Red Bluff Daily News

March 02, 2016

Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/647901

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 6 of 15

Baker:AutumnLynette Baker, 31, of Corning died Wednesday, Feb. 24at St. Elizabeth Community Hospital in Red Bluff. Ar- rangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Published Wednesday, March 2, 2016 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Black: Esther Ann Black, 87, of Corning died Saturday, Feb. 20at Oroville Hospital Post Acute. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mor- tuary. Published Wednes- day, March 2, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Halvorson: Rikkie Ann Halvorson, 58, of Orland died Wednesday, Feb. 17 at Enloe Medical Center in Chico. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortu- ary. Published Wednesday, March 2, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Hentzell: Karen Ann Hentzell, 69, of Redding died Sunday, Feb. 14in San Francisco. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mor- tuary. Published Wednes- day, March 2, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Hobgood: Michael Douglas Hobgood, 58, of Corn- ing died Friday, Feb. 19at St. Elizabeth Community Hospital in Red Bluff. Ar- rangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Pub- lished Wednesday, March 2, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. McQuillan: Michael Dennis McQuillan, 65, of Red Bluff died Thursday, Feb. 25at Shasta Regional Medical Center in Redding. Ar- rangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Published Wednesday, March 2, 2016 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Nelson: Gladys Oree Nelson, 81, of Corning died Tues- day, Feb. 23at her home. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Published Wednesday, March 2, 2016 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Shuman: Catherine Faye Shuman, "Cathy Lynch," 58, or Corning died Friday, Feb. 12in Corning. Ar- rangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Published Wednesday, March 2, 2016 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Death notices must be provided by mortuaries to the news department, are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the newspaper's website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. Deathnotices Magginisaid. In August 2015, the non- profit was able to resume the equine assisted learning program with Salisbury on a limited basis. With students asking for weekly instead of ev- ery other week classes, the idea of fundraising was brought up and that led to the Spring Bazaar. Maggini said she was thankful that the rain held off. Her sister, Liz Maggini- MacKay, Daystar's secre- tary, said she was glad for the partnerships, especially being able to have a local veterans group be a part of the day. A group from Redding is working to build a vet- erans museum and had a booth with food available for purchase, Maggini- MacKay said. Daystar is in the process of trying to bring back its equine ther- apy, which is used to help those with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Daystar offers both equine assisted learning, which includes activities done with horses geared to- ward experiential learning, and equine assisted psycho- therapy, which is partner- ing horses with humans to facilitate emotional heal- ing in the context of psycho- therapy, Maggini-MacKay said. For more information on Daystar Ranch, visit day- starranches.org. Bazaar FROM PAGE 1 JK Architecture Part- nership President Jordan Knighton, who presented the informational update, said he would donate. "Challenge accepted," Knighton said. "I would like to donated the first $500 contribution for that chal- lenge." The project, which will remodel the building origi- nally built in the late 1970s to house the Daily News, was initially estimated to cost $6.7 million. That es- timate was dropped in No- vember to $6.4 million. The estimate at Tuesday's meet- ing was $6.3 million. The county has set aside $4 million for the project with a hope that the com- munity would help fill in the remaining gap of just more than $2 million. Of the $6.3 million, there is about $4 million in con- struction and for escala- tion of costs and $1.75 mil- lion for fees, fixtures and equipment. The building and lot were purchased for $500,000. Knighton's update in- cluded a virtual tour of the planned facility, which can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=80b6704O4Kk. He talked about the initial design for the library and sought conceptual approval of the design development. The board approved the concept unanimously. "We're excited with the progress of the project," Knighton said. An entry plaza will be constructed in the front of the building and eventually an outdoor learning quad that can be utilized by the community. The metal pan- els on the outside would be an area that could poten- tially be utilized for