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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 2015)
SPORTS 4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 AHS soccer team helps #pinkisnotacure campaign ness and how we are no FORVHU WR ¿QGLQJ D FXUH´ Each year, the Astoria Adrienne hunter said. Snyder girls soccer team coordinates proposes another way to help a tie-dye party, to make pink focused strictly on a cure for shirts to wear to school and a metastatic breast cancer, the game in the month of October QRQSUR¿W0(7$YLYRURUJ Adrienne Hunter contact- for breast cancer awareness. This year, the team de- ed Norm Stutznegger of Co- cided to move beyond pink lumbia Screen Printing. Kelsey Hunter then took to help with a cure. Kelsey Hunter came up with the idea her idea, a design and the to promote #pinkisnotacure price to her coach and team. The Astoria girls Scap- to support funding for a cure poose Oct. 13, which was for metastatic breast cancer. “Kelsey came to me last WKH GHVLJQDWHG ³0(7$YL- month and told me she re- vor breast cancer awareness ally wanted to coordinate day.” The team wore their shirts something different,” said Adrienne Hunter, mother of to school and several attend- Astoria varsity player Kelsey ed the “die-in” at the high Hunter, a senior at Astoria school, organized by Libby Di Bartolomeo as her senior High School. “She stated that with her project to bring awareness to new awareness as to how the cause. “Of course, with teenage everything ‘pink’ has done QRWKLQJ WR ¿QG D FXUH DQG girls, the picture that was instead has become more of taken spread rapidly through a marketing gimmick, she social media the next day,” would like to encourage the Adrienne Hunter said. Stutznegger called the team to move in a different next day saying he and his direction.” Kelsey Hunter referenced daughter were so moved they community member, activ- decided to donate the T-shirts ist and friend, Laura Snyder, to the team. The Hunters decided to who is living with metastatic donate the $175 they had breast cancer. Because of Snyder’s collected from the team to voice, they learned “how Di Bartolomeo’s die-in and IXQGV DUH ¿OWHUHG IRU DZDUH- 0(7$YLYLRU The Daily Astorian Matt Hunter/For the Daily Astorian The Astoria girls soccer team poses before their game last week against Scappoose, wearing their #pinkisnotacure shirts. SCOREBOARD PREP SCHEDULE CROSS COUNTRY TODAY Football — Washington School for the Deaf at Naselle, 7 p.m. Volleyball — Portland Christian at Warrenton, 6 p.m.; Knappa at Gaston, 6:30 p.m.; Tacoma Baptist at Ilwaco, 7 p.m. Girls Soccer — Astoria at Banks, 4:15 p.m.; Scappoose at Seaside, 6:30 p.m. Boys Soccer — Seaside at Scappoose, 4:15 p.m. Cross Country — District 1-3A/2A Championships, TBA FRIDAY Football — Astoria at Banks, 7 p.m.; Seaside at Scappoose, 7 p.m.; Rainier at Warrenton, 7 p.m.; Rainier (Wash.) at Ilwaco, 7 p.m. Cowapa League Championships at Camp Rilea (5,000 Meters) Girls Team: Tillamook 49, Scap- poose 56, Banks 74, Seaside 92, Valley Catholic 105, Astoria 117. Top 10 Individuals 1, Linnaea Kavulich, Scp, 19:57 2, Kara Putman, Til, 20:43 3, Jamie Borchers, Banks, 20:53 4, Katie Zagata, Sea, 20:53 5, Josie Smith, Sea, 21:03 6, Phoebe Brown, Til, 21:13 7, Kaylee Mitchell, Ast, 21:23 8, Chloe Pampush, Til, 22:00 9, Maricela Jaroch, VC, 22:12 10, Jaime Evers, Banks, 22:17 Astoria 16, McKenzie Burnett, 22:42 29, Kathy Perez, 24:23 31, Libbie Nash, 24:35 34, Skadi Freyr, 24:54 40, Kyoka Tanahashi, 28:15 41, Daisy Gayral, 29:10 Seaside 18, Lucy Swenson, 23:02 32, Sydney Villegas, 24:47 33, Lizzy Barnes, 24:49 36, Anesha Smart, 25:31 42, Ana Rojas, 29:25 Boys Team: Seaside 35, Tilla- mook 48, Valley Catholic 59, Scap- poose 100, Astoria 139, Banks 167. Top 10 Individuals 1, Eulises Cruz-Vieyra, Til, 16:44 2, Bradley Rzewnicki, Sea, 16:49 3, Hunter Thompson, Sea, 16:56 4, Rafi Sibony, Sea, 16:58 5, Ayrton Ledesma, Til, 16:59 6, John Kavulich, Scp, 7:00 7, Seth Martin, Til, 17:04 8, Jackson Januik, Sea, 17:11 9, Jamie Kawaguchi, VC, 17:13 10, Lucas Caruana, Ast, 17:13 Astoria 28, Jackson Arnsdorf, 19:05 31, Tim Graves, 19:40 34, Calvin Kaul, 20:14 36, Parker Ivanhoff, 20:31 37, Rig Freyr, 