B1 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2020 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2020 • B1 WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE COMPILED BY BOB DUKE From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspapers 10 years ago this week — 2010 L ocal leaders of the U.S. Coast Guard are hold- ing a meeting at Station Cape Disappointment at 10 a.m. on Wednesday to discuss the new tools and procedures they’ll be using this winter to determine when the Columbia River B ar is safe to cross. Lt. Cmdr. Chad Fait, command center chief for Coast Guard Sector Columbia River, said the most signifi cant shift will be how soon bar openings can occur after a clo- sure. Historically, if the bar was closed and wasn’t safe to cross at sundown, the opening would typically have to wait until the next morning, he said. “We didn’t go out and look at it again until fi rst light,” Fait said. Recently installed weather buoys can give an accurate picture of what’s happening on the bar even if conditions cannot be seen from Cape Disappointment, he added. PORTLAND — Sea Lions that have faced death by lethal injection for making banquets of endangered fi sh in the Columbia River won a reprieve Tuesday when a federal appeals court told Oregon and Washington state wildlife offi - cials to cease killing them. WARRENTON — Longtime resident Dick Mattson scrambled to safety Thanksgiving e ve as his historic home became totally engulfed in fl ames. The building had historical signifi cance, having been purchased by Dr. Bethenia Owens Adair from relatives of the Van Dusen family in 1883. Owens-Adair, the pioneer doctor, called the home Sunnymead. Steve Roberts, vice chairman of the Wishing Tree Project, decorates the Wishing Tree inside Fred Meyer in Warrenton with Mary Altieri, 10, a 4-H member in the Young Entrepreneurs Club in 2010. While Dungeness crab season offi cially opens today, crabbers up and down the coast are still tied up at the docks waiting to get the green light. The good news is that the offi cial negotiations for a price and an industry-sanctioned start date were put in writing Tuesday. The uncertainty is because the agreement out- lines two price and start date scenarios. These are based on the results of one more round of indus- try-fi nanced meat fi ll testing. Depending on that outcome, it could be as long as two weeks before Oregon consumers can buy this year’s crab. The future of the old Darigold site in Astoria is in the hands of the Clatsop County Board of Commissioners. Coastal Family H ealth Center contracted with NoLoveNoFish, a local business development consultant fi rm, to conduct a feasibility study of the site at 385 Ninth Street . The center, along with Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare, hopes to build a three-story health and wellness complex on the site and fi ll it with various nonprofi t social service agencies. It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas. Communities throughout the North Coast got decked out for the holiday this past weekend. The 15th annual Astor Street Opry Compa- ny’s Starving Artist Faire kicked off the busy weekend at Lum’s Auto Center in Warrenton. The three-day event showcased the talents of local makers and artists . Warrenton fi refi ghters are silhouetted against a wall of fl ames while fi ghting a fi re in 2010. Ashlyn Routh, a senior at Seaside High School, unfurls a set of branches while assembling a Christmas tree for display at the St. Nicholas Festival of Trees inside the Seaside Civic and Convention Center in 2010. 50 years ago — 1970 Adult Student Housing Inc. in Portland is looking else- where for a site on which to build 100 apartment units for Clatsop College students after the Astoria Planning Com- mission unanimously rejected their request for conditional use of a 3.29 acre site between Madison and Niagara and First and Second s treets. The Planning Commission Tuesday night recom- mended the City Council deny the request in face of near unanimous opposition from the neighbors in the R-1 zone. SEASIDE — Bomb threats have returned to Seaside schools, this time closing the high school, Broadway Junior High and Central Grade School. According to Superintendent Charles Smith, a phone call to the home of Seaside High School Principal Ralph Nafziger at 7 a.m. today warned there was a bomb in one of Seaside’s three schools. The youth who telephoned the bomb threat, planned for Seaside High School, has been apprehended, according to City Manager Bur- ton Lowe. After being taken into custody Thurs- day morning, Lowe said, the boy was turned over to his parents. The incident was the latest in a wave of bomb threats hitting Seaside , including one Wednes- day which closed Broadway Junior High and Central Grade School. To date, fi ve youths have been apprehended in connection with the school disruptions and three have been working to repay expenses incurred as a result of the bomb threats. 75 years ago — 1945 The week of Dec. 2 through Dec. 8 , the fi nal week in the Victory War Loan bond selling campaign, has been designated in Clatsop County as Victory War Loan Week and will be featured by a fi nal, concentrated effort to spur the lagging bond drive in this area, according to Neil Morfi tt, Victory War Loan chairman. A bond-selling contest in which Astoria and Klamath Falls will compete against Wenatchee and Walla Walla in Washington state got underway today, according to word from Victory War Loan headquarters . The contest will determine which pair of cities can sell the most Series E bonds per capita during the present week, the fi nal week of the Victory W ar L oan. The old Shively S chool bell has been saved for Jim Osburn, of Cannon Beach, pauses to snap a few photos of a warm sunset while his black lab, ‘Ozzy,’ maintains focus on their unfi nished game of fetch at the Tolovana Beach Wayside in 2010. posterity. Complying with a directive of the Astoria S chool District board that the historic relic be retrieved from the scrap heap, Superintendent A.C. Hampton informed the board Tuesday night that he had visited the scrap metal heap where the old bell had been reported located by Harold Haynes, Astoria -Budget columnist. “I looked all over the lot and couldn’t fi nd it,” Hampton said. “So I called Haynes and he found it for me.” A truck and driver were hired, but it was nec- essary to call the aid of half the students in Astor Elementary S chool to load the 500 pound relic on the truck and unload it at the school. It is now stored in the school basement pending establish- ment of a museum in which it can be displayed. Basketball will get off to a fl ying start tonight for Asto- ria sports fans at the United Services Organizations a udi- torium in the fi rst game of a double-header between the Oregon State C ollege hoopmen and the Seattle U.S. Coast Guard quintet, preliminaried by an equally attractive mix between Astoria’s Fighting Fishermen and the Benson High School Mechanics. The reconstruction fi nance corporation of the federal government has notifi ed the Astoria Marine Construction Co. , by letter of intent, that John Schuler, captain and the outstanding team player on Knappa’s football team, holds the second place class A state championship trophy at Gyro Field following the Loggers heartbreaking loss by four points to St. Mary’s in 1970. the local fi rm will be awarded the contract for construction of two 100-foot steel-hulled combi- nation tuna clipper-trawler type vessels. Cost of the two ships will be around $450,000, according to offi cials of the company.