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Saturday, June 8, 2013 – Daily News Obituaries JOHN CLIFTON CRAMP August 9, 1983 - May 25, 2013 John Clifton Cramp came into our lives August 9, 1983 and left us May 25, 2013, at the young age of 29. John was predeeded in death by his father Fred Cramp, his grandparents Jack (Pappy) and Janice Cramp and his faithful dog Thor. John has left behind his loving mother Stacey Laughlin and stepdad Don Laughlin, grandparents Kenneth and Roberta Grootveld, Aunts and Uncles, Troy & Melissa Grootveld, Cory & Renee Grootveld, Dudley and John Thompson and Dan and Esther Cramp. He also leaves behind his little buddy Boe to whom he was a father figure to, and many friends who will miss his goofy sence of humor and his generosity. Any donations for the family will be greatly appreciated to help offset burial costs. Donations can be made to Tri-Counties Bank. TED & IRENE WHITE MEMORIAL SERVICE A memorial service for WWII Veteran Theodore (Ted) White and his wife Oleta Irene White is scheduled for June 18, 2013 at 12:30 p.m. The service has been relocated to Ide Adobe Park. The park is located in Red Bluff on Adobe Road, one-half mile from Interstate 5. A picnic will follow. Ted and Irene White are survived by their children Jo Hemphill, Irene Fuller, Anna (Hacklin) Carter, Bill Hacklin, and Lynne Hacklin as well as son-in-law Glenn Reed. Also, surviving are their grandchildren Donald, Dandy, Barbie, Lorrie, Cherie, Dana, Amber, Chris, Greg, Andrea, Ashley, Tricia, Tracy, and TD. They were predeceased by daughters Mary Niles and Judy Reed, and grandchild David. Death Notices Death notices must be provided by mortuaries to the news department, are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the newspaper's website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. Marshall "Chris" Harrison Marshall "Chris" Harrison died Thursday, June 6, 2013, at his residence in Red Bluff. He was 64. Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service is handling the arrangements. Published Saturday, June 8, 2013, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Evelyn Keller Evelyn Keller, of Orland, died Friday, June 7, 2013, at Westhaven Assisted Living in Orland. She was 78. Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary is handling the arrangements. Published Saturday, June 8, 2013, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. K-9 unit assists in drug arrest The Red Bluff Police Department's K9 unit, Many, was instrumental in the arrest of a 41-year-old man early Friday. Around 2:30 a.m. Red Bluff police officers stopped Scott William Festag in his vehicle near the Riverside Plaza, according to a department press release. Many and partner Corporal Mike Brown responded to the scene and the pair developed probable cause to believe narcotics were inside the vehicle. Three officers searched the vehicle and discovered 1.8 grams of methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia, stolen property and the evidence of financial crimes. Festag was arrested for possession of a controlled substance, transportation of a controlled substance, receiving stolen property, having a theft access card, possession of drug paraphernalia and identification theft. Plains Drive fire FINES Continued from page 1A compensation from those whose carelessness damages our treasured natural resources." The Whiskey Fire ignited June 12, 2009 when PG&E transmission lines contacted branches of a gray pine tree that was less than two feet away from the line, below the minimum amount of clearance by state law. The branches ignited and dropped to the ground, igniting surrounding vegetation. The fire lasted for eight QUERIES Continued from page 1A • The board set a public hearing for 10:30 a.m. June 15 to discuss adopting an ordinance that would impose a $1 fee to record property records. The fees would be used by the Clerk and Recorder Department to establish an electronic recording delivery system. The fee would not apply to vital SIGNS Continued from page 1A $500,000 at a stakeholders meeting in August 2011. The city of Corning has already started its wayfinding makeover. The Branding Project hopes to further expand the signage to freeways DANCE Continued from page 1A the owners were supplementing it with their own income to keep it afloat, she said. "As much as we've been in the public eye, we've been fighting to restore our good reputation, but we haven't grown enough to make it," Julian-Anker said. "We underpay our teachers