Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current, September 11, 2015, Image 11

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    SEPTEMBER 11, 2015, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A11
Lady Celt Kylie
Gilmour passes the
ball to the front line in
the game with Forest
Grove High School
Thursday, Sept. 3.
KEIZERTIMES/
Eric A. Howald
VOLLEY,
continued from Page A8
player and she did a great job
in the front row.,” Scholl said.
The tournament came
the following day at Moun-
tain View High School. The
Keizer girls beat The Dalles
High School 2-0 (25-18, 25-
14), Bend High School 2-1
(21-25, 25-20, 15-13), and
lost to Marist Catholic High
School 1-2 (25-23, 18-25,
16-18).
Scholl credited Cloyd,
Kaelie Flores, Montano,
Hayes and Gilmour with
tough play throughout the
tourney.
“Marist is an incredibly
strong team. We had started a
new line-up we had not been
able to practice due to inju-
ries, and the girls did a great
job with that. I think we are
a very evenly matched teams,
and it really could have gone
either way. It was a fun match
to play regardless,” Scholl
said.
Having gotten to see some
competition outside the
Celtic program, Scholl said
the work of fi ne-tuning was
just beginning.
“We need to work on our
block. We let a few balls get
around us from reading the
sets/hitter incorrectly, and
serving and passing is always
something you can improve
and work on,” she said.
puzzle answers
Member spotlight
TC Resale and Donation Center
David Wilkerson, the one-time rural preacher, is
known as the founder of an international drug rehabilita-
tion program called Teen Challenge that has one of the
highest success rates anywhere in the world.
Since its fi rst center opened in New York in 1960,
Teen Challenge has grown to nearly 250 centers in 48
states and more than 1,000 centers in 95 countries. In
Puerto Rico the organization is building an AIDS hos-
pital, the fi rst of its kind. The Salem TC Resale and
Donation Center supports this program, and the Keizer
Chamber of Commerce is proud to welcome them as
new members.
The Thrift Stores accomplish three major goals in our
communities: provide job-training to Teen Challenge
students, offer low-cost, sustainable retail options to lo-
cal shoppers and contribute fi nancial support to local
Kevin Van Dyke II
Teen Challenge centers
Your donations and patronage at your local TC Re-
sale and Donation Center helps Teen Challenge restore lives, and makes an impact on your community.
Kevin van Dyke II is an area manager including oversight of the Salem store. He helps develop job
training for the local Teen Challenge Program, supports the community providing low cost and sustain-
able goods and trains students for a vocation after the program. This includes one year living with-in the
program, after-care and counseling for challenged youth and young adults.
Having worked many years in retail, Kevin and his wife and two children found themselves in Salem
to help family. Being a thrift store shopper, Kevin found his new position while doing just this. Now as
manager he can compare the customers today from those in his past. “I have a way now to help improve
the lives of my customers. Some are trendy shoppers, some are thrift shoppers and some are those with
little to no means.
“I feel we can help change a life while not breaking the bank,” said Kevin.
Stop and shop at our local Teen Challenge Thrift Store, fi nd what you need, save money and help sup-
port a program that supports local teens wanting to fi nd their way back to normal.
Salem TC Resale and Donation Center
Kevin van Dyke II
3060 Portland Rd. N.E.
503-585-6278
www.teenchallenge.com
Hours: 9 a.m.-6 p.m., Mon-Sat
SOCCER,
continued from Page A8
Paulo Reyes on an assist
by Jose Daniel Ca-
ballero; Luis Audelo
on an assist by Reyes;
Caballero on an assist
by Bryan Keo; Jorge
Garcia on an assist by
Audelo, and Villalvazo
who headed in the
ball on an assist by
Miguel Bravo from a
corner kick.
Goalkeeper Sebas-
tian Lopez notched
three saves in the out-
ing and Hunter Mill-
er had one.
Whereas last year’s team
found ways to pull out the
stops when necessary, this
year’s team has made it a habit
of keeping the ball for long
possessions and taking some of
the pressure off the backfi eld.
“We had a lot more posses-
sion than the opponent team
in both games, and that helps
us tremendously and means
less danger to our goal,” Ca-
marena said.
penalty kick and Jorge Garcia
on an assist by P. Reyes.
