Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current, December 30, 2016, Page PAGE A2, Image 2

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    BAGE A2, KEIZERTIMES, DECEMBER 30, 2016
MAK cleans up Salem home
presented by
DRIVE A LITTLE – SAVE A BUNCH!
3893 COMMERCIAL ST SE • SALEM
MORE INFO AT NORTHERNLIGHTSTHEATREPUB.COM
UFC 207
Nunes vs. Rousey
Saturday,
JANUARY 7,
at 11:00 am
MOVIE:
T ROLLS [ PG ]
Sensory
Sensitive
Show ONLY $4
Special showing for kids and adults with
Autism or other sensory sensitivities.
LIVE STAND UP COMEDY
Lights, Comedy, Laughs!
Saturday, January 14
SATURDAY, DEC 30TH
—–———— 21 & OVER ——————
Live Fights at 5 pm – Tickets $13
9 fi ghts in all on the HUGE screen!
Reserved Seats Available Now Online
RYAN REAVES & DAN GABRIEL will
perform at 7pm and 9pm. Admission is
only $10. Ages 21 & over only. Reserved
seating for this show. Purchase tickets at
box offi ce or at our website.
Today in History
The Gadsden Purchase is signed between Mexico and the
United States. The treaty settled the dispute over the location
of the Mexican border west of El Paso, Texas, and established
the fi nal boundaries of the southern United States.
— December 30, 1853
Food 4 Thought
“Be at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors,
and let every new year fi nd you a better man.”
— Benjamin Franklin
The Month Ahead
Through Saturday, December 31
14th Something Red Art Walk, Exhibit and Sale
presented by Artists in Action. More than 20 businesses
in downtown Salem will participate. artists inaction.
org.
Keep your eyes open for Whale Watch Week at the
Whale Watching Center in Depoe Bay. Don’t pass up
the opportunity to catch a glimpse of a whale.
Through Sunday, January 1
Christmas in the Garden, located at The Oregon Garden,
879 West Main Street. Features ice skating, a traditional
German Christmas Market, and a light display in the
Rediscovery Forest. Ice skating is available daily (Garden
closed Dec. 24 and 25.) Visit www.oregongarden.org/
christmas-schedule-of-activities.
Saturday, December 31
New Year’s Eve Party at McNary Restaurant & Lounge
beginning at 7 p.m. All-request DJ, photo booth, raffl e
prizes, party favors, hors d’oeuvres, Two champagne
toasts (9:00 p.m. ET, 12:00 a.m. PT). Cost is $35 per
person.
Sunday, January 1
New Year’s Day.
Monday, January 2
New Year’s Day observed. Government offi ces and
banks closed.
Tuesday, January 3
Free admission all day at Hallie Ford Museum of Art,
700 State Street. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Keizer City Council meeting, 7 p.m., 930 Chemawa
Road N.E.
Monday, January 9
Keizer City Council and Keizer Parks and Recreation
Advisory board joint work session, 5:45 p.m., 930
Chemawa Road N.E. Council and parks board members
will provide information on parks survey.
Tuesday, January 10
Free admission all day at Hallie Ford Museum of
Art, 700 State Street. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Wednesday, January 11
Claggett Creek Watershed Council general meeting,
5:30 p.m. Keizer Civic Center.
Keizer Planning Commission meeting, 6 p.m., 930
Chemawa Road NE.
Thursday, January 12
Keizer Traffi c Safety, Bikeways and Pedestrian
Committee meeting, 6 p.m., 930 Chemawa Road N.E.
West Keizer Neighborhood Association meeting, 7 p.m.,
930 Chemawa Road N.E.
Saturday, January 14
Millstream Knitting Guild meets at Arrowhead Mobile
Park Community Center, 5422 Portland Road N.E. in
Salem,10 a.m. to noon. New members welcome, $24
membership per year. For more information, visit
millstreamknitting.wordpress.com.
Monday, January 16
Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Government offi ces closed.
Tuesday, January 17
Keizer City Council meeting, 7 p.m., 930 Chemawa
Road N.E.
Friday, January 20
Menopause the Musical at the Elsinore Theatre. Starts
at 7:30 p.m. Doors open at 6:30. Tickets are between
$29 and $55. Buy tickets online.
Monday, January 23
Keizer Festival Advisory Board meeting, 6 p.m. 930
Chemawa Road N.E.
Sunday, January 29
Fellini at the Circus. Hudson Hall Willamette University,
3 p.m.
Add your event by e-mailinc news@keizertimes.com.
Men in Action for Keizer
(MAK), the Keizer Chamber
of Commerce’s volunteer
group of men, jumped into
action earlier this month
when they were called by
representatives of the Oregon
Department of Veteran Affairs
to help clear out the former
home of a veteran’s widow.
A small group of MAK
volunteers, led by Bob
Shackelford, were joined
by three Keizer Police
Department employees at
the manufactured home in
northeast Salem that was the
residence of Carmel Westover
for decades. Westover, in her
70s, had relocated to a foster
home earlier in the year.
The large, three-bedroom
home, was fi lled with the
artifacts of a life that Westover
shared with her husband
Marvin, a Korean War Naval
vet, who had passed away. The
clear-out team fi lled a large
trash container and a recycling
container, donated by Pacifi c
Sanitation Service. Items in
the home were divided into
categories: trash, recyclables,
personal documents and
things that will be sold.
Men in Action for Keizer,
which has a roster of about 50
KEIZERTIMES/Lyndon A. Zaitz
Joseph Haccard (from left), Clay Rushton, Sct. Lance Inman and Bob Shackelford volunteer to
clear out the former home of a Korean War vet widow.
members, was created several
years ago as a counter to the
chamber’s Keizer Network
of Women (KNOW), assists
in every way for those in
need—individuals, businesses,
civic projects and more.
