Centralia Harrison Square Church, 1227 Harrison Ave, Saturday, May 19 at 5:00 p.m.

To view the obituary, please go to chronline.com/obituaries.

In Remembrance

LAJOS (LOUIS) NOZSAR

Lajos (Louis) Nozsar was born to Mihaly and Maria (Imrek) Nozsar on Feb. 15, 1935 in Sur Hungary and passed away on May 12, 2012 at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle at the age of 77. He was married 55 years to Ilona (Helen) Beke. Louis, wife and infant daughter escaped from communist revolution to the United States in 1956 settling in Chehalis, Wash., with the help of Westminster Presbyterian Church in Chehalis.

Louis worked at the Goodyear Rubber Tire plant for 22 years until they closed their doors. He also worked at Deca Rubber Co. for 14 years. Along with his son Lou, they built and ran the Rush Road Storage for over 10 years until selling in 2004. He enjoyed ishing, vacationing in Hawaii, going to Long Beach, Wash., in

particular and visiting his relatives in Hungary. He also enjoyed gardening and having the whole family over for the holidays, visiting with grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

He is survived by his wife Ilona (Helen) at the family home, three daughters, Ilonka (Dave) Mundine, Margitka (Carey) Laws, Zsuzsika (Lane) Castle and son (Lou) Lajoska (Denise) Nozsar, nine grandchildren, April Mundine, Michael Mundine, Staci (Charlie) Hall, Craig Laws, Justine (Mark) DeHaven, Jake (Nichole) Asher, Austin Macy, Megan Nozsar, Ashley Nozsar and four great-grandchildren, Mekenzie and Kaysen Hall, Savanha DeHaven and Alexandria Asher with another on the way. He is also survived by his brother and sister in Hungary.

He was preceded in death by his parents and a sister.

Memorial Service will be on Tuesday, May 22, 2012 at 12:00 noon at the Jackson Prairie Assembly of God, 4224 Jackson Hwy, Chehalis, Wash., with a graveside service to follow at the Napavine Cemetery and a celebration of life back at Jackson Prairie Assembly of God.

To view the obituary, please go to chronline.com/obituaries.

Brown Mortuary Service

Condolences may be offered at

www.brownmortuary.com

229 North Market Blvd.

Chehalis, WA 98532

(360) 748-4496

N EW E L L -HOERLING’s MORTUARY

The only independent and locally owned funeral home in Centralia-Chehalis.

205 W Pine Street, Centralia 360-736-3317est. 1907

Three generations of our family serving your family since 1922

CH

470277sl.cg

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Main 9LOCAL / BUSINESS

DINNER’S DONE: Centralia Chef Solves the What’s-for-Dinner Dilemma for Time-Starved People

By Amy Nile

[email protected]

Dinner’s Ready, Personal Chef Service is now offering its in-home meal preparation ser-vices throughout Lewis County.

“It used to be a celebrity or a rich and famous thing, but now the personal chef that goes around to people is really taking off. It’s now more affordable for the everyday person,” said own-er and chef Jeff Barth.

The cost of the service varies depending on the menu and num-ber of meals requested. Barth said he could make 10 meals for two people for around $220, which in-cludes the cost of groceries.

He said the cost per plate de-creases with an increased num-ber of servings and the service saves time-starved people from facing the daily what’s-for-din-ner dilemma.

“In the same amount of time as takeout you can have a home-cooked meal,” said Barth, a grad-uate of the Scottsdale Culinary Institute, Le Cordon Bleu. “If you’re not doing this service how many times do you end up in the McDonalds drive through?”

Barth will come to a client’s home, learn their personal food likes and dislikes and create a cus-tomized meal plan. He then does all of the grocery shopping and prepares several different entrees with the requested number of serv-ings in the client’s home kitchen.

He packages, labels and stores the meals in the refrigera-tor or freezer. He even cleans the kitchen when he finishes.

“You’d never know I was there until you open the re-frigerator and see all that great food,” Barth said.

Barth has tested more than 500 preservative-free recipes that a client can store and reheat later.

“The goal is to have it look and taste as good as when it’s first made,” Barth said.

He said he could cook for a client for six months without ever repeating a recipe.

Barth can customize menus based on special dietary needs

including low-fat, gluten-free and low-sodium diets.

“If can be creative and make someone happy with a good meal, that’s always what I want to do,” he said.

•••

Amy Nile: (360) 807-8235

New Service Provides Home Cooked Meals in Take-Out Time

Chris Geier / [email protected]

Jef Barth, a professional chef who is starting Dinner’s Ready Personal Chef Service, stands in the kitchen of his Centralia home.

ABOUT THE BUSINESSOwner: Jeff Barth Business: Dinner’s Ready, Per-sonal Chef ServiceAge of Business: 2 weeksNumber of Employees: 1Address: In-home service in Lewis CountyPhone: (360) 827-2057Email: [email protected]

TOP 5 SAMPLE ENTREES OF CHEF JEFF BARTH

Sample Menu for In-home Per-sonal Chef Service

• Southwest turkey chili with cheese biscuits

• Marinated flank steak with veg-gie stuffed potatoes

• Orange tarragon chicken with white rice and veggies

• Stuffed tamale peppers

• Swiss meatballs on egg noodles with tossed green salad

Playwrights to Give Readings at Writers Guild

Northwest writer Doyle McKim will present a dramat-ic reading of his one-act play

“Flight North” at 6 p.m. Friday as part of the Lewis County Writ-ers Guild meeting at the Matrix Coffeehouse, 434 N.W. Prindle St., Chehalis.

Following McKim will be Sean O’Neill with “A Hot Cup of Murder: A Murder Mystery Game for the Whole Family.” O’Neill recently di-rected “Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog” at the Evergreen Playhouse.

Attendees may meet the playwrights starting at 5 p.m.

Additional information is available from Elizabeth Holz-inger, president of the Writers Guild, (360) 219-5639.

NAMI Family-to-Family Education Program, for families of persons diag-nosed with serious mental illness, 6:30-9 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, 748-4024 or 748-0195

Benny Sidelinger and Roy Reinertsen, 8:30 p.m., Matrix Coffeehouse, Chehalis, $6

Support Groups

H.O.P.E., all addictions, 7:30-9 p.m., Heritage Baptist Church of Tenino, 1315 Sussex Ave. E., Tenino, (360) 480-0592, [email protected]

Senior Centers

Nutrition lunch, noon, suggested donation $3 for 60 and over, un-der 60, $5.95, Toledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Music, 10:30-11:45 a.m., Twin Cities Senior Center, 748-0061

Taco and potato bar, 4-6 p.m., salad, dessert and beverage, $6, Twin Cities Senior Center, 748-0061

Birthday celebration, 11 a.m., Twin Cities Senior Center, 748-0061

Lunch, noon, $3 suggested do-nation, Twin Cities Senior Center, 748-0061

Potato bar, noon, $6, Morton Senior Center, 496-3230

Exercise class, 8:30-9:30 a.m., Toledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Open pool, 9:30 a.m., Toledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Acrylics classes, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., To-ledo Senior Center, 864-2112

Coffee klatch, 9 a.m., Packwood Se-nior Center, 494-6331

Sewing and crafts, 10 a.m., RSVP by Monday, Packwood Senior Center, 494-6331

Pinochle, 10 a.m., Packwood Senior Center, 494-6331

12:30 p.m., pinochle and games, Packwood Senior Center, 494-6331

Saturday, May 19

Westminster to Hold Fundraising Auction to Support Mission Trip

To support an Alaska mis-sion trip, Westminster Pres-byterian Church, Chehalis, is sponsoring a gigantic auction at 6:309 p.m. Saturday in its fellow-ship hall at 349 N. Market Blvd.

There will be free desserts and beverages for everyone, in-cluding berry pies, chocolate and carrot cakes, brownies, cookies and more.

The auction will include theme baskets including wine, children’s play day, gardening, birding and pet baskets, as well as excursions such as fishing trips, baseball tickets to the Ta-coma Rainiers and a Hood Ca-nal weekend getaway

Services such as handmade crafts, piano lessons, specially designed jewelry and photo-graphs will be auctioned.

Cash and checks will be ac-cepted.

Grand Opening of Ticknor School Planned

A grand opening of the Tic-knor School will be held at the Tenino City Park 1-3 p.m. Sat-urday.

The school was moved from the Skookumchuck Valley to the park in 2002. Following restora-tion, the building is now like it was when it was last used in the 1930s. It replaced the original Ticknor School, which burned.

A brief history will be given, from the inception to comple-tion of the move, as well as the restoration project.

Some students from Tenino Parkside and Toledo Middle schools will be participating in the program.

Sixth annual Spring Fling, 4:30 p.m., Twin Cities Senior Center, $20, dinner of prime rib or Cornish game hen, music by Leon Nanny and Jerry Skinner, Mor-ton, silent and live auctions, donations for auctions being accepted, call 520-0772 or a local senior center.

Fundraising auction, 6:30 p.m., West-minster Presbyterian Church, Chehalis, to support Alaska mission team, free desserts and beverages provided, 748-09091

Social party games, 1-3 p.m., Matrix Coffeehouse, 434 N.W. Prindle St., Che-halis, [email protected]

Hypnosis show, Ron Stubbs, 8 p.m., Harry’s Place, Toledo, $15, 864-2700

“The Great Cross Country Race,” noon

and 2 p.m., Wickstrom Theatre, Centra-lia College, $5 adults, $3 children, 736-9391, ext. 525

Baby Gramps Coming to Matrix Coffeehouse

Musician Baby Gramps will be performing at the Matrix Coffeehouse in Chehalis at 8 p.m. Saturday.

Baby Gramps is a high en-ergy performer with an end-less repertoire. He plays acous-tic antique resonator National Steel guitars, and sings his own unique arrangements of rags, jazz and blues songs from the ‘20’s and ‘30, folksongs, and many originals with wordplay, humor, and throat singing.

He appeals to a wide range of audiences from folk to jamband to punk to old timey traditional and to kids of all ages. He per-forms a variety of venues, from intimate coffeehouses and pubs, to large concert halls, theaters and festivals across the United States, Canada, Europe and Australia.

Admission is $12 general, and $8 for students and seniors.

The Matrix Coffeehouse is located at 434 N.W. Prindle St., Chehalis. Telephone is 740-0492.

County Democrats Plan Auction and Dinner

Lewis County Democrats will be hosting a dinner and auction Saturday at the Virgil R. Lee Building in Recreation Park, Chehalis.

Theme for the evening is “Join the Fun at Our 99%er’s Dinner and Auction.”

A silent auction will begin at 5:30 p.m. Dinner and a live auction will be at 7 p.m.

Admission is $25 at the door. Additional information may be obtained by calling 262-0405.

Fundraiser to Help Centralia Graduate

A fundraiser is being planned Saturday for Angie Barnes-Tiller, a Centralia High School graduate and Washing-ton State University student has recently fallen ill due to the sud-den onset of an unknown neu-rological condition.

The event will be 4-8 p.m. at the Oakview Grange, 7515 N. Pearl St., Centralia. It will start with a dinner and silent auction

at 4 p.m. Live music by Chris Guenther will start at 5 p.m.

The fundraiser is donation-based and is open to all ages.

Proceeds will be used to help pay for Barnes-Tiller’s medical care and recovery.

Sunday, May 20

Fashion Show, Luncheon Coming to Lewis & Clark

Debbie’s Boutique, Centralia, will be hosting a fashion show and luncheon at noon Sunday at Centralia’s Lewis & Clark Hotel.

The event, for women of all ages, is called “Sundress to Im-press.” Participating merchants in the fashion show will be Deb-bie’s Boutique, Doria’s, HUB-BUB, Cheryl’s Attic, The Shady Lady, The Bath Depot, “Encore” at Abundance Vintage and Ciao Bella.

Lunch is being catered by Boccata, and desserts are being provided by Tegarden’s.

Other features of the event are a silent auction, random chance drawings and surprise entertainment.

“Sundress to Impress” is be-ing held in conjunction with Thorbeckes Fitlife Center in Centralia, United Way of Lewis County and the Centralia-Che-halis Chamber of Commerce.

Tickets are $25, of which $5 is a donation to United Way partner agencies. Tickets are available at Debbie’s Boutique, The Chamber of Commerce and Thorbeckes.

Additional information may be obtained by calling Debbie’s Boutique, (360) 269-6033.

Twin City Gospel Jubilee Coming to Calvary Assembly

Singer/songwriter Jerry Ott and evangelist William Ashpole will be guests at the Twin City Gospel Jubilee 6 p.m. Sunday at the Calvary Assembly of God in Centralia.

This is a free concert, with an offering being taken.

Calvary Assembly is located at 302 E. Main St. More infor-mation may be obtained by call-ing Carl Hendrix, 736-0788.

Bingo, doors open 5 p.m., bingo starts 6:30 p.m., Forest Grange, 3397 Jackson Highway, Chehalis

Calendar: Readings at Writers Guild; Ticknor School OpeningContinued from Main 2

Centralia, was arrested and booked for allegedly violating a protection order on the 600 block of Harrison Avenue at 1:26 p.m. Tuesday.

Theft• Darnell K. Crawford, 45,

Tacoma, was arrested for alleged third-degree theft at 4:45 p.m. Tuesday on the 1400 block of Lum Road.

• A victim reported that an acquaintance stole clothing, shoes, and a cell phone from his residence on the 100 block of East Roanoke Street at 6:22 p.m. Tuesday.

Disorderly Conduct• Joshua J. Wright, 22, Cen-

tralia, was arrested for alleged disorderly conduct on the 100 block of South Silver Street at 5:39 p.m. Tuesday.

Reckless Burning• A juvenile male allegedly

set a fire on the 2400 block of Seward Avenue at 7:57 p.m. Tues-day. He was referred for possible charges.

Heroin Possession• Kari N. Driver, 24, was

arrested and booked for al-leged possession of heroin at 11:50 p.m. Tuesday on the 100 block of East Roanoke Street. Driver was also referred for al-legedly rendering criminal as-sistance.

LEWIS COUNTY JAILInmate population in the

main facility as of early this morning: 148 inmates; 123 are men and 25 are women. None are work-release inmates. Fifty-eight of them are contract bed inmates from outside agencies. None are on electronic home monitoring and none people are on day reporting. In the past 24 hours, as of early this morning, 21 people were booked into the jail and 12 were released.

•••By The Chronicle Staff

Please call news reporter Stepha-nie Schendel with news tips. She can be reached at 807-8208 or [email protected].

SirensContinued from Main 8

Congressional Hearing on Spotted Owl Set for Monday at Expo CenterBy Erik Olson

The Daily News

A congressional committee will hold a hearing in Longview on Monday, May 21, on a pro-posed new plan to expand habi-tat protections for the threat-ened northern spotted owl, U.S. Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler an-nounced Monday.

The National Parks, Forests and Public Lands Subcommit-tee will hold the hearing 9 a.m. at the Cowlitz Expo Center. It will take testimony about a U.S. Fish and Wildlife proposal to restrict logging and other com-mercial activity on federal for-estland in Washington, Oregon and California.

The committee will hear tes-timony from invited guests only, but the hearing is open to the public.

Under the proposal, the amount of protected critical habitat would more than dou-ble from 5.3 million acres cur-rently to 13.9 million acres on the West Coast. The proposal includes 4.8 million acres of Washington forestland, mostly federally owned, and 5.1 mil-lion acres in Oregon.

Fish and Wildlife also is con-sidering a smaller expansion to 9.3 million total protected acres in the three states.

The agency is planning to complete a draft economic analysis by the end of this month and finalize the propos-al by the end of November, Fish and Wildlife spokeswoman Joan Jewett said.

In a written statement, Con-gresswoman Herrera Beutler, a Camas Republican, said the proposed expansion is a job-killer that may not sufficiently protect the spotted owl.

News in Brief

Nation/WorldNation in Brief

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Wife is Found Dead

NEW YORK — Mary Rich-ardson Kennedy, the estranged wife of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., was found dead on the family’s property north of New York City on Wednesday, two years after her husband filed for di-vorce and following a history of drug and alcohol problems.

Kerry A. Lawrence, a lawyer who had represented Mary Ken-nedy in a 2010 drunken driv-ing case, confirmed the death, but neither he nor police in the town of Bedford in Westchester County, N.Y., released a cause of death. An autopsy was sched-uled Thursday, The Associated Press reported.

According to a brief state-ment from Bedford police, offi-cers were called to the Kennedy home in neighboring Mount Kisco at 1:36 p.m. Wednesday

“to investigate a possible unat-tended death.” The statement said that officers found “a de-ceased person inside an out-building” on the property and that an investigation into the cause of death was under way.

Romney Pledges to ‘Get Us On Track to Have A Balanced Budget’

TAMPA, Fla. — As he con-tinued his effort to turn the public’s attention to the rise in federal spending, Mitt Romney acknowledged Wednesday that President George W. Bush pre-sided over the accumulation of $4 trillion in debt, but faulted President Barack Obama for failing to do enough to stem the growth in spending.

Romney noted that Obama was a harsh critic of Bush’s spending policies during the 2008 campaign, calling his re-cord on debt “irresponsible.” But without delving into the complexities of the economic collapse that Obama faced after taking office, he charged that the president did not fulfill a promise to cut the debt in half:

“Instead he doubled it, all right, he doubled it,” the former Mas-sachusetts governor said.

Biden Warns Ohio of the Consequences of ‘Romney Economics’

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio — Vice President Joe Biden brought the Obama campaign’s Bain Cap-ital offensive to Ohio on Wednes-day, framing the election as a choice between economic phi-losophies that would have stark consequences for the middle class.

Speaking at a local manufac-turer, Biden said there was “life and hope in the heartland” as a result of the administration’s pro-manufacturing policies, which he said would do more to build a lasting economy than the profit-at-all-cost approach of firms like the one Mitt Romney headed.

It was a spirited pitch to a working-class crowd that Biden acknowledged needed little per-suasion.

“You all get it,” he said. “You know the difference between an economy that’s built on making things rather than on collateral-ized debt, creative credit default swaps, financial instruments like subprime mortgages.

“That’s not how you build an economy. You build an economy by building things.”

ACLU Alleges Rights Violations at Immigration Detention Centers

ATLANTA — Suspected il-legal immigrants in Georgia are suffering from a “systemic viola-tion ... of civil and human rights” during their confinement in

“substandard” federal immigra-tion detention facilities, includ-ing Stewart Detention Center, the largest of its kind in the nation, according to a new re-port by the state’s chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.

World in Brief

Survivors of Afghan Massacre Recall Horror of Gunman’s Assault on Village

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — It was early in the morning, perhaps 2 a.m., when gunfire awoke 14-year-old Rafiullah.

He looked outside the house he’d been sleeping in with his grandmother, an aunt, two cousins and his sister, and he saw a man with a weapon walk to a shed that housed the family cow and open fire, shooting the animal dead.

In the next compound, a short distance from the house where Rafiullah had been sleep-ing, Haji Mohammad Naim awoke to the sound of dogs barking wildly in the street.

Shortly afterward, there was pandemonium at Naim’s front door as Rafiullah and a handful of terrified women and children poured into his yard, seeking shelter. Minutes later, another woman and a young girl emerged from the darkness.

Suddenly a silhouette ap-peared, moving rapidly behind a bright light. Naim thought that U.S. forces were raiding his vil-lage, and he expected a squad of soldiers to arrive. Instead, he saw just one man.

War Crimes Trial of Bosnian Serb Military Leader Ratko Mladic Begins

LONDON — Bosnian Serb Gen. Ratko Mladic confronted the accusations against him at the opening of his war crimes trial Wednesday with contemptuous gestures to the court and the vic-tims who had come to see him face justice for atrocities during the 1992-95 Bosnian war.

Slowed by age and the hard-ships of 15 years on the run from the U.N. tribunal’s indictment, Mladic still mustered a hint of his trademark swagger as he entered the courtroom in The Hague, Netherlands, giving a thumbs-up to the judges and mocking ap-plause for those watching from a glass-walled gallery.

Police, Protesters Clash at Two Sites in Moscow

MOSCOW — Russian riot police cleared a Moscow park early Wednesday of a week-old encampment considered a local version of the Occupy movement, and hours later clashed with anti-government protesters outside a Stalinist skyscraper in a different part of downtown.

The dispersal of several dozen protesters at the park en-campment, which they called Occupy Abai, preceded a night-time confrontation at Kudrins-kaya Square, where several hun-dred protesters had gathered to voice opposition to President Vladimir Putin.

At the square, some protest-ers were forced into police vans while others shouted that they had the right to assemble freely.

Amnesty International Report Says Mali Facing Its Worst Crisis in 50 Years

JOHANNESBURG — Mali is confronting its worst chal-lenges since independence in 1960, including a severe human-itarian emergency, human rights abuses committed by govern-ment troops and rebel militias, and international isolation after a military coup two months ago, Amnesty International said in a report released Wednesday.

The report said the West Af-rican nation, a beacon of stabil-ity for 20 years but now in the control of armed groups, faces an uncertain future. It called for steps to protect human rights and restore democracy.

•••

From The Chronicle’s wire services

•••

From The Chronicle’s wire services

By Hal Bernton

The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — Army Secre-tary John McHugh on Wednes-day announced a major review of post-traumatic stress disor-der and other behavioral health diagnoses that are received by soldiers who are under consid-eration for medical retirements.

The review will look at diag-noses made at all its medical fa-cilities as far back as Oct. 7, 2001, when the nation launched into a period of prolonged warfare in Afghanistan and later Iraq.

The review team will identify problems with the diagnostic program and find ways to fix them, according to a statement released by the Army.

The Army announcement follows an investigation earlier this year into Madigan Army Medical Center in Tacoma,

Wash., where soldiers under consideration for medical re-tirement complained that their original PTSD diagnoses were reversed by a screening team, with some of the soldiers labeled as possible malingerers.

The results of that investi-gation have not been released, but the Army Surgeon General identified more than 300 diag-noses that had been reversed, and has offered new evaluations to those soldiers.

U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who earlier this year pressed the Army to investigate the Madigan screening process, said that re-evaluations at the military hospital have reinstated the PTSD diagnoses to more than 100 service members who had that diagnosis dropped when they were screened for medical retirement.

Since 2008, a PTSD diagno-

sis had qualified a soldier for a 50 percent disability rating and a medical retirement that in-cludes a pension and other ben-efits.

“We owe it to every soldier to ensure that he or she receives the care they need and deserve,” McHugh said in a statement re-leased to members of Congress. The statement said the evalua-tions should be “influenced only by the opinion and expertise of our medical professionals.”

The review effort will be led by Undersecretary of the Army Joseph Westphal and Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Lloyd Austin.

The Army Inspector General will also separately examine how soldiers fare in the disability-evaluation system, whether the appeal process is adequate and how commanders might be in-fluencing the diagnosis system.

House Passes GOP-Sponsored Domestic Violence Bill Despite Obama Veto ThreatBy William Douglas

McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Unfazed by a White House veto threat, the House of Representatives on Wednesday approved anti-domestic violence legislation that opponents charge doesn’t sufficiently protect gay, lesbi-an, transgender people, Native Americans and immigrants.

On a 222-205 vote, the House passed a GOP-sponsored bill to renew the Violence Against Women Act, an 18-year-old law written by then-Sen. Joe Biden that dedicates federal resources to assist victims of domestic violence.

Wednesday’s vote puts the House at odds once again with the Democratic-controlled Sen-ate, which approved its version of the bill last month on a bipar-tisan 68-31 vote. The Senate bill renews the act for five years, au-thorizes $659.3 million in annual spending and contains measures to help victims of sexual assault, improve emergency housing ser-vices for victims and consolidate some grant programs to make them more efficient.

It also contains provisions intended to: encourage undocu-mented immigrants to help law enforcement identify domestic abuse victims; assure protections for gays, lesbians and transgen-der people, among others; and give tribal courts increased au-

thority to prosecute incidents of domestic violence committed by non-Native Americans in Native American territories.

While both political parties and both chambers of Congress agree on the need for the act — a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study last year found that 24 people per minute in this country are victims of rape, physical violence or stalking by intimate partners — they vastly disagree over what it should in-clude and whom it should protect.

The House bill provides the same level of funding as the Sen-ate measure but excludes some of the specific domestic-violence protections for gays, immi-grants and Native Americans that are in the Senate measure.

Those exclusions prompted opposition from hundreds of civil rights, religious and law enforcement groups, including

the National Organization for Women, the American Bar As-sociation, the Episcopal Church and the YWCA USA.

“During my first term in Congress nearly two decades ago, I proudly voted for the Violence Against Women Act. It saddens me that now, in my last term, my Republican col-leagues are determined to wa-ter down and undermine this landmark legislation,” said Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif. “But as we’ve seen many times, the majority likes playing politics with women’s health and safety. And because they rarely miss an opportunity to exclude LGBT Americans from important rights and benefits ... they’re say-ing that, if you’re a woman who’s in a relationship with another woman, then you don’t deserve the same protection against do-mestic abuse or sexual assault.”

‘‘It saddens me that now, in my last term, my Republican colleagues

are determined to water down and undermine this landmark legislation. ’’

Rep. Lynn Woolsey

D-California

Army to Review Behavioral Diagnoses For Soldiers in Line For Medical Retirement

Spring Flooding in the South

Charles Slate / The Sun News

This SUV had to be towed from a looded road in Pawleys Island, South Carolina, Wednesday, May 16, 2012. Roads were

looded from the heavy rains that fell most of the day in the area.

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Main 10

By Jennifer Emily

The Dallas Morning News

DALLAS — Testimony got under way Wednesday in the Dallas County trial of a former priest accused of engaging in a murder-for-hire plot to kill a man who accused the priest of molesting him as a boy.

Prosecutors allege that John Fiala was distraught over indict-ments that accused him of sexually assaulting a 16-year-old boy in his rural West Texas parish when he asked a neighbor to kill his accuser.

Fiala faces a charge of solici-tation of capital murder, which

is punishable by up to life in prison. He also has been indict-ed on four charges of sexual as-sault in Edwards County.

The neighbor, Scottie Fisher, testified that Fiala told him about his legal troubles in November 2010 when they were renting rooms at a house in Garland. Fisher said that Fiala was crying and that he tried to comfort the man he had known just three weeks by patting him on the back.

“Can you go out and kill him?” Fisher testified that Fiala asked.

“I said ‘Hell no.’”Fisher said Fiala told him “he

deserves to die” and said Fiala

was serious. “He said if he was dead all of this would be OK. ... He said he wanted him dead be-fore Thanksgiving.”

Fisher then told Fiala that his brother might do it and prom-ised to call him. Fisher instead called an attorney whose name he had seen in Fiala’s legal pa-perwork. That attorney called authorities, who contacted Fish-er.

Fisher testified that he coop-erated with authorities because he believes Fiala belongs behind bars.

“He’s a monster,” Fisher testi-fied.

Priest Accused Of Trying To Hire Hit Man To Kill Accuser

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Main 11LOCAL / NORTHWEST

IT’S A BIRD, IT’S A PLANE:

It’s a Science Project Gone Wrong

By Amy Nile

[email protected]

The Lewis County 911 dis-patch received several calls Tuesday about strange objects flying in the sky over Chehalis.

“One looked like those big black bags they store hay in,” said Marie Panesko of Chehalis.

Panesko said the other looked like a 8-foot-tall black tube floating vertically in the sky. Both objects were flying in the sky above Chehalis for at least half an hour before disap-pearing from view, Panesko said.

Officials at the Lewis County

Sheriff’s Office did report the event to the Federal Aviation Adminis-tration in case it posed a flight risk. However, the FAA did not seem in-terested, the local authorities said.

“It looks like a science experi-ment gone awry,” Panesko said.

In fact, Clifton White’s phys-ics class at W.F. High School was working outside around the same time Tuesday.

“We had a science project that just got away from them,” said Bob Walters, the principal at W.F. West. “It just went up in the air.”

The strange objects turned out to be nothing but trash bags joined together with masking tape.

“We were doing a buoyancy and thermodynamics thing,” White said.

The students had already

calculated the temperature the air-filled bags would lift off at when the strings broke and they flew away.

White said next time they will use rope to tie their experi-mental instruments down.

“It’s actually entertaining,” he said. “It’s a real good laugh.”

•••

Amy Nile: (360) 807-8235

UFO Sighting in Chehalis?

Marie Panesko / Courtesy photo

Marie Panesko took this iPhone photo of two unidentiied black objects in the skies of Chehalis Tuesday afternoon. “It looks like a science experiment gone awry,” said Panesko. And it turns out her evaluation

was just about spot on.

