NOVEMBER 8, 2019, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A5
EXPECT,
continued from Page A1
DRIVE A LITTLE – SAVE A BUNCH!
3893 COMMERCIAL ST SE • SALEM
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Lights,
Comedy,
Laughs!
LIVE STAND-UP COMEDY!
SATURDAY, NOV 9
CARL WOLFSON & CHASE MAYERS
7 pm & 9 pm (21 & Over)
Admission only $10.
Reserved Seating for this show.
OPEN CAPTION SHOWING
Overcomer (PG)
Sunday, Nov 10
6PM, TICKETS $4/EACH.
Special showing with captioning
shown on screen.
Saturday,
NOV 23,
at 11:00 am
MOVIE:
A BOMINABLE [ PG ]
Sensory
Sensitive
Show ONLY $4
Special showing for kids and adults with
Autism or other sensory sensitivities.
Today in History
For the fi rst time in 40 years, the Republican Party wins
control of both the U.S. House of Representatives and
the Senate in midterm congressional elections. Led by
Representative Newt Gingrich of Georgia, the empowered
GOP united under the “Contract with America,” a 10-point
legislative plan to reduce federal taxes, balance the budget,
and dismantle social welfare programs established during
six decades of mostly Democratic rule in Congress.
— November 8, 1994
Food 4 Thought
“We’re all human and we all goof. Do things that may be
wrong, but do something.”
— Newt Gingrich, speaker of the US House, 1995-99
The Weeks Ahead
Through Saturday, November 9
McNary Fine Arts presents She Kills Monsters at the Ken
Collins Theatre. Performances at 7 p.m. plus a 2 p.m.
matinee on Saturday. Tickets are $5.
Friday, November 8
Richard Marx performs at the Historic Elsinore Theatre,
7:30. Tickets range from $29 to $47. elsinoretheatre.com.
Saturday, November 9 – Sunday, November 10
Made in America: Willamette Master Chorus Concert, 3
p.m., Hudson Hall at Willamette University. Tickets are
$20-$30. willamettemasterchorus.org.
Saturday, November 9
Model train swap meet, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Rickreall Grange,
280 Main Street (Highway 99). Admission: $5 (under 12
free). 503-857-2108.
Keizer Elks Lodge #2472 will host a Veterans Day Tribute
at 11 a.m. Refreshments will follow. The event is open to
the public. 4250 Cherry Ave NE.
Veteran’s Day Pow Wow, Chemawa Indian School, 3700
Chemawa Rd. NE. Grand entries at 1 and 6 p.m.
An Evening with Katie Harman and Friends, 7:30 p.m.,
the Historic Elsinore Theatre. Oregon’s Miss America
2002 performs jazz, opera and musical theater favorites.
elsinoretheatre.com.
Dance & Potluck at the Keizer/Salem Area Seniors Center
featuring music by The Jefferson Parks Band from 7 p.m.
- 10 p.m. Admission is $5.
Willamette Valley Genealogical Society meets from 12 to
1 p.m. in the VFW Building at 630 Hood St NE, Salem.
Kerry Wymetalek will speak about “Soldiers, Sailors and
Pioneers.” For more information, call (503) 363-0880.
Sunday, November 10
The Keizer Elks Lodge hosts its 6th Annual Veterans
Appreciation Dinner, 2 to 5 p.m. This is a complimentary
dinner for Veterans and their guests to say, “Thank you for
your service.” Open to the public. 4250 Cherry Ave NE.
Monday, November 11 (Veterans Day)
Government offi ces, schools, banks closed for the holiday.
Veterans Day celebration, 3 p.m., World War II Memorial
on state capitol grounds.
Tuesday, November 12
Free admission all day at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 700
State Street. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday, November 16
Dance & potluck at the Keizer/Salem Area Seniors center
at 7 p.m. - 10 p.m. featuring music by Charles and The
Angels. Admission is $5.
Tuesday, November 19
Free admission all day at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 700
State Street. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday, November 23
Dance and potluck at the Keizer/Salem Area Seniors
center at 7 p.m. - 10 p.m. featuring music by The Country
Gents. Admission is $5.
Sunday, November 24
Annual BBQ chicken dinner at Sacred Heart-St. Louis
Parish in Gervais. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. 485 7th Street. Adults
$12, children 12 and under $7. Dine in or take out.
Tuesday, November 26
Free admission all day at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 700
State Street. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday, November 30
Dance and potluck at 7 p.m. - 10 p.m. featuring music by
Lee Nicholas and Diane. Admission is $5
Sunday, December 1
Holiday Open House at Deepwood Estates, 1116 Mission
Street S.E., Salem, from 1 - 4 p.m. The event is free.
Tuesday, December 3
Free admission all day at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 700
State Street. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday, December 6 – Saturday, December 7
Faith Lutheran Church is hosting a free toy swap in
partnership with Marion County Environmental Services.
