A4 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TuESDAY, FEbRuARY 19, 2019 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher JIM VAN NOSTRAND Editor Founded in 1873 JEREMY FELDMAN Circulation Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN Production Manager CARL EARL Systems Manager WRITER’S NOTEBOOK Kenyon brought learning, nurturing to Astor School K aren Kenyon was a stickler for grammar and especially for punctuation. Since she and her husband, Ralph Wirfs, lived less than two blocks from The Daily Astorian, I suggested that if she would walk down the hill around 8 a.m. on weekdays I could give her a desk and a red pen. One day Kenyon admitted that she had pulled out a marker and cor- rected the punctua- tion on a shopkeeper’s sign. In a town that nur- tures outsized charac- ters, her punctuation shaming was a delight- ful display of eccentric- ity. I joked that our head- STEVE line would read: “School FORRESTER librarian charged in bizarre sign defacement — ‘I couldn’t take it any more,’ says Kenyon.” Kenyon was a quiet presence. Behind her Cheshire cat smile was love and compassion that emerged in gestures large and small. As the librarian at Astor School in the 1990s, Kenyon brought a form of nur- turing and learning to a succession of young lives. She also made a difference in the lives of many women when she led the drive to create the Clatsop Com- munity College program called WINGS (Women Interested in Going to School). Kenyon died recently, after succumb- ing to a debilitating loss of memory. Describing Kenyon’s gift, former Astor teacher Ernie Atkinson says: “She was an expert at teaching library skills to very young students in a very unusual and creative manner. As a character she named Viola Swamp and using puppets with very interesting voices and sound effects, she was able to leave them with excellent library skills and, at the same bEHIND HER CHESHIRE CAT SMILE, WAS LOVE AND COMPASSION THAT EMERGED IN GESTuRES LARGE AND SMALL Karen Kenyon and her husband, Ralph Wirfs. time, keep us all laughing with tears in our eyes. She read stories to the students with such emotion and voice that they would always applaud at the end and ask for more.” While working as a volunteer in the Astor Library in the mornings, my wife observed a number of children regularly coming by the library for a hug from “Miss Kenyon.” Judy Bigby, who was principal of Astor in those years, said Kenyon brought authors and book illustrators to show students the creative process. She also taught the Great Books curriculum to upper grade level readers. When “Kindergarten Cop” was filmed at Astor School in 1989, Kenyon hatched the idea of having students interview the movie’s actors. The video of those inter- views is priceless. Our son asked one of the movie’s child actors how much money he made. The boy replied that his agent took care of that. After graduating with a degree in lit- erature from Illinois Wesleyan Univer- sity, Kenyon started writing for mag- azines. But in a 2004 interview with Lacey Hoyer, Kenyon said that work wasn’t very satisfying, as she was “a do-gooder at heart.” Of all the details I have collected about Karen Kenyon, this one particu- larly delights me. Judy Atkinson, who taught at Astor, remembers that, “We often would walk after our school day was over. Karen had designed small cards that she would leave in someone’s garden when it brought her delight.” Following her death, Kenyon’s capac- ity for friendship was described by the Rev. Sallie Shippen, who had been the first female priest of Grace Episcopal Church. Wrote Shippen, “She tended the garden of her family and friendships as carefully and skillfully as she tended her actual garden on 8th Street.” Steve Forrester, the former editor and publisher of The Daily Astorian, is the president and CEO of EO Media Group. LETTERS Stop this folly n stepping on his own declaration of a (fake) “national emergency,” President Donald Trump said, “I didn’t need to do this.” Actually, Trump had no right to do this. It couldn’t be clearer in the Constitution that no funds from the U.S. Treasury can be spent except as appropriated by Con- gress (Article I, Section 9, Clause 7). This is a check on executive power. Trump has ignored the Constitution; he will take money appropriated by Congress for primarily military purposes and use those funds to build his wall. It’s also a sickening display of autoc- racy and gross disregard for the people and environment around the border. Trump will seize private property, homes and ranches. National Geographic reports a wall will likely exacerbate