Join the Great Backyard Bird Count AHS wrestlers earn league titles NORTH COAST • 3A SPORTS • 7A TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 142nd YEAR, No. 160 ONE DOLLAR Job Corps cheers golden anniversary More than 30,000 students have attended Tongue Point By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian O n Sept. 27, 1963, two months before his assassi- nation, President John F. Kennedy visited Tongue Point in Astoria and foretold of the plan to save the former U.S. Navy reserve ÀHHW EDVH IURP WKH ZUHFNLQJ EDOO It would become a helicopter base for the U.S. Coast Guard, he said, as well as a weapons-procurement training school for senior civilian and military personnel. Kennedy had the part about the training school right. But rather than weapons, Tongue Point Job Corps Center opened Feb. 2, 1965, as a school for young men (and shortly thereafter women) to pro- cure vocational skills and jobs as part of President Lyndon B. John- son’s War on Poverty. To honor the 50th anniversary of Tongue Point, the second Job Corps center in the nation, U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici, D-Ore., and other politicians from the JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian county, Astoria and Seaside, along with Clatsop Community College U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici talks with Scott Craig, left, Tongue Point executive council president, See JOB CORPS, Page 10A during a reception for Tongue Point’s 50th anniversary celebration. Since it opened Feb. 2, 1965, at the site of a former U.S. naval base, Tongue Point Job Corps has trained more than 30,000 students. Tita Montero heads back to Seaside Astoria native the new face of Tongue Point adding that she’s thrilled to inher- it Montero’s position. Her focus, she said, is taking her background in work-based learning experience and expanding job-placement op- portunities for students. By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Advertising Tongue Point “I’m Tita Montero; I’m the BCL (business community liaison); and this is my last day,” said Montero Monday during a student assembly as part of Tongue Point Job Corps Center’s 50th anniversary, her last event. The hundreds gathered in Tongue Point’s gym Monday stood and applauded Montero, who’s dedicated her seven years as the public face of Tongue Point to pro- moting the positive impact of the center’s staff and students. Mon- tero started early this year as the executive director of the Seaside Downtown Development Associa- tion. A familiar face succeeds her. Katrina Morrell Gasser, a ¿IWKJHQHUDWLRQ$VWRULDQHPSOR\HG with Tongue Point for the past 10 years, most recently as a work- based learning adviser, started recently as business community liaison. “I did not think I’d be working with youth, and I did not think I’d JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Tita Montero, community liaison for Tongue Point Job Corps, hugs Tongue Point Job Corps student Shamiqwa McDowell after an as- sembly as part of Tongue Point’s 50th anniversary celebration. Montero is leaving her position at Tongue Point to be the executive director of the Seaside Downtown Development Association. be back home,” said Morrell Gas- ser, who started as a residential ad- viser at Tongue Point at age 22. After graduating from the Uni- versity of Oregon with a degree in psychology, Gasser spent six months in a similar position at the Barli Development Institute IRU 5XUDO :RPHQ D QRQSUR¿W YR- cational school in central India, before returning home and seeing an ad in The Daily Astorian for Tongue Point. “I knew this was where I want- ed to go, because of my experience at Barli,” said Morrell Gasser, When she also saw an ad in paper for a position at Job Corps seven years ago, Montero said she didn’t really know much about it. A University of Washington graduate with a master’s degree in library science, she had worked in WKDW¿HOGEHIRUHPRYLQJLQWRKHDOWK care administration for 27 years. Running a health plan for the U.S. Department of Defense, Montero said, she’d become familiar with working with members of Con- gress. But as a child on vacation on the North Coast, the Seattle na- tive had promised herself that one day she’d live in Seaside. She subscribed to the Seaside Signal for seven years before moving in 2002 to open Montero Sisters Fab- rics with her sister-in-law. Then during the Great Coastal Gale of 2007, Montero started at Tongue Point, which she said meshed with both her skill set and her values as a person. See MONTERO, Page 10A Knappa rallies for its schools Foundation’s annual auction is Saturday “After the Logger (Restaurant) elk last year … Mr. Kamppi came to me with this idea,” Hockman said of For anyone in need of a 12-foot the Knappa-themed metal elk cutout salmon sign to advertise their business, bought by Teevin Bros. Land and Tim- Knappa High School is the place to ber last year. “Let’s do something icon- look. ic for the Astoria area.” Students in Janet Hockman’s art Students have regularly supplied and Tim Kamppi’s metals programs items at the auction, which even in teamed up to create two gigantic, paint- snow and ice last year managed to take HGDOXPLQXPVDOPRQWREH¿QLVKHGLQ in more than $80,000. Each year the a polyurethane clear coat, sold Satur- foundation, started by Knappa alumni day at the 18th annual Knappa Schools and built on revenues from the auction, Foundation dinner and auction and doles out scholarships to departing se- hopefully used to advertise someone’s niors and funds projects on campus to business. support students. By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian The theme this year was “Local.” Along with the salmon, students cre- ated portraits of local scenes such as Haystack Rock, the Astoria Bridge, Saddle Mountain — and the sturgeon VHQLRU 6KDLOHL :ULJKW ZDV ¿QLVKLQJ Friday. ³,MXVWOLNH¿VK´VDLG:ULJKW³(Y- eryone’s doing scenic pictures, and I wanted to do something else.” Smorgasbord Knappa Schools Foundation’s event is an auction of variety, with businesses, individuals and students all contributing to the more than 300 available items. In the high school’s See AUCTION, Page 10A Knappa High School senior Jocelyn Burnett puts the finishing touches on the back end of a giant salmon sign to be auctioned off at the Knappa Schools Foundation’s 18th annual dinner and auction Saturday. EDWARD STRATTON — The Daily Astorian Defense attorney attempts to block media Lawyer for Seaside man accused of child’s murder takes TV to task By KYLE SPURR The Daily Astorian The defense attorney for Randy Roden, the live-in boyfriend accused of murdering his girlfriend’s 2-year- old daughter at their Seaside home Dec. 20, is attempting to block me- dia cameras in the courtroom at Ro- den’s next status hearing Thursday. Conor Huseby, from the law of- ¿FH 0HWURSROLWDQ 3XEOLF 'HIHQVH LQ 3RUWODQG ¿OHG DQ REMHFWLRQ ZLWK Clatsop County Circuit Court last week to deny the presence of both still and video cameras. In the written objection, Huseby claims the fact that Roden faces the potential of the death penalty height- ens the standard of reliability in the case, including the manner court hearings are conducted. Roden, 26, is charged with four counts of aggravated murder, two counts of murder by abuse, felony PXUGHU¿UVWGHJUHHXQODZIXOVH[XDO SHQHWUDWLRQ ¿UVW GHJUHH VH[ DEXVH WKHH FRXQWV RI ¿UVWGHJUHH DVVDXOW and three counts of criminal mis- treatment. The sex abuse charges relate to Roden allegedly subjecting 2-year-old Evangelina Wing to sexu- al contact by touching. See MEDIA, Page 10A Independent Party gets state OK SALEM — Secretary of State Kate Brown has formally designated the Independent Party of Oregon as a major political party. The designation announced Mon- day allows the Independent Party to participate in primary elections. 3DUW\RI¿FLDOVVDLGODVWZHHNWKDW their ranks reached 5 percent of the total voters registered for the No- vember election. That’s the threshold for a major party designation. %URZQ¶V RI¿FH VD\V WKH ,QGH- pendent Party’s status will be veri- ¿HG DJDLQ RQ$XJ WR GHWHUPLQH whether it gets a spot in the May 2016 statewide primary. The Independent Party joins the Republican and Democratic parties as major political parties in Oregon.