B1 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 2021 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 2021 • B1 WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE COMPILED BY BOB DUKE From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspapers 10 years ago this week — 2011 T he Night Crawlers have run the Hood to Coast race for 29 years. “For me it’s the camaraderie and teamwork that make it worth it,” said Paul Arbisi, a Night Crawler from Minneapolis. “Every year it is a new adventure for us. We get to meet new people.” The weather on Saturday could not have been better for the 12 veterans to fi nish the race. The Night Crawl- ers, along with 20,000 other runners and walkers from 50 states and 35 countries, converged on Seaside for the 30th anniversary of the “largest relay in the world,” which raises money for the American Cancer Society. The start of school is right around the corner. With most area schools set to begin in the next week, students aren’t the only ones packing bags and preparing for the next year of education. “I think everyone is hungry and ready to get started,” said Larry Lockett, principal at Asto- ria High School. “It’s time to get the kids back to school. Teachers are already showing up and getting things ready. We feel like we’re ahead of schedule, and this year we have extra time to prepare.” SEASIDE — The green carpet was rolled out Wednes- day morning, and several people cheered. They called the event a “great happening,” a “dream come true” and a “red letter day.” The carpet — actually artifi cial turf — was the fi rst of 135,000 square feet of turf to be applied to the Broadway Park fi eld. “Let’s push turf!” shouted Jason Boyd, Seaside High School athletic director, and several people leaned down to put muscle to one of the fi rst of many rolls to come. 50 years ago — 1971 The Astoria Regatta’s “Fun in 71” was: An abundance of royalty — the Regatta Queen and court, Miss Oregon, Miss Loyalty, Miss Clatsop County, Miss Scandinavia, the Clatsop County Rodeo Queen and a former Miss Oregon — Margie Huhta — judging. A parade review stand that looked as if it were at church as it constantly rose to honor passing American fl ags. A line of cheering and clapping parade watchers encouraging the Angel Job Corps drill team’s intricate maneuvers. Kids racing down Commercial Street in Kiddies Day competition. And young people sauntering down the mall all afternoon. Everyone forgetting that a street is closed to let peo- ple roam on it, and walking instead, sardine-crowding the sidewalks. Five children swarming on one piece of salt water taff y thrown from a novelty act trooper or rushing to ride the miniature tractor at the carnival, playing big papa. Police at the beer garden dance gate, spotlighting for kids. The youth standing outside the gate, too young to enter, but having as much fun dancing to the rock band as those inside. Portland is going to be bypassed by the con- tingent of Green Berets retracing the route of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. That word fi rst came Friday from an advance man for the 22 U.S. Army Special Forces soldiers, but it was not until later in the weekend that veri- fi cation was received, according to Jean Hallaux, manager of the Astoria Area Chamber of Com- merce and a member of the Oregon Lewis and Clark Heritage Committee. The Green Berets will be at Fort Clatsop for welcoming ceremonies Sunday afternoon, as scheduled by the local welcoming committee. The Berets will arrive in Astoria Saturday afternoon and bivouac at the Astoria Yacht Club on Youngs Bay . A compromise was worked out in a meeting at the chamber of commerce Thursday afternoon, after it was learned that the Special Forces troops and their welcoming committee were aiming at diff erent dates for the 120-day trek completion. 75 years ago — 1946 The biggest fl eet of boats in the history of the Colum- Tillamook Head in Seaside looms over the tent city created at the fi nish line of the Hood to Coast race in Seaside in 2011. Dale Collett, owner of Pro Turf Solutions, Seaside Mayor Don Larson, Seaside Public Works and Parks Director Neal Wallace, Seaside City Manager Mark Winstanley, Seaside High School Athletic Director Jason Boyd and chairman of Seaside’s parks advisory committee were among those on hand to help roll out the fi rst section of turf onto Seaside’s Broadway Field in 2011. bia River salmon derby was estimated to have been on the river estuary Sunday, as bright sunny weather stimulated fi shermen and apparently also stimulated salmon to take the hook more eagerly. Fishing was the best of the derby so far, with a sub- stantial run of silversides apparently in the river in addition to the Chinook run. Many catches of silver- sides were reported. The “catch” of fi ve wardens of the Washington Department of Fisheries during the derby included eight arrests and convictions for using extra lines and taking of too many fi sh; six arrests and convictions of visiting sports fi shermen catching too many clams during their off hours from the river, and the arrest of a custom cannery operator in Washington who did not obtain a license for his business before cutting up and canning fi sh. The “catch” of two Oregon State Police offi cers who spent some time on the river during the derby, and that of a U.S. game warden from Portland, was one angler, arrested for having extra fi shing line. ILWACO — Mayor Norman Howerton today announced that Pacifi c coast mayors will seek fi shing recruits from mayors of Brit- ish Columbia to challenge in 1947 the may- ors of leading eastern seacoast cities for the mayoral fi shing championship of the United States. The Port of Astoria celebrated 100 years in 2011 by burying a time capsule set to be unearthed after 100 years. The Regatta Court during the Astoria Regatta parade in 1971. Plans for the 1947 championship were enthusiastically discussed by the leading Pacifi c coast mayors at a reception in Hower- ton’s home. Further details were taken up at a dinner Saturday night. Sailors walked off ships in major Pacifi c coast ports today at the beginning of a progressive nationwide shipping tie-up and established soup kitchens for the AFL seamens’ strike scheduled to become fully eff ec- tive at 6 a.m. tomorrow. Responsibility for accidents along Taylor Avenue must be assumed by the City Com- mission if they maintain their present stand against the divider solution off ered by the state, Oregon Highway Engineer R.H. Bal- dock has indicated in a letter to the city. Baldock reminded the city that the state had made numerous surveys of the area and that no further studies of traffi c problems was justifi ed. Astorians thus far have made little progress in get- ting into the movies. But it now appears that the town’s fi sh fl ash on the screen. R.T. Whiteleather, of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice, is in Astoria today on what might be described as a “fi sh talent” scouting trip. He conferred with Fred Sandoz, of Columbia River Packers Association, in connection with its inquiries into the possibilities of producing an educational fi lm on fi lleting. Fish will not talk in the picture, but fi lleters and other performers will have something to say. TOKYO – Signe Pekuri, whose home is in Astoria, is one of a handful of Americans who have climbed Fujiyama, the 12,425 foot sacred mountain on the island of Honshu, this season. Dan Riggs, 16, scratches his head in wonderment as he views his partially submerged car, which rolled down a gentle slope into the Columbia River near the foot of 15th Street in 1971. Astoria’s chances for getting the proposed west- ern naval academy or post-graduate work are none too bright and, for that matter, neither are the chances of any other Oregon or Washington site. This was the impression gathered Friday by chamber of commerce offi cials who met the sub-committee of the U.S. Sen- ate Committee on Naval Aff airs, which is on a tour of the Pacifi c coast and which visited Astoria overnight.