fun- draising as they could be changed out periodically if the cost to do so were do- nated. They also create an area to celebrate the history of the county, something the inside of the building will already do between the use of barn wood from the Riverside Bar and Grill. A blue river running through the middle of the building along the floor is meant to represent the im- portance of the Sacramento River to the area. The group is hoping to see donations of saddles to be used as seating in the children's area. Supervisor Burt Bundy said he may have one for the group. The proximity to the ShastaCollegeTehamaCam- pus allows the potential for thecollegetoutilizethefacil- ity, particularly the commu- nity meeting rooms. Those rooms also could be used as apotentialsourceofrevenue, Knighton said. The interior of the build- ing will see a service desk down the center so employ- eeshaveadirectsitelinewith theentranceandeachsection to allow staff to engage with all areas of the library. There will be plenty of chances for naming rights in the building, including an area for storytelling, a children's area and a sec- tion for a study center and meeting rooms. Construction is set to be- gin in July with expected occupancy to take place in July 2017. That estimate is conservative and construc- tion could take less time, Knighton said. The library has kicked off the fundraising cam- paign and information on upcoming events will be posted as it becomes avail- able on www.tehamacoun- tylibrary.org. Donations to the library project are wel- come and checks made out to the Tehama County Li- brary can be mailed to 645 Madison St., Red Bluff, 96080. Library FROM PAGE 1 at his swanky Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, eschew- ing the traditional election night rally. Cruz desperately needed a win in Texas in order to stay in the race, and was likely to keep campaign- ing as the only Republican who has been able to defeat Trump in any primary con- test. For Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, the night was turn- ing into a disappointment. While a flood of Republican officeholders have rallied around him in recent days, his first victory remained elusive as results rolled in. Still, Rubio, who has launched an aggressive campaign to stop Trump in recent days, vowed to keep up his efforts to "un- mask the true nature of the front-runner in this race." The Florida senator's long-shot White House hopes now rest with his home state, which votes on March 15. But he's expected to face fresh calls from Trump and others to drop out of the race before then. "He has to get out," Trump told Fox News ear- lier in the day. "He hasn't won anything." Super Tuesday marked the busiest day of the 2016 primaries, with the biggest single-day delegate haul up for grabs. Democrats voted in 11 states and American Samoa, with 865 delegates at stake. Republicans voted in 11 states, with 595 dele- gates. Clinton also picked up wins in Alabama and Ar- kansas, while Trump car- ried the GOP contests in Al- abama and Massachusetts. Clinton steadied her- self after an unexpect- edly strong challenge from Sanders. The Vermont sen- ator did carry his home state decisively, and told the crowd at a raucous victory party that he was "so proud to bring Vermont values all across this country." Exit polls underscored Sanders' continued weak- ness with black voters, a core part of the Demo- cratic constituency. Clin- ton led with African-Amer- icans, as well as both men and women, in Georgia and Virginia, according to sur- veys conducted by Edison Research for The Associ- ated Press and television networks. Sanders continued to show strength with young voters, carrying the major- ity of those under the age of 30. The contests come at a turbulent time for the GOP, given Trump's strengths in the face of opposition from many party leaders. Some in the party establishment fear the anti-Trump cam- paign has come too late. Trump's wins in the South were a blow to Cruz, who once saw the region as his opportunity to stake a claim to the nomination. Republicans spent months largely letting Trump go unchallenged, wrongly assuming that his populist appeal with vot- ers would fizzle. Instead, he's appeared to only grow stronger, winning states and drawing broad support for some of his most contro- versial proposals. In six of the states on Tuesday, large majorities of Republican voters said they supported a proposal to temporarily ban all non- citizen Muslims from en- tering the United States, an idea championed by Trump. Two-thirds of GOP voters in Texas, Virginia and Georgia, 7 in 10 in Ten- nessee, and nearly 8 in 10 in Alabama supported the proposal, according to the early exit polls. Worries among Republi- cans appeared to grow af- ter Trump briefly refused to disavow former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke during a television inter- view. Trump later said he had not understood the in- terviewer who first