Red Bluff Daily News

July 29, 2015

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Sgt.AlbertMiller Capt. Michael Keith Mishoe Gunnery Sgt. Tage M. Nick- erson Pvt. Vance C. Nolta Cpl. Daniel R. Nosek Cpl. Devin Penner Sgt. Dustin L. Reese Cpl. Sonny Sauceda Cpl. Thomas Scott Lance Cpl. Jason L. Servera Sgt. Keith Sharp Sgt. Brad Sol Cpl. Kylee H. Stroing Gunnery Sgt. Kirk A. Sw- enson Cpl. Jonathan Turner Lance Cpl. Michael P. Turner Cpl. Nicholas R. Upton Lance Cpl. Raymond Mat- thew Walker Pfc. Jason Ward Pfc. Jeffery M. White Pfc. Henry C. Woolery Master Sgt. Jeff R. Wootton Master Sgt. Carson Zumalt NAVY E-5Guy Kelly Abbott E-5 CBCM Jarred S. Ables Lt. J.G. Kenneth W. Ander- son E-3Franklin J. Arellano II E-5Timothy M. Barbarick ET3Kent Barron Petty Officer 3rd Class David Baxter FTSN Wesley Bogner Josh Brady QM3Kirby J. Brandon E-3James Brankov E-7Chief Petty Officer James G. Brink E-6Jeffrey Brotherton Petty Officer 2nd Class James J. Burchiel SA Jessica L. Campbell E-5Dallas Chambers E-5Stephen Colgan BM5Victoria L. Contreras E-5Gunner's Mate Ashley Cordray E-6John Vincent Crisp AM Kyle Wayne Darrow CTR1Petty Officer 1st Class Cole Davis Petty Officer 3rd Class Paul D. Davis ENFA Christopher Dilsaver Petty Officer 1st Class Jef- frey Dobson PR2(AW) Richard Duncan E-6Robert W. Dunlap III Petter Officer 3rd Class Derek James Ellis E-6Ryan Jeffrey Farrar SeaBee Chief Brent K. Forward Petty Officer 2nd Class Brian Fry Dennis Garrison MM1stSS Albert Gleesing E-5Robert James Goode EWSa Michael A. Grant Petty Officer 3rd Class Frederick Gregorio IT2Alicia Kaylene Hamill CTSA Austin Harbaugh Petty Officer 2nd Class Craig Nicholas Hemping E-7Chief Petty Officer Eric Hemping AM3Roger Horner BM3Justin D. Iiams Petty Officer 2nd Class Charles (C.W.) Jones 2nd Class CTM Nathan L. Jones Travis E. Jordan Seaman William R. Kelly Seaman Johnathon L. Kersey Fireman Nathaniel L. Kersey Logistics Specialist Jesse Kunz Fire Controlman 2nd Class Tracy Mitchell Main Chief Petty Officer Cory Mason E-3Cody D. Maxwell HM5(FMF) Brian Patrick McKenna HA E2Joshua McManus MA1(EXW) Bobby McMi- chael MA1(MWD) Logan McMi- chael Shane V. Morey PR3Walter Moskal Airman Antonio Nava Jr. YNSN Mark Neal Jr. Petty Officer Third Class Cody A. Palmer Midshipman 2nd Class Shannon Penne Joseph Picklesimer MM2David Pollack E-3CTTSN Michael Dalton Raschke Ensign Christopher Reed Platner Seaman Jeremy C. Rice Petty Officer Third Class Michael Roach E-2Robert Rodabaugh Lt. Ryan Ross Petty Officer Stan Ross E-6Kristopher Rotter Seaman Apprentice Ryan Schaul ET-1(IDW/SW/AW/PJ) Keith Shandley Petty Officer 3rd Class Col- leen Shine IT1(SW) Petty Officer Kurtis Christopher Slaugen- haupt E-2Daniel St. John Minesman 2nd Class Petty Officer John Staggs PS3Clarence S. Stevens E-5Petty Officer 2nd Class Intelligence Specialist Rob- ert C. Stenberg Petty Officer 3rd Class Walter H. Vassar Seaman Matthew Weston AMSC (AW-SW) William H. White AT Clarissa Williams- McPherson E-5Matthew Williams Quentin Winegar Commander Cathy Wise NATIONAL GUARD Spec. 4Melissa A. Ables P2C Amanda J. Adams SSgt. Keith A. Barron Pfc. Dennis Beam Pvt. Michael M. Bennett Pvt. Lee F. Branham Pvt. Samuel Bullington Pvt. Brad Chambers Spec. Don Chambers Spec. 4Michael Chaney 1st. Lt. Brent N. Dawson Pvt. Johnathan W. Fox Pvt. Ryan Dee Freemyers Spec. Brian D. Glaser Pvt. Carl F. Hawthorne CW3Darren Henley MSgt. James Holland Pfc. Antony Holloway Spec. Stanley Holmes Tech Sgt. Jonathan Huff SSgt. Laura Jumpp Spec. Deneva Marshall Sgt. Jerald Ray Phillips, Jr. Pfc. Jake Pluim Spec. Brandon Powell Spec. Michael O'dell Powers Spec. Jeffrey Neal Price Pvt. Dustin Rahming Nathan Scott Spec. Vincent Torres PV2Kevin Turner Sgt. Michael Wentzel Sgt. Jason C. Westlund