9A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 2017
WORLD IN BRIEF
This would be a deeply provocative act from the U.S. perspective,
and there has been widespread debate about whether Washington
would try to shoot the missiles down if they’re fired.
The U.S.-North Korea impasse, which has simmered since the
end of the Korean War in 1953, has grown more tense in recent
months over worries that the North’s nuclear weapons program is
nearing the ability to target the U.S. mainland. Pyongyang tested
two intercontinental ballistic missiles last month.
Associated Press
Deadly rally accelerates removal
of Confederate statues
In Gainesville, Florida, workers hired by the Daughters of
the Confederacy chipped away at a Confederate soldier’s statue,
loaded it quietly on a truck and drove away with little fanfare.
In Baltimore, Mayor Catherine Pugh said she’s ready to tear
down all of her city’s Confederate statues, and the city council
voted to have them destroyed. San Antonio lawmakers are look-
ing ahead to removing a statue that many people wrongly assumed
represented a famed Texas leader who died at the Alamo.
The deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, is
fueling another re-evaluation of Confederate statues in cities across
the nation, accelerating their removal in much the same way that
a 2015 mass shooting by a white supremacist renewed pressure to
take down the Confederate flag from public property.
“We should not glorify a part of our history in front of our build-
ings that really is a testament to America’s original sin,” Gaines-
ville Mayor Lauren Poe said Monday after the statue known as
“Old Joe” was returned to the United Daughters of the Confeder-
acy, which erected it in 1904.
A county spokesman said he did not know if the statue was
removed because of the events that killed one person and injured
dozens more Saturday in Charlottesville. But many officials who
were horrified by the confrontation soon began publicizing plans
to take down statues.
Analysis: Trump’s slow walk to
condemning white supremacists
WASHINGTON — It took President Donald Trump two days
to do what both Republicans and Democrats said should have
come fast and easy.
In his carefully worded statement Monday, Trump condemned
members of the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and white supremacists
as “repugnant.” He vowed that his administration would crack
down on those who perpetrate “racist violence.” He called for
national unity.
It was the type of statement Americans have come to expect
from their presidents after racially charged incidents, like the
deadly violence that erupted Saturday in Charlottesville, Virginia.
But Trump struggled mightily to meet the moment, glaringly omit-
ting any direct condemnation of white supremacists in his initial
comments on the incident and decrying bigotry “on many sides.”
As the most unconventional president in modern American
history, Trump has at times thrived off low expectations. He is
often cheered by Republicans when he fulfills basic functions of
the office. And GOP lawmakers in particular have often tried to
explain away his missteps as a function of his lack of experience in
Washington and politics.
But he has found himself with few allies after his botched han-
dling of the Charlottesville violence. Several Republicans chal-
lenged Trump directly to be more strident in calling out white
nationalists and neo-Nazis. Colorado Sen. Cory Gardner said the
president needed to “step up” and call the groups “evil.”
Protesters topple Confederate
statue in North Carolina
DURHAM, N.C. — Protesters in North Carolina toppled a
nearly century-old statue of a Confederate soldier Monday at a
rally against racism.
Activists in Durham brought a ladder up to the statue and used
a rope to pull down the Confederate Soldiers Monument that was
dedicated in 1924. A diverse crowd of dozens cheered as the statue
of a soldier holding a rifle fell to the ground in front of an old court-
house building that now houses local government offices.
Seconds after the monument fell, protesters began kicking the
crumpled bronze monument.
“I was a little bit shocked people could come here and come
together like that,” said Isaiah Wallace, who is black.
Wallace said he watched as others toppled the statue. He hopes
other Confederate symbols elsewhere will follow.
Both Korean leaders, US signal
turn to diplomacy amid crisis
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea’s military on Tuesday
presented leader Kim Jong Un with plans to launch missiles into
waters near Guam and “wring the windpipes of the Yankees,”
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Analysis: To launch or not?
Either way, North Korea may gain
Casey Toth/The Herald-Sun
Isaiah Wallace plays his guitar standing on the base that
formerly supported a Confederate soldier statue after a
group of protesters pulled it down during a rally Monday
in Durham, N.C. Protesters toppled the nearly century-old
statue of a Confederate soldier Monday at the rally against
racism. The Durham protest was in response to a white na-
tionalist rally held in Charlottesville, Va., over the weekend.
even as both Koreas and the United States signaled their willing-
ness to avert a deepening crisis, with each suggesting a path toward
negotiations.
The tentative interest in diplomacy follows unusually com-
bative threats between President Donald Trump and North Korea
amid worries that Pyongyang is nearing its long-sought goal of
accurately being able to send a nuclear missile to the U.S. main-
land. Next week’s start of U.S.-South Korean military exercises
that enrage the North each year make it unclear, however, if diplo-
macy will prevail.
