Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current, October 05, 2016, Page A6, Image 6

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    A6
Community
wallowa.com
Public Meetings
Wednesday, Oct. 5
• Lostine City Council: 7:30
p.m. at City Hall
Oct. 6-7
• Oregon Fish and Wildlife
Commission, all day Thursday
and Friday in La Grande. http://
tinyurl.com/hftdpuq
Thursday, Oct. 6
• Joseph City Council: 7
p.m. at City Library, City Hall
or Community Center. www.
josephoregon.org
Friday, Oct. 7
• Oregon Housing Stability
Council, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
Blue Springs Crossing in Island
City. Dial-in: 1-877-273-4202;
Participant Code: 4978330
Monday, Oct. 10
• Joseph School Board:
5:30 p.m. at the school library.
www.joseph.k12.or.us
• Wallowa School Board: 7
p.m. at the high school library
• Enterprise City Council:
7:30 p.m. Monday at Council
Chambers, Enterprise City Hall,
108 NE 1st St. www.enterpriseo-
regon.org
Thursday, Oct. 13
• Wallowa County Candidate
Forum, 6 p.m. at Cloverleaf Hall.
Friday, Oct. 14
• Oregon Recreational Trails
Advisory Council, 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. at the Joseph Community
Center.
Monday, Oct. 17
• Wallowa County Com-
missioners: 9 a.m. in Thornton
Room at the courthouse. http://
tinyurl.com/jo8bcya
Tuesday, Oct. 18
• Wallowa City Council: 7
p.m. at council room in City Hall
Thursday, Oct. 20
• Wallowa County Forest
Classiication, 1:30 p.m. in
Thornton Room at the court-
house. Matt Howard, ODF, 886-
2881 or John Williams, OSU
Extension, 426-3143.
Monday, Oct. 24
• Wallowa Lake Rural Fire
Protection District: 7 p.m. at
Wallowa Lake Fire Station.
http://wallowalakeire.com
October 5, 2016
Oregon Fish
and Wildlife
Commission to
meet this week
in La Grande
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Oct. 5
MidValley Theatre Company
is continuing open auditions for
its winter production, “The Best
Christmas Pageant Ever,” from
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Lostine
Presbyterian Church. Roles
are open for six women, four
men of varying ages and many
children ages approximately 14
and younger. Once a cast is set,
rehearsals will take place 6:30
to 7:30 Mondays, Tuesdays and
Thursdays. For more information,
contact Director Kate Loftus at
541-569-2302.
Saturday, Oct. 8
Wallowa County Farmers
Market, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
downtown Joseph. Final market
of the season. Today: Customer
Appreciation Day on the lawn.
Open reception honoring
Chapter R of P.E.O., 100th Anni-
versary Celebration at The Place
(Joseph’s First Methodist Church
fellowship hall), 1 to 3 p.m.
Lower Valley Farmers’ Mar-
ket, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., 301 E. 1st
St., Wallowa.
Annual Frenchtown Ren-
dezvous at Assumption Church
Parish Hall, 2098 E. Alder St. in
Walla Walla. Tickets are 35$ and
available online at tinyurl.com/
frenchtownrv. Doors open at 1
p.m. for silent auctions, history
displays, coffee, cookies and
conversation. Keynote presen-
tation at 4 p.m. Tri-tip dinner at 5
p.m. For more information, visit
www.frenchtownwa.org.
Oregon Rural Action’s annual
meeting and dinner at the Union
County Senior Center in La
Grande. Activities begin at 3 p.m.
with the oficial welcome and in-
troductions opening the meeting
at 3:30 p.m. Learn about the lat-
est events and campaigns from
ORA chapters and issue teams.
Dinner and music begin at 6:30
p.m. Bag of Hammers, with Luke
McKern and Holly Sorensen, will
be the featured musical guests.
Reservations and $20 tickets
are available by calling 541-975-
2411, or by stopping by the Rural
Action ofice at 1119 Washington
Ave. in La Grande, Monday
through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to
noon. Tickets must be purchased
in advance and are available
through Oct 1.
Wallowa County Chieftain
Monday, Oct. 10
The OSU Extension Ofice
is sponsoring a Walk With Ease
class series developed by the
American Arthritis Association.
Classes will take place from
11 a.m. to noon Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays, Oct.
10 through Dec. 7, at The Place
(next to Joseph United Methodist
Church). Cost of class is $20,
which includes a workbook, all
handout materials and a water
bottle. Pre-registration required.