Spec. Bill Wooden Spec. Candace Zepp COAST GUARD BMC Brett Bonner Petty Officer 2nd Class April M. Hambly AMT2Christopher Harris GM1Brandon P. Hayward BM2Anthony Longo E2Trevor A. Miller EM1Charly Ostrowski EM Nolan Schlereth P.O. 3 SN Jacob Schlereth ENS Trevor Siperek Petty Officer 2nd Class Har- rison Stanley Richard W. Summers, Jr. Ifyouhaveamother, father, son or daughter serving in the military and would like to include the person's name on this list, call 527-2153 or send an e-mail to clerk@ redbluffdailynews.com. If this person gets discharged from the military, call and we will remove the name from the list. Military FROMPAGE4 Nation+World news feed Shootingvictim: Mourner JeRee Wilson holds her fist in the air outside funeral services Tuesday for Samuel Dubose at the Church of the Living God in the Avondale neighborhood of Cincinnati. Dubose was fatally shot by a University of Cincinnati police officer who had stopped him for a missing license plate. CINCINNATI TENSIONS JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ClosingahistoricvisittoAfrica, President Barack Obama on Tues- day urged the continent's leaders to prioritize creating jobs and opportu- nity for the next generation of young people or risk sacrificing future eco- nomic potential to further instability and disorder. He said in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the "urgent task" of generating jobs for a population that is expected to double to around 2 billion people in the coming decades will be "an enor- mous undertaking." But he said it can be achieved with U.S. help. "Africa will need to generate mil- lions more jobs than it is doing now," Obama said in a speech to the en- tire continent delivered from the headquarters of the African Union, a member organization of African na- tions. "And time is of the essence." "The choices made today will shape the trajectory of Africa — and therefore the world — for decades to come," said Obama. ETHIOPIA VISIT Obama: Africa must create jobs for its next generation The nation's respite from acceler- ating health care costs appears to be over. Spending on health care will out- pace the nation's overall economic growth over the next decade, the government forecast on Tuesday, un- derscoring a coming challenge for the next president, not to mention taxpayers, businesses and individual Americans. A combination of expanded in- surance coverage under President Barack Obama's law, an aging pop- ulation, and rising demand, will be squeezing society's ability to pay. By 2019, midway through the next president's term, health care spend- ing will be increasing at roughly 6 percent a year, compared to an av- erage annual rise of 4 percent from 2008 through 2013. The higher rate of increase is still "relatively modest," says the report from the Office of the Actuary in the Health and Human Services Depart- ment. HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Health care spending to accelerate, US report says Jonathan Pollard, the former Na- val intelligence analyst whose con- viction of spying for Israel stoked fierce international passions, has been granted parole and will be re- leased from prison in November af- ter nearly 30 years. The decision to free Pollard from his life sentence, announced Tues- day by his lawyers and then con- firmed by the Justice Department, caps an extraordinary espionage case after decades of legal and dip- lomatic wrangling. Critics have condemned the American as a trai- tor who betrayed his country for money and disclosed damaging se- crets, while supporters have ar- gued that he was punished exces- sively given that he spied for a U.S. ally. Pollard is due to be released on Nov. 21, three decades after he was arrested