OPINION 6A Founded in 1873 STEPHEN A. FORRESTER, Editor & Publisher LAURA SELLERS, Managing Editor BETTY SMITH, Advertising Manager CARL EARL, Systems Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN, Production Manager DEBRA BLOOM, Business Manager HEATHER RAMSDELL, Circulation Manager Water under the bridge Compiled by Bob Duke From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspapers 10 years ago this week — 2005 The Big One didn’t hit Tuesday night. But while no waves touched the North Coast, the California earthquake – and the subsequent tsunami warnings touched many lives. “It was insane,” said Seaside Police Communications Manager Lynn Smith, whose phones were jammed with callers. The 7.0-magnitude quake struck at about 7:50 p.m., about 90 miles southwest of the coastal community of Crescent City, Calif., and 300 miles northwest of San Francisco, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Law enforcement leaders have known for years that Astoria-based Senior Trooper Jim Pierce was one of the best. Now they have rewarded him. In a ceremony Saturday at the Evergreen Air Museum in McMin- nville, Pierce received the Gerry Frank Employee of the Year Award from Oregon State Police Superintendent Ronald C. Ruecker. The postmortem from Tuesday night’s tsunami warning has zeroed in on one key issue. What went wrong with the radio broadcasts? Coastal communities went on alert after an earthquake off the Californian coast, which sparked some evacuations of beaches. However, there were reports of families still out along the shore in Long Beach, Wash., and nearby Fort Canby during the period of the warnings, which were canceled after more than an hour when geologists realized the quake wasn’t the kind that triggers a tsunami. The latest evidence suggests that many local radio stations didn’t broadcast a tsunami warning Tuesday night. One exception was KCYS (98.1 FM), which did run a warning, getting its information from a U.S. Geological Service online pro- gram. 50 years ago — 1965 The Russian fishermen are back along our coast again, this time with a fleet of boats rather than just one. Apparently they may make a serious effort to fish for bottom fish in North American coastal waters. This creates a real problem for domestic fishermen, far more dif- ficult to deal with than the problem created by Japanese high seas salmon fishing. We have no regulatory treaty with Russia, as we do with Japan. We can make no claim that the bottom fish spawn in our streams, giving us proprietary interest in them. We have no trade with Russia, enabling retaliatory boycott action as fishermen are proposing against Japan. The Russians are fishing on the high seas, beyond the three mile limit, and if they go in there and clean out the bottom fishing banks completely there is nothing legal we can do about it. Perhaps our State Department could exert more than its usual dim interest in the plight of domestic fishermen, and urge the Russians to restrain their fishermen for fear of retaliatory action. Wednesday’s issue of The Daily Astorian had a considerable quota of news about new developments that show the Astoria area is forging ahead. There was a story about two local men launching a 40-home housing development at Knappa within short range of the new Crown-Zellerbach Daily Astorian file $90 million Wauna project; about a new $200,000 motel for downtown The Wauna Mill in 1965, a catalyst Astoria, and a $300,000 nursing for major development in the As- toria region at the time. home in the West End. All this new construction activity is on top of the Coast Guard’s $400,000 new air station at Clatsop airport. All these stories are indications that the Astoria area is growing and that there are people who expect it to continue to grow. 75 years ago — 1940 The Astoria Sea Scout ship Flying Cloud was the winner in the Portland area council regatta Sunday at Portland. The local ship ran a point tie with the Ranger of Portland, but was conceded first place because of its three firsts to none for the Ranger. President Roosevelt predicted today that some form of universal government service on a compulsory basis will be proposed shortly for all American young men and women of all classes. Artillerymen of the Oregon National Guard today completed tar- get practice at Fort Stevens after a “home-made” smoke screen Tues- day silenced the ten-inch rifles of Battery Russell while the