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2A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2017 Astoria Library receives Astoria hospital CEO honored for rural health leadership preservation grant The Daily Astorian By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian The Astoria Library just landed a grant that will help staff take the next step in cat- aloguing and preserving the many important historical items uncovered in the build- ing’s basement. The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department awarded 18 grants totaling $230,000 to organizations across the state Thursday. The grants will go to projects from exhibits to oral history that conserve, develop and interpret the state’s cultural heritage. The library received a grant for $10,850 to “orga- nize and develop a plan for the placement, storage and care of the archival collec- tion.” The grant will not require a financial match from the city, said Library Director Jimmy Pearson. Rather, the library will pro- vide staff time and volunteer hours. As the library staff pre- pare for an upcoming renova- tion of the 50-year-old build- ing, they have had to figure out what to do with historical items in the basement. The National Organization of State Offices of Rural Health has named Columbia Memo- rial Hospital CEO Erik Thorsen a 2017 Community Star. National Rural Health Day was Thursday. Each year for the holiday, the organization publishes “Community Stars,” an e-book highlighting those dedicating themselves to rural health care. Thorsen was one of 26 selected nationally for a profile, and the only person from Oregon. The publication highlighted Thorsen’s work to bring spe- The biggest piece of the grant is that it will allow Pear- son to hire an archivist who can evaluate the items, train volunteers on how to preserve the items and also figure out ways to store the items and make them available to the public. “Preservation, restoration and access,” Pearson said, summing up the three most important points as he sees them. He added that the grant will start refining what local SATURDAY Cloudy with a couple of showers ALMANAC The Daily Astorian An equipment upgrade will leave roughly 3,100 Pacific Power customers in Warrenton and Hammond without power early Saturday morning. Crews are scheduled to Increasingly windy with heavy rain Warrenton Nov. 3, 1937 — Nov. 13, 2017 Tillamook 40/53 First Salem 35/50 Newport 40/52 Nov 26 Last Dec 3 Source: Jim Todd, OMSI TOMORROW'S TIDES Astoria / Port Docks Time 6:49 a.m. 7:36 p.m. Low 2.2 ft. -0.5 ft. Today Lo 47 30 45 23 37 41 55 -11 69 47 39 46 56 64 69 55 64 37 50 37 56 26 47 43 39 Ontario 25/47 Burns 15/42 Klamath Falls 18/46 Lakeview 16/43 Ashland 28/51 REGIONAL CITIES City Baker City Bend Brookings Eugene Ilwaco Klamath Falls Medford Newberg Newport North Bend Hi 44 43 52 50 51 43 50 51 52 53 Today Lo 22 24 38 32 45 18 27 37 40 38 W pc pc c c r pc c c r c Hi 45 48 54 49 52 46 50 51 52 54 Sat. Lo 23 27 42 31 47 17 27 37 43 40 W pc pc pc pc c pc pc c c pc City Olympia Pendleton Portland Roseburg Salem Seaside Spokane Springfi eld Vancouver Yakima Hi 49 48 50 52 52 51 41 50 49 53 Today Lo 38 31 39 33 35 42 32 32 38 30 W r c c c sh r c c c c Hi 51 50 51 52 50 53 43 50 49 52 Sat. Lo 39 30 38 32 36 45 31 32 36 29 W c pc c pc c c c pc c c TOMORROW'S NATIONAL WEATHER NATIONAL CITIES Hi 66 45 46 67 53 44 82 13 82 52 62 77 73 72 81 65 79 49 77 50 57 49 62 49 53 Baker 22/45 Juneva Anne Brunswick was born Nov. 3, She was preceded in death by her brothers, 1937 in San Francisco to Maxine E. Tregil- Patrick and Bruce; her sons, Norman and John; lis and Ambrose T. Clancy. Anne grew up in and her husband, Larry Sr. She is survived by her brother, Michael San Francisco with her three brothers, Patrick, Clancy; one daughter, Deborah Bruce and Michael Clancy. “Debbie” Leiferman; three sons and She went on to marry Lawrence their wives, Lawrence “Tom” and Boardman. They had four children, Diane Boardman, Timothy “Tim” Debbie, Tom, Norman and Tim. She Boardman, and Larry Jr. and Kelly divorced Lawrence and moved with Brunswick; nine grandchildren; and her children to Oregon in 1968. She 13 great-grandchildren. married Larry Brunswick Sr. on June On Nov. 20, from 10 a.m. to 1 9, 1971 in Astoria and had two chil- dren with him, John and Larry Jr. p.m., a visitation will be held at Ocean View Funeral and Crema- She has been an active member tion Service, 1213 Franklin Ave., in of St. Mary, Star of the Sea Catho- Juneva Anne lic Church in Astoria, where she was Astoria. At 3 p.m., the rosary will be Brunswick prayed at St. Francis de Sales Mis- treasurer for the Catholic Daughters, sion, 867 Fifth Ave., in Hammond, volunteered for cleaning service, and faithfully ironed linens for the church. She followed by a Mass at 3:30 p.m. Interment will be at Willamette National retired from Lum’s Auto Center after many Cemetery the following day. years. In lieu of flowers, the family requests con- Her family remembers her as a solid, loving part of their lives. She enjoyed sharing parts tributions be made to St. Francis de Sales in of her heritage, including making Cornish pas- Hammond or to St. Mary, Star of the Sea in ties and telling stories of growing up in San Astoria. Francisco. She loved reading, and was eager to A digital guest book is available on the adapt from paper books to the instant delivery Ocean View Funeral and Cremation Service of digital material. website, www.oceanviewastoria.com Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017 Tonight's Sky: Leonid meteor shower peak. Expect 10 to 15 per hour fast meteors under dark skies. 