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arts & entertainment Every Thursday November 3, 2016 coastweekend.com
STORMY WEATHER
ARTS FESTIVAL
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American Legion pancake, egg breakfast set for Nov. 5 DEEP RIVER, Wash. — The American Legion Post 0111 in Deep River will serve an all-you-can-eat pancake and egg breakfast at the Legion Hall in Deep River on Saturday, Nov. 5. The meal will be served from 8 to 11:30 am. In addition to pancakes and eggs to order, the Legionnaires will serve kielbasa sausage and ham along with coffee, orange juice and milk. The cost
is $4 for children age 3 to 12 and $6 for teens and adults. Proceeds from the event go to support the NaselleGrays River community, veterans and area students. To reach the Legion Hall, travel 5 miles east of Naselle on Washington State Route 4, and turn north on West Deep River Dike Road. Travel on the Dike road for about1.25 miles and the hall will be on the left.
World of Haystack Rock lectures start
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This is always a well-attended event and a time for enjoying the company of old and new friends while Legionnaires cook and NaselleGrays River students serve your food.
CANNON BEACH — The 2016-17 World of Haystack Rock free community lecture series kicks off this month and continues through April. Mid Coast Watershed Council Policy Director Wayne Hoffman will be the first speaker, presenting “Peregrine Falcons of Yaquina Head.” His appearance is scheduled for 7 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 9 at the Cannon Beach Library, 131 N. Hemlock St. The World of Haystack Rock lecture series is sponsored by the Friends of Haystack Rock and the Cannon Beach Library. The talks will be held at the Cannon Beach Library at 7 p.m. on the second Wednesday of each month, November to April. The schedule is:
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Wayne Hoffman will give the talk “Peregrine Falcons of Yaquina Head” at 7 p.m. Nov. 9 at the Cannon Beach Library.
• Dec. 14: “The Oregon Beach Bill: 50 Years” by Seaside biologist, educator and wildlife photographer Neal Maine. • Jan. 11: “The Precipitous Loss of China’s Coastal Wetlands and Impacts to
Migratory Birds in the East Asian-Australasian Flyway” by Oregon Coast National Wildlife Refuge Complex former project manager Roy Lowe. • Feb. 8: “How to Help Protect Over 50,000 Acres of Forest in Clatsop County” by Oregon and California Wild Salmon Center Policy Director Bob Van Dyk. • March 8: “Oregon Marine Reserves: An Overview of the Human Dimensions Research Program” by Tommy Swearingen of the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Marine Resources Program. • April 12: “Geology of Haystack Rock” by Seaside geologist Tom Horning. To learn more about Friends of Haystack Rock, visit www.friendsofhaystackrock.org
Tickets on sale for ‘The Nutcracker’ Little Ballet Theatre to present 42nd annual ballet this holiday season ASTORIA — Tickets for the Little Ballet Theatre’s 42nd annual full-length production of “The Nutcracker” are on sale now. This year’s performances will take place at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 3 and at 2 p.m. Dec. 4 at the Astoria High School auditorium. In addition to the Little Ballet Theatre’s own local dancers, two guest artists from ORegon Ballet Theater will perform during the show, says Larry Peterson, president of Little Ballet Theatre Inc. Michael Linsmeier and Ansa Deguchi will perform the Grande Pas de Deux and the Snow Pas de Duex. The brilliant Tchaikovsky score will come to life with
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Tickets are now available for the Little Ballet Theatre’s 2016 production of “The Nutcracker,” taking place this December.
the 50-piece Little Ballet Theater orchestra and choir, conducted by Cory Pederson. Tickets are available online at TicketsWest.com and at the Liberty Theater box office from 2 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday now through Dec. 1. Ticket prices are $51 for premium seating and $26 for reserved seating. General admission tickets are $16
for adults and $11 for senior citizens and children up to age 12. Beginning Dec. 2, tickets will be available at Astoria High School. Premium and reserved tickets will be available. All general admission tickets sold at the high school will be $16. For more information call Pam Morimoto, Little Ballet Theatre secretary, at 503861-1971.
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 3
Find an epic lineup of authors Maritime museum hosts book signing, unveils new work by artist Bill Dodge ASTORIA — Veteran Astoria artist Bill W. Dodge will reveal a new original painting at the Columbia River Maritime Museum on Friday. The museum will also host an epic lineup of 16 authors — locals or those with local connections — with books available for purchase and personalization. Visitors can meet the authors, check out Dodge’s newest artwork and listen to
coast
local folk band the Brownsmead Flats in the great hall. It all takes place from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 4 before the Columbia River Maritime Museum’s annual meeting at the museum, located at 1792 Marine Drive. Raised in Hollywood, Dodge first arrived in Astoria in 1990, and his wellknown artwork depicts life in Astoria. He returned to live in Astoria this summer following a three-year retirement hiatus in Portland. He appeared at the Astoria Sunday Market this summer at the museum’s Dodge-sponsored booth, and he’s been busy painting full time.
weekend INSIDE THIS ISSUE
arts & entertainment ON THE COVER
“Red Coat, Blue Mood III” by Bev Jozwiak at DragonFire Gallery. Jozwiak will show a new series of watercolor and acrylic paintings during the festival and will demonstrate her technique in watercolors from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, along with other gallery artists. SUBMITTED PHOTO
See story on Page 10
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COASTAL LIFE
A timely ‘Election’
Seaside High School’s fall play comes at a timely moment
FEATURE
A storm of arts
COAST WEEKEND EDITOR REBECCA SEDLAK COAST WEEKEND PHOTOS DANNY MILLER ADVERTISING MANAGER BETTY SMITH CONTRIBUTORS NANCY MCCARTHY KATHERINE LACAZE RYAN HUME
To advertise in Coast Weekend, call 503-325-3211 or contact your local sales representative. © 2016 COAST WEEKEND Coast Weekend welcomes comments and contributions from readers. New items for publication consideration must be submitted by 10 a.m. Tuesday, one week and two days before publication.
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See what’s blowing into Cannon Beach at an art festival
DINING
Mouth of the Columbia
Cannon Beach Bakery delivers ample sugary sweets
FURTHER ENJOYMENT SEE + DO...............................12, 13 CROSSWORD..............................17 CW MARKETPLACE...........18, 19 MUSIC CALENDAR ..................20 GRAB BAG ..................................22
The 16 authors and their books have connections to the lower Columbia region. Many have to do with history: Kenneth M. Ames, Robert T. Boyd and Tony Johnson, who together authored “Chinookan Peoples of the Lower Columbia”; Carol Carruthers Lambert, author of “Letters to Louise”; Andrea Larson Perez, author of the Arcadia Postcard Series book “Astoria”; Karen Leedom, author of “Astoria: An Oregon History”; Gloria Stiger Linkey, author of “Native American Women: Three Who Changed History”; Jeffrey Smith, author of the Images of America book “Astoria”;
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Phone: 503.325.3211 Ext. 217 or 800.781.3211 Fax: 503.325.6573 E-mail: rsedlak@dailyastorian.com Address: P.O.Box 210 • 949 Exchange St. Astoria, OR 97103 Coast Weekend is published every Thursday by the EO Media Group, all rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced without consent of the publisher. Coast Weekend appears weekly in The Daily Astorian and the Chinook Observer.
Arline LaMear
Carol Carruthers Lambert
Rex Ziak
and Rex Ziak, author of “In Full View.” Others have to do with life and work on the Columbia River: Michael E. Haglund, author of “World’s Most Dangerous: A History of the Columbia River
Bar”; Nancy Lloyd, author of “Boats of the Northwest Coast”; Irene Martin, author of “Flight of the Bumblebee”; Nate Sandel, author of “Ships of the Mighty Columbia”; and Rebecca Harrison, author of “Deep,
Dark and Dangerous.” And still others have to do with animals: Margo Greeve, author of “Oregon’s Special Animals” and Arline LaMear, author of the children’s book “Lewis and Clark: The Astoria Cats.”
4 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Visual arts, literature, theater, music & more
An ‘Election’ where everyone is the winner Seaside High School’s fall play comes at a timely moment By KATHERINE LACAZE
I
FOR EO MEDIA GROUP
n the middle of a contentious election cycle, a group of Seaside High School students are exploring this keystone of America’s democracy through a satirical lens with their production of “The Election,” aimed at providing the community some much needed comedic relief. “You’ll laugh, you’ll cringe, you’ll laugh some more,” senior Bekah Cox said. “It should be fun for everyone, and they will be able to relate to it on some level.” In the play, which opens Friday, Nov. 4, Cox’s character, Christy Martin, is a preppy, polished know-it-all who decides to run for student body president against Mark Davenport, a completely unprepared fellow student who only wanted to pad his resume for college applications and expected an uncontested victory. Their contentious race is sparked by the fictional school’s student body president resigning in disgrace, à la Richard Nixon. Several of the play’s themes are applicable to the real world of politics at every level of government. Cox, a veteran of the high school’s drama program, described her character as “almost Hillary Clinton, but not quite,” adding her fellow cast mates often joked she would need to find a pantsuit to wear for her costume. “Christy is very good about saying things to appeal to the audience and making Mark look bad, and Mark is so out of his element,” senior Emma Dutcher said. “Mark is the butt of the joke always,” Cox agreed. “He has to resort to calling Christy a liar.”
Audience members also can expect to find allusions to the Watergate scandal, the “birther” conspiracy, words getting twisted out of context and antagonistic candidate debates. “Anything that has come up in politics is pretty much in this,” Dutcher said. “It’s ridiculous.” Meanwhile, her character, Kyli, the student broadcasting system reporter, is always hovering nearby, covering the outrageous process and milking its entertainment value to please her viewers, Dutcher said. “It’s definitely timely because there are a lot of parallels to what’s happening right now, and you definitely see a lot of current candidates and past presidents in this show,” Cox said. Director Lenore Morrisson specifically chose “The Election,” because of its comedic take on the contemporary political scene and relevance to the upcoming 2016 presidential election, scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 8. “All elections are sort of the same, right?” Morrisson said. “They say they’re going to run a clean campaign, and pretty soon someone’s running an ad, saying, ‘He’s a puppy killer.’ It’s just kind of ridiculous.” Morrisson said she believed the students would appreciate the play’s relevance and enjoy presenting the satire, and so far, they have. Junior Jacob Brien, who plays Mark’s geeky but lovable sidekick, Karl Merriweather, said the best part of what is his inaugural theater experience is “making people laugh.” While he is disdainful of politics in
PHOTO BY KATHERINE LACAZE
The cast and crew for Seaside High School’s fall play “The Election” are preparing to open Nov. 4.
general — “it’s just unpleasant,” he explained — he finds the play to be an optimal opportunity to express his diverse humor and have fun with other cast members. He expects it will be an equally enjoy-
able experience for the audience. While there isn’t much of an educational component to the play — audience members won’t leave with a better understanding of the electoral college — the play will afford a little comedic relief at the expense of the election process, outrageous political figures and how the media can fuel the fire. “Politics are scary,” Dutcher said, adding she would encourage everyone in the community to “come have a laugh with us poking fun at politics.” Brien agreed. “If you’re someone who gets really into politics and you watch it a lot, and it kind of stresses you a little bit, watching the play may ease it up and take some of that weight off your back — just to put it back on when you go watch it again,” he said. In addition to Cox, Dutcher
and Brien, students Emil Matlock and Jack Stapleton round out the core cast playing Mark Davenport and Gary McMaster, respectively. They are supported by fellow players Dakota Young, Cat Walgren, Phoenix Miller, Annie Stafford, Max McNeill, Nolan Milliren, Gretchen Hoekstre, Michael Matthews, Stephanie Anderson, Gwen Farrar and Alan Brockman. The tech crew consists of Daniel Contier, Will Kautz and Jessica Almaguer. Kelsey Crider is the lead costumer, and Craig Shepherd is in charge of the set production and design. The play will be performed at 7 p.m. Nov. 4, 5, 10, 11 and 12 at Seaside High School. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $5 for general admission and $3 for students with their ASB card. For more information, call the school at 503-738-5586.
