Red Bluff Daily News

January 12, 2016

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Dinwoodie:StanleyRobert Dinwoodie, 91, of Red Bluff died Saturday, Jan. 9at his residence. Arrangements are under the direction of Red Bluff Simple Crema- tions & Burial Service. Published Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Forester: Donna Forester, 75, of Cottonwood died Saturday, Jan. 9at Mercy Medical Center in Redding. Arrangements are under the direction of Blair's Cre- mation & Burial. Published Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Lasley: Lorraine Lasley, 91, of Cottonwood died Saturday, Jan. 9at Mercy Medical Center in Redding. Arrangements are under the direction of Blair's Cre- mation & Burial. Published Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Morris: James H. Morris, 89, of Red Bluff died Mon- day, Jan. 11in Red Bluff. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Salisbury: Robert N. Salis- bury, 76, of Red Bluff died Friday, Jan. 8in Redding. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Twiford: Frances Twiford, 74, of Manton died Sunday, Jan. 10at Mercy Medical Center in Redding. Ar- rangements are under the direction of Blair's Crema- tion & Burial. Published Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. White: Vivian White, 92, of Corning died Thursday, Jan. 7at her residence. Arrange- ments are under the direc- tion of Blair's Cremation & Burial. Published Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Deathnotices The Shasta College main campus lockdown has been lifted. The lock- down was initiated for the safety of individuals on campus in connection with a shooting in Bella Vista that occurred this morning. A suspect entered the woods northeast of the main campus and local law enforcement officials searched the area without incident. It has been de- termined that the area is now safe, and campus has reopened. At approximately 9 a.m. this morning the Shasta College main campus was notified that a suspect in connection with a shoot- ing in Bella Vista has en- tered the woods north of campus. Local law enforcement officials are currently searching the area for a while male, approximately 25 to 30 years old, wearing black clothing. To ensure the safety of individuals on campus, it is currently on lockdown. More information will be relayed as it becomes avail- able. For more information, please contact the Super- intendent/President's Of- fice at (530) 242-7510. REDDING ShastaCollegelockdownli ed organization is for ranch- ers and farmers on the lo- cal, state and federal lev- els, and noted that winter weather was occurring dur- ing the winter dinner. "Praise the Lord for the rain," McCarthy said. Following the passing of the gavel, Amen pre- sented McCarthy with a belt buckle for his two years as president. He en- couraged attendees to mark the Spring Field Day on their calendars, March 19-20 at Rolling Hills Ca- sino in Corning. Officers announced with Amen were Vice Pres- ident Ron Humphrey; Sec- retary Cathy Tobin; Trea- surer Cindy Brown and Scholarship Committee Chairman Richard Buch- ner. CattleWomen officers are President Linda Bor- ror; First Vice President Jeanne Smith; Secretary Linda Walker; Treasurer Renee Ewing and Schol- arship Committee Chair Vicky Dawley. Cattleman Wally Roney announced the selec- tion of Roger Nicholson, a cattlemen in Tehama and Shasta counties and Klamath Basin, Oregon whose family has been in the business since 1890, as the 2015 Man of the Year. Nicholson co-founded Water For Life, a non- profit organization that protects agricultural wa- ter rights through work- ing on legislation, pub- lic relations and politi- cal work, with Ambrose McAuliffe in 1990. He is a founder and director of the Western Resource Le- gal Center at Lewis and Clark College, a group that takes on a limited number of cases expense free to cattle producers. At pres- ent, the group is involved in 16 cases. Amen and Borror intro- duced 2015 Cowbelle of the Year Charlene Priest, who was awarded her title in No- vember at the annual Cat- tleWomen's fashion show and luncheon at Rolling Hills Casino. Awards FROM PAGE 1 or any number of things while others carved and painted a fish shape design into the square plate. Cost for the workshop was $7. Red Bluff resident Teri Banks has taken a couple of classes with Schwaller, and said she enjoys it in part because it's inexpen- sive. "This will hang in my bathroom," Banks said. "My bathroom's all fish so this class was perfect." Terri Bauer has known Schwaller for a long time and enjoys taking her classes, she said. "I'm loving it," Bauer said. "I like being creative and love being crafty. I like that this is something fun and different. I wish they had these classes when my kids were younger. It's important to give kids the opportunity to be cre- ative. Kids need to be able to realize with art it's not right or wrong, it's your ex- pression. Some of the best things start as one thing and end up being the com- plete opposite. It's like with these fish. You could have 100 people and there would be no two exactly alike." Debbie Deem, who brought her son, Ben, 7, to the class, said she was thrilled the Green Room was offering the classes it does. "I have a lot of artisti- cally inclined children and I'm not," Deem said. The fun continued Sun- day with a ceramic