Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current, March 15, 2017, Page A5, Image 5

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    Wallowa County Chieftain
Special
guest to
speak at
Josephy
A special Thursday Brown
Bag at the Josephy Center
will feature Mark Madden,
interpretation manager for
Charleston County Parks in
South Carolina. Gwen Trice’s
special guest from South Car-
olina. The event is Thursday,
March 23 at noon.
Gwen Trice, director of
Wallowa County’s Maxville
Heritage Interpretive Center,
was recent-
ly selected
for
special
interpretive
training
in
South Caroli-
na. Madden,
who oversees
all
history
Madden
and
nature
programs
and products for Charleston
County Parks in South Caro-
lina, was the trainer.
Impressed with Madden
and the training, and having
secured a traveling exhibit
from the new National Mu-
seum of African American
History and Culture for Max-
ville’s Joseph Center, Trice
convinced her mentor to
make an Oregon trip
Madden will speak about
the inclusive and award win-
ning interpretation of Mc-
Leod Plantation historic site
that profi les the transition to
freedom experienced by the
majority of the people who
lived there from 1851 to 1990.
He will also share information
about the National Museum
of African American History
& Culture workshop he led
and which interpreters from
across the nation, including
Trice, attended.
This event is free and
open to the public. For more
information, contact Trice at
541-426-3545.
Time for a Computer Tuneup?
Spyware Removal • 541-426-0108
103 SW 1st St., Enterprise
Entertainment/Opinion
wallowa.com
What’s Happening
March 15, 2017
ILLNESS
EASTERNOREGONEVENTS.COM
EXPANDED ONLINE CALENDAR
Continued from Page A4
A CMM pilot program
at the University of
Southern California slashed
hospitalization rates and
costs associated with them.
Lastly, offi cials could
start tracking patients’
adherence statistics, in
order to better identify
at-risk populations and
gauge the effectiveness
of future healthcare
interventions. Most states
don’t yet collect such data
— which is why Oregon
should take the lead on
this critical health reform.
After all, Oregonians pride
themselves on being ahead
of the curve.
Far too many
deaths, surgeries, and
hospitalizations result
from patients’ failure to
take medicines as directed.
Giving doctors and
pharmacists a few simple
tools to educate patients
would drastically reduce
non-adherence, improve
outcomes and save money
for Oregon.
■
Joel White is President
of the Council for Afford-
able Health Coverage,
a national nonpartisan
coalition of patients, pro-
viders, payers and employ-
ers with a singular focus:
bringing down the cost
of health coverage for all
Americans. CAHC runs the
50-organization Prescrip-
tions for a Healthy Ameri-
ca campaign that promotes
medication adherence.
Sloane Salzburg is the
Senior Director of Pre-
scriptions for a Healthy
America.
Thursday, March 16
BATTLE OF THE BOOKS,
fundraiser for Joseph Charter
School, 5 p.m. soup feed and 6
p.m. the battle begins in school
cafeteria.
Talk centers on
Nez Perce canoes
A MATTER OF SCALE, a
natural history perspective. View
the world from the point of
massive continental exploration
to intensive exploration of one’s
own back yard. Presentation by
photographer Kendrick Moholt.
Wallowology in Joseph, 7 p.m.
Bob Chenoweth of the Nez
Perce National Historical Park
will talk about his extensive
research on dugout canoes,
especially Nez Perce dugout
canoes.
The event is Friday, March
17 at 7 p.m. at the Josephy
Center
According to Chenoweth,
Lewis and Clark noted few
horses but scores of canoes on
the Columbia River. Only a
handful of historic Nez Perce
canoes exists, and the Nation-
al Park Service owns most of
them.
Chenoweth will be joined by
Nez Perce elder Allen Pinkham
Sr., who will talk about ca-
noes and culture. And Allen
Pinkham Jr., who worked as an
artist in residence last summer,
will begin scoping out his own
project — carving a full-size
Nez Perce dugout canoe in Jo-
seph this summer.
Admission to the Friday eve-
ning program is by donation.
A Saturday morning workshop
is being organized to allow as
many as six people join Allen Jr.
in working on model dugouts.
Local logger Jim Zacharias has
promised to provide three foot
“blanks” for workshop partici-
pants to work with.
For more information, con-
tact Rich Wandschneider at
541-432-0505.
CIRCLE 100 CLUB ANNUAL
MEETING, Join us for the
popular Circle 100 Club, open to
all women of Wallowa County.
To join bring your donation for
$100 to support a local health
project, to be presented at the
meeting. Meeting is at Wallowa
Memorial Hospital cafeteria,
from 4:30–6 p.m. Appetizers
and treats provided. For more
information, contact the Wallowa
Valley Health Care Foundation
at 541.426.1913.
Saturday, March 18
FAMILY DANCE featuring
Casey Kaiser and the Snake
River Blues Band. Benefi t for
Enterprise High School senior
class. Enterprise VFW Hall,
7-10 pm. $5 per person. $20 per
family.
OLD TIME COMMUNITY
DANCE, Beginners welcome,
no partner or special clothing
required, all dances taught and
called. Enterprise Odd Fellows
Hall, 7-10 p.m. $5 per person,
12 and under free.
Saturday, March 25
WOMEN, WORDS & MUSIC,
7 p.m., Josephy Center for Arts
And Culture for a celebration
of words and music by local
women. Songs and readings by
a variety of performers will be
featured as part of the women’s
art exhibit on display in the gal-
lery during the month of March.
Music will be performed by local
a capella group Harmony Rising,
plus Sue Juve, Laura Skovlin,
songwriters Heidi Muller and Je-
zebel’s Mother (Carolyn Lochert
and Janis Carper). Featured
readers include Elizabeth Enslin,
Submitted photo
Allen Pinkham Sr., right, speaks with a friend recently.
Submitted photo
An example of a traditional Nez Perce canoe.
(author of While the Gods Were
Sleeping) and Shannon Mc-
Nerney, (Fishtrap). This will be
the fourth year of collaboration
between the Music Alliance and
Josephy Center on this popular
event. Admission is $10.
A5
MARCH SAVINGS:
Now in paperback
A whole new twist
on the Jane Eyre story
enterprisevet.com
JANE STEELE
541.426.3331
10%
Savings
by
Lyndsay Faye
T HE B OOKLOFT
Across from the courthouse in Enterprise
107 E. Main • 541.426.3351
always open at www.bookloftoregon.com • booklofteoni.com
PLUS $10
coupon
from WCHS
Come in Feb 15-March 15 to enter for a free spay or neuter
HOURS
NOW OPEN
Monday - Friday
9:00am - 5:00pm
Appointments available with...
After Hours Number: 541-263-1358
Renee Grandi, MD
Amy Zahm, Acupuncture
Colleen Whelan, LMT #15230
Main Office Line: 541-426-4502
www.windingwaters.org or
holistichealing.windingwaters.org
Tai Jacques, LMT #22745
Gambling Problem?
Signs & Symptoms
• Deterioration of work performance • Problems in concentration
• Missing deadlines and important activities • Frequently borrowing money
• Gambling to escape boredom, pain or loneliness
• Lying to loved ones about gambling • Trying to win back money lost
If you or someone you care about is experiencing a gambling problem,
HELP IS AVAILABLE It's Free – It's Confidential – It Works.
Call today: Wallowa Valley Center for Wellness
541-426-4524 • Or 1-877-My-Limit (24 hour Helpline)
207 SW 1st, Enterprise, OR 97828