1
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Sunrise Sunset Sunrise Sunset Sunrise Sunset Chelan Rocky Reach Dam Statistics through 4am today Yesterday 0.04" 0.53" 0.07" Month to date 0.21" 0.62" 0.31" Normal m-t-d 0.34" 0.77" 0.52" Year to date 2.10" 3.60" 2.17" Normal y-t-d 2.85" 4.93" 3.24" WENATCHEE OMAK MOSES LAKE Statistics 24 hours ending 4am today High 61 54 61 Low 39 33 42 Normal high 64 65 65 Normal low 42 38 38 Record high 82 (2012) 93 (1934) 83 (2012) Record low 30 (2008) 21 (1972) 28 (1985) Local almanac Washington’s forecast tomorrow 5-day forecast 61 / 43 Thursday Tonight Low 45 NCW forecast Rivers & lakes Plain Peshastin Monitor Rock Island Dam Water temperature COLUMBIA RIVER CFS CFS WENATCHEE RIVER Statistics taken today in feet. *in feet above sea level LAKE LAKE LEVEL* DISCHARGE Extremes WASHINGTON 24 hours ending 4 a.m. today U.S. (FOR THE 48 CONTIGUOUS STATES) 24 hours ending 4 a.m. today Temperature trend Air quality index Yesterday City Hi Lo Prcp Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Hi Lo W wenatcheeworld.com Port Angeles 44 / 54 Olympia 47 / 56 Richland 49 / 66 Chelan 44 / 59 Seattle 47 / 56 Omak 41 / 58 Colville 35 / 56 Ephrata 43 / 63 Leavenworth 35 / 61 Northwest cities New 4/29 Shown are tonight’s lows and tomorrow’s highs and weather. Anchorage, AK 58 37 0.00" 51 35 s 50 35 s 53 34 mc Astoria, OR 55 46 0.95" 52 47 ra 53 44 sh 52 43 sh Bellingham, WA 55 46 0.02" 55 47 ra 54 45 sh 55 44 sh Bend, OR 50 36 0.00" 52 38 rs 52 35 ra 47 33 mc Butte, MT 63 29 0.51" 39 28 sn 52 29 ra 52 30 sh Coeur d’Alene, ID 50 32 0.00" 50 40 rs 53 39 t 57 39 sh Colville, WA 53 26 0.16" 57 35 rs 56 37 t 62 39 sh Coos Bay, OR 55 46 0.34" 55 50 ra 57 43 ra 54 41 sh Crescent City, CA 55 47 0.39" 51 49 ra 53 45 ra 52 44 t Elko, NV 59 25 0.06" 54 31 pc 64 38 pc 57 35 sh Ellensburg, WA 55 33 0.00" 56 39 mc 57 36 ra 55 36 mc Ephrata, WA 61 38 0.07" 60 43 pc 63 38 sh 62 39 pc Eugene, OR 56 44 0.12" 55 47 ra 54 41 sh 56 39 sh Eureka, CA 57 48 0.03" 57 50 ra 56 47 ra 53 44 t Friday Harbor, WA 55 41 Trace 54 43 ra 54 42 sh 56 41 sh Hanford, WA 64 44 0.16" 63 45 pc 65 40 ra 64 41 mc Idaho Falls, ID 73 26 0.22" 50 37 pc 59 40 ra 62 38 sh Kennewick, WA 64 46 0.10" 63 45 pc 65 40 ra 64 41 mc Klamath Falls, OR 49 29 0.01" 51 37 pc 51 34 ra 44 31 rs Lewiston, ID 58 39 0.14" 59 47 sh 62 45 t 62 42 sh Medford, OR 58 45 0.12" 63 48 ra 62 43 ra 58 41 sh Missoula, MT 59 36 0.05" 47 34 rs 57 36 sh 59 39 sh Olympia, WA 53 42 0.32" 54 47 ra 56 42 sh 60 41 sh Pendleton, OR 57 37 0.08" 58 44 sh 59 40 ra 59 39 mc Pocatello, ID 73 26 0.40" 50 43 pc 61 44 ra 61 43 sh Pt. Angeles, WA 54 39 0.09" 52 44 ra 54 43 sh 54 43 sh Portland, OR 55 45 0.26" 57 48 ra 60 42 sh 61 41 sh Pullman, WA 50 34 0.12" 51 41 ra 54 40 t 55 38 sh Redding, CA 68 42 0.00" 68 49 pc 68 46 sh 59 43 sh Reno, NV 56 36 0.00" 65 41 s 66 41 pc 52 36 sh St. Helens, OR 53 46 0.28" 53 46 ra 58 40 sh 58 40 sh Salem, OR 57 45 0.19" 56 48 ra 59 42 sh 59 40 sh Seattle, WA 54 43 0.39" 55 47 ra 56 45 sh 55 44 sh Spokane, WA 52 32 0.09" 53 39 rs 56 39 t 57 40 sh Tacoma, WA 53 42 0.42" 55 46 ra 56 45 sh 57 43 sh The Dalles, OR 61 42 0.00" 60 47 sh 60 42 ra 59 42 mc Tillamook, OR 54 46 0.52" 55 47 ra 56 43 sh 55 42 sh Twin Falls, ID 60 35 0.20" 55 40 s 60 43 cl 58 40 sh Vancouver, WA 53 46 0.28" 54 47 ra 57 42 sh 58 41 sh Victoria, BC 57 42 0.00" 55 46 ra 55 43 ra 55 43 cl Walla Walla, WA 58 41 0.16" 57 46 sh 60 43 ra 60 43 mc Yakima, WA 61 35 Trace 59 40 mc 61 37 ra 60 37 mc Weather now Yakima 40 / 61 Department of Transportation advisory for mountain pass and road conditions: 511 or 1-800-695-7623 Latest forecast, pass cameras and links to additional weather sites: wenatcheeworld.com Tonight Tomorrow Friday Wenatchee Valley Columbia Basin Lake Chelan 45 60 / 43 61 / 39 Waterville Plateau The Okanogan Mission Ridge Stevens Pass Leavenworth Portland 48 / 60 Rain Likely Precip Chance: 60% T-storms Likely Precip Chance: 70% World cities s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, mc-mostly