The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, October 14, 2016, WEEKEND EDITION, Page 2A, Image 2

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    2A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2016
cover, 21 and older.
Astro Tan, rock, 9 p.m., Adrift Hotel,
409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach,
Wash., no cover.
Lady A, Louisiana soul, 7 p.m., The
Birk, 11139 Hwy. 202, Birkenfeld, $10.
“Lulu’s Back in Town,” musical, 7 p.m.,
Barn Community Playhouse, 1204 Ivy
Ave., Tillamook, $10 to $15.
Saturday
* 19th Annual Dog Show on the
Beach, 9 a.m., on the beach, in front
of Surfsand Resort, 148 W. Gower Ave.,
Cannon Beach, $10 per dog, all ages.
“Don’t Dress for Dinner,” comedy, 7:30
p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 Hemlock St.,
Cannon Beach, $15 to $20, PG-13.
Astro Tan, rhythm-n-blues, rock, 9
p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder
Drive, Long Beach, Wash., no cover.
Move Against Cancer 6K Run/Walk/
Bike, 9 a.m., Ocean Beach Hospital,
174 First Ave., Ilwaco, Wash., $25.
Friday
* Wild Mushroom Hike, 1 p.m., Fort
Stevens State Park, Battery Russell,
100 Peter Iredale Road, Hammond,
free, all ages.
* Pickleball, 10 a.m., Camp Rilea Gym-
nasium, 333168 Patriot Way, Warren-
ton, $4, all levels.
Ray Raihala, blues, 6 p.m., Urban
Café, 1119 Commercial St., Astoria,
no cover.
Sunday
Great Columbia Crossing 10K Run/
Walk, 6 a.m., Dismal Nitch Rest Area,
Chinook, Wash., $40.
Water Music Festival with Cavatina
Duo, 12 p.m., Oysterville Church,
33590 Territory Road, Ocean Park,
Wash., $30.
Michael Metzger, blues, 6:30 p.m.,
Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Asto-
ria, no cover.
5th Annual Written in the Sand Au-
thor Gathering, 1 p.m., Beach Books,
616 Broadway, Seaside.
Water Music Festival with Pearl
Django, 6:30 p.m., Inn at Harbour
Village, 120 Williams Ave., Ilwaco,
Wash., $35.
Submitted Photo
Pearl Django will perform at the Water Music Festival Friday with
guest vocalist Gail Pettis. The festival continues with Cavatina Duo
and Tien Hsieh on Saturday .
* HAVA Pampered Chef Fundraiser,
1 p.m., American Legion, 221 Duryea
St., Raymond, Wash.
“Barefoot in the Park,” comedy, 7
p.m., Astor Street Opry Company,
129 W. Bond St., Astoria, $5 to $10,
rated G.
* Wild Mushroom Program, 1 p.m.,
Fort Stevens State Park, Coff enbury
Lake, 100 Peter Iredale Road, Ham-
mond, $5 parking, all ages.
“Lulu’s Back in Town,” musical, 7
p.m., Barn Community Playhouse,
1204 Ivy Ave., Tillamook, $10 to $15.
* Red & Ruby, showtunes, 2 p.m.,
Ocean Park Library, 1308 256th Place,
Ocean Park, Wash., all ages.
“Don’t Dress for Dinner,” come-
dy, 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, $15 to
$20, PG-13.
* Tide Pool Tour, 4:30 p.m., on the
beach at Haystack Rock, Cannon
Beach, all ages.
Geezer Creak, folk, 6 p.m., Urban Café,
1119 Commercial St., Astoria, no cover,
all ages.
Ray Raihala, folk, 6 p.m., T. Paul’s
Supper Club, 360 12th St., Astoria, no
cover.
Roaring 20s Fundraiser, 6 p.m., Ray-
mond Theater, 323 3rd St., Raymond,
Wash., $6 to $15.
Water Music Festival with Tien
Hsieh, 6 p.m., Leadbetter Farms
Lighthouse, 35710 I St., Ocean Park,
Wash., $45.
* Oktoberfest Chinook Style, 5 p.m.,
Chinook School Event Center, 810
Hwy. 101, Chinook, Wash., $5 to $20.
