PAGE A2, KEIZERTIMES, NOVEMBER 24, 2017 Going green at Rickman Keizer Rotarians helped install a donated greenhouse at Rickman Community Garden Saturday, Nov. 18. Left: Rotarians set the greenhouse on a new foundation. Below: The volun- teers who helped gather for a photo. presented by DRIVE A LITTLE – SAVE A BUNCH! 3893 COMMERCIAL ST SE • SALEM MORE INFO AT NORTHERNLIGHTSTHEATREPUB.COM Ducks vs Beavs SATURDAY, NOV 25 CIVIL WAR GAME 4:00 PM FREE ON THE BIG SCREEN! $5 Reserved Seating Now Available! Reservations can be redeemed for $5 to use toward purchases. (21 & Over Only, NO MINORS) UFC218 - Sat, Dec 2 Holloway v. Edgar FEATHERWEIGHT TITLE FIGHT 9 FIGHTS IN ALL ON THE HUGE SCREEN Live Fights at 5:00 (21 & Over) - Tickets $13 Reserved Seating Available Now Online. Start Shopping Now CHRISTMAS SPECIAL 8 Movie Passes for ONLY $25 We have Gift Cards available in any amount! Today in History A hijacker calling himself D.B. Cooper parachutes from a Northwest Orient Airlines 727 into a raging thunderstorm over Washington State. He had $200,000 in ransom money in his possession. The storm prevented an immediate capture, and most authorities assumed he was killed during his apparently suicidal jump. No trace of Cooper was found during a massive search. In 1980, a stack of nearly $5,880 of the ransom money was found in the sands along the north bank of the Columbia River, fi ve miles from Vancouver, Washington. The fate of Cooper remains a mystery. — November 24, 1971 Food 4 Thought “If you are really thankful, what do you do? You share.” — W. Clement Stone, businessman & philanthropist The Month Ahead Through Saturday, December 2 Pentacle Theatre presents A Christmas Carol, from the classic story by Charles Dickens and adapted by John Mortimer for The Royal Shakespeare Company. Tickets cost $23 for weekday performances and $24 for weekend shows. pentacletheatre.org. Through Sunday, January 21 Salem’s Riverfront Park will be home to the fi rst seasonal ice rink 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. 116 Marion St. NE. Cost is $12 ages 3 to 12 and $15 13 and older for each 90 minute session (includes skate rental). Friday, November 24 – Sunday, November 26 Visit Santa at Salem’s Riverfront Carousel, 101 Front Street. From noon to 6 p.m. Event is free. Photos with Santa are $10. For more information go to www.salemcarousel.org. Tuesday, November 28 Keizer Public Arts Commission story pole design meeting, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Keizer Civic Center, 980 Chemawa Road N.E. Target audience: middle and high school students. Intake day for Keizer Art Association’s December show: Fire and Ice. 3-7 p.m.keizerarts.com. Friday, December 1 – Saturday, December 23 Enlightened Theatrics presents A Charles Dickens Christmas. Previews Nov. 29 and 30. Opening night Dec. 1, closing day Dec. 23. Reserved seating admission is $20-$30, youth under 18 are 10 % off. Preview night only, admission is $10. Oregon Thespian Members/Cardholders are free. Friday, December 1 – Tuesday, December 26 Keizer Miracle of Christmas Lights Display, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Gubser neighborhood. Free admission but cash and food donations for the Marion-Polk Food Share are welcome Saturday, December 2 Countryside Christian Church 11th annual holiday bazaar, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.. More than 30 vendors, bake sale and raffl e. Free. 5775 McLeod Lane NE. Keizer Art Association reception for December show: Fire and Ice. 2-4 p.m. Santa arrives via helicopter at the Volcanoes Stadium. Free photos and a visit with Santa. Noon to 3 p.m. Cherry City Roller Derby Season 9, Bout 6: Panty Raiders vs Rydell Belles, 7 p.m. at The Mad House, 1335 Madison Street NE. The Elsinore Theatre, located at 170 High Street N.E., presents, live on stage, A Charlie Brown Christmas. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Seats are $15-$35. Go to www.elsinoretheatre. com/elsinore-events.html for more information, or to purchase tickets. Call 503-375-3574. City Dance Theatre presents The Snowman’s Dance, noon and 3 p.m. at McNary High School. Tickets are $10 and available at the door or in advance at the studio, 3540 Brooks Avenue, Salem. Sunday, December 3 Sacred Heart – St. Louis Parish BBQ chicken dinner at the church, 485 7th Street, in Gervais. Cost: $1 for adults, $7 for kids 12 and younger. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sweet Shop and Country Store will also be open featuring gifts, crafts, homemade baked goods and candies as well as Christmas wreaths and greens. Christmas Unplugged with John Doan. Musician and storyteller John Doan presents his Christmas Unplugged – Reclaiming the Holiday Spirit program. Advance tickets are $15 for adults and $10 for seniors, children, and students; or $18 at the door. 7 to 9 p.m. at Hudson Hall, 900 State Street in Salem. Monday, December 4 Offi cer retires after 27 years with KPD By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes When Offi cer David Bab- cock joined the Keizer Po- lice Department in 1990, he couldn’t have imagined fi nding a better gig. “I thought it was the great- est thing since sliced bread. At the same