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Wednesday, June 5, 2013 – Daily News Local Calendar Submit calendar items to P Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 .O. or clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5 Red Bluff Adult Carving Class, 1o a.m.-noon, Red Bluff Veteran's Memorail Hall, Corner of Jackson and Oak streets, 527-0768 Al-Anon, noon, Presbyterian Church, Jefferson and Hickory Alcohol, Anger and Abuse Group, Call for group time and location, 528-0226 Community Good News Club, 6-8 p.m., North Valley Baptist Church, 345 David Ave., $10, 527-0543 Elks duplicate bridge, noon, Elks Lodge, 355 Gilmore Road, 275-4311 Nurturing Parenting Dads Program, 10 a.m. to noon, 1860 Walnut St. #D, Shasta Room, call Keith at 527-8491, ext. 3012 Nurturing Skills for Teen Parents, 9 to 10 a.m., 1900 Walnut Street, 527-8491, ext. 3012 PAL Martial Arts Women's Self Defense, 5:306:30 p.m., 1005 Vista Way, Ste. C, 840-0345 Red Bluff Kiwanis, noon, Elks Lodge Red Bluff Derby Girls open tryouts and practice, 6:30 p.m., Tyler Jelly building at Tehama District Fairgrounds Senior Dance, 7 p.m., Westside Grange, Walnut Street Team Kid, 5:30 p.m., First Southern Baptist Church, 585 Kimball Road, 527-5083 TeenScreen Mental Health Appointments, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., free by appointment, Youth Empowerment Services, 1900 Walnut St., 527-8491, Ext. 3012 Tehama AIDS Consortium, 5 p.m. committee meeting, 5:30 p.m. public meeting, St. Elizabeth Home Health Care, 1425 Vista Way, 527-6824 Tehama County Drug and Alcohol Advisory Board Meeting, noon, 1850 Walnut St., Ste. G, 5277893 Tehama County Library story time, 9:30 a.m., 645 Madison St. 527-0604 Tehama County Technical Advisory Committee, 9 a.m., Board of Supervisor's Chambers Tehama Shooters Association, 6:30 p.m., Red Bluff Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. 5278727 Widowed persons breakfast, 8 a.m., Tremont Cafe & Creamery, 731 Main St., men and women welcome, 384-2471 Cottonwood Cottonwood Library Story Time, 11:30 a.m.12:30 p.m., Cottonwood Library, 3427 Main St., 3474818 Corning Corning Rotary, noon, Rolling Hills Casino: Timbers Steak House, 2655 Barham Ave., corningrotary.org School Readiness Play Group, 10-11:30 a.m., up to 5 years, free, Family Resource Center, 1480 South St., 824-4111 Spanish Adult Education, 5 p.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 Strategies for Success, Life Skill classes, 1:30 p.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 VFW Charity Bingo, 6 p.m., Corning Veterans Memorial Hall, 1620 Solano St., 824-5957 Los Molinos Bible Study, 1 p.m., Sherwood Manor, 7975 Sherwood Blvd.All welcome., Pastor Clyde Brant, 347-1330 Take Off Pounds Sensibly — TOPS, 8:30 a.m., 25160 Josephine St., 385-1068 Tweak a product to your liking I encourage readers to be diligent about reading product labels and unit pricing. Being a smart consumer means being informed about ingredients and costs. Aubrey's tip combines both, creating a product that her wallet likes and her taste buds prefer. LIGHTEN THE SOY SAUCE. My husband and I enjoy stir-fry recipes and like to use low sodium soy sauce because regular soy sauce tastes too salty. We go through it pretty quickly and wanted to buy it in bulk, but none of the warehouse stores in our area carry the lowsodium version. I read the list of ingredients and discovered that low sodium soy sauce is basically soy sauce, water and caramel coloring. Now we make our own. We purchase regular soy sauce in bulk and dilute it. It might be lighter in color, but now we have soy sauce at half the cost. Believe me, I can live with the lighter color! -- Aubrey, West Virginia PALMOLIVE ICE PACK. My physical therapist told me that the best and cheapest ice pack is "frozen" Palmolive green liquid dish soap. I buy the original brand and pour it into a zip-type freezer bag, and then toss it in the freezer. The liquid becomes gel-like and fits better on any part of the body. It can also be refrozen over and over. -- buildup, so I soaked a paper towel Peggy, California A SECOND LIFE FOR in vinegar and wrapped it around STUFFED TOYS. Over the the base of my faucet. I let it sit for years, our children accumu- a while, and it completely removed lated what amounted to two the buildup. -- Patty, Michigan DON'T STASH THE trash bags full of DETERGENT. I found a stuffed animals. bottle of Cascade ComAll were in like-new plete liquid dishwasher condition. We wanted detergent under my sink to donate them and found and used it in my dishout that some law washer. The dishes came enforcement officers out covered in white film. I keep stuffed toys in their phoned the 800 number on vehicles to give to chilthe package and was told dren who are involved in that bottle was six years accidents or other inciold. What happened to my dents. A call to your Mary dishes is common when local sheriff, city police using old dishwasher deteror nearby state patrol gents. Lesson learned -office will let you know don't hoard dishwasher if they'll accept your detergent! -- Kathe, email