Luke Winslow King, jazz, 8 p.m., The
Birk, 11139 Hwy. 202, Birkenfeld.
Adams & Costello, blues, 6:30 p.m.,
Sweet Basil’s Café, 271 N. Hemlock St.,
Cannon Beach, no cover, 21 and older.
Author Reading with Liz Prato, 7
p.m., Hoff man Center for the Arts, 594
Laneda Ave., Manzanita, $7.
“Barefoot in the Park,” comedy, 7
p.m., Astor Street Opry Company, 129
W. Bond St., Astoria, $7 to $16, rated G.
In Their Footsteps with Andrea
Larson Perez, 1 p.m., Fort Clatsop Vis-
itor Center, 92343 Fort Clatsop Road,
Astoria, free.
“Barefoot in the Park,” comedy, 2
p.m., Astor Street Opry Company, 129
W. Bond St., Astoria, $7 to $16, rated G.
Lady A’s Gospel Sunday, 2 p.m., The
Birk, 11139 Hwy. 202, Birkenfeld, $5.
Skadi Freyer, jazz, 6:30 p.m., Bridge-
water Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, no
cover.
Lewi Longmire, Americana, 8 p.m.,
Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive,
Long Beach, Wash., no cover.
“Hey Loretta! A Musical Tribute to
the Coal Miner’s Daughter,” 7 p.m.,
NCRD Performing Arts Center, 36155
9th St., Nehalem.
Winston Jarrett, reggae, 8 p.m., Fort
George Brewery, 1483 Duane St.,
Astoria, no cover.
Howly Slim, folk, 7 p.m., American
Legion, 1315 Broadway, Seaside, no
* Recommended for kids.
Pierce donates $250,000 to his campaign
contribution to Pierce’s cam-
paign Oct. 11.
“Bud has run a campaign
on fi ghting to reform and
take back government from
entrenched special interests,
and to that end he has put in
personal funds to supplement
and amplify the thousands
of donors, many of which
are small donors, who have
invested in his candidacy,”
said Nellie deVries, a Pierce
campaign
spokeswoman.
“Bud is focused on laying out
a vision on how he can make
government better utilize tax-
payers’ hard earned money,
and it is no surprise our oppo-
sition will say or do anything
to maintain the status quo.”
The couple already had
contributed more than $1
million mostly to fund
Pierce’s campaign for the pri-
mary, which he won against
By PARIS ACHEN
Capital Bureau
Twelve weeks after Bud
Pierce said he planned to stop
self-funding his bid for gov-
ernor , the Republican nomi-
nee and his wife have poured
another $250,000 into his
campaign.
Pierce, a Salem oncolo-
gist, is trying to unseat Gov.
Kate Brown in November to
complete the last two years of
Gov. John Kitzhaber’s four-
year term. As former secre-
tary of state, Brown inher-
ited the governorship when
Kitzhaber stepped down in
February 2015 amid an infl u-
ence-peddling scandal over
contracts awarded to his fi an-
cée, Cylvia Hayes.
Pierce and his wife, Selma,
who both are Salem physi-
cians, each made a $125,000
former Oregon Republican
Party Chairman Allen Alley
in May .
Pierce said at the Oregon
Newspaper Publishers Asso-
ciation forum in Silverton
in July that he would rely on
larger Republican donors to
orchestrate his general elec-
tion campaign.
“Kate Brown will have
union backing; that’s for
sure, and she’ll have large
donors, and I need to be able
to do that,” Pierce said in
July . “That is part of being a
viable candidate.”
Much of Pierce’s $2.5
million in campaign con-
tributions have come from
small donors. His largest
donations since July were
$50,000 apiece in August
from Mark J. Burham, a
Salem fi nance executive with
Hawthorn Development, and
FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR ASTORIA
TONIGHT
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
61
53
53
Breezy with periods
of rain
ALMANAC
Breezy with periods
of rain
60
50
Breezy with rain
Salem
54/60
Newport
53/59
Last
Eugene
53/60
New
Oct 22
First
Oct 30
Source: Jim Todd, OMSI
TOMORROW'S TIDES
Astoria / Port Docks
Time
7:13 a.m.
7:49 p.m.
Low
0.1 ft.
