»INSIDE WEEKLY RTAINMENT ARTS & ENTE THURSDAY MAY 6 2021 ONE STEP AT A TIME YOUR GUIDE TO THE ASTORIA ART WALK PAGE 4 LOCAL WRITERS SHARE SPRING- THEMED POEMS ET MEETS ASTORIA BALL WALK ASTORIA’S ART PAGE 8 PAGE 6 NO; Col- BAY CASI SHOALWATER x 108 Front Cover- ; 756 240813-1; 05.06 x 1.5; XPos: 0 YPos: 0, Width: or; 4 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, MAY 6, 2021 148TH YEAR, NO. 133 $1.50 CORONAVIRUS Port eyes Pier 2 repairs Hope for inclusion in infrastructure bill By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian The Port of Astoria’s best option for fi x- ing a slumping seawall on the west side of Pier 2 will cost an estimated $17 million. The Port plans to ask that the project be included in the American Jobs Plan, Pres- ident Joe Biden’s proposed infrastructure bill. Hundreds of workers with Bornstein Seafoods and Da Yang Seafood in the Pier 2 warehouse take in catch from boats at a dilapidated dock 800 feet long. The metal sheet pile seawall holding the pier is only 8 feet out from the western edge of the ware- house, causing the two load-bearing walls to bow out, risking failure. Matt McGrath, the Port’s deputy direc- tor , told the Port Commission on Tuesday that the most viable option is to move the seawall 60 feet out into the water to the See Port, Page A6 Photos by Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Family members gather around a photo of their ancestor, William Henry Menz, of the Lakota Sioux, who served in World War I and attended an Indian boarding school as a child. Boarding school exhibit illustrates complex history A concentrated eff ort to eradicate native cultures By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian MORE INSIDE County to remain at high risk for virus • A2 County reports new virus cases • A2 Lawsuit fi led over road district Lewis and Clark residents question use of funds By NICOLE BALES The Astorian Concerned Friends for Clatsop County, a group that formed to challenge plans to relocate the public works facil- ity to Lewis and Clark, is now suing the county. The group, in a lawsuit fi led in Cir- cuit Court in April, alleges the county has misappropriated funds received for Clatsop County Road District No. 1 and intends to use the money for unpermitted purposes. The c ounty declined to comment on the suit . Mike Sargetakis, a Portland attorney representing Concerned Friends for Clat- sop County, said the group fi led the law- suit in an eff ort to fi nd answers . S allie Thurman felt like she better understood her mother after she learned about the American Indian boarding schools. To Thurman, it explained the dis- tance, the anger. Thurman’s mother, a woman of Lakota and Dakota descent, had told her children about attending boarding schools, but not the context and purpose of the schools — off -reser- vation institutions created by the federal government in the late 1870s to force cultural assimilation on n ative children. Thurman only learned about the schools later while researching her family. Now, Thurman thinks, “OK, I was raised by boarding school tactics. ... I was raised by this woman but I never understood her until I started doing this research.” The boarding schools are the sub- ject of a traveling exhibit, “Away From Home,” on display at the Clat- sop County Heritage Museum. Though the few schools still in operation are run much diff erently now, the early ver- sions were part of a concentrated eff ort to eradicate n ative cultures through edu- cation after “government offi cials found it was less expensive to educate Native Americans than to fi ght wars (against them),” according to materials provided at the exhibit. The founder of one of the schools stated a philosophy to “kill the Indian and save the m an.” Thurman, who lives in California, and other members of her family trav- eled to Astoria to see the exhibit in ABOVE: Sallie Thurman discusses the ‘Away From Home’ exhibit, which features several of her ancestors, with McAndrew Burns, the executive director of the Clatsop County Historical Society. BELOW: Beaded moccasins, a tobacco bag and a woman’s purse were contributed to the exhibit by Thurman’s family. ilies today. The original “Away From Home” exhibit debuted in Arizona in 2000. It’s had years of audience interaction and undergone several updates, but it is still new information to many, even to Native Americans . A change in direction April. Family members had contributed stories and items to the exhibit: beaded moccasins, a tobacco bag, a woman’s purse, photos — including a photo of a trio of siblings, one of whom died after being taken to a school and who was buried in an unmarked grave. The schools and the policy that led to their creation was “a war waged on children,” according to exhibit materi- als, with repercussions still felt by fam- For the Clatsop County Historical Society and the m useum, the exhibit is part of a change in direction that has been underway for a while, as the insti- tution reexamines whose stories it tells and how. “Museums have an obligation to accurately tell stories and help explain complicated ones,” said McAndrew Burns, the executive director of the h is- torical s ociety. See Exhibit, Page A6 See Lawsuit, Page A2 A quiet steward of Seaside sports Community remembers a dedicated coach By GARY HENLEY The Astorian To the many athletes and follow- ers of high school sports in Clatsop County, he was the guy at the scor- er’s table in Seaside who always wore shorts. To Seaside, Dennis “Denny” Vaughn — who died at 77 just over a week ago — was much more. On the surface, you can fi nd his name on the list of Seagull booster club members and in the school’s Hall of Fame, plus all the work he did for the Astoria Golf & Country Club and the county’s junior golf program. But, “that was all just the tip of the iceberg, as far as Denny was concerned,” said longtime Seaside student-athlete, parent and fan Mark Truax. “He wasn’t a teacher or a coach to me, but he certainly was a mentor. He did a lot more behind the scenes — stuff he didn’t want credit for.” Vaughn began his teaching career at St. Mary, Star of the Sea School in Astoria, then moved to the Seaside School District and taught for 30 years, retiring in 1999. He coached freshman girls basketball in addi- tion to boys golf, and was inducted into Seaside’s Hall of Fame for mer- itorious service as an educator and coach. He took the boys golf team to the state tournament 12 times. He “left me a great program, and See Vaughn, Page A6 Longtime scorer’s table teammates, Alice Olstedt and Denny Vaughn.