On Friday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m, the public can donate their
gently used, clean toys. Participants then come back on
Saturday from 9 to 11 a.m. to shop for free toys.
Add your event by e-mailing reporter@keizertimes.com
a round of double-doubles for
the traffi c planning team.
Keizertimes talked with local
leaders about their plans for the
opening and city managers in
Medford and Grants Pass about
their experiences with an In-
N-Out opening in their towns.
“We
have
been
in
discussions with In-N-Out for
months now regarding traffi c
upon their opening. We are
going to allow them to take the
lead on traffi c control because
they have a lot of experience
surrounding the topic,” said
Chris Eppley, Keizer city
manager.
Eppley said the city will
have resources standing by
to help, but “realistically, our
resources will be overwhelmed
immediately.”
In the previous Oregon
openings, private security
personnel were hired to
help direct traffi c in the area
around the locations. While
there are numerous areas in
Keizer Station where In-N-
Out traffi c could stack and pull
cars off streets, it remains to be
ROMAN,
continued from Page A1
“The biggest thing I learned
was how to sit down at a table
with someone who has a con-
cern. That is a huge strength to
have,” Roman said.
As far as policy, Roman said
she is a supporter of the Timber
Unity movement that opposed
cap and trade carbon reduction
plans in Oregon, she remains
a strong advocate of veteran
support services and opposes
protections for undocumented
immigrants. Roman’s children
are half-Mexican.
“I’m one of the chief peti-
tioners to repeal the driver’s
licenses for illegal aliens,” she
said.
She said the immigration
challenges at the border are a
crises for Democrats and Re-
publicans, but there are solu-
tions to alleviate the problems.
“At a bare minimum, each
state should send one Constitu-
tional judge to the border to al-
leviate the backlog. Send them
down there to help with the
asylum judges and start getting
people processed,” Roman said.
“There are people that need to
looking
back in
the KT
5 YEARS AGO
Award winning at
425 degrees
seen how many other shopping
center tenants will be willing
to part with those spaces in the
run-up to Christmas.
Eppley said Keizer Station
has some capacity to absorb
burger-lovers, but that it is
possible traffi c will spill over
to Interstate 5. The highway is
the jurisdiction of the Oregon
Department of Transportation
(ODOT). ODOT isn’t making
any special plans for the
opening, said Lou Torres, an
ODOT spokesperson.
“The In-N-Out location is
a good one-half mile from the
I-5 Chemawa Interchange. It is
hard to believe that folks will
want to wait in a queue that
long for a hamburger,” Torres
said. “However, ODOT is not
planning to do anything special
regarding the opening.”
Cherriots also plans to
monitor traffi c as the restaurant
opens. If logjams occur, there
might be impacts to bus traffi c
passing through the Keizer
Station transit center.
“If traffi c starts to impede
Cherriots routes, we will
detour buses around Keizer
Station,” said Allan Pollack,
Cherriots general manger.
On weekdays, detours may
come here, there are families
escaping persecution from car-
tels.”
Those looking for more in-
formation about Roman and
her campaign, can visit ange-
laromanforcongress.com, but
don’t be surprised if searching
for her name yields reports of a
2017 arrest for supplying a felon
with a fi rearm. Roman pleaded
guilty to a misdemeanor charge
and served four days in jail.
Roman was participating in
a 3-percenter protest and said
she gave her Ruger pistol to
another member of the group,
Matthew Heagy. Heagy is a vet-
eran and also a convicted felon
who cannot possess fi rearms.
“A fi ght broke out. He
jumped in to try to retrieve this
old ladies’ fl ag. Someone yelled
gun. He didn't even pull it out,”
Roman said. “I told the judge, I
would do it all over again.”
Her stand on the arrest aligns
with what she most wanted
potential supporters to know
about her.
“At the end of the day, I be-
lieve in the Constitution and I
believe in everybody's freedom
as long as they're not pushing
for violence against others. I'm
here to protect their rights to
feel how they want – just keep
your hands to yourself,” she said.
affect Route 11 - Lancaster/
Verda, Route 12 - Hayesville
Drive, and Route 14 - Windsor
Island Road. On Saturdays,
Route 11 - Lancaster/Verda
and Route 19 - Broadway/
River Road may be affected.
Riders should visit Cherriots.
org/alerts for the latest updates
on any detours or stop closures
in Keizer Station.
“Realistically, our
resources will be
overwhelmed
immediately.”
— Chris Eppley
Keizer city manager
Brian Sjothun, current
Medford city manager, was
overseeing the city’s parks at
the time In-N-Out opened
and said the company brings in
its A-team for the fi rst couple
of weeks.
“They were a really
valuable resource to have as
far as training their employees
but also for handling general
operations and traffi c issues,”
Sjothun said. “I think the car
stacking in the parking lot of
the mall was brilliant.”
