Red Bluff Daily News

February 25, 2015

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The following infor- mation has been com- piled from Red Bluff Po- lice Department, Tehama County Sheriff's Depart- ment, Corning Police De- partment and California Highway Patrol logs. Arrests JustinPaulKellar:34, of Redding was arrested Monday on outstanding charges of felony failure to appear and misdemeanor failure to appear. Bail was $65,000. Curtis John Ables: 31, of Red Bluff was arrested Monday at Luning and Ven- tura avenues on suspicion of felony possession of a dirk or dagger and out- standing charges of felony failure to appear, misde- meanor failures to appear and vandalism. Bail was $58,000. Joseph Christopher Man- giapelo: 28, of Red Bluff was arrested Sunday on Main Street in Red Bluff on suspicion of felony vandal- ism, possession of a dirk or dagger and misdemeanor controlled substance paraphernalia. Bail was $33,000. Joseph Anthony Clopp: 24, of Red Bluff was arrested Monday in the 500block of Oak Street on suspicion of posses- sion of narcotics for sale and an outstanding felony charge of transportation or selling narcotics. Bail was $75,000. Suspicious 16400block of Benson Road: A caller reported Monday that a message was sent from her cell phone to all of her contacts that stated she had died and solicited donations. Policelogs Night patrolman Earl Hatfield arrested two ho- boes Tuesday evening when he caught them in the act of stealing oranges from the Kraft yard on North Washington street. They were held over night and after being given a se- vere reprimand yesterday morning were ordered to leave town. Patrolman Wilkinson and Hatfield have both been kept on the jump for the past two weeks han- dling the unusually large number of hoboes that are going through the country at this time. They report that every freight train brings in from ten to thirty tramps. The officers barely suc- ceed in getting one bunch rounded up and started out of town when another train brings in a fresh lot to be taken care of. The migration of the "side door Pullman mag- nates" during the past few months has been far in excess of the usual travel at this time of the year. A large percentage of them are young men and boys, most of whom make an effort to find work be- fore "hitting up the main stem," which is the way they express the act of pan- handling the streets. — Feb. 25, 1915 100 YEARS AGO... Policeofficers kept busy with traveling public War experts Allen Weiner and Allan Stam will give a presentation at 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 26, as part of the political science honor society Pi Sigma Al- pha's sixth annual spring lecture. The program, "Iraq: Looking Backward, Mov- ing Forward," will take place in the Bell Memorial Union Auditorium. Weiner is a senior law lecturer and co-director of the Stanford Program in International and Compar- ative Law. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2003, Weiner served from 1996 to 2001 as a principal counselor at the U.S. embassy in The Hague. Stam serves as dean of the Frank Batten School of Leadership and Pub- lic Policy at the Univer- sity of Virginia. He is the author of "Democracies at War" (Princeton Univer- sity Press, 2002) and "The Behavioral Origins of War" (University of Michigan Press, 2003). CSU, Chico political sci- ence professor James Ja- cob will join Weiner and Stam at noon Friday for a brown-bag roundtable titled "The Future of the Middle East." The event will be in Performing Arts Center 135. Pi Sigma Alpha is a na- tional political science honor society. Each spring, the society hosts one or more expert lectures. For more information, call po- litical science professor Alan Gibson at 530-898- 4952. Those who require an accommodation in order to participate in either of these events or who have questions about accessibil- ity should call the Acces- sibility Resource Center at 530-898-5959. CSU CHICO Visiting experts to speak on Middle East The recipe for seared sirloin steak with onion relish comes from www. marthastewart.com. 1 pounds boneless sirloin steak, 1 inch thick 1 tablespoon honey 3 tablespoons sherry vinegar Coarse salt and freshly ground pepper cup olive oil, plus more for skillet red onion, finely chopped (about cup) 1 tablespoon minced garlic, (2 medium cloves) 1/3 cup brine-cured pit- ted green olives, cut into inch thick rounds 1 navel orange, peel and pith cut off, flesh cut into inch cubes cup coarsely chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley, plus sprigs for garnish Directions: Wisk together honey and vinegar in a medium bowl; season with salt and pepper. Whisking constantly, pour in oil in a slow, steady stream; wisk until emulsified. Stir in onion, garlic, ol- ives, orange and parsley; set aside. Season steak all over with 1 teaspoon salt and teaspoon pepper. Coat a 12-inch seasoned cast- iron skillet with a thin layer of oil; heat over me- dium high heat until very hot. Sear steak, turning once, 6 to 8 minutes per side for medium-rare. Transfer to a plate, and tent with foil; let stand 10 minutes before slic- ing. To serve, cut steak against the grain into inch thick slices, and ar- range on a platter. Spoon relish on top; garnish with parsley sprigs. Makes 4 servings; Prep time: 20 minutes. Total time: 40 minutes. CATTLEWOMEN'S CORNER Seared sirloin steak with onion relish DAILY NEWS FILE PHOTO Tehama County Cattlemen member and past President Hank Pritchard, Manton rancher, and Griz, his border collie, were waiting for the cattle during the final round of si ing at the recent Red Bluff Bull & Gelding Sale. Time is running out for farmers and ranchers that want to participate in the Conservation Stewardship Program this year. Feb. 27 is the deadline. Produc- ers should visit their lo- cal NRCS office before that date to