B1 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2022 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2022 • B1 WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE COMPILED BY BOB DUKE From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspapers 10 years ago this week – 2012 LONG BEACH, Wash. — The Long Beach Peninsula is becoming a whale graveyard. Less than a month after two dead whales were dis- covered on the beaches of Seaview and Oysterville , a dead orca washed ashore near Long Beach on Saturday morning. It’s the second orca found decaying on a peninsula beach in the last three months. The 12-foot female orca washed up about 1 mile north of the Cranberry approach, according Tiff any Boothe of the Seaside Aquarium. WARRENTON – Clatsop County is begin- ning the next phase of development at the North Coast Business Park with the construction of a key route through the 270-acre site. Big River Excavating is clearing vegetation and installing silt-control fencing along the route of Ensign Lane, which will run from U.S. High- way 101 east to Highway 101 Business. Comple- tion is expected by late fall. The Astoria Bridge stretches 4.1 miles across the mouth of the Columbia River, as much a symbol of Asto- ria as the man whose legislative prowess helped put it in place. William “Bill” Holmstrom , an 18-year veteran of the Oregon Legislature from Gearhart and representing Clat- sop County, died Feb. 6 at a Salem h ospital. From his time in the Oregon House and Senate Holmstrom is remem- bered as a tireless advocate for North Coast transporta- tion projects. A whale washed up on the Long Beach Peninsula in 2012. The U.S. Coast Guard Sector Columbia River has received an upgraded MH-60T Jayhawk rescue helicopter. The helicopter features upgrades that greatly enhance mission performance capabili- ties for fl ight crews. It improves medium range response and recovery operations including law enforcement, search and rescue as well as cutter operations. 50 years ago – 1972 Clatsop Community College students perpetrated a second “kidnapping” today — Clatsop County Sheriff Carl Bondietti — and had vowed to hold him and Asto- ria Mayor Harry Steinbock hostage for a ransom of 200 pints of blood. The college is hosting an American Red Cross b lood drive today and kidnappings were intended to spur contributions. well,” Murakami wrote. Murakami said Columbia R iver water penetrates into Willapa Bay and added that his industry employs nearly 1,000 people, “whose jobs could be in grave danger.” An unusually bad weather fi shing season and a tremendous infl ux of boats from along the coast has made the winter crab catch spotty to poor. Never in recent years have so many crab pots been set down between Tillamook Head and Grays Harbor, Washington, according to reports. One fi sh packing plant in the Astoria area estimated up to 50,000 crab pots. Another person said the pots extend seaward farther than he has ever seen them before. ferry Arrow from the hands of the beachcombers. LOS ANGELES — Gardner Cowles, head of a newspaper, magazine and broadcasting empire, today expressed optimism over the immediate future of newspapers and magazines but said radio’s future is not too bright, and it may take 10 years or more to put television on a paying basis. Astoria City Manager Dale Curry said despite the fact that Astoria has an immoral practices ordinance , the c ity apparently has no authority to prohibit businesses which deal in sex fi lms or books. Another protest over the proposed American Metal Climax aluminum reduction plant in Warrenton was received Wednesday by the Clatsop County Board of Commissioners. Asking the c ommission not to permit construction of the smelter at the Warrenton industrial site was the Wil- lapa Harbor Oyster Growers’ Association. Commissioners received the protest written by Richard K. Murakami, president of the association, who said his group’s greatest concern was to its million dollar industry. “Because of the prevailing weather conditions, air-emitted pollutants will reach the Long Beach Penin- sula. If not emitted by air, these pollutants, including the fl uorides, will be emitted by water and thereby endanger the valuable commercial and soft salmon industries as A runner jogs along the Astoria Riverwalk as the sun sets over Youngs Bay in 2012. Over 270 people turned out to donate blood at the American Red Cross blood drive at Clatsop Community College in 1972. CANNON BEACH — Anybody want a lifeboat — a 26-foot one at that? There’s one up for auction. Minimum bid asked? $500. The lifeboat is a 56-man craft that washed ashore at Tolovana Park in the early morning of Jan. 9 after being lost by The World President, a steamship owned by the General Seamanship Co. of Portland. SEASIDE — Construction of an airstrip with adjoin- ing resort facilities has been started on a 57-acre tract bor- dering Sunset Lake, 3 miles north of Gearhart, by Clifton A. Seales, of Portland. Seales, a former U.S. A rmy sergeant, plans a 300 by 1,800-foot runway with an asphalted surface, lighting for night fl ying, two hangers and maintenance facilities for small aircraft. A fl oatplane ramp may be constructed on Sunset Lake. 75 years ago — 1947 Beachcombers on the Long Beach P eninsula, from North Head to the foot of Cranberry R oad, are having troubles in collecting the harvest of the sea. At the foot of Cranberry Road are stationed grim-faced U.S. A rmy guards protecting the remains of the A rmy A crew prepares to power down a new U.S. Coast Guard MH-60T Jayhawk helicopter after landing at the Astoria airport in 2012. A specially-equipped airplane will take off from the Astoria airport Monday — or on the fi rst day of good fl ying weather thereafter — to broadcast tree seed over a 600-acre forest tract west of Saddle M ountain, in the fi rst aerial operation of its kind ever attempted in Clatsop County. A boat found at Tolovana Park in 1972.