Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/270994
Wa shin gto n 30/15 New York 26/22 Miami 83/71 Atlanta 50/37 Detroit 20/15 Houston 44/34 Chicago 24/19 Minneapolis 18/6 Kansas City 36/25 El Paso 69/49 Denver 58/32 Billings 45/32 Los Angeles 69/55 San Francisco 63/51 Seattle 53/44 AIR QUALITY FORECAST What it means: 0-50: Good; 51-100: Moderate; 101-150: Unhealthy for sensitive people; 151+: Unhealthy for all. Source: Airnow.gov City Today's air quality City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W CALIFORNIA CITIES National and world forecast Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Summary National Extremes World Extremes North and South America Asia, Australia Europe Africa Carson City Hawthorne Reno Herlong Lovelock Sacramento Yuba City Napa Ukiah Chico Corning Lakeview Alturas Susanville Redding Red Bluff Laytonville Fort Bragg Point Arena Eureka Redway Mount Shasta Yreka Crescent City Ashland Shown is today's weather. Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows. Shown are today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. ALMANAC Precipitation Temperatures ALLERGY REPORT Pollen levels Source: National Allergy Bureau TODAY'S UV INDEX (The higher the number, the faster skin damage will occur.) 11+: Extreme 8-10: Very high 6-7: High 3-5: Moderate 0-2: Low SUN SETTINGS, MOON PHASES Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Hours of sunlight River Levels Sacramento River Flood 7 a.m. 24-hr Stage yest. chg. Lake Levels Elevation Yesterday Storage (acre-feet) Percent Capacity Q: A: WEDNESDAY 65° 52° THURSDAY 66° 43° Mostly cloudy , sho we rs around Br ee zy w ith periods of rain FRIDAY 71° 41° Sun and some clouds SATURDAY 71° 48° Pe riods of clouds and sunshine TODAY 68° 46° A shower in the morning; mostly cloudy, warmer. Partly cloudy tonight. High ....................................................................... 56° Low ........................................................................ 53° Normal high ......................................................... 63° Normal low ........................................................... 43° Record high ............................................. 77° in 1937 Record low .............................................. 27° in 1966 Humidity noon today ........................................ 55% 24 hours through 2 p.m. yesterday ................. 0.14" Month to date ................................................... 0.30" Normal month to date ..................................... 0.44" Season to date .................................................. 8.63" Normal season to date .................................. 18.50" Red Bluff through 2 p.m. yesterday Chico .................................................................. Good Napa ................................................................... Good Red Bluff .............................................. Not available Redding ............................................... Not available Yuba City ........................................................... Good Allergy, dust and dander today: Beneficial Grass .................. Absent Mold ......................... Low Trees ...................... High Weeds ................ Absent 3 Highest at 11 a.m. Today 6:38 a.m. 6:04 p.m. 8:29 a.m. 10:19 p.m. Wednesday 6:37 a.m. 6:05 p.m. 9:07 a.m. 11:21 p.m. 11 hr., 26 min. Mar 8 First Mar 16 Full Last Mar 23 New Mar 30 at Bend Bridge 27 1.70 -0.90 at Hamilton City 148 129.97 -1.49 at Ord Ferry 114 97.92 -1.49 at Red Bluff Diversion Dam 253 238.40 -0.60 at Tehama Bridge 213 201.00 -1.10 Lake Shasta...................944.86 1,793,654 39.4% Lake Trinity .................2275.20 1,190,259 45.0% Weather Trivia ™ Is northern Canada colder than the North Pole? Yes. Today Wednesday Anaheim 71/54/pc 75/54/pc Bakersfield 72/50/pc 74/52/pc Chula Vista 69/54/pc 72/54/pc Crescent City 58/49/c 56/50/r Death Valley 81/62/s 85/63/pc Eureka 60/49/sh 59/50/r Fremont 65/50/c 67/55/pc Fresno 70/52/pc 74/55/pc Glendale 70/53/pc 75/53/s Huntington Beach 65/55/pc 68/55/pc Irvine 67/55/pc 70/55/pc Lake Tahoe 51/26/sh 56/38/pc Long Beach 68/54/pc 71/55/pc Los Angeles 69/55/pc 74/56/pc Mammoth Mountain 53/29/pc 59/32/pc Modesto 68/48/c 73/52/pc Monterey 62/49/c 64/51/pc Moreno Valley 70/49/pc 76/50/s Napa 64/48/sh 64/51/pc Needles 80/58/pc 83/56/s Oakland 62/52/sh 64/54/pc Oxnard 66/50/pc 66/50/pc Redding 67/49/c 64/50/r Riverside 70/44/pc 77/43/s Sacramento 67/46/sh 69/52/pc San Bernardino 71/50/pc 76/51/s San Diego 66/57/pc 67/58/pc San Francisco 63/51/sh 63/54/pc San Jose 66/50/c 68/54/pc San Luis Obispo 69/50/pc 70/49/pc Santa Ana 68/55/pc 72/55/pc Santa Barbara 68/48/pc 68/48/s Santa Clarita 72/50/pc 76/50/s Stockton 68/47/c 72/52/pc Ventura 68/50/pc 69/50/pc Yosemite Valley 62/40/pc 66/43/pc Today Wednesday Albuquerque 62/40/pc 63/38/s Atlanta 50/37/pc 60/44/pc Baltimore 30/12/pc 35/27/pc Boston 25/19/pc 29/22/pc Buffalo 18/11/sn 27/20/sn Chicago 24/19/sn 30/19/sn Cincinnati 32/18/pc 43/30/pc Dallas 48/35/pc 57/38/c Denver 58/32/c 58/35/s Detroit 20/15/sn 27/21/sn El Paso 69/49/pc 72/45/s Fargo 14/-7/c 17/7/sn Honolulu 78/64/pc 79/68/pc Houston 44/34/r 58/43/pc Indianapolis 29/21/pc 40/29/c Kansas City 36/25/pc 37/23/sn Las Vegas 72/56/s 74/56/s Louisville 34/22/s 44/34/pc Miami 83/71/pc 83/70/pc Minneapolis 18/6/c 22/14/c New Orleans 47/41/r 60/48/c New York City 26/22/pc 37/30/pc Oklahoma City 45/31/pc 45/28/sh A very cold day is in store from the Midwest to the New England and mid-Atlantic coasts today. Arctic high pressure will settle over the Northwest. Spotty light snow will fall over the Great Lakes region. Meanwhile, clouds and rain are forecast to gather over the South, along the western part of the Gulf Coast, as rain lingers over the southern Atlantic coast. Dry weather that returned to much of the Southwest early this past week will continue with at least partial sunshine. More low- elevation rain and mountain snow are forecast for the Northwest. High ........................ 