20:50 38, Kyle Uber, 21:29 Seaside 18, Colton Carter, 17:56 21, Juneau Meyer, 18:27 30, Jack Whittle, 19:15 Fox torn over Cubs prediction in ‘Back to the Future II’ carpet that he was a little torn over that one. “It’s tough because I’m a NEW YORK — While New Yorker and I would love some of the predictions made WRVHHWKH0HWVGRZHOO%XW,¶G in “Back to the Future Part ORYHWRVHHWKH¿OPEHULJKW6R II” eventually came true, like I’m torn,” Fox said before the 6N\SHDQG¿QJHUSULQWVFDQQHUV game ended, adding, “Whatev- one of them did not: The Chi- er happens, happens.” cago Cubs winning the World Christopher Lloyd, who Series. played Emmett “Doc” Brown, At a special screening for said he didn’t really follow the WKH ¿OP :HGQHVGD\ VWDU 0L- predictions, except for that one. chael J. Fox admitted on the red “I’m hoping the Cubs win By JOHN CARUCCI AP Entertainment Writer tonight and go into the series, that would be the ultimate pre- diction,” Lloyd said with a bit of trepidation. But that was not to be. 7KH1HZ<RUN0HWVGHIHDW- ed the Cubs 8-3 Wednesday in the National League Champi- onship Series. They will ad- vance to the World Series. “Back to the Future Part II” envisioned more than baseball. It depicted a colorful 2015 with À\LQJ FDUV KRYHUERDUGV DQG self-tying shoelaces. While those doodads are hardly preva- OHQWWRGD\WKH¿OPGLGDFFXUDWH- O\ WHDVH WKH ULVH RI ÀDWVFUHHQ televisions, biometric scanning and hands-free gaming. Even President Barack Obama was impressed. Earlier in the day, he sent Fox a tweet that read: Happy Back to the Future Day, According to writer and co-creator Bob Gale, most of the predictions, including the one about the Cubs, “were in- tended to be jokes.” “The most far-fetched pre- diction was that lawyers would be abolished in the future. We didn’t expect that would hap- pen, but you put stuff in the movie you’re going to enjoy,” joked Gale. Fox and Lloyd arrived on- stage at “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” ZKLFKLV¿OPLQJDWWKH%URRN- O\Q$FDGHP\RI0XVLF¶V+RZ- ard Gilman Opera House this week, in a DeLorean dressed as 0DUW\0F)O\DQG'RF%URZQ The talk-show host informed the pair about all the advance- ments that have been made since 1985, including cronuts, HPRMLVDQGVHO¿HV “Doc, it seems like 2015 kinda sucks,” joked Fox as 0F)O\+HODWHUFDPHEDFNRXW sporting a pair of sneakers that appeared to have power laces, as depicted in “Back to the Fu- ture Part II.” School: Seaside will likely have to cut programs, positions Continued from Page 1A Figuring the cost Oregon state law requires any school district sponsoring a public charter school to help pay for its students’ education. Those funds are diverted from the district’s operational bud- get, Dougherty said. 5DWKHUWKDQDWWHPSWWR¿J- ure average individual student costs for each district, the Or- egon Department of Educa- tion determines each district’s weighted cost per student. For example, kindergarten stu- dents are counted as half, and special education students, in effect, count as two students. The department determined Seaside’s weighted rate for the SXUSRVHRI¿QDQFLQJWKHFKDU- ter school to be about $7,270 per student for 2015-16; based on state law, the academy would receive at least 80 per- cent of that, or $5,816. The district is requiring the academy to have a minimum enrollment of 44 students for the 2016-17 school year, which amounts to an approx- imately $256,000 contribu- tion from district funds in the other staff members are retir- ing or leaving the district at the end of the 2015-16 school year, “there are possibilities” to use that to balance the budget, Dougherty said. “It sort of depends on how the district is looking from year to year,” he said. “We try to look at all possible situations within the district,” The primary reason for the district setting the academy’s class size at a minimum of 22 students is to allow the district to reduce a teacher for each grade level at one of the exist- ing elementary schools. “If they only took 15 stu- dents, that would not allow the district to make those reduc- The Daily Astorian/File Photo tions,” Dougherty said. The temporary location of the Cannon Beach Academy at 171 Sunset Blvd. The academy decision