Seaside signal. (Seaside, Or.) 1905-current, January 23, 2015, Image 10

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    10A • January 23, 2015 • Seaside Signal • seasidesignal.com
LOCAL SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS
Seaside Scholarships
has one week to raise
$5,000 to hit its goal
TENNAYA CARR
WILL KENDALL
ALLISON KILDAY
CALVIN POLLARD
Four SHS seniors earn Elks scholarships
Seaside High School
seniors Calvin Pollard and
Allison Kilday were each
awarded $1,000 scholar-
ships by the Seaside Elks
Lodge. Will Kendall and
Tennaya Carr will each
receive scholarships of
$500.
Exalted Ruler Jerry
Lounsbury said that these
“Most Valuable Student”
scholarships are awarded
for superior scholastic ac-
complishment, as well as
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of citizenship and leader-
ship, using judging crite-
ria from the Elks National
Foundation.
The applications of
these four award winners
will be forwarded to Tilla-
mook Elks Lodge to com-
pete for further awards
against other students in
the Northwest District on
Jan. 24.
PEO awards scholarships to three local women
Three local women re-
ceived awards from PEO, an
international philanthropic
educational organization.
Those receiving scholar-
ships were:
• Evelyn Castro, from
Seaside High School, plans
to attend Clatsop Commu-
nity College to pursue a ca-
reer in nursing.
• Laura LaLond earned
a PEO Oregon Scholarship
toward a master’s degree
in health management and
policy at Portland State
University. Her specialty
is in reproductive, prenatal
and pediatric epidemiology.
•Lindsey Mizell re-
ceived a PEO Oregon
Scholarship to apply to-
EVELYN CASTRO
LAURA LALOND
LINDSEY MIZELL
ward a master’s degree in
medical speech pathology
at Portland State Universi-
ty. She plans to specialize
in swallowing and cleft
palate rehabilitation.
Seaside PEO Chap-
ter CR was established in
1953. Since 1999, Chapter
CR has awarded 78 schol-
arships amounting to over
$73,000. Scholarships and
loans are awarded to wom-
en of all ages.
The primary fundrais-
er is an annual plant sale,
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scholarship funds. Plant
orders begin every January,
with delivery the weekend
before Mother’s Day.
For information, contact
Khris Frank at 503-810-
5196 or kdfrank52@hot-
mail.com or visit the PEO
website at peointernation-
al.org
Students receive music scholarships
Three Seaside High
School musicians have re-
ceived music lesson scholar-
ships from the Astoria Friday
Musical Club.
Fiona Bonn, clarinet-
ist, will study with John
Hammond; Ryanne Sun-
nell, French horn, will study
with Michael McClure; and
Adam Morse, baritone, will
study with Susan Buehler.
Others who were selected
include:
• Andrew Conrad, cellist,
Astoria High School, and
Jaden Rainey, cellist, Astoria
Middle School, will study
with Judy Woodward.
• Charity Fleck, violin-
ist, Ilwaco High School,
will study with Angela Cal-
vin-Pederson.
• Julie Foss, violinist,
Astoria Middle School,
will study with Angela Cal-
vin-Pederson.
• Enoch Gray, baritone,
Astoria High.School, will
study with Susan Buehler.
The Music Lesson Schol-
arship program provides mu-
sic instruction to recipients
who have submitted an ap-
plication and who have been
recommended by their high
school music instructor or
private instructor. Students
are required to participate in
a course of instruction begin-
ning in January and ending
in May with a student recital
performance May 3.
Through their course of
study, students are paired
with instructors who have
expertise and experience in
music instruction and per-
formance and who are rec-
ognized as leaders in music.
The mission statement of the
Friday Musical Club is “to
further musical excellence”
and the Music Lesson Schol-
arship program is dedicated
to that statement.
Following their four-
month instruction, which
culminates in a public per-
formance, students are en-
couraged to continue private
instruction throughout their
high school career, which
may ultimately lead to schol-
arships at their college or
university of choice.
Friday Musical Club is
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School Scholarships, Inc.,
and donations to the schol-
arship fund are eligible for
a 501(c)(3) tax deduction.
