A5 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2021 OBITUARIES SPORTS Roberta McCallister Eaton Local runners have high hopes for districts Camas, Washington May 10, 1934 — Oct. 13, 2021 On Oct. 13, 2021, we unexpectedly lost our most precious mom, Roberta McCallis- ter Eaton, known to everyone as “Bobbie,” in her home in Camas, Washington. She was 87. Roberta Ellen Sjoding was born in Grant, Nebraska, on May 10, 1934, an only child to Bert and Mary Ellen Sjoding. Bobbie spent most of her child- hood in Salem, where she enjoyed spending time with the many family members who also lived in the area. After high school, she attended Linfi eld College, then trans- ferred to and grad- uated from Willa- Roberta Eaton mette University with a degree in education. It was during her Willamette years that she met Jerry McCallister, and the two were married March 25, 1956. Due to Jerry’s enrollment into the U.S. Air Force Reserve Offi cers’ Training Corps program while at Willamette, they were later stationed in Harlingen, Texas. After that assignment, they were transferred to McChord Air Force Base in Tacoma, Washington. When his service commitment ended, they returned to Salem, where he enrolled in the Willamette University law school pro- gram. It was during those three years that mom put her degree to work, and taught third grade at a local elementary school. After law school, they moved to Astoria in 1965. During her some 38 years of liv- ing in the Astoria area, mom was involved in many local activities: the national can- cer society, League of Women Voters, First Lutheran Church and Astoria Golf & Coun- try Club, to name a few. In 1976, she became a business owner when she and Jerry purchased a little gift store in downtown Astoria, known as The Galleon. She loved it so much, they moved locations after a couple of years to the main Astoria strip, aka Commercial Street, and renamed it The Gift Galleon. Mom poured her heart and soul into her business, but also to promoting down- town Astoria as a whole. To her credit, she founded and was the fi rst president of the award-winning Astoria Downtown Devel- opment Association. In 1986, she met Bob Eaton, who was the executive director of the Astoria Cham- ber of Commerce at the time, and later became her husband in 2001. Mom sold the business in 1993, and offi cially retired to enjoy her other life passions and spend more time with family. In 2003, she and Bob moved to Camas for Bob’s new career as executive director for the Multnomah County Drainage Dis- trict. They enjoyed entertaining family and friends, and were also able to do some trav- eling, with the highlights being an Alaskan cruise and European trip to Italy. Anyone who was fortunate enough to have known Bobbie knew her most sense of pride and joy was family and her many loving friends. We will be forever grateful for all the life lessons she gave, by her own example, of how to be a kind, generous, accepting and loving person. She is survived by her three children, Jay McCallister, Todd McCallister and Amy Crowley; two stepchildren, Mindy Durias and Brad Eaton; her 15 grandchil- dren, Matt McCallister, Gabrielle McCal- lister, Katie McCallister, Alexis McCallis- ter, Luke McCallister, Olivia McCallister, Jack Crowley, Madison Eaton, Makaena Durias, Aidan Durias, Fiyero Durias, Blake Eaton, Brady Eaton, Joshua Durias and Wilbur Durias. She also has one surviving great-granddaughter, Zeta McCallister. A service will be held on Nov. 20 at 1 p.m. at the Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church, 12513 S.E. Mill Plain Blvd. in Van- couver, Washington. The Astorian Three local cross-country teams at three diff erent levels, all competing for three diff erent district champion- ships Thursday and Friday. It’s that time of year, when districts and leagues across the state com- pete to fi nd out who’s the best, and which teams will