B1 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 2021 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 2021 • B1 WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE COMPILED BY BOB DUKE From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspapers 10 years ago this week — 2011 I n Japan it was a disaster. In Hawaii, it caused serious worries. On the North Coast, it was more like a drill — except it was real. Tsunami warnings — long anticipated in places from Wheeler to Ocean Park, Washington — kicked into motion early this morning after the earthquake hit Japan. There were estimated hundreds dead in Japan. E mer- gency service crews on both sides of the Columbia River went into action. People were evacuated in the Cannon Beach and Sea- side areas. As reports came in for Clatsop County to expect only 1 to 4 foot waves, offi cials relaxed a little but still advised people to stay away from beaches, rivers, bays and other low-lying coastal areas. The fi rst wave hit the c ounty between 8 and 9 a.m. More waves followed in approximately 18-minute intervals. It was a battle that the chief led from the front. Astoria fi refi ghters were called to extinguish a fi re on board the Lady Rosemary at the East End Mooring Basin in Astoria Friday. The call came in at 11:50 a.m. The report from the fi shing vessel was that smoke was coming from the pilot house. Because of weight limitations of the trestles at the East End Mooring Basin, Fire Chief Lenard Hansen, one of the fi rst to arrive, boarded the boat with a portable water extinguisher and knocked down the fl ames while his fi refi ghters packed fi re equipment to the fi shing vessel. A portable water pump was set up on the dock to pump water from the Columbia River for fi refi ghters to extinguish the fi re. Fire per- sonnel used a thermal imaging camera to ver- ify that there weren’t any hidden sources of heat. The fi re was brought under control at approx- imately 12:15 p.m. WARRENTON — Time. Floating in the icy ocean off the North Coast, having just a little extra could save your life. It’s a fact that’s well known to the crew who man the U.S. Coast Guard’s new Sector Columbia River com- mand center. Inside, the center’s staff must make split-second deci- sions with speed and accuracy when time lost can mean paying the ultimate price. “Minutes are the difference between life and death,” said Luke Cutburth, s enior c hief o perations s pecialist and the command center’s supervisor. After months of working ou t of a temporary home, the center’s staff is back at work in their new, advanced com- mand center. The space and its design has helped quicken response times and maximize effi ciency, saving minutes when a moment lost could mean disaster, Cutburth said. 50 years ago — 1971 North Coast residents crowd the Astoria Column atop Coxcomb Hill, taking precautions against a tsunami caused by an earthquake in Japan in 2011. Travis McDonnell, a communications unit controller at the U.S.Coast Guard Sector Columbia River command center, sends out a radio broadcast in 2011. Astoria driver-engineer Wade Mathews and fi refi ghters Aaron Bielemeir and Mark McGinnis set up a portable water pump to extinguish a fi re onboard the Lady Rosemary in 2011. An American Metal Climax offi cial said today the company will do some site work and test drilling this summer at its Warrenton plant site and at the Port of Asto- ria docks. The company said Friday it was delaying until 1972 the start of construction of an aluminum plant. Astoria and Warrenton residents interviewed at ran- dom on city streets Monday reacted somewhat negatively to the announcement that the company will postpone construction of the plant. American Metal Climax said “environmental con- cerns” played a large part in their decision to postpone the plant’s construction , but general citizen reaction favored immediate construction to alleviate the unemployment problem in Clatsop County. Construction of a complete cabin suitable for erection on a beach lot could be part of an Asto- ria High School class during the 1971 to 1972 school year. John McRae, director of instruction, told the Astoria s chool b oard Monday night that the course guide for a construction Trades Program has been developed by Chuck Raymond, Clat- sop Intermediate Education District vocational director, and George Huhtala, high school wood- shop teacher. P rerequisites for entry in the pro- gram are being developed. McRae said the idea of constructing a cabin suitable for a beach lot had been suggested as a major project for the students and he wanted to get the