Red Bluff Daily News

March 01, 2013

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Friday, March 1, 2013 ��� Daily News Local Calendar Submit calendar items to P Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 .O. or clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. FRIDAY, MARCH 1 Red Bluff Al-Anon, 6 to 7 p.m., Presbyterian Church, Jefferson and Hickory Bingo, doors at 5 p.m., early birds at 6 p.m. Community and Senior Center, food available Celebrate Recovery, 7 p.m., Bethel Assembly of God, 625 Luther Road, 527-0445 or 366-6298 Tehama County Education Foundation, board meeting, 7:30 a.m., County Department of Education, 1135 Lincoln St. Corning Car Show, 5-9 p.m., Bartels Giant Burger, 22355 Corning Road, local car clubs welcome, 824-2788 Los Molinos Los Molinos Grange, 7 p.m., Grange Hall, 68th and Singer avenues, 529-0930 Tehama Tehama County Museum, 275 C St.,is open on Fridays and Saturdays, 1-4 p.m.Group tours on other days call 384-2595 SATURDAY, MARCH 2 Life's money rules -- Rule 3: Give some away More than 25 years ago, Gordon Gekko, the main antagonist in the 1987 film "Wall Street," declared, "Greed is good!" From the excess and financial fallout of the '80s, it appeared that many people based their belief system on that line. Sadly, greed is like a cancer that when left untreated can destroy individuals, families, businesses, governments and economies. Breaking the stranglehold of greed starts with releasing the thing that has the power to consume you. That is why in my book, "7 Money Rules for Life: How to Take Control of Your Financial Future" (Revell, 2012), rule three is: Give Some Away. Giving away some of your money quiets your desires and knocks the life out of greed. Trust me, I know. My ignorance about credit and debt, plus my skewed logic that I could have it all now and pay for it later, set me up to be greed's dream client. Credit was my accomplice, and with it I landed in a pit of financial despair. I'm a lot wiser now, and I want you to learn from my mistakes. Become a giver, and dump your greed. How? Here are four simple steps: -- Develop personal compassion. Los Molinos Senior Dance, 7 p.m., Senior Center, Josephine Street, 384-2100 SUNDAY, MARCH 3 Red Bluff Knights of Columbus All-You-Can-Eat Breakfast, 8 a.m. to noon, $4 adult, $2 child or $10 family, Sacred Heart Parish Hall, 2285 Monroe St., 527-6310 WHEE Picnic and Prayer Circle, 4:20 p.m., 22116 Riverside Ave. Corning Evangelist services, 7 p.m., Family Bible Church, 609 Marin St., 824-9989 MONDAY, MARCH 4 Red Bluff Bend Jelly 4-H, 6 p.m.,Bend School, 527-3101 Diabetic Support Group, 6:30 p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Coyne Center, Columba Room English as a Second Language class, 5:30-8:30 p.m., Red Bluff High School Adult Ed building, 1295 Red Bud, 736-3308, same time Tuesday and Wednesday and 9 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. Thursdays, free childcarefrom 9 a..m. to 12:20 p.m. classes in Richlieu Hall, 900 Johnson St. Head Injury Recreational Entity, 10 a.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Coyne Center, Rusty, 5292059 Key to Life, 6 p.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 528-8066 Masterworks Chorale rehearsal, 6:45 p.m. to 8 p.m., Red Bluff Presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson St., 527-4203 PAL Martial Arts, ages 5-18, 3-5 p.m., 529-7920, www.tehamaso.org Red Bluff Community Band Practice, 7-9 p.m., Red Bluff Presbyterian Church, Jefferson St., 5273486 Salvation Army Writing Class, 9:30-11:30 a.m., 940 Walnut St., 527-8530 Sons in Retirement, 11:30 a.m., M&M Ranchhouse Restaurant, Antelope Blvd., 529-5700 Sun Country Quilters Community Service Group, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 528-1126 TeenScreen Mental Health Appointments, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., free, by appointment only, Youth Empowerment Services, 1900 Walnut St., 527-8491, Ext. 3012 TOPS Club (take off pounds Sensibly), 8:30 a.m., First Christian Church, 926 Madison Ave., 5277541 or 347-6120, visit www.tops.org US citizenship preparation class, 5:30-8:30 p.m., Red Bluff High School Adult Ed building, 1295 Red Bud, 736-3308, same time Tuesday and Wednesday Venture Crew 1914 meeting, 6:30-8 p.m., Moose Lodge on 99W, co-ed ages 14-20 welcome Women���s Domestic Violence Information and Support Group, Spanish speaking only, call for time and location, 