Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/658783
COURTESYPHOTO Phil Craig, senior volunteer, Brian Medeiros, cook, Maile Hoffer kitchen assistant, Karissa Rutledge, community services aide and Irene Miller community services aide pose for a photo. The Senior Nutrition Program has scheduled its third annual Spaghetti Dinner Fundraiser for Fri- day, May 20 at the Red Bluff Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. The program serves freshly prepared meals Money through Friday at noon at the Red Bluff Com- munity Center, at 11:30 a.m. at the Corning Senior Cen- ter and deliveries meals to homebound senior clients throughout the county, but there is a waiting list. The fundraiser will as- sist in continuing to serve the seniors in the county. Tickets are available at the Red Bluff Community Cen- ter for $15. For more information, call 527-2414 or visit www. tehamacountycaa.org/in- dex.php/programsservices/ senior-nutrition-program. Other programs include SNAP-Ed, which holds ed- ucational workshops each month at various locations. Subjects include gardening, eating healthy on a budget and food preservation. Visit the Facebook page for Community Action Agency of Tehama County for workshop dates and de- tails. SENIORNUTRITION Spaghetti dinner, workshops planned This week's most wanted subject is Chris- tian Alexander Macedo, 21, from Corning, who has a $1,515,000 felony warrant for his arrest for attempted murder. Macedo is a Hispanic man, 5 feet 7 inches tall, 130 pounds, black hair, brown eyes with a tat- too on the left side of his neck. Macedo should be con- sidered dangerous and anyone with information regarding his where- abouts can all any local law enforce- ment agency at any time or during b u s i n e s s hours can call the Tehama County District Attorney's Bu- reau of Investigations Of- fice at 530 529-3590. All callers will remain confidential. TEHAMA COUNTY Po li ce s ea rc h for most wanted Macedo Congressional candi- date Joe Montes will be the guest speaker this week for the Corning Pa- triots. The group meets at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Corn- ing Veterans Memorial Hall. 1620 Solano St. Montes is a veteran, business development spe- cialist, attorney, former judge and experienced se- nior executive in Chico. PATRIOTS Co ng re ss io na l candidate to be guest speaker Mercy High School math and English place- ment testing for register- ing eighth grade students is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 6. Stu- dents are asked to bring a basic scientific calcu- lator, two pencils, water and a snack. Check in at the main office at 233 Riv- erside Way in Red Bluff. Other testing dates are available by appointment; call 527-8313 or write to ebauer@mercy-high.org. MERCY HIGH SCHOOL Math and English placement testing set Bids were opened Tues- day night by the board of trustees of the Red Bluff union high school for the erection and finishing of the new high school build- ing to be paid for by the $90,000 bond issue. There were fifteen bidders for the job, practically all of whom were from San Francisco. In addition to the high school trustees, the com- mittee of five, from the chamber, Architect W. H. Weeks and a large number of interested local business men attended the meeting at the high school. — March 29, 1916 100 YEARS AGO... Bids opened erection of $90,000 high school here 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 High- way Patrol logs. Arrest John R. Linstroth: 18, of Rancho Tehama was arrest- ed Wednesday on Antelope Drive at Hillcrest. He was booked into Tehama County Jail on the felony charges of altering or removing a serial number from firearm and possession of a short bar- reled shotgun. Linstroth was also booked on the misde- meanor charge of carrying a loaded firearm in public. Bail was $33,000. Gerald F. Roerich: 48, of Red Bluff was arrested Friday at the Mobile gas station on Antelope Bou- levard. He was booked into jail on the felony charges of preventing or dissuading a witness or victim, conspir- acy to commit a crime and flash incarceration. No bail was set. Joshua G. Hansen: 26, of Red Bluff was arrested Friday in the 400block of Donna Avenue. He was booked into jail on the felony charges of exhibiting a mi- nor in pornography, distribu- tion of child pornography, possession of over 600 images of child pornography and possession of matter