tentative reaction of the board. He said they would seek to obtain a loan from one or more of the local lending institutions to fi nance the purchase of materials, with repayment to be made from the sale of the cabin. Adult Student Housing, Inc. is re-advertising for bids on its planned 100 apartment units in Astoria because of a federal directive on construction wages. Fred Bender, of Adult Student Housing Inc., said today from Portland that new bids will be opened next Wednes- day. The corporation plans to build apartment units for Clatsop College students on property just north of the Astoria approach to the O ld Youngs Bay Bridge. Financ- ing is from a $1 million loan from the federal U.S. Depart- ment of Housing and Urban Development agency. A fi shing boat sank in the Columbia River east of Sand Island Thursday as the result of a storm which whipped the area with strong winds Thursday afternoon. An old milk house was blown off its foundations in Seaside, but lit- tle other damage was reported. Three Seaside men, returning from crabbing off Seaside in their 35-foot fi shing boat, were res- cued by the U.S. Coast Guard after their boat split up and sank at the east end of Sand Island early Thursday afternoon. A building is damaged after a 1971 storm. Boy Scout Troop 279, of Warrenton, planted 5,500 pine trees in the Clatsop Spit area in 1971. particularly unpleasant job but that is the job a crew of four men and two ducks are doing along the North Coast this winter. They are working under what they call the “WOBS project,” to study wave action along the coast. The party of four men is operating in the Asto- ria vicinity now and will be here two or three more days. The project takes its name from Wave Obser- vation, Bureau of Ships. The p urpose of the study is to determine the nature and causes of wave action. The party has two ducks provided by the U.S. A rmy. Ducks, to the uninitiated, are amphibi- ous 2.5 ton trucks, with a seagoing body instead of the ordinary truck body. The duck is a sturdy craft and capable of taking a considerable beating from the seas — as it would have to be to make frequent trips through winter surf on the North Coast. PORTLAND — Herbert West, mayor of Walla Walla, Washington, championed the development of navigation on the upper Columbia and Snake rivers by the construc- tion of a series of dams Monday at the forum meeting of the Portland Chamber of Commerce. The dams, which will provide for suitable boat and barge navigation, are to rise at The Dalles, Arlington, John Day, Umatilla and on the Snake River. By a deal made yesterday, The Astorian-Bud- get Publishing Co. will become the owner of the Troy Laundry company property at 10th and Duane streets. The purpose of the acquisition is to remodel the structure to house the expand- ing business of the newspaper and job printing department. In 1971, the Port of Astoria Board of Commissioners voted to pay $42,337 in controversial back taxes on the dredge Natoma. 75 years ago — 1946 Astoria ranked 11th among Oregon cities in volume of home building in 1945, according to fi gures issued by the Equitable Saving & Loan Association in Portland. Astoria had $51,000 worth of home construction in the year marking the war’s end, out of a total of $6.1 million worth of home construction for the state. Cities leading Astoria included Portland, Eugene, Salem, Medford, Klamath Falls, Grants Pass, Corvallis, Albany, Pendleton and Coos Bay, the report indicated. Running a “duck” a mile and a half out to sea through the winter surf and coming back to take sounding on the way to shore may sound like a Members of the newspaper industry touring the north- west as guests of the National Association of Manufacturers displayed more intimate personal interest in Clatsop indus- tries than many of the larger ones they had seen elsewhere. They were concerned about what has happened to tim- ber and what is happening to fi sh. D riving along Sunset Highway, they inquired about the possible utilization of land which to them formed an ulcer on the economic body of the country. In Astoria, the party was acquainted with the practical problems of processing 35 million pounds of fi sh annually by James H. Cellars , public relations offi cial of the Colum- bia River Packers Association . They visited freezers and other units of the company’s installations. Late, individual members of the group were interested in the by-product phases of the industry. They saw important possibilities in the use of the Carruthers new can fi lling device, the Pac-E-Lector, which has been installed in several canneries.