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 5
Andy Hackbarth Trio brings blend of folk, jazz, indie to Raymond Theatre Sunday Afternoon Live hosts concert on Sunday, Nov. 6 RAYMOND, Wash. — Sunday Afternoon Live will present a captivating and memorable musical event this weekend: the Andy Hackbarth Trio. Woven from Colorado folk, classical roots and the Nashville experience, the Andy Hackbarth Trio is a crowd-pleaser with universal appeal. Hackbarth trained as a flamenco and classical guitar master and delivers performances comprised of his diverse musical influences, including ethnic folk tradition, jazz standards, traditional classics and modern indie rock. Winner of multiple music awards, Hackbarth is not only a talented instrumentalist but also a powerful vocalist and accomplished songwriter. The musical performance begins at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6 at the Raymond Theatre. Daylight Savings Time ends early in the morning
Clatskanie Arts Commission hosts concert of Bach, Beethoven and Brahms on Nov. 6
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Andy Hackbarth will lead his trio in concert at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6 at the Raymond Theatre in Raymond, Washington.
Nov. 6; remember to set your clocks back one hour. Tickets are $15 at the door or $12 in advance at the theater, located at 323 Third St.; Raymond Pharmacy; and South Bend Pharmacy. For further ticket information, call 360-875-5207.
Enjoy trivia night at Seaside Public Library SEASIDE —At 6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 9, the Seaside Public Library will host its monthly Team Trivia Tournament. Teams can consist of one person or have as many as six people. Trivia nights are informal, fun competitions where teams battle to see who has the greatest knowledge of all matters trivial. General questions will be asked by the library’s trivia host. The winners are the team that, at the
Oregon Symphonic Band concert brought to you by the letter ‘B’
end of the night, has correctly answered the most questions. Prizes will be awarded, but the main prize is knowing you have the smartest trivia team in Clatsop County. The Seaside Public Library is located at 1131 Broadway, across from the youth center and swimming pool. For more information on this event or other library activities call 503-738-6742 or visit www.seasidelibrary. org
The show is sponsored by Bud’s Lumber, Marilyn and Roy Stephens, Helen Campbell, and Beryl Adams. Grants were provided by the Washington State Arts Commission, Western States Arts Federation and National Endowment of the Arts.
CLATSKANIE — The Clatskanie Arts Commission will once again welcome the Oregon Symphonic Band in concert. The band will perform the second concert in its 2016-17 season at 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6 at Clatskanie Mid/High School, Donavon Wooley Performing Arts Center, located at 471 S.W. BelAir Drive. The theme of the Oregon Symphonic Band concert is “The Three Bs an Then Some.” The “Three Bs” are generally considered to be Bach, Beethoven and Brahms; but all the works on this concert have been
composed or arranged by someone whose name begins with the letter “B.” The concert will begin with Berlioz’s “Roman Carnival Overture,” a virtuoso piece with one of the most beautiful English horn solos in the repertoire, followed by Beethoven’s “March in F.” “Blessed are They” from the Brahms Requiem is next, and then comes Bizet’s famous “Farandole” from the L’Arlesienne Suite. The first half of the concert will conclude with “Joy in all Things” by Brian Balmages. After a short intermission, the Oregon Symphonic Band will return to open the second half of the program with “Overture to Candide” by Leonard Bernstein. Bach’s beautiful “Jesu, Joy
of Man’s Desiring” is next. Movie music will follow: “The Man From Snowy River” from the movie of the same name, arranged by Barry Bignell. The finale to the concert will be Robert Buckley’s exciting “Iditarod,” a musical depiction of the famous dogsled race of the same name. Tickets will be available at the door: $10 for adults, $8 for students and seniors age 60 and older, and $6 for children age 12 and under. Band students are free. Tickets are available at Hump’s Restaurant in Clatskanie, by calling Elsa at 503-728-3403 or at the door at 2:30 p.m. Nov. 6. This concert is possible through the sponsorship of Mike Arther Machine Service.
The Coaster Theatre Playhouse Presents
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Nov. 18 - Dec. 23, 2016 Tickets $20 or $15 Shows begin at 7:30 p.m. Sunday shows at 3:00 p.m. Sponsored by The Clark Family Tickets: 503-436-1242 or coastertheatre.com 108 N Hemlock Street, Cannon Beach, OR
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Talk to address aging, intergenerational friendship Tickets on sale for Center food bank fundraiser Hoffman hosts Oregon CANNON BEACH — Tickets are on sale for Clatsop Community Action’s seventh annual fundraiser, Coastal Harvest of Giving, which takes place Nov. 18. The event helps fund the nonprofit’s Regional Food Bank, a central clearinghouse for food donations on the North Coast. CCA invites Coastal Harvest of Giving attendees to help the organization continue to supply food and nutritional education to low-income residents in Clatsop County. “Not only are we addressing the issue of hunger today, putting enough food
on the table for 1,450,610 meals for low-income residents, but we are making great headway in impacting the lives of those we serve by improving their diets,” said Marlin Martin of CCA Regional Food Bank. The fine dining event includes dinner served in the Surfsand Resort Ballroom, located at 48 Gower Ave. The 170 tickets are firstcome, first-served and cost $150 per person. Two-thirds of the price is tax-deductible. Tickets are available until Nov. 11. Call 503-8613663, or email mmartin@ ccaservices.org
Events
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NOV. 3 * 8pm
Local Country Music with
Free
Rusty Spurs nov. 10 & 24
Bruce Thomas Smith and Friends
Tuesdays * 7pm
An Evening with Victoria Kingsbury
nov. 13 * 7pm
Pacific Northwest Professional Wrestling Pacific (Last Sunday of Every Month)
Astoria Event Center Doors Open at 4:30PM
Port of call specials
Free @
CALL PORT OF & BAR BISTRO
Acoustic Music
november 12
Caravan Glam Astoria Astoria Event Center
• Monday: Military appreciation day 20% off with proof of service • Tuesday: Taco Tuesday all day $2.00 tacos • Thursday: Burger and draft beer for 10.00 • Breakfast every Sunday and Saturday-open at 10am • Sunday: $10 Bloody Mary Bar-10am to 2pm. • $10 bottomless mimosa’s for 2 hours between 10am to 2pm.
November 9 * 8pm
KLEVERKILL
Astoria Event Center
Tickets at the door $ 8
Humanities event
MANZANITA — The Hoffman Center for the Arts will host an Oregon Humanities Conversation Project talk — “Just a Number: Aging and Intergenerational Friendship” — at 3 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 8. The event will be part of the Hoffman Center’s Art of Aging Series. Admission will be $5. Independent scholars Jenny Sasser and Simeon Dreyfuss will lead an open discussion about how people experience aging in community. Questions to be addressed include: How do we acknowledge both the universality of aging and the differences we experience? How do we cre-
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Jenny Sasser and Simeon Dreyfuss will lead an open discussion about how people experience aging in community on Nov. 8 at the Hoffman Center for the Arts in Manzanita.
ate meaningful connections with others of different ages and life stages? “Aging is a life-long experience that is both universal and different
for everyone,” according to the Conversation Project’s program explanation. “While people of different generations have wisdom to offer those who are ahead
of or behind them in life’s journey, barriers to connection often persist between generations. Many of these barriers are rooted in our ideas about age and aging.” Sasser is an educational gerontologist, transdisciplinary scholar and community activist. She has worked in the field of gerontology for more than half her life, beginning as a nursing assistant and aging advocate before focusing on research, writing and teaching. Dreyfuss is a writer and independent interdisciplinary scholar. His undergraduate studies were in the interdisciplinary liberal arts with concentrations in writing, literature, anthropology and philosophy. His graduate work was in English and creative writing.
Cabaret-style concert slated in Long Beach Peninsula Arts Center hosts blues man Albert Reda LONG BEACH, Wash. — Audiences at the Peninsula Arts Center may be familiar with Albert Reda from his appearances as bass player and vocalist with blues guitarist Terry Robb. This time, however, Reda will be doing a solo show on piano, showcasing old favorites, some originals, audience requests, and a chance for some dancing. This cabaret-style piano and vocal show will take place at 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5. Reda has been in the heart of West Coast music for 40 years. Beginning in 1977, and throughout most of 1978, Reda performed regularly in San Francisco music and comedy clubs with Donald Freda as the
duo Reda and Freda. During this time, they opened for or shared the bill with many comics, including a young Robin Williams and Dana Carvey. In 1979, Reda joined the seminal West Coast punk band Mutants, and beginning in 1980 began performing regularly in the traveling oldies act Cruisin’, playing the bass, piano and singing. This band would play a “History of Rock & Roll” type show in clubs in the Bay Area. When they weren’t performing in the Bay Area, Cruisin’ could be found traveling throughout northern California on oldies tours with Wolfman Jack and backing up groups like the Drifters and the Coasters. In 1988, Reda moved to Portland and for the past 25 years has been playing with Northwest blues artists
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Albert Reda will perform at the Peninsula Arts Center Nov. 5.
such as Robb, Lloyd Jones, Duffy Bishop, Bill Rhodes, Robbie Laws, (all members of the Cascade Blues Association’s hall of fame) and many others. He’s received 11 Muddy awards from the Cascade Blues Association and has been inducted into their hall of fame for winning the award for bass three years running in the 1990s. The Peninsula Arts Cen-
ter is located at 504 Pacific Ave. N. Admission to the concert is $12 at the door or online through Brown Paper Tickets, or call Bill at 360901-0962. Wine, beer, and other refreshments will be available for purchase. Concerts benefit the Long Beach Peninsula Acoustic Music Foundation, a 501(c)3 nonprofit charitable organization.
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 7
Explore ‘The Mediterranean Muse’ of place, friendship and creativity
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Kristin Shauck, Nancy Cook to present next free Ales & Ideas talk ASTORIA — Clatsop Community College and Fort George Brewery will present the next Ales & Ideas free community lecture, “The Mediterranean Muse: Place, Displacement, Friendship & Creativity,” at 7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 3. CCC faculty Kristin Shauck and Nancy Cook will share slides from their June 2016 educational tour of Southern France, Italy and Barcelona, Spain while discussing the role of place, travel and friendship in art history and their own creative processes with fine art and creative writing. Doors open with food and beverage service at 6 p.m. Seasonal beers on tap, food and other beverages are available for purchase, but no purchase is required. The Fort George Lovell Showroom is located at 14th and Duane streets. Minors are welcome. In June, CCC writing instructor Cook attended the Creativity Workshop Barcelona; afterwards she join her friend and creative collaborator Shauck for a CCC Adventure Club educational tour of Catalonia Spain and the French and Italian Riviera with stops in Carcassonne, Antibes, Nice, Cinque Terre, Pisa and finally the marvelous art mecca of Florence (aka Firenze to the Italians). At this Ales & Ideas talk, Shauck and Cook will discuss the artistic legacy of Picasso, Miro, Dali, Gaudi, Chagall, contemporary French icon Ernest Pignon-Ernest and more, focusing on the themes of
Nov.
GEARHART — The next Gearhart ArtWalk will take place from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5 at galleries and merchants in Gearhart. The featured local businesses for November are:
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PHOTO BY DWIGHT CASWELL
Nancy Cook is a local artist, poet and teacher at Clatsop Community College.
Kristin Shauck is an art instructor at Clatsop Community College.
