REGION TUESDAY, JULY 5, 2022 THE OBSERVER — A3 ‘It’s to pique their interest’ with the idea. “It’s been fun,” Nedrow said. “I just want the kids to have fun and have some- thing to take away from it.” They off ered 30 spots for students in third through sixth grade. Chil- dren attended from North Powder, Haines and Baker City. To fund the camp, the Eastern Oregon Museum received grants from the Buerkel-Zoellner Founda- tion and the Edna E. Har- rell Community Children’s Fund. First camp at Eastern Oregon Museum combined art, history, even gold panning By LISA BRITTON Baker City Herald HAINES — Cayden Sandberg is a bundle of impatient energy. When he fi nally gets the nod from Jessie Street, Sandberg gently extracts his paper from beneath the glass and takes it to a pan of water. He rinses, rinses and rinses some more. The paper turns a bril- liant blue with white designs created by objects placed on the light-sensitive paper. Satisfi ed with his work of art, Sandberg lays it in the sun to dry then quickly off ers to help someone else create their own creative piece. This art lesson was part of a day camp held June 27-30 at the Eastern Oregon Themes Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Emma Bain, 9, tries out the whirligig toy she made at a day camp at the Eastern Oregon Museum in Haines on Tuesday, June 28, 2022. Museum in Haines. This is the fi rst such camp off ered at the museum, and it was directed by Logan Nedrow and Chris Aldrich. “It’s to pique their interest,” Aldrich said as she helped youngsters thread string through a button to create a whirligig toy. Aldrich is a board member for the museum and youth outreach volunteer. Nedrow, a 2019 grad- uate of North Powder High School, is pursuing a degree in elementary education at Eastern Oregon Univer- sity and also working as a paraprofessional at North Powder. She didn’t hesitate to help direct the camp when Aldrich — her former teacher — approached her Activities for each day centered around a theme. Monday was about rocks and minerals, and members of a Huntington mining camp taught the youngsters how to pan for gold. Each child went home with a gold pan and vial of gold. “I’m a hands-on learner,” Nedrow said, explaining her goal with designing the activities. “If I’m doing something I’m more likely to remember it.” Tuesday was all about art. Stations included quilting, tie-dye, pioneer toys and games, and the sun prints that had Sandberg so excited. Street teaches art at North Powder, and created her own UV sensitive paper for the project. “It’s a very old process — blueprints, basically,” she said. Street gave the kids a history lesson about Anna Atkins, a botanist who in the 1850s invented this pro- cess of combining minerals to make paper sensitive to the light. Atkins used it to document types of plants. “She made the fi rst book of photographs,” Street said. Wednesday was Oregon Trail history paired with the importance of local agri- culture, and on Thursday the campers made a history board. Throughout the week, during breaks the young- sters explored the trea- sures inside the museum — which organizers hoped would create interest and return trips. “History is interesting and cool,” Aldrich said with a smile. Umatilla County District Att orney’s Offi ce charges kidnapping suspect By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian PENDLETON — The Til- lamook man Pendleton police arrested Friday, June 25, for kid- napping a woman and fl eeing in a high-speed chase now faces offi - cial criminal charges. The Umatilla County Dis- trict Attorney’s Offi ce on July 1 charged Charles Frederick Seeling, 34, with eight counts in all, including felonies for sec- ond-degree kidnapping, coercion and fl eeing police and for mis- demeanor assault. The charges stem from a June 28 grand jury indictment. The district attorney’s offi ce also notifi ed the court it would seek to enhance any sentencing based on several factors, including the “crime involved deliberate cruelty to the victim” and Seeling already was on supervised release. State court records show Seeling is serving three years of probation in Clatsop County on charges of unlawful use of a weapon and fl eeing police, and he violated that probation in March and April when he checked him- self out of a detoxifi cation center and then did not check in with his probation offi cer. Seeling also has a felony theft case pending against him in Tillamook County. According to Pendleton police, emergency dispatchers June 25 at 10:11 a.m. received several 911 calls from witnesses at Walmart, 2203 S.W. Court Ave., reporting a female screaming for help in a vehicle in the parking lot. Wit- nesses reported about what appeared to be an abduction, as a male took a female by force and sped out of the parking lot. Witnesses also provided a good vehicle description and loca- tion of travel, according to the press release. While offi cers were responding, the female in the vehicle called 911, screaming she had an emergency before the line was disconnected. The female called again screaming for help and stated her boyfriend was hit- ting her before the call was dis- connected again. She called 911 a third time and said the suspect had a hammer and she was in fear he was going to use it against her. During the calls, the victim was able to provide updates about their locations. During the last call, she said they were approaching the Interstate 84 east- bound milepost 213 on-ramp. Offi cers tried to stop the vehicle on I-84 near Exit 216, but Author says High Desert Museum banned his books, but museum says they just don’t