The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, November 03, 2017, WEEKEND EDITION, Page 2A, Image 2

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    2A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2017
Crash sends truck into Fort George Brewery building
Minor damage
and injuries
were reported
By JACK HEFFERNAN
The Daily Astorian
A crash sent a white Toy-
ota Tacoma darting into the
side of Fort George Brewery
in Astoria Thursday morning ,
causing minor damage and
injuries.
Kyle Kirby, of Warren-
ton, said he was driving east
on Exchange Street in the
Tacoma just after 11:15 a.m.
when a black Chevrolet Cruze
came hurtling down the 14th
Street hill. T he driver ran the
stop sign and collided with the
truck, sending it into the side
of the building, Kirby said.
The other driver, a young
man who briefl y lost con-
sciousness after the accident,
was taken to Columbia Memo-
rial Hospital on a stretcher.
Fire and police personnel said
it was likely precautionary and
Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian
Jack Heffernan/The Daily Astorian
Damage can be seen to the side of Fort George Brewery in Astoria Thursday after a
crash .
A sign was toppled after a crash near Fort George Brew-
ery Thursday.
that he didn’t sustain any seri-
ous injuries.
Kirby believed his foot was
broken. “I’m pretty banged up,”
he said as he limped around the
window after the accident.
“It’s a good thing no one
was in the room at the time,”
said brewer Alix Daggatt.
“There’s glass everywhere.”
scene minutes after the crash.
The crash shattered a glass
window and cracked another
window . It also took out a
corner street sign and caused
The Daily Astorian
Astoria school children
have raised over $1,000 for
renovation work at the Astoria
Library.
The “Pennies for Piggies”
program launched on Oct. 23
and involves the placement of
a special piggy bank in every
classroom at Astor Elemen-
tary, Lewis and Clark Ele-
mentary and Astoria Mid-
dle School. The program
The Daily Astorian
Carpenter/Grandfather
July 4, 1953 — Oct. 28, 2017
Participants in the Oregon Season Trackers program
monitor precipitation and plant changes from their
backyards, farms, woodlands and schoolyards, sharing
it with researchers nationwide.
online training before attend-
ing skills-building training
from 6 to 8 p.m. Nov. 15 in
Astoria. The program costs
$40 per person or group shar-
ing materials, including a pro-
gram-approved rain gauge.
Scholarships are available for
classes and other groups.
To register and take the
online training, visit http://
t i n y u r l . c o m / y a t k d z d w.
For more information, call
503-325-8573.
SUNDAY
32
49
39
Partly cloudy and chilly
Cloudy and chilly with
rain developing
ALMANAC
Last
Cloudy and breezy
First
Nov 18
Nov 26
Monday, Nov. 6
BADER, John “Billy” W.
Jr. — Funeral Mass at 10 a.m.,
Holy Rosary Church, 375 N.E.
Clackamas St., in Portland.
Interment is private. Bader,
La Grande
27/41
Baker
21/42
Burns
16/38
Klamath Falls
28/40
Lakeview
30/41
Ashland
38/48
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017
Astoria / Port Docks
Time
7:52 a.m.
8:39 p.m.
Low
1.3 ft.
-1.2 ft.
City
Baker City
Bend
Brookings
Eugene
Ilwaco
Klamath Falls
Medford
Newberg
Newport
North Bend
Hi
45
41
51
51
49
47
49
51
52
54
Today
Lo
21
22
39
33
35
28
31
36
38
38
W
r
sh
r
r
sh
sh
r
sh
sh
r
Hi
42
42
52
51
49
40
51
49
51
53
Sat.
Lo
23
29
43
39
42
20
34
41
43
44
W
r
pc
pc
c
r
pc
pc
r
r
pc
City
Olympia
Pendleton
Portland
Roseburg
Salem
Seaside
Spokane
Springfi eld
Vancouver
Yakima
Hi
43
47
50
49
53
50
38
50
50
49
Today
Lo
28
29
37
35
35
35
23
35
37
26
W
sh
r
sh
r
sh
sh
c
r
sh
r
Hi
45
45
49
49
51
49
36
49
47
46
Sat.
