PAGE A2, KEIZERTIMES, JUNE 26, 2015
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Today in History
U.S. and British pilots begin delivering food and supplies
by airplane to Berlin after the city is isolated by a Soviet
Union blockade.
— June 26, 1948
Food 4 Thought
“A man may die, nations may rise and fall, but an idea lives
on. Ideas have endurance without death.”
— John F. Kennedy
The Month Ahead
Saturday, June 27
The Oregon Spirit Chorus presents two performances of
Barbershop & Bluegrass in the auditorium at Chemeketa
Community College. Show are at 2 p.m. (tickets are $15)
and 7 p.m. (tickets are $20 for the evening show). For
tickets visit www.oregonspirit.org or email tickets@
oregonspirit.org.
Kimberly Hall and Friends, free concert at Keizer Rotary
Amphitheater at Keizer Rapids Park, 6 p.m. The evening
is a thank you to the Big Toy volunteers, donors and
sponsors. kraorg.com.
Saturday, June 27 and Sunday, June 28
The 18th annual World Beat at Salem’s Riverfront Park.
Tuesday, June 30
Free admission at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 10 a.m.-5
p.m. 900 State Street. willamette.edu/arts.
Wednesday, July 1
Claggett Creek Watershed Council meeting, 5:30 to 7 p.m.
at Keizer Civic Center.
Friday, July 3
Keizer city offi ces closed for Independence Day.
Friday, July 3 – Sunday, July 5
Civil War reenactments at Willamette Mission State Park,
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day. Tickets are $8 for adults, $5 for
seniors (55+) and students with ID and free for children
under 6 years old. nwcwc.org
Saturday, July 4
Happy Independence Day!
Monday, July 6
Keizer City Council meeting, 7 p.m. in council chambers at
Keizer Civic Center.
Mural timeline still undecided
By CRAIG MURPHY
Of the Keizertimes
For months, this summer
or early fall has been targeted
as the time for Keizer’s second
public mural to be done.
That could be changing,
though it’s not certain yet.
Lore Christopher and Jill
Hagen, both members of the
Keizer Public Arts Commis-
sion (KPAC), announced plans
in February to put a mural on
the north wall at Town and
Country Lanes. Not long af-
ter, Christopher said the mural
would be done in September.
The design of the mural
has undergone revisions. What
was originally announced as
the design was later amended
to be a proposed design. The
design is now envisioned by
KPAC members to be scenes
from the Iris Festival Parade.
At Tuesday’s KPAC meet-
ing, the timeline got potential
revisions as well. Keizer City
Councilor Amy Ripp will be
working with KPAC member
Rick Day to get the wall – es-
timated to be 140 feet long
and nine feet tall – ready “in
the next 30 days” with gray
primer and the wording “Ev-
eryone loves a …?” in large
letters.
Mardi Smith, general man-
ager at Town and Country,
had artist Michelle Rothar-
mel with her, who has done
large murals before and will be
helping on this one.
Another artist in the room,
Wendy Lusby, questioned at
one point when the project
would be done.
“As an artist, I’m really
confused by some of the time
frames being thrown out,” said
Lusby, a children’s artist from
Dallas.
“My vision is we paint the
wall (with primer) and get it
ready, then we don’t do (the
mural) until the spring,” Ha-
gen said. “I really want to wait
until the spring.”
That surprised fellow
KPAC members.
KEIZERTIMES fi le/Craig Murphy
(From left) Jill Hagen and Lore Christopher discuss the idea of a mural on the north wall of
Town and Country Lanes with the bowling alley’s owner, Don Lebold, back in February. The fi nal
design and possibly the timeline are still in fl ux following a meeting this week.
“I thought we were doing
it in September?” Beth Me-
lendy queried.
Christopher also ques-
tioned the timing.
“You really want to wait
until the spring?” Christopher
asked.
Given the scope of the
project, which in its current
guise would have between six
and 10 pictures up to 20 feet
wide each, Lusby said Hagen’s
timing made more sense.
“I don’t know how we will
have time to do it in Septem-
ber,” Lusby said.
Christopher noted when
the usual wet weather hits.
“We can’t do it later than
the end of October, otherwise
we’ll have to wait until next
summer,” she said.
Smith noted her parking
Library seeks
to fi ll volunteer
manager job
The Keizer Community
Library is seeking a volunteer
manager to oversee daily li-
brary operations.
The manager works closely
with the board of directors
and the Library Committee.
The board is seeking ap-
plicants with proven organi-
zational skills who is able to
set priorities within the op-
erations of the all-volunteer
library.
Applicants must be com-
puter literate; though knowl-
edge of library systems is de-
sirable it is not essential.
