2A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 2018 Musical,” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, $20 to $25, rated PG. SUNDAY * Civil War Re-enactment & Living History Program, 9 a.m., Clatsop County Fairgrounds, 92937 Walluski Loop, Astoria, $5 to $8. * “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” Screen- ing, 9 p.m., Fort George Brewery, 1483 Duane St., Astoria, rated PG-13. * Feis na Mara Irish Dance Festival, 9 a.m., Seaside Civic and Convention Center, 415 First Ave., Seaside. SATURDAY * Lewis & Clark Feis Irish Dance Festival, 9 a.m., Seaside Civic and Convention Center, 415 First Ave., Seaside. FRIDAY Geezer Creak, Americana, 6 p.m., T. Paul’s Supper Club, 360 12th St., Astoria, no cover. * Chinook Arts Festival, 10 a.m., at the intersection of Hwy. 101 and Olympia St., Chinook, Wash. * Fun at the Fort, 11 a.m., Fort Stevens State Park, 100 Peter Iredale Road, Hammond. * Fun at the Fort, 11 a.m., Fort Stevens State Park, 100 Peter Iredale Road, Hammond. Jeffrey Elvis Tribute Concert, 7 p.m., Liberty Theatre, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, $25. Gearhart ArtWalk, 2 p.m., along Pa- cific Way in Gearhart, look for art walk flags at participating merchants. Julie Amici Trio, blues, 7 p.m., Mac- Gregor’s Whiskey Bar, 387 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, no cover. Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian In celebration of Labor Day, Fort Stevens State Park in Warrenton is offering Fun at the Fort on Saturday and Sunday. * Steve Azar & the Kings Men, rhythm-n-blues, 2 p.m., Robinson City Park, 300 Alder Ave., Warrenton, no cover. “Shanghaied in Astoria,” 7 p.m., ASOC Playhouse, 129 Bond St., Astoria, $10. signs at participating merchants. Joe Woods, Americana, 7 p.m., Amer- ican Legion, 1315 Broadway, Seaside, no cover, 21+. Turtle & the Freaks at the Beach, roots rock, 2 p.m., Nehalem Bay Winery, 34965 Hwy. 53, Nehalem, no cover. Simon Levene, Brit-pop, 7 p.m., WineKraft, 80 10th St., Astoria, no cover, 21+. Just Us, country, 7 p.m., North Beach Tavern, 102 Pioneer Road, Long Beach, Wash. First Saturday Art Walk, 5 p.m., downtown Seaside, look for art walk * “The Musical of Musicals: The Train safety tech to be installed by deadline Seattle and Portland ahead of the Dec. 31 deadline. The technology, known as positive train control, or PTC, was not installed on the Amtrak train that derailed last year south of Tacoma, killing three people and injured dozens. Associated Press LONGVIEW, Wash. — Amtrak and state transpor- tation officials say they’re confident a new safety tech- nology will be installed on the rail corridor between FRIDAY SATURDAY 65 52 54 Partly cloudy By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau 67 52 Partly sunny Clouds and sunshine New Salem 56/75 Newport 52/63 Sep 9 Coos Bay 55/66 Full Sep 16 Baker 45/75 Ontario 58/80 Burns 40/76 Klamath Falls 43/77 Lakeview 40/77 Ashland 55/82 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018 Tonight's Sky: The star Deneb, high overhead, is the brightest star in the constellation Cygnus, the swan. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI TOMORROW'S TIDES Astoria / Port Docks Time 10:56 a.m. 11:41 p.m. Low 0.7 ft. 0.6 ft. REGIONAL CITIES City Baker City Bend Brookings Eugene Ilwaco Klamath Falls Medford Newberg Newport North Bend Hi 79 74 62 71 65 79 83 72 61 63 Today Lo 45 44 50 55 55 43 55 54 52 52 W pc pc pc c pc s s c pc r Hi 75 74 66 77 63 77 82 75 63 65 Fri. Lo 37 42 51 48 54 40 52 49 48 50 W s s pc s pc s s pc s s City Olympia Pendleton Portland Roseburg Salem Seaside Spokane Springfi eld Vancouver Yakima Hi 69 79 71 73 72 66 74 72 71 80 Today Lo 49 57 57 57 56 54 49 54 56 47 W c pc c pc c pc pc r c pc Hi 69 77 73 79 75 65 71 77 72 80 Fri. Lo 47 50 53 52 50 53 48 47 51 47 W c s pc pc s pc s s pc pc TOMORROW'S NATIONAL WEATHER NATIONAL CITIES Today Hi Lo 88 71 85 67 75 60 92 60 79 68 77 60 97 73 52 42 87 74 81 65 81 71 103 80 87 65 86 73 89 76 88 72 87 77 90 72 93 73 90 72 82 71 91 62 71 56 69 55 91 75 La Grande 51/74 Roseburg 57/79 Brookings 50/67 Sep 24 John Day 52/76 Bend 44/74 Medford 55/82 UNDER THE SKY High 7.0 ft. 8.0 ft. Prineville 45/77 Lebanon 55/77 Eugene 55/77 First Pendleton 57/77 The Dalles 57/77 Portland 57/73 Sunset tonight ........................... 