Seaside signal. (Seaside, Or.) 1905-current, September 17, 2021, Page 2, Image 2

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    A2 • Friday, September 17, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com
Seaside Fire hosts open
house, salute to 9/11
Sept. 4
By R.J. MARX
Seaside Signal
6:25 a.m., 800 block Avenue
M: A caller said someone ille-
gally entered their vehicle.
No responding agency felt
the tragedy of the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks more
than the New York City Fire
Department. Three-hundred-
forty-three city fi refi ghters
lost their lives in the after-
math of the terrorist attack.
Last Saturday’s open
house for the Seaside Fire
Department coincided with
that date 20 years ago.
Lt. Matt Keefer said he
was only 9 at the time, but
he remembers being on
the couch before school. “I
wasn’t really able to grasp it,
but did help spark the inter-
est in the fi re service,” Keefer
said.
Fire Chief Joey Daniels
said 9/11 is an important day
for the Seaside Fire Depart-
ment. “We support every-
body in the fi re service and
the police department who
PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
11:43 p.m., 800 block Avenue
M: A disturbance is reported.
Photos by R.J. Marx
ABOVE: The aerial quint
ladder truck, which arrived
in Seaside a year-and-a-
half ago but didn’t receive
its offi cial public unveiling
until Saturday. LEFT: Seaside
Fire Chief Joey Daniels
and Lt. Matt Keefer at the
department’s open house.
made the ultimate sacri-
fi ce in their job of saving the
public.”
Fire volunteers and staff
wore special T-shirts honor-
ing the anniversary.
This is the fi rst department
open house since the pan-
demic began, Keefer said.
“Due to COVID restric-
tions, when we got our new
ladder truck, we weren’t able
to show it off to the public
and let everyone see it,” he
said. “This is the fi rst time
it’s been out in the public as
a public event. We wanted to
give everyone hamburgers
and hot dogs and to come see
all of our equipment.”
“We appreciate everybody
coming out,” Daniels said.
“We wanted to say thanks to
the community, for always
supporting us, even through
these are tough times for all
of us.”
Sept. 5
1:19 a.m. 800 block Avvenue
M: A disturbance is reported,
followed up by a report of an
assault.
4:39 a.m. 1200 block S. Jack-
son: A person is arrested on a
warrant,
7:56 p.m. 2100 block N.
Holladay: Police respond to
a reported motor vehicle
accident; a driver is charged
with driving while under the
infl uence of intoxicants.
10:23 p.m., Quatat Park:
Property crimes are reported.
Sept. 6
2:10 a.m. 800 block Roos-
evelt Drive: A person is arrest-
ed and charged with driving
while under the infl uence of
intoxicants.
Janice Jeanne Carpenter
11:17 a.m. 900 block N. Holl-
aday: Sex crimes are reported.
Seaside
Nov. 2, 1942 — Sept. 13, 2021
4:28 p.m. Funland: Caller
reports a subject unwilling to
leave the Wizard of Oz game
at the arcade. On police arriv-
al, the person left the area.
ily with her fi rst husband,
Gary Hill. She later mar-
ried Bill Carpenter, her hus-
band of 29 years. They lived
in Marysville, Washington,
for 10 years until Bill retired
and then moved to Seaside,
fulfi lling her lifelong dream
of “living by my ocean.” For
the last 15 years Janice and
Bill have been an active part
of their Seaside community.
Many also have seen, or met,
Janice during her daily 6 to
8 mile walks. She was proud
to have recently hiked to the
top of Saddle Mountain.
Janice is survived by her
husband, Bill; son, Troy
Hill, and his husband, Paul
Verano; son, Doug Hill, and
his wife, Julie; six grandchil-
dren and three great-grand-
children. She is preceded in
death by her daughter, Kim-
berley Armstrong. Janice
became an important part
of Bill’s family: Roxane and
Mike Sullivan, Colleen and
Lynn Shindledecker, Bob-
bie and Dave Lange, and she
became Grandma Janice to
Joseph Low and Grace Low.
Her fi nal resting place
will be at Willamette
National Cemetery, not far
from her mother and father.
A memorial gathering in
Seaside has not yet been
scheduled.
Those wishing to make a
donation in her name can do
so to Lower Columbia Hos-
pice, who provided support
and comfort for her last stay
in Seaside.
Caldwell’s Luce-Layton
Mortuary was in charge of
arrangements. Please sign
the online guest book at
caldwellsmortuary.com.
