The Blue Mountain eagle. (John Day, Or.) 1972-current, March 23, 2022, Page 23, Image 23

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    QUICK TAKES
A BRIEF LOOK AT WHAT’S
HAPPENING IN EASTERN OREGON
5
MARCH 23�30, 2022
EASTERN OREGON FILM
FESTIVAL PRESENTS
MARCH ENCORE
SCREENING
LA GRANDE — Eastern Or-
egon Film Festival is off ering a
monthly encore screening of four
diverse short fi lms. This series
is free to Festival Friends and is
available to others for $12. The
March fi lms are now posted and
may be watched until March 31.
The series can be accessed at
the festival website, www.eofi lm-
fest.com, or at the offi cial Virtual
Screening Hub at https://watch.
eventive.org/friendsofeofi lmfest.
Films in the March series are
“Conspiracy Party” (H. Nelson
Tracey; 7 minutes, 55 seconds),
“A Lark & a Swallow” (Parker Win-
ship; 20 minutes), “Tired Eyes”
(Ryan Martin Brown; 8 minutes,
29 seconds) and “Wild Heart
1981/2020” (Zach Dorn; 6 min-
utes, 30 seconds).
PRINTMAKING EXHIBITS
FEATURE WORKS
CREATED AT CROW’S
SHADOW
MISSION — A pair of print-
making exhibits showcasing the
creations of Native American
EOFF/Contributed image
The Eastern Oregon Film Festival is featuring a monthly series of four short fi lms for online viewing. The March
screenings are available through March 31. The series is $12, or free to Festival Friends.
artists are featured in Wasco and
Hood River counties. More than
two dozen Native artists partici-
pated in two-week residencies
at Crow’s Shadow Institute of
the Arts, producing the works for
“Contemporary Native Voices:
Prints from the Crow’s Shadow
Institute of the Arts.”
The exhibitions can be viewed
through Saturday, March 26, at
The Dalles Art Center, 220 E.
Fourth St., and Columbia Center
for the Arts, 215 Cascade Ave.,
Hood River. Both facilities are
open Tuesday through Saturday,
11 a.m.-5 p.m. Admission is free.
work with a dynamic team
& make a difference in someone's life
part-time & full-time
positions open at our
residential care facilities
Learn more at wvcenterforwellness.org
or contact HR at hr@wvcenterforwellnes.org
541-426-4524 x1062
Each year, Crow’s Shadow
invites a select number of visual
artists and sculptors to partici-
pate in its residency program.
Participants produce limited
edition prints on subject matters
of their choosing. For more in-
formation about Crow’s Shadow,
email info@crowsshadow.org,
call 541-276-3954 or visit www.
crowsshadow.org.
JENNY DON’T AND THE
SPURS ARE IN CONCERT
MARCH 25
BAKER CITY — Jenny
Don’t and the Spurs will per-
form live Friday, March 25,
at Churchill School, 3451
Broadway St. (enter through
the 16th Street parking lot).
Doors open at 6 p.m. Tickets
are $10 in advance at www.
churchillbaker.com, or $15 at
the door. Proof of vaccination is
required. Admission is free for
fully vaccinated youth age 15
and younger who come with a
ticket holder.
In the life of the Spurs, the
band has played throughout
western Europe and nearly all
50 states. Their style, Jenny
said, is ‘50s and ‘60s country (as
Jenny Don’t/Contributed image
Jenny Don’t and the Spurs play
March 25, 2022, at Churchill School in
Baker City.
well as “Northwestern western,
garage country, surf western
and Cal punk”).
BLUEMOUNTAINEERS
DANCE SET FOR
SATURDAY
LA GRANDE — The Blue-
Mountaineers will have a dance
Saturday, March 26, 6-9 p.m. at
the La Grande Senior Center,
1504 N. Albany St.
Entry is $5 per person, or
free for ages 12 and younger.
The evening includes a fi nger
food potluck and door prizes.