Klamath Falls gunners were engaged in hurling 550-pound projectiles at a raft well off Clatsop spit. A brush fire, started by the scorching hot breath of the big guns, swept over a half an acre to the west and south of Battery Russell Tues- day, setting up such a quantity of smoke that target practice had to be suspended because the raft could not be seen at all. The old police docket book that has resided at the desk of the police department for the last 14 years, is at last full. The first entry was September 1, 1926. Written in the fine script of an earlier desk officer, the first page of the book had 38 entries, of which 26 were charges of drunkenness. That is in contrast with the last page of the book which was finished yesterday. There are seldom more than one or two charge of drunkenness of the last pages, most of the items being traffic violations. Charles Murphey was chief of police when the old book was started. He was replaced by Chief John Acton, who took office on May 1, 1929, and has been in office since. Anti-aircraft guns at Fort Stevens will open fire tonight after dark on a plane-size target, towed over the sea west of the post, by an army observation plane which will fly without running lights. THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 2015 Trojan horse burns! Live! Onstage! A PORTLAND FRIEND says that if the best player of any sport or game is in town, you should go. Most recently, my friend went to a tavern in Southeast Portland to see the world’s best pinball play- er, whose parents accompanied him because he’s a teenager. On another occasion, he watched the world’s best squash player during a Portland match. ‘The time has come,’ the Walrus said, ‘To talk of many things; Of shoes — and ships — and sealing wax — Of cabbages —and kings —’ Through the Looking-glass of Cabbages and Kings My wife and I have chanced into a number of opera world premieres, most recently last weekend in San Francisco. Two Women is most familiarly known as a movie for which Sophia Loren won an Oscar. It’s from that plot, based on a novel, that San Francisco commissioned a new work. ,W EHFDPH WKH ¿UVW ,WDOLDQ RSHUD of the traditional style to premiere in America since 1910. Marco Tutino’s new work is compelling, and not just for the dra- matic story of two imperiled women during the Nazi occupation of Italy. Tutino is rare among modern com- posers for two things: his ability to write melody and his mastery of orchestration. He offers a full meal. While The New York Times critic dismissed Tutino’s score, the San Francisco audience responded with Photo courtesy of the San Francisco Opera cheers. The story captures the chilling A Trojan horse animates the opera. essence of the Nazi culture of in- forming on your neighbors and how As a bitter comment on the that demeaned everyone. Seeing a 1D]L RI¿FHU SRUWUD\HG RQVWDJH LV D unending cycle of war and new thing for opera. During the cur- tain calls, that singer drew boos for vengeance, ‘The Trojans’ excels. his role and bravos for his booming voice. PDUVKDOZDVRQWKHVFHQHDVD¿UVW źźź responder. As a comment on the unending CIRCUS — SPECTACLE — IS cycle of war and vengeance, Les part of opera’s appeal. Troyens excels. Troy falls! — Live! Onstage! That was the headline I would źźź give a production of Hector Ber- lioz’s Les Troyens (The Trojans), AFTER SEEING A FIVE- ZKLFK6)2SHUDSHUIRUPHG$W¿YH hour bottom crusher and the un- hours, this work is seldom mount- predictability of a brand new work, ed. by Sunday I was ready for what In this production, the Tro- Astoria’s Dave Bennett calls his jan horse loomed high above the daily dose of Mozart. The familiar performers and it moved. Then it tunes of The Marriage of Figaro EXUQHG 7KHUH ZDV VR PXFK ¿UH were enormously welcome. RQVWDJH WKDW D 6DQ )UDQFLVFR ¿UH — S.A.F. Democratic Tea Party policy made global warming, but it Service-sector industries like these are where America is is close. strongest, where the oppor- That’s because free trade tunities for innovation are ast week, the Congressional is not a zero-sum game. the most exciting and where 7KHJOREDOSRRUEHQH¿WWKH Democrats defeated the un- wages are already 20 percent most, but most people in GHUSLQQLQJV RI WKH 7UDQV3DFL¿F ULFK FRXQWULHV EHQH¿W WRR higher than in manufacturing. Partnership trade agreement. • Imperil world peace. As Jason Furman, the chair- 7KH3DFL¿FUHJLRQZLOOHLWKHU Let’s count up the things these man of