A7 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2019 OBITUARY Rita Teresa Mary Ginn Astoria Jan. 13, 1929 — July 10, 2019 AP Photo/Matthew Hinton Barry Williams talks to a friend on his smartphone as he wades through storm surge from Lake Pontchartrain on Lakeshore Drive in Mandeville, La. Final blast of torrential rains unleashed by weakened Barry By REBECCA SANTANA and JONATHAN DREW Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — Tropical Depression Barry spared New Orleans from catastrophic fl ooding, but it still swamped parts of Lou- isiana with up to 17 inches of rain and transformed part of the Mississippi Delta into “an ocean.” Although Barry was downgraded from a tropi- cal storm Sunday afternoon, its torrential rains contin- ued to pose a threat Mon- day. Much of Louisiana and Mississippi were under fl ash-fl ood watches, as were parts of Arkansas, eastern Texas, western Tennessee and southeastern Missouri. Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards urged residents to be cautious as they ventured outside after a weekend in which many had sheltered indoors. He said he was “extremely grateful” that the storm had not caused the catastrophic fl oods that had earlier been forecast. More than 90 people had been rescued in 11 parishes, but there were no reports of weather-related fatalities, Edwards said. “This was a storm that obviously could have played out very, very differently,” he said. “We’re thankful that the worst-case scenario did not happen.” But Barry was still prov- ing disastrous in parts of Louisiana, particularly in areas north of Lake Charles where streams and rivers were on the rise. Up to 17 inches has fallen in isolated spots in that part of the state, the National Weather Ser- vice stated in one of numer- ous fl ash fl ood warnings issued Monday. “Please don’t drive through these fl ooded areas,” Calcasieu Par- ish Sheriff Tony Mancuso pleaded with motorists. In Mississippi, forecast- ers said 8 inches of rain had fallen in parts of Jasper and Jones counties, with sev- eral more inches possible. An additional 3 to 5 inches was expected Monday in the western part of the inland. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Sun- day parts of south-central Louisiana could still have rainfall totals of up to 12 inches, with isolated pock- ets of 15 inches. New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell said Sun- day the city was “beyond lucky” that rainfall there fell well short of early predic- tions of a deluge that could overwhelm the city’s pump- ing systems. “We were spared,” she ‘THIS WAS A STORM THAT OBVIOUSLY COULD HAVE PLAYED OUT VERY, VERY DIFFERENTLY. WE’RE THANKFUL THAT THE WORST-CASE SCENARIO DID NOT HAPPEN.’ Rita Teresa Mary Ginn passed away Church in Astoria. Rita and Merrill were peacefully on July 10, 2019, at the age of both private pilots, and met at the Astoria Regional Airport. She enjoyed racing small 90, in Astoria, Oregon. planes, and participated in the A funeral Mass will be held at Powder Puff Derby from Seattle, St. Mary, Star of the Sea Catho- Washington, to Clearwater, Flor- lic Church, 1465 Grand Ave. in ida, in July 1966. Astoria, at 12:30 p.m. on Satur- In addition to fl ying, she day, July 20, 2019. enjoyed family gatherings, con- Prior to the funeral Mass, necting with her Swedish cous- there will be a viewing held at ins, gardening, bridge and golf. 9 a.m., followed by a rosary at For over 40 years, her favor- 10 a.m., on Saturday July 20, ite avocation was doing gene- 2019, at Caldwell’s Luce-Layton alogy research for both family Mortuary, 1165 Franklin Ave. in Rita Ginn and friends, including self-pub- Astoria. lishing several family genealogy Rita was born Jan. 13, 1929, in Sawtelle, California, to John Sven Hakan- books. Rita is survived by her three children, son and Rosilda Mary (Bourdon) Hakan- son. Her family moved to Eugene, Ore- Diane Forst (husband, Jim