-0.7 ft.
Burns
37/54
Klamath Falls
40/53
REGIONAL CITIES
City
Baker City
Bend
Brookings
Eugene
Ilwaco
Klamath Falls
Medford
Newberg
Newport
North Bend
Hi
60
56
59
63
60
55
64
61
58
63
Today
Lo
40
45
55
53
55
40
53
53
53
57
W
sh
sh
sh
r
r
r
c
r
r
r
Hi
54
56
60
60
59
53
60
60
59
63
Sat.
Lo W
40
r
43
r
54
r
51
r
55
r
40
r
51
r
51
r
52
r
56
r
City
Olympia
Pendleton
Portland
Roseburg
Salem
Seaside
Spokane
Springfi eld
Vancouver
Yakima
Hi
58
65
62
63
62
60
56
62
60
63
Today
Lo
51
49
54
55
54
55
45
52
54
44
W
r
sh
r
sh
r
r
c
r
r
pc
Hi
56
60
61
60
60
60
56
60
60
58
W
pc
s
s
pc
s
s
s
s
pc
s
pc
pc
pc
t
pc
t
s
s
pc
s
c
c
r
r
s
Hi
77
58
72
80
77
71
89
32
85
77
79
89
75
85
88
83
88
64
85
67
81
71
71
58
68
Sat.
Lo
61
47
64
48
61
63
60
16
74
64
66
68
61
65
76
63
74
50
67
48
68
54
63
52
53
Sat.
Lo W
50
r
48
r
53
r
54
r
53
r
54
r
45
r
52
r
53
r
44
r
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
W
pc
s
pc
s
r
s
s
s
pc
s
pc
s
pc
pc
sh
pc
pc
s
s
s
pc
pc
sh
r
s
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries,
sn-snow, i-ice.
the Astoria & Columbia River
Railroad Co., was acquired by
the county through tax foreclo-
sure in 1988 and will be added
to adjacent Seaside Mill Ponds
park land area.
“It makes a beautiful
approach to the Mill Ponds,”
Seaside City Councilor Jay
Barber said in late September.
The 26.5-acre Mill Ponds
are owned by the city and
protected by the North Coast
Land Conservancy as part of a
55-acre expanse of wetlands in
the Neawanna Creek system.
infl uence of intoxicants, hit-
and-run property damage,
and reckless driving at Miles
Crossing.
• At 4:28 p.m. Thursday,
the S heriff’s O ffi ce arrested
Frederick Sterling Ey, 63,
offrom Portland, on one
count each of driving while
under the infl uence of intox-
icants and reckless driving
near 49th Street in Astoria.
ON THE RECORD
DUII
• At 2:29 a.m. Thurs-
day, Clatsop County Sher-
iff’s Offi ce arrested Andrew
Scott Ames, 28, of Astoria,
for driving while under the
MONDAY
Astoria City Council, 7 p.m.,
City Hall, 1095 Duane St.
Lakeview
32/52
Ashland
50/57
existing services. Pierce said
he plans to gradually trim
the number of state employ-
ees from 40,000 to about
25,000, according to Ore-
gon Public Broadcasting . He
would make the cuts in small
increments, about 3 to 4 per-
cent a year, by not replac-
ing employees who resign or
retire, OPB reported.
Chris Pair, a spokesman
for Brown’s campaign, called
Pierce’s plan “unrealistic”
and “reckless.”
“Dr. Pierce can try to bail
out his campaign with his
own money, but he can’t have
the same approach when it
comes to the services Ore-
gon families depend on,” Pair
said in a statement.
The Capital Bureau is a
collaboration between EO
Media Group and Pamplin
Media Group.
LOTTERIES
PUBLIC MEETINGS
Ontario
45/62
TOMORROW'S NATIONAL WEATHER
NATIONAL CITIES
Today
Lo
62
43
52
53
60
45
58
15
75
54
61
71
60
63
77
61
71
47
65
44
60
52
59
51
49
Baker
40/54
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
UNDER THE SKY
Hi
82
57
66
83
68
62
87
38
84
68
69
91
74
73
88
78
88
62
74
65
70
76
69
57
65
La Grande
47/55
Roseburg
55/60
Brookings
54/59
Nov 7
John Day
47/56
Bend
45/56
Medford
53/60
Tonight's Sky: Before midnight, Aries the Ram, will
be high in the eastern night sky.