and still have broken even, not even one month. They do it out of the goodness of their hearts." The studio has tried to keep overhead cost as low as it can and wasn't willing to raise the prices because doing so would go against the goal of making dance accessible to all, Julian-Anker said. It would also punish those who had been loyal customers while alienating new people. "Dance is good for people," Julian-Anker said. "It gives them selfconfidence and for the kids here it was important for there self esteem. We train dancers, and nurture artists because dance is an art form. You don't just show tricks and repeat what you've learned." LOSMO Photo by Ross Palubeski CalFire, Red Bluff Fire and Tehama County Fire Department were dispatched around 2:15 p.m. Friday to a vegetation fire at Plains Drive near Wilder Road in west Red Bluff. The first unit at scene reported about 5 acres burning with an outbuilding involved. The fire was contained in about 15 minutes. Nothing further was available. The staff at Red Bluff Simple Cremations would like to thank all of the families who trust us with their loved ones needs. Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service 527-1732 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff, FD Lic. 1931 days and cost nearly $5 million to suppress. The US Attorney's office sought compensation from PG&E and its contractors ACRT Inc. and Davey Tree Surgery Company for their failure to trim or remove the hazardous tree that started the fire. PG$E spokesperson Jana Morris said the company is paying $1.5 million of the settlement. "Since the fire, we have evaluated our policies and procedures to ensure that we are reducing the risk of fire and safe guarding our natural resources," she said. The settlements will be (Continued from page 1A) for all of her hard work, it was also a burden because she was being labeled as smart. "I don't believe in labeling people," she said, reminding everyone that each person has different talents. Smith said she was just good at getting her homework in on time and remembering what she studied for tests. Smith is the second in her family to graduate a Bulldog, following her father Michael R. Smith II, used to help restore national resources destroyed by the fire. "These settlement funds are important to helping achieve our ecological restoration goals for those forests impacted by these fires," U.S. Forest Service's Regional Forester Randy Moore said: The Power Fire was caused by cigarette smoking by a crew of workers hired to trim trees near the Salt Spring Reservoir. The crew was operated by VCS Sub Inc., doing business as Provco. They were smoking in a heavily wooded area under extremely hazardous fire life records such as life, death and marriage certificates. • The board adopted a resolution increasing the compensation for election workers and increasing the rental rates of polling locations. Precinct Inspector Compensation would increase from $110 to $125 including a meal allowance. Clerks and Roving Inspectors would receive $110. Previously those positions received $100 and $85 respectively. • The board extended a 10 percent salary increase for Treasurer 9A conditions, according to the US Attorney's office. That fire lasted for 17 days at a cost of $8.46 million, burning 13,000 acres of national forest land and 180 million board feet of commercially harvestable public timber. In addition to killing trees, the fire caused extensive damage to environmental resources, decimating protected habitat for sensitive species such as the northern spotted owl, causing harmful erosion into watersheds, and destroying irreplaceable artifacts in protected Native American historical sites. and Tax Collector Dana Hollmer through June 30, 2014. The county does not have an Information Technology manager and instead relies on Hollmer to provide computer expertise to other county departments on an ongoing basis. A staff report says budget restraints will not allow hiring of an IT manager at this time. Rich Greene can be reached at 527-2151, ext. 109 or rgreene@redbluffdailynews.com. about not being able to find the facility when they pull off the interstate. The council authorized the purchase by a 4-1 vote, with Councilman Clay Parker dissenting. and eventually install elaborate gateway signs at city entrances. Red Bluff Planning Director Scot Timboe said the city's expenditure was a cost-effective way to participate in the process. The city would be responsible for the 30-by42 feet vinyl banners' upkeep. The