stuffed toys. Many agencies are grateful to get Would you like to send them, and some even a tip to Mary? You can have organized efforts email her at that collect stuffed toys. -- Mary mary@everydaycheapskate.com, Beth, email ERASE THE BUILDUP. I use or write to Everyday Cheapskate, Mr. Clean Magic Erasers to clean P.O. Box 2099, Cypress, CA the bottom and sides of my iron. I 90630. Include your first and last use spray starch a lot, and it tends to name and state. Mary Hunt is the of build up on the iron. I just wet the founder sponge and wipe the buildup right www.DebtProofLiving.com and off. No more expensive iron clean- author of 23 books, including her 2013 release "Cheaper, Better, ers. -- Brenda, Oklahoma VINEGAR WRAP SOAKS Faster: Over 2,000 Tips and THROUGH. I read that vinegar Tricks to Save You Time and works well to get rid of lime Money Every Day." Hunt Everyday Cheapskate Woman arrested for taking off with man's truck A 25-year-old Red Bluff woman was arrested and booked into Tehama County Jail on the charge of grand theft auto after reportedly stealing a man's pickup early Tuesday. Red Bluff Police took report of a stolen truck at 12:09 a.m. taken from the area of James and Musick avenues. The man reported he was asked for a ride by an acquaintance, Chelsea Danielle Amanda Deuel, which he refused. Deuel jumped into the driver's seat and took off in the truck, which had the keys in the ignition, the man said. A search was conducted for the truck throughout the night and at 5:44 a.m. it was found parked in Deuel's driveway. Deuel was found inside her residence and was in possession of the keys. Bail was $15,000. — Julie Zeeb Senate introduces No Child Left Behind successor WASHINGTON (AP) — The onesized-fits-all national requirements of No Child Left Behind would give way to standards that states write for themselves under legislation Senate Democrats announced Tuesday. The state-by-state approach to education standards is already largely in place in the 37 states that received waivers to the requirements in exchange for customized school improvement plans. The 1,150-page proposal from Senate education committee chairman Tom Harkin would require some of those states to tinker with their improvement plans and force the other remaining states to develop their own reform efforts. Education Secretary Arne Duncan would still have final say over those improvement plans, and schools would still have to measure students' achievements. Buried on page 694 of the legislation, the proposal also includes protections for gay students. Schools that don't take stern measures against bullying or discrimination against gays or lesbians would see their federal funding cut. Democrats likened the measure to Title IX, which forced schools to provide equal opportunities for female athletes under threat of penalty. The proposal faces an uphill climb. A politically polarized Congress THURSDAY, JUNE 6 Police reports Red Bluff The following information is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corning Police Department and California Highway Patrol. California HEAT Chorus - Sweet Adelines, 7 p.m., Meteer School Room 26, 695 Kimball Road, 8950139 Childbirth Class, 6:30 p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Columba room, Anita 529-8377 Fun Senior Aerobics with Linda, 8-9 a.m., $1 per class, Red Bluff Community Center, 1500 South Jackson Street 527-8177 Grief Support Group, 3 p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, Coyne Center, Kristin, 528-4207 Kelly-Griggs House Museum, 1-3 p.m., Thursdays and Sundays, 311 Washington St., tours by appointment,527-1129 or 527-5895 Latino Outreach, noon., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 528-8066 Live country music, 5-7 p.m., dinner, Veterans Hall National Alliance on Mental Illness, Tehama County Chapter Meeting, 6 p.m., County Department of Education, 1135 Lincoln St.., 515-0151 Painting session, Red Bluff Art Association, 10 a.m., Snug Harbor recreation room, 600 Rio Vista Ave., 527-4810 PAL Martial Arts, ages 5-18, 3-5 p.m., 529-7920, www.tehamaso.org Pinochle for Seniors, 12:30-3:30 p.m., 1500 S. Jackson St., free, 527-8177 Playtime Pals Playgroup, 10 a.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 5288066 Phoenix Comunity Support Group for those getting over chemical dependency, 11:30 a.m., Presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson St., 945-2349 Red Bluff Exchange Club, noon, M&M Ranch House, 645 Antelope Blvd. #1 3A Arrests • Brandon Wade Garry, 28, of Corning was arrested Monday in the 1000 block of Fourth Street in Corning and booked into Tehama County Jail on the charges of receiving known stolen property: under $400, cruelty to an elder or dependent adult: great bodily injury likely and threaten crime: intent to terrorize. Bail was set at $115, 000. • Alfred Ralph Garbarini, 32, of Red Bluff was arrested and booked All makes and models. We perform dealer recommened Member Discount 30K, 60K, 90K SERVICES AT LOWER PRICES Smog Check $ starting at 95 $ 25 + 8 certificate 25 has