SEPTEMBER 21, 2018, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A7
LAPOF,
continued from Page A1
DRIVE A LITTLE – SAVE A BUNCH!
3893 COMMERCIAL ST SE • SALEM
MORE INFO AT NORTHERNLIGHTSTHEATREPUB.COM
The Magic of
Greg Moreland
SATURDAY, SEPT 29
SATURDAY, SEPT 22
Incredibles 2
(PG)
11:00 AM
TICKETS ARE JUST $4
SPECIAL SHOWING FOR KIDS
AND ADULTS WITH AUTISM OR
OTHER SENSORY SENSITIVITIES.
Family Show at 6:30 pm
21 & Over at 8:15 pm
$7 for guest under 18, $10 for 18 & Over
OPEN CAPTION SHOWING
Jurassic World:
Fallen Kindom (PG-13)
TUES, OCT 2
6PM, TICKETS ARE $4/EACH.
Special showing with captioning shown
on screen with the movie.
Today in History
Without warning, a powerful Category 3 hurricane slams into
Long Island and southern New England devastating coastal
cities and towns. About 700 people were killed. Nearly 9,000
homes and buildings were destroyed and almost 3,000 ships
were sunk or wrecked. Total damage, in today’s dollars, was
$18 billion.
— September 21, 1938
Food 4 Thought
“The more relaxed you are, the better you are at everything:
the better you are with your loved ones, the better you
are with your enemies, the better you are at your job, the
better you are with yourself. ”
— Bill Murray, actor, born Sept. 21, 1950
The Month Ahead
Saturday, September 22
First day of Autumn
Saturday Night Dance & Potluck. Featuring music by
Crossfi re. Admission is $5. 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at Keizer/Salem
Area Seniors, 930 Plymouth Drive NE.
Salem Hospital’s Fall-Prevention Awareness Fair. Resources
to help seniors prevent falls and assist in other mobility-
related health issues. 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. at Building D of Salem
Hospital’s Community Health Education Center.
Saturday, September 22 – Sunday, September 23
28th Annual Grape Stomp Championship and Celebration.
Music, games, wine tasting, grape-stomping, and more. Costs
$15 to attend and $10-per-team to stomp. Willamette Valley
Vineyards, 8800 Enchanted Way SE in Turner. 11 a.m. to 6
p.m.
Sunday, September 23
Rotary Multi-Sport Riverfest. The event includes Olympic and
Spring distance triathlon and duathlon as well as 5K, 10K,
half marathon and kids’ room. Visit rotaryriverfestsalem.
enmotive.com.
Tuesday, September 25
Keizer Public Arts Commission meeting, 6 p.m., Keizer Civic
Center, 930 Chemawa Road N.E.
Wednesday, September 26
Keizer Chamber of Commerce and City of Keizer invite
all citizens, community organizations, government, and
businesses to take part in a community conversation and learn
more about the waste management industry and how our
community is affected by the recent recycling changes. 6 to
7:30 p.m. at the Keizer Civic Center, 930 Chemawa Road N.E.
Thursday, September 27
Keizer Points of Interest Committee meeting, 6 p.m., Keizer
Civic Center, 930 Chemawa Road N.E.
Presentation and Community Conversation about Income
Inequality in Oregon at the Loucks Auditorium at the Salem
Public Library, 585 Liberty Street N.E. in Salem. Juan Carlos
Ordonez from the Oregon Center for Public Policy (OCPP),
and a representative from Family Forward will speak on the
topic and host an audience Q&A. Free. 6 p.m.
Friday, September 28
Opening night of Pentacle Theatre’s Dracula. A suspenseful
and thrilling adaption of the Brian Stoker classic by playwright
Steven Dietz. Show starts at 7:30 p.m., at Pentacle Theatre, 324
52nd Ave NW in Salem. Tickets available at pentacletheatre.
org
Saturday, September 29
Wedding & Event Show. For the second consecutive year,
Willamette Heritage Center hosts vendors, gift bags, and a
fashion show to help for soon-to-be-wed couples have fun
planning their big day. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at at the WHC, 1313
Mill Street SE in Salem. For more information, contact Liz
McIntire at lizm@willametteheritage.org
The Cherry City Roller Derby kicks off their tenth season by
pitting the 8 Wheel Assassins and the Boneyard Brawlers
against the Air Raid Roller Girls and Heartless Heathens from
Portland. Goes down at the Salem Armory, 2310 17th St NE.
In terms of housing, Lapof
champions
single-family
residences, but doesn't want
to turn a blind eye to the
needs of multifamily living,
such as apartments.
“The people who are
renting invest just as much in
the community as others,” he
said.
As the city continues
moving toward infi ll, Lapof
said it's reached the point
of desperation and the city
needs to expand the Urban
Growth Boundary that hems
in urban sprawl. With that
as an underpinning, Lapof
added that government's role
in fostering growth should
be minimal.
