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HOWALD Of the Keizerimes Marion Polk Food Share (MPFS) is used to getting food donations from the community, they don’t typically arrive by the truckload. However, on Tuesday, March 31, the Keizer Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints made it happen. The effort also involved the Salem and Monmouth Stakes of the church and a surplus of food from the Salt Lake City headquarters of the global faith. “This is a very large community donation,” said Rick Gaupo, executive director of MPFS. “When you’re talking about non-industry partners, you’re usually talking in barrels, not truckloads. And it couldn’t arrive at a better time.” Keizer City Councilor Dan Kohler was one of the spearheads in the effort to bring the food to Marion County. He also serves as public affairs director for the Keizer Stake of the church. “The local congregations (throughout the nation) have donated each month for years towards church- wide welfare needs. The surplus reserves KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald Mike Braegger hauled $40,000 of food from Salt Lake City to Marion County. CRASH, BOOM, BANG! PAGE A2 are from there and donations that went above and beyond tithing,” Kohler said. Food storage is a guiding principle for members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It’s part of making individual families and the church as a whole self-suffi cient. Over the years, food storage and processing – Please see SEMI, Page A7 Submitted Maddie, Summer and Brysen Donily show off some of the masks they’ve been making during the past several weeks. Sewing machines fi re Martial arts studio goes online up to make masks Submitted Keizer ATA Martial Arts is taking its lessons online and offering some free instruction. By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes The owner of a Keizer ATA Martial Arts is changing the way the studio does business during the COVID-19 pandemic, and opening up some classes to anyone who wants to participate online. Carson Clews, owner of the dojo since 2016, said he’s turning what was once an in-person, group activity into an online experience he wants to share with the wider community. “The thing about martial arts is that it’s a progression,” Clews said. “All the students – no matter their age – want to move up to the next belt, but it means they need feedback that helps them get there.” Clews and his fellow instructors began offering classes via Zoom.us, a video conferencing site, shortly after bans on large groups were put in place. Students would tune in and perform skills while Clews watched and provided guidance. “I was worried that it wouldn’t be the same for me or the students, but we started getting really good feedback from our families,” he said. “The students are still developing skill competence even though we had to change the class space.” While students can’t necessarily work with a heavy punching bag or spar with other students, Clews guides them through the same routines. Now, those interested in sampling the studios lessons can participate for FREE & LOCAL Please see STUDIO, Page A7 By ERIC A. HOWALD Donily started making masks Of the Keizertimes for the outreach personnel at Be Summer Donily’s sewing Bold using material she had at machine was already warmed up to home. Sharon Belleque, another respond to the need for face masks during the COVID-19 pandemic. Keizer stitcher, dove into the effort “I do a lot of volunteer sewing. I about two weeks ago and has made 200 masks started with Ran- since she started. dall’s Children’s She watched a Hospital, I made YouTube video pillow cases and that instructed quilts for them, I viewers on the sew for the Amer- process. ican Cancer Soci- “I heard about ety and Be Bold the need and I do Street Ministries,” a lot of sewing, Donily said. so I just decided Donily was one to give it a try,” of dozens, if not Belleque said. hundreds, who Belleque started sharpened their making masks needles to make for her family masks for fi rst members out of responders, family a concern for her members, friends and complete — Summer Donily elderly mother, but then offered strangers. Salem to make them Health was one agency that issued a call for help for others through Keizer-centric and planned to distribute enough Facebook communities. materials for 10,000 masks over a Neither woman had to reach two-day period. The organizers far for fabric, both had plenty of handed them all out within hours reserves at home. Donily told staff on the fi rst day. COVID-19 C VERAGE “ That would be the best outcome for this whole thing, to regain some sort of sense of communal responsibility.” 100 years young PAGE A3 Keizer mom connects Down syndrome community PAGE A4 Please see SEWING, Page A7 We’re providing free access to our coronavirus content — plus other local media’s — as a community service. Subscriptions help support this. Keizertimes .com