For details, contact the OSU Ex-
tension Ofice at 541-426-3143.
The Wallowa Memorial Hospi-
tal Auxiliary Gift Shop has recently
transitioned to new suppliers for
gift items. We are over-stocked
with exciting new items. Come by
and check out the shop, located
in the hospital lobby.
Thursday, Oct. 13
Maxville Heritage Interpretive
Center and the Joseph United
Methodist Church are hosting a
community discussion as part of
Oregon Humanities’ statewide
This Place series from 6-7:30
p.m. at United Methodist Church,
301 S. Lake St. in Joseph. The
discussions provide Oregonians
with an opportunity to explore
their relationship to the places
they’ve come from and the plac-
es they’re in now and are led by
trained facilitators from the ields
of tribal resource management,
anthropology, conlict resolu-
tion, applied theology, natural
resource management, ethnic
studies and isheries science. For
more information about this free
community discussion, please
contact Gwen at 541-426-3545
or gwen@maxvilleheritage.org or
visit http://oregonhumanities.org/
programs/this-place.
Friday, Oct. 14
The lu season is here, and
T HE B OOKLOFT
AND
Courtesy of Cathryn-Ann Paterson
As fall arrives, a large pumpkin sits in the yard of Cathryn-
Ann Paterson and David Jensen in Enterprise.
the Jonathan M. Wainwright
Memorial VA Medical Center
is holding a lu shot clinic for
Enterprise area Veterans at the
Enterprise VA Clinic from 8:30
a.m. to 3 p.m. Shots are free for
all veterans just by showing valid
identiication. For details, visit
https://goo.gl/MYvlES.
“Welcome home” open
house for the South Fork Grange
No. 605 in Lostine, 1 to 9 p.m.
Turn onto Roswell Street for an
afternoon/evening of free fun.
Cider pressing, potato bar, Eileen
Thiel book signing, local music
and pie. Come celebrate the new
community meeting hall.
The Oregon Recreational
Trails Advisory Council will meet
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Joseph Community Center. The
council invites public comments.
The agenda includes presenta-
tions from local trail advocates
and land managers about trail
projects and initiatives in the
area.
Annual National Rile Asso-
ciation Banquet and Auction, 4
p.m. at Cloverleaf Hall in Enter-
prise. Live and silent auctions,
special drawings, door prizes,
great food and friends. One brick
of .22 LR ammo rafled off every
10 minutes from 4:10 to 5:30
p.m. Purchase dinner tickets
online at www.friendsofnra.org.
For more information, contact
Stephen Wolfe at 541-263-0801
or sdw69548@yahoo.com or
Doug Batten at 541-426-4639 or
dbatten@frontier.com.
Saturday, Oct. 15
First-time home buyers
are invited to a free, one-day
workshop from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at Community Connection, 702
NW 1st St. in Enterprise. Local
lenders and Realtors will help
guide potential buyers through
the process. Lunch and snacks
provided. To register, call Debbie
Votaw at 541-963-3186, or Di
Lyn Larsen-Hill and Kate Gekeler
at 541-963-5360, extensions 32
and 27 before Oct. 10.
Lower Valley Farmers’ Mar-
ket, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., 301 E. 1st
St., Wallowa.
S KYLIGHT G ALLERY
Finding books is our specialty
541.426.3351 • 107 E . M a in • E n terprise • w w w .book loftoregon .com
Church of Christ
502 W. 2nd Street • Wallowa
541-398-2509
Worship at 11 a.m.
Mid-week
Bible Study 7 p.m.