initiate the applica- tion process. The CSP rewards farm- ers, ranchers and forest- ers for maintaining ex- isting conservation prac- tices and for adopting additional practices on cropland, grassland, non- industrial private forest- land and tribal lands. The program pays producers for fostering clean water, better soil management, improved habitat and other natural resource benefits. As part of the CSP appli- cation process, applicants work with NRCS field per- sonnel to complete a re- source inventory of their land to determine the con- servation performance for existing and new conser- vation activities. The ap- plicant's conservation performance will be used to determine eligibility, ranking and payments. Contracts are awarded to those offering the high- est level of environmental benefits, with NRCS work- ing down through the list of eligible applicants un- til acreage allocated to the particular state runs out. In addition, producers who received a CSP con- tract in 2011 have the op- portunity to renew their contract for another five- year period. Renewal ap- plications must be re- ceived by March 31 to en- sure a seamless transition into the next contract without a lapse in pay- ments. Renewal contracts do not compete with new applicants. Potential applicants can call the Center for Rural Affairs Farm Bill helpline by calling (402) 687-2100 or emailing Traci Bruck- ner at tracib@cfra.org for assistance from cen- ter staff with knowledge about program rules. CONSERVATION St ew ar ds hi p pr og ra m de ad li ne i s Fr id ay TheAssociatedPress SAN FRANCISCO Fish- ing along streams in three Northern California coastal counties may be off limits through the spring at times when water levels run low. Officials at the Califor- nia Department of Fish and Wildlife said Monday that they're trying to pro- tect spawning salmon and steelhead. They say streams in Mendocino, Sonoma and Marin counties are sub- ject to restrictions through April 30. Wildlife officials say coastal streams are a crit- ical habitat for chinook and coho salmon as well as steelhead trout, all fed- erally protected species. Officials say that in low water the fish have trouble reaching their spawning grounds, and they are vul- nerable to predators and stress. It is up to anglers to check with state wildlife officials for restrictions be- fore fishing. WATER LEVELS Streams subject to fishing closures in 3 counties The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO Someone hacked into Burning Man's website and snapped up the first batch of tickets to the summer festival. Now organizers are try- ing to figure out how it hap- pened, and promising to cancel the culprits' tickets. They figured out there was a problem when passes went on sale last week. Some 80,000 people tried to buy $390 tickets to the mas- sive, free-for-all festival in a remote dry lake bed in the Black Rock Desert in North- ern Nevada in late August. But only the first 20,000 people who clicked were guaranteed a pair of tickets. About three-quarters of would-be ticket buyers were turned away. Some- how, 200 people cheated and got to the front of the cyber line. Burning Man organizers said they are taking steps to prevent a future hack. SUMMER FESTIVAL Hackers snap up Burning Man tickets By Michael R. Blood and Kevin Freking The Associated Press WASHINGTON Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has declined to enter the race for Bar- bara Boxer's U.S. Senate seat, leaving state Attor- ney General Kamala Har- ris, the only announced candidate so far, as the heavy favorite. Villaraigosa had been cautiously exploring a run since Boxer's decision to re- tire when her current term expires. Many backers believed he would run, but in the end, he said he received a lot of encouragement, but knew his heart and fam- ily are in California, not Washington. "I have decided not to run for the U.S. Senate and instead continue my efforts to make Califor- nia a better place to live, work and raise a family. We have come a long way, but our work is not done, and neither am I," Villara- igosa said on his Facebook page. Political analysts had been expecting a hugely expensive and rough-and- tumble contest between Villaraigosa and Harris. "Civil wars are always the nastiest," Claremont McKenna College political scientist Jack Pitney said before the former mayor's announcement. Though Harris is the prohibitive favorite, there are more than a dozen other potential contend- ers. Villaraigosa had a chance to become the state's first elected His- panic senator, reprising his breakthrough when he became the first La- tino to become Los Ange- les mayor in more than a century. Harris, a former San Francisco prosecutor who entered the race Jan. 13, could mark two firsts for a California senator — the state has never elected a black senator or one of In- dian descent. She is the daughter of a black father from Ja- maica and an Indian mother. The contest had poten- tial geographic dimen- sions, too, in a state with a north-south rivalry that extends from sports — think Dodgers and Giants — through politics. Villaraigosa, 62, is the son of a Mexican im- migrant and a high- school dropout who shed his life as a barrio tough and eventually became speaker of the California Assembly, city councilman and in 2005, mayor. FACEBOOK PAGE Former LA Mayor Villaraigosa opts out of Senate bid TehamaCountyAuditor isrecruitingfor Auditor Accountant thru March 13, 2015 Job flyer and applications on line at http://co.tehama.ca.us Servicingyourdisposalneedsin Tehama County, and the City of Red Bluff including Residential, Commercial, and Temporary bin services. GREENWASTEOFTEHAMA A WASTE CONNECTIONS COMPANY 530-528-8500 1805 AIRPORT BLVD. RED BLUFF, CA GreenWasteisaproud supporter of local events. 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