528-0226 Putting others' needs ahead of our before you do anything else. -- Thoughtfully. This is a deliberwants takes our eyes off of our ate decision that needs to be based on selfish desires. -- Develop generosity. A good plans -- not impulsive or driven heart filled with gratitude by emotion alone. -- Enthusiastically. If you expresses itself are not excited or engaged in with generosity. the need, you may have not Generosity kills found the right place to give. greed and becomes the -- Voluntarily. Forced natural outflowing of your giving is useless. Don't let grateful heart. anyone twist your arm. -- Put others' needs -- Cheerfully. Generosiahead of your wants. Take ty brings happiness as sure some of your wants and as miserliness brings misfind someone who has a ery. real need. I cannot say that my bat-- Repeat. Give some tles with greed are over. I of your money away, sysMary know that I could easily go tematically and regularly, right back to where I was if as part of your personal it were not for a mindset of money management progenerous giving, a habit that gram. changed the equation of my Giving is the way to life. Giving has freed me break the grip of greed so from the stranglehold of contentment can thrive. materialism. How much you should If you missed reading about rule give is up to you, so don't look to me or others to tell you. Only you can one -- Spend Less Than You Earn -or rule two -- Save for the Future -make that determination. Once you have established the visit my blog at EverydayCheapamount, here are five ways you skate.com, and click on "Mary's Perspective." We'll be talking about each should give. -- Systematically. As you receive of the seven rules over the next couyour income, take care of giving first ple of months. By Corporal Michael Brown Hello Red Bluff, my name is Michael Brown and I am a Corporal with the Red Bluff Police Department. I have had the pleasure of serving as the canine handler for my department for the past year. You may have previously read about or seen our current police canine "Many." He is the Red Bluff Police Department���s first canine trained in the area of apprehension as well as drug detection. In this article I would like to provide information about the canine program in regard to what we do and how it benefits the operation of the police department and the safety of the community. I���ll start by providing a little background information about why Police and Sheriff���s Departments use canines. A primary function of a canine is to locate a scent. Canines have a much greater sense of smell than humans, due to their olfactory receptors. A canine���s sense of smell is about 100,000 times better than humans. I like to use the following example: When you are cooking stew it fills the house with an aroma, which we recognize as a single dish, stew. A canine though, does not smell stew, but smells each ingredient of Police reports The following information is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Tehama County Sheriff���s Department, Corning Police Department and California Highway Patrol. Arrests ��� Daisy Jean Bram, 32, Paradise was arrested for felony child cruelty with possible injury or death and misdemeanor contempt. Bail was $55,000. ��� Rodney Aaron Lyman, 38, Redding was arrested at Loleta and Oren avenues in Corning for possession of a firearm by a felon and a felony parole violation. Bail was $15,000. ��� Tyler James Sanford, 24, Red Bluff was arrested for perjury, second degree burglary and forgery. His bail was $200,000. ��� A wanted parolee was arrested during a traffic stop and booked into Tehama County Jail on the charge of felon in possession of a firearm. Corning Police stopped a vehicle for the stew separately. Because a canine���s sense of smell is so powerful, handlers are able to train canines to alert us when they smell certain odors. I am able to give Many a specific command to search for a certain odor or group of odors, such as illegal drugs, human odors, or damaged vegetation (like after someone walks on grass.) When Many locates an odor he alerts me to the source of the odor. The second function of a canine is to assist in apprehension of suspects. This function provides an invaluable buffer between dangerous individuals and officers, which helps reduce potential injury to officers. Police canines are trained to bite under only three circumstances: When the handler is