PUMP PAIN: Regular Gasoline Selling For an Average $4.20 — More Than 47 Cents Higher Than the National Average

By Erin Flemming

The Seattle Times

Like a wrong-way driver, it’s something you hate to see: While the national average price for gasoline has dropped 5 cents a gallon over the past week, Washington state drivers have been hit with an increase of 12.5 cents.

Largely fueled by the after-math of a fire at Washington’s biggest refinery, in Whatcom County, and scheduled main-tenance at other West Coast refineries, the discrepancy may continue until midsummer, ob-servers said.

Regular self-serve gasoline in Washington was selling Mon-day for an average $4.20 — more than 47 cents higher than the national average, according to the AAA auto club. That gap has more than doubled in the past month.

Nationally, gasoline prices were lower than year-earlier lev-els for the fourth consecutive week as crude-oil futures tum-bled to the lowest level in almost five months, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said Monday in its weekly retail report.

“The West Coast is zigging while the rest of the country is zagging,” said Tom Kloza, pub-lisher and chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service.

Michelle Perrigo, who works as an academic editor and recep-tionist in Seattle, said using gro-cers’ rewards programs is one way she’s been keeping down her spending on gas.

“We just do the best we can to get gas when it’s cheap and try not to overdo it,” Perrigo said. “I don’t run the air conditioning,

things like that ... anything to be conservative.”

Dave Overstreet, a spokes-man for AAA, said the West Coast refinery issues have brought the region’s gasoline inventories to their lowest levels for the month of May since 1992.

That is “putting pressure on gasoline prices that we really didn’t anticipate,” he said.

BP’s Cherry Point refinery in Whatcom County has been out of commission since a fire Feb. 17. An attempt to restart the re-finery last week failed, according to a person familiar with the ef-fort. BP says it will try to start it up again this week.

Drivers Fill Up With Pain as State Gas Prices Soar

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in the second day of the search Thurston County Sheriff ’s Of-fice Lt. Greg Elwin said the mis-sion changed from one focused on rescue to recovery due to the small chance of survivability overnight.

One of the teens Puentes was swimming with, an 18-year-old female Rochester student, helped search for his body. She wit-nessed Puentes disappear under the water and went out with the search team in a boat and iden-tified the location where he had disappeared. Minutes later, one of the divers located his body.

“She was really instrumental in finding him,” Dyer said.

Always Smiling

Family, friends and school of-ficials described Puentes as always having a smile on his face, no mat-ter what kind of mood he was in.

“He’s an outgoing kid,” said Gaby Tolentino, Puentes’ aunt.

“No matter how he felt, he always had a smile.”

Puentes and his mother, Ma-ria Puentes, along with his three siblings, ages 14, 6 and 9, all moved from Pasadena, Calif., last July, Tolentino said. Puentes was hoping to find a better fu-ture for her children.

The move initially was diffi-cult for Puentes, Tolentino said, but he he had adjusted well and was loving Rochester.

“He’s a wonderful kid,” Tolen-tino said. “We all loved him and cared about him.”

Matt Ishler, the principal of Rochester High School, spent several hours Wednesday on the river bank near the search. He said earlier Wednesday morning, students gathered at the school to share memories and thoughts about Puentes.

One thing that most stu-dents talked about was Puentes’ positive attitude and contagious

smile, Ishler said.“They said he made them feel

better about themselves,” he said. “He always had a smile on his face.”

Both Tolentino and Ishler said one of Puentes’ main pas-sions in life was basketball.

Puentes could always be found in the gym playing bas-ketball before and after school, Ishler said.

Tolentino said she saw a pro-fessional career in basketball in his future.

Swim Safely

Most drowning victims don’t get a chance to yell for help due to the difficulty of catching one's breath in cold water, Dyer said. The cold water can also cause people to get unexpected cramps, making them unable to stay afloat.

“The water is so cold and it really can take you by surprise,” Dyer said.

Even when someone, like Pu-entes, knows how to swim, it is always important to wear a life preserver, she said.

“People think that because they are an experienced swim-mer they don’t need it,” she said. “No matter how decent of a swimmer, it is always cool to wear a lifejacket.”

Puentes is the third person to die on the Chehalis River in the past month.

An 8-year-old boy, Nicholas Matchett, drowned in the river by the 100 block of Ceres Hill Road on May 4. He was last seen swing-ing on the back deck at his house.

The body of 24-year-old Olympia man Daniel Kuhn was found on April 19 in the Cheha-lis River near Doty after he went missing five days earlier during the Pe Ell River Run.

There is an account set up at Twin Star Credit Union in Puen-tes mother’s name, Maria Puen-tes. The funds will help pay for the funeral costs.

Found: Puentes Had Recently Moved to Rochester from CaliforniaContinued from front page

Chris Geier / [email protected]

Family members and Thurston County Sherif's Oice workers escort Maria Puentes to a coroner's van after she requested to

see the body of her son Chris Puentes Garay, who drowned in the Chehalis River Tuesday.

Members of the Thurston County Sherif's Oice dive rescue team work to retrieve the body of 16-year-old Chris Puentes

Garay from the Chehalis River south of Rochester Wednesday.

By The Daily News

Cowlitz County commis-sioners on Tuesday decided not to join two other counties in calling for continued Forest Service management of Mount St. Helens, even though they praised the recent work the agency has done at the volcano.

The decision surprised Ska-mania County Commissioner Paul Pearce, who had expected all three counties would agree. He said Lewis and Skamania counties will still send a resolu-tion supporting the Forest Ser-

vice to U.S. Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler without Cowlitz County.

Cowlitz commissioners said they'd been prepared to vote with Lewis and Skamania coun-ties, but they were swayed after hearing several residents plead for a delay.

In particular, backers of a plan to make the volcano a na-tional park said a vote Tuesday would derail a National Park Service study of the volcano that they've requested from Con-gresswoman Herrera Beutler. The Camas Republican said she

wouldn't make a decision until July, when the Forest Service will report on its management and tourist facility improve-ments at the volcano.

"I'm afraid (a vote for the res-olution) puts a nail in the coffin of the study," Kelso's Keath Huff told commissioners.

"Please don't kill the conver-

sation," added Mark Smith, who owns the Eco Park resort near the volcano.

Cowlitz commissioners said they had full faith in the For-est Service, and lauded several improvements and increased funding in the past two years. But they concluded that the res-olution in support of the agency

isn't needed at this time. They took no action, meaning the matter is dead unless someone asks for it to be reconsidered.

Management of the 110,000-acre Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument has been debated since the Congress des-ignated the protection area in 1982.

Cowlitz County Doesn't Join Resolution Backing USFS Control of Volcano

CH469150cz.db

CH472218bw.db

By Aaron VanTuyl

[email protected]

Six of the first eight games in the District IV 2B Softball Tour-nament were decided by a total of 78 runs. The drama in the other two, however, was enough to make up for the plethora of blowouts Wednesday at Centralia’s Fort Borst Park. Adna upset Napavine, 5-4, in one semifinal, and Toutle Lake knocked off Pe Ell, 4-3, in the other to set up a rematch of last season’s district championship game at 5 p.m. on Saturday and seal trips to the State 2B tourna-ment for the Pirates and Ducks. Pe Ell will now face Mossy-rock in a loser-out, winner-to-state contest at 1 p.m., while Pe Ell will take on Napavine at the same time in Saturday’s other consolation semifinal. The win-ners of the two games will play for the third and fourth seeds out of District IV to the State 2B Softball Tournament, which will be held in Yakima May 25 and 26.

Adna 5, Napavine 4

The Tigers swung for the fences, but the Pirates played a bit of small ball to pull off an up-set. Adna’s Jordan Sandrini laid a bunt down the third base line

with the bases loaded to score Taylor Woods, and Alexis Moer-ke retired Napavine in order in the top of the seventh to end the game. “I knew I’d get it down,” San-drini said, of what turned out to be the game-winning bunt.

“And Taylor was on third, and I had confidence in her.” Adna went into the sixth trailing 4-3, but a leadoff walk and an error put runners on first and second. Madi Karch moved

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash.,Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Sports 1

Sports Sports editor: Aaron VanTuyl

Phone number: 807-8229

e-mail: [email protected]

Updated District IV Softball Brackets / Sports 5

The Final Word

TV’s Best BetNBA Playoff Basketball

Miami at Indiana4 p.m.ESPN

Bicycle Stolen From Junior Seau’s Garage Recovered OCEANSIDE, Calif. (AP) — A bicy-cle stolen from Junior Seau’s Oceanside home days after the former NFL star’s suicide has been recovered, police said. An unidentified woman called police Wednesday after seeing a bicycle that matched the description of the one that was stolen from Seau’s garage on May 7, said Oceanside police Lt. Leonard Mata. Police confirmed it was the stolen

bicycle and contacted the man in pos-session of it. He told police he bought the bike from an unidentified man in Oceanside on May 8. The man with the bike was ruled out as a suspect. The crook had taken a $500 bicycle belonging to a friend of Seau and left through the garage door, Mata said. “Somehow they forced the doggy door open so they squeezed through,” he said.

Toledo-

Winlock

pitcher

Megan

Herbert

pitches to

a Ridge-

ield batter

Wednes-

day at Fort

Borst Park.

Aim...

Pete Caster / [email protected]

2B Softball

SQUEEZEDAdna Upsets Napavine, 5-4, to Seal State Berth

Pete Caster / [email protected]

Adna’s Jordan Sandrini lays down a squeeze bunt as Taylor Woods heads home during the sixth inning of a District IV 2B Softball Tournament semiinal game at Fort Borst Park in Centralia on Wednesday. Woods

scored the eventual winning run on the play as the Pirates beat Napavine 5-4.

Adna, Toutle Lake Unbeaten in First Day of District Tournament

Pete Caster / [email protected]

Pe Ell’s Amanda Woods pitches to a Toutle Lake batter in the District IV semiinals

Wednesday in Centralia. The Ducks beat the Trojans, 4-3, to drop Pe Ell into a loser-

out, winner-to-state consolation game on Saturday.

Pete Caster / [email protected]

Morton-White Pass’ Madison McCoy pitches to a Pe Ell batter during the irst round

of the District IV tournament Wednesday in Centralia.please see SOFTBALL, page S3

CH472509b

w.cg

Outdoors

By Kimberly Mason

For The Chronicle

Special hunting permit ap-plications are available for deer, elk, mountain goat, bighorn sheep, moose, wild turkey, cou-gar, and black bear. Applications are due tomorrow, May 18. It is a weighted-point permit drawing system; applicants who were not selected in the past have a better chance to be drawn. Applications may be pur-chased from license vendors or on WDFW’s website at https://fishhunt.dfw.wa.gov/wdfw/special_permits.html. Applica-tions must be submitted on that website or by calling 1-877-945-3492. Instructions and details on applying for special-permit hunts are described on pages 84-85 of the 2012-13 hunting regs pamphlet.

WDFW Kress Lake Safety Day

Kress Lake, north of Ka-lama in Cowlitz County, will close to public fishing all day May 18 and until 6 p.m. May 19 in order to accommodate the crowds expected to attend the WDFW Kress Lake Safety Day program. The Kress Lake Safety Day program will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, May 19, children ages 4-14 will fish at a netted section at the lake after finishing a safety course. For more information con-tact John Weinheimer, District 9 WDFW Fish Biologist, (360) 906-6746.

Rivers, Lakes, Streams and Saltwater

“Except for Mayfield, all the lakes are fishing well,” said Charles McElroy, sporting

goods clerk at Sunbird Shopping Center. Riffe Lake is still producing good numbers of silvers. Try your luck with the same ol’ stuff, says Marshall Borsom of Fish Country in Ethel — cocktail shrimp, worms and white corn. Trout planted lowland lakes in April have started to accli-matize to the local food on the menu, it’s time to switch up from dough baits and try your luck with flies, said McElroy. “Use spinning gear with a bubble above a swivel with a bead,” McElroy advised. “Use a 3 to 4-foot leader with an olive or black woolly bugger or woolly worm. Cast it out, let it sit for a second, then start twitching it back to shore.” American and Merwin are still fishing well for kokanee. “But they’re still pretty small,” said McElroy.

Local and out-of-town an-glers have been expressing con-siderable frustration over the constant raising and lowering of the Cowlitz River. “They put ‘em off the bite when they jack the water up and down,” said McElroy. “Boaters and bank anglers alike are catching fish — not limits for everyone, but the guys putting in their time are hook-ing up.,” said Borsom. Last week Tacoma Pow-er recovered 236 winter-run steelhead, 229 spring Chinook adults, 13 jacks and 56 summer-run steelhead during five days of operation at the Cowlitz Salmon Hatchery separator. During the past week Ta-coma Power employees released 104 spring Chinook adults, ten jacks and 9 winter-run steelhead at the Day Use Park in Lake Scanewa above Cowlitz Falls

Dam. They released five spring Chinook adults and three win-ter-run steelhead into the Cispus River above the mouth of Yel-low Jacket Creek, and released 19 spring Chinook adults and two winter-run steelhead into the upper Cowlitz River at Pack-wood, Washington. Scanewa Lake does not open for fishing until June 1. The South Fork of the Toutle, from the mouth to the 4100 Rd. Bridge, closed to fishing May 16 and will remain closed until June 1.

•••Kimberly Mason is a freelance

writer and photojournalist. Visit her website The (Almost) Daily News (almostdailynews.com), find her on Facebook (Kimberly Mason — The Chronicle), call 269-5017 or email [email protected].

Fishing & Hunting Report

Hunting Permit Deadline; Kress Lake Safety Day; Cowlitz Uneven

Hunting, Fishing Hiking, Birding

Sports 2 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012

Space

By Kimberly Mason

For The Chronicle

I spent some time at two of our more picturesque and fine-fishing local ponds this week: Swofford Pond (Mossyrock) and South Lewis County Pond (Toledo). I didn’t catch any fish, but that was probably because I was concentrating my efforts on photographing the wildlife — some of which was very weird wildlife. South Lewis County Pond is a local favorite for trout. Three-thousand catchable-sized rain-bows and 300 jumbos averaging a pound and a half were tossed into this 17-acre pond in April. The daily limit for trout is five fish. Some locals have been catching so many in just a few hours, I heard they switched to barbless hooks to make it easier to let them go. (Reminder: when fishing with bait, you must count all fish as part of your dai-ly limit, whether you keep them or not.) But the Double-crested Cor-morants that feed on this lake know of no such limits. Earlier this year, as the cor-morants congregated on their nesting grounds along the Co-lumbia River, they were blamed for consuming 22.3 million salmon and steelhead smolts. At the end of nesting season, they moved on to freshly stocked lakes and ponds, where the pick-ings are easy. Double-crested Cormorants are large birds, growing over two feet long, with a wingspan of four feet. They are accom-plished divers, reaching depths of up to 30-feet and they eat fish ranging from tiny fry to hefty 16-inch trout. Unfortunately, they aren’t particularly fond of American Bullfrogs as dinner fare. Bull-frogs are an invasive species, commonly found in local lakes and ponds, who have contrib-uted to the drastic decline of native amphibians and rep-tiles. Nor do the cormorants perch and poop their toxic waste on and kill aquatic invasive species such as the Yellow Flag Iris (due to bloom any day now), or lay waste to the Scotch Broom bush-es that line many of our favorite waterways. No, they generally lay waste to native plants with their waste.

Unambiguously Aggressive Amphibians

When people let their no longer treasured, cold-blooded pet go free, they cause more than a little trouble to the local residents. Bullfrogs are outcompeting local amphibians for food — and eating them as well. Bullfrogs are “sit and wait” predators who will attack almost any living, moving creature smaller than itself, including in-sects, frogs, tadpoles, fish, small snakes, turtle hatchlings, newts, salamanders, bats, humming-birds, and ducklings. Swofford Pond is rife with bullfrogs and Silver Lake in Cowlitz County produces some of the best jumping frogs for To-ledo Cheese Days Frog Jumping contestants. I found three good-sized Red-eared Slider Turtles — for-mer pet store residents — sun-ning themselves on log beside the South Lewis County Pond on Sunday. These colorful, non-native turtles compete with na-tive turtles — including the en-dangered Western Pond Turtle — for food and basking sites. If you think you see a Pond Slider, WDFW says, “confine it and look for an owner in your neigh-borhood.”

Odd Ducks

Fort Borst Park and South County Ponds both have a healthy local population of do-mestic duck/Mallard crosses. Such concentrated populations compete with natives for food and nesting space and they di-lute the gene pool and may in-troduce diseases that the wild duck population doesn’t have the immunity to overcome. These ponds also support a healthy local population of na-tive waterfowl who, when they migrate, may take domestic dis-ease with them and spread it to the wild populations.

Fur-Bearing Thieves

While kayaking along the shores of Swofford Pond on Tuesday afternoon with Mossy-rock local Lesa Horton, I spot-ted several otter slides along the southwestern end of the pond. Moments later we were re-warded with a view of an otter, who was probably heading out to make his afternoon rounds

of anglers’ stringers along the shoreline. Offut Lake also has a good-sized population of these fish-stealing mammals. Becky Pogue, an owner of Offut Lake Resort, recommends that all dock fishermen have a cage to keep their trout safe from the purloining population. “You ‘otter’ have one,” the sign says in her resort store. River otters are cute, but they are also 4-feet and 25-pounds of unpredictability with teeth. Never confront an otter. When he asks you for your fish, just put up your hands and give up the fight.

•••Kimberly Mason is a freelance

writer and photojournalist. Visit her website The (Almost) Daily News (almostdailynews.com), find her on Facebook (Kimberly Mason – The Chronicle), call 269-5017 or email [email protected].

InvadersA Short Study of the Abundant and

Abundantly Interesting, Irritating and Destructive Species in Local Waters

Kimberly Mason / For The Chronicle

A Double-crested Cormorant at South Lewis County Pond in Toledo opens

wide to show just how big of a ish can it inside. This diving bird eats ish

ranging from tiny fry to hefty 16-inch trout.

Kimberly Mason / For The Chronicle

Above: The Red-eared Slider Turtle can be seen sunning himself on a log at the South Lewis County Pond in Toledo.

Someone likely set this former pet free, hoping that he would ind a happy home here. This turtle and Painted Turtles

compete with native turtles for food and basking sites, creating a decline in native populations. Top Right: This odd

duck is just one of many residing on local small ponds such as Fort Borst Park Pond in Centralia and South Lewis County

Pond in Toledo. The upcurled central tail feathers and green head mark this duck as part Mallard, the white on the chest

marks it as domestic, the giant black-tipped grey bill and cinnamon body may come from a Widgeon.

the runners over with a bunt, and Krysta Anderson drove in pinch-runner Haley Minkoff with a single to tie the game. Ra-chel Diaz de Leon then reached on a fielder’s choice to load the bases and set up the suicide squeeze. “We knew it was coming, and we weren’t able to defend it,” Napavine coach Kurt Olson said. “So that was discouraging. But they’re a well-coached team, and they’re going to execute that time and time again. If you’re going to play with a team like that, you’d better step up.” The Tigers took a 2-0 lead in the first inning, when Sage At-kins was hit by a pitch and Brit-tany Mitchell knocked a 2-run homer to left-center field. Adna answered with 3 runs in the bot-tom of the second, two of which came around to score on errors and the third of which was driv-en home by Diaz de Leon’s triple. Napavine regained the lead in the bottom of the fourth, when Sam May took first on an error and scored on Lacie Smith’s homer to left field. Moerke allowed six hits over the course of the game, but walked only one batter and struck out two. She coaxed the Tigers into 10 pop-fly outs. “Obviously, we’re going to need to clean up the errors, quit chasing change-ups and quit popping up,” Olson added. Adna tallied five hits off of Tiger pitcher Alexa Peters, who allowed just a single earned run. Anderson and Diaz de Leon were both 2 for 3 in the win. “It was finally a total team effort,” Pirate coach Mike Ra-schke said. “We punched our ticket. We didn’t want to do it Saturday.” Adna (16-5), which won the league, district and state titles last season, will now face Toutle Lake in a rematch of last year’s district championship game at 5 p.m. on Saturday. Both teams will advance to the State 2B Soft-ball Tournament. Napavine (16-5), which went 12-0 in the Central 2B League regular season, will face Mor-ton-White Pass in a winner-to-state, loser-out consolation semifinal matchup at 1 p.m. on Saturday.

Toutle Lake 4, Pe Ell 3

The Trojans juiced the bases with no outs on two separate occasions, but couldn’t get the tying run across in a 4-3 loss to Toutle Lake. The Ducks, meanwhile, stroked five hits and took ad-vantage of three miscues by Pe

Ell. The Trojans tied the game at 3 with a 2-run homer from Kayla Capps in the fifth inning, but Toutle Lake answered with a double that came around to score on a fielder’s choice for what would be the game’s final run. Amanda Woods pitched all seven innings for Pe Ell and, at the plate, was walked three times. Kayla Hoke went 2 for 3 with a double, and Mattie Miller, Tabatha Skeen and Bailey Lusk all added hits for the Trojans. “We had our chances to win it,” Trojan coach John Woods said. “We had the bases loaded twice with no outs, and we didn’t score and capitalize on it.” The loss dropped the Trojans to 18-3 on the season and into the consolation bracket. Pe Ell will play a winner-to-state, los-er-out game against Mossyrock at 1 p.m. on Saturday. The Tro-jans finished third in the Dis-trict IV tournament last season and went on to reach the State 2B championship game. “We’ll go back to the dia-mond this week, and get ready for Mossyrock on Saturday,” Woods added.

Mossyrock 15, North Beach 1

The Vikings staved off elimi-nation in a big way, thumping North Beach 15-1 in a loser-out consolation game. Calli Hensch held the Hyaks to one hit over five innings, and Shayne Fried went 3 for 4 with an inside-the-park home run for Mossyrock. Kylie Blackburn was 2 for 4, and Sara Smith went 2 for 3 with a pair of doubles for the Vikings. Mossyrock will now face Pe Ell at 1 p.m. Saturday in a win-ner-to-state, loser-out consola-tion semifinal matchup.

Morton-White Pass 12, Ocosta 0

Morton-White Pass defeated Ocosta with ease, 12-0, to move on to Saturday’s loser-out game against Napavine. “We came in a bit sluggish after losing our first game,” Timberwolf coach Darrin Allen said, “but we did a whole lot bet-ter this time around.” Ashley Kelly went 3 for 4 with 2 RBIs while Kayla Reyn-olds and Maddie McCoy both hit 3 for 3. Both McCoy and Taylor Brooks were credited by Allen for pitching a solid game. “We still didn’t hit the way we should,” Allen said, “but now that we’ve got two more prac-tices in front of us, we will be focused on that.” Despite losing to Pe Ell early, MWP bounced back to top the Pacific 2B League champs. “Our Central 2B League is dominant and even though Ocosta was the champs for their

league, they don’t compare to the top teams in our league,” he said. Allen held a positive out-look for the Timberwolves’ next game. “We are looking forward to Saturday and being the under-dogs,” he noted. “We gotta put our bats on the ball and just fo-cus on that.”

First Round

Napavine 14, Mossyrock 2

The Tigers opened tourna-ment play with a big 14-2, five-inning win over Mossyrock. Napavine blew out to a 13-0 lead after three innings, with a five-inning, one-hit pitching perfor-mance from Mackenzie Olson. Olson helped her own cause with a 2 for 4 game at the plate

with a home run. Demi Sah-linger was 3 for 4, Lacie Smith went 2 for 3 and Teryn Pannette knocked a triple. Autumn Moorcroft doubled for Mossyrock. The win propelled the Ti-gers into the district semifinals, while bumping Mossyrock into a loser-out game against North Beach.

Adna 17, North Beach 1

The Pirates blasted North Beach 17-1 in the noon game to kick off the District IV tourna-ment. Adna led 10-0 after three in-nings, and pitcher Alexis Moer-ke held the Hyaks to a single hit over five frames. Jordan Sandrini and Taylor Woods each homered, Emma Brattain hit a double and Chey-

enne Gilbertson was 2 for 3 with a double for Adna, which ad-vanced to the district semifinals with the victory.

Pe Ell 13, Morton-White Pass 0

The Trojans pounded fellow Central 2B League squad Mor-ton-White Pass 13-0 in the first round, behind a three-hit, eight-strikeout pitching performance from Amanda Woods. The Pe Ell hurler also went 3 for 3 at the plate as part of 10 Trojan hits in the game. Kayla Capps was 2 for 2 with a grand slam in the Trojans’ 7-run fifth inning, and Kayla Hoke went 2 for 3 in the win. Note: Toutle Lake dropped Ocosta 11-0 in the other first-round game to meet Pe Ell in the semifinals.

By The Chronicle

The Loggers, once again, will play for a district title. Onalaska topped Ridgefield, 7-4, in the first round of the District IV 1A Softball Tourna-ment Wednesday at Centralia’s Fort Borst Park, and went on to top Elma 7-2 in the semifinals to reach the championship game for the fourth season in a row. The Loggers gave up a run to Elma in the top of the first inning, but answered with 2 in the bottom of the frame and stretched the lead to 7-1 before the Eagles could find home plate for the second and final time in the top of the seventh inning. Sarah Barnes, who got both wins on the day for the Loggers, allowed seven hits and struck out 11 in the semifinal win. The Boise State University-bound se-nior also drew walks in three of her four trips to the plate. Staci Vint went 2 for 3 with a pair doubles for the winners, while Autumn Durand doubled and drove in a run. Danyelle Duryea was 2 for 3 with a dou-ble and a pair of RBIs, and Erin Wrzesinski and Khodi Wright each added hits and drove in a run. Elma managed just one extra-base hit — a double from Taylor Wilson — in the contest, and Barnes allowed a single earned run. Onalaska will now face Mon-tesano, which topped Kalama

16-1 in the first round and Cas-tle Rock 6-5 in the semifinals, at 3 p.m. Saturday in Centralia for the District IV championship.

Notes: Onalaska lost to Mon-tesano in the 2009 and 2010 dis-trict championship games, and was defeated by Castle Rock in

the title game last year. ... Tole-do-Winlock opened the tourna-ment with an 11-1 loss to Elma, and was defeated 10-1 by Ridge-

field in the consolation round to

bring the Warhawks’ season to a

close.

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Sports 3SPORTS

1A Softball

Loggers Roll Back to District Title Game

Pete Caster / [email protected]

Onalaska’s Sarah Barnes pitches against Elma Wednesday in the District IV 1A Softball Tournament. Barnes struck out 11 for the Loggers, who won 7-2.

SoftballContinued from Sports 1

Pete Caster / [email protected]

Napavine second baseman Teryn Pannette dives for a ground ball that just skipped past her during a District IV 2B Softball

Tournament semiinal game against Adna at Fort Borst Park in Centralia on Wednesday.

Pete Caster / [email protected]

Pe Ell’s Kayla Hoke is tagged out at home plate by Morton-White Pass catcher Darian Atkinson during a District IV 2B Softball

Tournament irst-round game at Fort Borst Park in Centralia on Wednesday.

CLEVELAND — Felix Her-nandez sat at a clubhouse table, black towel draped over his head and shoulders like a beaten box-er. It was an apt look for a Mari-ners pitcher pounded merciless-ly by the Cleveland Indians in an early-round knockout. By the time this 9-3 loss on Wednesday night was finally done, little-used relief pitcher Hisashi Iwa-kuma had actually logged more innings on the mound than the onetime Cy Young Award win-ner. And that’s likely why Her-nandez wore this look of defeat so well. He’d periodically lean back in silence in his chair to scan the room, while tablemates Alex Liddi, Brandon League and Mike Carp said nothing. It was as if Hernandez felt comfortable under the security of that towel. As if he feared that, by removing it, he’d wind up just as he’d been for 32/3 tortu-ous innings against the Indians. Exposed. “It’s been a while, man,” he finally told reporters, after standing up and removing the towel from his head. “It’s been a while since I’ve had a game like that.” Two years to the month, to be exact. Although the eight runs — seven earned — allowed against the Angels in 31/3 in-nings at Safeco Field on May 7, 2010 came courtesy of just five hits, three of them home runs in the same inning. But the punishment here, in front of 12,092 fans at Progres-sive Field, was much more a sustained beating. By the time it

was done, Hernandez had been torched for eight runs — six earned — on 10 hits, three walks, a hit batter and a wild pitch. He needed 103 pitches just to record 11 outs and could not get the 12th. Three of the final five batters he faced hit doubles while the last one, Michael Brantley, belted a run-scoring single. The only thing that spared Hernandez another run against was an inning-ending rundown play after Shawn Kelley came on and yielded a single. Iwakuma took over in the fifth, gave up a solo homer in the sixth to Tra-vis Hafner and otherwise looked fine in collecting four more in-nings on his résumé. “I only pitched four innings, but I’ve felt stronger each time out,” Iwakuma said, through in-

terpreter Daisuke Sekiba. “I can still pitch five or six innings if I have to.” Seattle has lost five of six on this road trip. “I had good pitches, but the sinker was not there today,” Hernandez said. “My breaking ball was good. My changeup was good. It was down, but they didn’t swing.” Instead, the Indians loaded up on Hernandez’s fastballs. They erased a 1-0 lead in the first inning by loading the bases with none out on two singles and a hit batter, then had a passed ball get by catcher Jesus Montero to bring in a run. An ensuing groundout put Cleveland up 2-1 and later, with runners at the corners, Carlos Santana broke for second on a steal attempt. Montero pump

faked to second, then tried to nab Asdrubal Cabrera leaning off third. The young catcher’s throw went into left field. Cabrera got a late start for home and left field-er Chone Figgins had a chance, but threw the ball away at the plate. Cabrera scored and San-tana made it all the way home as well on the errors for a 4-1 lead. “If you are going to throw that ball down to third base, you’ve got to feel like you’ve got a chance to get that runner out,” Mariners manager Eric Wedge said of Montero’s decision. The Mariners tried to come back as Dustin Ackley hit a two-run homer in the third to make it a 4-3 game. Ackley and No. 2 hitter Michael Saunders went a combined 5 for 5 with the hom-er, a walk and a stolen base their first three trips to the plate. After Ackley’s homer, Saun-ders singled, stole second and then appeared to have third base stolen as well. But Montero lofted a lazy pop-up behind first base. Saunders was doubled off. Hernandez then imploded in the fourth. “Felix just had an off-day,” Wedge said. “He’s human. I think sometimes we forget about that.” Wedge took some solace from the offense again showing signs of life. Ackley has a 12-game hitting streak. “Right now, I’m starting to feel a lot better,” Ackley said.