ALES & IDEAS 7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 3 Fort George Lovell Showroom 426 14th St., Astoria All ages Free place (genius loci), displacement and friendship (el companerismo) in the artists’ varied bodies of work. The pair will also share highlights from their personal experiences with homeland, travel and the artistic inspiration found in creative collaboration with the intention of helping the audience appreciate the opportunities here in the Columbia Pacific Riviera. Shauck holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in painting and drawing from Baylor University in Waco, Texas and a Master of Fine Arts degree in painting and drawing from Texas A&M Commerce. She taught at the college level in Texas and South Dakota before joining the full-time faculty at CCC in 2004. She serves
as founding director of “Au Naturel: The Nude in the 21st Century,” an annual international competition of figurative art, and has exhibited her own artwork in various regional and national exhibitions as well as internationally in England, Japan and India. A former fisheries biologist and National Park Service interpretive ranger, Cook received her Master of Fine Arts in creative nonfiction from the University of Alaska and her Bachelor of Science in environmental science from Evergreen State College. She taught writing at Prince William Sound Community College before joining the CCC faculty in 2004. Her poems and prose have appeared in the Riverteeth Journal of Nonfiction Narrative, Mountain Gazette, HipfishMonthly, Xtra Tuff, Ice Box, RAIN Magazine and the Seal Press anthology “Going Alone: Women’s Adventures in the Wild.” She also performs each year at the Astoria FisherPoets Gathering. The mother of one daughter, Cook continues to summer at her cabin in Alaska’s Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, where she directs the annual RiverSong workshop.
A Great Gallery 576 Pacific Way The gallery’s 2017 calendar has arrived, a great gift for the holidays with 12 of gallery owner Susan Thomas’ favorite images to adorn your wall for the year. Holiday cards, gift tags, night lights and many other gift items will be available, along with original art. Refreshments — including chocolate — will be served. Gearhart Ironwerks 1368 Pacific Way Find new chef and field knives by John Emmerling and Rome Hutchings — and stop in to see how they’re made. Bladesmithing demonstrations will take place all day long. Pacific Crest Cottage 726 Pacific Way Bridal couture, sportswear,
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See how Gearhart Ironwerks creates its distinctive chef knives during art walk.
custom English riding jackets, artisan slipcovers and most recently Pendleton wool satchels — Coast Range Studios by Kimberly Fisher is a non-stop creative institution powered by the passion and skill of an artist who manipulates any textile to achieve her desired vision. Fisher
has been designing and constructing items of use and beauty since the age of 12 when she won the Montgomery Wards Make it with Wool contest, competing with contestants three times her age. Using a 1949 Singer straight stitch sewing machine, Fisher used tailoring techniques exclusive to bespoke construction. During art walk, Fisher will feature Dopp kits, satchels, coin purses and cosmetic caddies rendered from Pendleton wool and Oregon leather. Romancing the Home 3350 U.S. Highway 101N. Romancing the Home will host Gayle Pedimonte for the November ArtWalk. The shop offers Pedimonte’s work year-round and has some new, coastal-inspired paintings on display for the month of November. Meet Pedimonte and see her latest work. Refreshments will be served. Trail’s End Art Association 656 A St. Gheri Fouts, immediate past president of Trail’s End Art Association, will show her watercolor paintings as this month’s featured artist. Fouts paints in a style that can be described as loose realism, capturing misty moods and edgy apprehension on paper. Meet the artist, enjoy her work and partake of refreshments. Work of other member artists will also be on display.
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Hear cello and piano at the Liberty Theater Astoria Music Festival presents Sergey Antonov, Ilya Kazantsev in concert Nov. 4
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Cat Winters will read from her new novel “Yesternight” Nov.19.
Cat Winters to read from new novel in Manzanita MANZANITA — The Manzanita Writers’ Series will host author Cat Winters at 7 p.m. Nov. 19 for a reading from her new novel “Yesternight.” The event will take place at the Hoffman Center. “Yesternight” is Winters’ second adult novel, released Oct. 4. Set in 1925 in the “rain-soaked coastal hamlet of Gordon Bay, Oregon,” the novel involves reincarnation and madness as well as issues of a professional woman stifled by the conventions of her time. A review on Booklist said: “Winters follows ‘The Uninvited’ with another gripping historical novel, this one an exploration of the effects of suppressed trauma and desire. Winters unveils the unspoken complexities of humankind in this well-written tale that is suspenseful in all the right places, and will keep readers guessing at every page.” Winters is an award-winning, critically acclaimed author of young adult and adult fiction that blends history with the supernatural. Her young adult works include “In the Shadow of Blackbirds,” “The Cure for Dreaming,” “The Steep and Thorny Way” and the forthcoming “Odd & True.” She has been a Morris
Award finalist, a Bram Stoker Award nominee, and an Oregon Spirit Book Award winner, and her books have appeared on numerous state and “best of” lists. Winters will also lead a writing workshop during the day from 1 to 3:30 p.m. Nov. 19 titled “Writing Scary.” In the workshop, writers and learn how to make readers’ hearts race with fear, whether you’re a writer of horror or you simply want to write a chilling scene. Through lectures, group discussions, and a variety of exercises, Winters will share her favorite tools for producing writing that’s evocative and spooky. Tuition is $30. Register at hoffmanblog.org Following Winters’ reading and Q&A in the evening, Manzanita Writers’ Series will host an Open Mic where up to nine local or visiting writers will read five minutes of their work. The suggested (not required) theme for the evening’s Open Mic is “It Was a Dark & Stormy Night.” Admission for the evening reading is $7. Both events are part of the second annual Dark and Stormy Night: Mystery Weekend in Manzanita. For more info, contact Kathie Hightower at kathiejhightower@gmail.com
ASTORIA — The Astoria Music Festival will present a special concert at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 4 at the Liberty Theater. The concert will feature Sergey Antonov, the youngest winner of Moscow’s prestigious International Tchaikovsky Cello Competition, and pianist Ilya Kazantsev, a two-time winner of the World Piano Competition in Cincinnati, Ohio. A gala Artists’ Reception for patrons will follow the concert at Carruthers, a new restaurant kitty-corner to the theater. The concert will feature sonatas as well as shorter pieces for cello and piano.
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Cellist Sergey Antonov, left, and pianist Ilya Kazantsev will perform Nov. 4 in Astoria.
Camille Saint-Saens’ turbulent Cello Sonata No. 1 in C Minor is on the program. The sonata makes full use of the lower registers of both cello and piano, reflecting the composer’s sadness at the loss of a family member and at the state of France following Napoleon III’s crushing defeat by Prussia in 1870. The program also includes Benjamin Britten’s Cello Sonata, the first of five
major works that Britten wrote for Antonov’s celebrated cello teacher Mstislav Rostropovich. In the timbre and counterpoint of scherzo-pizzicato movement, one can immediately detect indebtedness to the Indonesian Balinese gamelan tradition. The moto perpetuo final movement uses the “DSCH” motif (D-E flat-C-B natural) as a coded tribute to the name Dmitri Shostakovich,
the composer who inspired Britten to write for cello. Antonov and Kazantsev regularly appear together in the world’s finest concert halls, and this performance provides North Coast audiences an opportunity to hear a celebrated international musical team. Antonov is a long-time audience favorite at the Astoria Music Festival, where his accomplishments have included concertos, chamber music, solo recitals and children’s concerts. Ticket are $40 for patron reserved seats and admission to the post-concert reception; $25 general admission; and $5 for students. Ticket are available from the Liberty Theater box office, open 2 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, by phone at 503-325-5922 ext. 55. The theater is located at 1203 Commercial St. Tickets are also available from Tickets West by calling 5032248499 or 800-922-8499.
Be an angel — attend a fundraiser for the Astor Street Opry Company Event to feature guest speakers, silent and live auctions, more ASTORIA — The Astor Street Opry Company will put on its annual Be An Angel fundraiser on Wednesday, Nov. 9 at the Fort George Lovell Showroom, located at 426 14th St. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., and the live auction will begin at 6:30 p.m. With live and silent auctions, this year’s event is shaping up to be the biggest and best ever. Auction items include everything from homemade
pies, lunch or dinner at T.Paul’s Urban Café or the Bridgewater Bistro, and prime rib at Mary Todd’s Workers Tavern to movie tickets at a Coming Attraction Theatre, gift certificates from Astoria Parks and Recreation, and a night’s stay at the Cannery Pier Hotel. There will even be a special auction for a priceless piece of original art from the world-famous Astoria artist Bill Dodge. If your house is already full of stuff, would you might be enticed with a plane or helicopter ride, a pass to ride the zip lines at High Life Adventures, or a pass to the Columbia River Maritime Museum? Or
perhaps you have a need for some professional services, such as an hour of council on your accounting needs by accountant Walt Garnet, or four hours of labor from a master carpenter via L.J. Allen Construction? Have you always wanted to learn how to paint? There will be one private art lesson from artist Kirsten Shauck and even a 3-credit class at Clatsop Community College. The Be An Angel fundraiser will also feature guest speakers, including long-time ASOC supporter Sen. Betsy Johnson and Rep. Deborah Boone. The Astor Street Opry Company will also hold a
special presentation for its in-house playwright, artist and fearless community theater champion Judith Niland. Niland is celebrating 32 years at ASOC by retiring a still partially sane woman, and all are invited to come help celebrate her career. Tickets cost $25 per person and are available by calling 503-325-6104 or by stopping into Holly McHone Jewelers in downtown Astoria. The event is sponsored by Van Dusen Beverages and hosted by Fort George Brewery. For more information, visit www.astorstreetoprycompany.com or email info@astorstreetoprycompany.com.
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 9
Local actors to produce, perform ‘The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) [Revised]’
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“Why Pay More?” by Bruce Peterson.
“40 Years With the Same Bird” by Penny Treat.
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Pad” by Wally
“Wayfaring” by John Clark Gleason.
“Crawdad Mann.
Get new ‘State of Mind’ at art show and auction 6-by-6 Art Show and Auction set for Nov. 5 in Ilwaco ILWACO, Wash. — The Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum will hold its seventh annual 6-by-6 Art Show and Auction on Saturday, Nov. 5, and organizers of the event are in a state — or, actually, they’re in all 50. This year’s event, with the theme “State of Mind,” has gathered more than 60 art objects — all of them 6-by-6 inches — from some of the region’s most talented artists. The artworks will be available to view in the museum’s special exhibition gallery now through Nov. 5. The works can also be seen on the museum’s website at columbiapacificheriatgemuseum.org. The silent and live auctions will take place from 5 to 8 p.m. Nov. 5 at the
museum, which is located at 115 S.E. Lake St. Presiding auctioneer, Bruce Peterson, is both entertaining and knowledgeable about the artists and their works. This event is the largest fundraiser for the exhibition programs of the Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum. It’s an opportunity to get to know the local art scene, enjoy some delicious refreshments, take home your very own masterpiece and, most importantly, show your support for the Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum. Tickets for the auction event are available at the museum for $10 each. Fifty raffle tickets are being made available for $20 each. The winner of the raffle will have the pick of any 6-by-6 art piece prior to the auction event. Call the museum at 360-642-3446 or visit the website for more information about the auction, raffle and exhibition.
Fast-paced farce takes audience on 1.5-hour journey of the Bard’s oeuvre CANNON BEACH — Come experience the magic and genius of William Shakespeare as you never have before when a trio of local thespians attempt to perform “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) [Revised]” at the Coaster Theatre Playhouse. Take part in a Freudian analysis of Ophelia in “Hamlet,” watch Titus Andronicus host a cooking show and cheer for your favorite historical monarch in a revised version of this comedic play, written by Adam Long, Daniel Singer and Jess Winfield, that parodies all the Bard’s works. The actors who will perform this feat are Seaside residents Emily Estrada, Ellen Jensen and Katherine Lacaze. They also are producing, directing and designing the production. The play will be performed at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5 and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6. It also will be shown the following weekend at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 12. All performances are free and open to the public. Each
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From left, Ellen Jensen, Emily Estrada and Katherine Lacaze will perform “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) [Revised]” at the Coaster Theatre in Cannon Beach.
performance contains some adult humor, but you are guaranteed a laugh or your money back. Estrada, Jensen and Lacaze bring to the stage about 45 years (collectively) of experience in every facet of theater. Estrada, 25, started performing at a young age. In 2013, she graduated from the University of Oregon, where she studied theater production with an emphasis in dramaturgy. Her performing arts experience was developed and impacted greatly by studying modern British the-
ater in London. After moving to the North Coast, she stage managed for “Twelfth Night” and “Murder On the Nile” at the Coast Theatre. Jensen, a 25-year-old Portland native, has been running onto stages and making a spectacle of herself since she was 3 years old. She has continued to do so on the stage of the Coaster Theatre since 2010, where she first appeared as a silly girl in “Annie Get Your Gun.” She’s gone on to play many other silly girls in 14 other productions including Sally in “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown,” Ra-
punzel in “Into the Woods,” Jaqueline De Severac in “Murder on The Nile” and, most recently, the scatterbrained Marsha Gilmore in the Coaster’s production of “Let’s Murder Marsha.” As an elementary-aged child, Lacaze, 25, started writing and acting in plays for her first captive audience: her longsuffering family. Throughout middle and high school, she attended Missoula Children’s Theatre’s summer camp for several years and participated in community and school productions. In her hometown of Kingman, Arizona, she directed six plays, including “The Music Man,” “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown” and “The Importance of Being Earnest.” Since moving to the area in 2014, she has performed in four plays and stage managed for one at the Coaster Theatre. “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) [Revised]” is produced by special arrangement with Broadway Play Publishing. The Coaster Theatre is located 108 N. Hemlock Street in Cannon Beach. For more information, contact Lacaze at 503-741-5668 or like “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) [Revised]” event on Facebook.
