A6 Entertainment wallowa.com What’s Happening Thursday, March 23 COMMUNITY BREAKFAST, 7-9 a.m., Wallowa FFA Alumni, in the Beth Johnson Room, Wallowa Elementary. Free to all. 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 gallery during the month of March. Music will be performed by local a capella group Harmony Rising, plus Sue WEALTH Continued from Page A4 in 1968) in “We Do Our Part,” things started falling apart with Vietnam, when college defer- ments separated the country, and continued in the war’s wake when wealth became more important than service. Today, doctors that come from the one percent and don’t have the debt load will join other one-percenters in fancy places across the country. Our Wal- lowa County docs want to be here for the reasons that ole Doc Sharff wanted to be here — fi shing, hiking, mushrooms, community. And Larry Davy, like most of us, could make more money elsewhere, choos- es to live in the county because it’s still a place where generosi- ty and service are more import- ant than wealth. ■ Main Street columnist Rich Wandschneider directs the Alvin M. and Betty Jose- phy Library of Western Histo- ry and Culture housed at the Josephy Center for Arts and Culture, located in Joseph. EASTERNOREGONEVENTS.COM EXPANDED ONLINE CALENDAR Juve, Laura Skovlin, songwrit- ers Heidi Muller and Jezebel’s Mother (Carolyn Lochert and Janis Carper). Featured readers include Elizabeth Enslin, (author of While the Gods Were Sleeping) and Shannon McNerney, (Fishtrap). This will be the fourth year of collaboration between the Music Alliance and Josephy Center on this popular event. Admission $10. hosts the teleconference with State Sen. Bill Hansell and Rep. Greg Barreto. Please bring a copy of your question(s) or input to the meeting to help structure the short meeting. We ask everyone to limit questions to 2 minutes. Everyone is welcome, and will be live on camera with our legislators. RSVP to the chamber (541) 426-4622. Tuesday, March 28 BEE MEETING, 6 p.m., M. Crow, Lostine; Open to anyone in- terested in beekeeping and bees. Informal meeting, dessert buffet included. More info call 541-569- 2285 or 541-426-4635. TELCONFERENCE WITH STATE REPRESENTATIVES, 7-8 a.m., OSU Extension Offi ce, 668 NW 1st St., Enterprise. Wallowa County Chamber of Commerce March 22, 2017 Thursday, April 6 Wallowa County Chieftain O UT AND ABOUT LAST WEEKEND Saturday, April 8 FARMER’S MARKET VEN- DOR SYMPOSIUM, 9 a.m. to noon, Fishtrap House,4 00 E. Grant, Enterprise; Wallowa Coun- ty Farmer’s Market offers advice on marketing, booth display and arrangement, salesmanship and more. Refreshments included. Call Carol Bartlow 541-398-8435 or email wallowacountyfarmers- market@gmail.com. Thursday, April 13 EASTER BAKE SALE, 8 a.m., Wallowa Memorial Hospital lobby, Enterprise; sponsored by the hospital auxiliary. Oregon printmakers exhibit opens April 1 at Josephy Center The Josephy Center will host an opening reception on April 1 at 7 p.m. for the new exhibit “Oregon Printmakers: From the Collection of Chris- ty Wyckoff.” The reception will include a cocktail party and art demonstration stations where visitors can produce their own prints. There will also be a ribbon cutting for the new classroom and ceram- ics studio, which was recent- ly completed at the Josephy Center. Fine art prints can be made a number of different ways. Etchings, linocuts, wood blocks, lithographs, screen prints, and monoprints, for example, each give artists dis- tinct challenges and opportu- nities for expression. “The Wyckoff collection includes a variety of meth- ods and artists,” said Cheryl Coughlan, Executive Direc- tor at JCAC. “This will be a chance for visitors to see superb prints and