cloudy, cl-cloudy, t-thunderstorms, ra-rain sh-showers, sn-snow, fl-flurries, w-wind, m-missing Highest: 64 at Pasco Lowest: 26 at Deer Park Wettest: 0.58" at Fort Lewis YESTERDAY TODAY YESTERDAY TODAY CFS CFS Friday Today Tomorrow Yesterday pollen count Trees: Moderate Grasses: Low Weeds: Low Courtesy of Dr. Bradley Cromar, of the Wenatchee Valley Medical Center 1087.73 90 703.89 180000 n/a 182400 n/a 44 3,320 3,360 4,200 4,260 4,460 4,540 Spokane 39 / 56 Pullman 41 / 54 Walla Walla 46 / 60 Wenatchee 45 / 61 Longview 47 / 57 Vancouver 47 / 57 Highest: 97 at Phoenix, Ariz. Lowest: 16 at Stanley, Idaho Wettest: 1.02" at Caribou, Maine Bellingham 47 / 54 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 and location of frontal systems at noon. L L H H L L 61 / 40 Friday Partly Cloudy Precip Chance: 20% 64 / 40 Saturday Partly Cloudy Precip Chance: 10% 66 / 41 Sunday Mostly Cloudy Precip Chance: 20% Tonight Tomorrow Friday 38 63 / 36 64 / 36 Tonight Tomorrow Friday 41 61 / 37 64 / 39 Tonight Tomorrow Friday 34 40 / 30 41 / 31 Tonight Tomorrow Friday 49 65 / 44 64 / 43 Tonight Tomorrow Friday 38 53 / 33 52 / 34 Tonight Tomorrow Friday 36 55 / 33 54 / 33 Tonight Tomorrow Friday 35 61 / 35 61 / 36 Last 5/21 First 5/6 Full 5/14 Today: 5, Good Monitoring site: Fifth Street, Wenatchee 0-50 Good, 51-100 Moderate, 101-150 Unhealthy for sensitive groups, 151-200 Unhealthy, 201-300 Very Unhealthy, 301-500 Hazardous 5:54 a.m. 8:04 p.m. 2:58 a.m. 1:53 p.m. 5:52 a.m. 8:05 p.m. 5:50 a.m. 8:06 p.m. 5:49 a.m. 8:08 p.m. weather key: Albany 70 43 .02 55 31 sh 59 33 s Albuquerque 81 58 78 40 s 77 45 s Atlanta 72 56 .04 75 48 s 78 60 s Austin 85 53 86 65 pc 86 67 s Baltimore 76 46 .26 62 41 s 68 48 s Bismarck 72 50 .03 64 36 t 62 35 sh Boise 52 32 .36 56 41 mc 59 44 t Boston 73 50 .05 58 41 t 58 40 s Chicago 61 33 47 43 pc 66 48 t Cleveland 63 40 49 33 pc 60 48 s Dallas 84 60 83 66 s 82 61 pc Denver 80 54 66 37 pc 65 43 s Des Moines 67 50 62 52 t 66 44 t Detroit 57 38 54 38 s 56 45 s Duluth 53 30 44 34 pc 42 33 rs Fairbanks 55 36 51 26 s 51 29 pc Honolulu 84 75 85 74 s 86 74 s Houston 87 63 84 65 s 83 66 pc Kansas City 69 54 75 60 pc 70 50 t Las Vegas 84 63 78 60 s 86 62 s Los Angeles 69 58 75 55 s 73 56 s Miami 85 66 82 70 s 83 73 s Milwaukee 57 33 47 36 pc 53 43 t Minneapolis 59 42 52 44 sh 58 40 sh Nashville 80 47 .01 71 44 s 78 66 s New Orleans 78 61 75 66 s 78 66 s New York 71 50 .01 59 38 pc 63 43 s Oklahoma City 81 49 85 62 s 78 54 s Omaha 69 53 73 52 t 69 47 t Orlando 82 64 86 66 s 87 66 pc Palm Springs 89 63 86 62 s 89 63 s Philadelphia 76 49 60 39 s 63 43 s Phoenix ARE O T AND 86 60 s 90 62 s City Yesterday Hi Lo Prcp Today Hi Lo W Tomorrow Hi Lo W City Yesterday Hi Lo Prcp Today Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Tomorrow Pittsburgh 69 40 .36 53 31 pc 64 50 s Portland, ME 60 44 .12 55 37 sh 55 35 s Raleigh 83 56 70 39 s 70 52 s Rapid City 76 51 64 38 s 63 41 s Sacramento 69 41 71 52 pc 74 53 pc St.Louis 69 47 70 52 s 72 50 t Salt Lake City 77 40 .30 53 41 rs 67 48 mc San Diego 68 59 68 59 pc 67 60 pc San Francisco 63 52 65 50 pc 63 51 mc Santa Fe 78 47 69 36 s 66 40 s Sioux Falls 66 49 68 48 t 67 40 t Tampa 76 65 83 67 s 84 65 s Tucson 94 64 86 58 s 87 61 s Washington, DC 72 51 .03 64 41 s 69 49 s City Today Hi Lo W Today Hi Lo W Today Hi Lo W Today Hi Lo W Today Hi Lo W Acapulco 93 76 pc Athens 72 61 s Auckland 66 58 t Bangkok 96 81 t Beijing 88 61 s Berlin 63 47 pc Buenos Aires 71 51 s Cairo 91 63 s Dhahran 98 80 pc Geneva 61 45 ra Hong Kong 80 73 t Jerusalem 83 59 s Johannesburg 72 48 s Kuwait City 100 81 pc London 59 44 sh Manila 91 79 s Mexico City 80 55 t Moscow 70 49 pc Nairobi 80 59 pc Oslo 53 35 sh Paris 61 46 sh Prague 62 45 sh Rio de Janeiro 82 72 t Rome 69 54 s Santiago 71 66 cl Seoul 73 50 s Sydney 72 55 sh Tel Aviv 78 65 s Tokyo 68 58 sh Vienna 66 48 s Warsaw 65 48 sh Winnipeg 56 38 ra Zurich 61 44 sh National cities JINDO, SOUTH KOREA S. Korea ferry toll hits 150 as search gets tougher The grim work of recovering bodies from the