84° in Vero Beach, FL Low ....................... -44° in Embarrass, MN High ..................... 108° in Gedaref, Sudan Low .............. -53° in Verkhoyansk, Russia Bogota 64/49/t 63/48/sh Buenos Aires 75/64/r 79/59/s Caracas 87/73/s 87/73/s Ensenada 69/54/pc 75/57/pc Mexico City 74/48/t 76/48/pc Montreal 12/3/sn 18/3/c Rio de Janeiro 88/74/pc 88/75/pc Tijuana 68/53/pc 74/54/pc Toronto 18/9/sn 21/11/sf Vancouver 42/37/r 44/42/r Orlando 80/62/pc 79/62/pc Philadelphia 28/16/pc 37/28/pc Phoenix 79/59/pc 82/59/s Pittsburgh 28/14/pc 40/26/pc Portland, ME 22/9/pc 25/12/pc Portland, OR 58/46/r 57/47/r St. Louis 34/21/pc 42/29/c Salt Lake City 54/37/sh 59/42/pc Seattle 53/44/r 54/44/r Tucson 74/51/pc 77/54/s Washington, DC 30/15/s 38/31/pc Cairo 75/59/s 83/61/s Casablanca 59/45/s 64/47/s Johannesburg 70/59/t 69/58/t Kinshasa 92/73/t 88/72/t Lagos 89/77/t 90/78/pc Nairobi 86/58/s 86/58/pc Tripoli 66/47/pc 63/45/s Baghdad 79/59/sh 83/62/s Beijing 47/25/s 48/25/s Hong Kong 73/64/c 70/64/r Jerusalem 64/50/s 70/54/s Kabul 47/29/pc 52/31/s Manila 90/74/pc 90/74/s Melbourne 90/67/s 74/55/t New Delhi 77/54/pc 77/54/t Seoul 52/27/pc 43/25/s Singapore 91/73/s 90/75/pc Sydney 81/64/pc 84/66/s Tehran 62/50/pc 65/51/s Tokyo 50/45/pc 57/39/r Amsterdam 48/38/pc 52/38/pc Athens 63/50/r 62/47/pc Belgrade 55/44/pc 49/45/sh Berlin 52/35/c 52/35/pc Budapest 54/39/pc 53/43/sh Dublin 47/38/pc 49/45/pc London 48/36/pc 54/39/pc Madrid 54/39/pc 57/36/pc Moscow 36/25/pc 35/27/c Paris 48/38/c 52/35/pc Rome 56/41/r 59/42/pc Stockholm 43/34/pc 39/32/c Vienna 53/42/sh 56/44/c Zurich 44/32/sh 46/32/c 60/35 61/40 60/35 61/36 61/31 67/46 68/47 64/48 67/45 68/48 68/48 52/34 56/31 58/36 67/49 68/46 64/42 59/50 58/51 60/49 65/46 58/37 63/37 58/49 64/36 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014 your newspaper. navigating A QUICK GUIDE TO Today marks your first day with the new Daily News: New look, new format, and new features designed to fit the needs of your busy lifestyle. Throughout the paper, you'll find more quick bites of news you can use to improve your life, more references to what's happening online, and more calls for you to engage with us — online, in print and in person. MORE ORGANIZATION All sections are color- coded, so you can easily recognize references to a particular kind of content throughout the paper. MORE LOCAL INFORMATION Spend more time with our expanded weather page. The graphics have been redesigned to provide a more clearer outlook for the region and the nation. In addition to the local forecast, precipitation and water levels remain, we're also providing an almanac, river levels, allergy report and weather trivia. MORE ENGAGEMENT From cover to cover, you'll notice more chances to engage with the journalists covering your community. On staff-written stories, you'll find not only the writer's e-mail address, but also his or her Twitter account, making it easier to keep up with the news that matters most to you. You'll find references to blogs, forums, chats and other online "extras" to supplement your print- reading experience. MORE UTILITY Page One has been reimagined as a guide to start your day. From a clear, concise display of the best stories inside today's paper, to essential information indexed at the bottom. Each page in the paper — particularly the front page — features more entry points and forms of storytelling. MORE MODERN The paper features cleaner, more modern typography throughout, including custom type for the paper's new logo. MORE INNOVATION We're telling stories in different ways. Look for more traditional long- form journalism as well as quick-hit bites of information you have come to expect from us. By Almendra Carpizo Staff Writer CHiCO It took Jacky only seconds to get a hit on the 4 ounces of co- caine hidden in the locker. She f iercely ba rke d a nd scratched to alert her handler that she had located the item and was ready for her reward. Jacky was one of the many K-9s who participated in a multi-agency training dedicated to the four- legged officers and their handlers on Monday at the Genetic Resource and Conservation Center off Cra- mer Lane in south Chico. Law enforcement officers from agencies including the Mendocino, Shasta-Trinity and Klamath Na- tional Forests, as well as the Siski- you and Lake County sheriff's of- fices, spent the morning and after- noon running through a series of exercises meant to keep their K-9s as well-trained as possible. Mendocino National Forest Offi- cer Chris Magallon has been part- nered with his dog Ice since he be- came a handler in 2010. During one of the first exer- cises of the day, an item search in an open field, Ice dashed off after Magallon gave him a command. In less than 1 minutes, Ice was hold- ing the item. "Good boy, bud," Magallon said to his 5-year-old German shep- herd. The monthly training is rotated throughout the north state and makes a stop in Chico about four times a year. Typically during the training, K-9s will be put through six to seven drills. K-9 uNiTs police dogs, handlers, come to train in chico Associated Press ReDDiNG Sheriff's deputies in far Northern California on Sunday successfully inciner- ated a mobile home whose resident had amassed more than 60 pounds of highly vol- atile explosive material days after evacuating dozens of people living nearby. The chemicals, gunpow- der, primers for firearms cartridges and other mate- rials found in the house in a sparsely populated area of Redding earlier this month made it too unstable for deputies to even walk on the property without risking a blast, Shasta County sher- iff's Lt. Dave Kent said. Sheriff 's officials con- sulted with water and air quality officials before start- ing the incineration with a remote-ignited flame at midday Sunday, and the fire went off without incident, he said. What's left of the resi- dence is still smoldering, so now we are in a cool-off period before officials can render that property safe for other residents to come back,'' Kent said. No other homes outside of that property caught fire, so that was very good for