SINCE 1979 • VOLUME 40, NO. 5 SECTION A NOV EMBER 2, 2018 $1.00 NOW PLAYING Turn back time Nov. 4 McNary alum’s journey to alien moon leading him back to Keizer special screening of the movie. By ERIC A. HOWALD He will introduce the fi lm and Of the Keizertimes When Zeek Earl was still take part in a Q-&-A moder- a student at McNary High ated by Heimerdinger after the School he told his mom he fi lm. Check the Salem Cine- wanted to make his fi rst feature ma website, www.salemcine- fi lm by the time he was 30. Earl ma.com, for details and tickets turned 30 while on the set of when they become available. Prospect is the Prospect, his fi rst story of Cee feature-length (played by So- fi lm with co- phie Thatcher) writer and and her father co-director (Damon played Chris Caldwell, by Jay Duplass) which will begin who travel to an screening at Sa- alien moon aim- lem Cinema later ing to strike it this month. rich harvesting “I wanted to elusive gems. The be a fi lm direc- hunt turns trou- tor since I was blesome when 14 years old,” the pair encoun- Earl said during Submitted ter others on the a phone conver- Zeek Earl on the set of Prospect in the same path and sation. He said Hoh Rainforest. Cee is forced to taking fi lm stud- contend with ies classes under the guidance of McNary High the forest’s other ruthless in- School’s Jason Heimerdinger habitants, and her own fa- inspired him from a young age. ther’s greed-addled judgment, Earl was in L.A. this week to while carving her own path. promote the fi lm’s Nov. 2 open- Pedro Pascal, of Game of Thrones fame, plays one of the fi lms ing to a wider audience. Earl will be coming home to Keizer on Nov. 16 for a Please see PROPECT, Page A8 Celts grab 1st MVC Championship PAGE B1 Students make quick work of park clean-up KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald Christian McKern assists another student in dumping a load of wood chips while Brian Hernandez and Marcos Tornez wait to smooth out a ramp leading to the rear of a container. Students removed wood chips from a play structure in Country Glen Park so city employees could replace them. By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes A group of about 60 Keiz- er students rose to a challenge that would cause many adults to cower Saturday, Oct. 27. The group, representing, McNary High School and Claggett Creek and White- aker middle schools, removed about 50 yards of wood chips from a play structure, repaint- ed a picnic shelter and general- ly cleaned up Country Glen Park in north Keizer. “I love how we bring the community together in our schools and get a bunch of work done to make parks better and more pre- sentable,” said McNary’s Mi- randa Coleman. Coleman and Whiteaker students Kyler Carmichael and Tristyn Campbell were making repeat appearances at community service efforts or- ganized through the schools. “We have a lot of garbage laying around and it’s good to get out and pick it up,” said Kyler. “I just like doing it and it’s a good workout,” added Tris- tyn. Some of the chips removed from the play structure were spread around the trees in the park for weed control, the rest were hauled away. City staff planned to replace the old wood chips with relative- ly new ones taken out of the Keizer Rapids Big Toy last year. Robert Johnson, Keizer’s parks supervisor, was grateful for the assistance, but he had larger goals in mind as well. “This is a park where we’ve had some graffi ti and vandal- ism and, if we get these kids involved in the com- munity, then when they see some- one doing something wrong they can speak up and talk about how they helped make it a better place,” Johnson said. “There’s about 60 kids here right now and that’s a lot of ownership happening.” Aside from that, the stu- dents allowed Johnson to di- rect parks employees’ efforts elsewhere. “There’s still a lot of work Please see PARK, Page A4 Halloween around town PAGE A7 Wolverines beat Panthers PAGE B4