failed to renew No Child Left Behind, also known as the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, since it expired in 2007. Harkin's Republican counterpart, Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, has supported updating No Child Left Behind but his approach has not always melded with Harkin's. Those differences are likely to come into full view on June 11 when the education committee begins to fine tune the legislation. A vote by the full Democratic-controlled Senate has not been scheduled and Democratic aides suggested it could be autumn before one occurs. Lawmakers in the Republican-led House, meanwhile, were reluctant to take steps that could be seen as telling local schools how to best teach their students and enrage tea party activists. Many GOP lawmakers also have been critical of Duncan's tenure as secretary and were unlikely to rush to give him more authority. And a separate legislative wrangle over student loans is certain to get higher priority. Interest rates on new subsidized Stafford loans are set to double on July 1 without congressional action. Competing versions of legislation to dodge avoid that hike on students were making their way through the House and Senate. The sweeping Elementary and Sec- into jail on the charge of public intoxication after it was reported he had battered someone at an apartment in the 1100 block of Delphinium. The incident was first called in at 5:54 p.m. Monday when someone reported his neighbor Ralph was intoxicated and threatening to beat people up. At 10:11 p.m., police returned to the apartments after a woman reported a man in Apartment D had battered her boyfriend. She reported the parties were separated and declined medical. Collision A collision at 5:20 p.m. Monday on northbound Interstate 5, north of the Sacramento River Bridge in Red Bluff, resulted from traffic slowing due to the fire in the area of the East Stop by our booth just inside the gates at this years 4th Annual Crawdad Festival June 7, 8 & 9th Gold Panning Demonstrations on site with Tom & Fran Leftwich Gold Exchange Business of the Year 423 Walnut St. Red Bluff 528-8000 (MOST CARS & PICK-UPS) T-F 10am-5:30pm • Sat. 10am-4pm 527-9841 • 195 S. Main St. facebook.com/redbluffgoldexchange ondary Education Act governs all schools that receive federal dollars for poor, minority, disabled and students whose primary language is not English. The latest version of the law eliminates 20 programs while encouraging states to expand art, physical education and pre-kindergarten programs. In exchange for those federal dollars, schools must meet standards — previously set by Washington but increasingly dictated by state capitols. The nation's largest teacher union, the National Education Association, applauded lawmakers for taking up changes to what it called a ''flawed law'' but urged them not to add importance to testing. And the American Federation of Teachers chief Randi Weingarten called Harkin's bill ''a good first step.'' ''The bill requires a variety of measures to evaluate teachers, rather than making test scores the be-all and endall,'' she said. But that does not mean schools would be off the hook for measuring students' achievements. Students would still be tested in reading and math each year from third to eighth grades, as well as once in high school. Schools would also have to measure students' aptitude in science at least three times between third grade and graduation. Sand Slough off Antelope Boulevard. Both drivers had minor injuries with Krista Vannoy, 21, of Red Bluff taken to St. Elizabeth Community Hospital. Rebekah Bullert, 36, of Red Bluff said she would seek her own aid. Both women were driving north in the right lane with Vannoy following Bullert. As Bullert slowed for traffic, Vannoy hit her brakes and swerved into the left lane in an attempt to avoid a collision, but was unable to do so. Vannoy's 2002 Dodge Stratus had major damage and Bullert's 2012 GMC Yukon had moderate damage. Crashes • A woman reported at 1:05 a.m. Monday hearing a large disturbance on Bend Ferry Road at the exit of an RV park and possibly a crash. The woman recontacted to advise a fence had been damaged and the people were at the boat ramp in an extended cab pickup. The pickup, which had a brush still in its grill, had hit a pole and an oleander bush in the 21800 block of Bend Ferry Road. CHP responded to St. Elizabeth Community Hospital for the incident. About 1:15 a.m., a report was received on Jellys Ferry Road near Coyote Canyon of a pickup with a plant in it in which medical was requested for a 17-year-old teen. • A crash took place at 8:25 a.m. Monday in the area of Antelope Boulevard and Interstate 5. There were no injuries reported. RUNNINGS ROOFING Sheet Metal Roofing Residential Commercial • Composition • Shingle • Single Ply Membrane Tony & Carmen Kelley "No Job Too Steep" " No Job Too Flat" 22679 Moran Road Corning, Ca 96021 Serving Tehama County No Money 530-824-2195 530-527-5789 530-209-5367 CA. LIC#829089 Down! FREE ESTIMATES Owner is on site on every job Fax: 530-824-0748