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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (June 21, 2018)
2A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 2018 house, 1204 Ivy Ave., Tillamook, $5. Astoria Music Festival All-Stars Classi- cal Jam, 7:30 p.m., Liberty Theatre, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, $15, $25, $35. Astoria Music Festival All-Bach, 7:30 p.m., Liberty Theatre, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, $20, $35, $45. “Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery,” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, $20 to $25, rated PG. “Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery,” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, $20 to $25, rated PG. Chris McNeary, folk, 7:30 p.m., WineKraft, 80 10th St., Astoria, no cover, 21+. FRIDAY Plein Air & More Arts Festival, 10 a.m., on location throughout Cannon Beach. * Jeff Evans’ Magic Show, 2 p.m., South Bend Library, 1216 First St., South Bend, Wash. SUNDAY Luke Winslow-King, blues, 8:30 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., no cover. Hickory Mertsching Artist Demon- stration, 11 a.m., RiverSea Gallery, 1160 Commercial St., Astoria. SATURDAY Plein Air & More Arts Festival, 11 a.m., on location throughout Cannon Beach. Plein Air & More Arts Festival, 10 a.m., on location throughout Cannon Beach. * Reptile Man Richard Ritchey, 3 p.m., Hoffman Center, 594 Laneda Ave., Manzanita. Northwest By Northwest Gallery * “King Arthur’s Quest,” 2 p.m., NCRD Performing Arts Center, 36155 9th St., Nehalem. * “King Arthur’s Quest,” 7 p.m., NCRD Performing Arts Center, 36155 9th St., Nehalem. Plein Air & More is an interactive, three-day arts festival featuring artists who create art outdoors in Cannon Beach, on the beach and in galleries. Festival artist Hazel Schlesinger will demonstrate ‘en plein air’ painting at Northwest By Northwest Gallery. Astoria Music Festival Sergey’s Happy Hour, 4 p.m., Liberty Theatre, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, $20. Resolectrics, blues, 7 p.m., McMenam- ins Sand Trap, 1157 Marion Ave., Gear- hart, no cover. Bar-K Buckaroos, country, 6 p.m., Public Coast Brewing Co., 264 Third St., Cannon Beach, no cover. * Starlite Children’s Academy “After Hours,” 7 p.m., Barn Community Play- house, 1204 Ivy Ave., Tillamook, $5. * Great American Trainwreck, country, 7 p.m., Confluence Project Amphithe- ater, 244 Robert Gray Drive, Ilwaco, Barbie G, folk, 7 p.m., WineKraft, 80 10th St., Astoria, no cover, 21+. ON THE RECORD Naomi Hooley & Rob Stroup, blues, 7 p.m., Peninsula Arts Center, 504 Pacific Ave., Long Beach, Wash., $15. * Starlite Children’s Academy “After Hours,” 7 p.m., Barn Community Play- * Pacific Northwest Pro Wrestling, 5 p.m., The Armory, 1636 Exchange St., Astoria, $10. Resolectrics, rock, 8 p.m., Fort George Brewery, 1483 Duane St., Astoria, no cover. The Hackles, folk, 8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., no cover. * Recommended for kids. Ban on food taxes would be a first in the nation Office on the 84300 block of Nordmark Drive in Seaside and charged with assault- ing a public safety officer, resisting arrest and interfering with making a police report. A sheriff’s deputy was trying to arrest Rich- creek on a warrant before he allegedly resisted. The deputy threatened to use a stun gun before two other officers arrived. A scuf- fle then allegedly ensued before Richcreek was arrested. DUII • At 2:08 a.m. Thursday, Hoang N. Phan, 23, of Portland, was arrested by Astoria police on Second Street near the Astoria Riv- erwalk and charged with driving under the influence of intoxicants. Assault • At 8:12 p.m. Wednesday, Nathan- iel Eugene Richcreek, 39, of Seaside, was arrested by the Clatsop County Sheriff’s Wash., no cover. Billy Stoops & the Dirt Angels, 7 p.m., The Birk, 11139 Hwy. 202, Birkenfeld, $10. Astoria Music Festival Puccini’s Tosca, 4 p.m., Liberty Theatre, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, $30, $65, $85. Voters to decide in November By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR ASTORIA TONIGHT FRIDAY SATURDAY 67 54 54 Becoming cloudy Tillamook 54/66 Clouds and sun with a shower possible Last Salem 55/78 Newport 52/63 July 6 Coos Bay 54/67 First July 12 Baker 47/82 Ontario 56/90 Burns 47/81 Klamath Falls 45/83 Lakeview 44/82 Ashland 56/85 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018 Tonight's Sky: Summer arrives at 3:07 a.m., which is the moment of the summer solstice here in the Northern Hemisphere. