B1 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2022 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2022 • B1 WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE COMPILED BY BOB DUKE From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspa- 10 years ago this week – 2012 75 years ago — 1947 S EASIDE — Home-schooled 17-year-old Sydney Dufka of Arch Cape was selected as the 2012 Miss Clatsop County Saturday night. Seaside high School students Han- nah Bacon and Giselle Pincetich won the Miss Oregon Coast Outstanding Teen and Miss Clatsop County Outstanding Teen titles before a crowd of about 500 people at the Seaside Civic and Conven- tion Center. “I’m elated! I can’t believe it!” said Dufka following her crowning as Miss Clatsop County. “My favorite part tonight was my onstage question. I felt like I really locked it this year,” she said A new record for successful cat rescues was established by Astoria fi remen during the past month. Never since the statistics were kept on such operations by our fi re- men have cats within the period of a month so frequently found themselves in distress. The cat calls usually are made by the owner who comes to the station with a plea for recovering his cat from a tree. She is represented as a pet of his children and the community joy. Invariably the cat is up a tree and refuses or is afraid to come down. The government’s fi sh and wildlife service today expressed hope that in a few years this coun- try will have a privately-operated fl eet of fi shing boats equipped as fl oating cannery ships. There is only one ship afl oat which combines fi shing, freezing and canning facilities, the govern- ment’s experimental factory fi sh- ing ship Pacifi c Explorer, a con- verted World War I ship . KNAPPA — Nearly 4 acres of grass and tidal land were destroyed at the intersection of Old U.S. Highway 30 and Hill- crest Loop in Knappa after a controlled burn went astray Monday night. “A homeowner was burn- ing trash and the wind kicked up some embers and it just took off ,” said Knappa Fire Chief Paul Olheiser. The former Red Lion Inn, the hotel at the Port of Astoria recently abandoned by its parent company, is courting two potential suitors. One is a partnership of the Portland based Williams/Dame & Associates Inc. and Escape Lodging from Cannon Beach. The other, Hospitality Masters, is a group from Astoria. The Port terminated its relationship with Red Lion in September 2010 and put out a request for proposals on the hotel by Jan 20. The original hotel, The Thun- derbird Inn, opened in the mid-1960s. It’s taken a decade, but con- servationists are fi nally herald- ing the passage of legislation that will create a system of marine reserves off the Oregon Coast, where fi shing and other com- mercial activity will be excluded from taking place. On Tuesday, the Oregon Sen- ate passed the bill, known as SB 1510, by a 25-5 vote that will go to the governor. Sen. Betsy Johnson, a mem- ber of the Coastal Caucus and a sponsor of the bill , told colleagues Tuesday the bill “was not a per- fect piece of legislation” because of the compromises made pass- ing it. But concerns that conser- vation groups outside the state would write their own ballot measure, with much stricter lan- guage calling for as many as 321 reserves, helped spur the com- promises, she said. She called such a ballot measure “economic Armageddon” “I absolutely believe this bill is an inoculation against a ballot measure,” she said on the Senate fl oor. 50 years ago – 1972 The anchored fl eet of strikebound ships in Astoria Harbor shrank from 13 to 12 last week when the Norwegian freighter Evano sailed for Korea. The ship’s new owners evidently abandoned the long wait for a chance to load cargo on the Columbia River. Five of the 12 ships still left are due to load cargo at the Port of Astoria when the longshoremen’s strike ends, the other seven are to load at upriver ports. LOS ANGELES — Phones rang crazily in police and sher- iff ’s offi ces, anxious callers saying they heard the western U nited States and Canada has sunk into It would have been impossible for the freighter Drexel Victory to have touched bottom in the area indicated by her mas- ter and bar pilot before she sank near the mouth of the Columbia River Jan. 21, Col. O.E. Wals, Portland district engineer, declared here today. He said the depth was found to be 57 feet at the spot indicated by the master and pilot, and that the time of the accident there was 2 or 3 foot tide, giving the vessel nearly 60 feet of water. 2012 – Last year’s Miss Clatsop County Jessica Humble gets ready to put the crown on Sydney Dufka, the new Miss Clatsop County, at the conclusion of the 2012 pageant. 