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 La Grande 29/45 Roseburg 33/52 Brookings 38/54 Dec 9 John Day 28/48 Bend 24/48 Medford 27/50 UNDER THE SKY High 7.9 ft. 9.3 ft. Prineville 23/49 Lebanon 33/50 Eugene 32/49 Full Pendleton 31/50 The Dalles 33/51 Portland 39/51 Sunset tonight ........................... 4:41 p.m. Sunrise Saturday ........................ 7:21 a.m. Coos Bay Moonrise today ........................... 6:16 a.m. 36/54 Moonset today ........................... 4:48 p.m. Time 1:12 a.m. 12:44 p.m. Cloudy, rain beginning; breezy in the p.m. Shown is tomorrow's weather. Temperatures are tonight's lows and tomorrow's highs. ASTORIA 42/52 SUN AND MOON Nov 18 55 50 A shower in the morning; partly sunny Regional Business Manager Alisa Dunlap said. Customers can call Pacific Power at 1-888-221-7070 with any questions. Any cus- tomers who lose power in any other part of the county during that time can report the outage at 1-877-508-5088. Juneva Anne Brunswick TUESDAY 53 45 upgrade equipment at the company’s Warrenton substa- tion from 11:59 p.m. Friday through 4 a.m. Saturday. “The work will reduce the likelihood of unex- pected outages in the future and improve reliability in the area,” Pacific Power OBITUARIES REGIONAL WEATHER Precipitation Thursday .......................................... 1.01" Month to date ................................... 7.32" Normal month to date ....................... 5.54" Year to date .................................... 69.47" Normal year to date ........................ 51.76" New MONDAY 52 43 Mainly cloudy Astoria through Thursday. Temperatures High/low ....................................... 49°/40° Normal high/low ........................... 53°/40° Record high ............................ 65° in 1976 Record low ............................. 24° in 1955 The 2017 book can be found at www.powerofrural. org Planned power outage in Warrenton, Hammond preservationist John Good- enberger and his students started. Goodenberger has spent hundreds of hours sift- ing through the basement’s buried treasures. “The grant has been a cul- mination of the right people at the right time in the right place with an understanding of what’s down there,” Pear- son said. The Astoria City Coun- cil will still need to formally accept the grant at a future meeting. SUNDAY 52 44 42 Erik Thorsen Alex Pajunas/The Daily Astorian The Astoria Library has received a grant to help pre- serve an archival collection. FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR ASTORIA TONIGHT cialty cancer care to the North Coast through a partnership with Oregon Health & Science University. The hospital and OHSU first partnered to open a local chemotherapy clinic in 2010. The Knight Cancer Col- laborative expanded chemo- therapy and added radiation treatment. “‘Medical excellence with- out the miles’ is the phrase used to describe the CMH-OHSU relationship,” the publication said of Thorsen. “For Erik’s part, his vision for advancing health care for people on the North Coast has gone the dis- tance, and then some.” W s s r sh sh c s sn pc c sh pc pc c pc pc pc s c s c sn s r s Hi 70 51 48 47 45 52 69 -6 82 59 49 63 77 70 83 69 80 54 58 57 60 44 62 51 58 Sat. Lo 42 48 27 26 25 33 40 -12 69 29 29 41 55 38 67 36 51 49 32 50 30 25 47 43 50 DEATH Oct. 14, 2017 HAISTEN, Vera Matilda Broman, 93, of Orange Park, Florida, formerly of Astoria, died in Orange Park. Broadus-Raines Funeral Home in Green Cove Springs, Florida, was in charge of the arrangements. An online obituary and guest book are available at http://tinyurl.com/VHaisten BIRTH Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Nov. 13, 2017 FOSTER, Kaylee, and KELLY, Patrick Jr., of Knappa, a boy, Jarrod Alan Dean Kelly, born at Columbia Memorial Hospital in Astoria. Grandparents are Clark and Heidi Foster of Jewell, Sha- ron and Water Olson of Warrenton, and Patrick Kelly Sr. and Donna Kelly Karns, both of Knappa. W pc r r s c r pc c pc r c pc s t s t pc r pc c sh pc s c c PUBLIC MEETINGS MONDAY Astoria City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane St. LOTTERIES OREGON Thursday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 3202 4 p.m.: 4136 7 p.m.: 8560 10 p.m.: 8180 Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice. Thursday’s Lucky Lines: 01-06- 12-15-20-22-25-31 Estimated jackpot: $12,000 WASHINGTON Thursday’s Daily Game: 1-5-6 Thursday’s Keno: 02-06-09-10- 11-15-24-30-43-50-56-63-64- 67-68-69-75-76-77-79 Thursday’s Match 4: 01-08- 17-19 ON THE RECORD DUII • At 7:44 p.m. Thursday, Howard Kem, 65, of Browns- mead, was arrested by the Clat- THE NEW BALANCE ® 860v7 WORKS AS HARD AS YOU DO sop County Sheriff’s Office on Brownsmead Dike Lane and charged with driving under the influence of intoxicants. Depu- ties found Kem after respond- ing to a single-vehicle accident in the area involving a car he was driving. Stability from top to bottom for the mileage hungry, in a sleek, responsive ride. OBITUARY POLICY The Daily Astorian publishes paid obituaries. The obituary can include a small photo and, for veterans, a flag symbol at no charge. The deadline for all obituaries is 9 a.m. the business day prior. 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