banners themselves cost around $130 each. The city would only need to purchase the $2,328 brackets once. The brackets will mount to traffic signal poles. Only one private business is noted on the signs — St. Elizabeth Community Hospital. Timboe said the city had a request to include the hospital from CalTrans as people have complained The studio teaches dance history, theory and philosophy and takes the students on field trips to see the people and styles they study, she said. Julian-Anker was thrilled to have the chance to see Pilobolus, one of the biggest dance companies in the world, and afterward the dancers sat down to talk with the students, she said. "They talked with them about what it means to be professional and about being creative," JulianAnker said. The group also had the chance to see the Paul Taylor Company at Laxson Auditorium shortly after doing a three-week unit on the company, she said. Her students performed at a international dance festival in Las Vegas, where they were asked to fill in for an injured dancer, she said. The studio has been able to go out into the community in big and small ways, which is something she's proud of, Julian-Anker said. Every Monday, two of her students go to Brentwood Skilled Nursing to dance. The group was instrumental in arranging one of Red Bluff's biggest flash mobs in 2012 at the farmers market. "Dance is so natural," Julian-Anker said. " If you can wiggle your eyebrows, you can dance. It gives joy and is healthy and life-giving." What she enjoyed in the flash mob was that there were people from so many different groups in Red Bluff, she said. "Very few of them were actual dancers,' Julian-Anker said. "It was so unifying. It was really fun and really special. Some of them worked over a month to surprise their family and friends. I was so proud to see people who wouldn't otherwise dance." Red Bluff does not have the economic strength to support all the studios, Julian-Anker said. While Julian-Anker won't be with Dance Red Bluff, she and her husband, Phil Anker, who teaches at Vista Middle School, will still be active in Red Bluff Elementary School productions, such as Thoroughly Modern Mille, which she assisted in this year. She plans to teach in Redding and will be returning to school to study kineseology so she can be the best dance teacher she can, JulianAnker said. "This whole thing has been heartbreaking," Julian-Anker said. "These are my kids. Some I've had since they were three and now they are eight. They haven't danced anywhere else and now to release them off to somewhere else is really hard." Julian-Anker even had one girl who offered to sell lemonade if it would help to keep the studio, she said. No offers to buy the studio have come forth, Julian-Anker said. The pieces of equipment, including the floor — one the best in the north state — will be sold off, she said. The final concert will be at 7 tonight at the State Theatre, 333 Oak St. Tickets are $12 adults, $8 seniors, children 11 and under and free for children two and under. who graduated in 1985. Rodolfo Martinez Chavez was also a second in the family, mother Bertha Martinez graduated from Los Molinos in 1993. Alicia Torres graduated in 1982 and her daughter Briana Perez donned her mortarboard Friday night. Jesse Brewer had two grandparents graduate from Los Molinos, Ina Morris in 1967 and Jerry Brewer in 1968. Gonzalez-Virgen spoke about the teachers that made her four years in high school memorable. "I can honestly say there is no other high school I'd rather graduate from than Los Molinos High School," she said. Francisco LangaricaCastellon and Rodolfo Martinez-Chavez graduated with a Golden State Seal Merit Diploma. The Los Molinos High School Class of 2013 is: Tamara Jean Ables, Jesse Lane Brewer, Nicholas Allen Bristow, Jesus Saul Castillo, Bridget Adriana Cosio, Adelle Rayelynn Drake, Johanna GonzalezVirgen, Sabrina Beth Gordon, Idalia Hernandez-Cas- taneda, Wesley Jason James, Adriana Geovanelly Langarica Garcia, Alfonso Langarica-Barraza, Francisco Langarica-Castellon, Griselda Loronoa Palomares, Edgar Arturo Lugo Soto, Rodolfo Martinez-Chavez, Eric Martin Munoz-Rocha, Sean Emmett O'Brien, Briana Nicole Perez, Beatriz Espinosa Salazar, Kristiana La Manda Smith, Halley Lin Ulrich, Candace Paige Wabs and Haylee Ciara Waelty. Rich Greene can be reached at 527-2151, ext. 109 or rgreene@redbluffdailyne ws.com. ——— Julie Zeeb can be reached at 527-2153, extension 115 or jzeeb@redbluffdailynews. com. Follow her on Twitter @DN_Zeeb.