More consistency on de-
fense and offense, as well as
better attacks to take the ball
away from opponents are the
areas Camarena would like
to see the team work on in
the coming weeks leading up
to league play. However, the
stunning success of the new
schemes and new players is,
at least in part, attributable
to living up to the mantle as
returning Greater Valley Con-
ference champs, Camarena
said.
“The experienced players
are taking their role seriously,
the young players are step-
ping quick to this idea, and
the chemistry between our
players in general has been
excellent. They are humble,
working hard and they know
as soon as they are wearing the
royal/white jersey it is time to
take care business. I’m proud
of them,” he said.
“They know as
soon as they
are wearing the
royal/white it is
time to take care
of business”
— Miguel Camarena
McNary’s follow-up con-
test with Lebanon High
School went down as a 4-1
Celtic win with goals scored
by: Luis Martinez on an assist
by Keo; Michael Reyes on an
assist by P. Reyes; Keo on a
Freshman gridders fi ght
through turnovers to win
McNary High School’s freshman football
team opened their 2015 season with a “sloppy
come-from-behind” 14-12 win over the North
Salem Vikings Thursday, Sept. 3, at Littlejohn
Field.
The young Celtics pulled out the win de-
spite 12 fumbles and an interception to go to
1-0 in the Greater Valley Conference.
“We looked sloppy and uncoached and
that’s on me. We will try to clean that
up this week,” said Ted Anagnos,
freshman head coach.
After a scoreless fi rst quar-
ter, McNary opened the
scoring when quarterback
Nigel Harris complet-
ed a 25-yard scoring
pass to Jacob Jack-
son. The point-after
kick was blocked and
Celtics led 6-0. That
score continued to the
end of the half as neither
offense could not overcome
turnovers.
The Celtics opened the third quarter with
a long drive led by some “nice runs” by run-
ning backs Clay Mary and Chanz Revis. After a
turnover stalled the drive at the North 14-yard
line, the Vikings drove the length of the fi eld
and scored on a one-yard run to tie the game at
6-6. The point-after kick was blocked.
The two teams entered the fourth quarter
tied, but it didn’t take long for the Vikings to
break it on a seven-yard run. After failing to
convert the point-after, North led 12-6.
With North in control and running the
clock out, McNary defensive end Ian Koenig
took the ball away from the Viking quar-
terback and ran 35 yards for a
touchdown to tie score at
12-12 with three min-
utes remaining. Jack-
son the ran in the
two-point conver-
sion in what proved
to be the fi nal 14-12
score.
North drove the
ball to the Celtic 15-
yard line with a min-
ute to go aided by two
15-yard penalties, but a
potential game winning
41-yard fi eld goal fell short.
“I’m proud of the way our kids came back
to make a big play and win,” Anagnos said.
Defensive coordinator Nick Phillips, a for-
mer McNary standout safety and baseball play-
er, credited defensive lineman Joshua Schmelt-
zer with 12 tackles and safety Robert Benson
with 11 to lead the Celts’ defense.
Oregon State Credit Union
invites you to get
READY TO
SHRED
Join us for a free shred day event
Saturday, September 12
10 a.m. – 1 p.m.
Safeway parking lot in Keizer
Secure shredding, drive-n-drop
Clean your attic, fi le cabinets, closets, then on
September 12, bring in up to three boxes of
outdated documents for hassle-free,
no-cost shredding through 1 p.m.
or until the shred truck is full.
What to bring
The Keizer Chamber of Commerce has relocated to new
offi ces at 6150 Ulali Dr. N.E. (next to Cost Plus Imports).
Christine Dieker: 971-703-2580
Bob Busch: 503-390-1031
6150 Ulali Dr. N.E. | 503-393-9111 | keizerchamber.com
Ad space donated by the Keizertimes
ss!
G
erle
o Pap
for
Old checks, charge receipts, credit
p
u
n
Sig ments
applications, monthly statements
te
e-sta
(fi nancial and utility), and more.
For more ideas on how to get
READY TO SHRED visit
oregonstatecu.com/articles/shred-day-2.