Beaverton
1940 — 2021
ria, where Paul established many patients and families
a private practice in urol- struggle with end-of-life
ogy, nephrology and sur- care and pain management,
gery. Within fi ve weeks of Paul wanted to off er his
opening his practice, Paul community better, more dig-
performed Clatsop Coun- nifi ed solutions to these dif-
ty’s fi rst transplant surgery.
fi cult situations. He began
Over the next three professional training in the
decades Paul worked tire- up-and-coming medical dis-
lessly to care for his com- ciplines of palliative care
munity. As the only urolo- and hospice management.
gist in the Northwest corner He was awarded the Roxane
of Oregon and the southwest Visiting Scholars Program
corner of Washington state, Fellowship at Northwestern
he traveled up and down University Memorial Hospi-
the coast seeing patients tal Hospice in Chicago and
from Ilwaco, Washington, he passed a national board
to Wheeler and everywhere certifi cation in hospice and
in between.
palliative medicine. In the
Paul never rested on his mid-1990s, in collaboration
laurels. Throughout his with state Sen. Joan Dukes,
career he continued to study he authored Oregon Sen-
medicine, staying abreast of ate Bill 1071, which estab-
the latest in technique, tech- lished a task force to study
nology and science. He was and improve pain manage-
one of the very fi rst doc- ment and end-of-life care in
tors to learn and perform Oregon. His eff orts did not
ultrasound-guided
radio- go unappreciated. He even-
active seed brachytherapy tually won the Elizabeth
for prostate cancer with the Wessinger Award for excel-
innovators of the proce- lence in hospice leadership.
dure at Northwest Hospi- Paul went on to become
tal in Seattle. He routinely medical director of several
made the 8-hour round trip, local hospices, all while
determined to provide his continuing to run his busy
patients with the highest urological practice.
level of care. He also served
Over the years, Paul and
for many years on the uro- Alice became the proud
logical teaching staff at parents of fi ve children.
the University of Oregon’s His daughters and sons
Medical School in Portland. all remember him for his
In the 1980s, after seeing incredible intellect, lifelong
Sept. 7
11:56 p.m. 1100 block S.
Downing: Caller reports
someone banging on their
window. Police are unable to
locate.
Sept. 8
14:38 p.m., Seaside: Seaside
fi refi ghters leave to assist at
the Cougar Fire
9:33 p.m. Lewis and Clark
Road and Sunset Beach:
Structure fi re.
Sept. 9
7:09 a.m. Seaside Golf
Course: Police advise a person
to stay parked and not drive if
they feel they are impaired.
10:32 a.m. Safeway parking:
A person is arrested on a
warrant.
11:15 a.m., Broadway Park: A
disturbance is reported.
love of learning, boundless
imagination and deep devo-
tion to his family, friends,
patients and faith. During
his time in Astoria, Paul
and his family were active
members and supporters of
the local Roman Catholic
parish, St. Mary Star of the
Sea.
After retiring in 2000,
Paul and Alice eventually
moved to Beaverton to live
closer to several grandchil-
dren. Paul, or Papa, as he
became known, devoted
himself to his grandchil-
dren, care of Alice and tend-
ing to his garden.
A funeral mass is sched-
uled for 1 p.m. Friday at St.
Pius X Catholic Church,
1280 NW Saltzman Road in
Portland. All are welcome
to attend in person. If you
wish to join virtually, you
can view the funeral Mass
live at www.stpius.org/s/
livestream.
and Clark Road: EMS call.
Sept. 7
3:47 a.m. Cove area; Police
assist fi refi ghters with an
unattended fi re.
8:29 p.m., The Cove: Fire-
works off ense.
Paul Denning Stull Jr.
Dr. Paul Denning Stull
Jr. died on Aug. 30, 2021,
at home in Beaverton at the
age of 81.
Paul is survived by his
wife, Alice Stull; children,
Ann Marie Clark, Mon-
ica Christler, Paul Stull III,
Matthew Stull and Christo-
pher Stull; seven grandchil-
dren; and his siblings, Philip
Stull, Karen Howell, Patrick
Stull and John Stull.
Paul was born in Colum-
bus, Ohio, to Paul and Edith
Stull. He spent his child-
hood in Ohio, moving to
Arizona and then California
in his teens. After attend-
ing several high schools, he
spent his junior and senior
year at St. Augustine’s in
San Diego. From there he
went on to study chemis-
try, zoology and psychology
at San Diego State Univer-
sity, obtaining a bachelor’s
degree in 1963. Immedi-
ately thereafter he moved
to Washington, D.C., to
study medicine at George-
town University. During the
summer of 1964 he briefl y
returned to San Diego to
marry his college sweet-
heart, Alice McKee. Their
subsequent
honeymoon
was an eventful trip across
America, driving an ancient
Volkswagen Beetle from
California to Washington,
D.C.