During an inspection of the North Korean army’s Strategic
Forces, which handles the missile program, Kim praised the mil-
itary for drawing up a “close and careful plan” and said he would
watch the “foolish and stupid conduct of the Yankees” a little more
before deciding whether to order the missile test, the North’s state-
run Korean Central News Agency said. Kim appeared in pho-
tos sitting at a table with a large map marked by a straight line
between what appeared to be northeastern North Korea and Guam,
and passing over Japan — apparently showing the missiles’ flight
route.
The missile plans were previously announced. Kim said North
Korea would conduct the launches if the “Yankees persist in their
extremely dangerous reckless actions on the Korean Peninsula and
its vicinity,” and that the United States should “think reasonably
and judge properly” to avoid shaming itself, the news agency said.
Lobbing missiles toward Guam, a major U.S. military hub
in the Pacific, would be a deeply provocative act from the U.S.
perspective, and a miscalculation on either side could lead to a mil-
itary clash. U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis said the United
States would take out any such missile seen to be heading for
American soil and declared any such North Korean attack could
mean war.
Top US military officer warns
NKorea that US military ready
SEOUL, South Korea — The top U.S. military officer said
Monday that the United States wants to peacefully resolve a deep-
ening standoff with North Korea but is also ready to use the “full
range” of its military capabilities in case of provocation.
The comments by Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford in a
series of meetings with senior South Korean military and political
officials and the local media appeared to be an attempt to ease anx-
iety over tit-for-tat threats between President Donald Trump and
North Korea while also showing a willingness to back up Trump’s
warnings if need be.
Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is visit-
ing South Korea, Japan and China after a week in which Trump
declared the U.S. military “locked and loaded” and said he was
ready to unleash “fire and fury” if North Korea continued to
threaten the United States.
North Korea, meanwhile, has threatened to lob four interme-
diate-range missiles into the waters near Guam, a tiny U.S. ter-
ritory about 2,000 miles from Pyongyang, North Korea’s capital.
Legal Notices
AB6430
Notice of Public Auction
Main Street Storage (North)
Pursuant to its lien rights
Intends to sell at Cash only
Public oral auction
The property of:
Liz Nelson #103
Lisa Benson #20
Shannon Innis #71B
Kelly Simonsen #76A
Leeann Travenshek #64
Sale to be held at
51 NE Harbor Ct.
Warrenton, Oregon
8/23/17 at 10:30am
(503) 861-2880
Published: August 8th and
15th, 2017
Dubai magnate tied to Trump
brand seeks new ventures abroad
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — During recent trips to Cro-
atia and Malta, a Dubai-based billionaire and business partner of
the Trump Organization looked more like a head of state himself
— mingling with government dignitaries, receiving a presidential
reception and visiting the glittering Mediterranean Sea.
Hussain Sajwani met with leaders in the two European nations
and addressed local journalists, many of whom referred to his ties
to President Donald Trump or simply called him “the Donald of
Dubai.”
Sajwani’s trips, as well as a recent deal in Oman, show that
Trump’s business partner in Dubai wants to expand his develop-
ment empire beyond the Mideast and a tower under construction
in London.
Enter Sajwani’s DAMAC Properties, which launched a new
effort this week to sell Trump-branded villas at the golf course
bearing the American president’s name.
“My dream is as we have put our major, iconic tower in Lon-
don, that we do repeat that in major gateway cities around the
world,” Sajwani said in a July online video. “Tokyo, Toronto, New
York, Paris, I don’t know. But that would be a dream — to grow
DAMAC with its iconic brands around the world.”
High-tech US plants offer jobs
even as the laid-off struggle
NORWOOD, Ohio — Herbie Mays is 3M proud, and it shows
— in the 3M shirt he wears; in the 3M ring he earned after three
decades at the company’s plant in suburban Cincinnati; in the way
he shows off a card from a 3M supervisor, praising Mays as “a
GREAT employee.”
But it’s all nostalgia.
Mays’ last day at 3M was in March. Bent on cutting costs and
refocusing its portfolio, the company decided to close the plant that
made bandages, knee braces and other health care supplies and
move work to its plant in Mexico.
At 62, Mays is unemployed and wants to work, though on the
face of it he has plenty of opportunities. Barely 10 miles from his
ranch-style brick home in this blue-collar city, GE Aviation has
been expanding — and hiring.
In the state-of-the-art laboratory in a World War II-era building
the size of 27 football fields, workers use breakthrough technol-
ogy to build jet engines that run on less fuel at higher temperatures.
Bright flashes flare out as GE workers run tests with a robotic arm
that can withstand 2,000 degrees.