Lo
34
33
41
39
41
42
28
40
42
31
W
r
r
r
pc
r
r
sf
pc
r
pc
TOMORROW'S NATIONAL WEATHER
NATIONAL CITIES
W
pc
c
c
pc
pc
pc
s
c
pc
c
c
pc
c
t
pc
t
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
r
sh
pc
Hi
78
52
52
73
54
51
83
29
85
64
62
75
69
80
85
77
80
57
81
60
71
61
61
43
58
Sat.
Lo
60
45
47
39
46
48
60
23
76
58
51
56
59
67
73
63
64
53
62
54
59
44
48
37
53
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
W
pc
pc
r
pc
c
r
pc
c
sh
r
c
c
c
c
s
sh
pc
pc
pc
pc
c
r
r
r
sh
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries,
sn-snow, i-ice.
69, of Astoria and Vancouver,
Washington, died Thursday,
Oct. 26, 2017, in Vancouver.
Mount Scott Funeral Home
in Portland is in charge of the
arrangements.
Saturday, Nov. 11
GRUHLKEY, Mary Jo —
Celebration of life and potluck
from 3 to 6 p.m., Pier 39 Ban-
quet Room, bottom of 39th
Street.
and criminal trespass. Police
responded to a report of a man
testing handles on car doors and
eventually entering one. When
offi cers arrived, Jones allegedly
fl ed the car and resisted as they
tried to arrest him.
John Jones, 21, of Warrenton,
was arrested by the Warrenton
Police Department on the 50
block of N.E. First Street and
charged with harassment and
resisting arrest. After police
responded to a reported distur-
bance, Jones allegedly hit an
offi cer in the face in a glanc-
ing blow.
ON THE RECORD
Ontario
29/48
Bend
22/42
REGIONAL CITIES
TOMORROW'S TIDES
Today
Lo
61
43
43
46
41
37
55
22
77
44
44
56
59
63
71
58
64
46
49
48
55
49
55
34
48
John Day
28/41
Kevin Lee Bohm was born July 4, 1953 to everyone, repairing, rebuilding and creating
Arne and Norma Bohm at St. Mary’s Hospital projects and helping in any way he could.
He is survived by his wife, Laura; his son,
in Astoria, Oregon. He passed away in Portland,
Shane (Kari) Wingenbach; his daughter, Tan-
Oregon, Oct. 28, 2017.
nia (Tyson Griffi n); his sister, Dena
Kevin was raised in Svensen, Ore-
(Michael Umbriaco); his four broth-
gon, and graduated from Knappa
ers-in-law and their wives, Rich-
High School in 1971. He married the
ard and Sharon Kelley, Daniel and
love of his life, Laura Kelley, in 1979.
Debra Kelley, David and Thalia Kel-
He learned the carpentry trade
ley, all of Astoria, and Donald and
from Lort Holdridge, then went on
Aaron Melcher of Watertown, Mas-
to run his own company for 12 years,
sachusetts. He is also survived by
O & B Construction with his busi-
11 grandchildren, Lexi, Rylan, Jay-
ness partner, Gary Ordway. He later
lynne, Shayna, Brock, Molina,
joined the carpenter’s union, where
Rosie, Jazmynn, Trenaley, Drecylla
he worked for several construction
Kevin Bohm
and Thor-Zander; numerous nieces,
companies, the most recent and lon-
nephews and cousins; and his fi shing
gest at J.H. Kelly with his good friend
partner Gail-Z-bob.
and co-worker, Shaun Magnuson.
A potluck celebration of life will be held at
Kevin was known for his love of sport fi sh-
ing, gardening, building things and music. He Knappa High School, 41535 Old Highway 30 in
was a devoted husband, father, grandfather Astoria, Oregon (Svensen), on Sunday, Nov. 5,
and friend, coming to the rescue of anyone and from 1 to 5 p.m.