us and for the residents.'' Authorities had been waiting for the weather to clear before incinerat- ing the home, and Sunday's clear skies provided good conditions. It could be up to 24 hours before authorities sHAsTA sHeRiffs home filled with explosives destroyed NEWS » chicoer.com Wednesday, february 19, 2014 MORE AT FACEBOOK.COM/CHICOER AND TWITTER.COM/CHICOER W1 Special to DAily News Los Molinos High¹s Chantal Narez earned the prestigious $20,000 Coca-Cola Scholars Scholarship. ( Courtesy photo ) Los Molinos High School se- nior Chantal Narez has received the 2014 Coca-Cola Scholars Scholarship. The scholarship is in the amount of $20,000, and Narez is one of only 250 high school stu- dents from across the United States to earn this rare honor. Actually, she is one in 24 stu- dents from California and the only student north of Roseville to be recognized. In December, Chantal was no- tified that she was a regional re- cipient for the Coca-Cola Schol- ars Scholarship. On Feb. 7, Chan- tal was interviewed, via Skype, to become a national recipient. She was then notified on Feb. 13 that she was in fact a National re- cipient and would have a chance to participate in the Scholars Weekend. Scholars Weekend is April 3-6 in Atlanta, Ga., where she will be honored at the Coca- Cola Scholars Banquet the eve- ning of April 3rd at the Georgia World Congress Center. In addition to the banquet , the weekend will be filled with Coca- Cola Scholars Leadership Insti- tute seminars, tours of local land- marks in Atlanta, seminars by alumni and staff, and a commu- nity service project. The objective of the commu- nity service project is to leave KiCKeR Cocal-Cola awards $20,000 to Narez Los Molinos High senior is one of only 250 students in US to earn accolade CREDIT HERE Chatter goes here in this space Officium quodis repuda voloruptatis excersp eliquam am quat. Special to DAily News Los Molinos High¹s Chantal Narez earned the prestigious $20,000 Coca-Cola Scholars Scholarship. ( Courtesy photo ) Los Molinos High School se- nior Chantal Narez has received the 2014 Coca-Cola Scholars Scholarship. The scholarship is in the amount of $20,000, and Narez is one of only 250 high school students from across the United States to earn this rare honor. Actually, she is one in 24 stu- dents from California and the only student north of Roseville to be recognized. In December, Chantal was notified that she was a regional recipient for the Coca-Cola Scholars Scholarship. On Feb. 7, Chantal was interviewed, via Skype, to become a national re- cipient. She was then notified on Feb. 13 that she was in fact a Na- tional recipient and would have a chance to participate in the Scholars Weekend. Scholars Weekend is April 3-6 in Atlanta, Ga., where she will be honored at the Coca-Cola Scholars Ban- quet the evening of April 3rd at the Georgia World Congress Center. In addition to the banq uet, the weekend will be filled with Coca-Cola Scholars Leadership Institute seminars, tours of lo- cal landmarks in Atlanta, sem- inars by alumni and staff, and a community service project. The objective of the commu- nity service project is to leave a mark on Atlanta as a member of the Coca-Cola family, as thou- sands of other Coca-Cola Schol- ars have done before her. This service activity is voluntary and KiCKeR Boosters breathe life into program with pennants CAPTION Caption text goes here and then continues to the next line and there should be 4 lines of cutline text to go here and then finish here. TEAM ##, TEAM ## Up next: Team names, with time and place of game and television station when applicable. THE SCORE Special to DAily News Los Molinos High¹s Chantal Na- rez earned the prestigious $20,000 Coca-Cola Scholars Scholarship. ( Courtesy photo ) Los Molinos High School senior Chantal Narez has received the 2014 Coca-Cola Scholars Scholar- ship. The scholarship is in the amount of $20,000, and Narez is one of only 250 high school students from across the United States to earn this rare honor. Actually, she is one in 24 stu- dents from California and the only student north of Roseville to be recognized. In December, Chantal was no- tified that she was a regional re- cipient for the Coca-Cola Schol- ars Scholarship. On Feb. 7, Chan- tal was interviewed, via Skype, to become a national recipient. She was then notified on Feb. 13 that she was in fact a National re- cipient and would have a chance to participate in the Scholars Week- end. Scholars Weekend is April 3-6 in Atlanta, Ga., where she will be honored at the Coca-Cola Schol- ars Banquet the evening of April 3rd at the Georgia World Congress Center. In addition to the ba nquet, the weekend will be filled with Coca- Cola Scholars Leadership Institute seminars, tours of local landmarks in Atlanta, seminars by alumni and staff, and a community ser- vice project. The objective of the community service project is to leave a mark on Atlanta as a member of the Coca- Cola family, as thousands of other Coca-Cola Scholars have done be- fore her. This service activity is vol- untary and Narez is excited to be a part of it. In addition to this, she will have the opportunity to receive an additional $10,000 scholarship. The Coca-Cola Scholars Foun- dation was announced in 1986, ac- cording to its website. "As we celebrate the Founda- tion's 25th Class this year, we ac- knowledge that is has been our good fortune to have invested more than $50 million in 5,250 students who represent the most promis- ing qualities of American youth NORTHeRN seCTiON Cif DiVisiON ii seMifiNALs Gridley stuns No. 1 seed corning The Oakland Athletics' Josh Reddick made two big catches robbing the San Francisco Giants of home runs in the second and fourth innings for a 10-5 victory over the Giants on Wednesday. MLB Oakland A's beat S.F. Giants in spring opener FULL STORY ON PAGE B3 Kyrie Irving scores 14 of his 31 points in the fourth quarter as the Cleveland Cavaliers beat Oklahoma City 114-104, the Thunder's third straight loss since coming out of the All- Star break. NBA ROuNDuP Irving