7:58 p.m. Sunrise Friday ............................. 6:35 a.m. Moonrise today ........................ 10:14 p.m. Moonset today .......................... 10:44 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 Partial sunshine Tillamook 56/66 SUN AND MOON Time 4:58 a.m. 5:05 p.m. 66 53 Shown is tomorrow's weather. Temperatures are tonight's lows and tomorrow's highs. ASTORIA 54/65 Precipitation Wednesday ....................................... 0.00" Month to date ................................... 0.51" Normal month to date ....................... 1.05" Year to date .................................... 36.25" Normal year to date ........................ 37.99" Sep 2 MONDAY REGIONAL WEATHER Astoria through Wednesday. Temperatures High/low ....................................... 65°/52° Normal high/low ........................... 69°/52° Record high ............................ 88° in 1944 Record low ............................. 42° in 1985 Last 65 52 Times of clouds and sun ALMANAC SUNDAY W pc pc pc pc s pc pc c pc pc t s s pc t t t pc pc pc c pc pc c t Hi 87 73 82 89 81 81 98 54 86 86 90 102 87 89 88 87 87 75 95 78 88 85 71 68 85 Fri. Lo 72 65 71 55 71 70 74 40 74 71 76 78 67 74 76 71 78 67 74 69 73 57 55 54 75 Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. W pc c pc pc t s s sh sh pc t s s t t t t sh pc sh t s pc c t Talia Keys, rock, 8 p.m., Sou’Wester Lodge, 3728 J Place, Seaview, Wash., no cover. Jeremy Wilson, folk, 8:30 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., no cover. * Recommended for kids. The Oregon Department of Justice has closed a criminal investigation into two petition- ers who were accused of giving false information to persuade voters to sign a petition to repeal the state sanctuary law. The complaint has been referred back to the Oregon Secretary of State’s Elections Division. “In sum, our investigation did not reveal sufficient evi- dence that either circulator violated (Oregon Revised Stat- ute) 260.555, which prohibits, among other things, making a false statement regarding the contents, meaning or effect of a petition,” wrote the depart- ment’s chief criminal coun- sel Michael J. Slauson in a Wednesday letter to Oregon Elections Director Steve Trout. Initiative Petition 22 has since qualified for the ballot as Measure 105, Stop Oregon Sanctuaries. The measure would repeal the more than 30-year law that prohibits use of state and local resources to enforce federal immigration law, when a per- son’s only crime is being in the country illegally. Robin Fisher, a sociology student at Portland State Uni- versity, filed a writ- To prove a criminal ten elections complaint misdeed, the Depart- ment of Justice would with the Secretary of have had to prove that State’s Office early circulator made a spe- this year against Nikki cific factually false Condon and Shilo statement, which he Gest-Vigil, who were Ellen knew was false at the circulating Initiative Petition 22 on the Port- Rosenblum time he made it, Slau- land State campus. son wrote. Condon was being paid The outcome “is exactly by Bend-based Ballot Access what I expected,” Vasche said. Condon made an uninten- LLC to gather signatures; Gest-Vigil was unpaid, said tional mistake, Vasche said. “He didn’t talk as clearly as Lee Vasche, the firm’s owner. Fisher claimed the two he should about the measure,” petitioners misled her about he said. Condon and other cir- the purpose of IP 22. She