time, there were a lot of the older, saltier guys who told me all the time how much the job had changed and it was time for them to get out,” Bab- cock said. Twenty-seven years later, Babcock has been feeling like one of the old salties he didn’t quite understand in his rookie days. “We live in a different world now and it feels like police al- ways have to be on guard,” he said. “The big thing I hope people remember is that when a police offi cer is talking with you, it doesn’t mean we’re thinking badly of you, we’re just doing the job.” The increased scrutiny of police nationwide is still felt keenly in departments like Keizer, even with considerable support from the citizens of the city and within City Hall. While his own attitudes have changed over the years, Bab- cock had nothing but praise for the city and his peers. “Keizer’s been blessed with really, really good people to work with. People ask me about moving into Keizer or working for KPD, I tell them do it. We have good police, great command staff and great citizens,” he said. Babcock holds a unique po- sition in the department, he’s the most senior offi cer on the patrol team and has spent all of his career on the streets. “I like being out in the middle of the fun,” he said. “You know that when payday is on a Thursday and there’s a full moon Monday, you are in for a ride.” He’s worked on motorcycle patrol, as the fi eld training of- fi cer and been part of the area’s accident reconstruction team. While Hollywood portrays things like accident recon- struction as a three-dimen- sional puzzle, Babcock said that’s truly the smallest part of it. “Most of it is math. You’re putting the scene back to- gether on paper before you do anything else,” he said. When he was going through the six-week training course, Babcock and his class- mates fi lled more than a half- dozen legal pads each working through equations. As a fi eld training offi cer, Babcock accompanies new offi cers on the road before they are cleared to patrol on their own. For the most part it means he’s gotten to watch his students go off to bigger and better things, but he’s also gone through phases of being the “hatchet man.” “If an offi cer is struggling, they get sent to me to docu- ment their work. It means some of them don’t get to be cops, but I was able to help two of them turn around and they are some of the best cops out there right now,” Babcock said. With a new offi cer, Bab- cock has always looked for well-rounded individuals: a good personality with a con- trolled temper and capable of going to blows if a situation escalates. “Beyond that everyone has their own approach and way of doing the job,” he said. His role as a training offi cer has extended to the Depart- ment of Public Safety Stan- dards and Training (DPSST) where he trains police acad- emy students in high-speed KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald Offi cer David Babcock is retiring this month after spending his entire career with the KPD patrol unit. driving, evacuation procedures, vehicle stops and, on occasion, gets into role-playing as part of training scenarios. After a brief mandatory vacation, he plans to return to instructing offi cers at DPSST. The calls he remembers most fondly are the ones that reaffi rmed the resilience of the people he’s come in contact with. “The calls in general where children are involved. Some sudoku looking back in the KT 5 YEARS AGO Keeping the kids honest 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. Third year McNary High School principal John Honey started what he calls police dog exhibitions. He partnered with local law enforcement agencies to bring in police dogs to do searches. The idea is to keep drugs away from the school. Students think its cool and parents are excited. 10 YEARS AGO JC’s Pizzaria reopens after July kitchen fi re KEIZERTIMES.COM Web Poll Results Will you do more of your holiday shopping online or in brick-and- mortar stores this year? 45% – A mix of the two 36% – Online 18% – In stores Gubser Elementary Choir performs at the Capitol rotunda. Starts at 12 p.m. Whitaker Middle School band concert. A-band plays at 6 p.m. B-band plays at 7 p.m. of them have been absolutely pulled through the mud and they are still bright-eyed and happy to see you. The same thing happens with abused women,” he said. “Some of them make it through all right and go on to better lives. Those stick with you.” Vote in a new poll every Thursday! GO TO KEIZERTIMES.COM The store was closed after a fi re started in the deep fryer causing an estimated $50,000 in damages. The business is re- opened and has upgrades like new overhead lighting and white painted walls. 15 YEARS AGO Gun mishap lands boy, 13, in hospital A 13-year-old Keizer boy had a close call when a friend, 14, shot him in the arm with a revolver. Keizer police said the two boys skipped school and were at the older boy’s home when the shooting occurred. The 14-year-old was arrested on one count of third degree assault. 20 YEARS AGO Tax bills to mingle with holiday mail Property tax bills will go in the mail and many Keizer home owners can expect to pay less than last year due to statewide property tax limitations.