submerged South Korea ferry proceeded rapidly today, with the official death toll reaching 150, though a government official said divers must rip through cabin walls to retrieve more victims. The victims are overwhelmingly students of a single high school in Ansan, near Seoul. More than three-quarters of the 323 students are dead or missing, while nearly two-thirds of the other 153 people on board the ferry Sewol when it sank one week ago survived. CAIRO, EGYPT Bomb, shooting in Egypt kills 2 police officers A senior Egyptian police officer was killed by a bomb placed under his car in a western Cairo suburb today, the latest in a series of targeted attacks on police and the military as Islamic militant groups keep up a campaign of violence since last summer’s ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi. Brig. Gen. Ahmed Zaki was the second police officer of that rank killed this month in a bombing, a sign of how the violence has shifted from high profile suicide and car bombings against police installation toward more low-level attacks on individual officers or small police posts. Also today, a police lieutenant was killed in a gunbattle that erupted as security forces raided a militant hideout near the Mediterranean coastal city of Alexandria. Al-Qaida-inspired militant groups have claimed responsi- bility for most of the attacks, saying that their bombings and shootings are to avenge the fierce crackdown on Morsi’s Islamist supporters in which more than 1,300 people have been killed and thousands arrested. The government says suspected militants have killed more than 450 policemen and soldiers in clashes and attacks since July. Police say of those 262 were policemen. PERTH, AUSTRALIA Material that washed ashore examined in jet search Authorities say unidentified material that washed ashore in southwestern Australia is being examined for any link to the lost Malaysian plane. The search coordination center said today that police secured the material that washed ashore 6 miles east of Augusta in Western Australia. Its statement did not describe the material found. Briefly From World news services The Associated Press Four decades after John Wayne Gacy lured more than 30 young men and boys to his Chicago-area home and strangled them, his case has helped authorities solve another killing — one he didn’t commit. Investigators have identi- fied the remains of a man who in 1978 never returned to his home just a few miles from Gacy’s house. Though the news that 22-year-old Edward Beaudion of Chicago is believed to have been killed by a small-time Missouri crook named Jerry Jackson who died last year at age 62 comes too late to bring Jackson to justice, it answers a question Beaudion’s family has spent decades asking. “I always thought he was killed but you still aren’t sure until you get the proof,” said Beaudion’s father, Louis. Beaudion was driving his sister’s car on July 23, 1978, when he dropped a friend off and told her he was heading home. No one ever heard from him again. That August, Jackson was taken into custody in Caruthersville, Mo., after he was found driving the car, which Beaudion’s family had reported stolen. Jackson was extradited to Chicago, where police said he told them he had met Beaudion on July 23 in downtown Chicago and had punched him in the face during an altercation, rendering him unconscious. Police said he told them he stuffed Beaudion’s body in the car, drove to a wooded area about 15 miles southwest of Chicago and dumped it. When he took police to the area, a search for the body came up empty. Without a body, police didn’t charge him in Beaudion’s death, settling for auto theft instead and a four-year prison sentence. In 2008, hikers discovered a partial skeleton in a forest preserve — in the same general area where Jackson had taken police years before. With little more than shreds of clothing and no indication of a cause of death, the inves- tigation went nowhere. The bones, one of which had an orthopedic screw in it, were