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI TOMORROW'S TIDES Astoria / Port Docks Time 3:57 a.m. 3:48 p.m. Low 1.1 ft. 1.4 ft. REGIONAL CITIES City Baker City Bend Brookings Eugene Ilwaco Klamath Falls Medford Newberg Newport North Bend Hi 77 81 65 77 63 83 88 75 62 66 Today Lo 47 48 52 50 56 45 55 55 52 54 W sh pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc Hi 82 79 70 77 64 83 86 75 63 67 Fri. Lo 46 45 54 49 56 42 54 54 51 53 W pc s s s pc s s pc s s City Olympia Pendleton Portland Roseburg Salem Seaside Spokane Springfi eld Vancouver Yakima Hi 73 88 77 80 77 64 79 75 75 88 Today Lo 50 59 57 55 55 55 56 54 56 55 W pc sh pc pc pc pc t pc pc pc Hi 70 84 76 82 78 66 81 78 73 86 Fri. Lo 49 56 58 55 54 56 53 53 56 51 W pc pc pc s pc pc pc s pc pc TOMORROW'S NATIONAL WEATHER NATIONAL CITIES Today Hi Lo 88 70 76 58 68 59 84 55 72 60 80 62 103 76 80 57 89 76 76 66 68 59 112 82 80 62 87 70 91 75 83 66 90 74 84 65 90 64 85 67 82 64 93 62 69 54 75 55 85 70 La Grande 53/80 Roseburg 55/82 Brookings 51/73 July 19 John Day 52/81 Bend 48/79 Medford 55/86 UNDER THE SKY High 6.5 ft. 8.6 ft. Prineville 49/82 Lebanon 54/77 Eugene 50/77 New Pendleton 59/84 The Dalles 61/79 Portland 57/76 Sunset tonight ........................... 9:11 p.m. Sunrise Friday ............................. 5:24 a.m. Moonrise today .......................... 2:43 p.m. Moonset today ............................ 2:06 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 64 52 Clouds and sun; breezy in the afternoon Partly sunny SUN AND MOON Time 9:51 a.m. 10:11 p.m. 68 54 Shown is tomorrow's weather. Temperatures are tonight's lows and tomorrow's highs. ASTORIA 54/67 Precipitation Wednesday ....................................... 0.00" Month to date ................................... 2.31" Normal month to date ....................... 1.92" Year to date .................................... 35.45" Normal year to date ........................ 35.28" June 27 MONDAY REGIONAL WEATHER Astoria through Wednesday. Temperatures High/low ....................................... 64°/53° Normal high/low ........................... 64°/51° Record high ............................ 86° in 1902 Record low ............................. 42° in 1947 Full 68 54 Partly sunny ALMANAC SUNDAY W t pc r s sh pc s pc pc r sh s pc t t t t s pc s c s pc pc pc Hi 88 70 65 82 72 72 107 67 88 77 74 109 82 86 90 84 90 75 90 76 78 86 75 70 77 Fri. Lo 71 56 58 53 58 65 75 49 76 64 59 82 63 70 75 66 75 63 67 65 63 62 56 56 67 Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. W t s r t pc sh s r pc t pc s pc t t t pc pc s sh t s pc pc sh EO Media Group A measure to ban taxes on everything related to the sale and distribution of food that has qualified for the Novem- ber ballot would be a first in the nation. a legal analysis conducted by Portland law firm Stoll Berne for Our Oregon. Other taxes that could be repealed under the constitu- tional amendment include the fuel tax, which pays for roads, local restaurant taxes and por- tions of a hospital provider tax voters approved in January to maintain the state’s Medicaid program. Proponents have cast the measure as a way to prevent additional costs to low-income families and seniors on limited budgets. Mary King, professor of economics emerita at Portland State University, said the ballot measure is “a massive, unprec- edented carve-out for some of the biggest retailers in the world that will apply to far more than just the food they sell.” Backers of the proposal have acknowledged that the measure still allows taxes on other basic necessities such as diapers, medicine and feminine hygiene products, yet restau- rant food would not be taxed. Proponents argue restaurant food could still be taxed. Johnson, Witt dinged by fellow Democrats By DIRK VANDERHART Oregon Public Broadcasting In 2016, two Democratic state legislators took a rare step: They endorsed a Repub- lican opponent in a competi- tive statewide