“Right now, my approach the last four or five games. ... I’m prob-ably as close to last year as I’ve been.”

Sports 4 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012SPORTS

By Tim Booth

The Associated Press

SEATTLE — Attempts to build a nearly $500 million arena that could bring the NBA back to Seattle took another step for-ward on Wednesday. And if an NHL team turns out to not be part of the equation, the public investment will be less than originally believed. The city, King County and private investor Chris Hansen announced a memorandum of understanding on Wednesday laying out the financial responsi-bilities for the proposed venue. The proposal included two significant changes, the result of three months of negotiations between Hansen and the local municipalities, from the original unveiled in February. The agree-ment indicates that construc-tion on the facility could begin with only an NBA franchise on board. Previously, it was believed that both an NBA and an NHL franchise would need to be com-mitted tenants to make the plan work. The plan calls for nearly $300 million in private invest-ment from Hansen's group. The amount of public support would be capped at $120 million if it's only the NBA making a return to the Puget Sound region. It would be $200 million if NBA and NHL franchises are involved. The goal is still to bring both professional leagues, but the project can move forward with only the NBA in hand, which is the focus of Hansen, a San Fran-cisco hedge-fund manager and main investor in the project. "Our job is, as soon as possi-ble, when we have an agreement in place, we'll be very aggressive in our efforts to make sure that everybody knows that we would like to have a franchise back here," Hansen said. "I don't want to comment on specific franchis-es again, but we'll do the best that we can." The agreement now goes be-fore the Seattle City Council and King County Council for review. Both entities would need to ap-prove the agreement for the proj-ect to move forward. No con-struction would begin until after a franchise has been acquired. Other little nuggets are laid out within the 24-page MOU, including the bullet point that any NBA team using the facility will have to be named the Super-Sonics, subject to NBA approval. Hansen also included a side letter where he suggests that KeyAre-na would be used for up to two years as a temporary home with a handful of upgrades paid for by Hansen's investor group, Ar-enaCo. Following its use as a temporary facility, Hansen sug-gests KeyArena could become a smaller arena, a theater venue or exhibition center. But the bulk of the MOU fo-cused on the financial details of the public investment, which is to be paid for through taxes and revenues generated by the new arena and has a number of public protections included. The project calls for about $290 million in private invest-ment from Hansen's group, along with $200 million from the city and county through 30-year bonds. Any franchise that comes to Seattle and uses the arena would be required to sign a non-relocation agreement that would span the life of those bonds. All construction costs, in-cluding overruns, would be paid for by Hansen's group, along with all environmental studies and permitting. Once that pro-cess is completed, most of the public investment is placed on the city. The MOU calls for an ini-tial investment of $100 million by the city for acquisition of the project site. During a second in-vestment window, the city would contribute another $20 million if both an NBA and NHL team are acquired, with the remaining $80 million in public investment being bonded by the county.

NBA

Agreement Reached on Seattle Arena Plan

MLB

Felix Has Bad Outing in 9-3 Loss to Tribe

Amy Sancetta / The Associated Press

Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Felix Hernandez throws against the Cleveland

Indians during the irst inning of a baseball game in Cleveland on Wednesday.

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The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Sports 5SPORTS

Mossyrock 2

Napavine 14

Adna 17

North Beach 1

Morton-WP 0

Pe Ell 13

Toutle Lake 11

Ocosta 0

Game 12

5 p.m., SaturdayWinner 7 vs. Winner 8First/Second Place

District ChampionThird Place

Game 11

5 p.m., SaturdayWinner 9 vs. Winner 10

Third/Fourth Place

Both to State

2012 District IV 2B Softball Tournament

Wednesday, May 16 & Saturday, May 19 • Fort Borst Park, Centralia • Top Four to State

Game 1Noon, Wednesday

Game 22 p.m., Wednesday

Game 32 p.m., Wednesday

Game 42 p.m., Wednesday

Game 8

6 p.m., WednesdayWinner 3 vs. Winner 4

Game 7

6 p.m., WednesdayWinner 1 vs. Winner 2

Game 5

6 p.m., WednesdayLoser 1 vs. Loser 2

(Loser Out)

Game 6

6 p.m., WednesdayLoser 3 vs. Loser 4

(Loser Out)

Game 9

1 p.m., SaturdayWinner 5 vs. Loser 8

(Loser Out)

Game 10

1 p.m., SaturdayWinner 6 vs. Loser 7

(Loser Out)

Seeds

Central 2B League

1. Napavine 2. Pe Ell 3. Adna 4. Toutle Lake 5. Morton-White Pass 6. Mossyrock

Pacific 2B League

1. Ocosta 2. North Beach

Elma 11

Toledo-Winlock 1

Ridgefield 4

Onalaska 7

Montesano 16

Kalama 1

Hoquiam 4

Castle Rock 5

Game 11

3 p.m., SaturdayWinner 7 vs. Winner 8First/Second Place

District ChampionThird Place

Game 12

3 p.m., SaturdayWinner 9 vs. Winner 10

Third/Fourth Place

Both to State

2012 District IV 1A Softball Tournament

Wednesday, May 16 & Saturday, May 19 • Fort Borst Park, Centralia • Top Four to State

Game 110 a.m., Wednesday

Game 210 a.m., Wednesday

Game 3Noon, Wednesday

Game 4Noon, Wednesday

Game 8

4 p.m., WednesdayWinner 3 vs. Winner 4

Game 7

4 p.m., WednesdayWinner 1 vs. Winner 2

Game 5

4 p.m., WednesdayLoser 1 vs. Loser 2

(Loser Out)

Game 6

4 p.m., WednesdayLoser 3 vs. Loser 4

(Loser Out)

Game 9

11 a.m., SaturdayWinner 5 vs. Loser 8

(Loser Out)

Game 10

11 a.m., SaturdayWinner 6 vs. Loser 7

(Loser Out)

Seeds

SWW 1A Evergreen

1. Elma 2. Montesano 3. Onalaska 4. Hoquiam

SWW 1A Trico

1. Castle Rock 2. Ridgefield 3. Kalama 4. Toledo-Winlock

Mark Morris

W.F. West

Centralia

Woodland

Aberdeen

R.A. Long

Black Hills

Tumwater

Game 11

5 p.m., FridayWinner 7 vs. Winner 8First/Second Place

District ChampionThird Place

Game 12

6:15 p.m., FridayWinner 9 vs. Winner 10

Third Place

Winner to State

2012 District IV 2A Softball Tournament

Thursday, May 17 & Friday, May 18 • Fort Borst Park, Centralia • Top Three to State

Game 14 p.m., Thursday

Game 24 p.m., Thursday

Game 34 p.m., Thursday

Game 44 p.m., Thursday

Game 8

6 p.m., ThursdayWinner 3 vs. Winner 4

Game 7

6 p.m., ThursdayWinner 1 vs. Winner 2

Game 5

6 p.m., ThursdayLoser 1 vs. Loser 2

(Loser Out)

Game 6

6 p.m., ThursdayLoser 3 vs. Loser 4

(Loser Out)

Game 9

4 p.m., FridayWinner 5 vs. Loser 8

(Loser Out)

Game 10

4 p.m., FridayWinner 6 vs. Loser 7

(Loser Out)

Seeds

Evergreen

1. Tumwater 2. W.F. West 3. Aberdeen 4. Centralia 5. Black Hills

Greater St. Helens

1. Woodland 2. R.A. Long 3. Mark Morris

Elma 2

Onalaska 7

OnalaskaRidgefield

Montesano 6

Montesano

Kalama 1

Castle Rock 5

Ridgefield 10

Castle Rock

Hoquiam 11

Hoquiam

Elma

Tol.-Win. 1

Morton-WP 12

Toutle Lake 4

Adna 5

Napavine 4

Pe Ell 3

Toutle Lake

Adna

Morton-WP

North Beach 1

Pe Ell

Ocosta 0

Mossyrock 15

Mossyrock

Napavine

Sports 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 SPORTS

PREPS Local SchedulesTrack and FieldFRIDAY, May 18 District IV 2A Championships at Centralia, 4 p.m. District IV 1A Championships at Ka-lama, 4:30 p.m. District IV 2B Championships at Raymond, 5 p.m.

Local ResultsWednesday’s ResultsDistrict IV 2B SoftballFirst RoundAt CentraliaTIGERS 14, VIKINGS 2Mossyrock 000 20 — 2 1 4Napavine 364 1x — 14 12 2 Batteries: Mossyrock — Macken-zie Olson and Sam May; Mossyrock — Calli Hensch and McKenna Ulery

At CentraliaPIRATES 17, HYAKS 1N. Beach 000 10 — 1 1 4Adna 271 7x — 17 7 0 Batteries: North Beach — Marya Pope and Desiree Markishtum; Adna — Alexis Moerke and Emma Brattain

At CentraliaTROJANS 13, T-WOLVES 0Morton-White Pass 000 00 — 0 3 2Pe Ell 004 27 — 13 10 1 Batteries: Morton-White Pass — Maddie McCoy, Kayleena Dotson (3) and Darian Atkinson; Pe Ell — Aman-da Woods and Ashley Shepherd

Second RoundAt CentraliaVIKINGS 15, HYAKS 1N. Beach 010 00 — 1 1 3Mossyrock 10(10) 4x — 15 9 2 Batteries: North Beach — Calli Hensch and McKenna Ulery; North Beach — Marya Pope and Desiree Markishtum

At CentraliaTIMBERWOLVES 12, WILDCATS 0Ocosta 000 00 — 0 3 5Morton-White Pass 033 15 — 12 12 0 Batteries: Ocosta — Jenny Benn and McKenna Powers; Morton-White Pass — Taylor Brooks, Maddie McCoy (4) and Darian Atkinson

At CentraliaDUCKS 4, TROJANS 3Pe Ell 000 120 0 — 3 7 3Toutle Lake 000 310 0 — 4 5 2 Batteries: Pe Ell — Amanda Woods and Ashley Shepherd; Paige Deffenbaugh and Iverson

At CentraliaPIRATES 5, TIGERS 4Napavine 020 200 0 — 4 6 3Adna 030 002 x — 5 5 2 Batteries: Napavine — Alexa Peters and Sam May; Adna — Alexis Moerke and Emma Brattain

District IV 1A Softball TournamentSemifinalsAt CentraliaLOGGERS 7, EAGLES 2Elma 100 000 1 — 2 7 1Onalaska 200 203 x — 7 7 1 Batteries: Elma — Brooke Gold-smith, Ashley Cooper (5) and Regan Wollen; Onalaska — Sarah Barnes and Khodi Wright

COLLEGENCAA BASEBALLUSA TODAY/ESPN TOP 25RK TEAM RECORD1 Florida State (15) 40-102 South Carolina (10) 38-133 Florida (6) 38-144 Baylor 39-115 Kentucky 41-116 North Carolina 38-137 Rice 36-148 Texas A&M 37-149 LSU 39-1310 Oregon 37-1411 UCLA 35-1312 Stanford 32-1413 Purdue 39-1014 Cal State Fullerton 32-1515 North Carolina State 36-1316 UCF 40-1217 Arizona 33-1518 Arkansas 35-1719 Virginia 34-15-120 Oregon State 32-1721 Miami (FL) 32-1822 Ole Miss 34-1823 San Diego 38-1324 Louisville 35-1725 TCU 32-16 Dropped Out: Georgia Tech (23), Georgia (24), Sam Houston State (25), Texas (25) Others Receiving Votes: Texas, Oklahoma, Indiana State, Clemson, Dallas Baptist, Coastal Carolina, St. John’s, Missouri State, Stony Brook, North Carolina-Wilmington, Utah Val-ley, Tulane, Georgia Tech, Army, Okla-homa State, Mississippi State, Appala-chian State, Pepperdine, Nevada, Sam Houston State, Georgia, East Carolina, Wright State

Pac-12 StandingsStandings Conference OverallOregon 19-8 38-14Arizona 16-8 33-15UCLA 15-9 36-13Stanford 14-10 33-14Arizona St. 14-10 32-17Oregon St. 13-11 33-17Washington 11-13 26-21Washington St. 10-14 25-24California 9-15 26-22USC 7-17 22-25Utah 7-20 14-35

MLBMajor League Baseball Standings

AMERICAN LEAGUEEAST W L PCT GBBaltimore 24 14 .632 -Tampa Bay 24 14 .632 -NY Yankees 20 17 .541 3.5Toronto 20 18 .526 4Boston 17 20 .459 6.5CENTRALCleveland 21 16 .568 -Detroit 18 19 .486 3Chicago Sox 17 21 .447 4.5Kansas City 15 21 .417 5.5Minnesota 11 26 .297 10WESTTexas 24 14 .632 -Oakland 19 19 .500 5LA Angels 17 21 .447 7Seattle 16 23 .410 8.5NATIONAL LEAGUEEAST W L PCT GBWashington 23 14 .622 -Atlanta 23 15 .605 .5NY Mets 20 17 .541 3Miami 20 17 .541 3Philadelphia 19 19 .500 4.5CENTRALSt. Louis 22 15 .595 -Cincinnati 19 17 .528 2.5Pittsburgh 17 20 .459 5Milwaukee 16 21 .432 6Houston 16 21 .432 6Chicago Cubs 15 22 .405 7WESTLA Dodgers 24 13 .649 -San Francisco 18 19 .486 6Arizona 16 22 .421 8.5Colorado 15 21 .417 8.5San Diego 14 24 .368 10.5

Tuesday’s ResultsSan Diego 6, at Washington 1at Philadelphia 4, Houston 3Cleveland 5, at Minnesota 0at St. Louis 7, Chicago Cubs 6Detroit 10, at Chicago White Sox 8at Boston 5, Seattle 0at Baltimore 5, NY Yankees 2at LA Angels 4, Oakland 0Tampa Bay 4, at Toronto 3at Atlanta 6, Cincinnati 2Milwaukee 8, at NY Mets 0at Miami 6, Pittsburgh 2Kansas City 7, at Texas 4Arizona 5, at LA Dodgers 1Colorado 5, at San Francisco 4

Wednesday’s Resultsat San Diego 4, LA Dodgers 2at Tampa Bay 2, Boston 1at Cleveland 9, Seattle 3Minnesota 11, at Detroit 7at Washington 7, Pittsburgh 4at Toronto 8, NY Yankees 1Miami 8, at Atlanta 4Cincinnati 6, at NY Mets 3at Texas 4, Oakland 1Philadelphia 9, at Chicago Cubs 2at Houston 8, Milwaukee 3Baltimore 4, at Kansas City 3at Colorado 6, Arizona 1at LA Angels 7, Chicago White Sox 2St. Louis 4, at San Francisco 1

Thursday’s Games (All Times PST)Seattle at Cleveland, 9:05 a.m.Minnesota at Detroit, 10:05 a.m.Cincinnati at NY Mets, 10:10 a.m.Oakland at Texas, 11:05 a.m.Baltimore at Kansas City, 11:10 a.m.Arizona at Colorado, 12:10 p.m.Chicago White Sox at LA Angels, 12:35 p.m.St. Louis at San Francisco, 12:45 p.m.Pittsburgh at Washington, 4:05 p.m.NY Yankees at Toronto, 4:07 p.m.Miami at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m.Boston at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m.Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m.Milwaukee at Houston, 5:05 p.m.LA Dodgers at San Diego, 7:05 p.m.

INDIVIDUAL LEADERSAL BATTING AVERAGE AVG1. Josh Hamilton, TEX .4042. Derek Jeter, NYY .3663. Paul Konerko, CHW .3564. David Ortiz, BOS .3455. Austin Jackson, DET .331

NL BATTING AVERAGE AVG1. David Wright, NYM .4022. Rafael Furcal, STL .3703. Matt Kemp, LAD .3594. Andrew McCutchen, PIT .3445. Jon Jay, STL .343

AL HOME RUNS HR1. Josh Hamilton, TEX 182. Edwin Encarnacion, TOR 133. Curtis Granderson, NYY 134. Adam Dunn, CHW 125. Adam Jones, BAL 12

NL HOME RUNS HR1. Carlos Beltran, STL 132. Matt Kemp, LAD 123. Bryan LaHair, CHC 104. Ryan Braun, MIL 105. Jay Bruce, CIN 10

AL RUNS BATTED IN RBI1. Josh Hamilton, TEX 452. Edwin Encarnacion, TOR 343. Miguel Cabrera, DET 334. Adam Dunn, CHW 285. David Ortiz, BOS 27

NL RUNS BATTED IN RBI1. Andre Ethier, LAD 342. Carlos Beltran, STL 323. Carlos Gonzalez, COL 304. Adam LaRoche, WSH 295. Freddie Freeman, ATL 29

AL WINS W1. James Shields, TB 62. Derek Lowe, CLE 63. David Price, TB 64. Yu Darvish, TEX 65. CC Sabathia, NYY 5

NL WINS W1. Lance Lynn, STL 62. Madison Bumgarner, SF 53. Chris Capuano, LAD 54. Kyle Lohse, STL 55. Gio Gonzalez, WSH 5

AL EARNED RUN AVERAGE ERA

1. Derek Lowe, CLE 2.052. Brandon Morrow, TOR 2.223. Drew Smyly, DET 2.314. Wei-Yin Chen, BAL 2.455. Justin Verlander, DET 2.47

NL EARNED RUN AVERAGE ERA1. Brandon Beachy, ATL 1.602. Ryan Dempster, CHC 1.743. Lance Lynn, STL 1.814. Carlos Zambrano, MIA 1.885. Johnny Cueto, CIN 1.89

AL SAVES SV1. Jim Johnson, BAL 132. Fernando Rodney, TB 123. Chris Perez, CLE 124. Joe Nathan, TEX 85. Jonathan Broxton, KC 8

NL SAVES SV1. Craig Kimbrel, ATL 112. Jonathan Papelbon, PHI 103. Brett Myers, HOU 94. Frank Francisco, NYM 95. Henry Rodriguez, WSH 9

NBANBA PLAYOFFSConference SemifinalsTuesday’s ResultsIndiana 78, Miami 75 Game 2 - Series tied 1-1San Antonio 108, LA Clippers 92 Game 1 - Spurs lead 1-0

Wednesday’s ResultsBoston 107, Philadelphia 91 Game 3 - Celtics lead 2-1Oklahoma City 77, LA Lakers 75 Game 2 - Thunder lead 2-0

Thursday’s Games (All Times PST)Miami at Indiana, 4 p.m. Game 3 - Series tied 1-1LA Clippers at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Game 2 - Spurs lead 1-0

Friday’s GamesBoston at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Game 4 - Celtics lead 2-1Oklahoma City at LA Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Game 3 - Thunder lead 2-0

PLAYOFF LEADERSOffensive LeadersPOINTS PPG1. LeBron James, MIA 28.42. Carmelo Anthony, NY 27.83. Kobe Bryant, LAL 27.14. Dirk Nowitzki, DAL 26.85. Kevin Durant, OKC 25.5

ASSISTS APG1. Rajon Rondo, BOS 12.92. Chris Paul, LAC 7.53. Tony Parker, SA 7.44. Mike Conley, MEM 7.15. Jameer Nelson, ORL 6.6

FIELD GOAL % FG%1. Serge Ibaka, OKC .5742. Amare Stoudemire, NY .5563. Kevin Garnett, BOS .5514. Kenneth Faried, DEN .5335. Al Jefferson, UTAH .529

Defensive LeadersREBOUNDS RPG1. Josh Smith, ATL 13.62. Andrew Bynum, LAL 12.13. Kevin Garnett, BOS 11.04. Paul Millsap, UTAH 11.05. Roy Hibbert, IND 10.9

BLOCKS BLKPG1. Serge Ibaka, OKC 3.672. Andrew Bynum, LAL 3.443. Roy Hibbert, IND 3.294. JaVale McGee, DEN 3.145. Paul Millsap, UTAH 2.50

STEALS STPG1. Chris Paul, LAC 3.002. Jason Kidd, DAL 3.003. Rajon Rondo, BOS 2.884. LeBron James, MIA 2.715. James Harden, OKC 2.33

NHLNHL PLAYOFFSConference FinalsTuesday’s ResultLos Angeles 4, Phoenix 0 Game 2 - Kings lead 2-0

Wednesday’s ResultNew Jersey 3, NY Rangers 2 Game 2 - Series tied 1-1

Thursday’s Game (PST)Phoenix at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. Game 3 - Kings lead 2-0

No Games Scheduled Friday

RACING2012 Formula One standingsDrivers Points Wins 1. Sebastian Vettel 61 1 2. Fernando Alonso 61 1 3. Lewis Hamilton 53 0 4. Kimi Raikkonen 49 0 5. Mark Webber 48 0 6. Jenson Button 45 1 7. Nico Rosberg 41 1 8. Romain Grosjean 35 0 9. Pastor Maldonado 29 110. Sergio Perez 22 0

Manufacturer’s championship Points WinsRed Bull 109 1McLaren 98 1Lotus 84 0Ferrari 63 1Mercedes 43 1Williams 43 1Sauber 41 0Force India 18 0

Toro Rosso 6 0Marussia 0 0

TRANSACTIONSThursday’s Sports TransactionsBASEBALLMajor League Baseball MLB — Suspended Toronto 3B Brett Lawrie four games and fined him for his aggressive actions toward um-pire Bill Miller during a May 15 game against Tampa Bay.American League CLEVELAND INDIANS — As-signed RHP Dan Wheeler outright to Columbus (IL). Released RHP Robin-son Tejeda. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Pro-moted OF Wil Myers and RHP Jake Odorizzi from Northwest Arkansas (Texas) to Omaha (PCL). MINNESOTA TWINS — Activat-ed 1B Justin Morneau from the 15—day DL. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Acquired OF Rich Thompson from Philadelphia Phillies for OF Kyle Hudson. Placed OF Brandon Guyer on the 15—day DL, retroactive to May 13. Transferred RHP Jeff Niemann from the 15— to 60—day DL.National League CHICAGO CUBS — Placed RHP Lendy Castillo on the 15—day DL. Recalled LHP Scott Maine from Iowa (PCL). COLORADO ROCKIES — Ac-tivated OF Eric Young Jr. from the re-stricted list. Placed INF Chris Nelson on the 15—day DL, retroactive to May 15th. NEW YORK METS — Designated RHP D.J. Carrasco for assignment. Re-called LHP Robert Carson from Bing-hamton (EL). PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Placed RHP Vance Worley on the 15—day DL, retroactive to May 12. Recalled LHP Joe Savery from Lehigh Valley (IL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Re-called RHP Evan Meek from India-napolis (IL). Optioned OF Alex Presley to Indianapolis.American Association AMARILLO SOX — Signed C Mitch Abeita. EL PASO DIABLOS — Signed LHP Grafton Kent. Released INF Mar-tin Parra and RHP Larry Rodriguez. GARY SOUTHSHORE RAIL-CATS — Released C Jordan Comadena. GRAND PRAIRIE AIRHOGS — Released INF Seth Boyd, RHP Ryan Hanna and RHP Stephen Faris. Signed INF Bridger Hunt. KANSAS CITY T—BONES — Signed C Bubby Williams and RHP Dan Kickham. LINCOLN SALTDOGs — Re-leased RHP Nate Stritz. SIOUX CITY EXPLORERS — Re-leased INF Lyle Allen, OF Matt Mans-illa, RHP Garrett Holleran, LHP Aaron Correa and RHP Bryan Wilde. Winnipeg Goldeyes — Released LHP Matt Fairel.Can—Am League NEW JERSEY JACKALS — Re-leased RHP Jared Locke. QUEBEC CAPITALES — Signed OF Normand Gosselin. ROCKLAND BOULDERS — Re-leased OF John Smith, RHP Mackenzie King and C Scott Knazek. WORCESTER TORNADOES — Released RHP Bryan Leigh.Frontier League EVANSVILLE OTTERS — Sold the contract of INF Sergio Miranda to Atlanta (NL). Released RHP Josh Ce-phas, OF Ryde Rodriguez and C Lucas Shaw. FLORENCE FREEDOM — Re-leased RHP Tim Adleman, RHP Ryan Bean, LHP Anthony Bello, C Tim Mahler and 1B Mike Schwartz. GATEWAY GRIZZLIES — Signed UTL Jon Myers. JOLIET SLAMMERS — Traded LHP Brian Fowler to Southern Illinois for a player to be named. LAKE ERIE CRUSHERS — Signed RHP Andrew Heston. NORMAL CORNBELTERS — Traded RHP Alex Jones to Winnipeg (AA) for a player to be named.BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association NBA — Fined Los Angeles Lakers F Devin Ebanks $25,000, for actions prior to and following his ejection from the May 14 game at Oklahoma City. Fined Los Angeles Lakers C Andrew Bynum $15,000, for failing to make himself available to the media follow-ing the Lakers’ May 15 practice.Women’s National Basketball Associa-tion MINNESOTA LYNX — Waived G Queralt Casas and F Julie Wojta.FOOTBALLNational Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Signed DE Landon Cohen. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed QB Chandler Harnish, RB Vick Ballard, WR LaVon Brazill and DE Tim Fugger. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Signed OL Jeff Allen, DB De’Quan Menzie, DB Dominique Ellis, OL Rich Ranglin, TE Martin Rucker and LB Leon Williams. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed DE Nick Reed. Waived DE Kev-in Cyrille.United States Football League USFL — Named Jeff Garcia to the board of advisors, who will serve on the player development branch.HOCKEYNational Hockey League NHL — Suspended Phoenix F Martin Hanzal one game for boarding Los Angeles F Dustin Brown during a May 15 game.

