2A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 2016
St., Cannon Beach, $2 to $12.
* Goodding Family Benei t Concert,
2 p.m., Seaside Civic & Convention
Center, 415 First Ave., Seaside, $20
suggested donation, all ages.
“Macbeth: Of -Kilter,” comedy, 7 p.m.,
Grays River Valley School, 793 WA-4,
Naselle, Wash., $5 to $7.
“Macbeth: Of -Kilter,” comedy, 2 p.m.,
Grays River Valley School, 793 WA-4,
Naselle, Wash., $5 to $7.
“Nothing Serious,” comedy, 7 p.m.,
Barn Community Playhouse, 1204 Ivy
Ave., Tillamook, $10 to $15.
Ray Raihala, folk, 6 p.m., T. Paul’s
Supper Club, 360 12th St., Astoria, no
cover.
Paint & Sip with Susan Curington, 7
p.m., Fairweather House & Gallery, 612
Broadway, Seaside, $45, 21 and older.
Friday
* Let’s Go Birding Bird Survey, 9 a.m.,
meet at Fort to Sea Trailhead, Sunset
Beach State Recreation Site, Warren-
ton, 8 and older.
* Whale Watching, 10 a.m., Lewis
& Clark Interpretive Center, Ilwaco,
Wash.; Ecola State Park, Cannon Beach;
Neahkahnie Mountain Historic Marker,
Turnout on Hwy. 101.
Candy-O & Workin’ For The Week-
end, tribute bands, 8 p.m., Astoria
Events Center, 255 9th St., Astoria, $10
to $12.
* Community Skate Night, 5 p.m.,
Armory, 1636 Exchange St., Astoria, $3,
all ages.
Troy Lee Hunt, jazz, 6 p.m., Bridge-
water Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, no
cover.
* Whale Watching, 10 a.m., Lewis
& Clark Interpretive Center, Ilwaco,
Wash.; Ecola State Park, Cannon Beach;
Neahkahnie Mountain Historic Marker,
Turnout on Hwy. 101.
* Veterans Appreciation Day, 11 a.m.,
Lum’s Auto Center, 1605 S.E. Ensign
Lane, Warrenton, all ages.
Saturday
* Student Artist Reception, 1 p.m.,
Redmen Hall, 1394 State Route 4,
Skamokawa, Wash.
* SOLV Beach Cleanup, dress ap-
propriately, 10a.m., visit website for
locations, all ages.
John Stowell, jazz, 7 p.m., Cannon
Beach History Center, 1387 S. Spruce
DEATH
OREGON
Thursday’s Pick 4:
1 p.m.: 0-1-0-2
4 p.m.: 1-3-4-6
7 p.m.: 9-8-7-3
10 p.m.: 5-4-4-0
March 24, 2016
LINDSTROM, Robert Douglas, 53, of Astoria, died
Thursday in Astoria. Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary is in
charge of the arrangements.
WASHINGTON
Thursday’s Daily Game:
2-1-2
Thursday’s Keno: 01-11-18-
22-23-24-32-36-42-47-48-
49-52-56-60-65-71-72-75-80
Thursday’s Match 4: 17-19-
21-23
MONDAY
Seaside City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 989 Broadway.
PUBLIC MEETINGS
ACCUWEATHER ® FORECAST FOR ASTORIA
Astoria 5-Day Forecast
Tonight
Oregon Weather
Shown is
tomorrow’s
weather.
Temperatures
are tonight’s
lows and
tomorrow’s
highs
Mostly cloudy
40°
Saturday
The Dalles
36/61
Astoria
40/54
Portland
42/59
Corvallis
40/56
Eugene
39/54
Pendleton
31/59
Salem
40/57
Albany
40/53
Sunday
Burns
20/50
Medford
37/59
Mostly cloudy with
a shower in spots
54°
Mostly cloudy
with a couple of
showers
42°
51°
Monday
Partly sunny
39°
57°
Klamath Falls
25/56
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
40°
Tuesday
Sunshine and
some clouds
53°
40°
Almanac
Sun and Moon
Astoria through Thursday.