helps Cavaliers win upset over Thunder FULL STORY ON PAGE B3 Tiger Woods and other top players like Adam Scott, Phil Mickelson and Rory McIlroy compete this weekend in the Honda Classic at Palm Beach Gardens in Florida, leading up to the Masters. PGA GOLf Tiger Woods gears up for Masters this week FULL STORY ON PAGE B2 The Los Angeles Angels have signed budding superstar Mike Trout to a one-year, $1 million contract for his production over his first two seasons in the major leagues, which may lead to a long-term deal. BAseBALL Angels star outfielder Mike Trout gets raise FULL STORY ON PAGE B2 CAPTION Caption text goes here and then continues to the next line and there should be 4 lines of cutline text to go here and then finish SPORTS » redbluffdailynews.com friday, february 7, 2014 MORE AT FACEBOOK.COM/RBDAILYNEWS AND TWITTER.COM/REDBLUFFNEWS B1 Read about and interact with the community on NorCal blogs, featuring dozens of bloggers writing on a variety of topics. VISIT WWW.NORCALBLOGS.COM ENGAGE YOUR COMMUNITY 7 58551 69001 9 A NEWSP By Ryan Olson rolson@chicoer.com @NorCalJustice on Twitter ROseViLLe The process of hold- ing a new trial for a former Chico State University football player previously convicted of killing a Chico doctor and his wife in 1987, began Wednesday in Placer County Superior Court. Steven Edward Crittenden, 46, appeared in the Santucci Justice Center Courthouse for a hearing to set a new trial date, according to Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey. The defendant is charged in con- nection with the deaths of Dr. Wil- liam Chiappella, then 68, and his wife, Katherine, then 67. They were found dead in their Chico residence Jan. 27, 1987, after being stabbed and beaten to death about four days prior. COuRTs retrial process begins for '87 murders Special to the Daily News sACRAMeNTO Otto Godinez- Sales, 22, of San Jose; Francisco Martinez-Cruz, 34, of Orland; and Soledad Garcia- Venegas, 31, of Or- land, pleaded guilty Wednesday to conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement, United States Attorney Benjamin Wag- ner announced in a release. According to court documents, Godinez-Sales maintained a num- ber of warehouses in the San Jose area where he sold CDs and DVDs containing counterfeit music and movies. The music and movies on the CDs and DVDs were protected un- der United States copyright laws. In many instances, the copy- righted movies being trafficked by the defendants were still in theatri- cal release and not yet available for purchase in the home DVD market. Martinez-Cruz and Garcia-Ven- egas were two of Godinez-Sales's customers at his San Jose ware- houses, and they would transport COuRTs 3 plead guilty in movie pirating A grant of more than $1.1 million from the Department of Homeland Security will help staff the facility, which is expected to open in July By Rich Green RGreenDN@redbluffdailynews.com @RGreen on Twitter For the first time in a decade the El Camino Fire Station will once again be fully staffed. The Tehama County Board of Supervisors accepted a federal grant Tuesday that will fund a five- person staff for two years. The station had operated solely through volunteers since 2004 when budget cuts forced the elim- ination of paid staff. Since then Tehama County Fire has had just two paid stations and 16 volunteer stations. The grant from the Depart- ment of Homeland Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency will provide 86 percent of the roughly $1.3 million needed to staff the facility. Tehama Fire will pick up the re- maining $183,313. Fire Chief Jeff Schori said he anticipates the sta- PuBLiC seRViCes El Camino Fire Station is back The El Camino Fire Station will again be staffed with paid firefighters due to a grant from the Department of Homeland Security. CEDIT HERE Index ............... ## Index ............... ## Index ............... ## Index ............... ## Index ............... ## Index ............... ## Index ............... ## Index ............... ## iNDeX Iceporium me imorarei sendien duconsulutes furei seris pos- sultodi culintentem i. REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM MORe ONLiNe What do you think of the redesign? Our weekly entertainment calendar lays out the schedule for concerts, plays, nightclubs and more. PAGE C3 eNTeRTAiNMeNT Looking for something to do this weekend? North State Voices columnist Rodney Cooper remembers a high school game that some would like to forget. PAGE A7 OPiNiON Upperclassmen taught a lesson in humility Incinerating an explosive- laden mobile home in Redding cost county taxpayers more than $170,000. PAGE A8 BuRNiNG DOWN THe HOuse Explosive home costs a bundle to burn down Volume %vol%, issue » redbluffdailynews.com friday, february 7, 2014 50 CENTS FACEBOOK.COM/RBDAILYNEWS TWITTER.COM/REDBLUFFNEWS We b b onu s Vi deos of lo c al b an ds. Red bl uff dai ly ne ws. com ON sTAGe Dancers ready to showcase their skills entertainment C1 WResTLiNG State berths are on line at Masters sports B1 fOReCAsT High: ## Low: ## » ## Washington 29/24 New York 23/15 Miami 78/66 Atlanta 54/38 Detroit 17/15 Houston 70/60 Chicago 23/15 Minneapolis 14/-8 Kansas City 42/16 El Paso 75/56 Denver 54/22 Billings 10/-14 Los Angeles 63/53 San Francisco 60/48 Seattle 55/38 AIR QUALITY FORECAST What it means: 0-50: Good; 51-100: Moderate; 101-150: Unhealthy for sensitive people; 151+: Unhealthy for all. Source: Airnow.gov City Today's air quality City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W CALIFORNIA CITIES National and world forecast Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Summary National Extremes World Extremes North and South America Asia, Australia Europe Africa Carson City Hawthorne Reno Herlong Lovelock Sacramento Yuba City Napa Ukiah Chico Corning Lakeview Alturas Susanville Redding Red Bluff Laytonville Fort Bragg Point Arena Eureka Redway Mount Shasta Yreka Crescent City Ashland Shown is today's weather. Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows. Shown are today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. ALMANAC Precipitation Temperatures ALLERGY REPORT Pollen levels Source: National Allergy Bureau TODAY'S UV INDEX (The higher the number, the faster skin damage will occur.) 11+: Extreme 8-10: Very high 6-7: High 3-5: Moderate 0-2: Low SUN SETTINGS, MOON PHASES Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Hours of sunlight River Levels Sacramento River Flood 7 a.m. 24-hr Stage yest. chg. Lake Levels Elevation Yesterday Storage (acre-feet) Percent Capacity Q: A: SATURDAY 59° 41° SUNDAY 62° 45° Mostly cloudy Cloudy with showers around MONDAY 61° 45° Rain and drizzle possible TUESDAY 68° 46° Warmer with a passing shower TODAY 55° 44° Cool with rain, becoming breezy in the aernoon. Cloudy with rain tapering to a couple of showers tonight. High ....................................................................... 54° Low ........................................................................ 53° Normal high ......................................................... 62° Normal low ........................................................... 42° Record high ............................................. 82° in 1986 Record low .............................................. 26° in 1962 Humidity noon today ........................................ 80% 24 hours through 2 p.m. yesterday ................. 2.39" Month to date ................................................... 5.55" Normal month to date ..................................... 3.92" Season to date .................................................. 7.48" Normal season to date .................................. 17.92" Red Bluff through 2 p.m. yesterday Chico .................................................................. Good Napa ................................................................... Good Red Bluff .............................................. Not available Redding ............................................... Not available Yuba City ........................................................... Good Allergy, dust and dander today: Beneficial Grass .................. Absent Mold ......................... Low Trees ...................... High Weeds ................ Absent 1 Highest at 9 a.m. Today 6:44 a.m. 5:59 p.m. 6:03 a.m. 5:45 p.m. Saturday 6:43 a.m. 6:00 p.m. 6:41 a.m. 6:56 p.m. 11 hr., 15 min. Mar 1 New Mar 8 First Full Mar 16 Last Mar 23 at Bend Bridge 27 0.80 none at Hamilton City 148 128.30 -0.10 at Ord Ferry 114 96.20 none at Red Bluff Diversion Dam 253 237.60 none at Tehama Bridge 213 199.80 none Lake Shasta...................940.98 1,732,474 38.1% Lake Trinity .................2274.25 1,180,699 44.6% Weather Trivia ™ At what temperature does snow squeak under foot? 14 F or colder. Today Saturday Anaheim 64/51/r 61/50/t Bakersfield 70/50/r 67/50/t Chula Vista 65/54/r 63/53/t Crescent City 56/44/r 53/43/sh Death Valley 73/57/r 70/55/sh Eureka 56/43/r 54/42/sh Fremont 61/49/r 63/47/sh Fresno 62/49/r 62/46/sh Glendale 61/49/r 60/49/t Huntington Beach 63/53/r 61/53/t Irvine 63/54/r 61/51/t Lake Tahoe 40/24/r 40/28/sf Long Beach 62/52/r 61/52/t Los Angeles 63/53/r 61/52/t Mammoth Mountain 40/25/sn 41/23/sf Modesto 61/46/r 63/47/sh Monterey 59/49/r 60/49/sh Moreno Valley 61/47/r 58/45/t Napa 57/46/r 60/44/sh Needles 72/54/r 68/51/sh Oakland 59/48/r 61/48/sh Oxnard 63/49/r 61/51/t Redding 56/42/r 58/42/sh Riverside 61/44/r 59/44/t Sacramento 59/44/r 62/44/sh San Bernardino 61/48/r 57/47/t San Diego 65/56/r 63/57/t San Francisco 60/48/r 61/48/sh San Jose 61/49/r 61/46/sh San Luis Obispo 59/49/r 64/49/t Santa Ana 64/54/r 62/52/t Santa Barbara 59/50/r 62/49/t Santa Clarita 59/46/r 58/46/t Stockton 60/45/r 63/44/sh Ventura 61/49/r 61/51/t Yosemite Valley 54/39/r 54/39/sh Today Saturday Albuquerque 63/44/pc 63/39/pc Atlanta 54/38/pc 62/46/pc Baltimore 26/15/s 40/31/c Boston 25/13/s 34/24/c Buffalo 13/12/pc 36/8/sf Chicago 23/15/c 22/9/sn Cincinnati 35/23/pc 48/23/c Dallas 78/43/pc 78/61/pc Denver 54/22/pc 39/13/sn Detroit 17/15/pc 31/8/c El Paso 75/56/s 76/53/pc Fargo 4/-20/pc -5/-26/pc Honolulu 81/69/c 82/68/ sh Houston 70/60/c 78/62/c Indianapolis 32/25/pc 39/15/pc Kansas City 42/16/c 27/0/c Las Vegas 61/53/r 60/49/sh Louisville 39/32/pc 50/29/c Miami 78/66/t 82/67/s Minneapolis 14/-8/sn 7/-16/sn New Orleans 65/56/pc 71/59/pc New York City 23/15/s 35/29/c Oklahoma City 64/33/pc 56/24/pc Very cold air will reign from the northern Plains to the Northeast today. The combination of wind, low temperatures and other atmospheric conditions will result in dangerous conditions to be outdoors for very long periods over the Upper Midwest. A weak storm will bring areas of snow and locally heavy snow squalls from the Great Lakes to New England. Most areas from the northern Plains to Texas and the interior South will be dry. However, rain will fall across much of the Florida Peninsula with a few locally strong thunderstorms over South Florida. High ................ 88° in Pompano Beach, FL Low ............ -24° in Lake Yellowstone, WY High ........ 113° in Vioolsdrif, South Africa Low .............. -64° in Verkhoyansk, Russia Bogota 62/49/t 61/48/r Buenos Aires 75/63/pc 77/63/pc Caracas 88/74/s 89/72/s Ensenada 63/54/r 61/52/t Mexico City 76/56/pc 78/49/pc Montreal 10/0/pc 21/0/sn Rio de Janeiro 88/77/pc 87/74/t Tijuana 66/54/r 64/52/t Toronto 12/11/pc 30/0/c Vancouver 46/29/pc 38/29/pc Orlando 73/52/s 79/56/s Philadelphia 21/16/s 37/30/c Phoenix 75/59/c 70/54/sh Pittsburgh 22/20/pc 43/22/c Portland, ME 24/3/s 31/21/c Portland, OR 59/39/pc 44/37/c St. Louis 38/26/sn 39/13/c Salt Lake City 59/42/pc 54/36/sh Seattle 55/38/pc 46/35/c Tucson 79/60/pc 69/49/sh Washington, DC 29/24/s 43/37/c Cairo 70/53/s 80/66/pc Casablanca 65/46/s 65/51/pc Johannesburg 77/58/c 75/55/sh Kinshasa 89/72/t 92/73/t Lagos 89/78/t 88/78/t Nairobi 85/58/pc 84/58/s Tripoli 57/48/r 65/51/pc Baghdad 73/51/s 73/52/pc Beijing 42/27/c 53/28/pc Hong Kong 73/65/pc 75/65/c Jerusalem 59/47/s 71/56/pc Kabul 51/27/s 51/28/s Manila 89/73/s 91/73/s Melbourne 75/55/pc 76/57/c New Delhi 72/55/t 73/50/pc Seoul 