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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (May 25, 2015)
2A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, MAY 25, 2015 &HOHEULW\,Q¿QLW\SUHPLHUVLQ$VWRULD Final spring cruise ship is a newbie to coast By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian A large local delegation with representatives from As- toria, Warrenton and Clatsop County was at the docks Sun- day morning. They gathered at the Port of Astoria’s security gate, with Port of Astoria Exec- utive Director Jim Knight, Commissioner Stephen Fulton and Administrative Assis- tant Esther Jones, to greet the FUXLVH VKLS &HOHEULW\ ,Q¿QLW\ RQLWV¿UVWVWRSLQ$VWRULD Included in the delegation were Astoria City Council or Cindy Price; her husband and Clatsop County District At- torney Joshua Marquis; Mary Iverson from Warrenton Fiber- Co.; physical therapist Lilly Lee from Columbia Memorial EDWARD STRATTON — The Daily Astorian The Port of Astoria welcomed the crew of the Celebrity Infinity on its maiden voyage to Astoria, including from, front left, Port of Astoria Executive Director Jim Knight, the ship’s captain, Michael Sympouras and Port Commis- sioner Stephen Fulton. Also in attendance were the ship’s navigation crew and dignitaries from the city and county. stopped in Astoria with 2,118 guests and 979 crew on its The Celebrity Infinity, seen from the Port of Astoria’s Pier 2, made its maiden voyage to way south from an Alaskan Astoria Sunday. and Canadian cruise, last stopping in Victoria, British +RVSLWDO 3RUW VHFXULW\ RI¿FHU bia River Cmdr. Doug Kaup, to meet Capt. Michael Sym- Columbia. From Astoria, it Bonnie Link; and retired U.S. along with his family. pouras and navigational crew. left Sunday evening for San Coast Guard Sector Colum- They ascended to the bridge 7KH &HOHEULW\ ,Q¿QLW\ Francisco, where it will start EDWARD STRATTON — The Daily Astorian ® ACCUWEATHER FORECAST FOR ASTORIA Astoria 5-Day Forecast Tonight Shown is tomorrow’s weather. Temperatures are tonight’s lows and tomorrow’s highs Partly cloudy 51° Tuesday The Dalles 53/79 Astoria 51/62 Portland 53/72 Corvallis 48/75 Eugene 46/73 Pendleton 49/76 Salem 50/73 Albany 49/74 Wednesday Low clouds breaking for some sun 62° 49° Burns 39/71 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 49° Friday Sunny Sunny to partly cloudy 50° 63° 50° Almanac Sun and Moon Astoria through Sunday. Temperatures High ........................................... 59° Low ............................................ 51° Normal high ............................... 61° Normal low ................................. 47° Precipitation Yesterday ................................ 0.05" Month to date .......................... 1.21" Normal month to date ............. 2.62" Year to date ........................... 26.58" Normal year to date .............. 32.66" Sunset tonight .................. Sunrise Tuesday .............. Moonrise today ................ Moonset today ................. Regional Cities Today Hi Lo W 71 38 t 71 37 t 66 51 pc 72 46 pc 59 51 c 73 38 t 81 50 pc 57 48 pc 62 51 pc City Baker City Bend Brookings Eugene Ilwaco Klamath Falls Medford Newport North Bend Hi 81 81 80 61 80 81 84 70 81 79 78 88 74 80 89 78 85 84 76 87 84 69 65 66 87 Today Lo W 70 t 62 c 64 t 44 c 63 c 66 c 59 s 48 sh 67 pc 65 c 62 c 67 pc 59 pc 69 t 79 t 66 t 75 t 67 pc 61 c 66 s 69 c 54 s 55 pc 52 c 69 s 8:52 p.m. 5:32 a.m. 1:00 p.m. 1:44 a.m. First Full Last New May 25 June 2 June 9 June 16 City Olympia Pendleton Portland Roseburg Salem Seaside Spokane Vancouver Yakima Today Hi Lo W 65 47 c 76 49 t 68 53 c 78 50 pc 71 50 pc 61 50 c 71 51 t 68 51 c 81 52 pc Tues. Hi Lo W 70 48 pc 76 52 s 72 54 pc 78 51 s 73 51 pc 64 49 pc 72 52 t 72 52 pc 81 53 t Tonight's Sky: First quarter moon at 10:19 a.m. Tues. Lo W 68 t 63 t 61 t 48 t 59 sh 66 t 62 s 52 pc 67 pc 64 t 59 pc 67 s 59 pc 67 t 77 pc 65 t 74 t 69 t 64 t 69 s 68 t 54 t 53 pc 54 pc 73 s erything from Easter goods to patio furniture. Meanwhile, U.S. exporters complained that their goods — including agricultural per- ishables — were stuck on the docks as foreign competitors ¿OOHG RUGHUV WKDW VKRXOG EH theirs. &DUJR LV DJDLQ ÀRZLQJ smoothly through 29 ports that handle about $1 trillion in imports or exports annually. Now the two sides must ZRUN WR UHVWRUH FRQ¿GHQFH that West Coast ports remain a reliable gateway for inter- national commerce. Import- ers and exporters will soon have another option in the ex- panded Panama Canal, which would allow larger ships to ply the route between the East and Gulf coasts and Asia. 3RUWV RQ WKH 3DFL¿F FRDVW RI Mexico and Canada also are vying for U.S. business. Saturday, May 30 HAGEMAN, Kenneth, Celebration of Life, QRRQWRSPDWWKH'HVGHPRQD&OXE Marine Drive in Astoria. Lotteries Source: Jim Todd, OMSI Tomorrow’s Tides Astoria / Port Docks Time High 8:16 a.m. 6.3 ft. 9:21 p.m. 7.5 ft. Time 2:35 a.m. 2:42 p.m. Low 2.7 ft. 1.5 ft. Tomorrow’s National Weather Hi 81 81 74 69 78 81 88 74 81 75 80 90 74 82 88 80 83 86 82 90 80 68 66 70 90 Earlier this week, the Pa- FL¿F0DULWLPH$VVRFLDWLRQRI shipping lines and port termi- LOS ANGELES — The nal operators said its mem- labor dispute that hobbled in- bers passed the contract. That ternational trade through West made the union’s approval the Coast seaports earlier this last step. \HDU RI¿FLDOO\ HQGHG )ULGD\ Ports from San Diego to when the union representing Seattle were all but shut down dockworkers announced its several months ago as the two PHPEHUV KDG UDWL¿HG D ¿YH sides haggled over the con- year contract. tract. Companies that accused Members of the Interna- workers of coordinated slow- tional Longshore and Ware- downs decided to cut their house Union voted 82 percent shifts, shuttering ports on in favor of the deal, according nights and weekends. to spokesman Craig Mer- The tit-for-tat led to long rilees. Union leaders had lines of ships queueing out- reached a tentative deal in side of harbors, waiting for February with the companies space at the docks. By the that own massive oceangoing time the U.S. secretary of la- ships that bring cargo to and bor had helped broker a tenta- from ports and operate the tive deal in February, several terminals where that cargo is dozen ships were anchored loaded and unloaded. outside the twin ports of Long $ERXWXQLRQPHP Beach and Los Angeles — the bers were eligible to vote. nation’s largest. They held ev- Memorial Under the Sky Tues. Hi Lo W 71 43 t 72 40 s 65 51 s 73 48 pc 62 50 pc 73 39 s 82 51 s 58 48 pc 62 52 pc National Cities City Atlanta Boston Chicago Denver Des Moines Detroit El Paso Fairbanks Honolulu Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Memphis Miami Nashville New Orleans New York Oklahoma City Philadelphia St. Louis Salt Lake City San Francisco Seattle Washington, DC Klamath Falls 38/73 Sunny 64° Thursday 64° Ontario 50/80 Bend 37/72 Medford 50/82 'RFNZRUNHUVXQLRQUDWL¿HV\HDUFRQWUDFW By JUSTIN PRITCHARD Associated Press Oregon Weather a cruise to Ketchikan, Alaska. The 965-foot, 14-year-old ship is run by Celebrity Cruis- es and registered in Malta. 