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NEWBERG,OREGON Franc- esca Aguilar, a theater ma- jor from Corning, earned dean's list recognition at George Fox University af- ter earning a grade point average of 3.5 or higher during the 2015 spring se- mester. Aguilar is academically considered a junior based on the number of cred- its earned. All told, more than 800 students earned dean's list honors for the se- mester. George Fox University is ranked by Forbes among the top Christian universi- ties in the country and is a Christian college classified by U.S. News & World Re- port as a first-tier regional university. RECOGNITION Aguilarmakesdean'slist SMITHFIELD, RHODE ISLAND Bryant University held its 152nd Commencement on Saturday, May 16. Among the graduates was Tyler Jo- seph Mcintyre, of Corning with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration in Management. Bryant University in Smithfield is a leading pri- vate university offering an innovative and uniquely in- tegrated business and lib- eral arts education. GRADUATION Mcintyre graduates from Bryant Red Bluff Rotary Awards 12 $1,000 College Scholar- ships. For 25 years, the Rotary Club of Red Bluff has raised money through local fund- raising activities to fund $1,000 scholarships for 10 or more Red Bluff high school students every year. In recent years, the ma- jority of funds for the schol- arships have been generated through beer sales at the annual Red Bluff Round-Up Rodeo, with the support of the Red Bluff Round-Up As- sociation. Scholarship recipients are chosen by a standing committee of Red Bluff Ro- tary from among about 200 applications submitted an- nually by local high school seniors. The 12 recipients for 2015 are Danielle Mincer- Mueller, Haley Rosser, Kevin Hinkston, Josiah Vasey, Jordan Vazquez, Eric Shreter, Mikenna Cory, Ashley Axum, Devan Schoelen, Kade Lewis, Ni- cole Sauve and Christopher Gray. All were from Red Bluff Union High School except Gray, from Mercy High School. Red Bluff club awards scholarships COURTESYPHOTO From le are Red Bluff Round-Up Association general manager James Miller, scholarship recipients Danielle Mincer-Mueller, Haley Rosser, Kevin Hinkston, Josiah Vasey, Jordan Vazquez, Eric Shreter, Mikenna Cory, Ashley Axum, Devan Schoelen, Kade Lewis, Nicole Sauve, Christopher Gray and Red Bluff Round-Up director JB Stacey. Standing behind is Scholarship Selection Committee Chairman Jack Fennel. DURANGO, COLORADO The Fort Lewis College School of Arts and Sciences held its annual Undergraduate Re- search & Creative Activities Symposium April 23. Student participants were selected by their de- partments to represent the best undergraduate re- search and performances done at Fort Lewis College this year. Each department selects two students to give talks, and up to five groups of stu- dents to present posters or performances. Jessica Huntoon, of Ger- ber, presented a project ti- tled "Concussion Reporting in NCAA Division I-III Col- legiate Athletes," along with peers supervised by Carrie Meyer. Huntoon's major is Athletic Training . The presentations can be seen on the Fort Lewis Col- lege You Tube channel via the archived live streams of the morning and afternoon sessions. FORT LEWIS COLLEGE Huntoon presents at symposium SAN DIEGO KCR College Radio, San Diego State Uni- versity's student-run radio station, won Best Online Station at the Intercolle- giate Broadcast System Golden Microphone Awards for 2015. In addition KCR was a finalist for the Abra- ham and Borst award for Best College Radio Station Overall. Daniel Vietti, a Journal- ism major from Cotton- wood, was a part of the KCR team for the 2014-15 year. GOLDEN MICROPHONE Vietti part of award-winning team ROTARY REDDING Simpson Uni- versity named more than 265 students to the Dean's List for the spring 2015 semester. To be eligible for the Dean's List, a stu- dent must have a semester grade-point average of 3.50 or higher. The following local stu- dents were named to the Dean's List: Nathan An- thony of Red Bluff, Bible & Theology and Business Administration; Natasha Bosetti of Red Bluff, Nurs- ing; Cameron Greilich of Cottonwood, Psychology; Amy Haley of Cotton- wood, English and Span- ish; Dolly Hopper of Red Bluff, Nursing; Gessica Leuschner of Orland, Lib- eral Studies; Megan Man- dolfo of Red Bluff, Eng- lish; Shannon McKenna of Red Bluff, Pre-Nursing; Corinne Schali of Cotton- wood, Biology; Danielle Tanis of Cottonwood, Psy- chology. For more information visit simpsonu.edu. ACHIEVEMENT Students named to Dean's List at Simpson CORVALLIS, OREGON Or- egon State University will hold its 146th com- mencement on Saturday, June 13. Among students gradu- ating is Shelby M. Foley, of Red Bluff with a Bachelor of Science in Environmen- tal Engineering. OSU is one of the few large universities in the nation to hand out stu- dents' actual diplomas during the commence- ment ceremony. More information about OSU's graduation is avail- able online at: http://ore- gonstate.edu/events/com- mencement/. COLLEGE Foley to graduate from Oregon State COURTESY PHOTO Cathy Wilson of the Tehama County Department of Education in the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Program, has helped create a sign language club at Gerber Elementary School to enhance communication between deaf and hearing students. The club will be performing a sign language interpretation of the classic song "What