Scoreboard

Sports on the AirTHURSDAY, May 17MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL9:05 a.m. ROOT — Seattle at ClevelandPRO GOLFNoon GOLF — PGA Byron Nelson Championship3:30 p.m. GOLF — Sybase Match Play ChampionshipNBA PLAYOFFS4 p.m. ESPN — Miami at Indiana, Game 36:30 p.m. ESPN — LA Clippers at San Antonio, Game 2NHL HOCKEY5 p.m. NBCSN — Phoenix at Los Angeles

FRIDAY, May 18MLB BASEBALL5:40 p.m. ROOT — Seattle at ColoradoWNBA BASKETBALL7 p.m. KONG — Los Angeles at SeattleNBA PLAYOFFS5 p.m. ESPN — Boston at Philadelphia7:30 p.m. ESPN — Oklahoma City at L.A. LakersGOLF9:30 p.m. GOLF — BMW Charity Pro-AmNoon GOLF — Byron Nelson Championship3:30 p.m. GOLF — LPGA, Match Play ChampionshipAUTO RACING7:30 a.m. SPEED — NASCAR Truck 200 practice9 a.m. SPEED — NASCAR Sprint Cup Showdown practice1 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR Truck 200 qualifying2 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR Sprint Cup Showdown qualifying5 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR Truck North Carolina 200HORSE RACING1 p.m. NBCSN — NTRA Black-Eyed Susan StakesCOLLEGE SOFTBALL1:30 p.m. ESPN — Div. I Regionals, Kentucky vs. Michigan4 p.m. ESPN — Div. I Regionals, Valparaiso vs. LouisvilleCYCLING2 p.m. NBCSN — Tour of CaliforniaPRO BOXING6 p.m. ESPN2 — R. Serrano vs. K. Mayfield

SATURDAY, May 19MLB BASEBALL1:10 ROOT — Seattle at Colorado4 p.m. FOX — Boston at PhiladelphiaNBA PLAYOFFS12:30 p.m. ABC — San Antonio at L.A. Clippers7:30 p.m. TNT — Oklahoma City at L.A. LakersGOLF4 a.m. GOLF — World Match Play Championship10 a.m. GOLF — BMW Charity Pro-AmNoon CBS — PGA Tour, Byron Nelson Championship GOLF — Sybase Match Play ChampionshipNHL PLAYOFFS10 a.m. NBC — N.Y. Rangers at New JerseyMLS SOCCER2 p.m. KONG — Sounders FC at Vancouver7:30 p.m. ESPN2 — CD Chivas at Los AngelesHORSE RACING1:30 p.m. NBC — The PreaknessAUTO RACING8 a.m. NBCSN — IRL IndyCar Indy 500 qualifying2 p.m. ESPN2 — NHRA Dollar General Summer-nationals qualifying4 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR Sprint Cup All-Star RaceUEFA SOCCER11 a.m. FOX — Chelsea at Bayern MunichCOLLEGE LACROSSE9 a.m. ESPN2 — NCAA Quarterfinal11:30 a.m. ESPN2 — NCAA QuarterfinalsCOLLEGE BASEBALL4:30 p.m. ROOT — Oregon St. at Washington St.COLLEGE SOFTBALL10 a.m. ESPN — NCAA Regionals, Teams TBA12:30 p.m. ESPN — NCAA Regionals, Teams TBA3 p.m. ESPN — NCAA Regionals, Teams TBACYCLING4 p.m. NBCSN — Tour of CaliforniaIIHF HOCKEY6 p.m. NBCSN — Semifinals, Teams TBA

SEA (16-23) 102 000 000 — 3 6 2CLE (21-16) 400 401 00X — 9 14 0

INDIANS AB R H RBI BB SO #P AVG OBP SLGS Choo RF 5 2 3 0 0 1 18 .261 .380 .391J Kipnis 2B 5 2 2 1 0 1 21 .275 .339 .463A Cabrera SS 4 1 2 0 0 0 17 .325 .420 .520T Hafner DH 5 2 2 3 0 0 21 .259 .397 .464C Santana C 3 2 1 1 1 1 19 .262 .385 .437L Marson C 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 .077 .226 .154M Brantley CF 3 0 2 1 1 1 21 .276 .318 .393A Cunningham CF 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 .213 .302 .255J Damon LF 3 0 1 0 2 0 18 .160 .236 .220C Kotchman 1B 3 0 0 0 1 2 15 .196 .283 .304J Lopez 3B 3 0 1 0 1 1 16 .212 .235 .364Totals 36 9 14 6 6 7 171 Pitchers IP H R ER BB SO HR PC-ST ERAJ Lester(W, 2-3) 9.0 8 1 1 0 6 0 119-73 3.71Totals 9.0 8 1 1 0 6 0 119-73

Wednesday’s Mariners Box Score

MARINERS AB R H RBI BB SO #P AVG OBP SLGD Ackley 2B 4 2 3 2 0 0 17 .262 .325 .383M Saunders CF 3 0 2 0 1 1 18 .237 .318 .415I Suzuki RF 4 0 0 1 0 0 30 .288 .329 .385J Montero C 4 0 0 0 0 2 13 .248 .277 .398K Seager DH 4 0 1 0 0 0 18 .274 .291 .452J Smoak 1B 4 0 0 0 0 1 13 .201 .246 .306A Liddi 3B-LF 3 0 0 0 0 2 14 .279 .333 .410C Figgins LF-3B 3 0 0 0 0 0 13 .182 .248 .293B Ryan SS 2 1 0 0 1 0 10 .137 .261 .211Totals 31 3 6 3 2 6 146

Pitchers IP H R ER BB SO HR PC-ST ERAF Hernandez (L, 3-3) 3.2 10 8 6 3 3 0 103-60 3.02S Kelley 0.1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3-2 5.06H Iwakuma 4.0 3 1 1 3 4 1 65-38 5.25Totals 8.0 14 9 7 6 7 1 171-100

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Sports 7SPORTS

FIRST ROUND: Rochester’s Aguilar Scores Lone Warrior Goal in 3-1 Loss to Pirates

By The Chronicle

Rochester's season came to an end at Centralia's Tiger Sta-dium Wednesday night with a 3-1 loss to Vashon Island in the first round of the State 1A Boys Soccer Playoffs. “This was a tough game for us,” Rochester coach Brian Ziese said. “We just could not get it to go in.” Evra Koenig of Vashon Is-land opened up the scoring in the 22nd minute, and teammate Victor Moreira followed suit in the 29th minute. Fernando Aguilar stepped up for the Warriors and sent one in the net in the 31st minute, but Moreira scored again in the 75th minute to seal the Pirates' vic-tory. “Both teams had a lot of on-goal shots, but we could not put them in the back of the net,”

Ziese noted.

Rochester had 25 shots, with

15 on target, while Vashon Is-

land had 27 shots with 10 on tar-

get.

“It is hard for us to prepare

for these good teams when we

play in the league that we are in,”

Ziese said, “but we stayed right

with them the whole game.”

The coach said he sees prom-

ise in the future of the program.

“We've made it to state the

last two years and this year we

claimed the league champion-

ship,” he noted. “And we are go-

ing to keep building on to our

success each year."

Rochester finished the sea-

son with a 16-2 record, after

winning the SWW 1A League

Evergreen Division champion-

ship with a 15-0 mark. It was the

second state playoff appearance

for the Warriors, who lost 1-0 to

Cedar Park Christian in the first

round last season.

By The Chronicle

COSMOPOLIS — Adna's Riley Boone wrapped up the district title with 5 strokes to spare here Wednesday as the District IV 2B Boys Golf Tour-nament concluded at High-lands Golf Course. Boone shot a 78 on Tues-day and an 85 on Wednesday to finish at 163 for the two-day event and win his second-straight district championship. The Pirate will return to the State 1B/2B Boys Golf Tourna-ment, in which he placed 15th last year, as one of 18 entries from District IV. "It is difficult to defend any

title at any level," Adna coach Alan Browning said. "His back nine today was just fantastic." Northwest Christian's Trevor Magruder pulled even with Boone on the 11th hole, Browning added, but the de-fending district champ buck-led down and played near-flawless golf the rest of the way to finish 6 strokes ahead of Magruder. Wahkiakum's Austin Good finished second (168), while Northwest Christian's Justin Blang was fourth (170) and Zach Rohrer, from King's Way, was fifth (171). "It has been a real pleasure

to coach Riley the last two seasons, and we both look for-ward to an enjoyable and fun state championship next week," Browning said. Adna's Nolan Wagner fin-ished with a 209 for the tour-nament, while teammate John Kruger shot a 211 and Jake Ferrier fired a 262. "Nolan, John, and Jake did everything asked of them all season," Browning said. "They tried their best over the last two days and came up short of a state qualifier position. That being said, I could not ask for a classier group of young men and am exited about the fu-

ture of Adna golf." Adna finished seventh out of nine complete teams. King's Way won the team title. The state tournament will be held Tuesday and Wednes-day at the Oakbrook Golf and Country Club in Lakewood.

North Thurston's Lowe Wins District Tournament

KELSO — North Thur-ston's Olivia Lowe shot a 161 over a total 36 holes to win the District IV 2A Girls Golf Tournament here at Three Rivers Golf Course on Tuesday. Forty players advanced to Day 2, with the top 16 golfers

after Tuesday's final round ad-vancing to the State 2A tour-nament. Centralia's Bailey Peters shot a 207 over the two-day tournament to finish in 21st place, while teammate Katie Von Rotz finished at 212. W.F. West's Hannah Cooley fin-ished at 218, and teammate Ai-mee Sennes shot a 238 for the tournament. Woodland's Sesca Jouws-ma shot a 174 to finish in sec-ond place. The State 2A Girls Golf Tournament will be held at Lake Spanaway Golf Course on Tuesday at Wednesday.

1A Boys Soccer

Pete Caster / [email protected]

Rochester’s Angel Vazquez goes up with Vashon Island keeper Philip Vandevanter for a long ball just outside the penalty area as Van Ralston looks on during a State 1A Soccer Tournament irst-round game

at Tiger Stadium in Centralia on Wednesday.

Pete Caster / [email protected]

Rochester’s Edgar Nunez heads the ball to his feet as Vashon Island’s Gerardo Pereyda-Antunez looks on during the irst half

of a State 1A Soccer Tournament irst-round game at Tiger Stadium in Centralia on Wednesday.

Vashon Island Ends Rochester’s State Run

Prep Golf

Adna’s Riley Boone Wins District IV Golf Title

Sports 8 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012SPORTS

By Don Frey

Centralia College

The name of George Gable-house stands as a monument to all that was and continues to be right with the Centralia Col-lege athletic programs — and the college and the Centralia College Foundation will honor Gablehouse as it dedicates the entrance hall in the Health and Wellness Center (HWC) in his name on Tuesday, May 22. For 20 years, beginning in 1957, he was the athletic depart-ment. And as the coach of the Blazer basketball and baseball teams he set high standards for recruiting, and developing the student-athlete that remain at the heart of the Centralia Col-lege culture. “I believed that you couldn’t come to Centralia College just as an athlete. You had to have a commitment to academics. It was my goal to make sure the kids knew it wasn’t just athlet-ics,” he said. “It’s very difficult to have success only as an athlete.” Gablehouse’s own experience helped bring him to that con-clusion. As a basketball player at Eastern Washington College (now University) he was the leading scorer on a team that won 30 games, losing but four. Gablehouse was named a mem-ber of the Little All-American Team. Even with star-status, he surmised his future lay out-side playing for money. Help-ing to mold new generations of student-athletes was his passion and he turned that into his ca-reer. Gablehouse said that he is proud of the fact that as he looks back on the kids who played for him, “I think just about every-one of one of my kids went on to a four-year school. They were and are successful people. My job as a coach was to help each player mature, to help each one recognize that he or she had po-tential as an athlete and as a stu-dent.” When Gablehouse accepted the coaching job at Centralia

College he was told the program was flat, and that he would have to rebuild it from the ground up. The job he accepted came with low expectations for win-ning. The word was that it would be surprising if he won a single game his first year. The Blazers did win three basketball games that year, out performing expectations and the program grew from there. Over the following 15 years his basketballteams made five tournament appearances. His baseball teams, during that span, were invited to six state tourna-ments, winning the title in 1965. “It was a rough start, but things turned around,” he said.

“The kids believed in themselves and their abilities and good things happened.” Plus they had a coach who believed in them. Gablehouse said the ability to get along with others was critical to players’ development. There was discipline, hard work, physi-cal and mental toughness, and goal setting. “But,” he said, “behind it was people getting along with peo-ple.” That standard still bonds his players today; “they still get along.” Supporting Gablehouse’s recruitment efforts was the fact that Centralia College was known throughout the state for it’s high academic standard. “I’d talk to them about coming to Centralia College and they knew they would get a great education. It was a tremendous recruiting message that the parents really liked, but it meant something to the kids, too. It’s a standard not easily lost on the kids who came here.” He added that the quality of the Centralia College faculty has not diminished. “It’s still a great college,” he said. “One that I am proud of the kids who come here can be proud of, and cer-tainly the community can take pride in this college.” The dedication ceremony will take place Tuesday, begin-ning at 3 p.m. The HWC is locat-ed at the corner of Walnut and Iron streets in Centralia.

College Athletics

Centralia College to Honor Gablehouse on Tuesday

Courtesy Photo / Centralia College

Centralia College will dedicate the entryway to the college’s Health and Wellness

Center in honor of longtime coach George Gablehouse in a ceremony on Tuesday,

May 22.

Local Bowling Standings

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) —Ev-erything always seemed to come so easily for Larry Bird on a bas-ketball court. The way the ball appeared al-most destined to swish through the net every time he finished his lightning-quick release with a flick of his right wrist. The way he could suck a defender in while running the break, only to zip a no-look pass to a cutting Boston Celtics teammate for an easy bucket. The way Bird related to his Indiana Pacers players as a coach, pushing the right buttons and drawing up the perfect plays late in games to lead his team to the NBA Finals. The intricacies of the execu-tive's chair proved far more dif-ficult for Larry Legend to mas-ter, which may make his latest award in a career full of them that much more fulfilling.

Bird was voted the NBA's Ex-ecutive of the Year on Wednes-day, becoming the first person to be named the league's top execu-tive, coach and MVP. "It was a long journey, it was a painful journey," Bird told re-porters in Indianapolis. "But now we think it's going to pay dividends." The three-time MVP and Hall of Famer received 12 first-place votes and 88 total points from a panel of team executives throughout the NBA. San Anto-nio's R.C. Buford (56 points) fin-ished a distant second, followed by Los Angeles Clippers GM Neil Olshey (55). Bird was hired as team presi-dent in 2003 and learned the ropes at Donnie Walsh's side. He helped put together one of the best teams in the league in his first season, a 61-game winner that seemed poised to rule the

Eastern Conference for years to come. Then he endured the fran-chise-changing brawl at the Pal-ace in Detroit in 2004 that gut-ted a championship contender; a series of arrests and public em-barrassments from his players in the following seasons that alien-ated a hoops-crazy fan base; and three coaching changes as he looked to change the culture of a free-falling franchise. A four-year playoff drought had many in his home state calling for Bird's head, a startling fall for someone who once could do no wrong in Indiana. Bird added Danny Granger, Paul George, Roy Hibbert and Tyler Hansbrough in the draft, George Hill, Lou Amundson and Leandro Barbosa through trades and David West in free agency.

NBA

Pacers’ Larry Bird is NBA Executive of the Year

By Danny O'Neil

The Seattle Times

RENTON — Rookie defen-sive back Donny Lisowski made his first impression a convinc-ing one, while veteran offensive tackle Alex Barron simply made the most of another NFL oppor-tunity. They were two of the four players the Seahawks added to their roster from a pool of more than 30 that participated in last week's rookie minicamp on a tryout basis. Seattle also agreed to terms with tight end Coo-per Helfet and tackle Andrew Mitchell. They were added to the 90-man roster, which will be reduced to 53 before the regular season starts. Seattle released cornerback London Durham, linebacker Adrian Moten, tackle John Op-perud and guard Brent Osborne. Of those four players, only Mo-ten appeared in a game for the Seahawks. He played in two games after being claimed off waivers from the Colts last year. Lisowski graduated from O'Dea High School in 2008. He played quarterback and defen-

sive back, wrestled and ran track. Lisowski's speed impressed coach Pete Carroll, who singled him out Sunday after the last of the three practices at the minicamp. "He was all over the place out here," Carroll said. Carroll said he knew little regarding Lisowski before the minicamp other than he had been timed very fast at a work-out. "He went out here and made a bunch of plays," Carroll said.

"So I was really fired up about him. I think he'll surprise you. I'm anxious to see what he can do on special teams and all kinds of stuff." While Lisowski, who played at Montana, is trying to gain a foothold in the NFL, Barron is trying to play his way back into the league. Barron was chosen No. 19 overall by the St. Louis Rams in the 2005 draft. He played five seasons with St. Lou-is before signing with Dallas in 2010. He started one game for the Cowboys and signed with New Orleans last August, but was subsequently placed on in-jured reserve. He did not appear in a game in 2011.

Seahawks Add Four to RosterNFL

Life:A&EThe Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012

Learn More

Check out Dixie Rogerson-Bill’s art online at www.rogersonlithographs.com

Call ahead to visit her studio: 736-5584

Artist Dixie Rogerson-Bill

holds one of two sailor-

themed sculptures she has

created.

By Victoria Stewart

For The Chronicle

Dixie Rogerson-Bill is spend-ing more time sculpting these days as she recuperates from re-cent surgery. Beneath her skilled hands, the figure of a lady is tak-ing shape in the clay.

“I’d like her to have a few birds on her arm,” says Rogerson-Bill, a rural Centralia artist whose work is sold around the country. She pauses a moment then says with a delightful chuckle, “and maybe one on her head.”

When finished, the clay lady will stand some 14 inches high. After two weeks of drying in the studio, she will be baked in the kiln on low fire, then brought back into the studio to be glazed. Next she will be baked on high for seven hours.

Rogerson-Bill’s first husband built her the large studio she works in and “cherishes” to this day, in the home she has lived in since 1953.

“I go to work in the studio for two hours or so. I used to work seven or eight hours and maybe get a painting almost finished. When you get older, you start to slow down,” she laughed.

Rogerson-Bill has been painting for 75 years, she figures. She won’t reveal her age.

Art and creative endeavors have always been a part of Rog-erson-Bill’s life.

“I still have a great joy in creating,” she said. “I’ve always created, even as a child. When I was a teenager, I would make little dioramas out of shoe boxes, cutting out little windows, and tables and chairs, and with just a little bit of glue and a little bit of cardboard, I was sculpting.”

“I remember the first piece I sold, for two dollars,” she said.

“It was a seagull on a stump and I was sixteen years old.”

Rogerson-Bill had entered her art at the Southwest Wash-ington Fair and sold it there.

Art is in her blood. “I had a grandmother who

painted and my sister painted professionally,” she said. “And my father drew, he was sketch-

ing all the time. There’s a gene that follows the line.”

Rogerson-Bill also has fond memories of her biggest piece of art, a commissioned piece for the out-door play toy company, Big Toys.

“They commissioned me to do a painting for their lobby and I had pictures of the wooden climbing toy and put children all over it,” she said.

A Centralia native, Dixie Dodd’s (her maiden name) first job was as a telephone operator.

“I graduated from high school at 17 and lied about my age a week later at the telephone company so I could get a job as a telephone operator for two years,” she said. “When I got married and pregnant right after, I quit the telephone com-pany and stayed home and took care of the babies.”

Artful ThoughtsThe Whimsy of Centralia’s Dixie Rogerson-Bill

Chris Geier / [email protected]

Dixie Rogerson-Bill works on a sculpture in her studio northwest of Centralia on a hill near Lincoln Creek. The proliic painter and sculptor estimates she has been creating art for 75 years.

Some of Dixie Rogerson-Bill’s sculpture work stands in her studio

before being glazed.

A sculpture made by Dixie Rogerson-Bill stands in the studio at-

tached to her rural Centralia home.

Full Calendar of Upcoming Activities and Events/ Life 2

please see DIXIE, page Life 8

By The Chronicle

Editor’s note: Plan ahead with this long-term schedule of upcoming activities and events. For the calendar leading up to this weekend, check page Main 2.

Monday, May 21Bingo, Chehalis Moose Lodge, doors

open at 4:30 p.m., game starts at 6:30 p.m.; food available, 736-9030

Burger Night, 5-7:30 p.m., Centralia Eagles, quarter-pound hamburgers, $1.50, other menu items, 736-1146

NAMI Family-to-Family Education Program, for families of persons diag-nosed with serious mental illness, 6:30-9 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, 748-4024 or 748-0195

Running Start orientation, 7 p.m., New Science Center, room 121, Centra-lia College, parent or guardian must at-tend with student, 736-9391, ext. 265

Tuesday, May 22

Ceremony to Honor

Former CC Coach George Gablehouse

Centralia College and the Centralia College Foundation will honor former coach George Gablehouse Thursday, May 22, when it dedicates the entrance hall in the Health and Wellness Center in his name.

When Gablehouse accepted the basketball coaching job at Centralia Col-lege in 1957, he was told the program was flat, and that he would have to rebuild it from the ground up. The job he accepted came with low expectations for winning. The word was that it would be surprising if he won a single game his first year.

The Blazers did win three basketball games that year, out-performing expectations and the program grew from there. Over the following 15 years, his basketball teams made five tournament appearances. His baseball teams, during that span, were invited to six state tourna-ments, winning the title in 1965.

The ceremony honoring Gablehouse takes place at 3 p.m. The HWC is located at the cor-ner of Walnut and Iron streets in Centralia.

Bingo, Chehalis Moose Lodge, doors open at 4:30 p.m., game starts at 6:30 p.m.; food available, 736-9030

LibrariesTeen writing group, 5:30-6:45 p.m.,

Vernetta Smith Chehalis Timberland Li-brary, 748-3301

Wednesday, May 23

Centralia College Student to Present Lyceum Event

Centralia College Student Janice McCormick will present this week’s Lyceum Series talk, titled “The Price of Humanity.”

The presentation will be 1-1:50 p.m. in New Science Cen-ter room 111, Centralia College.

McCormick will be discussing the effect of climate change on in-digenous peoples of the world.

Additional information may be obtained by calling Jody Pe-terson, 736-9391, ext. 209

Free concert, The Josties, from south-ern Alberta, 7 p.m., Grace Foursquare Church, 3030 Borst Ave., Centralia

Bingo, doors open 5 p.m., bingo starts 6:30 p.m., Forest Grange No. 153, 3397 Jackson Highway, Chehalis

Thursday, May 24Games Night, 6:30-11 p.m., Matrix

Coffeehouse, 434 N.W. Prindle St., Che-halis, 740-0492

“Gifford Pinchot Task Force Topics & Highlights,” Centralia College East Lyceum Series, presentation by Bob Dingenthal, Gifford Pinchot Task Force, noon-12:50 p.m., Roxy Theater, Morton, 496-5022

LibrariesThe Knitting Circle, 4-6 p.m., Salkum

Timberland Library, 985-2148

Junior PageTurners Book Group for Kids, for grades 1-3, 3:30-4:30 p.m., Win-

lock Timberland Library, “Tippy Lem-mey,” by Patricia C. McKissack, 785-3461

Friday, May 25Oregon Trail music and dancing,

open mic with Side Kicks Band, 7 p.m., Cowlitz Prairie Grange, 864-2023

Music, 10:30-11:45 a.m., Twin Cities Senior Center, 748-0061

Packwood Flea Market fundraiser, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., Packwood Senior Center, 12931 Highway 12, 494-6331

NAMI Family-to-Family Education Program, for families of persons diag-nosed with serious mental illness, 6:30-9 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, 748-4024 or 748-0195

Saturday, May 26

Museum Display to

Show Technological Development

The Lewis County Histori-cal Museum will honor the cen-tennial of the train depots in the Twin Cities Saturday, May 26, with a display featuring 100 years of technology.

The display will be between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. at the muse-um, located in downtown Che-halis.

Visitors will see exhibits that show how logging equipment and tractors developed over the years. music by the Back Porch Swing, food and guided town walking tours will be available.

Packwood Flea Market fundraiser, 9

a.m.-6 p.m., Packwood Senior Center, 12931 Highway 12, 494-6331

Social party games, 1-3 p.m., Matrix Coffeehouse, 434 N.W. Prindle St., Che-halis, [email protected]

Toledo Saturday Market, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Second and Cowlitz, Toledo, 864-2121

“A Theatrical Review,” monologues, duo-scenes, short, one-act plays by local talent, $8, 2 p.m., Roxy Theater, Morton

Monday, May 28Burger Night, 5-7:30 p.m., Centralia

Eagles, quarter-pound hamburgers, $1.50, other menu items, 736-1146

Packwood Flea Market fundraiser, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., Packwood Senior Center, 12931 Highway 12, 494-6331

NAMI Family-to-Family Education Program, for families of persons diag-nosed with serious mental illness, 6:30-9 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, 748-4024 or 748-0195

Tuesday, May 29Bingo, Chehalis Moose Lodge, doors

open at 4:30 p.m., game starts at 6:30 p.m.; food available, 736-9030

Wednesday, May 30Games Night, 6:30-11 p.m., Matrix

Coffeehouse, 434 N.W. Prindle St., Che-halis, 740-0492

Thursday, May 31

Documentary ‘Ingredients’ Coming to Fox Theatre

The Community Farmers Market and the Fox Theatre are presenting Movie Night Thurs-day, May 31, at the Fox.

On the screen will be “In-gredients,” an award-winning documentary.

There will be a 6 p.m. social hour, followed by the film at 7:15 p.m.

Admission is $12. The ticket price includes Santa Lucia Cof-fee and an array of farm-fresh foods. Organic popcorn will be served.

Tickets may be purchased at Santa Lucia Coffee, Centralia, or Book ‘n’ Brush, Chehalis.

Proceeds will benefit the Community Farmers Market and Historic Fox Theater Resto-rations.

Libraries

The Knitting Circle, 4-6 p.m., Salkum Timberland Library, 985-2148

Friday, June 1NAMI Family-to-Family Education

Program, for families of persons diag-nosed with serious mental illness, 6:30-9 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, 748-4024 or 748-0195

Saturday, June 2

Flapjack Fundraiser Planned for Lewis County Law Enforcement Memorial

The Lewis County Sheriff ’s Office Association will host a Flapjack Fundraiser 7-10 a.m. on Saturday, June 2, at the Chehalis Applebee’s to help raise funds for the Lewis County Law Enforce-ment Memorial.

Over the past year and a half, the association has raised $28,000 toward the memorial project, which is estimated to cost around $55,000.

The law enforcement memo-rial will have a nearly life-sized statue of a police officer, a police dog and a child. The memorial is planned to be constructed near the front of the Lewis County Law and Justice Building in Chehalis.

Tickets can be purchased for $10 at the sheriff ’s office front counter or at the door on the morning of the event. The breakfast includes pancakes, eggs, sausage, bacon, coffee, milk and juice.

Community Farmers Market, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Pearl and Maple streets, Centra-lia, 740-1212 or www.communityfarm-ersmarket.net

Sunday, June 3Bingo, doors open 5 p.m., bingo

starts 6:30 p.m., Forest Grange, 3397 Jackson Highway, Chehalis

Monday, June 4

Sutley, Plotz to Perform

With Chamber Orchestra

The Pacific Northwest

Chamber Orchestra will present a “Soaring Solo Concert” Mon-day, June 4, at Centralia Col-lege’s Corbet Theatre. Concert time is 7:30 p.m.

The concert will feature two student artists, French hornist Brian Sutley and pianist Kather-ine Plotz.

Sutley will open the concert with the first movement of Mo-zart’s “Horn Concerto No. 3.” Plotz will play the first move-ment of Haydn’s “Piano Concer-to in D.” The orchestra will then conclude the first half by playing the first movement of the famous Beethoven Symphony No. 5.

Following intermission, the orchestra will present “Irish Tune from County Derry” by Percy Grainger as well as

Life 2 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012LIFE

Upcoming Events: Honoring a Legendary Coach, Flipping Flapjacks for Lawmen

Chris Geier / [email protected]

This statue created by Jim Staford to memorialize police oicers who have lost their lives in the line of duty shows

a Lewis County Sherif’s deputy with a service dog kneeling next to a young girl. On Saturday, June 2, there will be a

lapjack fundraiser at Applebee’s to raise funds for the projects

Courtesy Photo

The Josties will be performing in a free concert at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, May 23, at Grace Foursquare Church, 3030

Borst Ave., Centralia.

NEW

George Gablehouse

former coach CC to be honored

NEW

NEWplease see EVENTS, page Life 7

Please Recycle This Newspaper

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Life 3

Columns, Celebrations, Community Conversations

Voice of the People

“You know, I’ve never called in just because

I wanted to, only because I was sick or because there was a necessity.”

Kenneth Cooper

Onalaska, future Army soldier

“Yeah, one of my first jobs I did. I went to lay out in the sun

and had margaritas. But it wasn’t at my current job and it

was a decade ago.”

Lela Smith

Rochester, Lucky Eagle Casino

“I actually haven’t. I’m super lame. I’m

a workaholic.”

Nicole McMaster

Rochester, Lucky Eagle Casino

“Once I didn’t come to school because I was

sort of sick so I stayed home and watched

movies all day.”

Rachelle Geringer

Centralia, Centralia College student

Have you ever called in sick for work or school

because you wanted to do something fun instead?

And if so, what did you do?

VoicesHistorical Performance

To submit your photograph, e-mail [email protected] or send mail to Voices, The Chronicle, 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia, WA 98531.