Temperatures
High ........................................... 53°
Low ............................................ 45°
Normal high ............................... 54°
Normal low ................................. 40°
Precipitation
Yesterday ................................ 0.21"
Month to date ......................... 11.57"
Normal month to date ............. 5.90"
Year to date ........................... 33.85"
Normal year to date .............. 23.54"
Sunset tonight ..................
Sunrise Saturday .............
Moonrise today ................
Moonset today .................
Regional Cities
City
Baker City
Bend
Brookings
Eugene
Ilwaco
Klamath Falls
Medford
Newport
North Bend
Ontario
27/56
Bend
25/54
Today
Hi Lo W
46 19 sn
46 25 sf
57 44 pc
56 39 pc
51 42 pc
53 25 pc
59 37 pc
52 43 sh
56 44 pc
Last
New
First
Full
Mar 31
Apr 7
Apr 13
Apr 21
Under the Sky
Hi
51
54
55
54
52
56
59
54
56
Sat.
Lo
30
33
45
43
44
37
45
45
45
Hi
75
46
57
39
52
53
79
40
83
61
56
70
78
72
87
72
78
58
71
60
66
50
67
58
64
Sat.
Lo
59
35
42
19
36
36
47
24
68
45
32
50
54
53
76
49
66
42
37
41
45
34
56
44
46
W
s
pc
c
c
c
pc
c
c
c
National Cities
Today
City
Hi Lo W
Atlanta
71 51 pc
Boston
63 37 r
Chicago
45 32 s
Denver
44 23 pc
Des Moines
53 41 pc
Detroit
46 28 pc
El Paso
77 48 s
Fairbanks
45 24 pc
Honolulu
83 68 sh
Indianapolis
50 34 pc
Kansas City
59 43 pc
Las Vegas
78 56 s
Los Angeles
78 54 s
Memphis
61 43 pc
Miami
84 74
t
Nashville
59 36 pc
New Orleans
72 56 s
New York
69 41 sh
Oklahoma City 69 48 s
Philadelphia
72 42 sh
St. Louis
55 39 pc
Salt Lake City
49 31 r
San Francisco
66 53 s
Seattle
54 41 pc
Washington, DC 72 44 sh
7:35 p.m.
7:06 a.m.
9:59 p.m.
8:18 a.m.
City
Olympia
Pendleton
Portland
Roseburg
Salem
Seaside
Spokane
Vancouver
Yakima
Today
Hi Lo W
55 38 pc
52 31 c
56 42 sh
58 42 pc
56 40 pc
52 41 pc
50 32 c
54 41 sh
61 33 pc
Hi
58
59
59
58
57
54
53
56
62
Sat.
Lo
41
41
45
45
44
44
37
44
40
W
c
pc
c
c
c
c
pc
c
pc
Tonight's Sky: Use the handle of the Big Dipper
to "Arc to Arcturus and spike down to Spica."
Source: Jim Todd, OMSI
Tomorrow’s Tides
Astoria / Port Docks
Time
High
3:37 a.m. 8.6 ft.
4:20 p.m. 7.5 ft.
Time
10:10 a.m.
10:06 p.m.
Low
0.5 ft.
1.7 ft.
Tomorrow’s National Weather
W
s
s
pc
sn
r
s
s
c
sh
s
r
s
s
s
t
s
c
s
pc
s
pc
pc
s
pc
s
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.
Sunday
“Nothing Serious,” comedy, 7 p.m.,
Barn Community Playhouse, 1204 Ivy
Ave., Tillamook, $10 to $15.
Joseph DeNatale, folk, 7 p.m., Adrift
Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long
Beach, Wash., no cover.
“The Apple Tree,” musical, 7:30 p.m.,
Coaster Theatre, 108 N. Hemlock St.,
Cannon Beach, $18 to $23, PG.
Jaime Leopold, blues, 8 p.m., Fort
George Brewery, 1483 Duane St.,
Astoria, no cover.
Thunder Road Band, rock, 7:30 p.m.,
American Legion, 1315 Broadway,
* Recommended for kids.
Independent Party unhappy
with latest ballot decision
SALEM — The Indepen-
dent 3arty of Oregon is ¿ ghting
a decision by Secretary of State
Jeanne Atkins to force the party
to select a presidential nominee
in the May primary through a
write-in process.