sub- culators were subsequently mitted with her complaint given additional training about a link to video — which she how to present the measure posted on YouTube — show- accurately, he said. ing footage of the exchange, Several law enforcement, but she failed to inform Con- business and civil rights groups don that the conversation was have mounted an opposition being recorded as required by movement against Measure state law, Slauson wrote. As a 105 called Oregonians United result, the footage could not be Against Profiling. More than a dozen county sheriffs, mean- used as evidence. The Secretary of State’s while, have signed a letter in Office reported that it had support of the repeal. “It’s unfortunate that Ore- received 39 complaints from individuals asking that their gonians’ basic rights are under signatures be removed from attack due to Measure 105, which is an attempt to throw out the petition. The Elections Division is Oregon’s law that has addressed now investigating Fisher’s unfair racial profiling for over allegation as a civil elections 30 years,” said Andrea Wil- complaint, said Debra Royal, liams, executive director of the secretary of state’s chief Causa, a statewide immigrant rights organization. of staff. DEATHS Aug. 27, 2018 SHARP, Edward G., 67, of Astoria, formerly of Seaside, died in Astoria. No service is planned. Aug. 25, 2018 PETERSON, Marian D., 104, of Seaside, died in Seaside. A service will be announced. PUBLIC MEETINGS TUESDAY Seaside Community Center Commission, 10 a.m., Bob Chisholm Community Center, 1225 Avenue A. Seaside Library Board, 4:30 p.m., Seaside Library, 1131 Broadway. Miles Crossing Sanitary Sewer District Board, 6 p.m., 34583 U.S. Highway 101 Business. Astoria City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane St. Seaside Planning Commission, 7 p.m., City Hall, 989 Broadway. 18-22-32-40 Estimated jackpot: $6.4 million Wednesday’s Powerball: 25- 41-53-57-67, Powerball: 12 Estimated jackpot: $90 million 30-31 Estimated jackpot: $120,000 Wednesday’s Keno: 03-05-13- 18-24-25-27-29-38-52-54-57- 58-59-62-66-68-71-74-76 Wednesday’s Lotto: 12-22-23- 26-28-42 Estimated jackpot: $2.2 million Wednesday’s Match 4: 05-06- 22-24 LOTTERIES 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 • Glass Heart String Choir, classical, 8 p.m., Sou’Wester Lodge, 3728 J Place, Seaview, Wash., no cover. * Concert in the Park, 5:30 p.m., City Park, next to Cannon Beach Chamber, 207 Spruce St., Cannon Beach, no cover. Criminal probe dropped in sanctuary repeal drive The Daily News of Longview reports that state officials say service on the Point Defiance Bypass route will resume in the spring. The state said PTC testing and crew training will occur on that route throughout fall and winter. FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR ASTORIA TONIGHT “Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery,” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, $20 to $25, rated PG. Julie Amici Trio, country, 1 p.m., Nehalem Bay Winery, 34965 Hwy. 53, Nehalem, no cover. • OREGON Wednesday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 7-9-6-8 4 p.m.: 0-1-3-8 7 p.m.: 1-4-3-9 10 p.m.: 2-0-9-4 Wednesday’s Lucky Lines: 04- 08-12-16-18-22-26-31 Estimated jackpot: $10,000 Wednesday’s Megabucks: 3-8- WASHINGTON Wednesday’s Daily Game: 3-7-1 Wednesday’s Hit 5: 18-22-27- 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. Obituaries may be edited for spelling, proper punctuation and style. Death notices and upcoming services will be published at no charge. Notices must be submitted by 9 a.m. the day of publication. Obituaries and notices may be submitted online at www.dailyastorian.com/forms/obits, by email at ewilson@dailyastorian.com, placed via the funeral home or in person at The Daily Astorian office, 949 Exchange St. in Astoria. 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