bell workshop, which was one of a few workshops offered over the past few months for beginners. One boy made a cow while three of the women attending made cats and one participant made a replica of the Dutch Bros. Coffee windmill. Past workshops have included one where attendees made a Santa plate and another with an owl. Another workshop in- volving wheel thrown pot- tery is being offered from 6-8 p.m. Wednesdays. The January session is already in its second week, but those who missed it will have another opportunity to take the class in Feb- ruary, also on Wednesday evenings. The cost for that class is $60 per person for the month. For more information on the pottery class and other offerings at the Green Room Community Art Stu- dio, write to GRClassInfo@ gmail.com or visit the Te- hama County Arts Council Facebook page. Workshops FROM PAGE 1 PHOTOS BY JULIE ZEEB — DAILY NEWS Instructor Nora Schwaller, center, talks with attendees about designing their fish Saturday at the Fish Plate Ceramic Workshop held at the Green Room Community Art Studio sponsored by the Tehama County Arts Council. Teri Banks of Red Bluff, le , paints her plate at the Fish Plate Ceramic Workshop held Saturday at the Green Room Community Art Studio sponsored by the Tehama County Arts Council. PHOTOS BY JULIE ZEEB — DAILY NEWS Tehama County CattleWomen Scholarship Committee Chair Vickie Dawley, le , poses with scholarship recipients on Saturday at the Tehama County CattleWomen and Tehama County Cattlemen's Association Winter Dinner held at the Tehama District Fairground. Tehama County Cattlemen's Association Ron Knight Scholarship Committee Chair Richard Buchner, far le , poses with scholarship recipients on Saturday at the Tehama County CattleWomen and Tehama County Cattlemen's Association Winter Dinner held at the Tehama District Fairground. By Don Thompson TheAssociatedPress SACRAMENTO California prison officials are end- ing visitor strip searches in response to a recent change in state law, but visitors will face in- creased scrutiny for a year if traces of drugs are detected by dogs or air- port-style scanners. It's the first time vis- itors will be scrutinized by dogs that previously have been used to search inmates, Department of Corrections and Reha- bilitation spokeswoman Dana Simas said Monday. Visitors who are spot- lighted by a dog or ion scanner but refuse clothed searches face an increasing range of pen- alties under the revised regulations the depart- ment proposed on Friday. "These new policies are just our way of try- ing to keep contraband and drugs outside of our prisons," Simas said. A first refusal means no visit that day. A sec- ond refusal could bring a loss of visiting privileges for 30 days, while a third could mean no visits for a year. A fourth refusal in a year could result in the permanent revocation of visiting privileges. The progressive pen- alties will encourage vis- itors to submit to the searches, the department said in outlining the new regulations. Even if a visitor sub- mits to a clothed search and no drugs or other contraband is found, the visitor can't have physi- cal contact with an in- mate during that day's visit and must go through the process again the next time he or she vis- its an inmate within the next 12 months. The controversial vis- itor strip searches were banned last summer by state lawmakers, who called them humiliating. The end was praised by Don Spector of the non- profit Prison Law Office, who represents inmates and called the nude searches "incredibly in- trusive." However, he is con- cerned that officials now are going to base escalat- ing sanctions on the use of drug-sniffing dogs, which he said can be un- reliable. Lawmakers also are concerned about using dogs to search visitors, although the department is using non-threatening dogs that sit down when they detect contraband. "If someone has a legit- imate concern with dogs, we'll work with them," Si- mas said, including using other ways to search the visitor. CRIMINAL JUSTICE State prisons end their visitor strip searches By Kristin J. Bender The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO The last survivor of the devastat- ing San Francisco earth- quake and fire of 1906 has died, a relative confirmed Monday. William A. "Bill" Del Monte died at a retire- ment home in nearby Marin County on Monday. He was 11 days shy of his 110th birthday. His niece, Janette Barroca of San Francisco confirmed his death of natural causes. He'd been doing "great for 109 years old," Barroca said Monday. Del Monte was just three months old when the quake struck, forcing his family into the streets to escape in a horse-drawn buck board with fire burn- ing on both sides, Barroca said. The family crossed the bay to Alameda County but eventually came back to the city after the home was rebuilt, Barroca said. OBITUARY La st s ur vi vo r of t he 1 906 S an Francisco earthquake dead at 109 R ed Bluff Simple Cremations and Burial Service FD1931 527-1732 Burials - Monuments - Preneed 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff We Don'tThink Cremation Should Cost So much. www.affordablemortuary.net•529-3655 FD1538 LocatedinChico,CA TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 2016 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM |NEWS | 7 A

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