2014 wines of the year Whiskey was the culprit WEEKEND EDITION FRIDAY EXTRA • 1C 142nd YEAR, No. 133 FRIDAY EXTRA • 2C FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 2015 ONE DOLLAR Dorothy Wing Randy Lee Roden Mother arrested in girl’s murder By KYLE SPURR The Daily Astorian JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Marilyn Tilbury, Seattle, watches for whales from the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center on Monday. WAVE TO THE WHALES PASSING BY Volunteers take to the shore for Whale Watching Spoken Here By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian V olunteers Cilla and Jim Border stood bundled up on a subfreez- ing Wednesday morning at Eco- la Point, their eyes and binoculars scanning the western horizon as they looked for small white plumes of spray from gray whales migrating south miles out amid the blue vast- ness of the Paci c Ocean. Visitors straggled in, and the Borders jump to help them watch one of the largest, longest migrations in the world. The Borders, who hail from Ne- tarts and have been traveling from Cape Lookout to Cannon Beach, are two of more than 200 volun- teers the Oregon Parks and Rec- reation Department recruited and stationed at 25 sites along the Or- egon Coast, Cape Disappointment, Wash., and Crescent City, Calif., for Whale Watching Spoken Here, the semiannual state promotion to get people out to the parks and looking for whales . Whale watchers spotted more than 1,900 whales between Sat- urday and Wednesday, when the event, centered on the peak season of the southward migration, ended. The next guided whale watch- ing week runs from March 21 to 28. Gray whales are found only in the Paci c Ocean and are esti- mated at approximately 26,000 by the Marine Mammal Center, They spend May to October feeding off the western coast of Alaska, before making the journey to warmer wa- ters off the coast of Mexico’s Baha Peninsula. JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Volunteer Jim Border, center, points out toward a plume from a whale during a whale watching session at Ecola State Park Wednesday. JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Models of a gray whale and a school bus sit on a curb while volunteer Georgeann Silvermann sets up things for whale watching Monday. Shooting stars On Wednesday, the frozen tun- dra of lawn and the ice sheets in the parking lot belied the clear blue skies and calm seas, perfect whale watching weather. The Borders looked patiently for brief succes- sive plumes near the horizon, at Ecola Point about 12 1/2 miles out. “It’s like viewing shooting stars in a shower,” said Jim. The sighting were infectious, as the few early morning strag- glers congealed around whoever happened to spot one of the south- ward-migrating grays, moving sev- eral miles per hour, said Jim, and coming up every ve minutes or so for a few quick breaths before div- ing down again. “The enthusiasm of people who haven’t seen them before is infec- tious,” he said, adding that the weath- er and a person’s patience determines whether or not they’ll see the whales. The Borders and other volun- teers report their daily ndings back to the parks and recreation department’s Whale Watching Center in Depoe Bay, headquarters of Whale Watching Spoken Here. On Saturday, whale watchers spotted only 83 whales along the coast in the rain and wind, with more than half of the guided sites not seeing any plumes. As the weather improved, they sighted 198 Sunday, 506 Monday, 635 Tuesday and 508 on Wednesday. The Borders themselves spotted 24 whale plumes and the occasional breach Wednesday. “Yesterday (Tuesday) it was like a chorus, and people weren’t drift- ing off,” said Jim, who with Cilla spent at least 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. each day during whale watching week helping people spot the migration. See WHALES, Page 8A SEASIDE — The mother of the 2-year-old girl who died at their Sea- side home Dec. 20 is facing charges of murder by abuse, manslaughter and criminal mistreatment. Dorothy Wing, 24, was arrested on the charges by Seaside Police Thursday afternoon. Wing’s live-in boyfriend Randy Lee Roden, 26, was arrested last week on a charge of aggravated murder in the death of 2-year-old Evangelina Wing. An indictment led Dec. 31 ac- cuses Roden of four counts of aggra- vated murder, two counts of murder by abuse, felony murder, rst-degree See MURDER, Page 8A Ducks set to duke it out with Buckeyes Football teams head to national title match in Texas By RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Football Writer Ohio State is looking for its rst national title since 2002. Oregon is seeking its rst, period. Pac-12 champion Oregon and Big Ten champion Ohio State will meet in Arlington, Texas, at the home of the Cowboys on Jan. 12 in the rst College Football Playoff champi- onship game. “It’s perfect,” Oregon line- backer Derrick Malone Jr. said. “I need another game. I’m glad I can still be a part of this. If we didn’t have another game I wouldn’t know what to do with myself.” See DUCKS, Page 7A Newcomer nds community with Coaster Theatre U of O grad lives in Seaside, works in Cannon Beach By KATHERINE LACAZE EO Media Group SEASIDE — Through living in Seaside, working in Cannon Beach and participat- ing in community activities, Oregon native Emily Estrada has quickly started whittling down her newcomer status. Estrada, 23, moved to the area from Eugene in July after graduating from the Univer- sity of Oregon in May with a bachelor’s degree in theater arts with an emphasis in dra- OUR NEW NEIGHBORS PEOPLE NEW TO THE COMMUNITY maturgy, or theater research. She was drawn to Cannon Beach by a job as the stage manager for Coaster The- atre Playhouse’s production of William Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night.” Rehearsals started in July and the produc- tion ran from Sept. 26 to Oct. 25. “I thought it would be good to get paid for some- thing I went to school for,” Estrada said. She planned to stay in the area for a temporary hi- atus between obtaining her undergraduate degree and returning to college for her master’s degree, but now she is uncertain what the future holds. She enjoys the area and the six months she expected to spend here have come and gone. See ESTRADA, Page 8A KATHERINE LACAZE — EO Media Group Since moving to the area in July, 23-year-old University of Oregon graduate Emily Estrada has become involved in both the Seaside and Cannon Beach communities. She spends most of her time in Cannon Beach, where she works in the accounting department at Escape Lodging’s headquarters and acts and stage manages for the Coast- er Theatre Playhouse. Most recently, she played two roles in the theater’s winter production, “Beauty and the Beast.”