Pastor Cherie Dearth
CLUES ACROSS
1. __ Nui, Easter Island
5. Midway between south and southeast
8. Small mark
12. Small antelope
14. Protects from weather
15. Goddess of women and marriage
16. City in Washington
18. Independent voters association
19. Bird genus
20. Train line
21. Annoy
22. Waste matter
23. 41st President
26. Type of cracker
30. Remove
31. Looked quickly
32. The habitat of wild animals
33. Type of gene
34. Humble
39. Barrels per day (abbr.)
42. Respectful compliments
44. Star Trek: The Next Generation
doctor
46. Pithy remark
47. Sums up
49. Tailless amphibian
50. American Gaming Association (abbr.)
51. After seventh
56. Czech River
57. Folk band __ Iver
58. Kids ride this
59. Ancient Greek City
60. Liquefied natural gas (abbr.)
61. Net
62. Colors clothes
63. Midway between east and southeast
64. Japanese beverage
CLUES DOWN
1. Island north of Guam
2. Biblical region
3. Scottish ancestor
4. Hills in northeast India
5. A way to cook by baking
6. Attacked ferociously
7. Furniture with open shelves
8. Burt Reynolds film
9. A way to examine
10. Plant of the goosefoot family
11. Job
13. Capable of being thought
17. One seeded fruit
24. Largest English dictionary (abbr.)
25. Platitudes
26. Very fast airplane
27. Pet detective Ventura
28. Resinous substance
29. Explosive
35. Purse
36. Swiss river
37. Separately managed account (abbr.)
38. Electron scanning microscope (abbr.)
40. Fable
41. Mythical monsters
42. Whale (Norwegian)
43. Domed recesses
44. Member of U.S. Navy
45. Cause to be loved
47. Expression of surprise
48. Jessica __, actress
49. Drove
52. Commands to go faster
53. Chinese dynasty
54. Military vehicle
55. Chinese Muslim
Wallowa County Chieftain
Enterprise
Christian Church
85035 Joseph Hwy • (541) 426-3449
Worship at 9 a.m.
Sunday School at 10:30 a.m.
Evening Worship at 6 p.m.
(nursery at A.M. services)
The Community Calendar
lists fundraisers, free local
events and those with a nomi-
nal fee organized by nonproit
organizations. Submit infor-
mation to calendar@wal-
lowa.com. Deadline is 5 p.m.
Friday. To promote for-proit
events, contact sales repre-
sentative Jennifer Powell at
jpowell@wallowa.com.
The Oregon Fish and
Wildlife Commission will
meet Oct. 6-7 in La Grande
to be briefed on the Wolf and
Cougar Management Plan re-
views.
The two-day gathering
begins Thursday with a ield
tour of the Starkey Experi-
mental Forest, which includes
a look at ODFW research
projects. Later, commission-
ers will travel to a private
ranch to discuss elk damage.
Members of the public may
join commissioners on the
tour but must provide their
own transportation and lunch.
The tour will depart Ameri-
ca’s Best Sandman Inn, 2410
East R Ave. in La Grande, at
8 a.m.
On Friday, the commis-
sion will host its regular
monthly meeting beginning
at 8 a.m. at the Blue Mountain
Conference Center, 404 12th
St. in La Grande. ODFW will
live-stream portions of Fri-
day’s meeting via Periscope
on our Twitter feed.
There are just three items
on the agenda for Friday.
First, the commission will
decide on funding for several
access and habitat projects,
including the Hancock Forest
Project to continue hunter ac-
cess to 250,000 acres of pri-
vate land in northeast Oregon
through 2021.
Next the commission will
be briefed on the status of Or-
egon’s Cougar Management
Plan, which is currently under
review. The review process
is not meant to completely
rewrite the plan, but to incor-
porate the latest science and
address any new challenges.
Public testimony is welcome
during this agenda item. The
commission will not be mak-
ing a inal decision on the
plan until a future meeting.
The commission also will
be briefed on the Wolf Man-
agement Plan review during
Friday’s meeting, and public
testimony is welcome during
this item. ODFW staff will
brief commissioners on the
policy issues and concerns
raised during the current re-
view based on meetings and
input from staff, stakeholder
groups and some state and
federal agencies. The com-
mission will not adopt a inal
updated Wolf Management
Plan until a future meeting.
The commission is the
policy-making body for ish
and wildlife issues in the
state. Public testimony before
the commission will be held
irst thing Friday morning,
just after the adoption of tem-
porary rules. Persons seeking
to testify on issues not on the
formal agenda may do so by
making arrangements with
the ODFW Director’s Ofice
at least 24 hours in advance
of the meeting by calling
800-720-6339 or 503-947-
6044.
Reasonable accommo-
dations will be provided as
needed for individuals re-
questing hearing devices,
sign language interpreters or
large-print materials. Indi-
viduals needing these types
of accommodations may call
the ODFW Director’s Ofice
at 800-720-6339 or 503-947-
6044 at least 24 hours in ad-
vance of the meeting.
“Loving God & One Another”
David Bruce, Sr. - Minister
Coats
for Kids!
Please bring your
new or gently used
coats, hats, gloves
and boots to:
Bank of EO,
Community Bank in
Joseph and Enterprise,
Safeway and
Joseph High School
during the entire
month of October