also learn about how they are made. We hope this is Step One in creat- ing a print studio for Wallowa County artists who will share a special press and print-making tools.” For this show, Christy Wy- ckoff has chosen a few of his own prints as well as those of other collaborators and friends. Wyckoff grew up in Eastern Oregon and spent his summers with grandparents in Wallowa County. He received his MFA from the University of Wash- ington and taught printmaking T HE B OOKLOFT AND Skylight Gallery at the Pacifi c NW College of Art in Portland for over 30 years. He will be giving a Live & Up Front presentation at the exhibit’s closing reception on May 26. The reception begins at 6:30 p.m., with Wyckoff’s presentation at 8 p.m. Wyckoff’s printmaking, painting, and photography have appeared in museum ex- hibitions including The Plates: International Contemporary Print Art at the Tokyo Na- tional University of Fine Arts and Music; One of a Kind: Monotypes from the Perma- nent Collection at the Portland Art Museum; Waters Edge: Landscapes by Contemporary Northwest Artists at the Ma- ryhill Museum of Art; What’s Happening: Contemporary Art from California, Oregon and Washington at the Alternative Museum, NYC; and In Touch: Nature, Ritual and Sensuous Art from the Northwest at the Portland Center for Visual Arts. 541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com 502 W. 2nd Street • Wallowa 541-398-2509 Worship at 11 a.m. Mid-week Bible Study 7 p.m. St. Katherine’s Catholic Church Fr. Francis Akano 301 E. Garfi eld Enterprise Mass Schedule Tues-Fri 8:00 am Saturdays 5:30pm Sundays 10:30am (541)426-4008 stkatherineenterprise.org St. Pius X Wallowa Sundays 8:00am All are welcome Joseph United Methodist Church 1. Pea stems 6. Type of music 9. Leader 13. Distant 14. 5,280 feet 15. Beloved Yankee great 16. A female domestic 17. Free from alcoholism 18. Ribosomal ribonucleic acid 19. Entertains with song 21. Wooden shoe 22. Female horses 23. Group of males 24. Sodium 25. Revolutions per minute 28. Neither 29. Woody climbing plant 31. Dismounted 33. Orbits the earth 36. Female parents 38 Separates acids 39. Origins 41. Stuffing and mounting animal skins 44. Rupture 45. Fathers 46. Large primate 48. Shape-memory alloy 49. Halfback 51. “Family Guy” daughter 52. Irish mountain chain 54. Paired 56. Drinks 60. Death notice 61. Skirts 62. Fertility god 63. Where a curve intersects itself 64. Red Sea port 65. Mozambique seaport 66. Leaver 67. The human foot 68. Crash 1. Excessively theatrical actors 2. Wings 3. French river 4. Internet device 5. Where Tony Bennett left his heart 6. Flowering shrub that bears gooseberries 7. Brews 8. For each 9. Dictatorships 10. Slavic person in Saxony 11. Nobel laureate Shmuel 12. Lasso 14. Tones down 17. Lunar period 20. Leavened Indian bread 21. Military elite 23. One thousandth of an inch 25. L.A. footballer 26. Land plan 27. A satellite of Saturn 29. “Cat Ballou” actor 30. Obscure aspect of Sun God and a group of asteroids 32. Indicates the fare 34. __ and feather 35. Round Dutch cheese 37. Begat 40. Relaxing place 42. __ Hit’an of Alaska 43. Belgian city 47. Organ of hearing and balance 49. Isolated Southeast Asian people 50. “Power Rangers” villain 52. Yellow-fever mosquitos 53. Heavy cavalry sword 55. Laundry detergent 56. A way to wait 57. Mother and wife of Uranus 58. Justly obtain 59. Stony waste matter 61. Helps you find places 65. Oil company Dozens of arts groups, including Fishtrap, were re- cently awarded Arts Build Communities grants from the Oregon Arts Commission. Across the state, nonprof- it art groups were awarded a total of $210,400, with Fish- trap receiving $7,000 for The Big Read event featuring Tim O’Brien’s “The Things They Carried.” The grants are awarded to groups who have proj- Directory Church of Christ CLUES DOWN Fishtrap receives $7,000 state grant Church Finding books is our specialty CLUES ACROSS Steve Tool/Chieftain Jon Rombach shows the technique for paddling a dugout canoe at the Josephy Center’s Saturday “Build a Model Canoe” workshop. A number of participants built working canoe models for the event. 