8 The Columbia Press February 19, 2021 National park offers listening adventure park. Want to explore “Taking time to the sounds of nature stop and listen to without leaving your the world around easy chair? us is important,” Lewis and Clark Job said. “It can National Historical enrich our lives Park can take you and provide a men- on a sound adven- tal break from the ture, allowing you to stress of daily life.” hear local birds, bab- Incorporating the bling streams, rus- sounds of a place tling reeds, even the Re-enactors shoot muskets as if they were mem- while telling a sto- sounds of shotguns bers of the Lewis and Clark party hunting food. ry can help bring during an elk hunt. the story to life, he The sounds were recorded said. Listening adventure by Jacob Job of the Colorado “This is what we’ve tried To view the story map State University Sound and to achieve in producing this and hear the sounds, visit Light Ecology Team as part story map. We hope you en- of the national park’s Sound- nps.gov/lewi/learn/nature/ joy listening to these sounds soundscape.htm. scape Project. as much as we did recording A Lewis and Clark Listening them and working them into Adventure story map high- what they might have heard. this story.” lights the sounds of Lewis The story map is filled with Ultimately, the park hopes and Clark National Historical high-quality images, inter- the Soundscape Project en- Park. active maps, immersive re- courages people to visit the Park staff collaborated with cordings, quotations from park to hear and see every- Job to create a map that tells the journals, and a capti- thing firsthand. the story of the explorers and vating narrative that guides For more information, call their experiences as well as the viewer to experience the the park at 503-861-2471. County arts groups receive operating grants The Oregon Arts Commis- sion awarded small grants to 97 organizations statewide, meant to be a lifeline ensur- ing arts access for Orego- nians, the agency announced. The Small Operating Grants are designed to pro- vide support to arts organi- zations with budgets under $150,000. Eligibility was limited to nonprofit organi- zations at least two years old that provide ongoing, sus- tained artistic programming and outreach programs. Each organization received $1,159. “So many grants are proj- ect-oriented when what most small organizations need is basic operating support to be able to even offer program- ming,” said Jessamyn West, the movement center’s exec- utive director. “Because this grant can be used for expenses like rent and utilities, it truly Members participate in a Bollywood-style performance at Asto- ria Arts and Movement Center. supports organizations at their most fundamental level.” The Arts Commission is supported with state general funds, federal funds from the National Endowment for the Arts, and money from the Or- egon Cultural Trust. Small Operating Grants went to the following Clatsop County organizations: Astoria Arts and Movement Center, Cannon Beach Arts Association, Cascadia Concert Opera in Astoria, Hoffman Center for the Arts in Manza- nita, North Coast Chorale in Astoria, Partners of the Per- forming Arts Center in Asto- ria and Tolovana Arts Colony.