The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, August 21, 2018, Page 7A, Image 7

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    7A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 2018
WORLD IN BRIEF
helping to elect Republican Donald Trump to the
presidency by hurting his Democratic opponent,
Hillary Clinton.
Associated Press
Microsoft uncovers
more Russian hacking
ahead of midterms
Microsoft has uncovered new Russian hack-
ing efforts targeting U.S. political groups ahead
of the midterm elections.
The company said today that a group tied to
the Russian government created fake websites
that appeared to spoof two American conserva-
tive organizations: the Hudson Institute and the
International Republican Institute. Both conser-
vative think tanks said they have tried to be vigi-
lant about “spear-phishing” email attacks because
their global pro-democracy work has frequently
drawn the ire of authoritarian governments.
Three other fake sites were designed to look
as if they belonged to the U.S. Senate.
Microsoft didn’t offer any further descrip-
tion of the fake sites, although it has previously
outlined in court filings how this hacking group
operated a network of fake sites designed to trick
victims into installing malicious software.
Russian officials dismissed the company’s
claims as unfounded. Kremlin spokesman Dmi-
try Peskov cited the lack of detail on the hack,
and said it wasn’t clear “who the hackers in ques-
tion are” and how they could distort the U.S.
electoral system.
The revelation of new hacking efforts arrives
just weeks after a similar Microsoft discovery
led Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat
who is running for re-election, to reveal that Rus-
sian hackers tried unsuccessfully to infiltrate her
Senate computer network.
The hacking attempts mirror similar Russian
attacks ahead of the 2016 election, which U.S.
intelligence officials have said were focused on
Trump plan scales back
Obama’s coal plant
emissions standards
WASHINGTON — The Trump administra-
tion came out with new rules today scaling back
Obama-era constraints on coal-fired power plants,
striking at one of the former administration’s leg-
acy programs to rein in climate-changing fos-
sil-fuel emissions.
The Environmental Protection Agency called
the Obama-era regulations on coal power plants
“overly prescriptive and burdensome.”
The Trump administration plan broadly
increases the leeway given states to decide how
and how much to regulate coal power plants. The
EPA says it “empowers states, promotes energy
independence, and facilitates economic growth
and job creation.”
Combined with the EPA’s proposal earlier this
month to ease mileage requirements for vehicles,
the move may actually increase the country’s cli-
mate-changing emissions, according to some for-
mer top EPA officials, environmental groups, and
other opponents.
The Natural Resources Defense Council
called the replacement proposal Trump’s “Dirty
Power Plan.”
Democratic Rep. Frank Pallone of New Jer-
sey cited this summer’s wildfires and increas-
ing droughts and coastal flooding as evidence
that man-made climate change from burning coal
and other fossil fuels is already well upon the
United States. “Once again, this administration is
choosing polluters’ profits over public health and
safety,” he said.
Scientists say that without extensive study they
cannot directly link a single weather event to cli-
mate change, but climate change is responsible for
more intense and more frequent extreme events
such as storms, droughts, floods and wildfires.
US deports former
Nazi camp guard,
95, to Germany
BERLIN — The last Nazi war crimes suspect
facing deportation from the U.S. was taken from
his New York City home and spirited early this
morning to Germany, following years of efforts
to remove him from the United States.
The deportation of the 95-year-old former
Nazi camp guard, Jakiw Palij, came 25 years
after investigators first confronted him about
his World War II past and he admitted lying to
get into the U.S., claiming he spent the war as a
farmer and factory worker.
Palij lived quietly in the U.S. for years, as a
draftsman and then as a retiree, until nearly three
decades ago when investigators found his name
on an old Nazi roster and a fellow former guard
spilled the secret that he was “living somewhere
in America.”
Palij, an ethnic Ukrainian born in a part of
Poland that is now Ukraine, told the Justice
Department he had Ukrainian citizenship. When
their investigators showed up at his door in 1993,
he said: “I would never have received my visa if
I told the truth. Everyone lied.”
A judge stripped Palij’s U.S. citizenship in
2003 for “participation in acts against Jewish
civilians” while an armed guard at the Trawniki
camp in Nazi-occupied Poland and was ordered
deported a year later.
But because Germany, Poland, Ukraine, and
other countries refused to take him, he continued
living in limbo in the two-story, red brick home
in Queens he shared with his late wife, Maria.
His continued presence there outraged the Jew-
ish community, attracting frequent protests over
the years that featured such chants as “your
neighbor is a Nazi!”
Jury in Manafort trial:
What if we can’t agree
on 1 count?
ALEXANDRIA, Va. — The jury in the
financial fraud trial of former Trump campaign
chairman Paul Manafort asked the judge today
what it should do if it cannot reach a consensus
for a single count in the case.
Jurors posed the question to U.S. District
Judge T.S. Ellis III on their fourth day of delib-
erations, asking how they should fill in the ver-
dict form if they are unable to agree on one of
the charges.