while trying to gain asylum at the Israeli Embassy in Washington. ESPIONAGE CASE US analyst Pollard who had spied for Israel to be freed Secretary of State John Kerry warned skeptical lawmakers not to nix the contentious nuclear deal with Iran, insisting that it includes strict inspections and other safe- guards to deter cheating by Tehran. "If Congress does not support the deal, we would see this deal die — with no other options," Kerry told the House Foreign Affairs Commit- tee on Tuesday as he testified for the second time in a week, part of the Obama administration's all-out cam- paign to sell the accord. Kerry spoke as the administra- tion picked up critical support for the deal from Rep. Sander Levin, D- Mich., a strong supporter of Israel who referred to his Jewish back- ground in announcing his decision. "I believe the agreement offers the best option to prevent Iran from ac- quiring a nuclear weapon," Levin said in a statement circulated by Mi- nority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. AGREEMENT Kerry implores Congress to back Iran nuclear deal A prison worker who was "in over her head" with two inmates con- victed of murder tearfully pleaded guilty Tuesday to charges of aiding them by smuggling hacksaw blades and other tools to the pair, who broke out and spent three weeks on the run. Joyce Mitchell, an instructor in the tailor shop at the Clinton Correc- tional Facility in upstate New York, wore shackles and prison stripes as she entered the pleas in a barely au- dible voice. Afterward, her lawyer, Stephen Johnston, said she realizes she made a "horrible mistake" by getting in- volved with Richard Matt and Da- vid Sweat, who staged an elaborate escape from the maximum-security prison on June 6. "She got in over her head into something that she never should have started. But she did, and she's paying the price now," Johnston told reporters outside court. NEW YORK Prison worker pleads guilty to aiding escape of two killers Two Bahraini policemen were killed and six were injured in a bomb attack south of the island kingdom's capital on Tuesday, according to authorities. The blast was the latest in a se- ries of bombings in recent years tar- geting security forces in the Gulf na- tion, which continues to face low- level unrest more than four years after protesters took to the streets to demand greater political rights. The Interior Ministry described the bombing as a "terror blast," and said it took place in the largely Shiite community of Sitra, just south of the capital, Manama. Bahrain is a Sunni-ruled kingdom that is home to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, whose responsibilities include patrolling the busy waters off Iran. The opposition movement in Bah- rain is dominated by the country's Shiite majority, which has long com- plained of poor treatment by secu- rity forces. MIDEAST Bahrain: 2 police officers killed, 6 wounded in bomb attack Select"Subscribe"tabinlowerrightcorner Complete information for automatic weekly delivery to your email inbox That's it! This FREE service made possible by the advertisers in TV Select Magazine Kindly patronize and thank them. Click on their ads online to access their websites! FREE online subscription to TV Select Magazine Digital edition emailed to you, every Saturday! Just go online to www.ifoldsflip.com/t/5281 (You'll only need to go there one time) • Fully searchable online, zoom in, print out pages and more! • No newspaper online subscription or website access required. • Best of all ... it's ABSOLUTELY FREE! DAILYNEWS WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 2015 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM | NEWS | 5 B

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