E-mail: [email protected]

Engagement, Anniversary or Wedding

Share your

CENTRALIA MIDDLE SCHOOLMembers of the Centralia

Middle School third-quarter honor roll are:

4.0 Grade Point Average

Eighth graders: Hayden Blaser, Kristina Bolt, Sarah Car-thum, Madison Crews, Gracie Crownover, Joseph Evans, Mi-kayla Gonzales, Camille Harris, Christian Peters, Payton Pock-lington, Katie Williams, and Daniel Wilson

Seventh graders: Sarah Gil-ligan, Brandilyn Haight, and Fe-licia Knapstad

3.20-3.99 GPA

Eighth graders: Leticia Ramirez, Emily Madsen, Caro-lyn Harper, Kiley Welsh, Kait-lynn Johns, Rafael Arceo, Megan Shelley, Christian Smith, Andrea Eacker, Melissa Zion, Maritza Rojas, Elijah Sortino, Shandra Bonagofski, Kennedy Woods, Julianna Mettler, Alexa Cabrera, Morgan Fast, Wyatt Aynes, Ray-lee Warnken, Jeffery Martinez, Bryce Zandofsky, Rubisela Se-villa Pineda, Sarah Hushagen, Shelby PemBerton, Amber John-son, Lujan Rodriguez

Benjamin Kallus, Cole Hyl-ton, Maggie Tartios, Anacari Castillo, Zachary Queen, Han-nah Gundersen, MacKenzie Neely, Johnathan Hammons, Brandon Orr, Jordan Bivins, Fernando Rosas-Navarro, Han-nah Berg, Joseph Finch, Binod Sapkota, Amy Vargas, Savana Croy, Ryan Garrison, Alycia Tracy, Daniela Flores-Diaz, Thalia Paramo, Lydia Knud-sen, Alexandria Norris, Jordan Christin, Kelsi Mack, Angelica Soeby-Reyes, Marrissa Van Puymbrouck, Carlos Acosta

Robin McGrew, Israel Cow-ger, Nolan Wasson, Kristen Rush, Austin Allegre, Noemi Nunez-Alvarado, Natalie Pre-inesberger, Paul Ward, Michaela Westley, Peyton Mills, Emely Gonzalez, Crystin Collette, Stel-la Rodriguez, Lesley Hernandez, Gabriella Sherman, Evelyn Lo-pez-Martinez, Alyx Fast, Haley Lucas, Jacie Crivea, Kimberly Gerry, Katy Bouck, Thomas Griffin, Vanessa Valenica, Kim-berlee Snipes, Seth Wagner, Kai-tlynn Hamilton, Lydia Ridgely, Daniel Ambriz-Arevalo, Fredy Torres, Riley Magill, Garrett Hicks, Laurencio Silva, Tyler Clark, Leticia Garcia

Kiyla Moore, Diante Spears, Ellie Bingham, Marquel Ellis, Derek Olsen, Esmeralda Zarco-Vasquez, Raquel Eacker, Dylan Ferrians, Cody Walker, Madi-son Gardner, Mallory Hughes,

Jordun Palermo, Ethan Bleak, Timothy Ralls, Tatiana Trent, Cameron Lancaster, Eron Al-len, Derryn Newhouse, Russell Johnson and Gabriela Ruiz.

Seventh graders: Sophie Hansen, Luke Smith, Noah Thomas, Kayana Curwood, Bri-an Murray II, Cheyllyn Colling-sworth, William Lorton, Emily Horwath, Kathy Neely, Rosean-na Braziel, Aria Mead, Zek Sor-tino, Austin Snideman, Mario Rueda, Karrisa Mitchell, Natalie Elwanger, Nikolas Evans, Tay-lor Powell, Lacey Duffy, Sayra Mendez-Perez, Destyne Wheel-er, Kary Sathre, Maya Patraca, Spencer Hunt, Tiffini Burris, Maritza Zaldivar, Zackary Stel-zner

Chloe McLachlan, Joseph Aliff, Emily Huerta, Maryanna Wu, Skye Phillips, Treven Raish, Sidney Holten, Joseph Gonzalez, Saydi Vanatta, Zurika Zamora, Taviana Keahey, Layne Pertz-born, Caleb Sevey, Grace Cooke, Keagan King, Itzamaria Zaldi-var, Kameron Allen, Brandon Richey, Mikayla Kelly, Dante Brown, Taylor Shepard, Kiersten Redding, Derek Sibbald, Raul Lopez, Jordin Raisor-Boone, Sa-mantha Nokes, Gloria Reyes, Sa-mantha Teitzel, Edgar Martinez, Madelyn Myers, Isabella Flores, Alexus Vaudrin, Jacob Tay-lor, Natalia Rios, Codi Brown, Griselda Rodas

Samantha Smith, Miriam Farias-Pardo, Daisy Homer, Briana Perry, William Cleve-land, Kelaiah Iseline, Connor Rhodes, Maria Lozano, Kier-rah Velazquez, Angela Hernan-dez, Cai-Lee Reed-Olson, Cale Shute, Saige Springer, Jazlyn Smart, Nestor Reyes-Gonzalez, Schuyler White, Viridiana Ran-gel-Velazqueaz, Nathan Yahn, Jessica Apantipan-Castro, Kar-ina Pannkuk, Samantha Las-ron, Elizabeth Macklin, Darien Roundtreee, Chanlar Worthey, Montana Cline, Maranda Para-mo, Mauro Torres Guillen, Co-bie Blaser, Haily Zimmerman, Nancy Cuenco Rico, Zackery Hasson

Stefany Larsen, Mario Marquez-Alcala, Derek Van-dellaarschot, Ilse Paramo-Va-lencia, Sarah Smith, Heather Beckham, Crystal Trudeau, Zachary Wade, Cristian Little, Howie Griffith, Stephen Phelps, Karina Chairez, Cherish Willis, Trent Due, Austin Neff, Aus-tin Dulaney, Alexahs Bruneau, Valerie Pickernell, Alexandria Snyder, Erin Duffy, Dylan Kim-ball, Mateo Arteaga-Cruz, Iris Sanchez-Franco, Lizbeth Apan-tipan, Haiko Huebner-Geary, and Chanler Allen

Honor Roll

Photograph submitted by Debbie Carey, Centralia School District

In connection with a study of the history of Centralia, third graders at Edison El-

ementary recently put on a performance titled “Yesterday and Today, Washington

in Story and Song.” Shown above is Jakayla Shipe. Each class performed a play

and songs that represented traditions that were a part of the development of this

area: American Indian stories, tall tales and the story of Johnny Appleseed. They

provided the accompaniment by playing on Orf instruments. The performance

ended with a Washington state folk song, “Roll On, Columbia” written by Woody

Guthrie.

It’s Spring

I’m sure you’ve noticed by now that spring is hereAnd we can say goodbye to winter, so dark and so drear.

Already, trees have put on their “pink-bud” displayThe clouds drifting by seem so frisky and gay.

Spring flowers have popped up just over nightI had forgotten the sun could shine so bright.

Surprisingly, things are better with my aches and my illsAnd I can laugh, once again out, among the daffodils.

Ellen Ann Hammondage 97

Chehalis

Poetry

Letter of Thanks

561 W. Main St. • Chehalis • 748-3368 • (800) 562-0949

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Napavine Foundation Appreciates Donations for the Hall FamilyTo the editor:

The Napavine Foundation would like to sincerely thank ev-eryone in the community who do-nated to the Hall family, who lost everything in a house fire in April.

We would like to extend a special thank you to Jodi and Mike Low for their great sup-

port and dedication. If you are still interested in

helping the Hall family, there is a donation account at Security State Bank. Again, thank you so much.

Napavine Foundation

Life 4 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012HISTORY

During this week in 1912, Centralia’s only aviator survived an accident when his plane fell to the ground.

“While making a trial flight in his new aeroplane at the fair grounds yesterday morn-ing, the engine of the machine failed, and Claude Berlin fell to the ground, a distance of 40 feet,” The Centralia Daily Chronicle wrote. “The aero-plane was badly damaged, but the aviator fortunately escaped with only a few scratches. Im-mediately after the accident, new parts to replace the dam-aged ones were wired to New York and as soon as they arrive the machine will be repaired. This will be in about a week. Mr. Berlin stated this morn-ing that his accident yesterday would in no way affect the flights arranged for the Hub City Festival.

“Just before the accident yes-terday, Mr. Berlin had made a spectacular ascension, rising to a height of about 400 feet. The machine was in perfect working order at that time. The flight and accident were witnessed by about 50 specially invited spec-tators.”

Dentist Thinks This Is ‘Boss Country for Health’

125 years ago, in 1887

A dentist thought the local area was a good place to prac-tice.

“The dentist, Dr. Albert J. Forrest, who has been in Chehalis for the past ten days, goes to Portland on Saturday, but will return here as soon as possible as he thinks this is the boss country for health,” The Lewis County Bee wrote.

“... We would advise the people of that town who are in need of dental work to give him a call.”

Oldfield Comes to Chehalis75 years ago, in 1937

A famous race car driver stopped in Chehalis.

“Barney Oldfield, known for years as one of the most famous of race track characters, stopped in Chehalis this week to visit a local auto dealer, whose com-pany is employing Oldfield in spreading a nation-wide safety campaign,” The Centralia Daily Chronicle wrote.

“Oldfield, once one of the fastest of drivers, explained now that he has left speed on and off the race track, and is emphasizing slow and careful driving.”

“Safety is vastly more impor-tant than getting anywhere in a hurry,” he said.

Arguments Are Emotional Over Bingo25 years ago, in 1987

The Mossyrock City Council meeting was full of emotion as residents, merchants and coun-cilors debated.

“At the heart of the issue was a proposed 5 percent utility tax and a proposed ordinance to freeze city bingo revenues for the eventual construction of a community hall,” The Daily Chronicle wrote.

“I would like to see a com-munity building in this town and I think it’d be a real asset and something the citizens can be proud of,” said Mayor Pep-

per Kirkendoll. “Am I obli-gated to operate bingo to save you from paying a 5 percent utility tax?”

Man Sentenced to Life in Prison

10 years ago, in 2002

Two brothers had been ac-cused of killing a man for his money. One brother, Terry Al-len Durga, 42, had been previ-ously sentenced to 22 years in prison. His bother, Donald Ray Durga, 36, was found guilty for the murder, which was his third felony.

“The second brother accused of slaying 71-year-old Smiley E. Farr by bashing him in the head with two hammers was sentenced to life in prison,” The Chronicle wrote.

“Authorities said the two brothers killed Farr, stole about $800 cash from him, then

gambled it away at the Cheha-lis Indian Tribe’s Lucky Eagle Casino.”

Hall Honored5 years ago, in 2007

Warren Hall, Centralia, was honored as the Univer-sity of Washington School of Pharmacy’s 2006 Distin-guished Alumnus Award for Excellence in Pharmacy Practice.

Hall, owner of Hall’s Drug Center, Inc., was a 1979 UWSP graduate. He was a founding donor for the Institute of In-novative Pharmacy Practice Program.

•••

From the Files of The Chronicle is compiled by Edna Fund, a Cen-tralian who describes herself as a

“history sleuth.” She can be contact-ed at [email protected] or at 269-7515.

TODAY IN HISTORY: From the Files of The Chronicle

Aviator Berlin Survives Fall in 1912

Veteran Teacher Is Retiring50 years ago, in 1962

Mrs. Charles Little, a teacher for over 30 years, announced her retirement from the Glenoma Elementary School.

“I’ve been a mother and grandmother to a lot of people in this area,” Little said. “I’ve had the parents in my classes and now I’m teaching their children.”

“Mrs. Little began her teach-ing career at the old Nesika school, south of the present Nesika bridge,” The Chronicle reported.

“The one-room school con-tained eight grades. Mrs. Little said the school was typical of its era, and boasted a school bell mounted on top of the building.

“Mrs. Little also taught in the Mossyrock and Morton school districts before joining the Gle-noma faculty 25 years ago. She teaches the second grade at the school.

“In addition to her teaching duties at Glenoma, Mrs. Little has also gained some repute as a gardener. She has planted most of the shrubs around the school.

The Chronicle, file photo

At left: Mrs. Charles Little (her own

irst name was not given in the

1962 Chronicle) was closing out 30

years of teaching as she prepared

to retire from the Glenoma School

in 1962. She was shown in front

of the Glenoma School on May 17,

1962. The school, at that time part

of the White Pass School District,

was built in 1932, the year Mrs.

Little started teaching.

TODAY IN WORLD HISTORY In 1792, 24 brokers and merchants signed the Buttonwood Agree-ment, forming what would become the New York Stock Exchange. In 1954, the Supreme Court, in Brown v. Board of Education of To-peka, Kan., ruled that segregation in public schools is unconstitutional. In 1970, Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves collected his 3,000th hit, becoming the first player with 3,000 hits and 500 home runs. In 2004, Massachusetts became the first U.S. state to legalize same-sex marriages.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: Dennis Hopper (1936-2010), actor; Bill Paxton (1955- ), actor; Sugar Ray Leonard (1956- ), boxer; Enya (1961- ), singer/songwriter; Craig Ferguson (1962- ), comedian/TV personality; Trent Reznor (1965- ), musician; Josh Homme (1973- ), musician.

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The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Life 5COMICS

GET FUZZY by Darby Conley

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE by Stephan Pastis

RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary B. Price

DILBERT by Scott Adams

NON SEQUITUR by Wiley

HERMAN by Jim Unger

DENNIS THE by Hank

MENACE Ketcham

SHOE by Chris Cassatt & Gary Brookins

PICKLES by Brian Crane

CLASSIC PEANUTS by Charles Schulz

BLONDIE by Dean Young & John Marshall

FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves

BEETLE BAILEY by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston

HI & LOIS by Greg & Brian Walker

B.C. by Mastroianni & Hart

WIZARD OF ID by Parker & Hart

Life 6 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012COMICS

GET FUZZY by Darby Conley

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE by Stephan Pastis

RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary B. Price

DILBERT by Scott Adams

NON SEQUITUR by Wiley

HERMAN by Jim Unger

DENNIS THE by Hank

MENACE Ketcham

SHOE by Chris Cassatt & Gary Brookins

PICKLES by Brian Crane

CLASSIC PEANUTS by Charles Schulz

BLONDIE by Dean Young & John Marshall

FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves

BEETLE BAILEY by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston

HI & LOIS by Greg & Brian Walker

B.C. by Mastroianni & Hart

WIZARD OF ID by Parker & Hart

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Life 7ENTERTAINMENT

Celebrity Cipher

Today’s clue: M equals D

“ V U N J L C T V U C J L M H R V U N H Z F V L P H C J ;

J X J C K R K N N L S N J V F LV H R R E J N N J M U A V H R L

R E L C O . ” — X H Y V U C F A Z U

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “How in God’s name can you expect to have a functioning society the way we teach our kids?” — Kathleen Turner

© 2012 by NEA, Inc.

Crossword

SudokuPuzzle Page One Find answers to the puzzles here on Puzzle Page Two on page Life 8.

“Soundtrack Highlights” by John Williams. This medley includes selections from “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” by A.I. (Artificial Intelligence), and “The Patriot.”

To conclude the concert, the orchestra will play the theme mu-sic from “The Magnificent Seven.”

Volunteers from Lewis County Granges will be offering refreshments.

There is no admission charge.

Burger Night, 5-7:30 p.m., Centralia Eagles, quarter-pound hamburgers, $1.50, other menu items, 736-1146

NAMI Family-to-Family Education Program, for families of persons diag-nosed with serious mental illness, 6:30-9 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, 748-4024 or 748-0195

Tuesday, June 5

Art Show, Auction Coming to W.F. West

The W.F. West High School Semester Art Show and Auction will be open to the public Tues-day, May, 5 from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the Technology Center.

There will be a silent auction featuring Fletcher Gober’s pot-tery and and advanced pottery work. Proceeds will help support the W.F. West pottery program.

Bingo, Chehalis Moose Lodge, doors open at 4:30 p.m., game starts at 6:30 p.m.; food available, 736-9030

Support for mothers, 9:15-11:15 a.m., Bethel Church, for mothers with chil-dren pregnancy through 6 years old, sponsored by Chehalis MOPS (Moth-ers of Preschoolers), (360) 520-3841 or (360) 864-2168, email [email protected] or visit www.facebook.com/chehalismops

Wednesday, June 6Bingo, doors open 5 p.m., bingo

starts 6:30 p.m., Forest Grange No. 153, 3397 Jackson Highway, Chehalis

Taco Night, 6-8 p.m., Centralia Eagles, hard-shell tacos, two for $1, other menu items, 736-1146

Games Night, 6:30-11 p.m., Matrix Coffeehouse, 434 N.W. Prindle St., Che-halis, 740-0492

Friday, June 8Oregon Trail music and dancing,

open mic with Side Kicks Band, 7 p.m., Cowlitz Prairie Grange, 864-2023

Pinochle tournament, 1 p.m., Twin Cities Senior Center

Potato and taco salad bar, open to everyone, $6, 4:30-7 p.m., Olequa Senior Center, Winlock, 785-4325

NAMI Family-to-Family Education Program, for families of persons diag-nosed with serious mental illness, 6:30-9 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, 748-4024 or 748-0195

Saturday, June 9Social party games, 1-3 p.m., Matrix

Coffeehouse, 434 N.W. Prindle St., Che-halis, [email protected]

Toledo Family Market, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Second and Cowlitz, Toledo, 864-2121

Sunday, June 10

‘Wizard of Oz’ Auditions to Start

Auditions for the Centralia College East and Fire Mountain Arts Council’s performance of “The Wizard of Oz” will be held in Morton in mid-June.

The first audition will be Sunday, June 10, at 2 p.m., fol-lowed by Wednesday, June 13, at 2 p.m. and Saturday, June 16, at 10 a.m.

All auditions will be at Cen-tralia College East, 701 Airport Way, Morton.

Those who are auditioning are asked to show up ready to read lines, sing and participate in simple choreography. To audition for a singing role, prospective cast members should prepare con-trasting musical selections (one a cappella and the other accompa-nied). A pianist will be on hand. Those who wish to audition by appointment should contact di-rector Lynne Olmos.

For more information, visit www.centralia.edu/cce/oz

Old Custom to Be Revived at St. Francis Xavier

A revival of an old custom of

the Eucharistic Procession and Benediction will be held during the Feast of Corpus Christi on Sunday, June 10, at St. Francis Xavier Cath-olic church near Toledo.

Mass will begin at 8:30 a.m. and will be done about 9:20 a.m. The congregation will then pro-ceed outside and to the cemetary, which is alongside the church. The choir will be outside and lead in hymns (some in Latin).

There are some blessings and other facets of the liturgy done. Then the congrega-tion will process back into the church for benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. The con-gregation will then sing “Holy God We Praise Thy Name” while the church bells toll out. It is estimated the event will be done by 10:15 a.m. Coffee and desserts served after in the hall.

Cowgirl’s Dream Band to Visit Roxy

The Roxy Theater in Morton will host Cowgirl’s Dream Band at 7 p.m. Sunday, June 10. The band plays traditional country swing music such as “I’m An Old Cowhand,” “Don’t Fence Me In” and “Detour.”

The group Includes Kristi and Steve Nebel on rhythm and lead guitars plus vocals, Toby Hanson on accordion, Paul Anastasio on fiddle and Mike Friel on drums. Yes, please dance! Tickets at door are $15, and $5 for students 21 and under.

For additional information, call (360) 496-3344.

June 11, 15, 18, 22NAMI Family-to-Family Education

Program, for families of persons diag-nosed with serious mental illness, 6:30-9 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, 748-4024 or 748-0195

Saturday, June 16

Randy Travis to Perform at the Lucky Eagle

Country music star Randy

Travis will perform on Saturday, June 16, at 8 p.m. at the Lucky Eagle Casino.

Travis has won nine Acad-emy of Country Music Awards, six Grammy Awards and acted in 38 movies.

He has had 22 number one hits.

Tickets are $45 to $65 and go on sale April 2.

Must be 21 to attend. Call the Lucky Eagle Box Office, 1-800-720-1788 for ticket information.

July 15

Tickets on sale for Mark Chesnutt Performance

Harry’s Place, a bar and grill in Toledo, will host country music singer Mark Chesnutt to play on July 15 at 3 p.m. as part of the town’s Cheese Days fes-tivities.

The tickets are $25 and can

be bought online at harrys-place.com or at Harry’s Place in Toledo. The phone is 864-2700.

Chesnutt was dubbed the “hillbilly messiah” by a music critic after he made his national debut in 1990 with the single

“Too Cold at Home.”More than 30 of Chesnutt’s

singles have since reached the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and eight have topped it.

His hits include “Bubba Shot the Jukebox,” “Goin’ Through the Big D” and “It’s a Little Too Late.”

His first three albums, “Too Cold at Home,” “Longnecks and Short Stories” and “Almost Goodbye” have all made RIAA platinum status in the U.S.

Chesnutt is selling his latest album “Live from the Big D” via his website and fan club.

Events: Art Show, Auction Coming to W.F. West; Cowgirl’s Dream Band at RoxyContinued from Life 2

736-6322

Helping BusinessesSucceedone sign at a time

CH471983cf.cg

1616 S. Gold St. Centralia, WA 98531In The Fairway Center

Life 8 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012ENTERTAINMENT

ADVICE: Dear Abby

Many Possible Stages Await Boomers Looking for ‘Encore’

By Abigail Van Buren

Celebrity Cipher

Today’s clue: R equals Y

“ Z S ’ F S E V H S F D S W G H S P H K S G F O H H S A E X O X

E V H S F D S W G Z P F K A M X G E K Z S L S G G P G B O G

H K O W S J S R P X A . ” — N O G B E S K S S L E D D P F A

SOLUTION TO PUZZLE ON PAGE LIFE 5: “To learn to read is to light a fire; every syllable that is spelled out is a spark.” — Victor Hugo

© 2012 by NEA, Inc.

Crossword

Sudoku

Answer to Puzzle on Page Life 5

Answer to Puzzle on Page Life 5

Puzzle Page Two Start on Puzzle Page One on page Life 7. Answers to the puzzles here will be published in Saturday’s paper.

DEAR ABBY: “Searching for ‘Me’ in Texas” (March 4) is not alone! A wave of 78 million baby boomers will soon leave 30-plus-year careers and are looking forward to an estimated 20 more years of life. A vast ma-jority of them are looking for meaningful opportunities for the second half of their lives. “Search-ing” should seek out a non-profit organization for a cause she’s passionate about and offer her skilled services. If

“Searching” doesn’t need an in-come, she can volunteer. Finally, instead of seeking a graduate degree, she could look at her local community col-

lege and find non-credit classes that interest her and participate without the pressure of credited course work. — STEPHANIE IN PHOENIX DEAR STEPHANIE: Your suggestions are all good ones. Second careers are becom-ing more common, and there are many opportunities for seniors to enjoy their “encore careers.” Read on for more op-tions:

DEAR ABBY: Your advice to “Searching” was dead-on. After a 30-year career in the insurance industry, I was forced into early retirement by a corporate buyout. At 59, I was stunned and unprepared. After some soul searching, I decided I wasn’t done with life. I started reading, talking to friends and praying.

There were some false starts. I tried out for the Peace Corps but backed out. I got into an in-come tax class that was over my head. Then I got another insur-ance job and found myself back in the rat race. I made ends meet by substi-tute teaching and began to real-ize that, eons ago, I had wanted to be a teacher. (I had been talk-ed out of it.) So I started back to college for my master’s degree in teaching. Talk about scared! It had been 33 years since I had seen the inside of a classroom. But my experience was one of the most challenging, positive and enrich-ing I have ever known. I met wonderful people along the way and was admired for my life ex-perience, insight and work ethic. It wasn’t all sweetness and light, but if I had to do it over again

I’d do it in a minute. — CATH-ERINE IN ILLINOIS DEAR ABBY: “Searching” might consider volunteering with SCORE — Service Corps of Retired Executives. Her skills are needed and would be appreci-ated. That way she can dabble in her old work and have a sense of accomplishment. — CHARLES IN MARYLAND

DEAR ABBY: As a volunteer coordinator at a large non-profit, I have many volunteers who dis-covered us as a result of a retire-ment search. The AARP’s vol-unteer engagement site is www.createthegood.org, and www.volunteermatch.org is a nation-wide site for searching volunteer opportunities. “Searching” needs to think about things she would like to do but couldn’t while working,

and dip her toe in the water. If she tries something and it isn’t a fit, she has no obligation and can try another. It may lead to a paid “encore” career or fulfill her through volunteerism. — JAN IN YARDLEY, PA.

DEAR ABBY: When I re-tired at 62, I decided to return to school for a graduate philosophy degree. My body may be weaker, but I like to think most of my mental faculties are intact. My first resume may generate hu-mor, but I’ll bring something to the classroom that may prove invaluable. That’s 40 years of experience and 63 years of 20-20 hindsight. I will call it a good day if I can communicate to any student that learning is fun and educa-tion has intrinsic value. — CAL-VERT IN NORTH CAROLINA

Even then, she pursued her art.

“I had a card table in the cor-ner of the living room with my art work and I would put a table-cloth over and tell the babies, ‘No, no! That’s Mommy’s.’”

While raising four children, “I was painting every day, as soon as they all went to school full-time, I really started dedi-cating myself to it, because I wanted to be a professional art-ist. I would paint for hours and hours and then when it got to be 1 p.m., I would stop and think ‘Oh, I haven’t had even a glass of water or food.’ Then I would do my housework. I dedicated my brightest hours in the morn-ing to my art. By late afternoon, I couldn’t even think of how to draw a circle!”

“I started out painting re-alism in children and flow-ers, then I didn’t want to copy pictures anymore. I wanted to take the painting right out of my head. It didn’t happen fast. I started playing around drawing the things that came out of my head. I scribbled drawings with

lines overlapping and I painted them,” she said.

She and her first husband, Jim, raised four children; Mark, Tim, Joanie and Sandy. Mark was sadly killed in an accident, and she found herself widowed at age 52.

“It’s bad to lose a husband and a child, but you have to go on,” she said.

She “went on” and found new love in a former high school sweetheart, and joy pursuing her art and participating in her grandchildren’s lives and then later, her great-grandchildren lives.

Today, she has 10 grand-children and six great-grand-children, and has been married

“very happily” to second hus-band Gordon Bill for 21 years.

Rogerson-Bill’s artwork has traveled throughout the United States, and to England, Japan and Canada. Her whimsical fig-ures have found their way onto quilt blocks, wine labels and even a fertilizer bag. And most recently, a number of her prints have had reproduction rights sold to be used on hats, totes, dishes and cups.

The September ARTrails

is when Rogerson-Bill throws open the doors of her studio to the public, although visitors are welcome throughout the year, if they call ahead.

“I think I have over 255 dif-ferent prints, and heaven knows how many originals I have done. Nowadays, it takes me a month

to do an original and I used to do three a month.”

“I still like to sketch and watch what comes out of the pencil,” she says. “I have so many books of whimsical sketches, I could paint for the rest of my life. I will never have enough time to do them all.”

For Rogerson-Bill, her be-loved sketchbooks are the most valuable thing she owns.

“They are more valuable to me than the original oils,” she said.

“Because this is the first thing that comes out of my head. I curl up for hours and sketch, and erase those lines, and sketch some more.”

Dixie: ‘I Still Like to Sketch and Watch What Comes Out of the Pencil’Continued from Life 1

The whimsi-

cal style of

Centralia

artist Dixie

Rogerson-

Bill is much

in demand.

She sells

her artwork

around the

world.

Chris Geier / [email protected]

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012 • Life 9ENTERTAINMENT

FRIDAY EVENING May 18, 2012 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

ABC 4 4KOMO 4 News 6:00pm Lewis, Nam. (N) (CC)

Wheel of Fortune “College Week”

Jeopardy! “DC Power Players”

Shark Tank The sharks fight over an inventor. (N) (CC)

Primetime: What Would You Do? ’ (CC)

20/20 ’ (CC) KOMO 4 News 11:00pm (N) (CC)

Nightline (N) (CC)

NBC 5 5NBC Nightly News (N) (CC)

KING 5 News (N) Evening Magazine (CC)

Inside Edition (N) ’ (CC)

Who Do You Think You Are? Paula Deen investigates her ancestry. (N)

Grimm “Woman in Black” Nick investi-gates a trail of murders. (N)

Dateline NBC (N) ’ (CC) KING 5 News (N) Tonight Show With Jay Leno

IND 6 6 The Nate Berkus Show ’ (CC) Extra (N) (CC) Access Hollyw’d Law & Order: Criminal Intent (CC) Dr. Phil (N) ’ (CC) KING 5 News at 10 (N) (CC) Northwest Sprt Law Order: CI

CBS 7 7KIRO 7 Eyewit-ness News

CBS Evening News/Pelley

Entertainment To-night (N) (CC)

The Insider (N) ’ (CC)

Undercover Boss CEO Stephen J. Cloobeck. ’ (CC)

CSI: NY “Officer Involved” Rookie cops get involved in a shooting. ’

Blue Bloods “Black and Blue” A call from a church leads to trouble. (CC)

KIRO 7 Eyewit-ness News

Late Show With David Letterman

PBS 9 9PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) KCTS 9 Connects Need to Know (N)

’ (CC)Washington Week (N) (CC)

BBC Newsnight Tommy Emmanuel: Center Stage Acoustic guitarist Em-manuel. ’ (CC)

Victor Borge: Comedy

The 1962 World’s Fair: When Seattle Invented the Future

MNT 10 10American Dad ’ (CC)

American Dad ’ (CC)

Family Guy ’ (CC)

Family Guy “Ger-man Guy” (CC)

The Simpsons ’ (CC)

The Simpsons “Kamp Krusty”

Q13 FOX News at 9 (N) (CC)

Washington’s Most Wanted

Friends ’ (Part 1 of 2) (CC)

Friends ’ (CC) 30 Rock ’ (CC) 30 Rock “Episode 210” (CC)

CW 11 11The King of Queens ’ (CC)

The King of Queens ’ (CC)

The Office “Ni-agara” (CC)

The Office “Branch Closing”

Nikita “Homecoming” Michael and Nikita infiltrate Division. (N) (CC)

Supernatural “Survival of the Fittest” Sam and Dean battle Dick Roman.

