B1 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2022 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2022 • B1 WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE COMPILED BY BOB DUKE From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspapers 10 years ago this week – 2012 I f they’re lucky, fans at the upcoming Oregon Junior Baseball state tournament will get to experience a Knappa Logger-Astoria Fisherme n showdown somewhere along the line. Because if it’s anything like the last three meetings between the two North Coast rivals, another Logger-Fish- ermen battle will be worth the price of admission. The Knappa and Astoria Ford summer baseball teams met for the third time this season Friday night Aiken Field, and for the third time, put on a dramatic show for those in attendance. The Fishermen scored another one-run win over the Loggers — their third of the summer – as Astoria’s Chris Leonardi lined a base hit to center fi eld in the bottom of the seventh inning, scoring Andrew Bergeson with the game-winning run, 5-4. Going purely by distance, Hollywood, Cali- fornia , is roughly 1,000 miles from Lewis and Clark National Historical Park. By metaphor , it’s farther away yet, well beyond a metaphysical plane separating the River Styx and the Elysian Fields. They are two completely diff erent worlds. In the history-rich forest of the park, there are no botox clinics, no B lue tooth-eared agents and no Charlie Sheen. But every summer, fi lmmakers fl ock to the forest, and most haven’t even graduated high school yet. The budding auteurs come as part of the park’s Teen Film Camp. For the fi rst time in the camp’s three-year history, a group of stu- dents has garnered the type of recognition that Hollywood insiders desperately seek. They’ve received an award from the National Academy of T elevision Arts and Sciences. Three high school students – Brooke Reichert, Lindsey Nordit and Caelan Hensley – from Oregon and Washington were awarded the regional Emmy for a video they directed and produced with the help of advisory fi lm- makers at NW D ocumentary, who worked with last year’s camp. Titled, “We Know Where We Came From,” the video tells the story of the Chinookan creation myth of the Clatsop-Ne- halem Tribe. The regional Emmy win was the fi rst award given to participants of the fi lm camp, says Will George, a park ranger and environmental edu- cator for the park. DEEP RIVER, Wash. — The century-old Deep River Lutheran Church stands as a reminder of an earlier time. With porch steps 4 feet from the asphalt, the 18-foot- tall National Historic Landmark sits expectantly on the edge of a winding country road in rural village of Deep River. Its simple Gothic Revival architecture and fresh coat of white paint recall the Finnish pioneers who built it. The pristine-looking spectacle wouldn’t be possi- ble without the love, dedication and care of community members. “It has stood through everything,” said Eva Maler- ich, whose family has helped preserve the church since the 1930 s. Deep River resident Mark Erickson spearheaded the recent project to renovate the church. 2012 – Middle school-aged campers at Lewis and Clark National Historical Park’s Nature Survival Camp prepare to pile into canoes at Netul Landing for a paddling trip on the Lewis and Clark River. fi shing 150 miles off Cape Blanco on the south- ern Oregon C oast aboard Pattterson’s 84-foot halibut schooner, the Hazel Rob. Sixty to 70 mph winds whipped the old schooner for three days until fi nally Saturday it began to break up in particularly rough seas. “It was heavily loaded with tuna and sim- ply could not stand the force of the sea. Boards began ripping away from the keel,” Patterson said. As winds and waves continued to buff et the craft, Patterson radioed to other fi shing vessels in the area, which reached the stricken craft within 45 minutes. “All in all, it took about 1 ½ hours for it to completely sink, ” he said. “It was a good boat. I’ve had some problems before – sometimes with other boats during my 30 years as a fi sherman, but this was easily the worst.” 