under attack, when some- expired registration and learned the driver, Rodney Aaron Lyman, 37, of Shasta Lake City, was a wanted parolee out of Shasta County. During a search of the vehicle, two rifles were located. No bail was set. ��� Someone on Almond Street in Corning reported Wednesday the theft of numerous items from her residence. The theft is believed to have occurred sometime Tuesday. ��� A woman reported Wednesday that Shane Purcell had cut the lock to her mini storage unit at Olive Grove Mini Storage on Route 99W in Corning. She believed it happened sometime Tuesday night and reported Purcell had just called her and was reading from some paperwork that was kept in her storage. Thefts ��� A theft was reported Wednesday at a residence on Gentry Way. ��� A resident on the 18000 block of Ridge Road reported the theft of prescription medications. ��� California Northern Railroad reported the theft of copper wire and vandalism to the area of Kirkwood Road and South Avenue ��� Someone reported Wednesday morning the theft of a brown 1995 Ford Ranger, license plate 6G35855, with a matching camper shell that had an Olive City Auto Parts logo on the door in blue taken from Napa Auto Parts on Solano Street in Corning. The theft took place sometime Tuesday night and the keys were accounted for. The Over 25 years of experience Now Serving Beer & Wine The North State���s premier supplier of stoves ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ STOVE JUNCTION BBQ PELLETS Prime Rib Now in Stock! every Fri. & Sat. Community Clip? clerk@redbluffdailynews.com Hunt Everyday Cheapskate Working like a dog Red Bluff 20th Annual Mr. Spartan Pageant, 7 p.m., Red Bluff Union High School Performing Arts Center, 5298710 BMX racing, 5:30 p.m., Red Rock BMX Track, Tehama District Fairground, $10 Red Bluff Outlaws Points Race 13, gates open at 10 a.m., trophy dashes start at 6 p.m., Tehama District Fairground Weight Watchers meeting, 8 a.m., 485 Antelope Blvd. #N, 1-800-651-6000 3A Popular customer request Best Homemade Pies in Town ��� Ice Cream Orders to go Serving Butte, Glenn & Tehama Counties Tues-Sat 9am-5pm ��� Closed Sun & Mon 22825 Antelope Blvd., Red Bluff 731 Main St., 530.529.4012 open 7 days 5:30am-9pm 530-528-2221 ��� Fax 530-528-2229 www.thestovejunction.com Drugs A request was made for medical aid at Corning High School on Blackburn Avenue for an evaluation of a student suspected to be under the influence. The youth was released to a par- one is attacking the canine, or when the handler commands him to bite. Many and I have attended several community events in the past year. If you have seen us at one of those events you already know that Many is very friendly and does not bite people to be mean. Our role as a canine team is to help keep the general public safe as well as our fellow officers. Using Many���s nose, we can search a building a lot faster and safer than a team of officers. Many can also tell if there are drugs in a vehicle before we open the car door. People think twice before fighting or running when they know the police canine is there, which helps to prevent injuries to both suspects and officers.. This is obviously a benefit for everyone. Canines also help officers connect with the community on a positive level. Police Canines love to show off their skills at public demonstrations. This gives officers a chance to have positive contact with children and adults alike and builds bonds between us and the community. I���d like to offer my thanks to all the members of the community whose contributions and efforts have made it possible for us to get a patrol canine program started at Red Bluff PD. ent. Odd Someone in management at Dollar Tree on Solano Street in Corning reported about 4 p.m. Wednesday that a Hispanic man in his late 20s with a goatee, who was about 5��� 8��� and 160 pounds, had been in store several times following a woman employee around. On Wednesday, the man was in store taking pictures with his cell phone of the employee. The manager got the man to leave store. He left in Gray Honda fourdoor. Threats A woman reported about 1:40 a.m. Wednesday to that her ex boyfriend keeps calling her and threatening to kill her. Extra patrol was provided. Announcing Practice Closure Michele Martin, DPM Office Closing February 28, 2013 527-2523 Medical Records Request P.O. Box 609 Cottonwood Ca 96022

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