“The city's role in
fostering growth should be to
analyze any sort of regulation
involved and the value of it.
If local government were to
help, it would be by stepping
back. The economy and
moral capitalism can provide
more
opportunities
for
success,” he said.
All of which isn't to say
that he's completely hands-
off. When asked whether he
supported Keizer's recent
attempts to act as landlord
on a few properties it owns
around the city, he wasn't
totally opposed.
“Land
ownership
should be minimal, but
it is benefi cial. If it's yet
undeveloped, and it's the city
making money outside of my
tax dollar, that's good,” Lapof
said.
On the topic of the
police and parks service fees
implemented by the city
council in 2017, Lapof said
he supported both, but not
the way the council chose to
enact them.
“It wasn't put to a vote,
it should have been put on
the ballot this November,”
he said. “The things that
our local government does
should be reduced to pure
necessities. I know there is
a case for the necessity [of
those services], but those
arguments are in lieu of a
vote. ”
BURGLARS: One suspect
is still being sought
(Continued from Page A1)
“they have no evidence that
is 100% on these trumped up
charges,” and threatening lo-
cal media organizations with
lawsuits.
On Sept. 2, about 8 a.m.,
the Keizer Police Depart-
ment offi cers responded to a
report of a business burglary
that occurred sometime
overnight at the Love Love
Teriyaki, 6385 Ulali Drive
Northeast. The suspects
forced entry into the business
by breaking a window after
the business closed at 11 p.m.
the previous night. A safe was
taken from the business.
On Sept. 8, at 7 a.m., the
Keizer police offi cers re-
sponded to a report of a busi-
ness burglary at the Good
Times Grill, 122 Chemawa
Road North. Entry was
made by breaking a window
after the business closed at
2:30 a.m. the same morn-
ing. The suspects used a pry
tool and attempted to force
entry into an automatic
teller machine (ATM) and a
safe inside the business caus-
ing approximately $1,000 in
damage. The suspect's actions
were captured on video sur-
veillance system.
On Sept. 13, police
searched Berlin's residence
on Eugene Court North-
east in connection with the
burglary at Good Times Grill
and found evidence warrant-
ing probable cause for an ar-
rest. Berlin was arrested on
two charges of burglary and
conspiracy to commit bur-
glary, and one charge each of
unlawful possession of bur-
glar tools, tampering with
physical evidence, and viola-
tion of a release agreement.
He was lodged at the Marion
County Correctional Facili-
ty. His bail was set at $90,000,
but he was released due to
overcrowding at the jail on
Monday, Sept. 17.
In addition to the prior
business burglaries, Berlin
has also been arrested for the
burglary of a tavern in Canby.
The Keizer Police Depart-
ment is continuing to investi-
gate the crimes and has prob-
able cause to believe 41-year
old John Albert Herriges is a
suspect in both of the most
recent burglaries. Herriges
whereabouts were unknown
at press time. Herriges was
arrested in December 2017
in connection with burglar-
izing coffee shops in Keizer
and Salem.
Anyone with information
about the burglaries at Love
Love Teriyaki or Good Times
Grill are asked to call Keizer
Police Department Det. Tim
Lathrop at 503-390-3713,
ext. 3481. Reference Keizer
Police Department incidents
#17-4318 and #17-440
Regarding the waning
presence of volunteers in a
city all but dependent on
them, Lapof doesn't see a
formal role for city council
intervention but prefers a
lead-by-example approach
to the problems.
“I believe more in direct
effort spent in time and
energy. If I were a chosen
member of the council,
my efforts would show my
commitment and people, I
hope, would follow me,” he
said.
He prides himself in
following in the footsteps
of his father, a longtime
volunteer fi refi ghter with the
Keizer Fire District, and Dave
Walery, a longtime volunteer
with the Keizer Chamber
of Commerce. Lapof is in
his third year as an elected
board member of the Keizer
Chamber and is a founding
LAWSUIT,
continued from Page A1
directed city staff to draft a let-
ter to the Oregon Legislature
asking the state's governing
bodies to “address the danger-
ous and unacceptable situa-
tion with regard to discharge
of fi rearms in close proximity
to urban areas.”
Mayor Cathy Clark asked
whether the letter should ad-
dress rural as well as urban ar-
eas, but City Manager Chris
Eppley and Johnson cau-
tioned against expanding the
parameters of the request.
“Going the legislative route
is going to be a tough row to
hoe. Crafting something that
walks the appropriate line is
going to be diffi cult and, the
broader you cast the net, the
more people will join in the
opposition,” Eppley said.
Councilor Marlene Par-
sons asked whether hunting
along the river should be an
additional consideration, but
waterways are mostly con-
trolled by the state.