Seinfeld “The Frog-ger” (CC)

Seinfeld “The Foundation” (CC)

Frasier ’ (CC) Frasier “Police Story” ’ (CC)

PBS 12 12McLaughlin Group (N)

The Impact Moyers & Company Guitarist and activ-ist Tom Morello. ’ (CC)

Masterpiece Mystery! “Sherlock, Series II: A Scandal in Belgravia” Blackmail case involves a dominatrix. ’

Inspector Morse Morse investigates the death of a woman. (CC)

The Red Green Show ’ (CC)

Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC)

FOX 13 13Two and a Half Men ’ (CC)

How I Met Your Mother ’ (CC)

The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)

The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)

Kitchen Nightmares “Michon’s; Park’s Edge” Ramsay tries to revive restaurants. ’ (CC)

Q13 FOX News at Ten (N) (CC)

Washington’s Most Wanted

Two and a Half Men ’ (CC)

How I Met Your Mother ’ (CC)

IND 14 14 Suzanne Somers Beauty, Health Sorrelli Jewelry Gem Treasures Skinn Cosmetics Skinn Cosmetics Summer Beauty Secrets

ION 15 15Cold Case Remains of a brush sales-man are found. ’ (CC)

Cold Case Murder of a man in witness protection. ’ (CC)

Cold Case “Jackals” The 1976 murder of a teenager. ’ (CC)

Cold Case “Officer Down” Searching for Jeffries’ shooter. ’ (CC)

Cold Case “Mind Games” Death of a psychiatrist. ’ (CC)

Flashpoint “Just a Man” Hostages are taken during a prison riot. (CC)

IND 18 18 Celebration Jack Van Impe Kingdom Conn. Joel Osteen K. Copeland Life Today (CC) Joyce Meyer Check the Sound The EVO Show The Master Celebration

ABC 22 22KATU News at 6 (N) ’ (CC) Jeopardy! “DC

Power Players”Wheel of Fortune “College Week”

Shark Tank The sharks fight over an inventor. (N) (CC)

Primetime: What Would You Do? ’ (CC)

20/20 ’ (CC) KATU News at 11 (N) ’ (CC)

Nightline (N) (CC)

NBC 26 26NewsChannel 8 at 6PM (N) (CC)

NewsChannel 8 at 6:30PM (N)

Live at 7 (N) (CC) Inside Edition (N) ’ (CC)

Who Do You Think You Are? Paula Deen investigates her ancestry. (N)

Grimm “Woman in Black” Nick investi-gates a trail of murders. (N)

Dateline NBC (N) ’ (CC) NewsChannel 8 at 11 (N) (CC)

Tonight Show With Jay Leno

UNI 30 30 Noticias Univisión Noticiero Univis’n Una Familia con Suerte (N) (SS) Abismo de Pasión (N) (SS) La Que No Podía Amar (N) (SS) Noticias Univisión Noticiero Uni

FOX 27 276 O’Clock News (N)

Timbers in 30 TMZ (N) ’ (CC) Access Hollywood (N) (CC)

Kitchen Nightmares “Michon’s; Park’s Edge” Ramsay tries to revive restaurants. ’ (CC)

10 O’Clock News (N) 11 O’Clock News (N)

Everybody Loves Raymond (CC)

A&E 52 52Dog the Bounty Hunter (CC)

Dog the Bounty Hunter (CC)

Storage Wars “Skullduggery”

Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC)

AMC 67 67››› A League of Their Own (1992, Comedy-Drama) Tom Hanks, Geena Davis. A women’s professional baseball league debuts in 1943. (CC)

››› O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000, Comedy-Drama) George Clooney, John Turturro, Tim Blake Nelson. Three escaped convicts embark on an unusual odyssey. (CC)

›› Sahara (2005) Matthew McConaughey. Adventurers search for a Confederate ship in Africa. (CC)

APL 43 43 Whale Wars: Viking Shores ’ (CC) Whale Wars: Viking Shores ’ (CC) Whale Wars: Viking Shores ’ (CC) Whale Wars: Viking Shores (N) ’ Whale Wars: Viking Shores (N) Whale Wars: Viking Shores ’

BET 56 56 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live (N) (CC) Motives (2004) Vivica A. Fox. A successful businessman cheats on his wife. ›› I Think I Love My Wife (2007, Romance-Comedy) Chris Rock, Kerry Washington. (CC)

BRAVO 66 66The Real Housewives of Atlanta The ladies answer America’s questions.

The Real Housewives of Atlanta The ladies wrap up the season in style.

To Be Announced To Be Announced

CBUT 29 29 News Ron James Show 22 Minutes (CC) Laughs: Gags CBC Winnipeg Comedy Festival ’ CBC News: the fifth estate ’ (CC) CBC News: The National ’ (CC) George Stroumboulopoulos Tonight

CMT 61 61 Teen Mom 2 ’ Teen Mom 2 Kailyn signs a custody agreement. ’ The Singing Bee (N) ’ (CC) Jennie Garth Melissa & Tye (N) The Singing Bee ’ (CC) The Singing Bee ’ (CC)

CNBC 46 46 The Celebrity Apprentice ’ (CC) Apocalypse 2012 People prepare for December 21, 2012. The Celebrity Apprentice The finalists plan a charity event. ’ (CC) Insanity Workout! Wealth-Risk

CNN 44 44 Piers Morgan Tonight (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Erin Burnett OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Erin Burnett OutFront

CNNH 45 45 Anderson Cooper 360 (N) (CC) Piers Morgan Tonight (N) Nancy Grace Showbiz Tonight Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 (CC)

COM 60 60The Daily Show With Jon Stewart

The Colbert Re-port (CC)

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

Tosh.0 (CC) Tosh.0 Fetishes at Adultcon. (CC)

Aziz Ansari: Intimate Moments For A Sensual Evening (CC)

Kevin Hart: I’m a Grown Little Man The comic performs. (CC)

The Half Hour “Na’im Lynn” (N)

The Half Hour “Neal Brennan”

DIS 41 41 Shake It Up! ’ Good-Charlie Austin & Ally ’ ›› Race to Witch Mountain (2009) Dwayne Johnson. Premiere. ’ (CC) TRON: Uprising Austin & Ally ’ Good-Charlie Austin & Ally ’ Austin & Ally ’

DSC 8 8Outlaw Empires “Crips” Turf battles escalate as the gang grows. (CC)

Alaska: The Last Frontier Kilcher family in Alaska awaits winter. (CC)

Alaska: The Last Frontier The Kilcher’s prepare for a storm. ’ (CC)

Alaska: The Last Frontier The storms hit earlier than expected. ’

Alaska: Ice Cold Killers A plot to blow up the Alaska Pipeline. (CC)

Alaska: The Last Frontier The storms hit earlier than expected. ’

E! 65 65› The Hot Chick (2002), Anna Faris

The Soup E! News (N) Sex and the City ’ (CC)

Sex and the City ’ (CC)

The E! True Hollywood Story The story of the mother/daughter duo. ’

Fashion Police (N) Chelsea Lately E! News

ESPN 32 32NBA Basketball Boston Celtics at Philadelphia 76ers. (N) (Live) (CC)

NBA Basketball Oklahoma City Thunder at Los Angeles Lakers. Western Conference Semifinal, Game 3. From Staples Center in Los Angeles. (N) (Live) (CC)

SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)

ESPN2 33 33 Boxing Karim Mayfield vs. Raymond Serrano. From Albany, N.Y. (N) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight NBA Tonight (N) NFL Live (N) (CC)

FAM 39 39 ››› Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002) Daniel Radcliffe. ››› Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson. The 700 Club “Danielle Williams”

FNC 48 48 Hannity (N) On the Record, Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor (CC) Hannity On the Record, Greta Van Susteren The Five

FOOD 35 35 Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Best Thing Ate Best Thing Ate Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Invention Hunters

FX 53 53Two and a Half Men ’ (CC)

Two and a Half Men ’ (CC)

Two and a Half Men ’ (CC)

››› Tropic Thunder (2008, Comedy) Ben Stiller, Jack Black, Robert Downey Jr.. A pampered actor’s war movie turns into the real thing.

The Ultimate Fighter Live (N Same-day Tape) ’

UFC Primetime (N) (Live)

››› Superbad (2007) Jonah Hill.

GOLF 70 70 PGA Tour Golf HP Byron Nelson Championship, Second Round. From Irving, Texas. Golf Central (N) 19th Hole (N) LPGA Tour Golf Sybase Match Play Championship, Day Two. Golf Now

HALL 19 19Little House on the Prairie Mrs. Dalton angers Nancy. (CC)

Little House on the Prairie Citizens learn of new railroad. (CC)

Little House on the Prairie “Love” Mr. Edwards falls for blind girl. (CC)

Little House on the Prairie New minis-ter believed to be a fraud. (CC)

Frasier ’ (CC) Frasier “Visions of Daphne” (CC)

Frasier Romantic entanglements.

Frasier Romantic entanglements.

HGTV 68 68 Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Million Dollar Closets Dream closets. Hollywood, Sale House Hunters House Hunters Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l

HIST 37 37 Modern Marvels “Bathroom Tech II” American Pickers “Boys’ Toys” American Pickers “The Mad Catter” American Pickers (CC) American Pickers “Mole Man” (CC) American Pickers (CC)

LIFE 51 51 Ancient Aliens (CC) America’s Most Wanted (CC) America’s Most Wanted (CC) America’s Most Wanted (CC) America’s Most Wanted (CC) America’s Most Wanted (CC)

MSNBC 47 47 The Rachel Maddow Show (N) Lockup: Raw “Ain’t No Hotel” Lockup: Raw “Lasting Impressions” Lockup: Santa Rosa Lockup: Raw “Word to the Wise” Lockup: Holman

MTV 63 63 Pranked ’ Pranked ’ Pranked ’ Pranked ’ Pranked ’ Pranked ’ Pranked ’ Money, Strangers › The Final Destination (2009) Bobby Campo, Shantel VanSanten. ’

NBCS 34 34 Cold War on Ice: Summit Series ’72 NHL 36 Cycling Tour of California, Stage 6. Poker After Dark (CC) Darts Game On!

NICK 40 40 Victorious (CC) Victorious (CC) Victorious “Locked Up!” ’ (CC) Victorious (CC) Victorious (CC) George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Yes, Dear (CC) Yes, Dear (CC)

OXY 50 50 ››› Hairspray (2007, Musical Comedy) John Travolta, Nikki Blonsky. ››› Enchanted (2007, Fantasy) Amy Adams, Patrick Dempsey. House “Unwritten” ’ (CC) House “Massage Therapy” ’ (CC)

ROOT 31 31 MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Colorado Rockies. From Coors Field in Denver. (Live) Mariners Post. MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Colorado Rockies. From Coors Field in Denver. (Subject to Blackout)

SPIKE 57 57Gangland “Basic Training” (CC)

Gangland “From Heaven to Hell” Crips in Salt Lake City. ’ (CC)

›› Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace (1999, Science Fiction) Liam Neeson, Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman. Young Anakin Skywalker begins to learn about the Force. ’

››› Ocean’s Twelve (2004) ’

SYFY 59 59 ››› Grindhouse Presents: Death Proof (2007, Suspense) Kurt Russell. WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) ’ (CC) Dream Machines (CC) Fact or Faked: Paranormal Files

TBN 20 20 The Harvest Perry Stone Praise the Lord (CC) Frederick Price Life Focus Secrets-Clement Creflo Dollar Kroeze Brothers Outreach

TBS 55 55The King of Queens ’ (CC)

The King of Queens ’ (CC)

Seinfeld “The Pony Remark” ’

Seinfeld “The Big Salad” ’ (CC)

Tyler Perry’s House of Payne

Tyler Perry’s House of Payne

Tyler Perry’s House of Payne

Tyler Perry’s House of Payne

› Lake Placid (1999, Horror) Bill Pullman, Bridget Fonda, Oliver Platt. A mon-strous crocodile chomps on villagers in rural Maine. (CC)

TLC 38 38 Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: Bride DC Cupcakes: Mommy

TNT 54 54Law & Order “Faccia a Faccia” A dead FBI witness has mob ties. ’

Law & Order “Savages” Prosecutors split on death penalty. (CC) (DVS)

Law & Order “Shangri-La” High-school love triangle. ’ (CC) (DVS)

› Obsessed (2009, Suspense) Idris Elba, Beyoncé Knowles, Ali Larter. Premiere. A stalker threatens a married man’s idyllic life. (CC)

› Obsessed (2009, Suspense) Idris Elba, Beyoncé Knowles. (CC)

TOON 42 42 Regular Show Regular Show Adventure Time Adventure Time Cartoon Planet King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad ’ American Dad ’ Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC)

TRAV 36 36 Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) The Dead Files (N) (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC)

TRUTV 49 49 Cops ’ (CC) Cops ’ (CC) Bait Car Bait Car Bait Car Bait Car Bait Car Bait Car Bait Car (N) Bait Car (N) Forensic Files Forensic Files

USA 58 58Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Paternity” The murder of a nanny.

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Man wakes up with a dead woman.

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Cold” ’ (CC)

Fairly Legal “Shattered” Kate and Ben go up against Justin. (N) (CC)

Common Law “Ride-Along” A woman’s fall from a balcony. (N) ’ (CC)

Suits “The Shelf Life” Mike questions a dismissal. (CC)

VH1 62 62 100 Greatest Songs of the ’90s ’ 100 Greatest Songs of the ’90s ’ 100 Greatest Songs of the ’90s ’ 100 Greatest Songs of the ’90s ’ 100 Greatest Songs of the ’90s ’ 40 Funniest Fails 2 ’

SATURDAY DAYTIME May 19, 2012 CEN CHE 6 AM 6:30 7 AM 7:30 8 AM 8:30 9 AM 9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM 1:30 2 PM 2:30 3 PM 3:30 4 PM 4:30 5 PM 5:30

ABC 4 4KOMO 4 News Saturday 6:00am

Good Morning America (N)

KOMO 4 News Saturday 8:00am

Jack Hanna

Ocean Mys.

Everyd Health

Food Sea Res-cue

Born to Explore

NBA NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Los Ange-les Clippers. (N) (Live) (CC)

Paid Prog.

Fat Loss Cash Cab ’

UW 360 KOMO 4 News

World News

NBC 5 5Weekend Early Morning News

Weekend Early Morning News

News News NHL Hockey New York Rangers at New Jersey Devils. (N) (S Live) (CC)

137th Preakness Stakes From Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore. (N)

Babar (CC)

Explora-tion

Kids News

KING 5 News (N)

IND 6 6 Cindy C Cindy C Hide- Cindy C WEN Paid Patrol Shell House Home. Old Home Hazel Recipe Gar Soun MLS Soccer McCar Butts! Paid Paid

CBS 7 7CBS This Morning (N) ’ (CC)

KIRO 7 Eyewitness News Saturday Morning (N)

Busy-town

Busy-town

Doodle-bops

Doodle-bops

Cindy C King of the Rock (N) (CC)

PGA Tour Golf HP Byron Nelson Championship, Third Round. From Irving, Texas. (N) (Live) (CC)

How to Drive

Paid Prog.

Sports Stars

Big World

KIRO News

KIRO News

PBS 9 9Sesame Street (CC) (DVS)

Curious George

Cat in the Hat

Dinosaur Train: Di-nosaurs A to Z

Sid the Science

Thomas & Fr.

Bob the Builder

Angelina KCTS 9 Cooks: At Home KCTS 9 Cooks: At Home

MNT 10 10Paid Prog.

Skin Se-crets

Wild Animals

Wild Animals

Adven-tures

Adven-tures

Young Icons

Live Life Paid Prog.

Paid Prog.

Paid Prog.

››› Gangs of New York (2002, Historical Drama) Leonardo DiCaprio, Daniel Day-Lewis. (CC)

››› Unfaithful (2002, Drama) Richard Gere, Diane Lane, Olivier Martinez. (CC)

House “Ignorance Is Bliss”

CW 11 11Paid Prog.

Paid Prog.

Cubix: Robots

Cubix: Robots

Sonic X (CC)

Sonic X (CC)

Yu-Gi-Oh! Zex

Yu-Gi-Oh! ’

Dragon Ball Z

Dragon Ball Z

Tai Chi Chase

Yu-Gi-Oh! ’

Real Life 101

WHAD-DYADO

Paid Prog.

Joint Pain?

Paid Prog.

Paid Prog.

Paid Prog.

Paid Prog.

Without a Trace “Live to Regret”

Hates Chris

Chris

PBS 12 12Vintage Vehicle

Steves’ Europe

Victory Garden

Garden Home

Crea. Living

Quilting Arts ’

It’s Sew Easy

Sew It All ’

Sewing Amer. Sews

Sewing Room

Love of Quilting

Quilt in a Day

Why Quilts

Rough Cut

Wood-smith

Old House

Old House

Steves’ Europe

Simply Ming

Nick Stellino

Pépin Test Kitchen

Sara’s

FOX 13 13WEN Hair

Sheer Cover

Aqua Kids (N)

Dragon-FlyTV

Swap TV (EI)

On the Spot

MLB Player

Eco Co. WEN by Chaz

Insanity Pregame UEFA Champions League Soccer Finals: Bayern Munich vs. Chelsea. (S Live) (CC)

Whacked Out

NewsRa-dio

Grey’s Anatomy ’ (CC)

MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (N Subject to Blackout) (CC)

IND 14 14 Skinn Cosmetics Beauty Secrets Skinn Cosmetics Suzanne Somers Suzanne Somers Skinn Cosmetics Skinn Cosmetics Suzanne Somers Suzanne Somers Beauty Secrets Beauty Secrets Skinn Cosmetics

ION 15 15Paid Prog.

Lk Young

Paid Prog.

Joint Pain?

Cindy C Wen Hair!

Paid Prog.

Live Longer

Food Lovers

Paid Prog.

Atmo-sphere

Paid Prog.

Paid Prog.

Paid Prog.

›› Something to Talk About (1995) Julia Roberts, Dennis Quaid. ’

››› The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976, Western) Clint East-wood, Chief Dan George, Sondra Locke. ’

IND 18 18 Wonder My Gospel Wonder Ollie Odys Ishine Bytes Marcos Cash Mal Celebra Marcos Freid Re BGEA Gospel Gospel Jesus Travel Cutback (2010) Justin Schwan.

ABC 22 22Good Morning America (N)

KATU News This Morning - Sat ’ (CC)

Jack Hanna

Ocean Mys.

Born to Explore

Everyd Health

Food Sea Res-cue

NBA NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Los Ange-les Clippers. (N) (Live) (CC)

Paid Prog.

Insanity! Fat Loss Recipe.TV

KATU News

World News

NBC 26 26NewsChannel 8 at Sunrise

NewsChannel 8 at Sunrise at 7:00 AM (N) (CC)

Willa’s Wild

Jane-Dragon

Babar (CC)

NHL Hockey New York Rangers at New Jersey Devils. (N) (S Live) (CC)

137th Preakness Stakes From Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore. (N)

Pearlie (EI)

Zula Patrol

Shelldon News News

FOX 27 27Good Day Oregon Saturday (N) MLB

PlayerJuice and Lose! Wen

Hair!Pregame UEFA Champions League Soccer Finals: Bayern

Munich vs. Chelsea. (S Live) (CC)Paid Prog.

Malibu Pilates

Ingredi-ent

Green Econ.

MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (N Subject to Blackout) (CC)

UNI 28 28 Pagado Pagado Pagado Pagado Pocoyo Back Zigby Maya Dora... Diego Crema Crema Viva la Familia! Delicioso (SS) Central-Abasto El Gran Show de los Peques (SS) Dice el Dicho

A&E 52 52TriVita Cindy C Sell

HouseSell House

Flip This House (CC)

Sell This House: Extreme (CC)

Fix This Yard

Fix This Yard

Flip This House (CC)

Flip This House (CC)

Flip This House (CC)

Flipped Off (CC) Flipped Off “I Smell a Rat”

Dog the Bounty Hunter (CC)

Bounty Hunter

Bounty Hunter

AMC 67 67The Rifleman

The Rifleman

The Rifleman

The Rifleman

The Rifleman

The Rifleman

The Rifleman

The Rifleman

The Rifleman

Broken Trail A cowboy and his nephew save five girls from prostitution. (CC) ›› Sahara (2005) Matthew McConaughey. Adventurers search for a Confederate ship in Africa. (CC)

O Brother

APL 43 43 Big Cat Big Cat Blue Planet Handfishin’ Dogs 101 (CC) Dogs 101 (CC) Wild Wild Wild Wild Wild Wild Tanked: Unfltrd Tanked: Unfltrd Tanked: Unfltrd Tanked ’ (CC)

BET 56 56 BET Inspiration My My My My My My My My My My My My My My My My My My My My

BRAVO 66 66The Celebrity Apprentice The finalists plan a charity event. ’ (CC)

Inside the Actors Studio (CC)

Interior Therapy With Jeff Lewis

Don’t Be Tar.

Don’t Be Tar.

The Wedding Party

Pregnant in Heels Around the World Around the World Bethenny Ever After

Housewives/OC Housewives/OC

CBUT 29 29 Mon Busy Animal Super Dood Gold Absolutely NHL Hockey: Rangers at Devils Volleyball Nature/ Things Doc Zone (CC) Land One/

CMT 61 61 CMT Music ’ CMT Music ’ CMT Music ’ CMT Music ’ CMT Music ’ Music Top 20 Countdown ’ (CC) ››› Rocky III (1982) ’ (CC) ›› Rocky IV (1985, Drama) ’ (CC)

CNBC 46 46 Show Paid Paid Paid Hoover Paid Paid Paid Paid De Land Insan Wealth Show Cindy C Paid WEN Hoover Kenny Orbison Money Prin American Greed

CNN 44 44 News Bottom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Your Money (N) CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom News Gupta CNN Newsroom Situation Room CNN Newsroom Voters-Vets

CNNH 45 45 CNN Newsroom (N) Bottom CNN Newsroom HLN Weekend Clark Howard Your Money (N) CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Investigators Evid Evid Situation Room CNN Newsroom

COM 60 60Paid Prog.

Get Hot! Paid Prog.

Cindy C ›› Coneheads (1993, Comedy) Dan Aykroyd, Jane Curtin. (CC)

›› Revenge of the Nerds (1984, Com-edy) Robert Carradine. (CC)

› The Love Guru (2008, Comedy) Mike Myers, Jessica Alba. (CC)

South Park

›› Balls of Fury (2007) Dan Fogler, Christopher Walken. (CC)

› Mr. Deeds (2002, Comedy) Adam Sandler. (CC)

DIS 41 41 Little Octo Mickey Doc Mickey Pirates Phineas Phineas Good Good Race to Witch Mountain Phineas Good Good Shake Shake Jessie Jessie ›› Beethoven’s 2nd ’ ANT

DSC 8 8Zumba Dance

Insanity! Brazil Butt Lift

Hoover Wind

Patient Ed ’ (CC) MythBusters ’ (CC)

American Chop-per: Sr. vs. Jr.

Overhaulin’ ’ (CC)

Overhaulin’ “Bel Air BBQ” (CC)

Biker Build-Off ’ (CC)

Biker Build-Off ’ (CC)

The Devil’s Ride ’ (CC)

The Devil’s Ride ’ (CC)

Outlaw Empires “Crips” ’ (CC)

E! 65 65TriVita Cindy C Ice-Coco Ice-Coco Ice-Coco Ice-Coco The

SoupEast-wood

E! News (N) Fashion Police The E! True Holly-wood Story ’

› The Hot Chick (2002, Comedy) Rob Schneider, Anna Faris.

East-wood

Khloe & Lamar

Khloe & Lamar

Khloe & Lamar

Khloe & Lamar

Khloe & Lamar

ESPN 32 32SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) College Softball NCAA Tournament,

Regional: Teams TBA. (N)NCAA Update

College Softball NCAA Tournament, Regional: Teams TBA. (N)

NCAA Update

College Softball NCAA Tournament, Regional: Teams TBA. (N)

MLB Special (CC)

ESPN2 33 33 SportsNation NFL Live (CC) NASCAR Now College Lacrosse Update College Lacrosse Update NHRA Drag Racing E:60 30 for 30 (CC)

FAM 39 39 Sexiest Brazil Boy... ›› Sabrina the Teenage Witch ›› The Flintstones (1994, Comedy) ›› Dennis the Menace (1993) ››› Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004) Harry Potter

FNC 48 48 FOX & Friends Bulls Cavuto Forbes Cash In News HQ News HQ Jour. News Stossel America’s News Headquarters (N) News HQ FOX Report (N) Huckabee (N)

FOOD 35 35 New Lk Cook Daddy Secrets Minute Mexi Pioneer Paula Trisha’s Con Giada Chopped Cupcake Cham. Food Network Star Diners Diners Iron Chef Amer.

FX 53 53Perfect Yard

Wealth-Risk

››› Life Is Beautiful (1998, Comedy-Drama) Roberto Benigni, Nicoletta Braschi.

How I Met

How I Met

How I Met

How I Met

How I Met

How I Met

Two Men Two Men Two Men Two Men ››› Tropic Thunder (2008, Comedy) Ben Stiller, Jack Black, Robert Downey Jr..

››› Superbad (2007) Jonah Hill.

GOLF 70 70 European PGA Tour Golf Break Atlantis Golf PGA Tour Golf LPGA Tour Golf Central European PGA Tour Golf

HALL 19 19I Love Lucy

I Love Lucy

I Love Lucy

I Love Lucy

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Fixing Pete (2011) Brooke Burns, Dylan Bruno, Valerie Harper. (CC)

› Uncorked (2010) Julie Benz, JoBeth Williams, Elliott Gould. (CC)

Always and Forever (2009) Dean Mc-Dermott, Rena Sofer. (CC)

Notes From the Heart Healer (2012, Drama) Genie Francis. (CC)

HGTV 68 68 Paid Keurig Holmes Inspect Rehab Rehab Prop Prop Yard Yard Yard House House Bath Elbow Con House House House House Green Home Going Curb...

HIST 37 37 Paid Free Heavy Metal Brad Meltzer The President’s Book of Secrets Pearl Harbor: 24 Hours After (CC) Vietnam in HD (CC) Vietnam in HD (CC) Vietnam in HD

LIFE 51 51 WEN TriVita Tummy Keurig Boone Paid Lk Paid Paid Cindy C Chris Chris Video Voyeur: Susan Wilson A Lover’s Revenge (2005) (CC) While the Children Sleep (2007)

MSNBC 47 47 Chris Hayes Melissa Harris-Perry (N) Weekends With Alex Witt (N) Al Roker Report. Al Roker Rep. Al Roker Rep. Al Roker Rep. Lockup: Holman Lockup: Holman Lockup: Holman

MTV 63 63 Disas Disas Disas Disas Pauly D Pauly D Strang Strang Strang Punk’d Punk’d Ten 16 and Pregnant 16 and Pregnant 16 and Pregnant ’ (CC) 16 and Pregnant ’ (CC) Teen

NBCS 34 34 Fishing Outdoor Angling Bass IndyCar Racing Indianapolis 500: Qualifying. (N) (Live) Preakness Stakes Prep (N) (Live) IndyCar Racing Preak Cycling Tour of California, Stage 7.

NICK 40 40 T.U.F.F. T.U.F.F. Penguin Penguin Parents Parents Spong Spong Spong Spong Korra Kung Power Spong Kung Kung Kung Kung Big Big iCarly iCarly iCarly iCarly

OXY 50 50 Keurig Paid Get Sit- ››› Hairspray (2007) ››› Enchanted (2007) Amy Adams. Glee ’ (CC) Glee ’ (CC) Glee ’ (CC) Glee ’ (CC) Glee “Mash-Off” Glee ’ (CC)

ROOT 31 31 Pros Paid Paid Paid Paid Juice and Lose! Must See Racing Perf. Cindy C Paid Planet Pre MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Colorado Rockies. Mari College Baseball

SPIKE 57 57Ninja Kitchen

Total Gym

Paid Prog.

