Red Bluff Daily News

April 10, 2014

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The Associated Press SACRAMENTO » Water managers are determining if recent storms helped California's dwindling wa- ter supplies enough to warrant increases in water deliveries to farms and thirsty cities. Meantime, the California De - partment of Water Resources and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation on Wednesday announced that water deliveries will remain at zero until the analysis is complete. State Water Project allocations have been cut to zero for the first time in the system's 54-year his - tory, and the federally run Cen- tral Valley Project has also can- celled deliveries to most recipients. Water resources director Mark Cowin says it will likely take until the end of the month to determine if any water can be delivered. California is in a drought emer - gency, and officials said recent rains haven't helped the parched state's long-term water prognosis. dROughT No w at er deliveries un ti l fu rt he r studies By Leila Rodriguez lrodriguez@chicoer.com @leilarrodriguez on Twitter ChICO » Fashion can define a person and at the same time a person can define fashion, hence Anna Wintour. How one dresses is an expres- sion of one's identity and it's a sentiment Chico State Univer- sity student Tara Beth Caledron conveys in her art show. "Veneer," a collection of Bar- bie doll-sized formal garments and large prints of Caledron's designs draped on the dolls, had its debut Monday at Ayres Hall's BS-O Space on the Chico State campus. Calderon refers to it as her spring 2014 "couture" collection. Her love of fashion and design - ing clothes were the binding fi- bers in creating her show. She would find inspiration in the pages of fashion magazines FAShION Art student tapers fabricated beauty through art show Life...................A4 Sports.............. B1 Opinion ............ A6 Classifieds ......B6 Community ..... A3 Weather ..........B8 INdEX The Lady Spartans brushed off the Eagles, and the Lady Cardinals opened league play with two wins. PAGE B1 SpORTS Red Bluff, Corning soball teams win big Sacramento River Discovery Center will host a free talk on invasive plants at 7 tonight at 275 Sale Lane. PAGE A3 ENvIRONMENT Invasive plants topic of informative talk tonight Official believes hunt is closing in on 'final resting place' of missing Malaysian jetliner. PAGE B8 FLIghT 370 Navy ship hears more signals from ocean As deadline approaches, most Americans say completing a federal tax return is easy. PAGE B3 FILINg Many have confidence in filling out forms By Rich greene rgreene@redbluffdailynews.com @richgreenenews on Twitter C O R N I N g » A f- ter running unop- posed in 2010 Bob Williams faces a ch a l len g e f r om grant writer Susan Price as he seeks a third term on the Teha ma County Board of Supervi - sors. T he t wo a r e competing to rep- resent District 4, which covers the southwestern por- tion of the county including the west- ern side of Cor- ing and the Ran- cho Tehama Reserve, Flournoy, Paskenta and Red Bank areas. The 4-year term would begin Jan. 5, 2015. The position pays an annual salary of $12,540, although a mea - sure to raise the salary beginning JuNE 3 ELECTION Wi ll ia ms challenged by P ri ce , District 4 Race between 2-term incumbent and former Red Bluff city manager Williams Price "The idea is that we would utilize the $75,000 to immediately go ahead and get some additional things done ..." — John Brewer, city manager ANDRE BYIK — DAILY NEWS FILE The Corning City Council moved forward with a plan Tuesday to borrow $75,000 to go toward the restoration of Rodgers Theatre. The theater must be opened in some way by July 2015 if the city is recover $45,000 in retained State Park Bond money. By Andre Byik sports@redbluffdailynews.com @TehamaSports on Twitter CORNINg » The City Council on Tuesday moved forward with a financing plan to restore Rodg- ers Theatre's floor and other im- provements, which could lead to the reopening of the theater be- fore July 2015. Council members authorized the signing of a financing pro- posal from 3Core that would open a $75,000 line of credit with the Chico-based institution that would go toward restoring the theater, which must be open for use by July 2015 if the city is to recover about $44,000 in re - tained State Park Bond money that is tied to the opening of the city-owned theater. "The idea is that we would utilize the $75,000 to immedi - ately go ahead and get some ad- ditional things done in the the- ater so that we can ... reopen the theater essentially," City Manager John Brewer told the City Council. "Even if it is mini - mally reopened, so that we can recover about $44,000 that's been retained by the state." According to city staff, the borrowing plan is favorable to spending money gathered from the city's development impact fees because some of those funds — which total about $327,000 — will be used to complete the sec - ond phase of the Corning Com- munity Park. Brewer said the city only CORNINg 'under the gun' to reopen theater Historic downtown Rodgers Theatre must open by July 2015 to recover $44,000 in State Park Bond money; plan includes $75,000 line of credit ELECTION » pAgE 7 ThEATER » pAgE 7 ART » pAgE 7 N EWS D AILY RED BLUFF TEHAMA COUNTY www.redbluffdailynews.com Ideal for Phone Books, Magazines, Newspapers & more! Pick yours up today at the Daily News office! 545 Diamond Ave., Red Bluff FREE with your subscription to the Red Bluff Daily News Family Science Night! April 15 th 6:00pm-8:00pm Tehama County Department of Education invites the community to participate in Family Science Night! Various workshops will engage participants in exciting experimentation around STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) concepts. We encourage parents to bring their kids to have a one-of-a-kind fun and FREE experience! The event will take place at TCDE, 1135 Lincoln Street, Red Bluff. » redbluffdailynews.com Thursday, April 10, 2014 50 CENTS AN EDITION OF THE CHICO ENTERPRISE-RECORD 7 58551 69001 9 Volume 129, issue 100 Web bonus » Mickelson a model for late success. redbluffdailynews.com MuSICAL 13-foot dragon featured on Mercy stage A+E » A5 SC hO OL v IO LE NC E Te en st ab s 2 2 with kitchen knives Na ti on » A 8 FORECAST High: 82 Low: 48 » B8 Like the Daily News on Facebook and stay in the loop on local news, sports and more. VISIT FACEBOOK.COM/ RBDAILYNEWS LIKE US ON FACEBOOK

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