Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current, July 23, 2021, Page 11, Image 11

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    JULY 23, 2021, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A11
drawing other people.
The Antique Powerland of today is
vastly larger than these early get-to-
gethers. In 1970, the Powerland park
was established on the Frank Petzel
farm just west of Interstate 5 on
Northeast Brooklake Road. Dedicated
afi cionados and tinkerers established
the 62-acre location to more perma-
nently preserve Oregon’s past, and
share this history.
The fi rst Steam-Up, in 1970, wasn’t
fancy, said Tim Dezotell, whose grand-
father, Percy, was one of the founders. It
featured “nothing more than a few his-
torical steam engines and tractors run
by steam and gas,” Dezotell recalled.
Since
that
small
beginning,
Powerland Heritage Park has expanded
in many directions, all of them con-
sistent with that original 1970 vision
of discovery, history and fun. It is
now comprised of 14 museums, all of
which participate enthusiastically in
Steam-Up.
The museums house vintage cars
Attendees enjoy the mini railroad ride at the 2018 Great Oregon Steam Up.
FILE PHOTO, Keizertimes
loved the vintage equipment. They
wanted to bring the old tractors out
and show them off .”
From there, gatherings
started
SHEBA DAWN
Where and how
do you volunteer?
"Presently—I’ve continued to be
available for deployment and
assistance with Marion County
Emergency Management, Keizer
CERT, on-call chaplaincy and
special event singing."
Why do you volunteer?
"I know each of us has a purpose
and can make a diff erence in our
community — one life at a time,
even when I'm plumb tuckered out,
it always fuels my tank. Sometimes
it’ll even mend my own bootstraps."
What does volunteering
do for you?
The new board of directors for the Keizer Chamber were introduced at a luncheon on Monday,
July 13 at Log House Gardens. Photo by LYNDON ZAITZ of Keizertimes
brainfood
sudoku answers pg A22
sudoku
presented by
See STEAM-UP, page A16
Keizer Chamber welcomes new board
The Keizer Chamber of Commerce
installed its offi cers and directors for
2021-22 on Monday, July 13, at a lunch-
time meeting at Log House Gardens in
Keizer.
Bob Shackelford, a HomeSmart Realty
Group broker, was installed for his sec-
ond stint as president; he also served as
president during the 2019-20 term.
Other offi cers installed were James
Hutches of Country Financial, pres-
ident-elect,
Jonathan
Thompson,
Northwest Dental Arts, treasurer, Jane
Lowery, Willamette Valley Bank, secre-
tary and Dave Walery, past-president.
Board directors installed were: Mike
Adams, Adam’s Rib Smoke House,
Michelle Adame, Copy Cats, April
McVay, HomeSmart Realty Group,
Kalynn Wright, Scott White, Markey
Toomes, The Chicken Shack and Shawn
Lapof, SERVPRO of West Salem.
The event was the fi rst installation
luncheon for new executive director
Corri Falardeau.
of the Week
Enter digits 1-9 into blank spaces. Every row must contain
one of each digit. So must every column, & every 3x3 square.
"For me —it is serving God and a
way to live my daily Thanksgiving to
him by asking God every morning
'let me be someone’s angel today.'
Sometimes I know when that
happens, but most of the time I don’t.
That request sets my course each day.
It allows me to be able to be more
open to hear, to see and perceive
situations that are easily masked by
others — or we ourselves are impaired
to see by our own pressing agenda."
How would you get
others to volunteer
in their community?
maze by Jonathan Graf of Keizer
"Explore your passions. If there is a
void or need that touches your heart,
there's usually something you can
do to help. Ask if there is anything
you can do to assist. Just don't sit on
the thought — act on it. Give without
expectation and thank God you
were blessed to be able do so."