WEN Hair

Weight Loss

Insanity! Repo Games

Repo Games

Repo Games

Repo Games

Search/Restore

Search/Restore

Search/Restore

Search/Restore

››› Interview With the Vampire (1994) Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt. A vam-pire recalls the tragic events of his 200-year life. ’

›› Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace

SYFY 59 59 Hoover Paid De Paid Hoover Tummy Total Total ›› Almighty Thor (2011, Action) › Queen of the Damned (2002) ›› Elektra (2005) Jennifer Garner. ››› X-Men (2000) Hugh Jackman.

TBN 20 20 Gina D Dooley Wonder Bug Auto B. Hop Rocks Goliath Ishine The Hermie Cater Tails Heroes-Bible News Praise the Lord (CC) Memories In Touch

TBS 55 55Married Married Name Is

EarlName Is Earl

Name Is Earl

Name Is Earl

Accord-ing-Jim

Yes, Dear

Yes, Dear

Yes, Dear

Yes, Dear

Yes, Dear

› Saving Silverman (2001) Jason Biggs, Steve Zahn. (CC)

›› Tommy Boy (1995, Comedy) Chris Farley, David Spade. (CC)

King of Queens

King of Queens

Friends (CC)

Friends (CC)

TLC 38 38 Moving Up (CC) Moving Up (CC) Moving Up (CC) Moving Up (CC) Dateline: Real Dateline: Real Dateline: Real Dateline: Real Dateline: Real Dateline: Real Dateline: Real Dateline: Real

TNT 54 54Law & Order “Over Here” ’

Law & Order “Ex-ecutioner”

Law & Order ’ (CC) (DVS)

Law & Order “Sav-ages” ’

Rizzoli & Isles (CC)

The Closer “Death Warrant”

›› Disturbia (2007, Suspense) Shia LaBeouf, David Morse. (CC)

››› Hitch (2005) Will Smith. A smooth-talker helps a shy accountant woo an heiress. (CC)

›› Edge of Darkness (2010) Mel Gibson. (CC)

TOON 42 42 Looney Looney Johnny Reda Bey Poke Ben 10 Thundr. Lantern Justice MAD Level NinjaGo NinjaGo Scooby-Doo Looney Looney Johnny Johnny Johnny Regular Regular

TRAV 36 36 Paid Rock When Vacations Mysteries at Food Food Food Food Food Food Food Food Food Food Bggg Bggg Hunt Hunt Hunt Hunt Keys to Castle

TRUTV 49 49 Best Paid Paid Paid Paid Land Hoover Jillian Storage Storage Lizard Lizard Pawn Pawn Most Daring Most Daring Most Daring Most Shocking Most Shocking

USA 58 58Monk “Mr. Monk & the Blackout”

Paid Prog.

Insanity! Paid Prog.

Lk Young

››› Public Enemies (2009, Crime Drama) Johnny Depp, Christian Bale, Marion Cotillard. (CC)

NCIS “Eye Spy” ’ (CC)

NCIS “Bete Noir” ’ (CC)

NCIS “Bikini Wax” ’ (CC)

NCIS “Mind Games” (CC)

NCIS The bodies of two assassins.

NCIS “Sandblast” ’ (CC)

VH1 62 62 Jump Start ’ Top 20 Video Countdown (N) ’ ›› Groundhog Day (1993) Bill Murray. Mob Wives (CC) Mob Wives (CC) Mob Wives (CC) Mob Wives (CC) Basket

Movies Sports Kids Bets

Movies Sports Kids Bets

Life 10 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012ENTERTAINMENT

SATURDAY EVENING May 19, 2012 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

ABC 4 4KOMO 4 News Saturday 6:00pm Dis-cepolo. (N) (CC)

Wheel of Fortune “Pet Lovers”

Jeopardy! (CC) ›› Spider-Man 3 (2007, Action) Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco. Peter Parker falls under the influence of his dark side. ’ (CC)

KOMO 4 News 11:00pm

Cash Cab ’ (CC)

NBC 5 5NBC Nightly News (N) (CC)

KING 5 News (N) (CC)

Laura McKenzie’s Traveler (N)

Northwest Back-roads

Harry’s Law “Breaking Points” Harry represents a runaway juror. ’ (CC)

The Firm “Chapter Seventeen” Claire and Abby go to Kentucky. (N)

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Father Dearest” ’ (CC)

KING 5 News (N) Saturday Night Live (N) (CC)

IND 6 6 Access Hollywood (N) ’ (CC) Paid Program Law & Order “Discord” ’ (CC) Law & Order “Profile” ’ (CC) News Inside Edition (N) Da Vinci’s Inquest (CC)

CBS 7 7CBS Evening News (N) (CC)

KIRO 7 Eyewit-ness News

Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ (CC) CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Dr. Robbins’ wife finds a nude corpse.

Criminal Minds A series of beatings in Philadelphia. ’ (CC) (DVS)

48 Hours Mystery ’ (CC) KIRO 7 News at 11PM

The Insider (N) ’ (CC)

PBS 9 9KCTS 9 Cooks: At Home Dr. Wayne Dyer: Wishes Fulfilled Getting the most out of life. ’ (CC) MI-5 Harry kidnaps his old colleague.

(N) (CC)Austin City Limits Fleet Foxes; Joanna Newsom’s indie rock. (CC)

MNT 10 10House “Wilson” Cuddy searches for real estate. ’ (CC)

Bones “The Man on Death Row” Bren-nan and Booth race the clock.

Bones Cam thinks Michelle is keeping a secret. ’ (CC)

Q13 FOX News at 9 (N) (CC)

Cops “Coast to Coast” ’ (CC)

Live From Daryl’s House (N) (CC)

Live From Daryl’s House (CC)

Cheaters (N) ’ (CC)

CW 11 11New Adventures of Old Christine

’Til Death “The Hockey Lie” ’

The Office “The Search” ’ (CC)

The Office “PDA” ’ (CC)

NUMB3RS “First Law” Charlie considers an enticing job offer. ’ (CC)

The Unit “Old Home Week” The ladies organize “Old Home Week.” ’

Criminal Minds “Minimal Loss” Reid and Prentiss are taken hostage. ’

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

PBS 12 12Antiques Roadshow “Minneapolis” George Elmslie chair. (CC)

Doctor Who “Colo-ny in Space”

Doctor Who “The Daemons”

As Time Goes By “Why?” (CC)

As Time Goes By (CC)

Keeping Up Ap-pearances (CC)

Keeping Up Ap-pearances (CC)

Are You Being Served? ’

Are You Being Served? ’

The Red Green Show ’ (CC)

The Red Green Show ’ (CC)

FOX 13 13MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (N Subject to Blackout) (S Live) (CC)

Cops ’ (CC) Cops ’ (CC) According to Jim “The Pass” (CC)

Everybody Loves Raymond (CC)

The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)

The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)

Q13 FOX News at 10 (N) (CC)

Washington’s Most Wanted

The Finder A missing woman leaves her shoe behind. ’ (CC)

IND 14 14 Skinn Cosmetics Invicta Watches Invicta Watches Invicta Watches Invicta Watches Invicta Watches

ION 15 15Psych “Who Ya Gonna Call?” ’ (CC) Psych A comic-book and sci-fi conven-

tion. ’ (CC)Psych “Forget Me Not” Early onset Alzheimer’s. ’ (CC)

Psych Lassiter has doubts about an astronomer. ’ (CC)

Psych A man abducted by aliens. ’ (CC)

Psych “Cloudy Chance of Murder” A weather forecaster dies. ’ (CC)

IND 18 18 Kenneth Hagin Jay Sekulow In Touch With Dr. Charles Stanley Perry Stone Gospel Music Hillsong (CC) End of the Age Check the Sound The Ramp MX TV Acquire the Fire

ABC 22 22KATU News at 6 (N) ’ (CC)

Hoover TwinTank Jeopardy! (CC) Wheel of Fortune “Pet Lovers”

›› Spider-Man 3 (2007, Action) Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco. Peter Parker falls under the influence of his dark side. ’ (CC)

KATU News at 11 (N) ’ (CC)

Comedy.TV ’ (CC)

NBC 26 26NBC Nightly News (N) (CC)

Straight Talk Inside Edition Weekend (N) ’

Grants Getaways Harry’s Law “Breaking Points” Harry represents a runaway juror. ’ (CC)

The Firm “Chapter Seventeen” Claire and Abby go to Kentucky. ’

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Father Dearest” ’ (CC)

NewsChannel 8 at 11 (N) (CC)

Saturday Night Live (N) (CC)

UNI 30 30 Comediant. Noticiero Aquí y Ahora (SS) Sábado Gigante (N) (En Vivo) (SS) Comediant. Noticiero

FOX 27 27MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (N Subject to Blackout) (S Live) (CC)

Paid Program Alyssa Milano Uses Wen Hair!

Law & Order “Discord” Rape case in-volves rock star. ’ (CC)

Law & Order “Profile” White nabbed for racial attacks. ’ (CC)

10 O’Clock News (N) The Finder A missing woman leaves her shoe behind. ’ (CC)

A&E 52 52Dog the Bounty Hunter Dog needs a birthday gift for Cecily. (CC)

Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Storage Wars (CC) Flipped Off “Family Feud” Russell saves, while Shawn spends. (N)

Flipped Off Russell and Shawn team up with a friend. (CC)

AMC 67 67››› O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000) George Clooney, John Turturro. Three escaped convicts embark on an unusual odyssey. (CC)

››› Independence Day (1996, Science Fiction) Will Smith, Bill Pullman, Jeff Goldblum. Earthlings vs. evil aliens in 15-mile-wide ships. (CC)

››› Independence Day (1996) Will Smith, Bill Pullman. (CC)

APL 43 43 Tanked “Fish Out of Water” (CC) Tanked “Serenity Now” ’ (CC) Tanked ’ (CC) Tanked “Polar Opposites” (N) ’ Tanked “Tanks for the Memories” Tanked “Polar Opposites” ’

BET 56 56 ›› Roll Bounce (2005) Bow Wow. A roller-skater prepares for a big showdown. (CC) 35 & Ticking (2011) Nicole Ari Parker. Friends try to figure out where their lives are heading. ›› Video Girl (2010) Meagan Good.

BRAVO 66 66The Real Housewives of Orange County “Whine & Cheese” (CC)

The Real Housewives of Orange County “Happily Never After” (CC)

The Real Housewives of New Jersey “Poker Face”

The Real Housewives of New Jersey “Third Eye Blind”

The Real Housewives of New Jersey “Drowning Pool”

Don’t Be Tardy for the Wedding

Don’t Be Tardy for the Wedding

CBUT 29 29 National Marketplace ’ 22 Minutes (CC) Laughs: Gags Above and Beyond (2006) Liane Balaban, Jonathan Scarfe. ’ (CC) News Above and Beyond (2006) Liane Balaban. ’ (CC)

CMT 61 61 ›› Road House (1989, Action) Patrick Swayze. A legendary bouncer agrees to tame a notorious gin mill. ’ (CC) Texas Women “Dog Days” (N) (CC) Southern Nights “Guaradian Angels” Texas Women “Dog Days” ’ (CC)

CNBC 46 46 The Suze Orman Show (N) (CC) Princess (N) ’ Princess (N) ’ American Greed The Suze Orman Show (CC) Princess ’ (CC) Princess ’ (CC) Best Pillow Ever! Zumba Dance

CNN 44 44 Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) Voters in America: Vets Wanted? To Be Announced CNN Newsroom (N) Voters in America: Vets Wanted?

CNNH 45 45 Voters in America: Vets Wanted? Piers Morgan Tonight The Investigators Body of Evidence Body of Evidence To Be Announced CNN Newsroom (N)

COM 60 60› Mr. Deeds (2002) (CC)

››› Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004, Comedy) Vince Vaughn, Chris-tine Taylor. Dodgeball teams compete for $50,000 in Las Vegas. (CC)

›› Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006, Comedy) Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly, Sacha Baron Cohen. A NASCAR driver has a new rival. (CC)

Katt Williams American Hustle: The Movie (CC)

DIS 41 41 Austin & Ally ’ Shake It Up! ’ A.N.T. Farm (CC) A.N.T. Farm (CC) Good-Charlie Shake It Up! ’ Phineas and Ferb Jessie ’ (CC) A.N.T. Farm (CC) Shake It Up! ’ Shake It Up! ’ Austin & Ally ’

DSC 8 8American Chopper: Senior vs. Junior Junior and Senior finally meet. ’

American Chopper: Senior vs. Junior “Mikey Out?” ’ (CC)

American Chopper: Senior vs. Junior “Change of Heart - Part 1” (CC)

Saw Dogs “First Breath” ’ (CC)

Saw Dogs “Tree-house Fantasy”

Saw Dogs “Mon-ster Wine” (CC)

Saw Dogs “Furry Creek” ’ (CC)

Saw Dogs “First Breath” ’ (CC)

Saw Dogs “Tree-house Fantasy”

E! 65 65Khloe and Lamar Khloe and Lamar The E! True Hollywood Story The story

of the mother/daughter duo. ’››› Charlie’s Angels (2000, Action) Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore, Lucy Liu. Premiere. Three nubile crimefighters must solve a kidnapping.

Meet Mrs. East-wood & Company

Khloe and Lamar The Soup Chelsea Lately

ESPN 32 32SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)

To Be Announced SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)

ESPN2 33 33 Street League Skateboarding From Kansas City, Mo. MLS Soccer Los Angeles Galaxy at Club Deportivo Chivas USA. (N) (Live) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) NBA Tonight (N) SportsNation (CC)

FAM 39 39 ››› Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe. ››› Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson. Harry Potter-Prisoner of Azkaban

FNC 48 48 Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) The Five Journal Editorial FOX News Watch Justice With Judge Jeanine The Five Red Eye

FOOD 35 35 Restaurant: Impossible Chopped “Dr. Deckle & Mr. Fried” Chopped “Own It!” Chopped “Ready, Set, Escargot!” Chopped “Viewers’ Choice!” Iron Chef America “Cora vs. Mullen”

FX 53 53››› Superbad (2007) Jonah Hill. Co-dependent teens hope to score booze and babes at a party.

›› Step Brothers (2008, Comedy) Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly, Richard Jenkins. Two spoiled men be-come rivals when their parents marry.

›› Death at a Funeral (2010, Comedy) Keith David, Loretta Devine. Rival sib-lings learn a shocking secret about their late patriarch.

GOLF 70 70 Euro PGA LPGA Tour Golf Sybase Match Play Championship, Day Three. Golf Central (N) Feherty Big Break Atlantis Big Break Top 10

HALL 19 19A Crush on You (2011, Romance-Comedy) Brigid Brannagh, Sean Patrick Flanery. A man e-mails the wrong woman with a message of affection. (CC)

Kiss at Pine Lake (2012, Romance) Barry Watson, Mia Kirshner. Premiere. A man rekindles an old romance while trying to save a camp. (CC)

Kiss at Pine Lake (2012, Romance) Barry Watson, Mia Kirshner, Bill Engvall. A man rekindles an old romance while trying to save a camp. (CC)

HGTV 68 68 House Hunters Hunters Int’l Junk Gypsies (N) Design/Dime High Low Proj. Mom Caves (N) Great Rooms Interiors Inc (CC) House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l

HIST 37 37 Vietnam in HD (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC) Pawn Stars (CC)

LIFE 51 51 ››› Cries in the Dark (2006) Eva La Rue, Adam Harrington. (CC) Murder on the 13th Floor (2012) Sean Patrick Thomas. Premiere. (CC) The Wife He Met Online (2012) Cameron Mathison, Barbara Niven. (CC)

MSNBC 47 47 Lockup: Santa Rosa Lockup: World Tour “Israel” (N) Lockup: World Tour Lockup: World Tour Lockup: Holman Lockup: Holman

MTV 63 63 Teen Dads (CC) Punk’d ’ (CC) Ridiculousness ›› ATL (2006) Tip Harris, Lauren London. Four Atlanta teens face challenges. ’ ››› Boyz N the Hood (1991, Drama) Larry Fishburne, Ice Cube. ’

NBCS 34 34 Hockey IIHF World Championship: Teams TBA. (N Same-day Tape) Game On! Cycling Tour of California, Stage 7. Motorcycle Racing AMA Motocross: Moto 2. From Sacramento, Calif. NHL 36

NICK 40 40 Victorious “Freak the Freak Out” ’ Victorious (CC) Victorious (CC) Victorious “Tori Goes Platinum” (N) iCarly ’ (CC) iCarly ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Yes, Dear (CC) Yes, Dear (CC)

OXY 50 50 Glee “Michael” Rivalry intensifies. Glee “Heart” ’ (CC) Glee “On My Way” ’ (CC) Glee Disco-inspired dance numbers. Glee “Dance With Somebody” (CC) Glee Students prepare for prom. ’

ROOT 31 31 College Baseball Oregon State at Washington State. (N) MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Colorado Rockies. From Coors Field in Denver. (Subject to Blackout) MLS Soccer: Sounders at Whitecaps FC

SPIKE 57 57›› Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace (1999, Science Fiction) Liam Neeson. Young Anakin Skywalker begins to learn about the Force. ’

›› Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones (2002, Science Fiction) Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Hayden Christensen. Obi-Wan Kenobi and his apprentice protect the former queen. ’

››› Crocodile Dundee (1986) ’

SYFY 59 59 ››› X-Men (CC) ›› Stealth (2005) Josh Lucas, Jessica Biel. Premiere. Three pilots combat artificial intelligence. American Warships (2012) Mario Van Peebles, Carl Weathers. Premiere. › Battle of Los Angeles (2011) (CC)

TBN 20 20 Hour of Power (CC) Billy Graham Classic Crusades Not a Fan (CC) Travel the Road ›› Generation Gap (2008) Alex Black, Edward Asner. Thru History Live at Oak Tree Virtual Memory

TBS 55 55Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Seinfeld “The Chi-

nese Woman”Seinfeld “The Couch” ’ (CC)

The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)

The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)

›› Old School (2003, Comedy) Luke Wilson, Will Ferrell, Vince Vaughn. Three men relive their wild past by starting a fraternity. (CC)

›› Road Trip (2000, Comedy) Seann William Scott, Breckin Meyer. (CC)

TLC 38 38 Dateline: Real Life Mysteries (N) ’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries (N) ’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries (N) ’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries (CC) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries (CC) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries (CC)

TNT 54 54›› Edge of Darkness (2010) Mel Gib-son, Ray Winstone. (CC)

NBA Pregame (N) (Live) (CC)

NBA Basketball Oklahoma City Thunder at Los Angeles Lakers. Western Conference Semifinal, Game 4. From Staples Center in Los Angeles. (N) (Live) (CC)

Inside the NBA (N) (Live) (CC) ›› The Guardian (2006, Drama) Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher. (CC)

TOON 42 42 World of Gumball World of Gumball ›› Open Season (2006) Voices of Martin Lawrence, Ashton Kutcher. King of the Hill Delocated Eagleheart Family Guy (CC) The Boondocks The Boondocks

TRAV 36 36 Hotel Impossible (CC) Extreme Pools (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC)

TRUTV 49 49 Top 20 Most Shocking Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Forensic Files Forensic Files

USA 58 58NCIS “Sharif Returns” A terrorist with a chemical weapon. ’ (CC)

NCIS “Ex-File” A Marine captain is mur-dered. ’ (CC)

NCIS “Guilty Pleasure” Officer’s death links to a prostitute. ’ (CC)

NCIS “Kill Screen” A stolen purse with gruesome contents. ’ (CC)

NCIS “One Last Score” A new special agent arrives. ’ (CC) (DVS)

›› National Treasure: Book of Se-crets (2007) Nicolas Cage. (CC)

VH1 62 62 Basketball Wives La La’s Life Tough Love: New Orleans ’ ›› Groundhog Day (1993) Bill Murray. A TV weatherman’s day keeps repeating. ’ 40 Greatest Feuds Opinions on recent celebrity battles.

WEEKDAY DAYTIMECEN CHE 6 AM 6:30 7 AM 7:30 8 AM 8:30 9 AM 9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM 1:30 2 PM 2:30 3 PM 3:30 4 PM 4:30 5 PM 5:30

ABC 4 4 KOMO 4 News Good Morning America Live! With Kelly The View The Doctors The Chew The Revolution General Hospital The Dr. Oz Show KOMO 4 News News ABC

NBC 5 5 News Today New Day NW KING 5 News Days of our Lives Anderson Dr. Phil Ellen DeGeneres KING 5 News

IND 6 6 Funny Videos KING 5 Morning News on KONG The 700 Club Prince Paid Paid Paid Meyer Paid News People Court Divorce Divorce Judge Judge Anderson

CBS 7 7 KIRO News CBS This Morning Minute Minute Price Is Right Young/Restless News Bold The Talk Make a Deal Rachael Ray Judge Judge News News

PBS 9 9 WordW Clifford Sesame Street Curious Cat in Super Dino Sid Wild Arthur Steves Varied Programs Charlie Rose Curious Cat in Wild WordG Busi News

MNT 10 10 Varied Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Earl Earl Justice Justice Judge Mathis Judge Mathis Judge Cheater Cops Cops Cheater TMZ King King

CW 11 11 Wom Life Cope Paid Paid Paid Family Family Million. Million. Jeremy Kyle People’s Court Judge Judge People’s Court Life Life ’70s ’70s Chris Chris

PBS 12 12 Varied Programs SitBeFit Varied Programs Sesame Street Curious Cat in Super Varied Sid Clifford Electric WordG Fetch! Martha Arthur Wild

FOX 13 13 News Q13 FOX News This Morning Q13 FOX News Jerry Springer Bill Cunningham Steve Wilkos Jerry Springer Maury Maury FOX News at 4 Q13 FOX News

IND 14 14 Varied Programs Cartoon Varied Programs Invicta Watches

ION 15 15 Varied Programs Paid Paid Varied Programs Bible Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid George Varied Programs

IND 18 18 Varied Today Varied Prince Varied Meyer Celebration Reflec Varied Super Reflec Prince Y’r Day Varied Winston Varied Programs Creflo Varied J.Hagee Parsley Joni L.

ABC 22 22 KATU News Good Morning America AM Northwest The View Live! With Kelly The Chew The Revolution General Hospital The Dr. Oz Show KATU News First News ABC

NBC 26 26 NewsChannel 8 Today Anderson News Million. Nate Berkus Days of our Lives Ellen DeGeneres Four O’Clock News News

FOX 27 27 News Good Day Oregon Good Day Or. The 700 Club Law Order: CI Perry Mason Rachael Ray Better Judge Judge Judge Judge 5 O’Clock News

UNI 28 28 Tu Desayuno ¡Despierta América! Casos de Familia Rosa Guadalupe El Talismán Corazón Apas... Dos Hogares Gordo Flac Primer Impacto

A&E 52 52 Paid Paid Dog Varied Dog Varied Criminal Varied Criminal Minds CSI: Miami CSI: Miami Criminal Varied Criminal Varied First 48 Varied First 48 Varied First 48 Varied

AMC 67 67

M Hang Kitchen Paid Paid Looks Paid Stooges Stooges The Pitch (CC) ››› The Fugitive 1993 Harrison Ford. (CC) ›› U.S. Marshals 1998 Tommy Lee Jones. (CC) CSI: Miami (CC)

Tu Paid Paid Paid Looks Tummy Paid ›› Force 10 From Navarone 1978 Robert Shaw. (CC) ››› High Plains Drifter 1973, Western (CC) ›› Escape From L.A. 1996 Kurt Russell. CSI: Miami (CC)

W Paid Paid Paid Looks Paid Paid ›› Blown Away 1994 Jeff Bridges. (CC) ›› The Beach 2000 Leonardo DiCaprio. ››› Die Hard 1988 Bruce Willis, Alan Rickman. (CC) CSI: Miami (CC)

Th Kitchen Paid My Pil Paid Looks Paid ››› Death Wish 1974 (CC) ››› Die Hard 1988 Bruce Willis, Alan Rickman. (CC) ››› Backdraft 1991, Action Kurt Russell. (CC) CSI: Miami (CC)

F Kitchen Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid ››› A Bridge Too Far 1977, War Dirk Bogarde, James Caan. (CC) ›››› Patton 1970, Biography George C. Scott, Karl Malden. (CC) The Green Berets

APL 43 43 Oran Eden Big Cat Big Cat Crocodile Hunter Wild Kingdom Be Alive Animal Cops Phil. Animal Cops Phil. Animal Cops Phil. Animal Cops Phil. Varied Programs

BET 56 56 BET Inspiration Paid Bernie Bernie Bernie Bernie Chris Chris My Wife My Wife Parkers Parkers Movie Chris Chris My Wife My Wife Parkers Parkers

BRAVO 66 66

M Around the World Bethenny Ever Bethenny Ever Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC

Tu Match Don’t Don’t Don’t Don’t Don’t Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Pregnant in Heels Pregnant in Heels Pregnant in Heels Pregnant in Heels

W Around the World Around the World Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million, Listing Million, Listing Million, Listing Million, Listing Million, Listing Million, Listing Housewives/NJ

Th Tabatha Tk-Ovr Tabatha Tk-Ovr Tabatha Tk-Ovr Tabatha Tk-Ovr Tabatha Tk-Ovr Tabatha’s Salon Tabatha’s Salon Tabatha’s Salon Tabatha’s Salon Tabatha’s Salon Tabatha’s Salon Around the World

F Decorators Decorators Decorators Decorators Pregnant in Heels Pregnant in Heels Matchmaker Matchmaker Matchmaker Matchmaker Matchmaker Matchmaker

CBUT 29 29 CBC News Now Turbo Monster Bo On/ Busy Super Cat in Poko Doodlebops Art CBC News Now Cor J’pardy! Steven and Chris Recipes Wheel 22 Min HNIC Hockey Varied

CMT 61 61 CMT Music Music Varied CMT Music Music Varied Music Varied Music Varied Programs

CNBC 46 46 Squawk on the Street Fast Money Power Lunch Street Signs Closing Bell Closing Bell Fast Varied Mad Money Report Varied Programs

CNN 44 44 CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Situation Room John King, USA E. B. OutFront Anderson Cooper

CNNH 45 45 Starting Point CNN Newsroom Morning Express News Now CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom News Now HLN Special John King, USA E. B. OutFront

COM 60 60 Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Entou RENO Movie Varied Movie Scrubs Scrubs Comedy Fturama Fturama Tosh.0 Sunny South

DIS 41 41 3rd & Little Gas Chug Mickey Pirates Mickey Mickey Doc Little Mickey Octo Mickey Varied Oso Pirates Varied Programs

DSC 8 8 Paid Creflo Paid Robison Meyer Paid Varied Programs

E! 65 65

M Paid Paid Fashion Police Kourt & Kim Kardashian Mrs. Eastwood Ice- Ice- E! News Khloe Khloe Khloe East When Women Kill True Hollywood E! Investigates

Tu Paid Lose Celebrity Near Death Kids of Killers Kardashian Mrs. Eastwood E! News 50 Most Insane Celebrity Oops Kendra Kendra ›› Along Came Polly 2004W Paid Paid The E! True Hollywood Story (CC) Mrs. Eastwood Sexiest Bodies True Hollywood E! News Kardashian ›› Along Came Polly 2004 True Hollywood Khloe Khloe

Th Paid Paid True Hollywood Rich Kids Kill Unforgettable Hollywood Tragedies Kardashian E! News Mrs. Eastwood Kendra Kendra Khloe Khloe Ice- Ice- Ice- Ice-

F Paid Paid True Hollywood True Hollywood Hollywood Meltdowns Mrs. Eastwood E! News Celeb. Transf. › The Hot Chick 2002, Anna Faris Kardashian East East

ESPN 32 32

M SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Report Football NFL Live (N) Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) MLB Baseball: Braves at Reds

Tu SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Report Football NFL Live (N) Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter NFL Live (CC)

W SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Report Football NFL Live (N) Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) NBA NBA Basketball

Th SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Report Football NFL Live (N) Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) NBA NBA Basketball

F SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Report Football NFL Live (N) Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) College Softball

ESPN2 33 33

M Mike and Mike ESPN First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) ESPN First Take (S) (CC) Mike and Mike NAS First Num Le Ba SportsNation (N) NFL32 (N) (CC) NFL Live (N) 30 for 30 (CC)

Tu Mike and Mike ESPN First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) ESPN First Take (S) (CC) Mike and Mike NAS First Num Le Ba SportsNation (N) NFL32 (N) (CC) Around Pardon E:60

W Mike and Mike ESPN First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) ESPN First Take (S) (CC) Mike and Mike NAS First Num Le Ba SportsNation (N) NFL32 (N) (CC) MLB Baseball: Nationals at Phillies

Th Mike and Mike ESPN First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) ESPN First Take (S) (CC) Mike and Mike Best/First Take Num Le Ba SportsNation (N) NFL32 (N) (CC) NFL Live (N) College Softball

F Mike and Mike ESPN First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) ESPN First Take (S) (CC) Mike and Mike NAS First Num Le Ba SportsNation (N) NFL32 (N) (CC) Pardon NBA Tonight (N) NBA

FAM 39 39 Meyer Varied Boy... Boy... Boy... Boy... 700 Club Special Programming Gilmore Girls Still Still 8, Rules 8, Rules Ground Ground ’70s ’70s ’70s ’70s Varied Programs

FNC 48 48 America’s Newsroom Happening Now America Live Shepard Smith Neil Cavuto The Five Special Report FOX Report O’Reilly Factor

FOOD 35 35 Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid B. Flay Varied Programs Unwrap Varied Paula Con Money Dinners Secrets Minute Giada Giada Con Con Paula Cooking

FX 53 53 Paid Paid Smarter Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs

GOLF 70 70 Morning Drive Varied Programs Paid Varied Programs Central Varied Programs

HALL 19 19 Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Golden Golden Golden Golden Martha Stewart Hungry Hungry Emeril Pets Martha Stewart Martha Stewart The Waltons The Waltons The Waltons

HGTV 68 68 Paid Varied Programs Hunters Hunt Varied Programs

HIST 37 37

M The Conquerors The Real West American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers Pawn Pawn

Tu Paid Quart Civil War Journal Ice Road Trucker Ice Road Trucker Ice Road Trucker Ice Road Trucker More Extreme Marksmen (CC) Sharp Shooters (CC) Weird Warfare (CC)

W Quart 3x Modern Marvels Ameri Ameri Ameri Ameri Egypt: Engineering an Empire (CC) Last Stand of the 300 (CC) Gates of Hell (CC) Holy Grail in America (CC)

Th Paid Paid The Most (CC) The Dark Ages Charlemagne. (CC) The Real Robin Hood (CC) Modern Marvels (CC) Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels

F Paid Paid Save Our History Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People

LIFE 51 51 Paid Paid Balance Varied Will Will Will Will Will Will Chris Chris Chris Chris Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Mother Reba Reba Reba

MSNBC 47 47 Daily Rundown Jansing and Co. MSNBC Live Alex Wagner Andrea Mitchell News Nation Martin Bashir Dylan Ratigan Hardball Chris PoliticsNation Hardball Chris The Ed Show

MTV 63 63 AMTV Varied AMTV Varied Programs

NBCS 34 34 NHL NHL Varied Programs NBC Sports Talk NHL Live NHL Hockey

NICK 40 40 Parents Sponge. Kung Fu Kung Fu Sponge. Sponge. Dora... Dora... Umi Umi Bubble Bubble Mike Max, Dora... Dora... Sponge. Sponge. Kung Fu Penguin Big Big Sponge. Sponge.