Additionally, the scholar-
ship fund is supported by
club membership dues, club
and community members,
Lund House concerts, and
the Patricia Friedland Fund
of the Oregon Community
Foundation. For further in-
formation about the Friday
Musical Club and/or the
Scholarship Fund, contact
Buehler, chairwoman of the
Scholarship Committee 503-
436-0378 or vsbuehler@
gmail.com .
Only $5,000 from its
$50,000 goal, Seaside
Scholarships has extend-
ed its fundraising cam-
paign to the end of Janu-
ary.
To donate or for up-
to-date information, visit
seasidescholarships.com
or the group’s Facebook
page.
An anonymous lo-
cal donor gave $50,000,
raising awareness about
the drive and challenging
Seaside Scholarships to
match. In less than two
months of fundraising,
Seaside Scholarships has
raised $45,000 toward the
match. Donations ranging
from $5 to $20,000 have
been received from 89
donors.
The goal of the non-
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make a variety of postsec-
ondary options more af-
fordable for Seaside High
School students. Through
scholarships, the group
wants to invest in meri-
torious, needy, passionate
and promising graduates.
Scholarship winner
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Howard Hazelett, the master of Evergreen Masonic
Lodge in Seaside, presents Haylie Moon with a $500
check from the lodge’s Stanley Abramson Scholarship
Fund. Moon graduated from Seaside High last June
and attends nursing school in Portland.
SHS students to perform Motown memories
A night of Motown is planned Jan. 23
at 7 p.m. in Seaside High School.
Members of the school’s chamber
choir and musical revue class will sing
and dance its way through some of Mo-
town’s biggest hits, including “Stop in
the Name of Love,” “I Want You Back,”
“Just My Imagination” and more.
All proceeds will go toward sending
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years.
Tickets for premium seats are avail-
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for $8, or pay $5 at the door.
Camp Rilea’s history focus of lecture
Local author Andrea Lar-
son Perez will discuss her
book, Camp Rilea, Thurs-
day, Feb. 5, in the Seaside
Public Library.
Sponsored by the Friends
of the Seaside Library, the
program will begin at 7 p.m.
in the community room.
Book sales and signings are
planned afterwards.
Camp Rilea, originally
named Camp Clatsop, was
founded in 1927 and soon
became the Oregon Nation-
al Guard’s preferred train-
ing site. Located in Warren-
ton, the camp covers 1,800
acres and includes three
miles of beachfront.
Andrea Larson Perez
will describe the role Camp
Rilea has played over time.
Since the early days, the
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Camp Rilea will be the focus
of a talk by the book’s au-
thor, Andrea Larson Perez.
training center has offered
maneuver areas, facilities
and ranges assisting mili-
tary units, law enforcement
agencies and public safe-
ty organizations. From the
time of Brig. Gen. Thomas
Rilea in 1931, to the present
day, the camp has provided
the armed forces training
and support crucial for the
country’s security.
Perez, a native of St. Pe-
tersburg, Fla., moved to the
lower Columbia region in
1994. She has a degree in
public relations from Cali-
fornia State University and
is married to Col. Dean Pe-
rez, the post commander at
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book.
For more information,
call 503-738-6742 or visit
www.seasidelibrary.org and
www.facebook.com/sea-
sidepubliclibrary
Photos by Maine, Wing to be displayed at library
Original nature photogra-
phy by Neal Maine and his
grandson, Michael Wing,
will be displayed at the Sea-
side Public Library from Feb.
3 to March 3.
Titled “Images of the Or-
egon Coast,” the exhibit will
hang in the foyer and com-
munity room of the library,
1131 Broadway.
Maine and Wing estab-
OLVKHG 3DFL¿F /LJKW ,PDJHV
a partnership that is dedicated
to raising public awareness
about the North Coast’s natural
resources through nature pho-
tography. Their work centers
on coastal and Columbia River
landscape, ecology and estuary
habitat. Maine focuses his im-
agery on wildlife in the context
of its habitat, while Wing’s spe-
cialty is capturing action imag-
es that illustrates the dynamic
nature of coastal wildlife.
For more information, call
503-738-6742 or visit www.
seasidelibrary.org and www.
facebook.com/seasidepubli-
clibrary
Photographs by Neal Maine
and his grandson, Michael
Wing, will be on display.
NEAL MAINE PHOTO
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Warrenton, OR
503-861-1144
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