comes on the cusp of a special Lessening the election Nov. 3 to determine if DFDGHP\¶V ¿UVW \HDU RI RSHU- single time. The board of direc- nue is from local property taxes Seaside School District 10 will ¿QDQFLDOKLW ation. When the enrollment tors is aware Seaside likely will collected each year. Phillips agreed that, with the UHQHZDORFDORSWLRQWD[IRU¿YH increases to a capacity of 85 have to cut some programs, ser- The State School Fund students — the academy’s vices or teaching positions at its does not contribute to Seaside arrival of the academy, there years starting with the 2016-17 goal — the district will have existing schools. School District, only one of will be some cuts, adding he school year. The rate is set at to divert about $494,000, “It’s going to give up some- ¿YH GLVWULFWV LQ WKH VWDWH WKDW does not “want to go down too $0.52 per $1,000 of assessed value. The local option tax, in Dougherty said. thing,” board member Hugh does not receive money from far in the discussion.” The district will “look at place since 2000, helps fund the The district is phasing in Stelson said. “There is not a lot the fund. The department uses a grade levels at the academy so of money running around.” complicated formula — which DWWULWLRQ ¿UVW´ DV LW KDV ZKHQ district’s operations by generat- the other schools do not take The Seaside School Dis- takes into consideration rev- making reductions in the past, ing approximately $1.2 million DV ODUJH RI D ¿QDQFLDO KLW DW D trict’s primary source of reve- enue sources, student ratios, Dougherty said. If teachers or per school year. poverty levels, transportation costs, transportation reimburse- ments from the state, teacher experience and other factors — to generate an annual to- tal formula revenue based on equalization. If a district’s lo- cal revenue equals or exceeds the formula revenue calculated by the state, as Seaside’s does, then the district does not re- ceive contributions from the State School Fund. “Seaside has enough, if not more, local revenues than their IRUPXODUHYHQXH´VDLG0LFKDHO Wiltfong, the director of school ¿QDQFHIRUWKH2UHJRQ'HSDUW- ment of Education. The Seaside district does, however, receive revenue from the Common School Fund and state-managed timber resources. W ! O N N IN WARRENTON next to Big 5 & Fred Meyer E P O www.americasmattress.com 503-861-6085 HOURS M-F 10-7 SAT 10-5 SUN 11-5 FREE DELIVERY FREE SET-UP The Sleep You Need w/minimum purchase local delivery GUARANTEED B O N N E V I L L E P O W E R A D M I N I S T R A T I O N Columbia Estuary Ecosystem Restoration Program The Bonneville Power Administration and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are proposing to conduct a programmatic environmental review of a suite of estuary restoration activities that are currently reviewed on an individual basis. A programmatic assessment could result in cost savings and other effi ciencies by reducing the time and eff ort needed to review and issue permits for restoration projects without compromising environmental protections. We want to hear from you on what should be included in the analysis. The Columbia Estuary Ecosystem Restoration Program was developed to protect, restore and monitor fi sh and wildlife habitat in the Columbia River estuary and satisfi es restoration obligations as defi ned in the Northwest Power Act, Water Resources Development Act, and biological opinions for the operation of the Federal Columbia River Power System. The program covers all low-lying, tidally-infl uenced portions of the Columbia River and its tributaries that are currently or were historically tidally infl uenced upstream to Bonneville Dam. This includes portions of Pacifi c, Wahkiakum, Cowlitz, and Clark counties in Washington and Clatsop, Columbia, and Multnomah counties in Oregon. BPA is accepting comments on the proposal through Nov. 4, 2015. You may submit comments to BPA online at www.bpa.gov/comment or fax comments to 503-230-3285. You also may call us with your comments toll free at 800-622-4519. Please reference “Columbia Estuary Ecosystem Restoration Program” with your comments. We will post all comments we receive on our website at www.bpa.gov/comment. 531989.100915