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COURTESYPHOTO JohnandLucilleRobisoncelebratedtheir72nd Wedding Anniversary at their home on Oct. 12. They were married in San Diego in 1943. They have five children, Johnnie Ferguson, Jacki Walters, Chuck Robison, Patty Howell and Jane Works. They have 15 grandchildren, 29 great grandchildren and 6 great- great grandchildren. ANNIVERSARY Robisons celebrate 72 years of marriage Parent's Choice Confer- ence, a no-cost conference for North State families presented by Northern Cal- ifornia Child Development, Inc., will be in Red Bluff on Friday Oct. 30. The dead- line to register is Wednes- day. The event will feature sessions on topics vital to family's success and well being to succeed in ele- mentary school and be- yond including conversa- tions about time manage- ment for parents. This workshop will dis- cuss prioritizing things, give some good tips to avoid time wasting activi- ties and ways to make time for yourself within your hectic schedule. It Came from the Junk Drawer — Turning Junk into Learn- ing Opportunities is a hands-on opportunity to look at junk a whole new way. There will be a hands-on Cooking with Kids work- shop. The English ver- sion of this workshop will be hosted by our partners from the UC Davis exten- sion, while our staff will be teaming up with the Com- munity Action Agency staff for the Spanish presenta- tion. Preparing for Kinder- garten and Beyond will give some insight to strat- egies you can use to make sure your child is fully pre- pared for the next step in their education. Back to College — Financial Aid Edition will be hosted by Head Start mother Martha Dixon and experts from Shasta College and is sure to be informative for those parents looking to get back to school. Family Budgeting is an opportunity to think about how you spend your money and where your priorities are. Family Finances helps you set long term financial goals for your family. Cou- poning will teach you the art of using coupons to get more bang for your buck at the store. Join NCCDI and Child Abuse Prevention Council staff for Coping with the Crying, a workshop to deal with what may seem like the constant screaming and crying of your infant or toddler. Learn strate- gies to cope, and ways to deal with this part of par- enting that no one seems to talk about. Experts from Corn- ing Family Resource Cen- ter will be on hand to dis- cuss Immigration Services in Tehama County. This workshop is only offered in Spanish. "We use it as a pre- view to guide our parent topics for the rest of the year," Family and Com- munity Outreach Director Tina Robertson said. "We have in the past two years opened it up to other par- ents in the community. It is no cost to the families. We are pleased to have Judge McGlynn as our guest speaker at lunch, and he will be talking about what he is seeing in family court in Tehama County and about the CASA program (Court Appointed Special Advocates). We will also have Mike Baldwin from Community Action Agency talking about VITA (Vol- unteer Income Tax Assis- tance)." Community resource ta- bles will be set up by Alter- natives to Violence, Child Abuse Prevention Council, Tehama Together, Child Care Referral and Educa- tion, Self Help Home Im- provement (SHHIP) and Lassen Medical. The conference runs from 9 a.m. to 2:15 p.m. with sign-in from 8:30-9 a.m. at the Red Bluff Com- munity Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. For more infor- mation, call 529 1500 ext. 114 or 529 1500 ext. 112 for Spanish speakers. To regis- ter sign-up at your NCCDI site or visit the website www.tinyurl.com/qyw- cphx . RED BLUFF Parent's Choice Conference coming Friday REDDING An evening of TED Talk videos is sched- uled on Heat, Drought and Wildfire: Why be- coming climate literate could save us from our- selves, with a question and answer session to fol- low at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28, at the Shasta Col- lege Main Campus, Room 806.This event is free and open to the public. The featured TED Talks videos are of re- nowned research scien- tists Dr. James Hansen, Climate Scientist, former Director, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Stud- ies; Dr. Katherine Kay- hoe, Climate Scientist, Director, Climate Science Center at Texas Tech Uni- versity; and Dr. Richard Alley, Department of Geo- sciences, Penn State Uni- versity and Winner 2011 Heinz Award for work on Abrupt Climate Change. Following the videos will be a panel of accom- plished professionals and concerned citizens — in- cluding a Climate