represent districts at the upcoming state meet, Nov. 6 in Eugene. At the 4A level, the Astoria and Seaside cross-country teams will compete Thursday at Alder- brook Golf Course in Tillamook, host for this year’s Cowapa League championships. The Astoria boys are projected to fi nish second behind Valley Catho- lic, with Astoria junior John Clement holding the seventh-best time over 5,000 meters (17 minutes, 37.3 sec- onds), followed by junior Thomas Laman (ninth), junior John Col- quhoun (11th) and seniors Dan- iel Messing (14th) and Elias Hard- ing-Coe (16th). Seaside sophomore James Roehr has the fi fth-best time in the league. In the girls race, Astoria junior Ella Zilli has the fourth-fastest time (20:55), behind three Valley Catholic runners. The Valiants are also the girls’ favorites, ahead of Tillamook, Sea- side and Astoria. In 3A cross-country, the expecta- tions are high for the Warrenton boys, after the Warriors fi nished fourth in last spring’s unoffi cial state meet. And the only way to go is up for Warrenton, which will be in the run- ning for a state title Nov. 6, with six of its top seven runners returning from last season. Senior Zander Moha (second-fast- est district time of 16:29) will battle for the individual title, followed by seniors Phoenix Martin, Nathan Strei- beck and Erik Cooley (11th, 12th and 13th). The District 1 3A meet will be held Friday at Sherwood Mid- dle School, along with the District 1 facebook.com/dailyastorian Consult a PROFESSIONAL Warrenton cross-country Senior Zander Moha hopes to lead the Warrenton boys to a district title this week, and a top fi nish at state on Nov. 6. PREP SPORTS SCHEDULE THURSDAY Girls soccer — Astoria vs. Molalla, 4:30 p.m. at CMH Field; Seaside vs. Estacada, 7 p.m. at Broadway Field Cross-Country — Cowapa League Cham- pionship, at Alderbrook Golf Course, Tilla- mook, 2 p.m. FRIDAY Football — Seaside at Astoria, 7 p.m.; War- renton at Yamhill-Carlton, 7 p.m.; Gaston at Knappa, 7 p.m.; Ilwaco at Raymond, 7 p.m.; Chief Leschi at Naselle, 7 p.m. Cross-Country — District 1 3A/2A/1A Cham- pionships, at Sherwood Middle School, TBA SATURDAY Boys soccer — Seaside at Hidden Valley, 1 p.m. Volleyball — Warrenton at Horizon Christian, 1 p.m. 2A/1A championship. The best hopes for a local state title this year belong to the Knappa boys. The team built by Stan Spors- een and now under the direction of Amanda Isom, Knappa is the favor- ite to win the District 1 2A meet, and the Loggers are one of the primary contenders for a state title — with no seniors on the roster. How tough is district? In the recent Logger Invitational, the top three boys teams were Knappa, Vernonia and Neah-Kah-Nie, who all fi nished ahead of 4A Estacada and Warrenton, the fi fth-ranked team at the 3A level. Statewide, the Knappa boys are projected to fi nish third in the state meet behind Bandon and Union, with Logger junior Isaiah Rodriguez the favorite to win the individual title. PREP ROUNDUP BOYS SOCCER Seaside defeats Astoria, 3-1 With their two wins over Astoria this season, the Seaside boys soccer team has taken over the all-time lead in the Clatsop Clash series, with the Gulls’ latest victory a 3-1 decision Tuesday night at a breezy Broadway Field. With the exception of a 2-2 tie in 2017, Seaside has now won 11 of the last 12 meetings with Astoria since 2015. From 2011 to 2014, the Fish- ermen were 7-0-1 against the Gulls. Seaside plays at 1 p.m. on Saturday in a playoff game at Hidden Valley. GIRLS SOCCER sop Clash, Seaside fi nishes the reg- ular season with a 6-3-1 league record, 7-6-1 overall, while Asto- ria drops to 4-3-3 in league, 6-5-3 overall. Astoria will still head to the playoff s ranked 16th, ahead of the 19th-ranked Gulls. League champion Valley Catho- lic put the fi nishing touch on a per- fect league season (10-0) with an 8-1 win over Rainier. Astoria was com- ing off a 7-1 win at Rainier Monday