race. State Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, and Rep. Brad Witt, D-Clatskanie, supported Dennis Richardson in his suc- cessful bid for secretary of state against Democrat Brad Avakian. Nearly two years later, their party has exacted its revenge — sort of. In a rare move earlier this month, the central committee of the Democratic Party of Ore- gon voted to eject both Johnson and Witt from the party’s exec- utive committee, citing the law- makers’ support of Richardson. In practical terms, it’s a pretty minor move. By virtue of being elected, every Dem- ocratic legislator in the state automatically gets a seat on the party’s executive commit- tee. As such, they have sway over appointing a party trea- surer, among other things. But few legislators par- ticipate in the committee — including Johnson and Witt. “If you called most elected legislators, they wouldn’t know that they belonged to the exec- utive committee,” Johnson, the Senate’s most prominent mod- erate Democrat, told OPB. “I’ve been to exactly zero meetings.” Still, the lawmakers were surprised to hear earlier this month they’d been voted off the committee. They figured their support for Richardson was in the past. Both said they learned about the vote from party chairwoman Jeanne Atkins on June 11, the day after the vote. “I was dumbstruck that anybody cares about this,” Johnson said. “This has obviously been a burr under somebody’s sad- dle for almost two years now,” Witt said. “I don’t know who it is who has the problem and what problem they have with what I said.” MEMORIALS Friday, June 22 JONES, Lola Essiemae — Viewing from 5 to 7 p.m., Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary, 1165 Franklin Ave. Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice. CLATSOP POWER EQUIPMENT , INC. SALES SERVICE RENTALS • A corporate-funded ballot measure that would block taxes on junk food and sugary drinks and freeze the state’s corporate minimum tax for certain com- panies has qualified for the November ballot. Measure 103 would amend the Oregon Constitution and set a national precedent by barring all taxes on the sale or distribu- tion of groceries. Large grocery chains — Kroger, Albertsons, Safeway and Costco — and others have contributed about $2.5 million to the political action commit- tee attempting to make the con- stitutional change. The ballot measure would prevent implementation of a Multnomah County tax on sodas and other sugary drinks. It could even repeal the state’s bottle deposit fee, which is meant to encourage recycling of spent beverage containers and other taxes, according to • PUBLIC MEETINGS THURSDAY Seaside Transportation Advisory Commission, 6 p.m., City Hall, 989 Broadway. LOTTERIES OREGON Wednesday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 1-7-7-2 4 p.m.: 5-2-3-7 7 p.m.: 7-9-7-0 10 p.m.: 8-7-4-2 Wednesday’s Lucky Lines: 02- 07-10-14-19-21-28-29 Estimated jackpot: $18,000 Wednesday’s Megabucks: 12- 22-26-30-34-47 Estimated jackpot: $1.4 million Wednesday’s Powerball: 4-14- 23-27-56, Powerball: 13 Estimated jackpot: $40 million WASHINGTON Wednesday’s Daily Game: 3-5-5 Wednesday’s Hit 5: 01-09-20- 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 www.dailyastorian.com MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 34912 HWY 101 BUS • ASTORIA 503-325-0792 • 1-800-220-0792 Saturday, June 23 JONES, Lola Essiemae — Celebration of life at 11 a.m., Lewis and Clark Bible Church, 35082 Seppa Road. 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SUBSCRIBER TO THE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. 26-39 Estimated jackpot: $150,000 Wednesday’s Keno: 02-06-08- 13-18-28-30-31-34-35-39-41- 44-49-54-60-67-68-74-76 Wednesday’s Lotto: 14-16-19- 38-45-47 Estimated jackpot: $3.9 million Wednesday’s Match 4: 09-13- 21-24 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Effective July 1, 2015 HOME DELIVERY MAIL EZpay (per month) ................$11.25 EZpay (per month) ............... $16.60 13 weeks in advance ........... $36.79 13 weeks in advance ........... $51.98 26 weeks in advance ........... $70.82 26 weeks in advance ......... $102.63 52 weeks in advance ......... $135.05 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. 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