taken to the county medical examiner’s office. Three years later, Dart’s office exhumed eight of Gacy’s unidentified victims from the 1970s to test DNA. And the sheriff asked that relatives of young men who disappeared about the time Gacy was committing slayings to submit DNA samples for comparison. “I didn’t think Gacy killed him but we figured we’d go ahead and try,” said Beaudion’s sister, Ruth Rodriguez. Tests ruled out Gacy as her brother’s killer. In the meantime, sheriff ’s detective Jason Moran was among those working with the medical examiner’s office to clean up the operation in the wake of embarrassing revelations about stacked bodies and remains tossed haphazardly in boxes. As a result of that work, the office shipped some unidentified bones to the same lab where Moran had earlier sent DNA samples from Beaudion’s relatives as part of the Gacy investigation. Then earlier this year, the lab reported a “genetic associ- ation” between the bones and Beaudion’s relatives’ DNA Moran said he interviewed Beaudion’s father and sister, who confirmed Beaudion had an orthopedic screw in his left knee. Beaudion’s family did not exactly find justice, but they were able to identify their loved one’s remains and get closer to knowing what happened to him. Detective Moran said he recalls the moment when he and Sheriff Dart recently took the family out to the spot where the bones were found. “He (Louis Beaudion) starts crying and opens a bag that has a cross in it (and) he gets down on one knee and with a little hammer pounded this cross into the ground,” Moran said. “This guy, 36 years after his son is killed, he’s crying like he went missing yesterday and then he grabbed my arm and said, ‘Thank you.’ ” Gacy case helps in unsolved death Edward Beaudion Jerry Jackson “... 36 years after his son is killed, he’s crying like he went missing yesterday and then he grabbed my arm and said, ‘Thank you.’ ” J ASON MORAN Detective, Cook County Sheriff ’s Office B5 The Wenatchee World Nation World Wednesday, April 23, 2014 93.9 WENATCHEE 6:00-10:00 am Weekdays Dave in the Morning Show L I ST E N T O W I N on the Wenatchee Valley 93.9 FM Lake Chelan Valley 95.3 FM Methow Valley 106.3 FM Brewster/Pateros Valley 101.3 FM Okanogan Valley 101.9 FM MENU in Phone Books & GoldenEastWenatchee.com Delicious Lunch Specials (Served until 3 pm!) Daily Dinner Specials & Combos Two 7-Course Family Meals (Min. 2!) Hot & Spicy Low Fat Vegetarian Open Tuesday to Sunday! (509)884-1510 230 Grant Road, East Wenatchee DINE IN! ORDER OUT! Get More For Your $$!! Come Celebrate Apple Blossom With Us! MCW COINS IS NOW BUYINg • GOLD JEWELRY • SILVER FLATWARE • GOLD CROWNS • COINS • SILVER By Appt. Only • (509)393-6570 Did you make the same resolution again this year? What you need is the right program with the right support. We can help! Get results that will last! Free Consultation 630 N Chelan Ave. Suite A3 Wenatchee, WA 98801 (509) 663-5102 Lobby hours: Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Circulation phone hours: Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Sunday 6:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Call: 663-5161 or 1-800-572-4433 Fax: 662-5413 Classified: 661-1111 Newsroom: 665-1164 wenatcheeworld.com Mailed in state: $19 Mailed out of state: $21 Published daily except Monday, Saturday and Christmas by The World Publishing Co., 14 N. Mission St., Wenatchee, WA 98801. Periodical postage paid at Wenatchee, WA. (USPS 674-340) POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Wenatchee World, Circulation Department, P.O. Box 1511, Wenatchee, WA 98807. The World is a member of Certified Audit of Circulation. x The Wenatchee World uses recycled newsprint and soy ink. From your friends at RiverWest! Don’t forget to call your Mom! WINDOW FASHIONS & OOTHILLS BE INFORMED & INSPIRED Subscribe to all six editions published annually for just $14.99. Subscribe online at wenatcheeworld.com/subscribe/foothills/ or call 509-663-5161 to begin your subscription.