Trivia and museum scavenger hunt strike again CANNON BEACH — Back by popular demand is the Cannon Beach History Center & Museum’s trivia contest event. This family-friend event is a great way to bond or to compete for the highest prize. The one-day event takes place from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5. Each competitor purchases a single trivia card for $2.
Each card contains 10 questions that must be answered while in the museum. No cell phone or internet searches are allowed. All of the questions are contained within the museums exhibits and displays. “The event is a combination of scavenger hunt and trivia contest,” explains Museum Director Elaine Murdy-Trucke. “The answer
to every single question are contained within the museum’s exhibits. Even the bonus questions.” Those who answer all 10 questions correctly will win a prize. You can only win once, but you will win — the staff and volunteers will make sure of that. While they cannot give you answers, they can guide you in the right direction if you’re
having trouble. The museum will offer brain food in the form of Sleepy Monk coffee and a few light snacks. Writing materials and writing stations are provided throughout the museum. For more information, visit www.cbhistory.org. The Cannon Beach History Center & Museum is located at 1387 S. Spruce St.
10 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
A STORM OF ARTS
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A painting by Jeffrey Hull, of Jeffrey Hull Gallery. Hull will be in the gallery all weekend, holding an art reception and book signing at 5:30 p.m. Friday and an open house reception from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Saturday.
Look what’s blowing into Cannon Beach during the Stormy Weather Arts Festival on Nov. 4, 5 & 6
park,” said Carrier. “To keep bringing people back, they freshen it by adding a new ride or changing it up.”
auction, other activities will include concerts Friday night and Sunday, artists demonstrations and receptions hosted by local galleries, street-corner musicians, a fashion show and a three-woman play. “This is a traditional event,” said Court Carrier, director of the Cannon Beach Chamber of Commerce, which organizes the festival. “The arts are an incredible part of Cannon Beach, and this is a celebration of the arts.” With at least one new event — the Blues, Brews and Barbeques lunch Sunday in the chamber’s community hall — and a few twists in the annual offerings, the festival is a little different this year. “It’s like Disneyland when it has a theme
Carnes became intrigued with basket weaving when a friend in Michigan taught her 30 years ago. “There are no rules — you don’t have to follow patterns, and I don’t like to follow rules,” Carnes said. “But there are endless possibilities.” She uses a variety of materials. “Everywhere I look, I find something to work with — trees, the ground and the beach, for sure. I started working with metal last year.” Carnes’ brightly colored, hand-dyed basket fabricated with rope found on the beach won her the Steve McLeod trophy presented this year by Cannon Beach’s Earth Day Committee. The trophy was named after
By NANCY MCCARTHY
Even if the rain is blowing sideways and the wind bends the trees outside, Debra Carnes will weave a little magic during the Stormy Weather Art in Action dinner and auction on Saturday, Nov. 5. With rattan, and maybe some curly willow and birch bark — or possibly beach rope, metal or sea grass — Carnes will weave a basket that could ultimately be 3 feet tall — and filled with her imagination. In fact, imagination and creativity will infuse Cannon Beach for three days during the 29th annual Stormy Weather Arts Festival Friday, Nov. 4 through Sunday, Nov. 6. In addition to the annual dinner and silent
Art in Action
the late Steve McLeod, a local painter and sculptor who used beach debris in his work. Carnes and seven other professional artists will demonstrate their techniques by creating art during the annual dinner Saturday night. Some of their works will be for sale. Participants in the silent auction can bid on Cannon Beach experiences, travel packages and other items. Proceeds from the auction will pay for scholarships for children attending the Coaster Theatre Kids Camp, the Sea Ranch Children’s Summer Music Camp or the Cannon Beach Arts Association’s Arts Camp. “The scholarships help kids maintain their interest in arts,” Carrier said. “Last year we sponsored scholarships for nine students.” Other festival highlights include:
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Storm clouds will blow away when Grammy-nominated blues singer Ellen Whyte kicks off the festival at 7 p.m. Friday in the Coaster Theatre Playhouse. Hailing from Oregon City, Whyte is in the Oregon Music Hall of Fame; she performs vocals for blues, pop and jazz and plays the rhythm guitar. “Ellen Whyte is a great musician,” Carrier said. “This will be a night of fun, entertaining music.”
COURTESY EXPLORER MEDIA GROUP
Suzanne Kindland and Jim Kingwell of Icefire Glassworks will demonstrate glass blowing from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday.
Fashion Show
The best thing about stormy weather is the clothing — the stylish coats and cute rubber boots for outdoors and the cozy sweaters and comfy clothes for indoors. The “Dancing in the Rain” fashion show at 10:30 a.m. Saturday in the Coaster Theatre is free, but donations to CASA (Court-Appointed Special Advocates), which assists foster children, will be accepted. Local residents will model, said Dena Draxton, owner of Dena’s Shop on the Corner and fashion show organizer. “We will be showing very wearable things, both indoor and outdoor apparel.” In addition to Dena’s, participating stores include Maggie and Henry’s, La Luna Loca, Cannon Beach Leather and Paolas Pacas, an Italian designer from Portland, whose woven pieces are displayed at EVOO Cooking School.
PHOTO BY NANCY MCCARTHY
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Debra Carnes’ oval basket features an antler handle. The baskets’ shapes and materials are determined by what Carnes finds in nature. Carnes and seven other professional artists will demonstrate their techniques by creating art during the annual Art in Action event Saturday night.
Grammy-nominated singer songwriter Ellen Whyte and her five-piece band will perform in concert at the Coaster Theatre on Friday night.
Street Music
Rain or shine, the streets will be filled with music from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, as local and regional musicians play tunes throughout town. From blues to classical guitar, with some folk and Americana thrown in, there’s bound to be something for everyone to listen to. “Half or better of these musicians have played Stormy Weather before,” said Paul Dueber, who, along with “Bobcat” Bob Rice, also will perform. “We always go back to these folks because we like their quality. They’re good to listen to, and their music fits.” Each outside location downtown and in midtown has a back-up indoor space, in case of rain. “We don’t even have to even bother to look at the weather,” Dueber said.
Working Shakespeare
It will be a tempest of talent when three local actors tackle the play “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) [Revised]” at the Coaster Theatre. The shows will be at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, 2:30 p.m. Sunday and 7:30 p.m. Nov. 12. “ Everyone and anyone is invited to attend this free event,” said Katherine Lacaze, who, along with Ellen Jensen and Emily Estrada will perform the play.
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Archimedes Gallery artist Ivy Jacobsen strives to create a place of magical realism in her paintings. The gallery will hold a reception with Cannon Beach Distillery at 5 p.m. Saturday.
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Northwest by Northwest Gallery oil painter Hazel Schlesinger will give a demo at 11 a.m. Saturday at the gallery before taking part in Art in Action at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Surfsand Ballroom.
Hammond artist J.R. Moyer, whose work can be found at Primary Elements Gallery, is a self-taught woodworker whose works often feature found wood from coastal shores. Moyer will be one of the artists demonstrating his techniques and offering a new work for sale at the Art in Action event Saturday night at the Surfsand Ballroom.
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 13
12 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
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This year’s Stormy Weather Arts Festival poster art is by painter John Ebner; see more of his work at Haystack Gallery.
Thursday, Nov. 3 Book Presentation 6 p.m., Astoria Public Library, 450 10th St., Astoria, 503-325-7323, free. Bonnie Olin will give a talk, reading and slideshow presentation on the Owyhee Canyonlands; followed by a Q&A session and book signing. Ales & Ideas 7 p.m., Fort George Lovell Showroom, 426 14th St., all ages. Clatsop Community College instructors Kristin Shauck and Nancy Cook will talk about their summer trip to Europe, art history, and how travel can inform artistic expression and collaboration.
FRIDAY:
Stormy Weather Arts Festival Friday, Nov. 4 Bazaar & Bake Sale
√ Coast Weekend editor suggested events
10 a.m., Peninsula Church Center, 5000 N Place, Seaview, 360642-3115. Ocean Beach Presbyterian Women’s Association will hold its annual bazaar and bake sale featuring
homemade pies, baked goods, pottery, knitting, quilts, painted art, photography, books, beaded silverware, fused glass, jewelry and more. A portion of all proceeds supports their mission work.
Book Signing 3 p.m., Columbia River Maritime Museum, 1792 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-325-2323. A line up of authors will be onsite for a meet and greet and book
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signing. Also find live music and artist Bill W. Dodge, who will reveal a new original; books available for sale. “The Election” 7 p.m., Seaside High School, 1901 Holladay
Drive, Seaside, 503738-5586, $3 to $5. Seaside High School presents “The Election,” a hilarious and timely satire on the contemporary political scene through an embattled student body election.
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10 a.m., multiple locations, Cannon Beach, 503-436-2623. Stormy Weather Arts Festival is a weekend filled with art events, artist demonstrations, gallery receptions, a fashion show, live music and more.
COA S T W E E K E N D C A L E N DA R Saturday, Nov. 5 Pancake Breakfast 8 a.m., American Legion Post 0111, off Dike Road, Deep River, Wash., $4 to $6. The American Legion will serve an all-you-caneat pancake and egg breakfast with kielbasa sausage and ham, coffee, orange juice and milk. Proceeds go to support the NaselleGrays River community, veterans and area students. Beach Clean Up 9 a.m., Seaside Beach, meet at Seashore Inn on the Beach, 60 Promenade, Seaside, all ages. Join local volunteers for the monthly “Treasure the Beach” community beach clean up. Pickleball 10 a.m., Camp Rilea Gymnasium, 333168 Patriot Way, Warren-
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Sunday, Nov. 6
ton, 503-860-1382, $4, all levels. Great exercise and fun, includes demonstrations and instruction; balls and paddles provided. Stormy Weather Arts Festival 10 a.m., multiple locations, Cannon Beach, 503-436-2623. Stormy Weather Arts Festival is a weekend filled with art events, artist demonstrations, gallery receptions, live music. A fashion show will take place at 10:30 a.m. at the Coaster Theatre. The Art in Action dinner and auction event – which features a painted umbrella by Marianne Post for auction – takes place at 7 p.m. at the Surfsand Ballroom. Scavenger Hunt and Trivia 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Book Reading
5 p.m., Beach Books, 616 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-3500. Authors Chandler O’Leary and Jessica Spring will join Green Cabartist Jim Zaleski to discuss the new book “Dead Feminists.”
“Dead Giveaway” 7 p.m., NCRD Performing Arts Theater, 36155 9th St., Nehalem, 503-368-7008, $15. “Dead Giveaway” is a thriller with a glimmer of suspense, blackmail and highway robbery that turns into a case of political intrigue. Cannon Beach History Center & Museum, 1387 S. Spruce St., Cannon Beach, $2. Search the museum for answers to questions on your trivia card and earn a prize.