With no declared candidates,
party leaders had hoped to have
more control over the process
to select a presidential nomi-
nee for the November general
election. Earlier this month, the
party asked the secretary of state
to either provide no option for its
members to vote for a presiden-
tial nominee in May, or list “the
well-known candidates who
could legally earn the (Indepen-
dent Party of Oregon) nomina-
tion,” according to the party’s
press release.
Atkins found neither of those
options to be legal.
The Independent Party on
Thursday sent a memoran-
dum to Atkins challenging her
decision.
“It is a baseless legal con-
clusion, which (the Independent
Party of Oregon) will appeal
to the courts, if necessary,” the
party wrote in a press release.
It is the Independent Party
of Oregon’s ¿ rst state-funded
primary election since it gained
major party status last year.
The secretary of state asked
the Oregon Department of Jus-
tice to weigh in and in a March
opinion, Assistant Attorney
General Amy Alpaugh wrote
that under state law members of
major parties — including the
Independent Party of Oregon
— are entitled to participate in
the primary nomination process.
Alpaugh also wrote that state
law requires write-in spaces
for all of¿ ces listed on a ballot,
according to the opinion.
The Independent Party of
Oregon had hoped the state
would allow its members to
cross-nominate Democratic and
Republican candidates in the
May primary, which could allow
party members to nominate a
candidate such as Hillary Clin-
ton or Ted Cruz. Alpaugh wrote
that is not allowed under Oregon
law, which prevents a candidate
who lost a primary election from
running on another party’s ticket
in the general election.
Molly Woon, communica-
tions director for Atkins, wrote
in an email that the secretary of
state was concerned the party’s
rules appeared to give it “veto”
power over the presidential can-
didate selected by voters.
“The s ecretary feels strongly
that voters expect that the can-
didate with the most votes on a
primary ballot is the candidate
that is forwarded to the Novem-
ber election,” Woon wrote in an
email Thursday. “This is a well
understood outcome of the dem-
ocratic process. If the (Inde-
pendent Party of Oregon) rules
result in a different outcome, she
is concerned about making sure
voters are aware of this devia-
tion from the norm.”
Independent Party lead-
ers pointed out that Democratic
and Republican party delegates
select their presidential nomi-
nees at nominating conventions.
Those nominees aren’t neces-
sarily candidates who have won
the Oregon primary.
Woon said the Independent
Party of Oregon differs from the
other major parties because of
its party rules.
“The Republican and Demo-
cratic parties have a well-estab-
lished national delegate selec-
tion process that is informed
by the primary elections and is
understood by those voting in
the primaries,” Woon wrote in
an email. “The (Independent
Party of Oregon) has no delegate
selection process or national
party af¿ liation and proposes to
use another model that not been
used in Oregon and has not been
evaluated by counsel. We have
asked for further clari¿ cation
from the (Independent Party of
Oregon), which was received
today.”
The Secretary of State’s
Of¿ ce is reviewing the informa-
tion with its lawyer.
The Capital Bureau is a col-
laboration between EO Media
Group and Pamplin Media
Group.
Mormons to sing
Olney church
celebrates Easter, along to ‘Messiah’
anniversary
The Daily Astorian
The Daily Astorian
Cold
DJ Dance Party, 9:30 p.m., Twisted
Fish, 311 Broadway, Seaside, 21 and
older.
“Nothing Serious,” comedy, 2 p.m.,
Barn Community Playhouse, 1204 Ivy
Ave., Tillamook, $10 to $15.
Fronts
Warm
The Weather Machine, rock, 9 p.m.,
Pitchwood Inn & Alehouse, 425 3rd St.,
Raymond, Wash., $5, 21 and older.
Micah White Author Reading, 7 p.m.,
Cloud & Leaf Bookstore, 148 Laneda
Ave., Manzanita.
By HILLARY BORRUD
Capital Bureau
TUESDAY
Clatsop Community College Board, 6:30 p.m., special meeting
to consider of er on Performing Arts Center, Columbia Hall
Room 219, 1651 Lexington Ave., Astoria.
Faint Peter, folk, 9 p.m., Adrift Hotel,
409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach,
Wash., no cover.