flooding, destroy migra- tion routes and habitat for thousands of species of animals, and disrupt several wildlife conservation areas and parks. The environmental laws will not apply. The wall is a huge waste of taxpayer money — $20 to $40 billion that could be used to pay down the debt, provide health care, address climate change and improve education. The excuse that the wall will stop drugs is belied by Trump’s own administration’s statistics that cartels smuggle drugs into the U.S. mostly through ports of entry. Also, Trump’s own administration’s num- bers show arrests for illegal immigration across the southern border have been at historical lows for some years. As Trump admitted, there is no emer- gency. The wall is a monument to Trump’s ego and racism. We must stop this folly. LAURA ALLEN Seaside I Gun violence n the anniversary of the Parkland High School shooting, the cover of The Daily Astorian’s Coast River Business journal has a picture of a local gun store owner, Jeff Kelland, with his description of gun control legislation “gunpocalypse” in bold letters (“Firearms sales boom, but ‘gunpocalypse’ looms in Oregon,” Feb. 14). Is there any wonder his business is suf- fering? He peddles in irrational hyste- ria. I don’t see NAPA Auto Parts selling more tools when Obama is in office and less tools with President Donald Trump in office because, as he bemoans, “there was no panic with Trump in the White House.” He admits to peddling in hysteria. What a business plan. He promotes the fear of gun confiscation, and his customers become reluctant to buy anything. He said “if they know you have it, then they can say it’s illegal, and you can get a knock O on your door,” I assume from jack-booted government agents. This is truly absurd. This is exactly the problem. Using hys- teria to prevent solving a very solvable gun violence problem. I want him to enjoy his guns and have a successful business. But take a second to reflect on the fact that nearly 40,000 Americans died in 2017 from gun violence, and that by resisting any urge to be part of the solution, your business cannot thrive like it should. JIM SPURR Cannon Beach National emergency here is a national emergency right now. A would-be dictator is in the White House who has just bypassed the will of Congress to declare a national emergency to get his ridiculous border wall built in response to a fabricated crisis. Then he jetted to Mar-a-Largo for a weekend getaway, sending us a message that even he doesn’t believe there is a cri- sis worthy of this extreme unprecedented action. This leaves us with the very fright- ening scenario of his (and his enablers’) real agenda. Consolidate power in the White House, delivering a near death blow to what T remains of our democracy with an act that borders on martial law. Is this really what we want? Congress has the power to pass a res- olution of disapproval of this declaration. Please call your representatives today and urge them to do so. JULIA HESSE Astoria Renewable energy he Daily Astorian’s Feb. 14 story “State Legislature considers com- munity energy bill” contains an incorrect assertion that Pacific Power has prevented renewable development in Oregon. In fact, just last summer, Pacific Power and Facebook jointly announced an agree- ment to build two large projects, total- ing 100 megawatts of new solar, in the Prineville area to power a nearby data cen- ter. In all, there are more than 40 wind and solar projects in Oregon owned by third- party developers that Pacific Power has connected to the grid that serves customers in Astoria and beyond. Right here in Astoria, Pacific Power’s Blue Sky renewable energy program has supported the solar array on the Boying- ton Building and a small hydro project. This is in addition to Pacific Power’s own Energy Vision 2020 initiative, which will build enough new wind power to cost-ef- fectively serve more than 400,000 homes during the next two years, and upgrade existing wind projects in the Columbia River Gorge and in Wyoming with lon- ger blades and newer technology to boost output. ALISA DUNLAP Regional business manager, Pacific Power Warrenton T What in the world? regon Senate Bill 608 breezed through the Senate last week. It is the first state rent control measure in the coun- try. Once again, Oregon is on the cutting edge. A Democratic state senator representing Clatsop County voted against the bill. The bill would prevent price gouging, and keep Oregonians in their homes. I say if a senator leans like a Republi- can, votes like a Republican, she’s a Betsy Johnson. What in the world? MARY TANGUAY WEBB Astoria O