Bazaar & Bake Sale
10 a.m., Peninsula Church Center, 5000 N Place, Seaview, 360642-3115. Ocean Beach Presbyterian Women’s Association will hold its annual bazaar and bake sale featuring homemade pies, baked goods, pottery, knitting, quilts, painted art, photography, books, beaded silverware, fused glass, jewelry and more. A portion of all proceeds supports their mission work.
Enjoy refreshments. Gearhart ArtWalk 2 to 5 p.m., celebrate creative art forms during the monthly Gearhart ArtWalk at businesses and galleries in Gearhart. Look for the “Welcome to the Shore” flag at participating merchants. Art Show & Auction 5 p.m., Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum, 115 Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash., 360-642-3446, $10 to $20. “State of Mind” 6-by-6 art show and auction features more than 60 art objects from regional talent to
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Pickleball 10 a.m., Camp Rilea Gymnasium, 333168 Patriot Way, Warrenton, 503-860-1382, $5, all levels. Great exercise and fun, includes demonstrations and instruction, balls and paddles provided.
be auctioned off at the annual fundraiser for the museum’s exhibition programs. Seaside Art Walk 5 to 7 p.m., enjoy original artwork, live music and refreshments during Seaside’s monthly First Saturday Art Walk, includes artists receptions and demonstrations. Look for the art walk signs at participating merchants.
“The Election” 7 p.m., Seaside High School, 1901 Holladay Drive, Seaside, 503-738-5586, $3 to $5. Seaside High School presents “The Election,” a hilarious and timely satire on the contemporary political scene through an embattled student body election. “Shakespeare (Abridged)” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, free. A fast-paced farce of “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) [Revised].”
Wednesday, Nov. 9
“Shakespeare (Abridged)” 2:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, free. A fast-paced farce of “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) [Revised].” Stormy Weather Arts Festival 10 a.m., multiple locations, Cannon Beach, 503-436-2623. Stormy Weather Arts Festival is a weekend filled with art events, artist demonstrations, gallery receptions, a fashion show, live music, Art in Action, dinner and auction.
“Dead Giveaway” 2 p.m., NCRD Performing Arts Theater, 36155 9th St., Nehalem, 503-3687008, $15. “Dead Giveaway” is a thriller with a glimmer of suspense, blackmail and highway robbery that turns into a case of political intrigue.
ASOC Angel Fundraiser 5:30 p.m., Fort George Lovell Showroom, 426 14th St., Astoria, 503-3256104, $25. Astor Street Opry Company’s annual “Be an Angel” fundraiser is a night of entertainment and fun, includes dinner, silent and live
3 p.m., Hoffman Center, 594 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-3846, $5. Independent scholars Jenny Sasser and Simeon Dreyfuss will lead an open discus-
sion about how people experience aging in community, intergenerational friendships, barriers between generations and how to create meaningful connections.
ts n e m int o p p A adly l g e ar d! e t p e Acc
World of Haystack Rock Lecture Series 7 p.m., Cannon Beach Library, 131 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1391, free. The World of Haystack Rock lecture series presents “Peregrine Falcons of Yaquina Head” with Wayne Hoffman.
Grand Canyon Slideshow 3 p.m., Manzanita Branch Library, 571 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503368-6665. Librarian and photographer Bill Landau will present a slide show of “Journey to the Bottom of the Grand Canyon,” chronicling his hikes in the canyon. “The Election” 7 p.m., Seaside High School, 1901 Holladay Drive, Seaside, 503738-5586, $3 to $5. Seaside High School presents “The Election,” a hilarious and timely satire on the contemporary political scene
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Coast Weekend welcomes comments and contributions from readers. New items for publication consideration must be submitted by 10 a.m. Tuesday, one week and two days before publication.
Trivia Night 6 p.m., Seaside Public Library, 1311 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-6742, free. Teams can consist of one person or up to six people in this monthly, fun trivia competition with prizes.
Thursday, Nov. 10
Tuesday, Nov. 8 Talk on Aging
auctions, drinks, and guest speakers Sen. Betsy Johnson and Rep. Deborah Boone; seating is limited and reservations required.
through an embattled student body election. Author Reading 7 p.m., Seaside Public Library, 1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-7386742, free. Christopher Sandford, author of “Bowie: Loving the Alien” will be featured.
Keith Klatt, MD
14 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Coast Weekend’s local restaurant review
Bakery delivers ample sugar and some steep prices Review and photos by MOUTH OF THE COLUMBIA
A
MOUTH@COASTWEEKEND.COM
A cornerstone of the Western diet for some 6,000 years, bread has heard a lot of nasty whispers of late. Whether fact or fad, “gluten” has developed a stay-away reputation approaching that of trans-fats and MSG. Regardless of purported effects to our health or waistlines, there’s hardly any denying: A freshly baked bread with a taught, crusty shell cradling pocketed, pillowy insides can be elementally satisfying. A simple baguette with some butter, brie or salami, endures for a reason. At Cannon Beach Bakery, however, there are no baguettes. You can take home a “French Bread,” but the airy, plump, 2XL, spongy, white puffed dough-ball will hardly do the trick. Europeans, if not scratching their heads, would disavow. Indeed, Cannon Beach Bakery’s tack is much more American. Think mid-century — if not captivated by the advent of big, processed food, then the era where donut shops were king. And I don’t mean fancy, spunky, artistic, none-the-less-useless donut shops (we see you Voodoo). I’m talking pre-Dunkin’. At Cannon Beach Bakery there are glazed donuts, maple bars, fritters and the like, as well as muffins, cookies, croissants and so on. Of course, there are a few fancier offerings that might scoff at the association — indeed they
AS WITH MANY OF THE BAKERY’S CONFECTIONS, I LONGED FOR THE INCLUSION OF NATURAL, VARYING FLAVORS — RATHER THAN MORE SUGAR.
are baked, not dipped in oil. From all, I sampled a cross-section. Near the size of a tennis ball, the spongy Almond Poppyseed Muffin ($2.75) was permeated, almost bound, with sugar. The almond essence smacked of flavored syrup. (There were no chunks of almond.) It was so sweet that if you wanted more than a nibble, a component cup of black coffee was requisite. Nothing was sweeter than the Mocha Horn ($3.75), which seemingly sought to outdo the fictional Chocolate Frosted Sugar Bombs (of Calvin and Hobbes infamy). The Horn was also pricey for its pint size. (Sticker shock, like sugariness, were recurring themes at Cannon Beach Bakery.) I made peace with, and even understood, the outer layer of almonds, coated and joined with caramel. But the inner puff of mocha-tinged cream was too much — the proverbial sugar bomb. With this reasonable wrapper, the opportunity here to incorporate different flavors — like tart fruits, or bitter, dark chocolate — felt like a missed opportunity. As with many of the bakery’s confections, I longed for the inclusion of natural, varying flavors — rather than more sugar. The Blueberry Muffin tripped in that regard. It was sad and small, almost indistinguishable from the type you get in a bulk pack at Safeway or Costco. Well, OK, it was probably smaller. And more expensive ($1.75).
CANNON BEACH BAKERY
Above: The display case at the Cannon Beach Bakery. Left: The Turkey Delight — with cream cheese, cranberry sauce and lettuce on a croissant — was a balance of sweet and savory.
The Chocolate Chip Cookie ($1.75) was bursting with chips, but it was dry, almost dusty. The Apple Turnover ($3.50) wrapped syrupy apple chunks in layered Filo dough and was covered in hailstorm of large, sugar granules. The Lemon Bar ($2.75), about the area of a business card, cried out for more zest. Stepping to the savory side, I enjoyed the gooey, salty Ham and Cheese Croissant ($3.95). It would’ve been even better warm. Along with the pastries, Cannon Beach Bakery uses some of its sliced breads for sandwiches (though strangely not all). The eatery offers but three “signature
sandwiches,” one being PB&J. Creativity, if there is any, is outsourced to the customer. And, indeed, while ordering I asked for suggestions but received next to none. The Turkey Delight — with cream cheese, cranberry sauce and lettuce on a croissant — came together rather well, a balance of sweet and savory. The Veggie Delight too — with lettuce, tomato, cucumber, onion, avocado and cream cheese — was a fine, fresh snack, though I was puzzled why I was charged $11 when all sandwiches are marked at $9.95. Sandwiches come with a pickle spear. The meats come from Reed and Hertig, and they’re of admirable quality. The turkey was juicy, the pastrami thick,
Rating: 240 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach PHONE: 503-436-0399 HOURS: 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday to Monday. Closed Tuesday. PRICE: $$ – Spendy little confections VEGETARIAN / VEGAN OPTIONS: It’s the diabetics who should be wary. SERVICE: Counter service DRINKS: Coffee, espresso, bottled soda KEY TO STAR RATING SYSTEM Poor Below average Good Excellent Best in region
supple and briny. The breads — Haystack (white), sourdough, 8-grain and Limpa rye — were fine, albeit not especially distinct. (Dave’s Killer Bread casts a long shadow...) And while certainly the “Cannon Beach price” is a factor, $10 for a medium-sized, otherwise indistinct deli sandwich to-go isn’t an inspiring value. One of the few prices I didn’t scoff at was the Bacon Cheese Quiche ($4.95). The tall, wide slice was fluffy and creamy, with a flaky crust and salty shards of bacon throughout. But it wasn’t enough to overcome the legion of simple sugars and stacked pricing. While the discussion over breads, gluten and carbs is far from finished, there are better arguments to be made than Cannon Beach Bakery’s.
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 15
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Cascade Crescendo brings own brand of bluegrass
Continued from Pg. 11 Blues, Brews and Barbeques
Even if there’s a raging windstorm outside, the atmosphere will be tranquil inside the community hall Sunday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. during the festival’s new event, Blues, Brews and Barbeques. Three Stormy Weather beers, designed especially by Pelican, Public Coast and Bill’s brew pubs, will be paired with pulled pork and eggplant sliders prepared by chef John Sowa. Steve Cheseborough will play the blues. “This is our send-off luncheon,” Carrier said. “We thought people might want to stay an extra day in town or spend more time on Sunday and take a leisurely trip home in the afternoon.”
Artists in Action
Twelve local galleries and some shops are planning a whirlwind of activity with artists’ demonstrations, receptions and music throughout the weekend. The weekend also will mark the opening of a new space for artistic endeavors on the second floor of Sandpiper
SUBMITTED PHOTO
“Midnight Crossing” by Oregon artist Jean-Marie Chapman. Chapman returns for her 11th year as artist in residence at the Cannon Beach Hotel during Stormy Weather Arts Festival. See her paint in oil 10 a.m. to noon Friday, Saturday and Sunday, as well as 2 to 4 p.m. Friday and 4 to 7 p.m. Saturday during an artist reception at the hotel.
Square. It will be the site for demonstrations by artists from the Primary Elements gallery during the festival. “It will be an education and work space for artists,” said Jane Brumfield, director of the Cannon Beach Arts Association, which is opening the space. Future workshops on printmaking, basketry and bookmaking are planned for the space, as well as free lectures by artists on Thursday evenings, Brumfield said. The Cannon Beach Gallery also will be open during
the festival, and a reception will be held from 6 to 7 p.m. Saturday. “It will be a prelude to the Art in Action gala, so the crowd can move from the gallery to the Surfsand ballroom,” Brumfield said. If you can’t fight the weather, you might as well make the most of it, noted Carrier, and that’s what the Stormy Weather Arts Festival does. “It’s an event that draws all parts of the town together,” he said. “To celebrate what’s so special in Cannon Beach is important.”