a Wonderful World" by Louis Armstrong during the final Student of the Month assembly May 29. Students will be performing at 9 a.m., 10:15 a.m. and 1:15 p.m. GERBER STUDENTS TO SIGN Salisbury High School Class of 2015 will hold its graduation ceremony at 7 p.m. Wednesday, May 27 at Red Bluff High School Per- forming Arts Center. Admittance to gradua- tion is by ticket only. The following is the list of Salisbury High School graduates: Alyssa Annemarie Al- ford, Miguel Banuelos, Samuel Clifford Cline, Nicholas Coats, Erika Di- anne Couch, Brittany Re- nee Debuono, George DeGrace, Jr., Paige Le- vonne, Detoskey, James E. Fletcher, Jr., Elizabeth Grace Flickinger, Des- tiny D. Freeman, Dal- las Givens, Anthony E. Gniech, Arnulfo Guar- dado, Daniel Hurd, Nich- ole C. LaFrentz, Trestin Lee Micah Ledford, Taylor Lynn May, Victoria Jean Morrison, Toby J. My- ers, Chelsea Dawn Paulk, Cyrille Anthony Reese, Jr., Kyle Nicholas Sala- zar, Julio Eduardo San- chez, Victoria Taylor Sef- ton, Maria M. Solorzano, Saul Refujio Tapia, Delo- ris Jean Teague, Kendull L. Thevenot, Mikah Lee Thomson. GRADUATION Salisbury High School Class of 2015 TheAssociatedPress SAN FRANCISCO Un- dergraduates from out- side California and grad- uate students preparing for careers outside aca- demia will pay more to at- tend the University of Cal- ifornia in the fall under a revised plan approved by members of the 10-campus system's governing board on Thursday. The tuition hikes en- dorsed by a Board of Re- gents committee included an 8 percent increase in the premium non-Califor- nians pay to pursue bache- lor's degrees at UC schools. The number of students from other states and abroad has grown rapidly at most campuses in re- cent years, and the higher charges will bring their tuition and fees to nearly $37,000 in the fall. The increase resulted from a budget compro- mise between Gov. Jerry Brown and UC President Janet Napolitano that for the next two years would freeze in-state tuition at $11,220 for all in-state stu- dents except those pursu- ing professional degrees but does not include any money to expand under- graduate enrollment for Californians. Under their agreement, graduate students in fields such as medicine, nursing, business and journalism but not law would pay any- where from 1.5 percent to 20 percent more next year. It also would keep nonres- ident tuition for graduate students in academic disci- plines at $26,322 next year. The full board was ex- pected to endorse the deal on Thursday afternoon. UC officials, meanwhile, are lobbying the Legisla- ture for $50 million above the $120 million budget increase Brown has pro- posed next year, money they said would allow them to expand under- graduate resident enroll- ment by 500 slots in the fall and another 2,110 the year after. Democratic leaders have been pressuring Napoli- tano to prioritize Califor- nia residents in admissions decisions over higher-pay- ing nonresidents. UNIVERSITIES Committee OKs tuition hikes for nonresidents (530) 529-1220 100 Jackson St.,Red Bluff 2 FREE Tanning Sessions withanynew membership in the month of May Valid'tillMay31,2015 ValleyTerraceApts Waitlistfor1,2&3bdrms USDA-RD w/HUD S8 and LIHTC, available for income qualified households. Application criteria apply. This institution is an equal oppor- tunity provider and employer 982 Toomes Ave, Corning, CA 530-824-4805 TDD: 800-735-2929 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Mel's Place • Lingerie • Airbrush Tanning • Swimwear 332OakStreet Red Bluff (530) 604-4182 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ TheDailyNewswill feature a special section of photos and write-ups on over 90 "Students of Distinction" from middle and high schools across the county. This project has been created in cooperation with the Tehama County Department of Education. Selections of students featured will be made by schools and Teachers. The supplement will be published as a special section of the newspaper and as a digital page-turn online edition on www.redbluffdailynews.com through May of 2016! To sponsor a student's photo and accomplishments is just $59 for 1 sponsorship and $55 each for multiples. Local businesses, professionals, educators, local citizens: All are welcome to support Tehama County's most accomplished students, and demonstrate support of local education in the process. SponsorDeadline: Friday, May 22 Sponsors will be identified in a 3" tall by 1 column wide space at the bottom of each student salute. This special will appear in the full run of the Daily News on Thursday, May 28, 2015 Daily News advertising representatatives can help you decide what to say. Limited opportunity to support students from individual schools. For further information, contact your Daily News advertising representative or Nadine Souza at Honoring Outstanding Tehama County Students (530) 527-2151 advertise@ redbluffdailynews.com CANNED FOOD DRIVE *Validonly at H & R Block 1315 Solano St, Corning Call 530-824-7999 for a appointment Bring in 4 cans of food when you come in to get your taxes done, and get $15.00 off your tax preparation fees.* Allcannedfoodswillbedonatedto CorningChristianAssistanceFoodBank. Take15%offyourmeal with this ad dineinonly 723 Main St. 527.5470 www. palominoroom .com PrimeRibonFridaysnights Open Tues-Sat EDUCATION » redbluffdailynews.com Friday, May 22, 2015 MORE AT FACEBOOK.COM/RBDAILYNEWS AND TWITTER.COM/REDBLUFFNEWS A8