2012 – A fi refi ghter pauses to observe a grass fi re in Knappa after unrolling a length of hose from the truck. The fi re grew from a debris pile and spread out through a fi eld between Hillcrest Loop and Old U.S. Highway 30. the sea. As mystifi ed law enforcement offi cers listened, about 50 call- ers described how a great earth- quake triggered by the recent Amchitka atomic tests had dev- astated Alaska, Tokyo and the western coast of North America. Everything from Alaska to Santa Barbara, California, was underwater, the callers said Sunday. Most of the callers said they had heard about the disaster on radio. A check showed that KPPC FM in suburban Pasadena had just aired a two-hour simulated newscast depicting a disaster caused by the Amchitka test. Most of the callers had missed an announcement at the start and fi nish which told listeners it was all fi ction. A t entative agreement to end the crip- pling 123-day strike on West Coast docks was announced Tuesday by negotiators for shippers and longshoremen. The Columbia River lightship is now the only one left on the U.S. West Coast, following dis- establishment last month of the Umatilla Reef lightship off the northern Washington coast. A Port of Portland offi cial said Tues- day night he thinks the Port of Astoria’s future development will probably be confi ned to a chance at attracting deep- draft bulk-commodity ships, a little con- tainer cargo and as a LASH port. Keith Hansen, director of administra- tion for the Port of Portland, told Astoria Lions Club members he things LASH is the biggest opportunity the Port of Asto- ria has for big growth. The LASH con- cept (which stands for lighter aboard ship) is that it’s effi cient to load cargoes aboard barges and the barges aboard ships. The ship can then put in at a stra- tegically located port, the barges can be taken off and sent to private and public docks throughout a river system. Hansen said when LASH becomes fi nancially feasible on the l ower Colum- bia River, he’s sure Astoria, not Portland, will be the key port. Expansion of the coyote’s ter- ritory within the past two decades is one of the most unusual recent developments in wild animal life of the W est, according to Stanley PO. Young, former Astorian who for 29 years has been one of the leading biologists of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife S ervice. Young was here Monday in the course of a 10,500-mile trip through Canada and the United States gathering material for a book he expects to publish this year on western wild animals. Young was gathering informa- tion about the activities of coyotes in Clatsop County. He said that the coyote, the only wild animal which has spread its range into new territory in modern times, was unknown in Clatsop County until after 1911. President Abraham Lincoln’s birthday observances in the city schools was fea- tured this morning by fl ag presentation of the local Veterans of Foreign Wars at the Astoria High School before the student body and numerous visitors. An attempt will be made this afternoon by the U.S. Army LT 373 to cross in with the deactivated ship Arrow from the lightship. A 45 mph wind kicked up a heavy sea earlier. Southwest storm warnings were posted. Standing by the tug is the cutter Onondaga, which has been at sea for three days in assisting the LT 373 to put a line on the former ferry and escort her to Astoria. “Seventy-fi ve percent of unemploy- ment compensation in Astoria goes to peo- ple who don’t want to work,” James H. Cellars, secretary of the Columbia River Salmon and Tuna Packers’ A ssociation, declared Wednesday at the hearing in Salem before the S enate labor and indus- tries committee. Cellars was opposing the proposal backed jointly by the AFL and CIO for an increase in benefi ts from $18 for 20 weeks in any one year to $25 for 26 weeks. “No increase is justifi ed now,” Cel- lars argued, declaring increased benefi ts “would only lead” to more abuses. He said employers fi nd they can’t get workers “because they would rather load on unem- ployment compensation.” LEFT: 1972 – Winter wave watching attracts viewers to South Jetty. MIDDLE: 2012 — Cody Carmichael, a Seaside High School senior who is the lead engineer and designer for the school’s robot team, works on getting the chains tensioned and lined up with the sprockets on the team’s robot. The robot is being designed to pick up and shoot foam basketballs into hoops and will be competing in the regional robotics competitions at Portland’s Memorial Coliseum. RIGHT: 1972 — Grimstad and Vanderveldt Inc. are completing a contract to grade a new, less steep beach approach on the county’s Del Rey Beach access road.