For Medford, the opening of
an In-N-Out paid off in other
ways as well. Because the chain
prides itself on the freshness of
its ingredients, it opened up a
small distribution center in the
city to serve other locations in
the region.
In Grants Pass, City
Manager Aaron Cubic said
plans developed by In-N-
Out that included some
additional help from the city’s
public safety department went
off without a hitch. There
also wasn’t a traffi c impact
that lasted weeks as it did in
Medford.
“During this same time, we
had a number of new businesses
and building retrofi ts in this
same area and do not have any
data that separates out In-N-
Out impact,” Cubic said. “We
have certainly seen a rise in our
tourism stats, though I cannot
contribute them to In-N-Out
at this time.”
Back in Medford, Sjothun
said most locals waited a few
weeks before venturing into
the joint, but admitted “the
experience is kind of fun.”
KEIZERTIMES/Matt Rawlings
A fi re decimated the home of the property manager in McNary
Oaks Mobile Villa on the afternoon of Oct. 30.
FIRE,
continued from Page A1
morning hours of Nov. 1.
In a letter to residents, the
president of Investment Prop-
erty Group (IPG), Amber
Monte, said that new equip-
ment was brought in for the
well on the site. IPG also
brought in portable toilets and
some bottled water for all res-
idents. IPG ordered pizzas for
park residents for lunch on
Oct. 31 and planned to make
a dinner meal available at the
clubhouse on the property.
Delivery for residents physi-
cally unable to reach the club-
house was also made available.
The Oregon State Fire
Marshal’s offi ce is investigat-
ing the cause of the fi re. Keiz-
ertimes requested copies of a
report on the incident but it
was not available at press time.
KAI: Child remains in critical condition
(Continued from Page A1)
cooperated with police during
the investigation. No citations
were issued.
Those wishing to contrib-
D aw n S c h i e r m a n wa s
recognized as the Papa
Murphy’s Regional Manager of
the Year. The had to be lured to
the award ceremony by Chris
Copp, who said: “I told her it
would be really good for her
to be there and that the vice
president for operations wanted
to have her on his team.”
ute to the GoFundMe cam-
paign can visit www.gofund-
me.com/f/kaiorn-ellertson.
There is currently a goal of
$10,000 and almost $2,700
maze
had been raised by press time.
In an update on the Go-
FundMe page, the Ellertson
family said, “Thank you to
everyone for your prayers and
support. Every day is still a
fi ght, however, there are some
signs of hope peaking out.
Kai is surrounded by family
but most of all faith and love!
Please continue those prayers
... as we still need the strength.”
10 YEARS AGO
In book, son
chronicles father’s
journey in wartime
3893 COMMERCIAL ST SE
THIS WEEK’S
MOVIE TIMES
In more care-free times,
Walter Jamieson and son, Jay, a
physician in Keizer, had traveled
overseas to commemorate 50
years since the horrifi c fi ghting
in the Pacifi c theater of World
War II had come to an end.
Ad Astra (PG-13)
Fri 6:25, Sat 2:25, 5:55, Sun 6:30
Art of Racing in the Rain (PG)
Fri 4:40, Sat 11:50, Sun 2:45
15 YEARS AGO
Dora & The Lost City of Gold (PG)
Sat 12:25 Sun 1:45
Keizer crooner –
Karaoke singer takes
his talent to national
contests – and wins!
Maze by Jonathan Graf of Keizer
Hustlers (R) Fri 6:45, Sun 6:40
Michael Kelly, 40, started going
public with his talent in high
school, singing in the choir and
in garage bands. In the mid-
1980s, his mother urged him
to compete, which he has been
successfully doing ever since.
20 YEARS AGO
Newcomer wins vote
for Keizer council seat
J.L. Wilson, 25, was chosen
from among eight other can-
didates to be Keizer’s newest
city councilor, fi lling the va-
cancy left by Garry Whalen’s
resignation. Wilson, director of
legislation for House Speaker
Lynn Snodgrass, will be the
youngest councilor in Keizer’s
short history.
Good Boys (R)
Fri 8:55, Sat 4:45, Sun 8:45
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.
Lion King (PG)
Fri 1:50, 4:05,
Sat 12:10, 2:25, 4:40
Sun 11:50, 2:05, 4:20
Once Upon a Time in
Hollywood (R)
Fri 8:05, Sat 8:15, Sun 8:15
Overcomer (PG)
Fri 1:55, Sun 12:30, 3:45, 6:00
Peanut Butter Falcon (PG-13)
Fri 6:00, Sat 3:55, 6:35, Sun 4:50
Rambo: Last Blood (R)
Fri 8:45, Sat 8:30, Sun 8:50
Toy Story 4 (G) Fri 2:00, 3:55,
Sat 1:55, Sun 11:50
FOR ALL SHOWTIMES GO TO
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