54/34/c 54/30/pc Singapore 87/75/pc 88/76/pc Sydney 76/65/sh 77/62/sh Tehran 57/41/pc 56/42/s Tokyo 63/47/pc 49/44/sh Amsterdam 47/37/c 44/35/r Athens 61/54/r 59/49/r Belgrade 56/41/sh 61/45/pc Berlin 48/33/pc 52/33/pc Budapest 52/38/c 54/42/c Dublin 43/30/sh 43/31/sh London 48/34/r 45/36/pc Madrid 57/41/pc 55/45/r Moscow 36/19/pc 31/24/pc Paris 46/38/r 48/38/c Rome 56/47/sh 54/41/r Stockholm 41/34/pc 40/34/sh Vienna 47/40/c 54/41/pc Zurich 47/34/r 42/26/sh 48/30 53/32 52/32 52/32 53/32 59/44 58/45 57/46 56/42 57/44 57/44 47/33 50/31 49/32 56/42 55/44 56/39 55/47 55/47 56/43 58/42 50/35 56/34 56/44 57/33 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014 Thursday, July 11 CARNIVAL: The 42nd An- nual Westbrook Fire Department Carnival will be from 6 to 11 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, July 10-13, behind the firehouse. Wrist bands all for nights. There will be rides, games and food. Show by Tufano Amusements. CONCERT: Rock Bottom, a Clin- ton-based band since 2007, opens the Guilford Savings Bank Concert Series at 6:30 p.m. at the Pierson School lawn in Clinton. In the event of rain, the concert is cancelled. A complete schedule is available at clintonct.com. GOLF: The Epilepsy Foundation of Connecticut will host its eighth an- nual Andrew's Golf Benefit for Epi- lepsy at Quarry Ridge Golf Course, 9 Rose Hill Road, Portland. The fee is $150, which includes golf carts and greens fees. Activities include a barbecue lunch from 10:15 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. For more information, call 860-346-1924 or e-mail lwallace. efct@sbcglobal.net. DANCE: Gallim Dance perform "Mama Call" and "Pupil Suite" at 8 p.m. in the CFA Theater at Wes- leyan University. CONCERT: Phil and Daniel Rosen- thal will perform from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Leif Nilsson Gallery with outdoor bistro-style seating in the amphitheater on Spring Street, Chester. Donation $10. Visit www.nilssonstudio.com for more details. THEATER: "Young Frankenstein" will be shown at the Andrews Memorial Town Hall, 54 East Main St., Clinton. MUSICAL: "Hello Dolly" will be offered at Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main St., East Haddam, Wednesdays through Sundays. For ticket information and show times, visit www.goodspeed.org. OLD HOME DAYS: East Hampton's Old Home Days will be marking its 35th consecutive year with festivi- ties on the field that lies between Center School, the East Hampton Post Office, and the Congregational Church in East Hampton's historic Village Center. A parade and carni- val will be included. For full details, visit easthamptonoldhomedays. blogspot.com. MUSICAL: "Footloose" with music by Tom Snow and book and lyrics by Dean Pitchford will be performed at Ivoryton Playhouse, 103 Main St. For hours and ticket prices, visit www.ivorytonplay- house.org. WIGGLE WORMS: The Killing- worth Library, 301 Route 81, will offer "Wiggle Worms" at 10 a.m. for children ages 3-5 presented by staff at the Children's Museum. BOOK DISCUSSION: "Blind Descent" by Nevada Barr will be discussed in the Van Beynum Room of the Portland Library, 20 Freestone Ave. Books are available at the Library. For details, call 860- 342-6770. ICE CREAM SOCIAL: Partnership for Sharing is sponsoring and all- you-can-eat Ice Cream Social from 6 to 8 p.m. at Third Congregational Church, 94 Miner St., Middletown. Cost is $4 for adults and $2.50 for children under 10 (bring your own banana). Friday, July 12 CARNIVAL: The 42nd An- nual Westbrook Fire Department Carnival will be from 6 to 11 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, July 10-13, behind the firehouse. Wrist bands all for nights. There will be rides, games and food. Show by Tufano Amusements. DANCE: Gallim Dance perform "Mama Call" and "Pupil Suite" at 8 p.m. in the CFA Theater at Wes- leyan University. MUSIC: Gaslight Arkestra, w/musi- cal influences from Miles Davis to John Zorn, shares an evening with Cross-Fluence and a focus on spoken word at 8 p.m. at The Buttonwood Tree, 605 Main St., Middletown. BOOK SALE: The Friends of the Russe ll Library will host a book sale from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at 123 Broad St., Middletown. THEATER: "Young Frankenstein" will be shown at the Andrews Memorial Town Hall, 54 East Main St., Clinton. MUSICAL: "Hello Dolly" will be offered at Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main St., East Haddam, Wednesdays through Sundays. For ticket information and show times, visit www.goodspeed.org. AUTHOR: Former Congressman Bob Steele, author of "The Curse: Big-time Gambling's Seduction of a Small New England Town," will speak at the East Haddam Free Public Library, 18 Plains Road, Moodus, at 7 p.m. OLD HOME DAYS: East Hampton's Old Home Days will be marking its 35th consecutive year with festivi- ties on the field that lies between Center School, the East Hampton Post Office, and the Congregational Church in East Hampton's historic Village Center. A parade and carni- val will be included. For full details, visit easthamptonoldhomedays. blogspot.com. MUSICAL: "Footloose" with music by Tom Snow and book and lyrics by Dean Pitchford will be performed at Ivoryton Playhouse, 103 Main St. For hours and ticket prices, visit www.ivorytonplay- house.org. BLOOD DRIVE: Middlesex Health Care Center, 100 Randolph Road, is hosting an American Red Cross Blood Drive in the Dining Hall from 9:30 a.m. to 2:15 p.m. To schedule an appointment, call 1-800-RED-CROSS or visit red- crossblood.org. Saturday, July 13 RUSSELL WRITERS: The Rus- sell Writers will meet from 9:30 a.m. to noon in Meeting Room 3 at Russell Library, 123 Broad St., Middletown. CARNIVAL: The 42nd An- nual Westbrook Fire Department Carnival will be from 6 to 11 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, July 10-13, behind the firehouse. Wrist bands all for nights. There will be rides, games and food. Show by Tufano Amusements. BOAT SHOW: Connecticut River Museum's 29th Annual Mahogany Memories Antique and Classic Boat Show, presented