Museum holds scavenger hunt CANNON BEACH — Back by popular demand is the Can- non Beach History Center & Museum’s trivia contest. This family-friend event is a great way to bond or compete for the highest pride. The one-day event takes place from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, March 14. Each competitor may pur- chase a trivia card for $2. Each card contains 10 questions that must be answered while in the museum; all answers are contained within exhibits and displays. Those who answer all 10 questions correctly will win a prize. No cell phone or Internet searches are allowed. The museum will offer brain food in the form of Sleepy Monk coffee and a few light snacks. Writing materials and writing stations are pro- vided throughout the museum. The Cannon Beach History Center & Museum is located at 1387 S. Spruce St. For more information, visit www.cbhis- tory.org Hear Castle Rock ensemble Men’s chorus performs in Cathlamet CATHLAMET, Wash. — The Castle Rock Men’s Ensem- ble will give a concert at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 15 in St. James Episcopal Church, located at 1134 Columbia St. A reception will follow. The ensemble includes 10 pastors, teachers, a judge and a plumber. The have been singing together for 12 years under director Clar- ence Knutsen. Although they usually sing in Cowlitz County, the ensemble were invited last year to visit Germany, where they spent a week, singing in several historical churches as well as doing some tour- ing. This concert will include a free-will offering for St. James Family Center, the only nonprofit agency in Wahkiakum County serving children and families. For more information, call Rachael Wolford at 360- 849-4181. Can community be found in the age of the Internet? ASTORIA — Many social theorists agree that com- munity life has been trans- formed by communications technologies. Is community disappearing or strength- ening as we gaze at smart- phones, video games, online movies, and web pages? How do these technologies both connect and disconnect us? Where online do we en- gage deeply with friends, family, and neighbors alike? This is the focus of “Lost and Found: Community in the Age of the Internet,” a free conversation with Tod Sloan at 6 p.m. Friday, March 13 at Astoria Public Library, 450 10th St. This program is hosted by Astor Library Friends Association and sponsored by Oregon Humanities. Sloan is a professor of psychology in the Lewis & Clark Graduate School of Education and Counseling in Portland. He was trained in a field known as person- ality theory, which address- es fundamental questions about human nature. Sloan is fluent in Spanish and has taught in universities in Ven- Submitted photo Tod Sloan is a professor of psychology in the Lewis & Clark Graduate School of Edu- cation and Counseling in Portland. ezuela, Nicaragua and Costa Rica. Through the Conversation Project, Oregon Humanities offers free programs that en- gage community members in thoughtful, challenging conversations about ideas critical to daily life and the state’s future. For more in- formation, contact Astoria Public Library at 503-325- 7323 or comments@astori- alibrary.org with a terrific film, fashion and chocolate! Watch glamorous Audrey Hepburn romance Cary Grant in the 1963 classic film “CHARADE” on the big screen. Win prizes for best “glam” costumes in the audience! Sip bubbly and eat chocolate while you watch a fashion show! More information at:http://www.supportthepac.org 20 | March 12, 2015 | coastweekend.com A t the PA C for the PA C Partn ers for the PA C presen ts... Crossword Answer A C T P L Y R O E S C U D E A R O S L O N E L S S T Y C H E C K S H O G A N S A W O K E N T I M E S M E T E A U R A L I S C T I U C L D E P U M A E S A U N E G G D G U I S I R R S E S A O N N E I L S A T E K I T W I S H A N I A D L Y S E T A B O A R C O U L D E N T S N Y O S T C R A E H A R R E N I P R E L I M R O T E E P E R S E M A R I P S T A B L E E S E E D K R E M L I N F I L L I N G C A M P E D A D O S C O M I N G O S T I L C A S I H O E T D A H A P P E N S U S S O U T A W A I T P E L T T I E A R I E D H A A D B E S L T H E I R L S L A E A S R U S T O R O C E A T E I R S R E C A R D O S W R E M A Y E E R D S F O G I R A R E S E S P L I C K E D P L A Y E R S Y N O D S U P T O R O S E E D A Y S Celebrate Albert Einstein’s Birthday with a slice of Pi ASTORIA — Clatsop Com- munity College will cel- ebrate notable physicist Albert Einstein’s birthday and the mystery of the math- ematical constant Pi from 1:59 to 6 p.m. Saturday, March 14 at CCC’s Patriot Hall Gym. Pi is everywhere; it is the ratio of any circle’s circum- ference to the length of its di- ameter. The celebration mim- LFV WKH ¿UVW HLJKW GLJLWV RI 3L which are 3.1415926. Thus, Pi Day is on Saturday, March 14 (3.14), beginning at 1:59 p.m. (159) and continuing to (2) 6 p.m. (6). CCC’s regionally ac- FODLPHGEDQG7KHʌµGʌµSHUV will open the festivities at 1:59 p.m. with music and singing. There will be math games, Pi and other math walks, face painting, Pi prizes and more. Pi’s famous relative — pie — will be sold by the Pi-Phi Chapter of Phi Theta Kappa as a fundraiser (by the slice or whole pie). Admission is free. This event is appetizing for all ages, and families are encouraged to attend (children under 12 need to be accompanied by an adult). For more information, con- tact TJ Lackner, CCC mathe- matics instructor, at 503-338- 2452 or tlackner@clatsopcc. edu Listening to the Land: Clark remembers the Oregon Coast SEASIDE — It’s been 209 years since the Corps of Discovery reached the estuary of the Co- lumbia River prompting Capt. William Clark to pen the im- mortal words, “Ocian in view! O! the joy.” If Clark (now Gen. Clark) was retired and relaxing in his parlor in St. Louis, were to UHÀHFWRQWKHQHDUO\¿YHPRQWKV he spent on the North Oregon Coast in the winter of 1805-06, what details would stand out in his memory? Hear for yourself at “General Clark Remembers the Coast,” the third of this year’s Listening to the Land programs beginning at 6 p.m. Wednesday, March 18 at the Seaside Public Library, located at 1131 Broadway. Ad- mission is free, and refreshments will be served. Clark, who will be reanimat- ed by living history re-enactor Tom Wilson, will share the po- dium with Jill Harding, chief of visitor services at Lewis and Clark National Historical Park. Wilson and Harding will talk about the landscape and resourc- es Clark encountered during his stay. Attendees are welcome to ask questions. Submitted photo by Tom Wilson Tom Wilson as William Clark. Listening to the Land is a monthly winter speaker se- ries presented by North Coast Land Conservancy and the Ne- canicum Watershed Council in partnership with the Seaside Public Library with support from the Seaside Chamber of Commerce. This year’s Listening to the Land series is focused on the natural and cultural heritage of the Oregon Coast. For information, call 503-738-6742, or visit www. seasidelibrary.org