“The state has recourse if
a hunter is the bad actor in
this,” Clark said.
Gary Blake, a member of
the West Keizer Neighbor-
hood Association, thanked the
council for its actions, saying,
“This shooting issue is some-
thing that needs to be ad-
dressed and I really appreciate
your action tonight.”
death notice
Submit an obituary through our website at keizertimes.com
or send an email to: editor@keizertimes.com
John Paul Reich (Salem)
Sept. 22, 1944 – Sept. 10 2018
traffi c court
NO INSURANCE
Juan Antonio Campos-Bartow,
$642; Savannah Nichole
Guthrie, $642; Abel Vasquez
Almanza, $317; Codey Leo
Toquero, $265; Luis Eduardo
Diaz, $245; Jonathan Abel
Thompson, $265; Jennifer
Ann Barlow, $235.
NO PROOF OF INSURANCE
Levi Edward Kovalski, $600;
Jahaziel Isaac Esparza, $75.
DRIVING WHILE
SUSPENDED
Mika-Noel Donaldson Bradley,
$1,258;
Cody
Cameron
Eldridge, $1,258; Olimpia
Perez
Covarrubias, $440;
Codey Leo Toquero, $440;
Maleek Marquez Collier, $440;
Jonathan Abel Thompson,
$492.
Thompson, $115; Alfred
Bruno Schissler, $145.
PROHIBITED PARKING
USE OF MOBILE DEVICE
Jennifer Nicole D’amico,
$642; Erica Elvia Davis, $642;
Adriana Isabel Hernandez,
$642; Luis Eduardo Diaz,
$235;
Jesse
Davidjames
Baldwin, $235; Carrie Ann
Gaboury, $235.
Luis P. Gonzalez, $92; Brianna
R. Bermudez-Shields, $92;
Kyle T. Read, $92.
FAILURE TO OBEY
TRAFFIC CONTROL
DEVICE
Pamela Hart Moffet, $245.
SPEEDING
OTHER
Fernando Calvillo, $145;
Ezra James McQuiddy, $145;
Olimpia Perez Covarrubias,
$165; Mandy Dillon Dunagan,
$165; Macy Lee Martinez,
$165;
Maleek
Marquez
Collier, $165; Jonathan Abel
Keith Alan Wright, careless
driving, $265; Heather Marie
Anderson, no seatbelt, $192;
Levi Edward Kovalski, failure
to install ignition interlock
device, $1,242; Victor Cid
Villegas, improper display of
validating stickers, $115.
sudoku
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.
looking
back in
the KT
5 YEARS AGO
Lady Celts compete
well, wins still elusive
The Celts varsity volleyball
played hard, but lost the match
against Lincoln High School,
narrowly losing in each set.
10 YEARS AGO
Celts squeak by
Redmond
Saturday Night Dance & Potluck. Featuring music by Lee
Nicholas and Diane. Admission is $5. 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at
Keizer/Salem Area Seniors, 930 Plymouth Drive NE.
Monday, October 1
Keizer City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Keizer Civic Center, 930
Chemawa Road NE.
board member of the Keizer
Fire Foundation.
He said he wanted more
time to research and consider
his stance of a request by
some Keizer residents for the
city to adopt an inclusivity
resolution, but that the city
“should be welcoming to all
American citizens.”
Lapof is the youngest of
the four candidates running
in contested city council
races this year, but he said his
Keizer upbringing, decision
to remain in the city inform
his politics.
“I'm approaching this as a
development of relationships
and leading with information
about how things could best
be done. The best decision
can be made with all the
information, but the best
information can be hard to
get,” he said.
maze
A tough Central Valley Confer-
ence varsity boys soccer season
began with a hard-fought 3-2
win against Redmond.
15 YEARS AGO
Saturday, October 6
Oregon’s Bounty. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Oregon State Capitol,
900 Court St NE in Salem.
Celtics defense stops
the Saxons
The McNary Celts entered the
week 2-0 following a 14-3 win
against South Salem.
Sunday, October 7
Male Ensemble Northwest Concert. This group of singers
and conductors kick off St. Paul’s 2018-19 Evensong Concert
Series. Starts at 4 p.m. at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 1444
Liberty Street SE in Salem.
20 YEARS AGO
Dog on duty
Offi cer Jay Prall is putting in
extra hours to get his new
partner, a German Shepherd
named Lando, ready for duty.
Monday, October 8
Columbus Day
Add your event by e-mailing news@keizertimes.com.
Confi dential
News Tip?
Correction:
A story in the Sept. 14 edition of the Keizertimes titled
Diamond anniversary at Jackson’s Auto Body mistakenly referred to
the business as Jackson’s Auto Body Shop. The proper name is
Jackson’s Body Shop Inc.
Maze by Jonathan Graf of Keizer
If it's happening in Keizer,
We want to know about it.
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