THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2019 • B1 WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE COMPILED BY BOB DUKE From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspapers 10 years ago this week — 2009 A storia developer Floyd Holcom was granted a one-year permit extension Tuesday from the Astoria Planning Commission for the four-story riverfront hotel he and his partners plan to build between 38th and 39th streets and between the Riverfront Trolley tracks and Lief Erickson Drive. The commission also considered a city code interpretation that will govern the siting of wind turbines within the city limits. After a public hearing on Holcom’s request, the com- mission voted in favor of extending the permit for a variance, which allows Holcom and his Portland part- ners, doing business as Pier 38 Marina & RV Park LLC, to construct a building that will have varying heights between 36 feet and 48 feet. Holcom needed the vari- ance because the maximum height limit for the property, which is now zoned Tourist-Oriented Shoreland, is 28 ft. Listen to Lt. Cmdr. Mark Vlaun’s account of trying to tie up the 225-foot Coast Guard cutter Fir to its home berth at Tongue Point last winter and you’ll realize he is a patient man. It had gotten to be so diffi cult to park the seagoing buoy tender at its pier, that he recalls waiting days outside the Columbia River bar to take advantage of a slim window of opportu- nity when weather, tides and currents were just right. “In winter, there are just 45 minutes a day when we can tie up. Finding that combination of events in Astoria takes a long time,” Vlaun said. The old pier was built in 1933, but in May, a much-needed $5.5 million overhaul of the aging pier was completed. The upgrade added an extra, more accessible slip for the ship and gave Fir’s crew a solid surface to work on. 2009 – Coast Guard crew members aboard the cutter Fir prepare to get underway, taking off from the recently rebuilt Tongue Point pier. The Astoria City Council took a leap of faith into the fi nancially troubled Aquatic Center Monday. Members agreed to pay $14,000 to a consultant who is charged with implementing marketing programs for the pool in the few days remaining before schools let out next week. For at least the third time since 1966, a sec- tion of land above the Portland & Western Rail- road near Brownsmead has collapsed. The landslide, which took place May 22, sent mounds of debris tumbling onto the end of Aldrich Road and covered railroad cars that were being stored on the line, according to Ed Wegner, Clatsop County community develop- ment director. One of the fi ercest noxious weeds on the North Coast is at its most vulnerable this month. The blazing yellow Scotch broom is in full bloom, but it hasn’t put out its seedpods yet. Now is the time to nab it. 2009 – Scotch broom is scooped up and beaten back from a Surf Pines property. A single plant can create more than 30,000 seeds, decisively take over yards and create a monoculture that decreases biodiversity. the concern over the war’s new turn calmed down after dawn to serious comment and speculation, with the pub- lic generally turning to regular business pursuits after 8 a.m. Radios were quietly turned to morning newscasts in many stores and restaurants. Most frequent comments over coffee cups and busi- ness men’s desks concerned the size of the operational forces and the losses “bound to be” suffered. 50 years ago — 1969 More than 9,000 of 14,686 registered voters in Clat- sop County balloted Tuesday in the special Oregon sales tax referendum and local voters rejected the issue 8,269 to 767. With the passage of the Memorial Day week- end, the tourist season is underway, and it’s off to a good start, according to Jean Hallaux, man- ager of the Astoria Chamber of Commerce. The infl ux of out-of-towners kept the motels busy, Hallaux said, and Fort Stevens State Park was full over the weekend. The chamber offi ce itself has experienced spottiness, in that some- times there are many tourists with many ques- tions, and at other times, “business” is slow. 1969 — Briskly blown American fl ags were an impressive sight in Clatsop County beach areas during the Memorial Day weekend. These fl ags fl ew from high poles in the Arch Cape area. The early settlers were attracted to the fertile Northwest country because of the farming pos- sibilities. The development of electrical power for rural areas is opening even newer horizons to agriculture. Rural electrifi cation administration engi- neers estimate there are about 74,000 unelec- trifi ed farms in the Northwest states, of which 34,000 have been classifi ed as potential custom- ers of nearby cooperative distribution systems. SUPREME HEADQUARTERS, Allied Expedition- ary force, London — American, British and Canadian invasion forces landed in northwestern France today, established beachheads in Normandy, and by evening had “gotten over the fi rst of six hurdles” in the greatest amphibious assault of all time. Astoria awoke gradually this morning to hear reports that allied invasion of Western Europe was a reality. That was fi rst announced here at 12:33 a.m. in radio fl ashes from Eisenhower over the allied communication system, developed into an Astorian-Budget extra which hit the streets at 6 a.m. and led into increasingly complete news reports as the day progressed. Interest was apparent throughout the city from the fi rst fl ash. Beginning in a sleepy excitement, with church bells and telephones breaking the early morning silence, George V. Shevlakov, assistant superintendent of the Vanport schools in Portland, and a recognized author- ity on settlement of juvenile delinquency problems, defended modern youth in a speech before the Astoria Rotary club and the Clatsop League of Women Voters. The 43-year-old Russian declared that youngsters today “are no better or no worse” than those of previous generations; that in fact before the war, juvenile delin- quency was in a sharp decline. But, he said, wartime conditions have created abnor- mal, distressing atmospheres and have fi lled the air with uncertainty, fear and doubt in the future. These condi- tions, Shevlakov said, comprise fertile fi elds for juvenile delinquency. 1969 — A friendly welcome to visitors is extended by Jill Simonsen, native Astorian, whose task it is to provide tourists with all types of travel information. 1969 editorial cartoon. 1944 ad for surplus helmets. The United States National Bank of Oregon and The Daily Astorian announced plans for new buildings in Astoria today. The bank announced purchase of the newspaper’s present site and plans to remove the building and build a new bank. The newspaper announced purchase of prop- erty on Exchange Street, between Ninth and 10th, and plans to construct a plant for itself on the southeast cor- ner of Exchange and Ninth. 75 years ago — 1944