The jury in Alexandria, Virginia is weigh-
ing 18 counts against Manafort, who is accused
of hiding millions of dollars in foreign income
from Ukraine and of lying on loan applications
to maintain a lavish lifestyle.
Manafort’s attorneys called no witnesses in
his defense, arguing prosecutors failed to meet
their burden of proof.
The question was the first word from the jury
since last Thursday when they asked for clarity
in several areas, including for a definition of the
legal concept of reasonable doubt.
In response to Tuesday’s question, the judge
said he would not yet ask the jurors where they
stood on the indictment.
The trial is the first courtroom test of special
counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe, though
the case doesn’t involve allegations of Russian
election interference.
CLASSIFIEDINDEX
classifieds
NOTICES
MARINE
Special Notices ............................. 104 Boats for Sale................................. 251
Public Notices ............................... 107 Boating Parts & Accessories ..... 254
Announcements .......................... 110 Boats Wanted ................................ 257
Boat Trailers ................................... 260
PERSONALS
Marine Supplies & Equip. .......... 266
Lost & Found ................................. 181 Boat/RV Storage ........................... 269
Personals ........................................ 184
Fund-raisers ................................... 188 RVs & Trailers
RVs & Travel Trailers ............ 301-307
AUTOMOTIVE
Campers, Utility Trailers .... 310-313
Antiques/Classic Vehicles ......... 201
Automobiles .................................. 204 REAL ESTATE
SUVs/Trucks .......................... 207-210 Open Houses ................................. 501
4WD .................................................. 213 For Sale ................................... 504-513
Vans .................................................. 216 Lots & Acreage .............................. 516
ATVs/Motorcycles ........................ 219 Income Property .......................... 519
Truck/Auto Parts .......................... 222 Manufactured Homes ................ 522
Detailing ......................................... 225 Commercial Property ................. 525
Tires & Wheels ............................... 228 Real Estate Wanted ..................... 531
107 Public Notices
110 Announcements
Occasionally other
companies make
telemarketing calls off
classified ads. These
companies are not affiliated
with The Daily Astorian and
customers are under no
obligation to participate.
If you would like to contact
the attorney general or be put
on the do not call list, here
are the links to both of them
Complaint form link:
http://www.doj.state.or.us/
finfraud/
CLOSING-LIQUIDATION
SALE
EVERYTHING MUST GO
Go.
Do.
A small town
newspaper
with a global
outlook
T HE
D AILY
Sale dates: 8/1 - 9/15
In need of some volunteers!
WE GETRESULTS
Animal Boarding .......................... 701
Feed-Hay-Grain ............................ 704
Pets & Supplies ............................. 710
Horses & Tack ................................ 713
DANIELLE
MISCELLANEOUS
CALL
TODAY TO PLACE YOUR AD
Fuel, Heating & Firewood ......... 807
Furniture & HH Goods ................ 810
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES TV & Electronics ........................... 811
Business Opportunities ............. 643 Antiques & Collectibles ............. 813
Business for Sale .......................... 644 Jewelry ............................................ 814
Arts & Crafts ................................... 816
503-325-3211
or 800-781-3211 x1231
Email: classifieds@dailyastorian.com
Web: www.dailyastorian.com
HELP WANTED
Help Wanted .................................. 651 APPLIANCES & EQUIP.
Work Wanted ................................. 652 Tools & Heavy Equipment ........ 851
Lawn & Garden Equipment ...... 854
SERVICES
Appliances ..................................... 860
Childcare/Adult Care .................. 661 Medical Equip. & Supply ........... 866
Services ........................................... 664 Farm Equipment .......................... 923
481 Freebies
Looks & runs great!
In Astoria, you haul.
504 Homes for Sale
House For Sale By Owner
Beautiful house with a million
dollar view. Equipped with
solar panels.
Price Reduced: $475,000
Call
(503)440-8918
201 Antique &
Classic Vehicles
1929 Ford Model “A”
Standard Coupe
Restored 40 years ago in North
Dakota.
Runs and drives.
Sell your children’s outgrown
clothes and toys with a
classified ad in the
Daily Astorian.
Call 503-325-3211 to place
your ad today!
204 Automobiles
1995 GMC Suburban
Not running. Motor & trans
good. Body straight.
$750/OBO
503-861-0952
2011 Harley Davidson
Sportster 883SL
Clean, near new, locking
leather saddle bags,
windshield. 3,150 mi.
Cover included. $5,000.00
(503)325-5237
316 Trailers Misc.
A STORIAN
www.dailyastorian.com
PETS/LIVESTOCK
Call 503-338-6318
Furniture, clothing, knick
knacks, books, entertain-
ment, jewelry, tools, textiles,
household, pictures, frames.
Also huge selection of
shelves, display cases,
fixtures.
219 ATVs/Motorcycles
One of the Pacific
Northwest’s great
small newspapers
Properties for Rent ............. 601-613
Rooms & Roommates................. 616
Commercial Rental ...................... 619
Vacation Rentals .......................... 622
Storage Space ............................... 628
Wanted to Rent ............................ 634
RV/Mobile Home Space ............ 637
THE DEADLINE FOR CLASSIFIED ADS
is 1 p.m. the day before your ad is scheduled to run
651 Help Wanted
Free Treadmill
PENNYWISE THRIFT
STORE
723/737A E. Harbor Dr.