Forst), Steven gon, in 1934, and then to Seaside, Oregon, Ginn and Kenny Ginn; three siblings, Jean- where Rita graduated from Seaside High nette Schmitz, Robert Hakanson (wife, School in 1948. After college, she settled Peggy Hakanson), and Cecile Starr; one brother-in-law, Robert Ginn (wife, Sheryl in Astoria. After high school, Rita attended Oregon Ginn); and a large batch of nieces and State College in Corvallis, and was certi- nephews. She was preceded in death by her hus- fi ed by the American Society of Clinical Pathologists as a medical technologist. She band, Merrill, on May 17, 2015, at the age worked for many years as a lab technician of 93; and by six of her 10 siblings. Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary is at Columbia Memorial Hospital in Astoria in charge of the arrangements. Please sign before leaving to raise her family. Rita married Forrest “Merrill” Ginn our online guest book at caldwellsmortu- on April 25, 1959, at St. Mary’s Catholic ary.com Facebook faces $5B fi ne, largest ever in tech By BARBARA ORTUTAY Associated Press At $5 billion, the fi ne the FTC is about to levy on Facebook is by far the larg- est it’s given to a technol- ogy company, easily eclips- ing the second largest, $22 million for Google in 2012. The long-expected pun- ishment, which Face- book is well prepared for, is unlikely to make a dent in the social media giant’s deep pockets. But it will also likely saddle the com- pany with additional restric- tions and another lengthy stretch of strict scrutiny. The Wall Street Jour- nal and other news outlets reported that the FTC has voted to fi ne Facebook for privacy violations and mis- handling user data. Most of them cited an unnamed person familiar with the matter. Facebook and the FTC declined to comment. The Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards state, including parts of the rural Delta that have been fl ooded for months from the Mississippi River and its backwaters. “The South Delta has become an ocean,” Missis- sippi Gov. Phil Bryant wrote on Twitter on Monday. He’s calling on the fed- eral government to build pumps to drain water from the confl uence of the Yazoo and Mississippi Rivers. The EPA shelved the project in 2008 amid concerns about wetlands and wildlife. The Trump administration has said it might reconsider that decision. Forecasters had warned of a continued threat of heavy rains into Monday as the center of the storm trudged SEVENDAY FORECAST FOR ASTORIA TODAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY said at a news conference, while noting the city was ready to help nearby par- ishes hit harder. About 51,000 custom- ers in Louisiana, 1,800 cus- tomers in Mississippi and another 1,700 customers in Arkansas were without power Sunday night, accord- ing to poweroutage.us. Edwards thanked the public for taking offi cials’ warnings seriously over the weekend, but he also reminded residents that it is still relatively early in the Atlantic’s hurricane season. “Based on what we’ve experienced, I think (we will be) even better prepared for next time — and we do know that there will be a next time,” Edwards said. FRIDAY SATURDAY APPLIANCE PACKAGE DEALS APPLIANCE AND HOME FURNISHINGS 529 SE MARLIN, WARRENTON 503-861-0929 Over 30 RS IN YEA TSOP C LA NTY C OU SUNDAY Mattresses, Furniture & More! MONDAY 68 59 68 55 A brief shower Cloudy, showers A little morning or two around rain 68 55 70 55 A couple of showers Partly sunny 70 56 Mostly sunny 70 57 Mostly sunny REGIONAL FORECAST Aberdeen Olympia 69/59 77/60 Wenatchee Tacoma Moses Lake UNDER THE SKY TODAY'S TIDES Astoria through Sunday Tonight’s Sky: Capricornid me- teor shower reaches its second of three peaks. Astoria / Port Docks Temperatures High/low ................................ 73/55 Normal high/low .................. 67/53 Record high .................. 95 in 1941 Record low .................... 