Shackelford, a real estate
broker, leads the group, which
is constantly seeking projects
to which they can lend their
manpower.
Jordan Killian, property
manager for the Department
of Veteran Affairs (ODVA),
contacted Sgt. Lance Inman at
Keizer Police, who connected
him with Shackelford and
MAK.
Overseeing
the
project was Helen Ireland,
conservatorship manager with
ODVA.
Along with Shackelford,
the volunteers from Men in
Action for Keizer at the home
clean-up were Bob Parsons,
Clay Rushton and Joseph
Haggard. Joining Inman from
the police department were
Traci Moore and Jacki Wolfe.
School board talks McNary, McKay growth
By HERB SWETT
Of the Keizertimes
Preparing for further enroll-
ment growth is the object of a
series of Salem-Keizer School
District work sessions, the fi rst
of which was held Monday,
Dec. 19.
The session focused on se-
curity, safety, and expansion.
Participants were mostly dis-
trict administrators and staff-
ers, with Paul Kyllo the only
School Board member pres-
ent; director Chuck Lee had
to cancel plans to attend the
session.
Mary Paulson, district chief
of staff, reviewed the school
bonds from 1992 on. She noted
that the current bond of $242.1
million, which began in 2008,
includes four new schools but
not the career technical school.
3893 COMMERCIAL ST SE
THIS WEEK’S
MOVIE TIMES
Jack Reacher: Never Go Back (PG-13)
Sun 6:30
Sully (PG-13)
Fri 7:00, Sun 6:50
The Magnifi cent Seven (PG-13)
Fri 8:55, Sun 8:55
Allied (R)
Fri 3:30, Sat 2:15, Sun 3:30
The Accountant (R)
Fri 6:00, 8:30, Sun 6:00, 8:30
The Girl on the Train (R)
Sun 8:45
Miss Peregrine’s Home for
Peculiar Children (PG-13)
Fri 12:10, 2:40, Sat 12:00, Sun 2:25
Trolls (PG)
Fri 11:20, 1:10, 3:05, Sat 12:15,
2:35, Sun 2:00, 4:00, 4:55
Storks (PG)
Fri 11:45, 1:35, Sat 12:40,
Sun 1:40
The Secret Life of Pets (PG)
Fri 5:10, Sat 2:50
FOR ALL SHOWTIMES GO TO
NORTHERNLIGHTSTHEATREPUB.COM
Michael Wolfe, chief operat-
ing offi cer, showed a chart of
levy rates for the 2008 bond.
He pointed to a drop in the
rate for 2017 but showed that
there would be small increases
in the next few years.
Noting that projections are
not an exact science, Super-
intendent Christy Perry said,
“We tried to be middle-of-
the-road in setting goals.”
The meeting split into two
groups, one on safety and secu-
rity and the other on possibili-
ties for future buildings.
John Van Dreal, director of
safety and risk management,
discussed safety and security.
The objectives, he said are
based on the multidisciplinary
approach of CEPTED (crime
prevention through environ-
mental design).
CEPTED involves con-
struction of buildings so that
lookinc
back in
the KT
people are as visible as possible.
This means deterring potential
troublemakers by constructing
barriers, placing access points,
and allowing places for cam-
eras.
“Criminals don’t like to
work hard,” he noted.
Van Dreal said plans are to
have all district buildings se-
cured in those ways.
Wolfe, who led the other
group, discussed recommenda-
tions for portable classrooms,
including replacing 20-year
portables with 50-year ones.
He said one of the latter, which
would have two classrooms,
would cost $350,000.
Growth of the McNary
High School attendance area is
something Wolfe said will have
to be addressed. He raised the
possibility of having the atten-
dance area of a new or present
high school include part of
Keizer. He said the same is true
of the McKay High School at-
tendance area.
“If we do nothing,” Wolfe
said, “McKay will have 2,700
students by 2020.”
Succeeding meetings will
be held Jan. 12, 19, and 26.
Paulson said there is a possibil-
ity of a Feb. 9 session.
sudoku
Enter dicits
from 1-9 into
the blank
spaces. Every
row must
contain one
of each dicit.
So must every
column, as
must every
3x3 square.
5 YEARS AGO
B’ball team
adopts family
The McNary High School
varsity
basketball
team
adopted a local family intent
on making their holiday
brighter with some leftover
money from last season’s
fundraising projects.
KEIZERTIMES.COM
Web Poll
Results
10 YEARS AGO
Shop owner brincs
his kincdom to
Keizer
Tony Grove opens Kingdom
of Comics on River Road
N. Opening the store was a
team effort for Grove’s entire
family, they helped prep the
store for its opening.
15 YEARS AGO
BMW crashes into
house, all is forciven
Pastor Jim Banke, who lives
at Chemawa Road and Verda
Lane returned home early to
fi nish up his Sunday morning
sermon when he heard
car brakes screeching and
something hit the side of the
house and stuff fl ew off the
walls. He ran to the front of
the house and found a shiny
BMW on his porch. The
driver of the stolen vehicle
was treated at the hospital and
then booked into jail. The
topic for the pastors sermon
was “forgiveness, repentance
and restoration.”
Does your vehicle
or home have an
emercency kit?
74% – Yes
26% – No
Vote in a new poll every Thursday!
GO TO KEIZERTIMES.COM
20 YEARS AGO
Last-minute hitches
don’t slow council’s
okay of baseball deal
The Keizer City Council
fi nally
approved
leasing
property to a minor league
professional baseball team.
Construction on the 4,400-
seat stadium on NE Radiant
Drive is scheduled to start
right after the fi rst of the year.
Award-Winning
Authentic American BBQ
Now 2 Locations
1210 State Street
503-362-2194
2505 Liberty St NE
503-689-1082