President Barack be organized by American Democrats will have done if this pol- Obama’s Council of Eco- rules or Chinese rules. By nomic Advisers, pointed out David icy stands. voting against the trade deal, in a speech at the Brookings Brooks • Impoverish the world’s poor. Institution, since World War Democrats went a long way There’s an argument over what trade II, reductions in U.S. tariffs have con- toward guaranteeing that Chinese rules agreements do to workers in the na- tributed an additional 7.3 percent to will dominate. As various people have noted, the tion’s rich countries, but there is no American incomes. question they have a positive impact on 7UDGHWUHDWLHVKDYHOHGWRVLJQL¿FDQW Democratic vote last week was a min- people in the poorer ones. growth in American manufacturing ex- iversion of the effort to destroy the The North American Free Trade ports. According to Furman, export-in- League of Nations after World War I. It Agreement, for example, probably tensive industries pay workers up to 18 damaged an institution that might head didn’t affect the American economy percent more than nonexport-intensive RIIIXWXUHFRQÀLFW The arguments Democrats use too much. But the ones. Rising imports Mexican economy has also give American against the deal are small and inade- Rejecting consumers access to quate. Some Democrats are suspicious taken off. With more opportunities, Mexican wider range of inex- because it was negotiated in secret. the Trans- a pensive workers feel less need products, lead- (They seem to have no trouble with the to sneak into the U.S. ing to huge standard Iranian nuclear treaty, which is also ne- Pacific As Fareed Zakaria has of living increases for gotiated in secret). Others worry that the treaty would pointed out, a regime Partnership those down the income that was anti-American scale. The authoritative allow corporations to sue governments. will hurt has turned into one that VWXG\ RQ 3DFL¿F WUDGH But these procedures are already in is pro-American. deal, by Peter Petri, Mi- place, and as research from the Center In Asia, the Ameri- economies chael Plummer and Fan for Strategic and Internatioanl Studies can-led open trade era Zhai, suggests it would has demonstrated, the concerns are vast- from the has created the greatest raise U.S. incomes by ly overblown. They mostly protect com- reduction in poverty in 0.4 percent per year by panies from authoritarian governments U.S. to who seek to expropriate their property. human history. The Pa- 2025. Japan to In reality, the opposition to the trade FL¿F WUDGH GHDO ZRXOG ‡ 6WLÀH IXWXUH LQQR- lift the living standards vation. Democrats point pact is part of a long tradition of pop- Vietnam. out that some workers ulist reaction. When economic stress of the poorest Asians, especially the 90 mil- have been hurt by trade rises, there is a strong temptation to pull lion people of Vietnam. deals. And that’s true. Most manufac- inward. The Republican Tea Partiers As Tyler Cowen, an economist at turing job losses have been caused by are suspicious of all global diplomatic arrangements. The Democrats’ version George Mason University, wrote in his technological improvements. Marginal Revolution blog: “Do you But those manufacturing jobs aren’t of the Tea Partiers are suspicious of all get that progressives? Poorest country coming back. The best way forward is to global economic arrangements. It would be nice if Hillary Clinton = biggest gainer. Isn’t that what we are increase the number of high-quality jobs looking for?” LQ WKH VHUYLFH VHFWRU 7KH 3DFL¿F WUDGH emerged and defended the treaty, which • Damage the American economy. deal would help. The treaty is not most- she helped organize. 5HMHFWLQJWKH7UDQV3DFL¿F3DUWQHU- According to a survey by the University ly about reducing tariffs on goods. That of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, work has mostly been done. It’s mostly ship will hurt economies from the U.S. 83 percent of the nation’s leading econ- about establishing rules for a postindus- to Japan to Vietnam. It will send yet an- omists believe that trade deals have trial global economy, rules having to do other signal that America can no longer been good for most Americans. That’s with intellectual property, investment, be counted on as the world’s leading not quite the level of consensus on man- antitrust and environmental protection. nation. By DAVID BROOKS New York Times News Service L