Red Bluff Daily News

November 07, 2014

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COURTESYPHOTO TheRedBluffElksproudlyrewardhighschoolstudentsinTehamaCountyfortheir excellence. Students honored were Corning High, Zachary Pritchard; Mercy High, Megan Realand; Los Molinos High, Juan Ascencio Aguilare; Red Bluff High, Michael- la Hutchens; Centennial High School, Elsie Woods. ACHIEVEMENT STUDENTS OF MONTH COURTESY PHOTO Elks proudly reward elementary school students in Tehama County for their excel- lence. Students honored were Maywood Elementary, Kara Beckwith; Reeds Creek, Emma Ermgcoff; Vina Elementary, Parker Coley; Berrendos, Lindsay Harrison; Los Molinos Elementary, Juan Sclazar; Richfield, Zuri Morrow; Sacred Heart, Steefarie Avila; Vista School, Maci Lemke; Lassen View, Maci Ochs; Woodson Elementary School, Citlalli Creuz. ACHIEVEMENT KIDS REWARDED By Lisa Leff TheAssociatedPress SAN FRANCISCO Tuitionat the University of California's 10 campuses would rise by as much as 5 percent in each of the next five years under a plan UC President Janet Na- politano is expected to pres- ent to the system's governing board Thursday. Theproposalfollowsthree years in which tuition rates have remained frozen. It would increase the average annual cost of a UC educa- tion for California residents pursuing undergraduate de- grees and graduate degrees in academic as opposed to professional disciplines from $12,192 to up to $12,804 next fall and $15,564 in fall 2019, according to a copy of the plan provided in advance to The Associated Press. Napolitano said the five- year framework fulfills a goal she set when she as- sumed the president's office last year of making "mod- est" tuition hikes a predict- able part of the university's budget so both families and campuses can know what to expect and plan accordingly. "We are being honest, be- ing honest with Californians in terms of cost and also en- suring that we are continu- ing to maintain the Univer- sity of California in terms of academicexcellence,interms of its moment, in terms of be- ing really an engine of mobil- ity," she said in an interview. The 5 percent figure as- sumes state funding for the university will go up by about $120million,or4percenteach year, which Napolitano said is inadequate given ongoing cost increases, the pressure campuses are feeling to en- roll more students and fund- ing cuts made during the re- cessionthathavelefttaxpayer- support for the part of the budget that goes for educat- ing students $460 million be- low what it was six years ago. A bigger boost in state funding would reduce or eliminate the need for the proposed tuition hikes, she said. For every addi- tional $20 million, the planned tuition increase could be reduced by 1 per- cent, UC spokesman Steve Montiel said. HIGHER EDUCATION Un iv er si ty o f Ca li fo rn ia w ei gh s tu it io n hi ke p la n Mercy High School will present "Harvey" at 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday Nov. 7-9 at the school. Tickets are $5 and avail- able at the door. When Elwood P. Dowd starts to introduce his imaginary friend, Harvey, a six-and-a-half-foot-tall rabbit, to guests at a soci- ety party, his sister, Veta, has seen as much of his ec- centric behavior as she can tolerate. She decides to have him committed to a sanitarium to spare her daughter, Myr- tle Mae, and their family the embarrassment. Problems arise, however, when Veta herself is mis- takenly assumed to be on the verge of lunacy when she explains to doctors that years of living with El- wood's hallucination have caused her to see Harvey also. The doctors commit Veta instead of Elwood and his invisible compan- ion. When he shows up at the sanitarium looking for his best friend Harvey, it seems that the mild-man- nered Elwood's delusion has had a strange influ- ence on more than one of the doctors. The cast includes Mi- kaela Weber, Jasmine Vu, Gabe Sartori, Megan Re- alander, Nate Bennett, Sam Nguyen, Vincent Chen, An- nie Feser, Chris Gray, An- thony Aviles and Shyanne Riberal-Norton. THEATER Mercy High School to stage 'Harvey' COURTESY PHOTO Red Bluff Outdoor Power 527-5741 490 Antelope Blvd, Red Bluff Mon.-Sat. 8am-5pm Earn500pointsfrom7:00am–Midnight,andspin the Feathers of Fortune Wheel to win incredible prizes! $50TIMBER'SGIFTCERTIFICATE TICKETS TO THE NEW YEARS EVE PARTY UP TO $100 IN FREE SLOT P�Y · BUFFET FOR TWO GOLF AT SEVIL�NO LINKS · MYSTERY GIFTS 2655EverettFreemanWay Corning, California 96021 888.331.6400 www.rollinghillscasino.com 365 S. MAIN ST, RED BLUFF 527-2720 • www.lariatbowl.com Lariat Bowl & Miniature Golf Joinus for FUN Regular Haircut $ 2 00 off KWIK KUTS FamilyHairSalon 1064SouthMainSt.,RedBluff•529-3540 ANY RETAIL PRODUCT 20 % off withanychemicalserviceof $50 or more Notgoodwithotheroffers Expires 11/30/14 With coupon Reg. $13.95 CattleWomen's Luncheon & Fashion Show Roaring 20's Don't Forget Sat.Nov.8,2014 Rolling Hills Casino FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2014 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM | EDUCATION | 5 A

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