Warrenton
503-440-9481
coastweekend.com
RENTALS
Wanted
5x8 Dump Trailer
503-791-1999
Full-Time Employment
Housekeeper/Front
Desk
$15/hr DOE Tradewinds
Condo/Hotel Seaside, OR.
503-738-9468
info@sea-
side-tradewinds.com
All classifieds require pre-payment
651 Help Wanted
651 Help Wanted
Warrenton-Hammond
School District
BUSY ASTORIA HOTEL
NOW HIRING FOR
Warrenton Prep
Preschool seeks a Preschool
Assistant. Position is full time,
with benefits, life insurance,
paid holidays, paid sick leave
and paid personal leave.
HOUSEKEEPING
FRONT DESK CLERK
Application and job details
are available online at
http://www.warrentonschools.com/
or contact (503) 861-2281
Now Hiring
Carwash Mechanic
30-40hrs.
Pay DOE
Experience Preferred
For More Information
& Application Email
astoriaecowash@gmail.com
PUBLISHER’S NOTICE
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
“Any preference, limitation
or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or
national origin, or an intention
to make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.”
Familial status includes
children under the age of 18
living with parents or legal
custodians; pregnant women
and people securing custody
of children under 18. This
newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for
real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby informed
that all dwellings advertised
in this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity basis.
To complain of discrimination
call HUD at 1(800)669-9777.
The toll free telephone
number for the hearing
impaired is 1(800)927-9275.
651 Help Wanted
Full-Time Employment
Fernhill Holly Farms is now
hiring a full or part-time truck
driver. Call Conrad or Liz to
apply. Astoria, OR.
503-325-6604
conrad@fernhillhollyfarms.
com
Bundle Internet with your
classified ad package for
maximum reach!
Call 503-325-3211
for more information.
BioOregon Protein
has immediate openings for
Machine Operators. Starting
rate $14.00 per hour. Day and
Night Shift.
Apply online at
https://www.pacseafood.com/
careers
or call Kara (503)861-2201
EEO and E-verify company
Warrenton-Hammond
School District
Warrenton Grade School is
seeking an Educational
Assistant for a Behavior
Support Classroom.
Job opportunities and
application are
available online at
www.warrentonschools.com
or contact (503) 861-2281.
NOW HIRING
Delivery Drivers
Can earn $18-$20 p/hour
with tips. Must be a licensed,
insured driver, age 18 or older
with a good driving record.
• Shift Managers
• Crew
Flexible Hours
and Meal Discounts.
Apply online at:
jobsatpizzahut.com
for positions in Warrenton
or Seaside.
From Clatskanie to Arch Cape,
classified ads reach over
30,000 households!
Call 503-325-3211
to find out more.
Columbia Memorial Hospital
is seeking exceptional
candidates for the following
positions and more:
Community Action Team
- Head Start is Hiring
We are looking to hire a
Disabilities Specialist and an
Early Childhood Education
Instructional Coach to provide
training, consultation and
technical assistance with staff.
We have excellent employee
benefits which include: medical,
dental, vision,long and short
term disability, life insurance,
retirement plan and education
benefits.
Position open until filled. EOE.
Visit
www.nworheadstart.org
for more information.
Full Time, Part Time
and Intermittent
Opportunities available
• Medical Assistant (MA)
• Registered Nurse
• Certified Nursing Assistant
(CNA)
• Telemetry Technician
• Radiologic Technologist – CT
• Mammographer
• Social Worker
• Customer Care Representative
View and apply for
opportunities at
www.columbiamemorial.org.
CMH is an Equal
Opportunity Employer
committed to the
development of an inclusive,
multicultural community.
YEAR-ROUND POSITIONS
Competitive Wage
Bonus Program
No Phone Calls Please
Apply in Person
204 West Marine Drive
Astoria
or email to
sales@astoriahie.com
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Seeking enthusiastic, respectful
people who enjoy a
professional, collaborative
work-environment supporting
people with developmental
disabilities.
• Program Manager
• Direct Support
Professional (July 1st
-$12.50 per hr)
• Job Coach (part-time)
($13.50 per hr)
Generous benefits including
health care, 401k, life
insurance, paid vacation.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Call (503) 861-3372 (ext. 202)
susieb@nwcall.org
CLATSOP COUNTY
CODE COMPLIANCE
SPECIALIST
$4,185.71 - $5,087.77
Seeking one Code
Compliance Specialist to
interpret and enforce county
land development, solid
waste, and nuisance control
ordinances; process
violations, conduct
investigations, and instruct
applicants with development
requests or compliance.
Requires bachelors in
planning, urban studies,
or equivalent training and
experience.
Visit
www.co.clatsop.or.us/jobs
for detailed requirements
and how to apply.
Applications due
August 24, 2018.
EOE/AA
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