night. Astoria will play Molalla in a playoff game at 4:30 p.m. on Thurs- day at CMH Field. Seaside plays Estacada at home in a playoff game at 7 p.m. on Thursday. Seaside holds off Astoria, 2-1 Willamina tops Warrenton in volleyball playoff With second place in the league standings on the line, the Seaside girls soccer team picked a great time to score their fi rst Clatsop Clash win since 2018. Seaside built a two-goal advan- tage, then held off a late charge by Astoria for a 2-1 victory over the Lady Fishermen, Tuesday night at Broadway Field in the regular sea- son fi nale for both teams. In addition to snapping a four- game losing streak in the Clat- In a match that did not include a single lead change until the fourth set, Willamina defeated Warrenton in a Coastal Range League playoff Tuesday night, 25-6, 22-25, 25-10, 25-22. The regular season champion Bulldogs also captured the league’s No. 1 seed to the state playoff s, which start Saturday. Warrenton is scheduled to play Saturday at Hori- zon Christian in Tualatin at 1 p.m. — The Astorian SEVENDAY FORECAST FOR ASTORIA TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY REGIONAL FORECAST Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Seattle 61 47 Rain; winds subsiding 54 43 58 44 More clouds than sun Abundant sunshine 57 46 56 46 56 45 58 46 Sunshine Showers possible Chance of a shower Cloudy, rain possible Aberdeen Olympia 60/44 61/48 Wenatchee Tacoma Moses Lake 62/47 ALMANAC UNDER THE SKY TODAY'S TIDES Astoria through Tuesday Tonight’s Sky: Cassiopeia is nearly overhead before midnight. Astoria / Port Docks Temperatures High/low ................................ 57/49 Normal high/low .................. 58/43 Record high .................. 74 in 1908 Record low .................... 32 in 1996 Precipitation Tuesday ................................... 0.92” Month to date ........................ 5.30” Normal month to date ......... 5.36” Year to date .......................... 48.28” Normal year to date ........... 47.15” Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Time 8:12 a.m. 6:29 p.m. 5.8 1:03 a.m. 6.6 1:15 p.m. 1.0 4.1 Cape Disappointment 7:54 a.m. 6:24 p.m. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI Hammond SUN AND MOON Sunrise today .................. 7:51 a.m. Sunset tonight ............... 6:07 p.m. Moonrise today ..................... none Moonset today .............. 3:12 p.m. Last New First Full 8:05 a.m. 6:34 p.m. Warrenton 8:07 a.m. 6:24 p.m. Knappa 8:49 a.m. 7:06 p.m. Depoe Bay Oct 28 Nov 4 Nov 11 Nov 19 7:21 a.m. 5:33 p.m. 5.7 12:27 a.m. 1.0 6.3 12:39 p.m. 4.5 5.9 12:44 a.m. 0.7 6.6 12:59 p.m. 4.3 6.2 12:47 a.m. 1.1 7.0 12:59 p.m. 4.2 6.1 2:04 a.m. 6.9 2:16 p.m. 0.8 3.5 6.1 12:07 p.m. 4.8 6.7 none City Atlanta Boston Chicago Dallas Denver Honolulu Houston Los Angeles Miami New York City Phoenix San Francisco Wash., DC Today Hi/Lo/W Fri. Hi/Lo/W 64/52/r 54/46/pc 56/52/r 73/51/s 59/39/s 85/73/pc 78/53/s 88/64/s 88/78/t 60/49/s 86/62/s 68/57/s 66/57/pc 57/50/c 54/53/c 56/49/r 70/48/pc 70/41/s 85/74/pc 72/47/s 83/59/s 86/71/pc 59/55/r 88/63/s 66/55/pc 64/53/r Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice. 68/54 Hermiston The Dalles 77/57 Enterprise Pendleton 63/47 76/54 66/56 La Grande 66/51 68/52 NATIONAL CITIES High (ft.) Time Low (ft.) 62/50 Kennewick Walla Walla 71/57 Lewiston 76/58 63/48 Salem Pullman 67/50 Longview 61/47 Portland 66/52 60/50 Yakima 69/52 60/46 Astoria Spokane 56/45 Corvallis 66/50 Albany 67/50 John Day Eugene Bend 68/51 70/50 68/51 Ontario 69/46 Caldwell Burns 65/36 68/47 Medford 71/51 Klamath Falls 64/39 City Baker City Brookings Ilwaco Newberg Newport Today Hi/Lo/W 63/43/pc 63/53/pc 59/48/r 65/49/sh 61/48/r Fri. Hi/Lo/W 59/37/pc 60/52/r 55/47/c 55/45/sh 56/43/c City North Bend Roseburg Seaside Springfi eld Vancouver Today Hi/Lo/W 65/52/sh 70/53/c 60/48/r 69/50/c 65/51/sh Fri. Hi/Lo/W 58/47/r 63/45/sh 55/43/c 55/44/sh 56/45/sh