FREE WALK-IN VACCINE CLINICS FOR AGES 16 AND UP | PAGE A7 Wednesday, April 21, 2021 153nd Year • No. 16 • 18 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com MONUMENTAL MOVIEMAKER Grant County graduate earns second Oscar nomination with latest documentary ‘Hunger Ward’ By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle F ilmmaker Skye Fitzgerald carried the lessons he water, electricity or access to health care. learned in high school in the tiny town of Monu- “In some small sense, I experienced some of that lack ment all the way to war-torn Yemen, the setting for myself, and I wanted to make sure that whatever I devoted my his latest documentary “Hunger Ward,” which is in career to, there’s an attempt to use my career for good to get the running for an Academy Award at Sun- change,” Fitzgerald said. day’s ceremony. His 2018 fi lm “Lifeboat,” which was also nom- It’s Fitzgerald’s second Oscar nomination, and inated for an Oscar, followed search and rescue he said his time growing up in rural Grant County operations off the coast of Libya. taught him the value of hard work and gave him “Hunger Ward,” competing in this year’s an appreciation of “the simple things in life” short documentary category, focuses on two when his family moved to a house 16 miles out- therapeutic feeding centers in Yemen for chil- side of Monument that lacked running water and dren suff ering from malnutrition. He said the electricity when he was in eighth grade. Oscar nomination gives the documentary another “The fact that we didn’t have running water or chance to raise awareness about the confl ict. electricity made me appreciate them all the “It’s important that I use my own tools Contributed photo as a fi lmmaker to try to intervene and more when I went to college in La Grande at Monument graduate Skye Fitz- bring the issue to the largest audience Eastern Oregon University,” he said. Fitzgerald said he knew he wanted to pur- gerald directed the Academy possible to alter this unfolding tragedy sue a career where he could bring to light the Award-nominated fi lm ‘Hunger that doesn’t need to occur because of this challenges faced by others in the world who Ward.’ See Moviemaker, Page A18 lack fundamental resources such as running Contributed photo Skye Fitzgerald fi lming a search and rescue operation in the Southern Mediterranean. Cattle mutilations perplex investigators Six more mutilated cows found in rural Crook County By Garrett Andrews EO Media Group The udders appeared to have been removed with precision — straight, even cuts, as if made by a sharp object. The reproductive systems had been cut out cleanly as well, and without dis- turbing other organs. There was no indication of predator activity, and perhaps strangest of all, scavenging animals appeared to have hardly touched these six cow carcasses found in a seven-day span this year on ranchland in rural Crook County. Detectives with the Crook County Sheriff ’s Offi ce, longtime ranchers and a Prineville veterinarian who reviewed evidence from an ongoing case say they’re stumped by the “unnatural” deaths. But the mutilated cattle might be more ordinary than they seem, accord- ing to Brian Dunning, a Bend-based podcaster committed to defl ating wild claims. “This reads like a very typical case,” he said. Crook County Sheriff John Gaut- Contributed photo/Clancy Roth A cow was found dead and mutilated in early 2020 at Bar DR Land and Cattle, a Deschutes County ranch in Hampton. ney said his offi ce has no leads but cau- tioned there’s “no reason to panic.” “We’ve had cases like this over the years,” Gautney said. “They seem to come in groups and then go away. We are not speculating on how these are happening, as we try to keep an open mind and look at all possibilities.” Mutilated cattle have been reported in the American West since at least the 1960s. There have been multiple recent cases of bull mutilations in Har- ney, Wheeler and Umatilla counties in Eastern Oregon. But now, beef cat- tle have turned up dead in the remote ranchlands outside Prineville bearing signs common to the cattle mutilation phenomenon. The current string of cases began Feb. 27, when Crook County Sher- iff ’s Offi ce Deputy Scott Durr was dis- patched to suspicious circumstances at the 96 Ranch on Southeast Van Lake Road. Owner Rickey Shannon said See Mutilations, Page A18 The Eagle/Rudy Diaz Kobe Fell bunts the ball on April 14 in the fi rst game of the season against the Baker/Powder Valley Bulldogs. Other scheduled sports events are on hold after an uptick in COVID-19 cases. Grant Union, Humbolt Elementary close for COVID-19 Seneca remains open, but sports contests are canceled this week By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle Grant Union Junior/Senior High School and Humbolt Ele- mentary transitioned to distance learning on April 19 because of an uptick in COVID-19 cases. Grant School District 3 Super- intendent Bret Uptmor said they are targeting April 26 as a return date for in-class sessions, but this is contingent on the district’s eval- uation of the COVID-19 situation on April 22 to see if the date would need to be extended. Grant Union Junior/Senior High School sporting events are also canceled this week. Uptmor told the Eagle April 16 that Seneca will remain open for in-class lessons. “During the time of distance learning, the district along with the health department will monitor cases for community spread,” Upt- mor said in the release. “Opening our schools for onsite instruction will be announced as it is deter- mined safe for our students and staff to return. Grant Union Jr./Sr. High School and Humbolt have prepared for the delivery of instruc- tion remotely.” On April 13, Uptmor said 44% of students at Grant Union Junior/ Senior High School and 16% of students at Humbolt Elementary were on quarantine. The Grant County Health Department began considering the two-week pause for the district with the percentage of students on quarantine. “We have a great appreciation for parents and their willingness to work with us and getting students the material they need at home through this process again,” Upt- mor said. The school district will con- tinue providing breakfast and lunch Mondays through Thursdays. The program is for all children 18 years old and younger in the community. The school will prepare meals based on last November’s student counts. If somebody did not partic- ipate last fall, call and leave a mes- sage at 541-575-1799 to participate in the food service program. The breakfasts and lunches will be available for pickup from 9-9:30 a.m. at Humbolt Elementary, the Seventh Street Complex by the pond, the bowling alley parking lot and the Mt. Vernon Park. “We appreciate your under- standing and patience through this change,” Uptmor said. “The pro- cess of taking in information and making safe decisions will con- tinue, and our school will get back to onsite quickly and only with safety in mind.” No other school districts in Grant County announced closures as of April 19.