“Macbeth: Of -Kilter,” comedy, 7 p.m.,
Grays River Valley School, 793 WA-4,
Naselle, Wash., $5 to $7.
John Stowell
Faint Peter, folk, 9 p.m., Adrift Hotel,
409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach,
Wash., no cover.
Ray Raihala, folk, 6 p.m., Urban Café,
1119 Commercial St., Astoria, no cover.
LOTTERIES
Howly Slim, blues, 7 p.m., WineKraft,
80 10th St., Astoria, no cover, 21 and
older.
“The Apple Tree,” musical, 7:30 p.m.,
Coaster Theatre, 108 N. Hemlock St.,
Cannon Beach, $18 to $23, PG.
Three For Silver, folk, 8 p.m.,
Sou’Wester Lodge, 3728 J Place,
Seaview, Wash.
Ramble On, tribute band, 9 p.m., San
Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Ave., Manzani-
ta, 21 and older.
Caravan of GLAM, 7 p.m., Port of Call,
894 Commercial St., Astoria, $12 to
$15, 21 and older.
* “Lessons of Basketball and War,”
i lm screening, 7:30 p.m., Hof man
Center, 594 Laneda Ave., Manzanita,
$5.
Seaside, no cover, 21 and older.
OLNEY — Olney Community Church,
87869 Highway 202, is holding an Easter ser-
vice at 11 a.m. Sunday, followed by a cele-
bration of the 60th anniversary of the church.
Cake and refreshments will be served. The
public is welcome.
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Orches-
tra at Temple Square are joining forces to pres-
ent Handel’s “Messiah” in its entirety for Eas-
ter season.
The event is 6:30 p.m. today, and a live video
feed of the concert will be shown at the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints building,
350 Niagara Ave.
Deadline to remove studded tires approaches
The Daily Astorian
The state Department of
Transportation is remind-
ing drivers to remove
their studded snow tires
by Thursday. Drivers with
studded tires on their vehi-
cles after the deadline can
be charged with a traffic
violation.
The law allows the state to
extend the studded tire season
when necessary, but current
weather forecasts do not support
an extension this year. Washing-
ton state is also ending studded
snow tire season Thursday.
“Please don’t wait until the
deadline to remove your stud-
ded tires, especially if you
aren’t driving in the mountain
passes between now and then,”
said Luci Moore, a mainte-
nance and operations engineer
with Oregon’s transportation
department.
told included using a child in
the display of sexually explicit
conduct, ¿ rst-degree online
sexual corruption of a child
and luring a minor.
Sexual abuse
William Michael Schus-
ter, 70, was arrested by the
Astoria Police Department
Thursday on one charge each
of ¿ rst-degree sexual abuse,
second-degree sexual pene-
tration with an object and sec-
ond-degree sodomy.
ON THE RECORD
aetrex
®
the healthiest shoes you will ever wear ®
Child pornography
Brandon Bachtold, 21,
was arrested by the Clat-
sop County Sheriff’s Of¿ ce
Thursday on several charges
related to child pornography.
The charges against Bach-
The Daily Astorian
M ACY
Follow us on
(Also in Coral and Teal)
• M em ory Foam Footbed
• Lynco® O rthotic M em ory Foam Footbed
• Anti-m icrobial Technology
$ 80
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. POSTMASTER:
Send address changes to The Daily Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria,
OR 97103-0210
www.dailyastorian.com
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for
republication of all the local news printed in this newspaper.
SUBSCRIBER TO THE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE
ASTORIA: 239 14th Street • (503) 325-3972 • www.gimresshoesastoria.com
MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Effective July 1, 2015
HOME DELIVERY
EZpay (per month) ................$11.25
13 weeks in advance ........... $36.79
26 weeks in advance ........... $70.82
52 weeks in advance ......... $135.05
MAIL
EZpay (per month) ............... $16.60
13 weeks in advance ........... $51.98
26 weeks in advance ......... $102.63
52 weeks in advance ......... $199.90
Circulation phone number: 503-325-3211
Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR
ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP
All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Daily Astorian become
the property of The Daily Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use
without explicit prior approval.
COPYRIGHT ©
Entire contents © Copyright, 2016 by The Daily Astorian.
Printed on recycled paper