3rd & Lake St. • Joseph Pastor Cherie Dearth Phone: 541-432-3102 Sunday Worship Service 10:00 am JosephUMC.org St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church 100 NE 3rd St, Enterprise NE 3rd & Main St 541-426-3439 Worship Service Sunday 9:30am ects to address social issues. O’Brien’s book informed and inspired discussion about war, veteran’s issues and PTSD. Now in its 21st year, the Arts Build Communities pro- gram targets broad geograph- ic impact and arts access for under-served audiences. More than half of the 2017 awards go to communities outside of the Portland Metro region. Arts Build Communities grants frequently serve as seed money to spur additional local support. In recent years Arts Build Communities projects attracted more than $570,000 in leveraged fund- ing, much of it used to pay artists as well as to purchase products and services in the funded communities. PUBLIC MEETINGS March 27 Wallowa Lake Rural Fire Pro- tection District, 7 p.m. at Wallowa Lake Fire Station March 28 Summit Church Gospel Centered Community Service time: 10:30 am Cloverleaf Hall in Enterprise Pastor Mark Garland www.summitchurchoregon.org Wallowa County Planning Commission, 7 p.m. in the circuit courtroom of the Wallowa County Courthouse April 3 Wallowa County Commission- ers, 9 a.m., Thornton Room at the courthouse Enterprise School Board, 7 p.m. April 4 Faith Lutheran Church 409 W. Main Enterprise, Oregon Worship 2 nd & 4 th Sundays - 2 pm Bible Study 2 nd & 4 th Thursdays - 11 am Enterprise Planning Commis- sion, 7 p.m. city hall April 5 Lostine City Council, 7:30 p.m., city hall April 6 Joseph City Council, 7 p.m., city hall, library or community center LCMS (Lutheran Church Missouri Synod) Time for a Computer Tuneup? Enterprise Christian Church Christ Covenant Church 85035 Joseph Hwy • (541) 426-3449 Pastor Terry Tollefson Church Offi ce: 541-263-0505 Worship at 9 a.m. Sunday School at 10:30 a.m. Evening Worship at 6 p.m. (nursery at A.M. services) Family Prayer: 9:45am Sunday School: 10am Worship Service: 11am “Loving God & One Another” David Bruce, Sr. - Minister 723 College Street Lostine Lostine Presbyterian Church Enterprise Community Congregational Church Discussion Group 9:30 AM Worship Service 11:00 AM The Big Brown Church Childrens program during service Blog: dancingforth.blogspot.com 541.398.0597 Hwy 82, Lostine Stephen Kliewer, Minister Wallowa Assembly of God 606 West Hwy 82 Wallowa, Oregon 541-886-8445 Sunday School • 9:30 Worship Service • 10:45 Pastor Tim Barton wallowaassemblyofgod.com with an open door Pastor Archie Hook Sunday Worship 11am Bible Study 9:30am Ark Angels Children’s Program Ages 4-6th grade, 11am Nursery for children 3 & under 301 NE First St. • Enterprise, OR Find us on Facebook! 541.426.3044 Spyware Removal • 541-426-0108 103 SW 1st St., Enterprise NEW SPRING ARRIVALS FROM MINNETONKA and BED STU Wedges, Gladiators, Flats, Fringe Stop by today! Open 10am - 5pm daily Seventh-Day Adventist Church & School 305 Wagner (near the Cemetery) P.O. Box N. Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-3751 Church 541-426-8339 School Worship Services Sabbath School 9:30 - 10:45 a.m. Worship Hour 11:00 a.m. - Noon Pastor Jonathan DeWeber Uptown Clothing & Accessories in Downtown Joseph 12 S. Main St. • 541-432-9653