depicting minor in sexual conduct. Bail was $60,000. Crash San Benito, north of Ger- ber Road: Brandon C. Ta- laska, 22, of Red Bluff was arrested on suspicion of DUI following a crash about 5:45 a.m. Sunday. He was driving a 2014Kawasaki motorcycle north on San Benito when he made an unsafe turning movement, went off the west road edge, lost control, overturned and was ejected. He was taken to St. Eliza- beth Community Hospital for minor injuries. Disturbance Del Norte Drive: A Cot- tonwood resident reported hearing a disturbance in the area about 1a.m. Sunday. Mark C. Wathen, 39, of Cottonwood was arrested Sunday in the 18900block of Winter Creek Lane and booked into Tehama County Jail on the felony charge of assault with a deadly weapon. Bail was $30,000. Fires San Benito Avenue at Lu- ning: A vehicle fire reported at 10:28p.m. Friday was determined to have been ar- son. The fire was contained at 10:40p.m. No one was injured. Suspicious Sunrise Way: A clerk at Holiday Inn Express reported a man wandering around the property exposing himself and urinating about 8:30 a.m. Saturday. The man was cited and released on pos- session of controlled sub- stance and given a trespass admonishment. Fig Lane: A woman report- ed that someone entered a residence in the 1400block, le items around the yard and took other items. Stanmar Drive: Sometime between Friday and Sunday an unknown person cut the lock to a shed. Nothing was missing. Johnson Street: A man reported seeing a white Chevrolet extra cab pickup watching his house Friday with the occupant taking photos. The man believed the vehicle was associated with a the from his truck six months prior. The s Michael Drive: A 1998Ford Windstar with a large dent in the rear and damaged back door handle was stolen sometime a er 2p.m. Sun- day. Keys were accounted for. Mina Avenue: A silver 1998 Honda Accord four door was taken about 1a.m. Satur- day. Keys were accounted for. The vehicle had a round sticker on it and the front windshield had a cracked on the top passenger side. 7600Roosevelt Avenue: A four-wheeler and motor- cycle were stolen between midnight and 5:40a.m. Friday. 9100block State Route 99E: A safe with pre- scription medication and family heirlooms was taken between Wednesday and Friday. 17800block Reeds Creek Road: A boat, a motor and a portable gas pump were taken from a barn Sunday. Jellys Ferry Road, cross of Penner Drive: A back win- dow to a vehicle was broken and medication, music and personal items were taken sometime Sunday. 850Kimball Road: Four men associated with a white vehicle in the parking lot of the Kimball Cross- ing Apartments reportedly punched a man in the face and brandished two knives at the victim about 5:15p.m. Friday before stealing $300 in cash from him. Police Logs By Janie Har TheAssociatedPress SAN FRANCISCO A key re- port released Monday calls on California State Univer- sity to give faculty mem- bers the pay raises they've requested as the two sides prepare for a five-day strike if they can't reach an agree- ment. Faculty cheered the in- dependent assessment, but the release of the fact-find- ing report doesn't mean the two sides are any closer to settlement. Administration officials said Monday the university does not have an additional $70 million to spend on pay this year. They also rejected a suggestion in the report to divertmoneyfromotherpro- grams or delay new projects. The system's 23 cam- puses enroll about 460,000 students, making it the na- tion's largest public univer- sity. A five-day strike sched- uledforAprilwouldbebyfar the system's largest walkout sinceprofessors andinstruc- tors won collective bargain- ing rights in the early 1980s. California Faculty As- sociation members are in the second year of a three- year contract that included across-the-board raises of 1.6percent,alongwith3per- cent raises for some faculty for the 2014-15 schoolyear. The faculty association is seeking a 5 percent salary increase for 2015-16, as well as other salary adjustments. The university is offering 2 percent raises. Monday's report found the great recession severely affected faculty pay as mem- bers gave up negotiated raises, and endured a 10 per- cent cut by taking furlough days in 2009-10. Giving the requested raises, the report stated, "is in the interest of students, whoneedcaringfaculty,and certainly in the public inter- est as our country needs a well-educated population." THREATENED STRIKE Key report calls for higher pay for Cal State faculty 744 Main St., Red Bluff NEWARRIVALS •HIMALAYANSALTLAMP (Preventasthma,sinus,allergy) • WHITE SAGE & MIXED (Clear energy and lift your spirit) • LITTLE DISHES ART (Use for pills, tea bags, incense) • FENG SHUI BOOK & CRYSTAL COME & SHOP WITH US Weofferfast,efficient, reliable, and confidential services at a more affordable cost to our clients. We specialize in: Evictions: Pro Per or Attorney Represented 530.527.2104 756 Rio St, Red Bluff www.atwellpropartners.com 734MainStreet 530-690-2477 11am-9pm Mon.