High
8.4 ft.
9.1 ft.
Prineville
46/58
Lebanon
52/60
By R.J. MARX
The Daily Astorian
Rain
Pendleton
49/60
The Dalles
48/60
Portland
54/61
Pierce has repeatedly
apologized for the comment.
He acknowledged at a
debate in Eugene in Octo-
ber that his campaign was
in crisis over the fl ap. He
said the controversy caused
him to delay the completion
of his proposed state bud-
get, which he fi nally released
Wednesday .
Pierce already faced poor
odds of defeating Brown in
Oregon’s predominantly Dem-
ocratic political environment,
but his moderate Republi-
can platform had drawn some
independents to his side.
His proposed budget calls
for investing more money
in education and transporta-
tion, while giving some small
tax cuts. The proposal comes
while budget writers project
a nearly $1.4 billion short-
fall in 2017-19 to maintain
County land sale adds to Seaside park land
The Clatsop County Board
of Commissioners transferred
two properties to Seaside for a
purchase price of $60,000.
The land, once owned by
Tillamook
54/59
Sunset tonight ........................... 6:30 p.m.
Sunrise Saturday ........................ 7:33 a.m. Coos Bay
Moonrise today .......................... 6:03 p.m. 58/62
Moonset today ............................ 5:27 a.m.
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
60
50
Shown is tomorrow's weather. Temperatures are tonight's lows and tomorrow's highs.
ASTORIA
53/61
SUN AND MOON
Time
1:03 a.m.
1:20 p.m.
TUESDAY
REGIONAL WEATHER
Precipitation
Thursday .......................................... 3.22"
Month to date ................................... 7.01"
Normal month to date ....................... 1.82"
Year to date .................................... 49.98"
Normal year to date ........................ 42.31"
Oct 15
60
52
Very windy; rain;
damaging winds
Astoria through Thursday.
Temperatures
High/low ....................................... 65°/57°
Normal high/low ........................... 62°/45°
Record high ............................ 79° in 1982
Record low ............................. 33° in 1966
Full
MONDAY
Norman L. Brenden, presi-
dent of Hawthorn Develop-
ment Vancouver.
Brown has reported about
$3.3 million in campaign
contributions so far.
The Pierces’ $250,000
contribution Tuesday came
two days before Pierce was
scheduled to debate Brown a
fourth time in Medford.
Pierce’s campaign has
been trying to recover from a
controversy over his comment
at a debate at the City Club of
Portland in September sug-
gesting successful women
aren’t susceptible to domes-
tic violence. Pierce made the
comment minutes after Brown
suggested she was a victim of
domestic violence. She later
clarifi ed that the incident hap-
pened when she was a young
woman and did not involve
her husband, Dan Little.
TUESDAY
Cannon Beach Public Works
Committee, 9 a.m., City Hall,
163 E. Gower St.
Sunset Empire Parks and Rec
District, 4 p.m., 1225 Ave. A,
Seaside.
Astoria Historic Landmarks
Commission, 5:15 p.m., City
Hall, 1095 Duane St.
Shoreline Sanitary
District Board, 7 p.m.,
Gearhart Hertig Station,
33496 West Lake Lane,
Warrenton.
Clatsop County Human
Services Advisory Council, 4
to 5:30 p.m., 800 Exchange St.,
Room 430.
Seaside Planning Commis-
sion, 7 p.m., work session, City
Hall, 989 Broadway.
OREGON
Thursday’s Pick 4:
1 p.m.: 3-0-2-0
4 p.m.: 1-5-4-4
7 p.m.: 1-3-1-1
10 p.m.: 0-0-1-7
WASHINGTON
Thursday’s Daily Game: 2-8-0
Thursday’s Keno: 03-05-09-
10-13-20-21-22-35-37-40-43-
48-52-53-54-58-68-71-78
Thursday’s Match 4: 07-09-
14-22
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at The Daily Astorian offi ce, 949 Exchange St. in Astoria.
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. POSTMASTER:
Send address changes to The Daily Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria,
OR 97103-0210
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