7KH HTXLYDOHQW RI D ÀRDW ing, all-inclusive resort, it summers in Alaska and win- ters in South America. Fronts Cold Warm Stationary Showers T-Storms -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Rain Flurries Snow Ice Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities. Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice. K lem p Fam ily D en tistry... W e h elp keep fam ilies sm ilin g! K lem p Fam ily Dentistry now offers L ife Ch a n gin g D en tistry Tru D enta u ses m o d ern tech no lo gy and tech niq u es th at can d iagno se and treat sym p to m s, and p ro v id e lasting relief fro m d ental issu es th at yo u m ay h av e su ffered w ith fo r m any years! OREGON Sunday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 2-5-7-9 4 p.m.: 7 p.m.: 9-5-9-4 10 p.m.: Saturday’s Megabucks: Estimated jackpot: $4.2 million. Saturday’s Powerball: 3RZHU ball: 16, Power Play: 4 (VWLPDWHG MDFNSRW million. Saturday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 4 p.m.: 7 p.m.: 7-9-4-2 10 p.m.: Friday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 9-4-2-7 4 p.m.: 7 p.m.: 10 p.m.: WASHINGTON Sunday’s Daily Game: Sunday’s Keno: Sunday’s Match 4: Saturday’s Daily Game: Saturday’s Hit 5: Estimated jackpot: Saturday’s Keno: 04-06-08-12-14-22-25-26- 28-32-35-40-45-48-49-61-62- 69-74-79 Saturday’s Lotto: 11-14- Estimated jackpot: $1.2 million Saturday’s Match 4: Friday’s Daily Game: Friday’s Keno: Friday’s Match 4: 16-19 Friday’s Mega Millions: 0HJD%DOO Estimated jackpot: $194 million City Hall, 225 S. Main Ave. WEDNESDAY Astoria Parks and Recre- ation Board, 6:45 a.m., ARC, 1555 W. Marine Dr. Emergency Prepared- ness Training in Cannon Beach, 5 p.m., Cannon %HDFK &LW\ +DOO ( Gower St. Clatsop County Housing Authority Board, 5 p.m., Guy Boyington Building, 857 Commercial St. Public meetings TUESDAY Astoria Library Board, SP$VWRULD3XEOLF/L EUDU\ )ODJ 5RRP WK St. Warrenton City Com- mission, 6 p.m., Warrenton OBITUARY POLICY The Daily Astorian publishes paid obituaries. The obituary can include a small photo and, IRUYHWHUDQVDÀDJV\PERODWQRFKDUJH7KHGHDGOLQHIRUDOORELWXDULHVLVDPWKHEXVLQHVV day prior. Obituaries may be edited for spelling, proper punctuation and style. Death notices and upcoming services will be published at no charge. Notices must be submitted by 9 a.m. the day of publication. Obituaries and notices may be submitted online at www.dailyastorian.com/obituaryform, by email at ewilson@dailyastorian.com, placed via the funeral home or in person at The 'DLO\$VWRULDQ RI¿FH ([FKDQJH 6W LQ$VWRULD )RU PRUH LQIRUPDWLRQ FDOO H[W Relieve Pa in a n d D iscom fort from Pain less, w ith ou t th e u se of d ru gs or n eed les! • Headaches and Migraine • Clenching and Grinding (Bruxism) • Dental Wear and Tooth Breakage • Clicking and Popping of the Jaw Head, Neck or Jaw Discomfort) • TMJ/TMD The Daily Astorian Established July 1, 1873 (USPS 035-000) Published daily, except Saturday and Sunday, by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503- 325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573. 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