-Thur. 11am - 10pm Fri. & Sat. 11am-8pm Sun. 9 CRAFT BEERS ON TAP Pizza Restaurant STOVEJUNCTION The TheNorthState'spremiersupplierofstoves 22825 Antelope Blvd., Red Bluff 530-528-2221 • Fax 530-528-2229 www.thestovejunction.com Over 25 years of experience Tues-Sat9am-5pm• ClosedSun&Mon Now Carrying! GreenMountainGrills & Accessories Serving Butte, Glenn & Tehama Counties www.RedBluffDailyNews.com Facebook:facebook.com/RBDailyNews Twitter: @RedBluffNews Customer service....................(530) 737-5048 Fax....................................................................................... 530-527-5774 Hours: 8a.m. to 5p.m. Monday through Friday Main Office...........................................527-2151 Write to us........................................P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Office...............................................728 Main St, Red Bluff, CA 96080 All Access subscription rates, Tuesday through Saturday: $7.24per week. Digital-only subscription, Tuesday through Saturday $2.99per week. Print-only subscription, Tuesday through Saturday, $4.25per week. Business and professional rate, Tuesday through Friday: $2.19for four weeks. Prices included all applicable sales tax. (USPS 458-200) The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955. Published Tuesday through Saturday by California Newspapers Partnership. Postmaster: Please send address changes to: P.O. Box 220, Re d Bluff, CA 96080© 2012Daily News Postage Paid Periodicals NEWSROOM News Tips........527-2151, press 7 Sports............................737-5043 Obituaries .....................737-5046 Fax..................................527-9251 clerk@redbluffdailynews.com ADVERTISING Classified.........1-855-667-2255 Gayla Eckels .................737-5044 Suzy Noble....................737-5056 Fax..........................530.527.5774 advertise@redbluffdailynews.com Production manager Sandy Valdivia..........................................sandy@redbluffdailynews.com Publisher, Advertising director Greg Stevens......................................gstevens@redbluffdailynews.com Editor Chip Thompson........................................editor@redbluffdailynews.com Sports editor.........................................sports@redbluffdailynews.com Circulation manager Kathy Hogan.......................................... khogan@redbluffdailynews.com Home Delivery Subscription Terms & Conditions: Your subscription to the Red Bluff Daily News is a continuous subscription for as long as the service is offered. You will be billed at the interval you have selected, which shall be your Billing Term. You may cancel by calling Customer Service at 530-527-2151ext 2. You must cancel before the end of your Billing Term. No unused portion of a Billing Term will be refunded. No credit is offered for vacation service interruptions. Future prices are subject to change. All home delivery subscriptions will include the Thanksgiving Day special edition which will be charged at the normal Thursday rate plus $3.00. All home delivery subscriptions will include no more than five additional special editions annually, that will be charged at the normal daily rate plus $3.00, which will be charged to the subscriber's account. To opt out of any special editions, please contact custom er service at 530-527-2151ext 2. Receiving these special editions will cause your selected billing term to expire sooner. A portion of your subscription price is allocated to digital online content. Digital online content is not subject to California sales tax. The sale of printed newspapers is subject to sales tax reimbursement per Cal. Code Regs., tit. 18, § 1590(b)(1) COMMUNITY » redbluffdailynews.com Tuesday, March 29, 2016 MORE AT FACEBOOK.COM/RBDAILYNEWS AND TWITTER.COM/REDBLUFFNEWS A3