2012 — The Deep River Lutheran Church, built in 1902 and listed as a National Historic Landmark, is nestled along a quiet, winding road. SEASIDE — “I only missed the beach by a mile and half,” laughed big, nerveless Jim Bonner, Astoria para- chute jumper, after he was rescued from the ocean during the Sportsmen Pilots’ air show here Sunday. Bonner stole the show from stunt pilots, nine P-51s of the Oregon Air National Guard and a helicopter when a trick change in the wind set him afl oat in the drink after and exhibition parachute jump from 5,500 feet at 12:45 p.m. Wearing a Mae West life vest, Bonner fl oated for 30 minutes with the Oregon Journal helicopter hovering overhead until he was rescued, wet but unruffl ed, by and amphibious DUKW operated Clinton G. White. White operates a passenger ride service with the vehicle on the beach here. 50 years ago – 1972 NEAHKAHNIE LODGE – A 50-pound Jap- anese horned mine had been exploded today after it drifted ashore and threatened the lives of vacationers at this summer resort yesterday. Guyon Biisset, owner of the Neahkahnie lodge near Nehalem, recognized the mine after reports reached him that children were play- ing with a strange looking object that came in with the tide during the night and settled on the beach. He placed the children in charge of the mine, as he believed they were the only ones who would “mind” and stay away from the object, and notifi ed the U.S. Coast Guard. One of the children was found sitting on the explo- sive when Capt. Kenneth Hawks, and ordnance expert from Fort Stevens, arrived on the scene. Hawkes touched off the mine with a fuse and dynamite mechanism. The explosion shattered dozens of windows in cottages within a half mile radius and sent a black column of smoke mush- rooming into the air. WARRENTON – The Skipanon River Bridge issue is alive again. The s tate h ighway d ivision has received word from the U.S. Coast Guard that it must, within two years, come up with a solution to the problem of the controver- sial span on Harbor Drive in Warrenton. That solution must permit navigation of the Skipanon River. One of the alternatives the s tate might consider is to construct an alternate route eliminating the existing bridge altogether, h ighway offi cials say. The suggestion has left E.R. Baldwin, c ity man- ager for Warrenton, alternately amused and dismayed: “I would like to think they were only kidding. The boat basin would be basically inoperative. They must have been fi shing for comments.” Access roads to the c ity-operated boat basin are posi- tioned at the east end of the bridge. Another alternative is to replace the existing bridge with a lift span. Cutting d onuts can be dangerous. That is, it can be dangerous if the donuts you’re cutting are big circles on the beach and if you’re cutting them with a car. Sgt. Stan Gray, of the Oregon State Police, says that cars “cutting donuts” can “fl ip over so fast. They’ll be going along fi ne, then they hit a pocket of softer sand and just fl ip.” As a result, he doesn’t recommend playing games with cars on the beach. The recently purchased Bettie M., Bumble Bee Sea- foods largest tuna seiner, has been berthed since Sun- day at the Bumble Bee docks and will leave Wednesday morning on the fi rst leg of its inaugural cruise. It will stop in San Diego to pick up additional crew, then move to Panama to pick up tuna nets and fi nally begin fi shing later this summer. The 191-foot boat has a 1,000-ton capacity, a depth of 18 feet and a draft fully loaded of 21 feet. It will travel at 16 knots with a sustained maximum speed of 14 knots. Dick Patterson must have slept well Monday afternoon. It was probably the fi rst good rest he had in several days. Patterson, a 46-year-old Astoria commercial fi sherman, returned home Monday morning 75 years ago — 1947 1972 — When the temperature rises, go to where the water falls — a little motto this youngster worked up as he frolicked in the cool spray of Youngs River Falls. 1972 — Road-driving rules apply to beaches, too. after a harrowing experience on the high seas Saturday. He returned without his boat, but thankful that he and two other companions were alive. Patterson and the others, David Patterson, 29, Astoria, and Henry Snell, 17, Seaside, were Eleven hundred Elks will arrive in Astoria by special train Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. to visit the Astoria Col- umn, Tongue Point naval base and the fi sh canneries, according to Ellis O. Link, Elks secretary, who returned to Astoria from the n ational Elks c onvention in Portland last night. Older Astorians remember when Dr. Nellie S. Vernon fi rst set out her shingle. It was the Astoria of 1903. They recall that the woman doctor received a cool reception. Most male physicians believed a woman belonged behind a house apron, not a doctor’s apron. Dr. Vernon did not agree. Clatsop County began to like her as a woman; to believe in her as a physician. She never refused a call for help. By horseback or buggy, by fi sh boat or on foot, she went wher- ever she was needed. No one knows how many times she crossed the Columbia in a fi sh boat. Often expect- ant fathers waited there on horseback, till she jumped on behind. A city offi cial once said that a third of the chil- dren on the streets were delivered by Dr. Ver- non. The doctor did enjoy pointing to a young- ster as she smiled, “That’s one of my kids.”