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LONG BEACH, Wash. — Portland band Cascade Crescendo will bring its own brand of bluegrass to the Long Beach Peninsula this Weekend. The band will perform at the Pickled Fish restaurant at the top of the Adrift Hotel at 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Nov. 4 and 5. The band came together in 2013. Pulling from their vast range of collective influences, Cascade Crescendo plays original, high-energy bluegrass, jamgrass and Americana music with captivating lead vocals by Hunter White, blazing-fast mandolin licks by Aden Beck, and creative, thumping bass lines by Taylor Skiles. Duluth, Minnesota banjo player, Harrison Olk, joined the band in late 2015, bringing with him solid Scruggs-style banjo and high lonesome harmony vocals. Cascade Crescendo recorded its first studio album
SUBMITTED PHOTO BY CARLTON WARD PHOTOGRAPHY
Cascade Crescendo will perform Nov. 4 and 5 at Pickled Fish.
in spring 2016 at The Hallowed Halls in Portland. The album features fiddle player Allie Kral (Yonder Mountain String Band) on five tracks and a guest appearance by drummer Nick Werth (Yak Attack, Ghost-Note). The band has been gaining steam in 2016, quickly winning over fans across the Pacific Northwest and
beyond. They performed on the lineup of the 2016 Northwest String Summit and are touring the West Coast and beyond this fall and winter. The concerts have no cover. The Adrift Hotel is located at 409 Sid Snyder Drive. For more information, call the hotel at 360642-2311.
Scientists to discuss ‘Columbia Under the Microscope’ Nov. 10 ASTORIA — Environmental advocacy group Columbia Riverkeeper will host three local scientists for “Columbia Under the Microscope,” a presentation about research on pollutants in the Columbia River. The event will take place from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 10 at the Blue Scorcher Bakery & Cafe, located at 1493 Duane St. The event is free and open to all ages, with food and drinks available for purchase. The informal talk will cover Contaminants of Emerging Concern, or CECs, which are produced industrially yet are dis-
persed to the environment from domestic, commercial and industrial uses, such as through pharmaceuticals and personal care products. Speakers will include: • Elena Nilsen, a research chemist and team lead at the U.S. Geological Survey. She will speak about the impacts of industrial-, agriculturaland household-sourced contaminants on food webs and fish in the Columbia River. • Jennifer Morace, a hydrologist at the U.S. Geological Survey. Her work includes the evaluation of water-quality conditions in the Willamette River and Columbia River basins, par-
ticularly focused on contaminants. Understanding the transport and ecological fate of contaminants and the role that we, as a society, play in protecting water quality are of particular interest to her. • Tawnya Peterson, an assistant professor at Oregon Health & Science University’s Institute of Environmental Health in the division of environmental and biomolecular systems. Her interests include biological oceanography and the ecology and physiology of phytoplankton and harmful algal blooms. She will discuss her studies of pharmaceuticals in the waterways.
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 17
THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE CROSSWORD
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ACROSS 1 One talking on the phone, nowadays? 5 Numerical prefix 9 Glitz 13 Coronas, e.g. 19 What sweet gestures may mean 20 Whitman sampler? 21 Like sardines 22 The princess in “The Princess Diaries” 23 “Fine, see if I care!” 25 Banned pollutants 26 With reason 27 Reading comics, doing crosswords, etc. 28 *2000s group with three eponymous Disney Channel films, with “the” 30 U.S.C.G. rank 31 Woman of whom it’s begged, “Please don’t take my man,” in a 1973 hit 33 Place 34 *Athletic footwear once promoted by Pelé 38 Bled 39 Bo’sun for Captain Hook 43 Soon enough 44 Prefix with -pathy 45 School in Berkshire 47 Shelf supports 48 Set (against) 49 Result of Québec’s vote to leave Canada 50 Event code-named Operation Neptune 51 Endure, in an expression 52 B flat equivalent 56 Lie on the beach 58 *Enzo Ferrari called it “the most beautiful car ever made” 60 Make sense of 62 Lush 64 Acronym for an outdoor fantasy game 65 Things found at the starts of the answers to the six starred clues 71 Get bored (of)
72 Prefix with -stat 73 Not go home by curfew 75 *Showy orange bloom 80 Artist Magritte 82 Chest bones 83 Some acids 84 Fantasy creatures 86 Band with the 1991 No. 1 hit “Unbelievable” 88 Like non-prescription meds 89 Colt 45 brewer 90 Home to Hernando 91 American ____ 93 Start of many congregation names 94 Suit 95 Woodrow Wilson was the only U.S. prez to have one 96 *Something spotted on a runway? 99 Margarine 101 Axis foe 102 When sung five times, a 1974 Rolling Stones hit 103 *1968 Peter O’Toole drama, with “The” 107 1998 Faith Hill hit that describes “perpetual bliss” 112 Cold-weather conveyance 113 Part of P.S.U.: Abbr. 114 Annual California music festival 115 Symbol of wisdom 116 Small change 117 “I’ll take care of that” 118 Employments 119 Threw out 120 In view 121 Comes together 122 Football gear DOWN 1 Kemo ____ 2 Corsica et d’autres 3 Recruiting org.
4 Odysseus, by birth 5 Possible paths 6 Intimidates 7 Faction in “Twilight” fandom 8 Funny Schumer 9 Minnesota athlete 10 Able to practice, say 11 Pulitzer-winning Edward 12 Best-selling PC game before The Sims 13 Convert chips to money 14 X-ray, e.g. 15 Tech help station 16 ’Stro, e.g. 17 Streamlet 18 “Goes” 24 Tinder and others 28 Miss ____ (late TV psychic) 29 Astronaut Shepard 32 U.S. base site in the Pacific 34 Half of a 1960s pop group 35 Popular sleep aid 36 Godzilla foe 37 Ages and ages 38 Prince and others 40 Who said “Revolutions are the locomotives of history” 41 Composer Satie 42 Dirección geográfica 46 ____ Boston (luxury hotel) 47 Eagerly seized 50 One side of the climate change debate 51 Pops 53 J.F.K. tower grp. 54 Plant malady caused by overwatering 55 Teacher’s head count 57 Familiar folks 59 Target audience of Out magazine 61 Actress Polo 63 “Don’t quit ____ now!” 66 Browser button 67 Flipped
David Bowie biographer to speak at Seaside library SEASIDE — On Thursday, Nov. 10, the Friends of the Seaside Library will host noted biographer Christopher Sandford as he speaks about his book “Bowie: Loving the Alien.” The event will take place in the Community Room at 7 p.m., and there will be book sales and signings. Musical legend David
Robert Jones, better known as David Bowie, passed away in January 2016, and event attendees and readers have the opportunity to look at his life through the lens of Sandford’s biography. Based on interviews with family members, colleagues, lovers and the previously silent William
Burroughs, Sandford’s unsparing yet evenhanded biography guides readers through many of the personas, crises and musical metamorphoses of David Bowie — he was also known as Davy Jones, the Laughing Gnome, Major Tom, Ziggy Stardust, Aladdin Sane and the Thin White Duke.
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Bowie was the grandfather of punk, an actor, art aficionado, political activist and one of rock’s most resonant idols. He was a totem of modern pop culture who helped shape the musical landscape of a generation. Sandford will talk about Bowie’s life from humble beginnings in South London, to the icon who sold more than 140 million records worldwide. The man and musician will be convincingly deconstructed and compellingly humanized. Sandford is the ac-
85 Make a “T” gesture in basketball 87 Pro 90 Eats 91 Setting for a sunset on the Seine 92 Rehab attendees 93 Split 95 The fingers of a hand, e.g. 97 One plus one? 98 Fancy-schmancy 100 Actress Balaban
claimed author of 19 books and has written for a variety of publications including the Times of London, The Daily Telegraph, Cosmopolitan and Rolling Stone. His biographies of Mick Jagger, Kurt Cobain and Sting have been best sellers. Born in London, Sandford splits his time between Seattle and England. The Seaside Public Library is located at 1131 Broadway. For more information call 503-738-6742 or visit www.seasidelibrary.org
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SUBMITTED PHOTO
“Bowie: Loving the Alien” by Christopher Sandford.
18 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
coa st w eeken d M ARK ETPLACE 70 Help Wanted
70 Help Wanted
Bay Breeze Boarding & Grooming is looking for an experienced dog groomer. We are a very busy salon in need of a groomer who can work with all breeds of dogs and also who can clip cats. Please email baybreezeoregon@gmail.com or call 503-861-9817 to schedule an interview with our General Manager. Competitive Pay and a great working environment.
CLATSOP COUNTY Road Foreman - Svensen (FT, Benefits) Apply by Nov 15 Now accepting applications for a Road Foreman to supervise County Road Division, Svensen Road Crew. Assign/review construction tasks such as,oiling, paving, culvert installation, bridge repair, etc. Review, prioritize and schedule projects, determine methods, equipment, materials and staffing needs. HS grad plus training equal to 2 yrs technical college and 4+ yrs progressively responsible experience in road maintenance or satisfactory combination thereof. For complete job description and application visit www.co.clatsop.or.us/jobs. AA/EOE
Bring your enthusiasm to work at our oceanfront resort Maintenance Manager Maintenance Supervisor Housekeeping Wages are DOE Please apply at
www.martinhospitality.com/careers
Dining Room Supervisor Servers Wages are DOE Please apply at
or apply in person at 148 East Gower in Cannon Beach.
www.martinhospitality.com/careers
If you have questions, please call Tamara at 503-436-1197.
If you have questions, please call Tamara at 503-436-1197
Clatsop Care In Home Caregiver positions available. Bring your caring attitude for our clients. Flexible hours, experience preferred, but will train. Employer paid benefits upon eligibility. EOE. Apply at www.clatsopcare.org or 646 16th St. Astoria.
Experienced Waitstaff. Apply in person at Rileyʼs Restaurant 1104 S. Holladay, Seaside. No phone calls.
CLATSOP COUNTY Case Aide-Restitution Specialist (20 hrs/wk) First Review: Nov 15 Applications being accepted for a Case Aide to assist the County Sheriffʼs Parole & Probation Dept with necessary services. Gather, review, report to Probation Officers and staff regarding offender supervision. Requires 2 yrs postsecondary education or experience in corrections, criminal justice, social work or related field. Successful applicant will pass POST test, criminal background check and pre-employment drug screen. Prorated benefits. Application instructions on County website at http://www.co.clatsop.or.us/jobs. AA/EOE
Freelance sports writer needed:
Full time/Half time Truck driver: Class A CDL, medical card, on road/off road experiance required. Call 503-791-7038.
or apply in person at 148 East Gower in Cannon Beach.
Do you love youth sports and recreational leagues? Are you a good writer who is accurate and lively and involved in the community? The Daily Astorian is looking for someone to help by covering sports and sports-related activities in Clatsop County. This could be several stories a week or a couple of columns, to start.If you shoot photos, all the better. Freelancers are paid per project and the amount is commensurate with experience. If you are interested, submit a letter of interest with any relevant experience with community sports and a couple of writing samples to Managing Editor Laura Sellers, The Daily Astorian, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 or email to lsellers@dailyastorian.com
70 Help Wanted
Freelance writers/photographers needed: The Daily Astorian is seeking writers to add to its local coverage in several areas – general community news, local youth/recreational sports, photography and arts and entertainment. If you are a good writer and/ or photographer who is accurate, lively and involved in our North Coast area, we would like to talk to you. You could contribute an occasional story or up to several stories a week, depending on the topics. Freelancers are paid per project and the amount is commensurate with experience. If you are interested, submit a letter of interest explaining what you would like to cover, any relevant experience and a couple of writing samples to Managing Editor Laura Sellers, The Daily Astorian, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 or email to lsellers@dailyastorian.com Full or part-time Driver needed. Wages DOE, CDL required, North West Ready Mix. 950 OlneyAvenue nwready@pacifier.com (503)325-3562 Home Cleaning business seeking cleaners. Some experience, transportation and background check required. $10.50 starting-up to $15.00 hourly. Call 503-338-9193 IGUANA need a bigger terrarium? Check the Pet & Supplies section of the Daily Astorian classified ads.