42 in 1970 Precipitation Sunday ..................................... 0.02” Month to date ........................ 0.98” Normal month to date ......... 0.58” Year to date .......................... 23.85” Normal year to date ........... 36.49” Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019 Time High (ft.) Time Low (ft.) 12:57 a.m. 8.4 8:12 a.m. -1.1 2:30 p.m. 6.9 7:58 p.m. 2.6 Cape Disappointment 12:37 a.m. 8.2 7:23 a.m. -1.3 2:18 p.m. 6.4 7:08 p.m. 2.7 Source: Jim Todd, OMSI Hammond SUN AND MOON Sunrise today .................. 5:40 a.m. Sunset tonight ............... 9:03 p.m. Moonrise today ............. 9:13 p.m. Moonset today ............... 5:22 a.m. Full Last New First 12:48 a.m. 8.6 7:40 a.m. -1.3 2:27 p.m. 6.9 7:32 p.m. 2.7 Warrenton 12:52 a.m. 8.8 7:56 a.m. -1.0 2:25 p.m. 7.3 7:42 p.m. 2.7 Knappa 1:34 a.m. 3:07 p.m. Depoe Bay July 16 July 24 July 31 Aug 7 1:32 p.m. none 8.6 9:13 a.m. -0.9 7.1 8:59 p.m. 2.3 6.8 6:52 a.m. -1.3 6:39 p.m. 3.1 City Atlanta Boston Chicago Dallas Denver Honolulu Houston Los Angeles Miami New York City Phoenix San Francisco Wash., DC Wed. Hi/Lo/W 94/75/pc 85/75/s 86/72/t 99/78/s 95/67/s 88/78/s 93/78/pc 86/65/s 91/80/pc 89/75/pc 114/91/s 72/56/pc 93/77/pc 94/76/t 92/74/t 91/75/pc 97/77/s 97/63/s 90/77/sh 93/77/pc 82/63/pc 91/78/s 91/75/t 109/88/pc 72/57/pc 95/78/t Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice. 74/54 Kennewick Walla Walla 85/63 Lewiston 88/63 79/58 Hermiston The Dalles 88/64 Enterprise Pendleton 74/49 84/59 82/63 La Grande 79/53 80/58 NATIONAL CITIES Today Hi/Lo/W Pullman 85/56 74/57 Salem 78/59 Yakima 85/62 Longview 70/59 Portland 79/61 Spokane 83/63 75/59 74/57 Astoria ALMANAC HOURS OPEN: MON-FRI 8-6 * SATURDAY * SUNDAY 10-4 We Service What We Sell Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Seattle 70 59 chapter and puts it in the rearview mirror with Cam- bridge Analytica,” said Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives. “Investors still had lingering worries that the fi ne might not be approved. Now, the Street can breathe a little easier.” Facebook has earmarked $3 billion for a potential fi ne and said in April it was anticipating having to pay up to $5 billion. But while Wall Street — and likely Facebook execu- tives — may be breathing a little easier, the fi ne alone has not appeased Facebook critics, including privacy advocates and lawmakers. “The reported $5 billion penalty is barely a tap on the wrist, not even a slap,” said Senator Richard Blu- menthal, a Democrat from Connecticut. “Such a fi nan- cial punishment for a pur- poseful, blatant illegality is chump change for a com- pany that makes tens of bil- lions of dollars every year.” 3-2 vote broke along party lines, with Republicans in support and Democrats in opposition to the set- tlement, according to the reports. The case now moves to the Justice Department’s civil division for review. It’s unclear how long the process would take, though it is likely to be approved. A Justice Department spokes- woman declined to com- ment on the Facebook matter. For many companies, a $5 billion fi ne would be crippling. But Facebook is not most companies. It had nearly $56 billion in rev- enue last year. This year, analysts expect around $69 billion, according to Zacks. As a one-time expense, the company will also be able to exclude the amount from its adjusted earnings results —the profi t fi gure that investors and fi nancial ana- lysts pay attention to. “This closes a dark Corvallis 80/56 Albany 79/56 John Day Eugene Bend 82/55 78/47 80/53 Ontario 89/60 Caldwell Burns 81/47 87/58 Medford 86/59 Klamath Falls 81/45 City Baker City Brookings Ilwaco Newberg Newport Today Hi/Lo/W 80/47/s 69/53/pc 68/60/sh 77/56/sh 66/56/pc Wed. Hi/Lo/W 84/50/pc 70/57/pc 66/59/sh 75/60/c 66/58/c City North Bend Roseburg Seaside Springfi eld Vancouver Today Hi/Lo/W 70/58/pc 83/59/pc 69/58/sh 82/55/pc 76/59/sh Wed. Hi/Lo/W 71/59/pc 84/62/c 67/59/c 81/60/c 73/61/c