Following his gradua-
tion from medical school,
Paul accepted an internship
in surgery, a residency in
urology and fellowships in
nephrology and transplan-
tation surgery at the Uni-
versity of Kentucky. While
in Kentucky, Paul spent his
summers working sunup to
sundown as the only doc-
tor in an underprivileged,
rural county in Appalachia.
Throughout the 1960s and
early 70s Paul also served as
an offi cer in the U.S. Navy
Reserve. Upon the comple-
tion of his medical training
in 1972 and an honorable
discharge from the Navy,
the family moved to Asto-
SEASIDE POLICE DEPT.
9:16 a.m. 700 block S. King
Street; Caller reports their car
was illegally entered.
OBITUARIES
Janice Jeanne Carpenter,
born to June and Hilton Tay-
lor on Nov. 2, 1942, was 2
pounds 5 ounces and was a
fi ghter from the beginning.
She departed this world as
she entered, battling against
the odds in her fi nal weeks,
not wanting to leave the
ones she loved.
She was born when the
world was engulfed in World
War II and passed when the
world was fi ghting the coro-
navirus pandemic. Between
those two confl icts Janice
was the friendliest and most
loving person, truly setting
a positive example for those
that came to know her.
Janice spent her early life
in Portland, raising a fam-
PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
11:47 a.m., Avenue G and
Holladay: A car accident with
possible injuries is reported.
9:34 p.m., Eleventh and
Holladay: A person reported
driving around naked advised
police they had their clothes
back on. The driver was not
identifi ed.
9:40 p.m. S. Wahanna: A
person reported yelling and
screaming on the sidewalk
tells police they are just trying
to make their way to the
hospital.
SEASIDE FIRE & RESCUE
PUBLIC SAFETY
LOG
Sept. 4
3:56 p.m. 1200 block S.
Downing: EMS call.
Sept. 5
4:52 p.m., N. Wahanna: Fire
alarm.
6:46 p.m. 2100 block Lewis
4:09 p.m. 800 block Broad-
way: EMS call.
10:43 p.m. N. Downing: A
disturbance call turns into an
EMS call.
Sept. 8
8:27 p.m. Avenue A: EMS
call.
Sept. 9
12:12 a.m., 700 block N. Holl-
aday: Fire investigation
OREGON STATE
POLICE
PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
Citation issued in crash
A citation was issued to
a 36-year-old Seaside
woman Aug. 30 at 4:34 p.m.,
after troopers responded
to a two-car crash on U.S.
Highway 101 at milepost
23.5. One driver was headed
northbound and about to
turn into his driveway when
the second driver came
up too close behind and
rear-ended him. The fi rst car
was drivable and the driver
drove it to his residence. The
second vehicle had to be
towed by Triangle Towing.
The rear-ended driver de-
clined medical assistance.
Order of protection
dispute
Troopers received a report
Aug. 30 at 7:19 p.m., of a
potential order of protection
violation happening at Hug
Point. The reporting party
stated she traveled from
Milwaukie July 4 with the re-
stricted person. She said she
camped with him for three
days before returning to his
residence in Milwaukie and
then to her own home. She
said she decided to travel
with him because he owes
her money. When troopers
asked why she was making
a complaint, she said it was
because she said he was “try-
ing to get her in trouble.”
Wheel comes off
A wheel came off a truck
pulling a boat trailer Sept. 1
at 2:24 p.m. on U.S. Highway
26 near milepost 8; the truck
was traveling eastbound.
The wheel struck a van trav-
eling westbound, resulting
in minor injuries to the van
driver. Four children on
board were not injured. Clas-
sic Towing towed the van.
Reckless driving
Matthew Edmund Maizel, 29,
was arrested on U.S. High-
way 26 at milepost 10 Sept.
3 at 12:54 a.m. traveling 79
mph in a marked 55 mph
zone. A check of his Oregon
driver’s license showed
it suspended for reckless
driving. He was cited and
released.
Backing-up collision
A backing-up collision
occurred Sept. 4 at 3:44 p.m.
in the parking area of Hug
Point State Park on U.S. High-
way 101. One party’s left rear
panel was damaged as well
as a tail light. A trooper who
happened to be in the area
conducting a park check
responded to the crash. Both
vehicles were drivable.
See Log, Page A3