OXY 50 50 Single Single Single Single Varied Programs Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Top Varied Top Varied Top Varied

ROOT 31 31 The Dan Patrick Show Varied Programs Paid Paid Paid Paid Patrick Varied Programs

SPIKE 57 57 Paid Paid Paid Paid Varied Paid Auction Auction CSI: NY Varied CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene Varied Programs

SYFY 59 59 Paid Paid Paid Paid Varied Programs

TBN 20 20 Creflo J.Hagee Parsley Y’r Day Believer Varied Programs Behind Varied Life To Today The 700 Club J.Hagee Varied Praise the Lord Varied Potters Behind Varied

TBS 55 55 Married Married Home Home Prince Prince Payne Payne Browns Browns Payne Jim Yes Yes Amer. Earl Ray Ray Ray Ray Friends Friends Friends Friends

TLC 38 38 Baby Baby’s Varied Programs Say Yes Say Yes What Not/Wear Baby Baby Baby Multi Varied Programs

TNT 54 54 Angel Angel Charmed Charmed Supernatural Supernatural Las Vegas Las Vegas Leverage The Closer Varied Programs Law & Order

TOON 42 42 Looney Ben 10 Johnny Bey Poké Johnny Johnny Almost Looney Lazlo Coden Coden Looney Tunes Tom & Jerry Jerry Looney Looney Gumball Ed, Edd Total Total Regular

TRAV 36 36 Paid Paid Varied Paid Paid Paid Brown Brown America America Varied Programs Food Food

TRUTV 49 49 Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid In Session Varied Programs

USA 58 58 Varied Programs NCIS NCIS

VH1 62 62 Jump Start Varied Programs

Movies Sports Kids Bets

Movies Sports Kids Bets

1977 LINCOLN Continen-tal: 65k original miles, fullpower, new tires-shocks-battery, leather, 460 ci,excellent condition. $4250.360-790-2100

New Today!

SATURDAY, MAY 19th,8-5pm. 975 SW 21st St.Knitting machine, sewing& knitting items. Fabric &yarn. Bookshelves, bas-kets, plants indoor & outand pots, sweaters, cow-boy boots & hats, cow-boy boot cookie jar &many more boot items.Horses of all kinds, etc.Horse lamps, dish sets,purses, many horseitems! Old fashion hairdryer, wheel chair, show-er chair, mugs, steins,tools, so much more!Horse, plant & sewinglovers don't miss thisone!

1992 FORD Ranger: regu-lar cab, 3.0 V6, 20 mpg, 5speed, 7' bed. Runs andlooks nice. 22K miles. Newradiator, fuel pump, batteryand custom door panels.No carpet due to smallwindow seal leak. Needsomething bigger. Asking$1200/offer. No trades.Call 360-736-0968, leavemessage.

MOVING SALE! Powertools, air compressor, ster-eo, hand tools, somethingfor everyone! 1471Centralia-Alpha Rd. 1/2mile from Logan Hill. 9-4,Friday, Saturday and Sun-day.

1990 TOYOTA 4x4: 209Kmiles, extended cab, longbed, bed liner & hitch. Newoversized snow tires &wheels, battery & exhaust,$4500. 360-880-6180

1995 FORD Explorer: 4x4.Clean title. Stopped work-ing a couple days ago. If Ifix, I will sell for at least$1000, if you buy and fix,make offer. 360-520-7990

INSIDE THE hanger sale!30 plus years accumula-tion, antiques, historical,miscellaneous hardware tozippers, furniture, officeitems, dishwares, books.414 Hewitt Rd., Saturdayand Sunday, 8-3. NOEARLY BIRDS!

2002 CHRYSLERTown & Country Limited

Loaded, clean, 7 passen-ger, leather, power every-thing, newer tires & brakes,107K miles, $6500!3 6 0 - 8 8 0 - 7 6 1 6 o r360-880-1582.

HUGE 3 Family GarageSale! 40+ years of accu-mulat ion. Householdgoods, furniture, tools,camping, fishing, huntinggear, men's clothes, TV's,books, electronics, art, en-tertainment center. Brandnew hunting clothes!!Brand new fishing rods!!Everything must go!Friday-Sunday 8-5. NOEARLY BIRDS!!! 416 New-aukum Valley Rd. Cheha-lis, 1.5 miles from Carl's Jr.off exit #72.

BRAHMA PICK-UP cano-py, standard size, tan incolor $100. 360-273-2095

WANTED: USED traveltrailer, 17' to 20', lightweight, no junk. Will paycash. 360-330-1380

New Today!

GARAGE SALEFriday & Saturday,

May 18 & 19, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Horse tack, shabby chic,heavy duty t-posts, Kiln,antiques, glass, pottery,furniture, camping gear,collectibles and more! 117Hewitt Rd.

SUNDAY, MAY 20TH ~ 9:00 amConsignments Welcome! Now accepting delivery.

Very early listing! Much More By Sale Day

Early Listing Includes:‘68 Cat D8h W/WinchKubota L4850 4x4

‘81 Mack 10 Wheel Manure Truck

Fransgard RV300 Tedder Rake

Int. 430 Baler1952 9N Ford Tractor‘74 Mf Front Loader, Gas,

3 PtJD Bull Dozer, 250,

6-Way Blade3-Pt 6’ Drum Mower3-Pt Springtooth

CultivatorDock Plate2-Honda Reconditioned

4-Wheeler Atv’s7’ Jd Hyd. Disc4’ Landpride Rotary

Cutter5’ Wagner Comm. Lawn

Roller (New)14’ Smokercraft Boat

W/9.9 Evrd/Galv. Trailer

14’ Tandem Axle Car/Equipment Trailer

16’ Stock Trailer, Bumper Hitch

‘92 SeaDoo On TrailerLocal HayVegas Style Quareter Slot

Machine‘89 F350 Dually 2WD,

New Engine‘94 F150 6 Cyl, Short Box‘91 Ford Ranger Ex. Cab,

6 Cyl.

‘94 Jeep Cherokee, 6 Cyl, 4X4

‘90 Jeep Cherokee, 6 Cyl, 4X4

‘77 Ford Pickup‘96 Jeep CherokeeFew Sheriff Seizures,

grow equipment, etcMiscellaneous:Hay Buddy Hyd. Hay Squeeze; 4 - Powder River Feed Panels; Port. Air Comp; Gas Generator; Small Wood Stove; Smalll Combination Safe; Craftsman 12” Lathe; 6’ Rotary Bbq, 1/2 Pig Size; Engine - Ford 4.0 V-6 Gas W/Trans; New & Used Tools; Lumber’

Nursery Stock.Lawn & GardenFarm ImplementsFarm & Industrial SupplyCars, Trucks, Tractors & More

CHEHALIS LIVESTOCK MARKET328 Hamilton Road N. Chehalis, WA 98432 (360) 748- 3191

Auction Lic. #163Joe Parypa

(360) 736-5802Web: www.clmauctions.com

Dave Balmelli

Cell - 520-4150

(360) 748-1778

Terms: Cash or check on Sale Day. Sold AS-IS - WHERE IS. Not responsible for any additions, deletions, accidents or advertising discrepancies.

~ Delivery by ~

Titled Items by Wed., May 16th 4:00 pm

Tools & Misc. by Thur., May 17th Noon

Equipment ONLY til Noon,

Sat., May 19th Sooner would be better.

No Friday Deliveries Please!!

~ Sale Schedule ~

9:00 am - Tools & Miscellaneous

12:00 noon - Tractors - Rolling Stock

Farm Implements to Follow

PreviewSat., May 19th

9:00am - 4:00pm

EarlyListing

Much more by sale day!

CC57842ao.ke

2006 SUZUKI BoulevardM50: 9600 miles, 800cc,$3500. 360-748-4362

2004 125L DRZ Suzukidirtbike: bought new, lowhours, $1250. Centralia,cell 702-756-9464.

New Today!

MOVING! OVER 30 yearsof treasures! Friday &Saturday, 9am-5pm, Sun-day, 9am-2pm. No earlybirds. 3608 Russell Rd.

New Today!

BREYER HOUSECollection

over 120 horsesOther miscellaneous,horse items, book shelves,chest of drawers, plants,books, etc. Saturday, 9-4 &Sunday, 9-3. 1852 SWKimberly Ct, off of 19th St.

WANTED: SAVAGE model24, 410/22, over/undercombo. Willing to pay$200. Dan 360-304-1199.

New Today!

HUGE GARAGE sale!Harrison Square Pres-byterian Church, 1227Harrison Ave., Central-ia. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.Friday and Saturday,May 18 and 19. Furni-ture, Christmas items,household items, cloth-ing, and much more.

LARGE YARD sale! 510 SKing St. Collectables,plates, glassware, ceram-ics. No clothes. SomeChristmas, Easter, Thanks-giving, Halloween decora-tions. Friday & Saturday,May 18 & 19, 9am. NOEARLY SALES!

RELOADINGEQUIPMENT:

RCBS press, MEC shotshell press, powder scale,case, trimmer & .243 dies,$125 for all. 360-736-1756

ANNUAL BARN sale!Dresser, recliner, desk, re-ttan chairs, rocking chairs,nice teen clothes (Hollister,Aero, Abercrombie), crib.Flatbed & car hauler trail-ers, craft items, medicalsupplies. Come out I-5 toexit 68 turn left onto Hwy12, take first left onto AveryRd. E, follow signs orJackson Hwy to Avery Rd.,turn right by Logger'sWorld and follow signs to126 Zachery Dr. Friday &Saturday, 8-4pm.

HAVING AGARAGE SALE?

No time to stopby the office?

Go to chronline.comto place your ad fromyour own home today!

2 GARAGE SALES! 1104Fieldcrest Ave & 102Captain Ln. Off RussellRd. Furniture, bedroomset, bike, tools, car parts,old boat motor, enginedolly, primitive decor,household, too much tolist! Friday, May 18th, 8-5,Saturday, May 19th, 8-12.

GUN & KNIFESHOW

May 19 & 20Centralia Fairgrounds

Saturday 9-5and Sunday 9-3.Admission $6.

For more information,503-363-9564.

www.wesknodelgunshows.com

HUGE SALE! Somethingfor everyone! Tools, mitersaw, air compressor, pingpong table, clothes, furni-ture, bed, workout equip-ment, tires, fencing, toys,pellet stove, boat & motorand much more. 2709State Hwy 6 - 9 miles westof Chehalis. Worth thedrive! Saturday only 9 - 5.

WINLOCK: HOUSEHOLD,Christmas items, O Scaletrain stuff, some furniture,motorcycle stuff, ceilingfans, light fixtures & more,tons or miscellaneous! May19 & 20, 9am-5pm. 222Saint Helens Way.

New Today!

GARAGE SALESaturday & Sunday,

8am - 4pmNo early birds

1933 Delano Rd.IN THE RED SHOP

15 years of accumulation!Tires, kids quads, clothes,household and much more!Don't miss this sale!

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'SSALE PURSUANT TOTHE REVISED CODE OFWASHINGTON CHAPTER61.24 ET. SEQ. TS No:11-02831-6 Loan No.4 0 0 0 6 8 8 2 3 6 A P N :0.18888007000 I. NOTICEIS HEREBY GIVEN that onJune 15, 2012, 10:00 AM,at the entrance to theLewis County Courthouse,located at 351 N.W. NorthStreet, Chehalis, WA, Fi-delity National Title Insur-ance Company, the under-signed Trustee will sell atpublic auction to the high-est and best bidder, paya-ble, in the form of cash, orcashiers' check or certifiedchecks from federally orState chartered banks, atthe time of sale thefollowing described realproperty, situated in theCounty of Lewis, State ofWashington, to-wit: THELAND REFERRED TOHEREIN BELOW IS SITU-ATED IN THE COUNTYOF LEWIS, STATE OFWASHINGTON, AND ISDESCRIBED AS FOL-LOWS: THAT PORTIONOF THE NORTHEASTQUARTER OF THENORTHWEST QUARTEROF SECTION 17, TOWN-SHIP 13 NORTH, RANGE3 WEST, W.M., DESCRI-BED AS FOLLOWS: BE-GINNING AT THE QUAR-TER CORNER BETWEENSECTION 8 AND 17 INSAID TOWNSHIP ANDRANGE, BEING A BRASSCAPPED CONCRETEMONUMENT ALSO BE-ING THE NORTHWESTCORNER OF THE PLATOF SLEEPY HOLLOW;THENCE ALONG THEWEST LINE OF SAIDPLAT, SOUTH 00º14' 14"WEST 468.00 FEET TOTHE TRUE POINT OFBEINNING; THENCECONTINUING ALONGSAID WEST LINE SOUTH00º14'14" WEST 380.00FEET; THENCE SOUTH85º05'33" WEST 148.80FEET; THENCE NORTH14º37'28" WEST 424.94FEET; THENCE NORTH51º02'46" WEST 113.15FEET, MORE OR LESS,TO THE SOUTHERLYRIGHT OF WAY LINE OFCURTIS HILL ROAD;THENCE ALONG SAIDSOUTHEASTERLY RIGHTOF WAY LINE NORTH-EASTERLY 40.00 FEET;T H E N C E S O U T H51º02'46" EAST 145.00FEET; THENCE SOUTH81º53'24" EAST 209.30FEET TO THE POINT OFBEGINNING. LEWISCOUNTY, WASHINGTON,which is subject to thatcertain Deed of Trust datedMay 24, 2004, recorded onJune 2, 2004, as Instru-ment No. 3198120 of Offi-cial Records in the Officeof the County Recorder ofLewis County, WA fromGALEN WEDIN ANDKATHLEEN WEDIN, HUS-BAND AND WIFE as theoriginal Grantor(s), toSTEWART TITLE, as theoriginal Trustee, to securean obligation in favor ofAMERIQUEST MORT-GAGE COMPANY, as theoriginal Beneficiary. An As-signment recorded underAuditor's File No 3320736.The current Beneficiary is:Deutsche Bank NationalTrust Company, as Trusteefor Ameriquest MortgageSecurities Inc., Asset-Backed Pass-Through Cer-tificates, Series 2004-R7,(the "Beneficiary"). Morecommonly known as 265CURTIS HILL ROAD,CHEHALIS, WA II. Noaction commenced by theBeneficiary of the Deed ofTrust is now pending toseek satisfaction of theobligation in any Court byreason of the Borrowers' orGrantor's default on theobligation secured by theDeed of Trust/Mortgage.III. The default(s) for whichthis foreclosure is made is/are as follows: failed topay payments which be-came due; together withlate charges due; . Thetotal amount of payments

1986 BAYLINER: openbow, 18.5ft, 125 hp inboard/outboard. Fish finder,down riggers, pole holders,life jackets, skiis, AM/FM,seats 6 plus, trolling plate,anchors, Bimini cover, trav-el cover, Calkin trailer$4000 firm. 360-262-0540

EXERCISE BIKE, goodc o n d i t i o n , $ 5 0 .360-904-8402

New Today!

YARD/GARAGE Sale! Re-model items, double panewindows, lawn equipment,furniture, power tools,miscellaneous! Saturday,May 19th only, 9-6pm. Noearly birds. 612 JacksonSt.

New Today!

WINLOCK: GARAGE sale!Friday & Saturday,May 18 & 19, 2012

9 a.m. - 4 p.m.245 Hart Rd.360-304-9406

Tools, fishing, equipment,canning supplies, books,clothes & more!

DONATE YOUR CAR,TRUCK OR BOAT TOHERITAGE FOR THEBLIND. Free 3 VacationTax Deductible, Free Tow-ing, All Paperwork TakeCare of. 877-213-9145(PNDC)

S A T U R D A Y O N L Y ,10am-3pm. 3733 PrairieAve. No early birds, pricedto sell!

1984 5.0 Ford Mustang:hatchback, 302 V8, runsbut needs work. Fun fixer$400. Call 360-324-2060.

SILVERCREEK: WE'REback, surplus plant sale!Saturday, 19th, 7am-3pm.Old Silvercreek Grange,Hwy 12.

New Today!

DEALERS, COLLECTORS& eBayer's dream! Livingestate sale! Fenton, Rose-ville, Fire King & China,paintings, prints, toys, mar-bles, Hot Wheels, furniture,school desks, piano, Foos-ball table, too much moreto list! Fair, firm prices, noearly sales! Numbers at7:30am. Sale 9am-5pm,Friday & Saturday, May 18& 19. 1155 Roanoke, offNorth Pearl, top of the hill.Lots of breakables, pleasewell behaved children only.

2004 MERCURY MarquisLS: 90K miles, clean,$4950/offer. 360-508-8748

1988 BUICK Regal: 2 door,85K original miles, 24-25m p g , $ 2 8 0 0 / o f f e r .360-262-0499

VENDORS WANTED for350 booth community ga-rage sale! Saturday, June30, SWW Fair & ExpoCenter, 2555 N NationalAve, Chehalis, WA. Marchsale had 442 venderbooths & over 8000 peoplein attendance. Sign upnow! 360-740-2655

the original Grantor(s), toSTEWART TITLE, as theoriginal Trustee, to securean obligation in favor ofAMERIQUEST MORT-GAGE COMPANY, as theoriginal Beneficiary. An As-signment recorded underAuditor's File No 3320736.The current Beneficiary is:Deutsche Bank NationalTrust Company, as Trusteefor Ameriquest MortgageSecurities Inc., Asset-Backed Pass-Through Cer-tificates, Series 2004-R7,(the "Beneficiary"). Morecommonly known as 265CURTIS HILL ROAD,CHEHALIS, WA II. Noaction commenced by theBeneficiary of the Deed ofTrust is now pending toseek satisfaction of theobligation in any Court byreason of the Borrowers' orGrantor's default on theobligation secured by theDeed of Trust/Mortgage.III. The default(s) for whichthis foreclosure is made is/are as follows: failed topay payments which be-came due; together withlate charges due; . Thetotal amount of paymentsdue is: $34,650.30; thetotal amount of late charg-es due is $1,286.10; thetotal amount of advancesmade is/are are $0.00. IV.The sum owing on theobligation secured by theDeed of Trust is: Thep r i n c i p a l s u m o f$195,040.24, together withinterest as provided in thenote or other instrumentsecured from March 1,2011, and such other costsand fees as are providedby statute. V. The abovedescribed real property willbe sold to satisfy theexpense of sale and theobligation secured by theDeed of Trust as providedby statute. Said sale will bemade without warranty,expressed or implied, re-garding title, possession orencumbrances on June 15,2012. The defaults referredto in Paragraph III must becured by June 4, 2012, (11days before the sale date)to cause a discontinuanceof the sale. The sale will bediscontinued and termina-ted if at any time beforeJune 4, 2012 (11 daysbefore the sale) thedefault(s) as set forth inParagraph III is/are curedand the Trustee's fees andcosts are paid. The salemay be terminated anytime after June 4, 2012 (11days before the sale date)and before the sale, by theBorrower, Grantor, anyGuarantor, or the holder ofany recorded junior lien orencumbrance paying theentire principal and interestsecured by the Deed ofTrust, plus costs, fees, andadvances, if any, madepursuant to the terms ofthe obligation and/or Deedof Trust, and curing allother defaults. VI. A writtenNotice of Default wastransmitted by the Benefi-ciary or Trustee to theBorrower and Grantor atthe following address(es):3523 PACIFIC AVE SEOLYMPIA, WA 98501 265CURTIS HILL ROAD CHE-HALIS, WA 98532 3523PACIFIC AVE SE OLYM-PIA, WA 98501-2120 265CURTIS HILL RD CHEHA-LIS, WA 98532-9157 byboth first class and certifiedmail on August 17, 2011,proof of which is in thepossession of the Trustee;and the Borrower andGrantor were personallyserved, if applicable, withsaid written Notice of De-fault or the written Noticeof Default was posted in aconspicuous place on thereal property described inParagraph I above, and theTrustee has possession ofproof of such service orposting. VII. The Trusteewhose name and addressare set forth below willprovide in writing to any-one requesting it, a state-ment of all costs and feesdue at any time prior to thesale. VIII The effect of thesale will be to deprive theGrantor and all those whohold by, through or underthe Grantor of all theirinterest in the above de-scribed property. IX. Any-one having any objectionsto this sale on any groundswhatsoever will be affordedan opportunity to be heardas to those objections ifthey bring a lawsuit torestrain the sale pursuantto RCW 61.24.130. Failureto bring such a lawsuit mayresult in a waiver of anyproper grounds for invalid-ating the Trustee's sale.NOTICE TO OCCUPANTSOR TENANTS - The pur-chaser at the Trustee'sSale is entitled to posses-sion of the property on the20th day following the sale,as against the Grantorunder the deed of trust (theowner) and anyone havingan interest junior to thedeed of trust, includingoccupants who are nottenants. After the 20th dayfollowing the sale the pur-chaser has the right to

due is: $34,650.30; thetotal amount of late charg-es due is $1,286.10; thetotal amount of advancesmade is/are are $0.00. IV.The sum owing on theobligation secured by theDeed of Trust is: Thep r i n c i p a l s u m o f$195,040.24, together withinterest as provided in thenote or other instrumentsecured from March 1,2011, and such other costsand fees as are providedby statute. V. The abovedescribed real property willbe sold to satisfy theexpense of sale and theobligation secured by theDeed of Trust as providedby statute. Said sale will bemade without warranty,expressed or implied, re-garding title, possession orencumbrances on June 15,2012. The defaults referredto in Paragraph III must becured by June 4, 2012, (11days before the sale date)to cause a discontinuanceof the sale. The sale will bediscontinued and termina-ted if at any time beforeJune 4, 2012 (11 daysbefore the sale) thedefault(s) as set forth inParagraph III is/are curedand the Trustee's fees andcosts are paid. The salemay be terminated anytime after June 4, 2012 (11days before the sale date)and before the sale, by theBorrower, Grantor, anyGuarantor, or the holder ofany recorded junior lien orencumbrance paying theentire principal and interestsecured by the Deed ofTrust, plus costs, fees, andadvances, if any, madepursuant to the terms ofthe obligation and/or Deedof Trust, and curing allother defaults. VI. A writtenNotice of Default wastransmitted by the Benefi-ciary or Trustee to theBorrower and Grantor atthe following address(es):3523 PACIFIC AVE SEOLYMPIA, WA 98501 265CURTIS HILL ROAD CHE-HALIS, WA 98532 3523PACIFIC AVE SE OLYM-PIA, WA 98501-2120 265CURTIS HILL RD CHEHA-LIS, WA 98532-9157 byboth first class and certifiedmail on August 17, 2011,proof of which is in thepossession of the Trustee;and the Borrower andGrantor were personallyserved, if applicable, withsaid written Notice of De-fault or the written Noticeof Default was posted in aconspicuous place on thereal property described inParagraph I above, and theTrustee has possession ofproof of such service orposting. VII. The Trusteewhose name and addressare set forth below willprovide in writing to any-one requesting it, a state-ment of all costs and feesdue at any time prior to thesale. VIII The effect of thesale will be to deprive theGrantor and all those whohold by, through or underthe Grantor of all theirinterest in the above de-scribed property. IX. Any-one having any objectionsto this sale on any groundswhatsoever will be affordedan opportunity to be heardas to those objections ifthey bring a lawsuit torestrain the sale pursuantto RCW 61.24.130. Failureto bring such a lawsuit mayresult in a waiver of anyproper grounds for invalid-ating the Trustee's sale.NOTICE TO OCCUPANTSOR TENANTS - The pur-chaser at the Trustee'sSale is entitled to posses-sion of the property on the20th day following the sale,as against the Grantorunder the deed of trust (theowner) and anyone havingan interest junior to thedeed of trust, includingoccupants who are nottenants. After the 20th dayfollowing the sale the pur-chaser has the right toevict occupants who arenot tenants by summaryproceedings under the Un-lawful Detainer Act, Chap-ter 59.12 RCW. Fortenant-occupied property,the purchaser shall providea tenant with written noticein accordance with RCW61.24.060; SALE INFOR-MATION CAN BE OB-TAINED ON LINE ATwww.lpsasap.com AUTO-MATED SALES INFOR-MATION PLEASE CALL714.730.2727 DATED:March 12, 2012 FIDELITYNATIONAL TITLE INSUR-ANCE COMPANY, Trustee1920 Main Street, Suite1 1 2 0 I r v i n e , C A9 2 6 1 4 P h o n e N o :949-252-4900 Juan Enri-quez, Authorized SignatureA-4215731 05/17/2012, 06/07/2012 . which is subjectto that certain Deed ofTrust dated May 24, 2004,recorded on June 2, 2004,as Instrument No. 3198120of Official Records in theOffice of the County Re-corder of Lewis County,WA from GALEN WEDINAND KATHLEEN WEDIN,HUSBAND AND WIFE as

New Today!

ADOPTION FUNDRAISERRummage Sale!

Saturday, May 19th, 8-5Fords Prairie Grange-

Reynolds Rd.HUGE sale, something foreveryone! Baby, kids,household, clothes of allsizes & much more! Don'tmiss this one! Cash only.

O N A L A S K A : F I N A LCLOSEOUT OF FEEDSTORE! 3363 State Hwy508, Saturday & Sunday9-6. Dog, cat, chicken &horse supplies. Electricfence accessories, western13" show saddle, old Pepsimachine, soda pop cooler,office furniture, steele pal-let racks, display racks,electric heaters, too muchto list! CASH ONLY !

New Today!

PORTRAIT PARTY &GARAGE SALE!

Shop for collectibles, cloth-ing and more! Get aprofessional outdoor por-trait of you, your child, petor family done by ourphotographer....only $10!!!

Saturday 5/19 & Sunday 5/20,

9am-6pm. 3105 Russell Road.

2000 HONDA Civic: 5speed, high miles, excel-lent condition inside & out,sun roof, black on black$4900. 360-789-8901

TONS OF miscellaneous!Come check it out! Friday,9-8pm & Saturday, 8-1pm.138 Sunnyside Dr.

C 14 � The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, May 17, 2012

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