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Sunrise

Sunset

Moonrise

Moonset

Sunrise

Sunset

Sunrise

Sunset

Sunrise

Sunset

ChelanRocky Reach Dam

Statistics through 4am today

Yesterday 0.04" 0.53" 0.07"Month to date 0.21" 0.62" 0.31"Normal m-t-d 0.34" 0.77" 0.52"Year to date 2.10" 3.60" 2.17"Normal y-t-d 2.85" 4.93" 3.24"

WENATCHEE OMAK MOSES LAKE

Statistics 24 hours ending 4am today

High 61 54 61Low 39 33 42Normal high 64 65 65Normal low 42 38 38Record high 82 (2012) 93 (1934) 83 (2012)Record low 30 (2008) 21 (1972) 28 (1985)

Local almanac

Washington’s forecast tomorrow5-day forecast

61 / 43

Thursday

Tonight

Low 45

NCW forecast

Rivers & lakes

PlainPeshastinMonitor

Rock Island Dam Water temperature

COLUMBIA RIVER CFS CFS

WENATCHEE RIVER

Statistics taken today in feet.

*in feet above sea level

LAKE LAKE LEVEL* DISCHARGE

ExtremesWASHINGTON24 hours ending 4 a.m. today

U.S. (FOR THE 48 CONTIGUOUS STATES)24 hours ending 4 a.m. today

Temperature trend

Air quality index

YesterdayCity Hi Lo Prcp Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

wenatcheeworld.com

Port Angeles44 / 54

Olympia47 / 56

Richland49 / 66

Chelan44 / 59Seattle

47 / 56

Omak41 / 58

Colville35 / 56

Ephrata43 / 63

Leavenworth35 / 61

Northwest cities

New

4/29

Shown are tonight’s lows and tomorrow’s highs and weather.

