SEPTEMBER 27, 2019, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE B3 Keizertimes marks 40th anniversary A look back on Keizer’s history of local news On Thursday, Oct. 3, the Keizertimes will be celebrating its 40th anniversary. While the newspaper in- dustry has been roiled by changes large and small in recent decades, we wanted to celebrate our award-winning, locally-owned paper’s suc- cesses with the community by publishing this giant-sized edition of the paper and look- ing back on the history of news in the Keizer commu- nity. While the Keizertimes pub- lished its fi rst edition on Oct. 3, 1979, the history of news- papers in Keizer goes back even further, to the 1940s and the Keizer News. Clarence Zaitz, father and father-in-law of the current Keizertimes owners Les Zaitz and Scotta Callister as well as dad to current publisher Lyn- don Zaitz, arrived in Salem to work for the Capital Journal in 1963. In 1964, he purchased the Keizer News, a weekly community paper in what was then a mostly agricultural area of Salem. “It was an eye-popping experience,” Clarence said. “That was back in the days of printing with hot lead before offset printing. Fortunately, print,” Clarence said. Unfortunately, the busi- I also acquired an itinerant, drunken printer. He stayed ness of running the paper with me long enough to took him away from his fi rst love, reporting, but he and teach me the basics.” He switched to offset Joanne enlisted a small team printing as soon as he learned of “neighborhood reporters” to feed them about it and the stories for could make each edition. the switch. Joanne sold Offset doesn’t ads and helped involve the manage the dangers of business end molten metals. throughout Clarence their owner- and his wife, ship. Joanne, who “I took already had fi ve kids — Les Zaitz care of all the offi ce stuff af- when they Keizertimes owner ter taking the took over the kids to school, Keizer News, fed each copy of each edi- but we always tried to have a tion of the paper through the babysitter on the nights we printing press by hand and went to press,” she said. They also offered print then through a folding ma- chine. The offi ce was located services to others in the com- on the southeast corner of munity and printed some of River Road North and Che- the fi rst student ID cards for mawa Road Northeast where McNary High School when it opened in 1965. Shari’s is now. The most memorable news “We’d be there till mid- night or one o’clock in the event was a winter fl ood in morning to get enough pa- 1964. Keizer News was the pers to take to the post offi ce. fi rst publication to have print- Some nights, the kids would ed photos of the devastation all be asleep on the news- on the streets, beating all the “We had to be a successful business to be a successful paper.” local major newspapers at the time. “The fl ooding happened overnight. I raced around to get photos in the morning, brought them back to devel- op them, made paste-ups and we had a fl ood edition on the street by noon,” he said. That was one week the decisions came easy, but that wasn’t always the case. “Sometimes on the day that we’re supposed to put the paper together, I still didn’t know what I was gonna put on the front page,” he said. Living in the moments like those were as exhilarating as they were exhausting, but de- spite victories like the fl ood edition, running the business became a grind. “There was a constant strain to make enough mon- ey to survive between getting advertisers that were reluctant and inheriting equipment we were totally unfamiliar with,” he said. He and Joanne shuttered the paper in 1969 and Clar- ence took a job running the Oregon capital bureau for United Press International. While Clarence was run- ning the paper, his enthusiasm for journalism was infecting his sons, Les and Lyndon. Les was acting as a report- er for the Keizer News by the age of 13. The offi ce was just across the street from the all-volunteer Keizer Fire Dis- trict and Clarence sent him out to fi nd out what hap- pened every time the crew got back from a call. “I would trudge across the fi eld and they’d give me all the details. It was cool to have the inside information that young, and share it with other peo- ple,” Les said. Lyndon was a student at Whiteaker Middle School one day when a plane crashed in a nearby fi eld. His fi rst stop was the main offi ce to call his dad and report what happened. QUOTE from LYNDON Les went on to a career with The Oregonian, but he and his wife, Scotta another break-out Oregonian reporter, were looking to own a paper of their own. They scouted papers throughout Oregon and Washington, but Les thought the Keizertimes, which was started by John Ettinger in 1979, had the most potential. “John was not a newspaper guy, but he had done a good job of building a publication on a shoestring budget. Keiz- er was growing and I though the newspaper could serve the community better,” Les said. Les and Scotta purchased the paper from Ettinger in 1987. While Les had prior expe- rience in the community, he found running a business to be just as challenging as his father. “We had to be a success- ful business to be a successful paper, but we also wanted to upgrade the quality of the journalism and give the paper a more professional look,” he said. While his dad’s legacy in the community didn’t play a huge role in Les’s return to Keizer, their paths diverged again when Les ended up cov- ering another major fl ood in the area in 1996. “We had to evacuate our offi ce. It was a huge issue for Keizer and we leaned into it hard and worked around the clock. There was great fear at the time that the water would keep rising and the dyke would breach,” Les said. The waters fi nally ebbed saving the community from more damage. Improvements to the water management up- stream have spared the city continued fl ooding problems. Whether it is the big com- munity-wide issues or just the small, everyday victories that make Keizer the place it is, Les said the presence of a newspa- per is still as important as ever. “In this day and age, the Keizertimes continues to suc- ceed and that is an important legacy. Local news is not an accessory, it’s essential to life and is part of the success of a community. Having good journalism that reports hon- estly about a community is a point of pride,” he said. See our Keizer listings on page C2 As lifelong residents of Salem-Keizer, we know this market and are here to help. Welcome to The Chill Zone Come Witness the Largest Beer Selection in all of Keizer Keizer Liquor Store 971.273.0456 keizerliquor.com TEXT “keizerliquor” to 85100 for special tasting event updates BRIAN & APRIL McVAY L I C E N S E D O R E G O N R E A L E S TAT E B R O K E R S 503.510.6827 CALL OR TEXT mcvaythree@gmail.com