The board asks interested
persons to apply in person at
the library in the Keizer Heri-
tage Center at 980 Chemawa
Road N.E. or email books.
keizerlilbrary@gmail to re-
quest an application.
The deadline to apply is
July 15.
lot is often full September
through May in the evenings
with league bowlers.
“We have it every day,”
Smith said. “It would behoove
us to do it in the summer dur-
ing the day, before September.”
Christopher suggested a
compromise: getting some of
the background building and
crowd scenes done this fall.
“Then we leave it and do
the pieces that will take so
long next summer,” she said.
Hagen agreed and noted
the time it took for Colleen
Chronister-Goodwin to do
the Valley Treasures mural at
Keizer Florist last summer.
“I think it took Colleen
two weeks, with one thing,”
Hagen said. “We’re talking
nine of those.”
Regardless of the timing,
Lusby is eager to help out.
“I am very excited about
being involved in it,” she said.
“I’m just having a hard time
thinking how the big frames
will happen.”
KPAC members agreed
with a request from Smith
to honor Town and Country
owner Don Lebold.
“I would like to do a trib-
ute to Don, an avid fi sher-
man,” Smith said. “It would be
cool to be the last fl oat in this,
with Don casting off into the
end of the mural. We’d get the
river in that way. It would be
great for Don.”
A Town and Country fl oat
would be one of the pictures
depicted, with Lebold cast-
ing towards River Road on
the west end of the mural.
KPAC members will be go-
ing through 400 parade im-
ages to select between six and
nine additional images to be
painted on the wall. Sugges-
tions have included the Mc-
Nary High School band, the
pet parade and the old Keizer
Fire District fi re truck.
“We would like to pick a
lot of images, but it will be too
busy,” Christopher said. “If we
could cut it down to like sev-
en images and (the Town and
Country fl oat) be the seventh,
that would work. The plan
is to pick out six images you
think we should include. By
the time we come back, we
will vote on the images.”
Hagen amended that by
asking KPAC members to se-
lect their top nine images.
At the end of the meeting,
Christopher clarifi ed the tim-
ing at this point.
“The wall will be prepared
and primered soon, as well as
lettered,” she said. “We’re still
on the original timeline for
right now.”
local
weather
sudoku
Tuesday, July 7
Keizer Economic Development Commission meeting,
noon at Keizer Civic Center.
Free admission at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 10 a.m.-5
p.m. 900 State Street. willamette.edu/arts.
Community Build Task Force meeting, 6 p.m. in council
chambers at Keizer Civic Center.
Wednesday, July 8
Keizer Planning Commission meeting, 6 p.m. in council
chambers at Keizer Civic Center.
Thursday, July 9
Keizer Traffi c/Bikeways/Pedestrians Safety Committee
meeting, 6 p.m. in council chambers at Keizer Civic Center.
Opening night of Tony-award winning musical Chicago
at Pentacle Theatre. Tickets are $23. Runs through Aug.
1. Visit pentacletheatre.org for show times and ticket
availability.
Saturday, July 11
Third Annual Hazelnut Festival on Main Street in
downtown Donald between 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. The day
begins with a parade and then many vendors for food,
crafts, and games will be held during the day. The event
is free. To fi nd out more visit donaldhazelnutfestival.com.
He’s back! Patrick Lamb in concert at Keizer Rotary
Amphitheater at Keizer Rapids Park, 6 p.m. Free. kraorg.
com.
Tuesday, July 14
Keizer Parks and Recreation Advisory Board meeting, 6
p.m. in council chambers at Keizer Civic Center.
Free admission at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 10 a.m.-5
p.m. 900 State Street. willamette.edu/arts.
Thursday, July 16
Volunteer Coordinating Committee meeting, 6 p.m. in
council chambers at Keizer Civic Center.
Add your event by e-mailing news@keizertimes.com.
looking back
in the KT
5 YEARS AGO
Dormant housing
rehab program
will be revived
A housing rehabilitation
program, which laid dormant
for almost a decade-is being
revitalized.
Enter digits
from 1-9 into
the blank
spaces. Every
row must
contain one
of each digit.
So must every
column, as
must every
3x3 square.
10 YEARS AGO
Hot time in Chemawa
Road; controlled
burn makes way for
new development
Relatives, friends of the late H.P.
“Rusty” Teets and his wife Ha-
zel gathered to watch the fam-
ily’s home burn to the ground.
15 YEARS AGO
Practice burn
triggers new fi re
What started out as a training
exercise for the Keizer Fire
District turned into the real
thing when a hot ember from
a practice fi re ignited a shake
roof on a home two blocks
away.
20 YEARS AGO
Keizer lake site
gets new owner
Longtime Keizer Staats Corp.,
and it’s Staats Lake Develop-
ment, a project calling for 462
housing units around Staats
Lake, has been sold to a Salem
company.
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