MEMORIALS
Roseburg
35/49
Brookings
39/53
Source: Jim Todd, OMSI
Hi
79
73
50
66
50
52
79
34
88
57
53
74
70
78
85
75
81
72
62
75
60
64
64
43
77
Prineville
21/43
Lebanon
36/49
Medford
31/51
Tonight's Sky: Full Moon at 10:23 pm.
High
8.3 ft.
9.7 ft.
Pendleton
29/45
Salem
35/51
Newport
38/51
Eugene
33/51
New
Nov 10
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
52
42
Mostly cloudy and cool
with a little rain
The Dalles
33/48
Portland
37/49
UNDER THE SKY
Time
2:05 a.m.
1:49 p.m.
Chilly with periods of rain
52
38
Tillamook
36/50
Sunset tonight ........................... 5:58 p.m.
Sunrise Saturday ........................ 8:01 a.m. Coos Bay
Moonrise today .......................... 6:14 p.m. 38/52
Moonset today ............................ 7:02 a.m.
Nov 3
48
35
TUESDAY
Shown is tomorrow's weather. Temperatures are tonight's lows and tomorrow's highs.
ASTORIA
32/49
SUN AND MOON
Full
MONDAY
REGIONAL WEATHER
Precipitation
Thursday .......................................... 0.32"
Month to date ................................... 0.50"
Normal month to date ....................... 0.60"
Year to date .................................... 62.65"
Normal year to date ........................ 46.82"
bers of the foundation and the
library board emphasized the
need to give younger citizens
a role.
“Our ‘Pennies for Piggies’
fundraiser is not about how
much money is being raised
by the children,” said Patsy
Oser, foundation board mem-
ber and retired school librar-
ian. “It’s about the children
having ownership in a place
that will be special to them for
many years.”
Kevin Lee Bohm
Jody Einerson
SATURDAY
Astoria through Thursday.
Temperatures
High/low ....................................... 52°/45°
Normal high/low ........................... 57°/42°
Record high ............................ 71° in 1970
Record low ............................. 23° in 1935
allows students to participate
in efforts to raise $3.5 million
for the library renovation, said
Cheryl Johnson, of the Astoria
Library Foundation board and
a retired librarian for the Asto-
ria School District.
“Libraries are the heart of
our communities,” she said.
“Libraries help create and sup-
port life long learners and life-
long readers.”
As the city discussed plans
for the library building, mem-
OBITUARIES
FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR ASTORIA
TONIGHT
Kirby, 27, lamented the
damage to the truck, which he
bought just a year ago.
“This is basically my pride
and joy,” he said.
‘Pennies for Piggies’ raises money for library
Oregon State extension recruits
‘citizen scientists’ to track plants
Oregon State University
Extension Service is provid-
ing citizen scientists a chance
to help track the change of the
seasons.
The Oregon Season
Tracker program connects
community volunteers with
university researchers to col-
lect and report local data on
precipitation and phenology,
the study of plant life cycles
and how they are affected by
climate and habitat. Volun-
teers collect data from their
backyards, farms, woodlands
and schoolyards. The data
is shared with researchers
nationwide.
More than 100 rain sta-
tions have cropped since the
program opened in 2015,
helping fi ll in missing micro-
climate data in counties, but
more are needed, according
to Oregon State University.
Participants can take
minor damage to a parked gray
Chevrolet Colorado. No one
was inside the building , which
contained shards of glass as
far as 20 feet away from the
Assault
• At 1:06 a.m. Thursday,
Timothy Yaakola, 46, of Sea-
side, was arrested by the Sea-
side Police Department on S.
Franklin St. and Avenue C and
charged with assaulting a pub-
lic safety offi cer, unlawful entry
into a motor vehicle, resisting
arrest, eluding a police offi cer
Harassment
• At 10:18 p.m. Thursday,
PUBLIC MEETINGS
MONDAY
Astoria City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane St.
LOTTERIES
OREGON
Thursday’s Pick 4:
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10 p.m.: 2-5-8-6
Thursday’s Lucky Lines: 02-07-10-15-19-21-28-32
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:
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OR 97103-0210
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