raised the question about Duke, and he did repudiate him. House Speaker Paul Ryan said Tuesday that anyone who wants to be the Repub- lican presidential nominee must reject any racist group or individual. States holding voting contests in both parties were Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Ten- nessee, Texas, Vermont and Virginia. Republicans also vote in Alaska and Demo- crats in Colorado. Demo- crats also have a contest in American Samoa and for Democrats Abroad. Tuesday FROM PAGE 1 HillaryClinton Bernie Sanders UpcomingcontestsforSaturday: Kansas, Kentucky (GOP), Louisiana, Nebraska (Dems), Maine (Sunday for Dems) Projected winners and delegates awarded for both parties as of 9:10p.m. March 1. Results for Alaska were not available at time of printing. Sources: The Associated Press, CNN • Map courtesy of www.freeusandworldmaps.com INFOGRAPHICS BY EVAN BURT AND AUDRIA RUSCITTI — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA DEMOCRATICSUPERTUESDAYPROJECTEDWINNERS 984 Clinton: Currently has won past contests in Iowa and Nevada. Tuesday's winnings include Texas, Massachusetts and Alabama. 347 Sanders: Has previously won the primary for New Hampshire. Tuesday's winnings added his home state of Vermont. Ted Cruz Marco Rubio Donald Trump To win the party nomination, Republican candidates need to win 1,237delegates, while Democratic candidates need to win 2,383delegates. Despite Tuesday's results, the nominations won't be final until the conventions in July. REPUBLICANSUPERTUESDAYPROJECTEDWINNERS 11 0 Cr uz : I ow a w as hi s o nl y p ri or wi n. H e a dd ed Te xa s a nd Okl ah om a o n Tu es da y. 25 8 Tr um p: Prev io us con te st w in s in cl ud e N ev ad a an d N ew Ham ps hi re. 8 Ca rso n: Cu rr en tl y han gin g o n wi th t he le as t nu mb er o f del eg at es . 23 Ka si ch : S ho we d st rong s up po rt in V er mo nt o n Tu es da y, b ut lo st to T ru mp . 70 Ru bio : Su pe r Tu es da y m ar ks hi s fi rs t p ri ma ry wi n w it h Mi nn es ot a. ThePassingParadeisbroughttoyoubyMinchPropertyManagement, 760 Main Street specializing in commercial leasing and sales. 530 527-5514 THEPASSINGPARADE (FrommyISaycolumnofJune1972) "Uncle" Dick Hyde had the high cheek bones of a Maasai Warrior. He was a tall, lean, black man referred politely in the old days as "colored". He worked for my father at a variety of dirty jobs around the slaughter plant and rendering plant that many whites would refuse. After that, father retired Dick to the grove at the back of father's orchards in Antelope. He lived there with his wife Lily, son Maurice and assorted livestock. They lived in a small tin covered shack which had no electricity Their water came from a hand drilled well that Dick had drilled by himself. Dick's grove was a haven for other colored folks when they passed through the area. Some would drop off a child or two for Dick and Lily to look after for a few days. Once a man left his pretty young wife for safe keeping with the 80 year old Dick, who reported, with a leer, that the man had made a big mistake doing that. Dick's duties were to grow a vegetable garden and to hoe weeds in the garden and around newly planted trees. My father would go out to the grove after work at the plant, and on the long evenings of sum- mer the two would hoe side by side. Father said it was for exercise but I thought it was for companionship. Uncle Dick stayed in the grove for many years and then began talking about moving to Stockton into a colored neighborhood where he could have, among other things, a TV. One day a big old beaten up truck backed up into the grove where Dick and Lily loaded up dogs and cats, chickens and even a horse…and away they went. I had lost track of their son Maurice by then. I have a film of Uncle Dick that I run now and then …and the sight of that old man puttering around his shack recalls strong feelings within me about the brotherhood of man. A few years later, we heard that Dick had fallen ill, and father went to Stockton to visit his old friend. After returning to Red Bluff, father learned that Dick had died which reduced his hoeing companion to tears. And while we were saying "rest in peace, Uncle Dick", there are those who would have dubbed him an "Uncle Tom". Why is that? … Spring rains came late this year, but were quite welcome. Cats moved in and out of the old barn like miniature switch engines in a railroad yard. They don't ever get really dirty…but they spend a lot of time on their personal hygiene before curling up for a good snooze. We personally prefer dogs to cats but the little devils can become en- dearing…perhaps because they sleep a lot…and don't take up much room. Also they are not finicky when it comes to food. Dry cat food seems to do the trick. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 2016 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM |NEWS | 7 A

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Red Bluff Daily News - March 02, 2016