by The South- ern New England Chapter of The Antique and Classic Boat Society, will be from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the museum, 67 Main St., Essex. Admission is free. BOOK SALE: The Friends of the Russell Library will host a book sale from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 123 Broad St., Middletown. MUSIC: Covert Jazz, a 5-piece ensemble specializing in a sophisti- cated, pleasing sound, will play at 8 p.m. at The Buttonwood Tree, 605 Main St., Middletown. THEATER: "Young Frankenstein" will be shown at the Andrews Memorial Town Hall, 54 East Main St., Clinton. MUSICAL: "Hello Dolly" will be offered at Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main St., East Haddam, Wednesdays through Sundays. For ticket information and show times, visit www.goodspeed.org. OLD HOME DAYS: East Hampton's Old Home Days will be marking its 35th consecutive year with festivi- ties on the field that lies between Center School, the East Hampton Post Office, and the Congregational Church in East Hampton's historic Village Center. A parade and carni- val will be included. For full details, visit easthamptonoldhomedays. blogspot.com. MUSICAL: "Footloose" with music by Tom Snow and book and lyrics by Dean Pitchford will be performed at Ivoryton Playhouse, 103 Main St. For hours and ticket prices, visit www.ivorytonplay- house.org. OPERA: The Guild of Salt Marsh Opera will present a free lecture by Jane Gullong, "Opera Today," at 10 a.m. at Acton Library, 60 Old Bos- ton Post Road, Old Saybrook. TOUCH-A-TRUCK: Brin g the fam- ily to the Higganum Green to see the trucks up close and personal from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Talk to the truck operators. Learn about how the trucks are used. So drinks will be available for purchase. Proceeds will benefit the Brainerd Memorial Library. Admission is $2 for adults and $1 for children. Maximum cost per family is $7. Sunday, July 14 RUNWAY FLASHBACK: Summer Soiree on the Lawn from 4 to 8 p.m. at E.E. Dickinson Mansion, 21 North Main St., Essex, will be a Runway Fashion Show featur- ing local models wearing vintage outfits and accessories from Fa- mah Hoffman's private collection. Tickets $100 per person. Make checks payable to Child & Family Agency, Attn: Pat Thompson, 12 River Road Dr., Essex, CT 06426. RSVP by July 1. THEATER: "Young Frankenstein" will be shown at the Andrews Memorial Town Hall, 54 East Main St., Clinton. SUMMER WORSHIP: Deep River Congregational Church, 1 Church St., will offer a summer worship service at 8:30 a.m. with the Rev. David Johnson preaching. For details, call 860-526-5045. MUSICAL: "Hello Dolly" will be offered at Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main St., East Haddam, Wednesdays through Sundays. For ticket information and show times, visit www.goodspeed.org. MUSICAL: "Footloose" with music by Tom Snow and book and lyrics by Dean Pitchford will be performed at Ivoryton Playhouse, 103 Main St. For hours and ticket prices, visit www.ivorytonplay- house.org. RUNWAY FLASHBACK: Summer Soiree on the Lawn from 4 to 8 p.m. at E.E. Dickinson Mansion, 21 North Main St., Essex, will be a Runway Fashion Show featuring local models wearing vintage outfits and accessories from Famah Hoffman's private collection. Tickets $100 per person. Make checks payable to Child & Family Agency, Attn: Pat Thompson, 12 River Road Dr., Es- sex, CT 06426. Calendar Mia I am a very sweet cat that loves to cuddle. I love to play with string and feathers so stock up on all toys because we will have a blast together. Please come and see me at the Granby adop- tion center and let's start to play together. Reach Mary's Kitty Korner at 860-379-4141 or 413-297-0537 or visit maryskittykorner.org. Or email marys.kitty. korner@sbcglobal.net. The Middletown Press reminds interested persons that the pets pictured may already have been adopted. Pet of the day PORTLAND The Polish Le- gion of American Veterans will host its seventh annual golf tournament on Satur- day, Aug. 17, at the Portland West Golf Course in Port- land. Proceeds from the event will benefit the Meriden PLAV Post 189 Henrietta Kulinski Scholarhship Fund and the Polish Legion of American Veterans USA sponsorship of the Veterans Day ceremonies to be held Nov. 11, 2015, at the Arling- ton National Cemetery in Washington, D.C. The Polish Legion of American Veterans mem- bers participate in club function and outreach to veterans in area medical centers. Many also work on care packages, which are sent to enlisted men and women all over the world. Henrietta Kulinski was a dedicated member and past president of the Ladies Aux- iliary and the scholarship was founded in her memory. Cost to participate in the tournament is $99 per player, which includes breakfast at the course. Registration starts at 7:30 a.m.; shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. For details, call 203- 213-7063. fuNDRAiseR Golf tournament scheduled for Aug. 17 HADDAM (AP) Owners of farmland and forest land have an opportunity to learn about how best to plan the fu- ture use of their land. A workshop scheduled for later this month and orga- nized by American Farmland Trust, University of Connect- icut Cooperative Extension System, state Department of Agriculture and other agen- cies is intended to help land- owners plan for their land's future. Issues to be considered include whether or when to protect land, how to treat it in estate planning, whether or how to rent it and how to manage it for farming or for - estry. The workshop is sched- uled for 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. July 30 at the Middlesex County Extension Center in Haddam. The workshop is free and includes a light din - ner. "Whether you are just be- ginning the planning process or developing questions with planning that is already un- der way, this workshop can help you understand your options and make informed choices," according to a state- ment from the organizers. For details, visit www. fa rmland.org/Connecticut. HADDAM