Anchorage, AK 58 37 0.00" 51 35 s 50 35 s 53 34 mcAstoria, OR 55 46 0.95" 52 47 ra 53 44 sh 52 43 shBellingham, WA 55 46 0.02" 55 47 ra 54 45 sh 55 44 shBend, OR 50 36 0.00" 52 38 rs 52 35 ra 47 33 mcButte, MT 63 29 0.51" 39 28 sn 52 29 ra 52 30 shCoeur d’Alene, ID 50 32 0.00" 50 40 rs 53 39 t 57 39 shColville, WA 53 26 0.16" 57 35 rs 56 37 t 62 39 shCoos Bay, OR 55 46 0.34" 55 50 ra 57 43 ra 54 41 shCrescent City, CA 55 47 0.39" 51 49 ra 53 45 ra 52 44 tElko, NV 59 25 0.06" 54 31 pc 64 38 pc 57 35 shEllensburg, WA 55 33 0.00" 56 39 mc 57 36 ra 55 36 mcEphrata, WA 61 38 0.07" 60 43 pc 63 38 sh 62 39 pcEugene, OR 56 44 0.12" 55 47 ra 54 41 sh 56 39 shEureka, CA 57 48 0.03" 57 50 ra 56 47 ra 53 44 tFriday Harbor, WA 55 41 Trace 54 43 ra 54 42 sh 56 41 shHanford, WA 64 44 0.16" 63 45 pc 65 40 ra 64 41 mcIdaho Falls, ID 73 26 0.22" 50 37 pc 59 40 ra 62 38 shKennewick, WA 64 46 0.10" 63 45 pc 65 40 ra 64 41 mcKlamath Falls, OR 49 29 0.01" 51 37 pc 51 34 ra 44 31 rsLewiston, ID 58 39 0.14" 59 47 sh 62 45 t 62 42 shMedford, OR 58 45 0.12" 63 48 ra 62 43 ra 58 41 shMissoula, MT 59 36 0.05" 47 34 rs 57 36 sh 59 39 shOlympia, WA 53 42 0.32" 54 47 ra 56 42 sh 60 41 shPendleton, OR 57 37 0.08" 58 44 sh 59 40 ra 59 39 mcPocatello, ID 73 26 0.40" 50 43 pc 61 44 ra 61 43 shPt. Angeles, WA 54 39 0.09" 52 44 ra 54 43 sh 54 43 shPortland, OR 55 45 0.26" 57 48 ra 60 42 sh 61 41 shPullman, WA 50 34 0.12" 51 41 ra 54 40 t 55 38 shRedding, CA 68 42 0.00" 68 49 pc 68 46 sh 59 43 shReno, NV 56 36 0.00" 65 41 s 66 41 pc 52 36 shSt. Helens, OR 53 46 0.28" 53 46 ra 58 40 sh 58 40 shSalem, OR 57 45 0.19" 56 48 ra 59 42 sh 59 40 shSeattle, WA 54 43 0.39" 55 47 ra 56 45 sh 55 44 shSpokane, WA 52 32 0.09" 53 39 rs 56 39 t 57 40 shTacoma, WA 53 42 0.42" 55 46 ra 56 45 sh 57 43 shThe Dalles, OR 61 42 0.00" 60 47 sh 60 42 ra 59 42 mcTillamook, OR 54 46 0.52" 55 47 ra 56 43 sh 55 42 shTwin Falls, ID 60 35 0.20" 55 40 s 60 43 cl 58 40 shVancouver, WA 53 46 0.28" 54 47 ra 57 42 sh 58 41 shVictoria, BC 57 42 0.00" 55 46 ra 55 43 ra 55 43 clWalla Walla, WA 58 41 0.16" 57 46 sh 60 43 ra 60 43 mcYakima, WA 61 35 Trace 59 40 mc 61 37 ra 60 37 mc

Weather now

Yakima40 / 61

Department of Transportation advisory for mountain passand road conditions: 511 or 1-800-695-7623Latest forecast, pass cameras and links to additional weather sites: wenatcheeworld.com

Tonight Tomorrow Friday

Wenatchee Valley Columbia Basin

Lake Chelan 45 60 / 43 61 / 39

Waterville Plateau

The Okanogan Mission Ridge

Stevens Pass Leavenworth

Portland48 / 60

Rain LikelyPrecip Chance: 60%

T-storms LikelyPrecip Chance: 70%

World cities

s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, mc-mostly cloudy, cl-cloudy, t-thunderstorms, ra-rain sh-showers, sn-snow, fl-flurries, w-wind, m-missing

Highest: 64 at PascoLowest: 26 at Deer ParkWettest: 0.58" at Fort Lewis

YESTERDAY TODAY

YESTERDAY TODAY CFS CFS

FridayToday Tomorrow

Yesterday pollen countTrees: ModerateGrasses: LowWeeds: Low

Courtesy of Dr. Bradley Cromar, of the Wenatchee Valley Medical Center

1087.73 90 703.89 180000

n/a 182400 n/a 44

3,320 3,360 4,200 4,260 4,460 4,540

Spokane39 / 56

Pullman41 / 54

Walla Walla46 / 60

Wenatchee45 / 61

Longview47 / 57

Vancouver47 / 57

Highest: 97 at Phoenix, Ariz.Lowest: 16 at Stanley, IdahoWettest: 1.02" at Caribou, Maine

Bellingham47 / 54

40s30s20s10s

90s80s70s60s50s

100s110s

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

HH

L

L

61 / 40

FridayPartly CloudyPrecip Chance: 20%

64 / 40

SaturdayPartly CloudyPrecip Chance: 10%

66 / 41

SundayMostly CloudyPrecip Chance: 20%

Tonight Tomorrow Friday

38 63 / 36 64 / 36

Tonight Tomorrow Friday

41 61 / 37 64 / 39

Tonight Tomorrow Friday

34 40 / 30 41 / 31

Tonight Tomorrow Friday

49 65 / 44 64 / 43

Tonight Tomorrow Friday

38 53 / 33 52 / 34

Tonight Tomorrow Friday

36 55 / 33 54 / 33

Tonight Tomorrow Friday

35 61 / 35 61 / 36

Last

5/21

First

5/6

Full

5/14

Today: 5, GoodMonitoring site: Fifth Street, Wenatchee 0-50 Good, 51-100 Moderate, 101-150 Unhealthy for sensitive groups, 151-200 Unhealthy, 201-300 Very Unhealthy, 301-500 Hazardous

5:54 a.m.

8:04 p.m.

2:58 a.m.

1:53 p.m.

