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1979 – 2019
ak
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VOLUME 40, NO. 52
se
ou
’s H
lor
y
Ta
r
tu
en
SECTION A
ek
cre le
n
b
l o ra
tol esto
n
r
a
um ut is
H
b
:
ial ive
fic ulat
m
cu
OCTOBER 4, 2019
at school just south of Keizer
es
rch
ea
n s
ee
t
r
ize
Ke
l
ro
nt
co
for
r
he
of
e
us
Ho
r’s
ylo
a
T
at
life
KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald
TOP: Jenna Odeay as Meaoud. CENTER: Jolinda Mathis as her Pennywise-inspired take on a clown. RIGHT: Trevor Robertson is
prepared to scare inside his Nightmare Factory room.
$1.00
By ERIC A. HOWALD
Of the Keizertimes
A list of memorable re-
actions by visitors to Salem’s
Nightmare Factory as recalled
by the actors involved:
• Frightening one man so
badly he started swinging a
handbag at the actor who
cornered him. (Trevor Rob-
ertson)
• Scaring a woman so badly
she fell on her backside be-
fore running past the actor
and into multiple walls before
escaping
to
another room.
(Izzy Zachary)
• Literally
just staring at a
woman in line
and
causing
her to black
out. (Kivo Le-
Ferve)
• Making
people
pee
their
pants.
(Multiple ac-
tors and, yes, it
happens.)
“ W h a t ’s
even crazier is
that they will announce it to
everyone when they do it,”
Gridders
drop to 0-4
PAGE A12
Conserve now
to save later
PAGE A2
Please see FACTORY, Page A3
Keizer mayor honored by peers with major award
The prestigious James C.
Richards Award was presented
Friday evening to Keizer.
Mayor Cathy Clark during
the League of Oregon Cities’
94th annual conference in
Bend.
The award is given to
an elected city offi cial who
serves the citizens of Oregon
through an exceptional per-
sonal investment in intergov-
ernmental affairs.
Clark was cited for being
an unwavering champion for
the Keizer community, a lead-
er in the Mid-Willamette Val-
ley and among mayors across
the state.
During her years on the
Keizer City Council, Clark
led efforts to coordinate local
library services, fund miles of
streetscape and transportation
improvements and helped de-
velop a new civic and event
center.
In 2017, she was pivotal
in creating stable funding for
parks and police services and
has taken a keen interest in
directing public resources to
homeless programs that have
made measurable impacts.
Regionally, Clark been a
steady presence in conversa-
tions regarding transportation
“Real leadership
isn’t easy, it often
necessitates
dealing with
very diffi cult,
challenging issues,
issues that others
prefer to ignore —
not Mayor Clark.”
— John McArdle,
Mayor of Independence
Please see AWARD, Page A6
Submitted
Keizer Mayor Cathy Clark (second from left) accepts the James
C. Richards Award at a ceremony in Bend.
Where to turn depends on need, but help is available
By CASEY CHAFFIN
For the Keizertimes
Juanita Aniceto was starting
to get worried.
As a youth support specialist
with the Salem Drop, a youth
community center-slash-sup-
port network, she invests a lot
of time, energy and care into
the young people she works
with.
When a boy she had been
working with for a while told
her no one cared about him,
and he might as well not even
be here, she was concerned.
But she was able to check in
on him when he came to the
Drop.
Then, one day, he didn’t
show up. He also didn’t re-
spond to Aniceto’s texts
checking in. She waited, an-
other day went by. Still no re-
sponse. As time passed on that
second day, she became more
distraught. Did something
happen? Is he still alive?
Just as she received per-
mission from her boss to go
check on him in person, the
boy walked through the door.
Aniceta sunk into a nearby
chair, frazzled but relieved.
“I couldn't stop crying,”
Aniceto said. “Because for a
minute, I thought he had died
by suicide.”
Aniceto said sometimes it’s
First
responders
get financial
booster
PAGE A4
A sportsman
and a
spokesperson
PAGE A12
TEENS AND
MENT
E A LT H
MENTAL A L H HEALTH
diffi cult to convince the kids
she works with they’re more
than a job. But this moment
convinced the boy.
“He started crying,” she
said. “And he said, ‘Now,
you’ve given me a reason to
live.’”
The teen told her that
when he thinks of dying by
suicide, he remembers how
the idea of him dying brought
Aniceto to tears. He tells her,
“I know there's somebody that
cares about me, so because of
that reason I can't give up on
myself.”
“That's the number one
thing,” Aniceto said. “[Young
people] need somebody to
believe in them,” she said.
And that goes for all kids,
not just those who are cur-
rently depressed or suicidal,
she said.
“All youth are at risk,” said
Please see HELP, Page A5