Farmland owners to learn about planning The American Red Cross issued an emergency re- quest for platelet and blood donors of all blood types to roll up a sleeve and give be- cause many fewer donations than expected were re- ceived in June and the first week of July. Nationwide, donations through the Red Cross were down approximately 10 per- cent in June, resulting in about 50,000 fewer dona- tions than expected. The shortfall is similar to what the Red Cross experienced in June 2012. June can be among the most challenging months of the year for blood and plate - let donations as regular do- nors delay giving while they adjust to summer schedules. High school and college blood drives account for as much as 20 percent of Red Cross donations during the school year. To donate, call 1-800- RED CROSS (1-800-733- 2767) or visit redcrossblood. org to make an appoint- ment. All blood types are needed to ensure a reliable supply for patients. A blood donor card or driver's li- cense, or two other forms of identification are required at check-in. ReD CROss Blood donors urgently needed OLD sAYBROOK Enjoy an evening of singing on Mon- day, July 29, at St. Paul Lutheran Church in Old Saybrook at the season's fourth of six SummerSings co-sponsored by Cappella Cantorum and the Con Brio Choral Society. Steven Bruce of the Con Brio Choral Society will lead the group in an infor- mal read-through of the "Messa di Gloria" by Gia- como Puccini beginning with registration at 7 p.m. and singing at 7:30. All singers are welcome. An $8 fee includes a bor- rowed score for the eve- ning, if needed. The church is located at 56 Great Ham- mock Road and is air con- ditioned. Parking is avail- able at St. Paul's or at the Valley Shore Assembly of God at 36 Great Hammock Road. The next SummerS- ing will take place Aug. 5 at St. Paul's and will fea- ture Rachael Allen of the Shoreline Chorale and Westbrook High School di- recting "The Creation" by Joseph Hayd n. For more informa- tion about either of these events, call 860-767-9409 or 203-245-6947. MusiC Summer Sing in Saybrook in July SUBMITTED PHOTO snapshot Sc hol arS hi pS Jeffrey Barbour, le, and Alicia Waldner, center, from Middletown, as well as Deep River resident Dani- elle Hunter, not pictured, are among 15 recent high school graduates presented with a total of $75,000 in scholarships at a reception at Liberty Bank's main office. At right is Willard McRae. Middletown police reported the following arrests: EVADING: Jordan Riley, 20, 89 Shunpike Road, Cromwell, was arrested on a warrant July 3 charging him with evading responsibility, driving without a license and driving without min- ium insurance. He was released on a $500 non-surety bond and was scheduled to appear in court July 10. BREACH OF PEACE: Brianna S. Dandelski, 21, 287 Highland Ave., Meriden, was arrested June 27 and charged with second-degree breach of peace aer a distur- bance at Middlesex Hospital. Bond was set at $1,000 and a court date scheduled for July 10. LARCENY: Marissa Davies, 26, 17625 Nelson Road, Spring Hill, Fla., was arrested June 29 and charged with sixth-degree larceny aer a shopliing inci- dent at Stop & Shop. Police said Davies took hair clips out of a package and clipped them to her pants, hid a bottle of nail polish in her pocket and concealed several packets of artificial nails in her boots. She is also accused of inhaling whipped cream from a can and taking several other items, according to police. She was released on a summons and was scheduled to appear in court on July 10. Police blotter Get listed: Submit items for the calendar at EVENTS.CTCENTRAL.COM/LISTINGS. News feed COMMUNITY » dailyfreeman.com Thursday, July 11, 2013 MORE AT FACEBOOK.COM/FREEMAN AND TWITTER.COM/DAILYFREEMAN C1 By Laura urseny lurseny@chicoer.com @LauraUrseny on Twitter CHiCO As a wildfire consumed her house in 2000, a woman in Con- cow rushed inside to save her cat. She perished, as did her cat. From that incident sprung the North Valley Animal Disaster Group, a volunteer organization whose members continue sav - ing creatures caught in natural or man-made disasters, here and around the world. In December, group president John Maretti and local member Norm Rosene spent 19 days in In- dia, where they trained 70 volun- teers. "In India, there are plenty of di- sasters, from flooding to earth- quakes, and then there's natural Maretti recently retired from the Chico Fire Department. What the two men taught in In- dia is not too different than what lo- cal volunteers learn, as far as tech- nical rescues. The bottom line is safety for an- imals and human rescuers. So how did two men from Chico end up being sent around the world? It's about what they've learned regarding animal re scue and evac- uations since that 2000 fire in Butte County, the systems they've developed, the close relationship with emergency personnel — and a link to the nonprofit International Fund for Animal Welfare. With Maretti's background in the Fire Department and working in emergency situations, animal disaster group volunteers learned WiLDLife animal disaster group seeks volunteers Will help animals in danger at home, abroad COURTESY Norm Rosene teaches a local from India about harnessing to retrieve animals. Online: For more information about the Snow Goose Festival , go to WWW.SNOWGOOSEFESTIVAL.ORG. JASON HALLEY/CHICO ENTERPRISE-RECORD Snow geese and other waterfowl take flight at Gray Lodge Wildlife Area on Thursday in Gridley. A number of free events associated with the Snow Goose Festival will take place at the Chico Masonic Family Center, 1110 W. East Ave, on Saturday and Sunday. saster groups, they aren't as ac- tive as the local one is or as or- ganized, noted Rosene. IFAW tapped the local group for help with training in India. pel down a canyon wall. "We have all these pictures of the volunteers, in a harness, up a tree, with their arms flung open and their knots holding," ReD BLuff uNiON HiGH sCHOOL locKDoWN Drill | WEATHER | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, MARCh 4, 2014 8 B