Join the Lumʼs Team! We are hiring GREAT team members for the following positions: •Detail Tech •Express Tech •Lot Attendant •Service Appt Scheduler Seeking great customer service skills and awesome attitude! Will Train! Valid driverʼs license required. We offer vacation, health benefits, 401K and much more. Proudly a drug free workplace. Apply at 1605 SE Ensign Lane, Warrenton, OR or http://www.lumsautocenter.com/ employment/
70 Help Wanted
Mailroom Opportunity to work part-time (15-25 hours per week) in our packaging and distributing department at The Daily Astorian. Duties include using machines to place inserts into the newspaper, labeling newspapers and moving the papers from the press. Must be able to regularly lift 40 lbs. in a fast paced environment. Mechanical aptitude helpful and the ability to work well with others is required. Pre-employment drug test required. Pick up an application at The Daily Astorian, 949 Exchange Street or send resume and letter of interest to EO Media Group, PO Box 2048, Salem, OR 97308-2048, fax (503) 371-2935 or e-mail hr@eomediagroup.com LIVE OUTSIDE ASTORIA? To place your ad in the Daily Astorian Classifieds, simply dial:
1-800-781-3211 Itʼs fast and itʼs toll free!
McMenamins Sand Trap is now hiring servers, line cooks, and housekeepers! Qualified applicants must possess the following: a willingness to learn; an open and flexible schedule including days, evenings, weekends, holidays; an open summertime schedule; and an enthusiasm for working in a busy, customer service-oriented environment. Previous experience is a plus! We have seasonal and long term opportunities. Looking for a career in the hospitality industry? We offer opportunities for growth and great benefits to eligible employees. Apply online at www.mcmenamins.com or pick up a paper application here at the Sand Trap(or any other McMenamins location). Mail to: 430 N. Killingsworth, Portland, OR, 97217 (Attn: HR); or fax to 503-221-8749. E.O.E.
70 Help Wanted
Port of Astoria Maintenance Department Is now accepting applications for a Full-time Maintenance Worker. Visit the Port of Astoria website at www.portofastoria.com HAVING storage problems? Why not sell no-longer-used items with a fast-working classifed ad? Seaside School District Is seeking applicants for: HEAD SOFTBALL COACH Visit our employment page for more info and to apply: www.seaside.k12.or.us/employment or 503-738-5591 The District is an EOE
70 Help Wanted Seeking energetic ft/pt Kennel Assistant for busy, AAHA accredited Animal Hospital. Weekend and evening help needed. Please drop-off hand written cover letter and resume to 325 SE Marlin Ave. Warrenton. No phone calls please. CASH buyers are reading your Classified Ad. Tyack Dental Group Astoria office is seeking experienced, full time dental assistant to be a key part of our team. Highly competitive wages, vacation, holidays, retirement plan medical and dental. Radiology certification required. Tyack Dental Group 433 30th St. Astoria, Or 97103 (503)338-6000 jtyack@clatskanie.com
70 Help Wanted Clatsop Community Action
Administrative Support Specialist
40 hours/week With Benefits Salary range: depending on experience Purpose: Employee acts as the agency receptionist and performs administrative/office support duties as assigned. The employee is the first person both clients and professionals encounter. The employee must provide information and referrals and advocacy where appropriate, in a warm, non-judgmental, professional manner. The employee must help clients feel welcomed, respected, and comfortable their concern or issue is being addressed. Duties: • Performs assigned administrative support tasks. • Assists clients (walk-in and by telephone) with pre-screening for agency program eligibility. • Assists clients with completing intake forms. • Enters intake information into electronic database. • Issues variety of vouchers for programs. • Helps clients complete eligibility assessments for services. • Oversees Personal Care Pantry supply and distribution to clients. Qualifications, Skills, Knowledge: • Associates Degree (desired) or five years of equivalent work experience; social work preferred. • Two years of experience completing administrative duties, receptionist tasks, or secretarial duties involving significant public contact; social services background strongly preferred. • Strong organizational skills. • Ability to communicate effectively to individuals and groups verbally and in writing. • Ability to maintain records and compile information and statistics for clear concise reports. • Ability to work independently within assigned area of responsibility. • Must always maintain unbiased demeanor and must treat each client with respect and display strong communication and interpersonal skill with people of various backgrounds and cultures. • Must maintain client confidentiality at all times and must be able to maintain personal boundaries to effectively function on behalf of CCA's clients. • Bi-lingual (Spanish) ability desired (not required); must at times communicate with people speaking languages other than English. Any job offer will be contingent upon the results of an updated background investigation and drug screening. For more information please contact Viviana Matthews at 971-308-1031 or vmatthews@ccaservices.org
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 19
coa stweeken d MARK ETPLACE 70 Help Wanted
105 Business-Sales Op Be an Astoria Carrier!
The City of Astoria has an opening for an Equipment Maintenance Supervisor with an hourly rate of $24.48 to $29.75 per hour. This is a full time position with benefits. To apply or to obtain further information, please go to the Cityʼs application website at http://astoria.iapplicants.com. If you are unable to complete the application, you may contact the Cityʼs Human Resources Department at (503) 325-5824 for a paper application.
The Inn at Cannon Beach is currently hiring for YEAR ROUND EMPLOYMENT Come see us - we'll work with your current schedule * Maintenance * Housekeeping * Housekeeping Supervisor $300 HIRING BONUS NEGOTIABLE WAGES PAID HOLIDAYS INCENTIVE BONUSES And more! Please apply in person at the Inn at Cannon Beach (3215 S Hemlock, Cannon Beach) If you have any questions, please contact Terri at terri@innatcannonbeach.com or call (503) 436-9085 HOME DELIVERY! Your Daily Astorian should arrive by 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. If it does not, please call us at 503325-3211 or 1-800-781-3211.
The Seashore Inn is now hiring for the following positions:
$100 Signing Bonus! The Daily Astorian is currently seeking independent contractors to deliver its paper and related products in the Astoria Oregon area. Interested individuals must have valid drivers license, reliable vehicle, and insurance. Routes are Monday through Friday afternoons. There are no collections or weekend deliveries. Please come in person to The Daily Astorian office at 949 Exchange St, Astoria OR 97103 to pick up more information.
225 Townhouses 3 bd 2.5 ba 1800 sq ft townhouse, $1450.00 per month. 1 yr lease. No Smoking or pets 1386 Kyla Ln Seaside OR. 503-4409561
250 Home Share, Rooms &Roommates Home share: 1 furnished bedroom, $650. First/last month, $300 security deposit. No pets/smoking. (503)338-0703 CLASSIFIED ADS are used by people when they are searching for products or services. For fast results, use a Classified ad to attract people who are ready to buy your product.
390 Garage Sales WA 500+ Sales Nov 5th NW'S LARGEST Garage Sale & Vintage Sale Clark Co Event Center Sellers & Shoppers Wanted www.nwgsales.com 360-907-5919
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Learn about albatrosses of the Oregon Coast Lower Nehalem Watershed Council holds next speaker event Nov. 10 MANZANITA — Albatrosses have been described as the most legendary of all birds, holding a special place in maritime lore and superstition such as in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” The true story of the albatross is even more enthralling. The public is invited to attend the next event in the Lower Nehalem Watershed Council’s speaker series on Thursday, Nov. 10. Council board member and wildlife biologist Ted Chu will be the featured presenter. Chu had the brief opportunity to volunteer on the Midway Atoll albatross nesting grounds, where black-footed and Laysan albatrosses that forage off the Oregon Coast return each year to create
COURTESY OF MIDWAY ATOLL NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE
Wisdom, a wild female Laysan albatross, tends her chick in February 2016. Wisdom is the oldest known bird in the wild at 65 years old (possibly even older).
large breeding colonies. Albatrosses are large seabirds whose wingspans can reach up to 10 or 12 feet. Most albatrosses range in
the Southern Hemisphere in Antarctica, Australia, South America and South Africa. Four albatrosses range in the North Pacific, from Hawaii to
Japan, California and Alaska. A breeding season, with one egg, can last over a year from laying to fledging. Wisdom, a female Laysan albatross, is the oldest wild bird in the world; she was first banded in 1956 and is thought to be about 65 years old. Chu’s slide presentation will highlight these iconic birds. As a special door prize, Chu will be giving away a signed copy of Carl Safina’s book “Eye of the Albatross.” The presentation will be held at the Pine Grove Community House, located at 225 Laneda Ave. in Manzanita. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. for refreshments. The presentation will start at 7:20 p.m. following an update from Lower Nehalem Watershed Council at 7 p.m. This event is free and open to the public. Find more information about the speaker series, follow the Lower Nehalem Watershed Council on Facebook.
Edna Vazquez brings Latin roots to Astoria Hear her perform Sunday at Fort George Brewery ASTORIA — Fresh off of wooing a sold-out crowd as a solo act at the Liberty Theater in support of Blind Pilot, Edna Vazquez will return to Astoria with her band for a night of Latin roots music at the Fort George Brewery. She will perform at 8 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6 at the upstairs pub, located at 1483 Duane St. There is no cover for the show, and all ages are welcome. After Fort George, Vazquez will continue on to the World Cafe Live in
Philadelphia to be broadcast on NPR. Vazquez is a Portland-based Latin American singer-songwriter who performs original compositions that pay homage to her international influences with a passion that comes through in every note of her music. She lifts the audience’s spirits during her cathartic live performances with a vocal range that allows her to transition seamlessly between folk, rock, pop and Mariachi, all while exploring jazz stylings. Vazquez’s songs are deeply rooted in universal human emotion, and she has traveled far and wide spreading her message of light, love and
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Edna Vazquez will perform Sunday, Nov. 6 at the Fort George Brewery in Astoria.
cultural healing. Born in the Mexican state of Colima but raised in Jalisco, Vazquez spent half of her life immersed in the culture and music of Mexico and Latin America, moving to the United States as a teenager. Her passion for music and performance was born from these bicultural roots and has led her on a path of
self-discovery through song that has brought her success at each turn in the road. Whether sharing the stage with her musical influences or winning the first prize on Sabado Gigante with her rendition of “Cucurrucucú Paloma,” Vazquez’s spirit and powerful vocal performance have been the cornerstone of her career.
20 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
IN THE COLUMBIA-PACIFIC REGION Thursday, Nov. 3 Basin Street NW 6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777. Dave Drury on guitar, Todd Pederson on bass and friends perform mainstream jazz. Senior Center Jam 6:30 p.m., Astoria Senior Center, 1111 Exchange St., Astoria, 503-468-0390. The Astoria Senior Center offers string band, bluegrass and country. Ben Larsen 7 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-6422311. Ben Larsen plays folk, bluegrass. Floating Glass Balls 7 p.m., Bill’s Tavern, 188 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2202. The Floating Glass Balls plays bluegrass, Caribbean, folk, swing and country.
Friday, Nov. 4 Tom Trudell 6 p.m., Shelburne Inn, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash., 360-642-4150. Tom Trudell plays jazz piano.
Wanderlodge 7 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash. Wanderlodge plays rock and country.
Tuesday, Nov. 8 Swingcats of Astoria 11 a.m., Blue Scorcher Bakery, 1493 Duane St., Astoria, 503-338-7473. Swingcats of Astoria play swing, jazz.
Saturday, Nov. 5
George Coleman 6 p.m., Shelburne Inn, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash. George Coleman plays pop, jazz, folk and rock music on his 12-string guitar.
David Drury 6:30 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria. David Drury plays guitar. Maggie & the Cats 6:30 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-4361539, 21+. Maggie and the Cats play Creole, jazz, blues and soul music.
The Coconuts 6:30 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 21+. The Coconuts play swing, jazz, country, bluegrass and folk music.
Pilar French 7 p.m., McMenamins Sand Trap, 1157 Marion Ave., Gearhart, 503-717-8150. An eclectic songwriter, Pilar French sings blues, funk and lounge ballads.
Albert Reda 7 p.m., Peninsula Arts Center, 504 Pacific Ave., Long Beach, Wash., 360-901-0962, $12. A night of cabaret-style piano and vocals with blues bassist Albert Reda.
Astoria Music Festival 7 p.m., Liberty Theater, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, 503-325-9896. A concert presented by the Astoria Music Festival features cellist Sergey Antonov and pianist Ilya Kazantsev.
Burgers & Jam 6 p.m., American Legion, 1216 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2973. The legion offers burgers and music.
Cascade Crescendo 9 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash. Cascade Crescendo crafts its own brand of bluegrass pulling from a vast range of collective influences playing original, high-energy bluegrass, jam and Americana music.
