THE FINNISH BROTHERHOOD PRESERVES HERITAGE COAST WEEKEND • INSIDE DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 2017 144TH YEAR, NO. 145 ONE DOLLAR AP Photo/John Minchillo Danny Miller/The Daily Astorian Military personnel walk along the National Mall in Washington, D.C., Wednesday alongside vendors’ merchandise ahead of Friday’s presidential inauguration. Kit Ketcham, center, and other organizers for Saturday’s Women’s March dis- cuss details for the event in Astoria. Trump believers celebrate inauguration many did not foresee Women’s March hints at more activism in North Coast politics Hope, and a few prayers, for the new president By JACK HEFFERNAN The Daily Astorian T erry Johnson stood watch behind the Clatsop County Republicans’ table at the 2015 county fair. At the time, 17 candidates were vying for the Republican presidential nomination. To Johnson’s surprise, he heard Don- ald Trump’s name uttered repeatedly. So he decided to take a poll. Once the roughly 90 votes were counted, he said, Trump received 45 percent. “That’s about the time I started getting on board with the possibility of Trump becoming the nominee,” he recalled. On Friday, the 41 percent of Clat- sop County voters who marked Trump’s name on their ballots in November will get to enjoy his inauguration. Just as they did during the real estate magnate’s acceptance speech at the Republican National Conven- tion in Cleveland in July, conservatives will gather at BJ’s Pizza Palace in Sea- side at 6 p.m. to watch inaugural events. Prior to the election, most national polls pegged former U.S. Secretary of State See TRUMP, Page 7A ‘I really underestimated his appeal. I didn’t think he had a snowball’s chance in hell.’ Local event in solidarity with national march By JACK HEFFERNAN The Daily Astorian O ne week after the November elec- tion, protesters who opposed the Dakota Access Pipeline stood in the rain outside the Clatsop County Courthouse in Astoria. Despite the weather, more than 50 people showed up to join the protest, which was organized in a matter of days. “If we could do this,” some of the organizers thought out loud, “what if we had much more time to plan?” Since then, some of those same lead- ers have been planning a Women’s March in downtown Astoria for Saturday — one day after Donald Trump’s inauguration as president. The march is in solidarity with hundreds of others against the Republican real-estate magnate around the nation, including the main one in Washington, D.C. As more and more votes were counted on Election Day, Joyce Hunt said she became angry and fearful. But both she and other organizers said they converted their initial anger into a desire for action. See MARCH, Page 7A ‘I wasn’t anywhere near as pissed about the election once I had a plan.’ George Warren Kit Ketcham farmer, speaking of Donald Trump’s presidential election win one of the organizers for Saturday’s Women’s March Cannon Beach widow blames Trump nominee for foreclosure Woman lost her home after her husband died Lisa Fraser, a Cannon Beach widow, is fea- tured in a TV ad opposing President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for Treasury secre- tary, Steven Mnuchin. By ERICK BENGEL The Daily Astorian CANNON BEACH — A Can- non Beach widow, who lost her home to foreclosure shortly after Submitted Photo her husband died, is the subject of a TV ad opposing President-elect Donald Trump’s choice for Trea- sury secretary. Lisa Fraser’s husband, John, died last winter after a long bat- tle with cancer. She said OneW- est — the bank Steven Mnuchin, Trump’s nominee, led as chairman and CEO from 2009 to 2015 — foreclosed on the home where the couple lived for almost 25 years. As Lisa Fraser explains in the somber 30-second spot: “We did everything the bank asked. They lied to us and took our home any- way. John spent his last days ter- rified I’d be homeless. And then they kicked me out right after the funeral.” The commercial — funded and produced by progressive See WIDOW, Page 7A Pillar Rock skeleton is missing Seattle man ‘My luck has run out,’ final text reads By NATALIE ST. JOHN EO Media Group CATHLAMET, Wash. — Richard Donald Arneson’s last known words came in the form of an ominous text message. “My luck has run out,” Arneson, 62, told a friend on Feb. 5, 2016. After that, his loved ones had no idea what became of him until law enforcement delivered bitter- sweet news: A Texas forensic lab used DNA to confirm that Arneson was the man discov- ered on the bank of the Colum- bia River near Altoona in May. Wahkiakum County Prose- cutor and Coroner Dan Bige- low was still trying to wrap his head around the unexpected news about the mystery man at Pillar Rock. Over the past sev- eral months, he’s put consid- erable thought and effort into trying to find the man’s name. “All that detective work. All that ‘2 a.m.-ing!’ Dr. (Kathy) Taylor was giddy when she told me,” Bigelow said, referring to the Wash- ington state forensic anthro- pologist who helped Bigelow prepare the remains for DNA testing, and hired the forensic artist who drew the likeness of the man that was released to the public just last week. “I did a little happy dance.” Against diminishing odds It might seem odd for Bige- low to be happy about such a thing, but he doesn’t intend any disrespect. It’s just that a great many missing persons and unidentified remains cases never get solved, and the pros- pects definitely weren’t great for this one. It was dubious whether the man’s weathered, partial skeletal remains would yield any usable DNA. Even when there is DNA, it often takes months or even years before labs get any results. Leads in the case had all come to nothing. After seven months of searching, Bigelow and Taylor thought that if they got any new leads this month, they would come from the new drawing, not the Texas foren- sic lab. “This came out of the blue.” Bigelow said. His last uniden- tified remains case involved another skeleton found on the banks of the Columbia in February 2013. It took almost exactly two years for the same Texas lab to confirm that the bones belonged to Molly Wad- dington, a 44-year-old Kelso, See SKELETON, Page 5A Westseattleblog.com Richard Donald Arneson of west Seattle went missing nearly a year ago. Thanks to DNA and a tenacious Wahkiakum County coro- ner, his remains have now been identified as a skeleton found on the Columbia River shoreline near Pillar Rock.