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
AB6431
Notice of Public Auction
Main Street Storage (South)
Pursuant to its lien rights
Intends to sell at Cash only
Public oral auction
The property of:
Kayla Baughman #307
Kevin Jensen #142
Kathryn St. Clare #302
Andrew Wirkkala #144
Sale to be held at
1805 S. Main Ave.
Warrenton, Oregon
8/23/17 11:00 am
(503) 861-2880
Published: August 8th and
15th, 2017
AB6436
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON
FOR THE COUNTY OF CLATSOP
HSBC BANK USA N.A., AS TRUSTEE ON BEHALF OF ACE
SECURITIES CORP. HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST AND FOR THE
REGISTERED HOLDERS OF ACE SECURITIES CORP.
HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST 2007-HE1 ASSET BACKED PASS-
THROUGH CERTIFICATES,
Plaintiff,
v.
ROSALBA CISNEROS ESPINOZA AKA ROSALBA CISNEROS;
COLUMBIA COLLECTION SERVICE, INC.;
OCCUPANTS OF THE PROPERTY,
Defendants.
Case No.: 17CV15279
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
Legal Notices
AB6427
CITY OF ASTORIA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The City of Astoria Planning Commission will hold a public hearing on
Tuesday, Aug 22, 2017 at 6:30 p.m., in the Astoria City Hall, Council
Chambers, 1095 Duane Street, Astoria. The purpose of the hearing is
to consider the following request:
1. Conditional Use CU17-10 by Md7, on behalf of Verizon Wireless, to
install conduits for public/private use on Tax Lot 809090000100 in the
LR, Land Reserves Zone and R-2 Medium Density Residential Zone.
2. Conditional Use CU17-09 (Permit Extension PE17-01) by Elizabeth
Nelson to operate a school of music in an existing commercial building,
and to extend this permit to 8-23-18, at 1103 Grand Ave in the R-3,
High Density Residential zone.
For information, call or write the Community Development Department,
1095 Duane St., Astoria OR 97103, phone 503-338-5183.
The location of the hearing is accessible to the handicapped. An
interpreter for the hearing impaired may be requested under the terms
of ORS 192.630 by contacting the Community Development
Department at 503-338-5183 48 hours prior to the meeting.
The Astoria Planning Commission reserves the right to modify the
proposal or to continue the hearing to another date and time. If the
hearing is continued, no further public notice will be provided.
THE CITY OF ASTORIA
Anna Stamper, Administrative Assistant
Published: August 15th, 2017
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SEOUL, South Korea — If, after all the fanfare, North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un doesn’t actually launch missiles toward
Guam, many may write the whole episode off as another of the
North’s seemingly endless bluffs. But from Pyongyang’s perspec-
tive and in the eyes of some U.S. military experts, Kim and his gen-
erals have already won this round.
Launch or not, Pyongyang has caused great drama and angst,
riled U.S. President Donald Trump and alarmed America’s allies in
Tokyo and Seoul. It could also set a precedent for more aggressive
brinkmanship ahead.
It comes as no surprise then that on Tuesday, as North Korea’s
state media released photos of Kim and his military officers exam-
ining the launch plan, replete with photos of the missiles’ flight
path and a big satellite image of the U.S. territory’s Andersen Air
Force Base, it also offered a seeming out.
Kim, it said, wants to “watch a little more” before making a
decision.
The North’s plan is to launch four missiles into the waters
around the U.S. Pacific territory: one to the north, one to the south,
and one each east and west. Pyongyang is calling it an “envelop-
ing fire” demonstration, but in military jargon it’s more commonly
called “bracketing.” It was calculated to touch off a storm of anx-
iety region-wide.
WWW.DAILYASTORIAN.COM
po: Rosalba Cisneros Espinoza aka Rosalba Cisneros; Occupants of
the Property
You are hereby required to appear and defend the Complaint filed
against you in the above entitled cause within thirty (30) days
from the date of service of this summons upon you, and in case
of your failure to do so, for want thereof, Plaintiff will apply to the
court for the relief demanded in the Complaint.
NOTICE TO DEFENDANT:
READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY!
You must “appear” in this case or the other side will win automatically.
To “appear” you must file with the court a legal paper called a “motion”
or “answer.” The “motion” or “answer” (or “reply”) must be given
to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of
first publication specified herein along with the required filing fee.
It must be in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff's
attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service
on the plaintiff.
If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you
need help in finding an attorney, you may call the Oregon State Bar's
Lawyer Referral Service at (503) 684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at
(800) 452-7636.
The relief sought in the Complaint is the foreclosure of the property
located at 1389 Stillwater Court, Seaside, OR 97138.
Date of First Publication: August 15, 2017
McCarthy & Holthus, LLP
Jeremy Clifford, OSB #142987
920 SW 3rd Ave, 1st Floor
Portland, OR 97204
Phone: (855) 809-3977
Fax: (971) 201-3202
E-mail: jclifford@mccarthyholthus.com
Of Attorneys for Plaintiff
Published: August 15th, 22nd, 29th, and September 5th, 2017