Jennifer Goodenberger 6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria. Jennifer Goodenberger plays classical and contemporary piano.
Quartet Trio 7 p.m., WineKraft, 80 10th St., Astoria, 503-468-0206, 21+. John Orr, Dave Gager and RJ Marx play jazz music.
Monday, Nov. 7
Ellen Whyte 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2623, $39. Stormy Weather Arts Festival kicks off with a spotlight concert showcasing blues singer Ellen Whyte.
Bruce Smith 6 p.m., Elks Lodge, 324 Avenue A, Seaside, 21+. Bruce Smith will perform acoustic Texas roadhouse rock music.
Wanderlodge 7 p.m., The Birk, 11139 Hwy. 202, Birkenfeld, 503-755-2722. Wanderlodge plays rock, rock-n-roll and country music. Cascade Crescendo 9 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash. Cascade Crescendo plays bluegrass.
The Bridge Morning Show With Mark Evans 6 am to 10 am
MORE MUSIC coastweekend.com/ cw/music
Brian O’Connor 5:30 p.m., Shelburne Inn, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash. Acoustic jazz guitarist Brian O’Connor plays an eclectic mix of jazz standards.
Saturday, Nov. 5
Quarterflash
7:30 p.m., Liberty Theater, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, 503-3255922, $15 to $35. Formed in 1980 in Portland, Quarterflash plays contemporary pop rock music.
Sunday, Nov. 6 Richard T. & Friends 11:30 a.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria. Richard T. and friends performs a repertoire of blues. Kitchen Music 1 p.m., Long Beach Grange, 5715 Sandridge Road, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2239. Join the circle and enjoy, folk, bluegrass, country, blues. Hunter & The Dirty Jacks 2 p.m., The Birk, 11139 Hwy. 202, Birkenfeld. Hunter & The Dirty Jacks are a hometown California band that plays handcrafted California and retro fresh rock-n-roll soul like smoky whiskey with phosphorescent ice cubes in a blues-tinted glass. Sunday Afternoon Live 2 p.m., Raymond Theatre, 323 3rd St., Raymond, Wash., 360-875-5207, $12 to $15. Sunday Afternoon Live presents the Andy Hackbarth Trio playing folk, classical roots and indie..
Oregon Symphonic Band 3 p.m., Donavon Wooley Performing Arts Center, 471 Bel Air Drive, Clatskanie, 503-728-3403, $6 to $10. “The Three Bs and Then Some” features music from composers or arrangements by someone whose name begins with the letter B: Bach, Beethoven, Bernstein, Bignell and more. Evensong 6 p.m., Cannon Beach Community Church, 132 Washington St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1222. Evensong features performers Jennifer Goodenberger and Wes Wahrmund, meditative songs and quiet reflection. Skadi Freyer 6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria. Skadi Freyer plays piano. Wanderlodge 7 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash. Wanderlodge plays rock, rock-n-roll and country music.
Benyaro 7 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash. Songwriter, singer and guitarist Jeff Crosby joins Benyaro for a night of indie, soul, rock, blues, folk and country music.
Wednesday, Nov. 9 Paul & Margo 5 p.m., The Bistro, 263 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2661. Paul and Margo Dueber play Americana. Lucy Barna 6 p.m., San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-5080, 21+. Enjoy the musical stylings of singer songwriter Lucy Barna, playing Americana, folk and original music. Luke Callen 7 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash. Luke Callen plays acoustic folk and blues music.
Thursday, Nov. 10 Luke Callen 7 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash. Luke Callen plays acoustic folk and blues music.
Spend Afternoons With Skye 2 pm to 8 pm www.949thebridge.com
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 21
Nov.
5
SEASIDE — The Seaside First Saturday Art Walk, celebrating 12 years in 2016, is all about the arts. Visitors walk about, meet artists, sip wine or snag appetizers, view artist demonstrations, listen to an artist talk or enjoy live performances in music. The next art walk is from 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5 at galleries located in the historic Gilbert District of downtown Seaside. SunRose Gallery 606 Broadway Visit with owner and artist Cathy Tippin, who creates broken china mosaics in the French tradition. Colorful and inspiring, SunRose features the spectrum of creative, from recycle art to fine art mosaics by local, regional and nationally known artists. See artwork by Mimi Cernyar Fox, who is inspired by her marine surroundings. She uses sand dollar mosaics, paintings and drawings to tell a story. SunRose also offers artful women’s accessories, gifts, home decor and eclectic garden art. Fairweather House and Gallery 612 Broadway Fairweather will host an opening reception for “A Simple Approach.” The essence of every sanctuary one creates in the approaching season can be distilled down to the principles of classic neutrals, materials that endure and soothing sight lines in art pulled from a serene environment. Regional artists in the show are Lori Wallace-Lloyd, who will be offering a Painting Seaside LIVE demonstration; Denise Joy McFadden, who will introduce woven watercolors; and Kathryn Delany, who portrays through her encaustic/mixed-media art “a little bit of the feeling of isolation of the birds, the vastness of their universe and the landscape underneath them.” At 6 p.m. ecologist and wildlife photographer Neal Maine will offer a lecture on the local habitat. Enjoy refreshments, live music by Shirley 88 and patron gifts.
“Birth of Time” by Jim Zaleski at Beach Books.
A painting by Kathryn Delany at Fairweather.
“Sand dollar salmon” by Mimi Cernyar Fox at SunRose Gallery.
Moxie 609 Broadway Moxie is a conscientious business filled with the eclectic, from exclusive jewelry to handmade art and fair trade clothing. The store, with its first location in Manzanita and its second new location in Seaside, is an established member of the Fair Trade Federation Beach Books 616 Broadway Authors Chandler O’Leary and Jessica Spring will join artist Jim Zaleski for this month’s art walk. A member of the Green Cab Collective of artists, Zaleski is an abstract-expressionist who loves color and whimsy. He will exhibit samples of his work that explode with color, energy, joy and wonder. Also see work by other Green Cabbie artists: Helvi Smith, Elina Zebergs, Jeff Hall, Amy Osborne, Barbara Martin and Anne Brown. O’Leary and Spring will discuss their new book, “Dead Feminists: Historic Heroines in Living Color,” at 6:30 p.m., focusing on both ordinary and extraordinary women who have made a difference throughout history. It’s a profound and super-smart look at feminist craft, creation and collaboration. T. anjuli’s Gallery 7 N. Holladay Drive The gallery will feature “Heartbeat,” a new series of original art focusing on what lies beneath appearances by owner Billy Lutz, whose body of work spans a career of 30 years of mature thematic painting. Taken as a whole, the art
“Winter Seeds” by Neal Maine at Fairweather’s.
“Salon” by Billy Lutz at T. Angjuli’s.
reflects a sustained examination of spirituality and present-tense collectivism. As a vehicle, this theme is moved forward within the paradox of duality.
Additional art: SeaSoles Boutique, 608 Broadway; The Gilbert District Gallery, 613 Broadway; Seaside Coffee House, 3 N. Holladay Drive; Hold Fast Gallery, 611 Broadway; Seaside
Fair trade art is on display at Moxie in downtown Seaside.
Antique Mall, 726 Broadway. Participating restaurants: Guido and Vito’s, 604 Broadway; Tora Sushi, 619 Broadway; Nonni’s
Astor Street Opry Company
Bistro, 831 Broadway; Lilikoi Grill, 714 Broadway; Yellow Curry Cozy Thai, 20 N. Holladay Drive. SUBMITTED PHOTOS
Open 7am Daily!
3 ABNNUAL RD
A FUNDRAISER E AN
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W ednesday N ovember 9 th
Fort George Brewery GUEST SPEAKER
SEN. BETSY JOHNSON
lude: items inc
Auction PRIVATE ART LESSON ORIGINAL BILL DODGE ARTWORK 3-CREDIT CLASS AT CLATSOP COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Doors Open @ 5:30 pm Live Auction @ 6:30 pm
CELEBRATE
JUDITH NILAND’S RETIREMENT!
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SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH & SUPPER European Style Coffeehouse by day, intimate bistro offering neo-regional cuisine by night. Regional selection of beers, wines and vintage cocktails available. We cater your event!
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BOOK SHELF // GLIMPSE // WILDLIFE // POP CULTURE // WORDS // Q&A // FOOD // FUN
NW word
nerd
By RYAN HUME
Clatsop
[klat•səp]
COURTESY OF CLATSOP COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
A historical photo shows the former Astoria High School below a quarry on Jerome Avenue, where Clatsop Community College was established in 1958.
PHOTO BY PATRICIA BECK-FRIES
Gray Memorial Chapel, commonly known as Pioneer Presbyterian Church, is located in the Clatsop Plains. Though the current building was constructed in 1927, the congregation was established in 1846 and is the oldest, continuous Presbyterian church west of the Rockies.
Origin: From the Salish language family, specifically the Clatsop dialect of the lower Chinookan. Recorded alternatively throughout the 19th century as Chat-sops, Chadsops, Clasops and by Lewis and Clark as Clat-sops, the term originated as a place name, a modification of the Upper Chinook tlaak’eelak to the Lower Chinook łät’cαp or la t cap, which means “place of dried salmon.” Clatsop District was created on June 22, 1844 by an act of the Provisional Legislature. “It is to be hoped the Legislature will not forget the case of Clatsop county, in the multitude of other important matters they have in hand. The redistricting and apportionment by the last Legislature was extremely unjust to Clatsop county. While other counties having a smaller population have a full Representative, Clatsop is left without one. According to the census of 1870 Clatsop county had at that time a population of 1, 255. Since then the population of that county has
increased very rapidly — probably at a greater ratio than that of any other county in the State.” —“Clatsop County,” The Morning Oregonian, Tuesday, Oct. 6, 1874, P. 2
“What used to be known as the Clatsop Plains and which is now growing into villages and towns such as Warrenton, Hammond and Flavel is
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
noun 1. a native Salishan people of the North Oregon Coast that once occupied the area below the Columbia River and north of Tillamook Head around present-day Seaside and Gearhart. Today the remaining 200 members of the Clatsop Tribe have been subsumed within other local tribes, including the Clatsop-Nehalem Confederated Tribes of Oregon and the Chinook Tribe. 2. the extinct dialect of the Clatsop people, part of the Lower Chinookan language 3. a county situated on the northernmost point of the Oregon Coast. The county seat is Astoria and the population is 37,039 according to the 2010 U.S. Census. The term Clatsop has been affixed to many place names within the county including the Clatsop Plains and Clatsop Spit 4. Clatsop Community College: an accredited twoyear public college serving both northwest Oregon and southwest Washington since 1958. The historic main campus on Lexington Avenue in Astoria, located on a hill overlooking the Columbia River, has been built up around Towler Hall, the former site of Astoria High School. Satellite campuses include the Marine and Environmental Research and Training Station on the east end of Astoria and South County Campus located in Seaside
Live
Presents
ANDY HACKBARTH TRIO
Colorado folklore, classical guitar and Nashville experience create a musical treat!
a stretch of level country twenty miles long and with an average width of three miles…. Clatsop county is simply teeming with possibilities for the enterprising man with small means who wishes to become independent and form the foundation of a lucrative business.”
—“A Land of Unlimited Resources,” The Morning Astorian, Investors’ and Homeseekers’ Edition, Sunday, Feb. 23, 1908, P. 4
PHOTO BY DANNY MILLER
The new welcome pole carved by artist Guy Capoeman and created in partnership by the Clatsop-Nehalem tribe and the city of Cannon Beach is at NeCus’ Park in Cannon Beach.
Sponsored by: • Bud’s Lumber • Marilyn & Roy Stephens • Helen Campbell • Beryl Adams
Sunday November 6th at 2pm
In the HISTORIC RAYMOND THEATRE
Buy advance tickets at: www.sundayafternoonlive.org or phone (360) 875-5207
240 11TH STREET ASTORIA, OR 97103
NOVEMBER 3, 2016 // 23
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Hwy 101 & 12th Ave., Seaside, Oregon • 503.717.1603
24 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
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