sell the suspect led police on a high- speed chase on South Market Road for about 10 minutes before abandoning the vehicle and victim at the end of Marsh Hawk Lane, where he then barricaded himself in a barn. Police were able to arrest him at 10:59 a.m. and reported he was smoking fentanyl in the barn. Medical personnel attended to the victim and did not take her to a hospital. Umatilla County Circuit Judge Christopher Brauer has set Seel- ing’s bail at $380,000. He remains in the Umatilla County Jail, Pendleton. Umatilla National Forest seeks public input for sunfl ower insect and disease project East Oregonian By JOE SIESS The Bulletin BEND — A Prineville author is saying the High Desert Museum banned his books as part of a politi- cally motivated attack, but the Bend museum said the author’s books simply do not sell in its gift shop, so it decided to discontinue car- rying them. Rick Steber, 75, the owner of Rick Steber- MAKERS in Prineville, and an author known for his books detailing the his- tory of the Western United States, wrote in a Face- book post that the museum banned his books from its Silver Sage Trading gift shop and called the decision “heavy-handed censorship.” The museum said that’s not the case at all. “He says that we’re ban- ning his books. In reality, we’re simply not carrying them anymore. Mr. Steber’s framing of this situation was infl ammatory, inac- curate and unfortunate,” Heidi Hagemeier, director of communication at the museum, said in a prepared statement. Hagemeier said the museum decided to dis- continue new purchases of Steber’s books based on a broader inventory of the store’s off erings and their Contributed Photo Prineville author Rick Steber, seen here in a 2019 photo, is known for his Western and historical writing. profi tability. “We appreciate Mr. Ste- ber’s work over the years and applaud him for having sold more than 2 million copies of his books,” Hage- meier said. “But the fact remains that of the tens of thousands of books sold in our Silver Sage Trading gift shop over the past decade, less than 1% of them have been authored by Mr. Steber.” Hagemeier said the museum’s executive director, Dana Whitelaw, spoke directly with Steber about the decision. But the museum’s account of the conversation varies greatly from Steber’s account shared on social media, Hagemeier said. According to Steber’s post, Whitelaw told him the museum is not banning his books, but has decided to no longer carry them in its gift shop because the museum is working to pro- mote authors who advocate for social justice. “I know my books sell,” Steber told The Bulletin. “They could have picked what they wanted to carry, but instead they banned me.” Steber called the deci- sion “a political move.” “It was directed at me and it shows what direction the High Desert Museum is headed, and I don’t agree with that at all,” he said. Steber said part of the museum’s decision is because of his decision to not follow state mandated COVID-19 protocol during the early part of the pan- Charles & Eileen Stewart demic. He chose to keep his business open despite not being designated an essen- tial business. “I think I pissed off the left, and I think this is how they are lashing out at me,” Steber said. “I’ve had enough. I’ve drawn a line in the sand, and I’m not going to put up with it.” Hagemeier reiterated the museum’s commit- ment to sharing a broad range of perspectives and stories about the High Desert region, and that the museum is committed to the idea that people can have diff erent view- points and also respect one another. “We do not believe, how- ever, that characterizing the stocking of a revenue-gen- erating gift shop even remotely stems from ‘dra- conian censorship’ as Mr. Steber claims,” Hagemeier said. Hagemeier said the museum’s mission “includes making sure the Silver Sage Trading gift shop contains a wide selection of retail products that are at once appealing to our patrons, connected to our current exhibitions and programs, and revenue generating for the Museum.” PENDLETON — The Umatilla National Forest is seeking public input for a sunfl ower insect and disease project on the Pomeroy Ranger District. The U.S Forest Ser- vice announced in June the purpose of the project is to reduce hazardous fuels caused by overly dense stands and insect infesta- tion in the area. The sunfl ower project proposes to remove trees through mechan- ical means on up to 2,902 acres within a 13,824-acre area. Treating the project area will decrease compe- tition for moisture, light and nutrients and thus increase vitality of the leaf trees, according to the announcement. The project area is 15 La GRANDE AUTO REPAIR 975-2000 www.lagrandeautorepair.com MOST ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY AVAILABLE Joe Horst Summer 10304 A 1st St. Island City, OR cstewartpc@gmail.com 541.910.5435 Pay cash or Rent to own Authorized Dealer miles southeast of Dayton, Washington. The Forest Service is seeking com- ments to help refi ne the proposed action and iden- tify ways to improve project designs. The Forest Service is accepting com- ments until Friday, July 22. The Pomeroy Ranger District also is hosting a collaborative fi eld trip to the project area on July 7. For more details about attending the fi eld trip, con- tact Alison Arnold at 509- 803-1891 as soon as pos- sible. The purpose of the fi eld trip is to discuss pro- posed plans and gather information from the public to consider in project development. For additional infor- mation about the project, contact Arnold or visit the project website at bit. ly/3NCZxiU. ACDelcoTSS