5:52 a.m.

8:05 p.m.

5:50 a.m.

8:06 p.m.

5:49 a.m.

8:08 p.m.

weather key:

Albany 70 43 .02 55 31 sh 59 33 sAlbuquerque 81 58 78 40 s 77 45 sAtlanta 72 56 .04 75 48 s 78 60 sAustin 85 53 86 65 pc 86 67 sBaltimore 76 46 .26 62 41 s 68 48 sBismarck 72 50 .03 64 36 t 62 35 shBoise 52 32 .36 56 41 mc 59 44 tBoston 73 50 .05 58 41 t 58 40 sChicago 61 33 47 43 pc 66 48 tCleveland 63 40 49 33 pc 60 48 sDallas 84 60 83 66 s 82 61 pcDenver 80 54 66 37 pc 65 43 sDes Moines 67 50 62 52 t 66 44 tDetroit 57 38 54 38 s 56 45 sDuluth 53 30 44 34 pc 42 33 rsFairbanks 55 36 51 26 s 51 29 pcHonolulu 84 75 85 74 s 86 74 sHouston 87 63 84 65 s 83 66 pcKansas City 69 54 75 60 pc 70 50 tLas Vegas 84 63 78 60 s 86 62 sLos Angeles 69 58 75 55 s 73 56 sMiami 85 66 82 70 s 83 73 sMilwaukee 57 33 47 36 pc 53 43 tMinneapolis 59 42 52 44 sh 58 40 shNashville 80 47 .01 71 44 s 78 66 sNew Orleans 78 61 75 66 s 78 66 sNew York 71 50 .01 59 38 pc 63 43 sOklahoma City 81 49 85 62 s 78 54 sOmaha 69 53 73 52 t 69 47 tOrlando 82 64 86 66 s 87 66 pcPalm Springs 89 63 86 62 s 89 63 sPhiladelphia 76 49 60 39 s 63 43 sPhoenix ARE O T AND 86 60 s 90 62 s

CityYesterday

Hi Lo PrcpToday

Hi Lo WTomorrow Hi Lo W

CityYesterday

Hi Lo PrcpToday

Hi Lo WHi Lo WTomorrow

Pittsburgh 69 40 .36 53 31 pc 64 50 sPortland, ME 60 44 .12 55 37 sh 55 35 sRaleigh 83 56 70 39 s 70 52 sRapid City 76 51 64 38 s 63 41 sSacramento 69 41 71 52 pc 74 53 pcSt.Louis 69 47 70 52 s 72 50 tSalt Lake City 77 40 .30 53 41 rs 67 48 mcSan Diego 68 59 68 59 pc 67 60 pcSan Francisco 63 52 65 50 pc 63 51 mcSanta Fe 78 47 69 36 s 66 40 sSioux Falls 66 49 68 48 t 67 40 tTampa 76 65 83 67 s 84 65 sTucson 94 64 86 58 s 87 61 sWashington, DC 72 51 .03 64 41 s 69 49 s

CityToday

Hi Lo WToday

Hi Lo WToday

Hi Lo WToday

Hi Lo WToday

Hi Lo WAcapulco 93 76 pcAthens 72 61 sAuckland 66 58 tBangkok 96 81 tBeijing 88 61 sBerlin 63 47 pcBuenos Aires 71 51 s

Cairo 91 63 sDhahran 98 80 pcGeneva 61 45 raHong Kong 80 73 tJerusalem 83 59 sJohannesburg 72 48 sKuwait City 100 81 pc

London 59 44 shManila 91 79 sMexico City 80 55 tMoscow 70 49 pcNairobi 80 59 pcOslo 53 35 shParis 61 46 sh

Prague 62 45 shRio de Janeiro 82 72 tRome 69 54 sSantiago 71 66 clSeoul 73 50 sSydney 72 55 shTel Aviv 78 65 s

Tokyo 68 58 shVienna 66 48 sWarsaw 65 48 shWinnipeg 56 38 raZurich 61 44 sh

National cities

JINDO, SOUTH KOREA

S. Korea ferry toll hits 150 as search gets tougherThe grim work of recovering bodies from the submerged

South Korea ferry proceeded rapidly today, with the offi cial death toll reaching 150, though a government offi cial said divers must rip through cabin walls to retrieve more victims.

The victims are overwhelmingly students of a single high school in Ansan, near Seoul. More than three-quarters of the 323 students are dead or missing, while nearly two-thirds of the other 153 people on board the ferry Sewol when it sank one week ago survived.

CAIRO, EGYPT

Bomb, shooting in Egypt kills 2 police offi cersA senior Egyptian police offi cer was killed by a bomb

placed under his car in a western Cairo suburb today, the latest in a series of targeted attacks on police and the military as Islamic militant groups keep up a campaign of violence since last summer’s ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.