Change writer, a radio show host, an eco-psychologist, an oceanographer, a minis- ter and an environmen- tal activist who will lead a question and answer session. The event is sponsored by Science, Language Arts and Math Division and the Sustainability Committee at Shasta Col- lege. SHASTA COLLEGE Climate change: The fate of the Earth is in our hands The following informa- tion is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Red Bluff Fire, Tehama County Sheriff's Depart- ment, Corning Police De- partment, Corning Fire, Cal Fire and California Highway Patrol logs. Arrests FreddieCox: 44, of Red Bluff was arrested and booked into Tehama County Jail Friday on charges of false imprisonment with violence, inflicting corporal injury on a spouse, receiving known stolen property of $400or more and possess- ing a firearm and ammuni- tion as a convicted felon. Bail was set at $458,000. Lance Son: 38, of Redding was arrested and booked Friday on charges of pos- sessing a billy club and a firearm and ammunition as a convicted felon. Bail was set at $45,000. Sydney Halbersma Jr.: 46, of Red Bluff was ar- rested and booked Friday on charges of receiving known stolen property of $400or more, possessing a billy club and a firearm and ammunition as a con- victed felon. Bail was set at $60,000. Paul Marinos: 50, of Red Bluff was arrested and booked Saturday on a charge of battery with seri- ous bodily injury on a person and assault with a deadly weapon not a firearm. Bail was set at $83,000. Jeffrey Stanley: 56, of Anderson was arrested and booked Saturday on a charge of burglary. Bail was set at $50,000. Connie Stevens: 24, of Gerber was arrested and booked Saturday on a charge of first degree resi- dential burglary. Bail was not set. Trevor James: 35, of Chico was arrested and booked Saturday on a charge of receiving known stolen property. Bail was set at $15,000. Brandon Martinovich: 33, of Red Bluff was arrested and booked Sunday on a charge of burglary. Bail was set at $24,000. Kevin Mair: 25, was observed Friday attempt- ing to break into a shed at 350Gilmore Road. Mair was arrested and booked on charges of attempted burglary and prowling. Suspicious Safeway on Edith Street: A man reported Sunday that as he was pulling into the parking lot he heard a car alarm sounding. He then noticed a male about six feet tall taking off running southbound toward a Valero gas station. The man report- ing the incident believes he was trying to break into a light blue Scion because he noticed a dent right above the door handle and a purse was in plain view. Shots fired 31000block of Manton Road: Deputies responded to a home in Manton Sat- urday for a report of shots being fired. Deputies were able to get the first victim, a 38-year-old Manton woman, safely away from the residence. The sus- pect, James Pulizzano, 41, of Manton was still in the house. He was reported to have a firearm and had shot into the residences while the woman and the second victim, a 20-year-old Man- ton man, were just outside. Deputies were able to call Pulizzano out of the house without incident. Multiple bullet holes in the front of the resident were found and the hand gun believed to be used in the incident was found on the property. The incident was the result of difficulties within a roman- tic relationship. No one was injured and Pulizzano was arrested and booked Sat- urday on charges of making criminal threats, possessing a firearm as a convicted fel- on and attempted murder. Bail was set at $1,315,000. The Cabernet Apartments: A red 1992Acura Integra, California license plate 6HBE437, was stolen from the complex. POLICE LOGS Mt. Lassen is becoming sentimental in her hold age and is now confining her spectacular exhibi- tions to the evening hours and the "light of the sil- very moon." Or it may be that she has an inside tip to the ef- fect that Mt. hood is go- ing to be the real thing in the volcano line and is withdrawing from pub- lic notice as much as pos- sible so as not to be too muchly humiliated when the northern mountain begins to do things. At any rate, after a lengthy period of quietude the mountain broke out in a violent eruption at about eight o'clock last night which lasted for over half an hour. The eruption was wit- nessed by many people in the vicinity of Red Bluff and to the east of this city, the moon furnishing am- ple light for the spectacle. The blowout was one of unusual size although not classed among the largest that have occurred. — Oct. 27, 1915 100 YEARS AGO... 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