Brig. Gen. Ahmed Zaki was the second police offi cer of that rank killed this month in a bombing, a sign of how the violence has shifted from high profi le suicide and car bombings against police installation toward more low-level attacks on individual offi cers or small police posts.

Also today, a police lieutenant was killed in a gunbattle that erupted as security forces raided a militant hideout near the Mediterranean coastal city of Alexandria.

Al-Qaida-inspired militant groups have claimed responsi-bility for most of the attacks, saying that their bombings and shootings are to avenge the fi erce crackdown on Morsi’s Islamist supporters in which more than 1,300 people have been killed and thousands arrested.

The government says suspected militants have killed more than 450 policemen and soldiers in clashes and attacks since July. Police say of those 262 were policemen.

PERTH, AUSTRALIA

Material that washed ashore examined in jet searchAuthorities say unidentifi ed material that washed ashore

in southwestern Australia is being examined for any link to the lost Malaysian plane.

The search coordination center said today that police secured the material that washed ashore 6 miles east of Augusta in Western Australia. Its statement did not describe the material found.

Briefl y From World news services

The Associated Press

Four decades after John Wayne Gacy lured more than 30 young men and boys to his Chicago-area home and strangled them, his case has helped authorities solve another killing — one he didn’t commit.

Investigators have identi-fi ed the remains of a man who in 1978 never returned to his home just a few miles from Gacy’s house. Though the news that 22-year-old Edward Beaudion of Chicago is believed to have been killed by a small-time Missouri crook named Jerry Jackson who died last year at age 62 comes too late to bring Jackson to justice, it answers a question Beaudion’s family has spent decades asking.

“I always thought he was killed but you still aren’t sure until you get the proof,” said Beaudion’s father, Louis.

Beaudion was driving his sister’s car on July 23, 1978, when he dropped a friend off and told her he was heading home. No one ever heard from him again.

That August, Jackson was taken into custody in Caruthersville, Mo., after he was found driving the car, which Beaudion’s family had reported stolen.

Jackson was extradited to Chicago, where police said he told them he had met Beaudion on July 23 in downtown Chicago and had punched him in the face during an altercation,

rendering him unconscious. Police said he told them he stuff ed Beaudion’s body in the car, drove to a wooded area about 15 miles southwest of Chicago and dumped it.

When he took police to the area, a search for the body came up empty. Without a body, police didn’t charge him in Beaudion’s death, settling for auto theft instead and a four-year prison sentence.

In 2008, hikers discovered a partial skeleton in a forest preserve — in the same general area where Jackson had taken police years before. With little more than shreds of clothing and no indication of a cause of death, the inves-tigation went nowhere. The bones, one of which had an orthopedic screw in it, were taken to the county medical examiner’s offi ce.

Three years later, Dart’s offi ce exhumed eight of Gacy’s unidentifi ed victims from the 1970s to test DNA. And the sheriff asked that relatives of young men who disappeared about the time Gacy was committing slayings to submit DNA samples for comparison.

“I didn’t think Gacy killed him but we fi gured

we’d go ahead and try,” said Beaudion’s sister, Ruth Rodriguez. Tests ruled out Gacy as her brother’s killer.

In the meantime, sheriff ’s detective Jason Moran was among those working with the medical examiner’s offi ce to clean up the operation in the wake of embarrassing revelations about stacked bodies and remains tossed haphazardly in boxes. As a result of that work, the offi ce shipped some unidentifi ed bones to the same lab where Moran had earlier sent DNA samples from Beaudion’s relatives as part of the Gacy investigation.

Then earlier this year, the lab reported a “genetic associ-ation” between the bones and Beaudion’s relatives’ DNA Moran said he interviewed Beaudion’s father and sister, who confi rmed Beaudion had an orthopedic screw in his left knee.

Beaudion’s family did not

exactly fi nd justice, but they were able to identify their loved one’s remains and get closer to knowing what happened to him. Detective Moran said he recalls the moment when he and Sheriff Dart recently took the family out to the spot where the bones were found.

“He (Louis Beaudion) starts crying and opens a bag that has a cross in it (and) he gets down on one knee and with a little hammer pounded this cross into the ground,” Moran said. “This guy, 36 years after his son is killed, he’s crying like he went missing yesterday and then he grabbed my arm and said, ‘Thank you.’ ”

Gacy case helps in unsolved death

Edward Beaudion Jerry Jackson

“... 36 years after his son is killed, he’s crying like he went missing yesterday and then he grabbed my arm and said, ‘Thank you.’ ”JASON MORANDetective, Cook County Sheriff ’s Offi ce

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