Red Bluff Daily News

May 27, 2016

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Cpl.BlairLyleHencratt Cpl. Branden H. Holland Pfc Michael J. Holland Lance Cpl. Hoag, Cody Cpl. Matthew P. Hopper Pvt. Brian D. Howtopat GySgt. Jill Linnet Mayfield HM5(FMF) Brian Patrick McKenna Lance Cpl. Peter J. Men- doza Sgt. Albert Miller Capt. Michael Keith Mishoe Gunnery Sgt. Tage M. Nick- erson Pvt. Vance C. Nolta Cpl. Daniel R. Nosek Cpl. Devin Penner Sgt. Dustin L. Reese Cpl. Sonny Sauceda Cpl. Thomas Scott Lance Cpl. Jason L. Servera Sgt. Keith Sharp Sgt. Brad Sol Cpl. Kylee H. Stroing Gunnery Sgt. Kirk A. Sw- enson Cpl. Jonathan Turner Lance Cpl. Michael P. Turner Cpl. Nicholas R. Upton Lance Cpl. Raymond Mat- thew Walker Pfc. Jason Ward Pfc. Jeffery M. White Pfc. Henry C. Woolery Master Sgt. Jeff R. Wootton Master Sgt. Carson Zumalt NAVY E-5Guy Kelly Abbott E-5 CBCM Jarred S. Ables Lt. Kenneth W. Anderson E-3Franklin J. Arellano II E-5Timothy M. Barbar- ick ET3Kent Barron Petty Officer 3rd Class David Baxter Josh Brady QM3Kirby J. Brandon E-3James Brankov E-7Chief Petty Officer James G. Brink E-6Jeffrey Brotherton Petty Officer 2nd Class James J. Burchiel SA Jessica L. Campbell E-5Dallas Chambers E-5Stephen Colgan BM2Victoria L. Contreras E-5Gunner's Mate Ashley Cordray E-6John Vincent Crisp AM Kyle Wayne Darrow CTR1Petty Officer 1st Class Cole Davis Petty Officer 3rd Class Paul D. Davis ENFA Christopher Dilsaver Petty Officer 1st Class Jef- frey Dobson PR2(AW) Richard Duncan E-6Robert W. Dunlap III Petter Officer 3rd Class Derek James Ellis E-6Ryan Jeffrey Farrar SeaBee Chief Brent K. Forward Petty Officer 2nd Class Brian Fry Dennis Garrison MM1stSS Albert Gleesing E-5Robert James Goode EWSa Michael A. Grant Petty Officer 3rd Class Frederick Gregorio IT2Alicia Kaylene Hamill CTSA Austin Harbaugh Petty Officer 2nd Class Craig Nicholas Hemping E-7Chief Petty Officer Eric Hemping AM3Roger Horner BM3Justin D. Iiams Petty Officer 2nd Class Charles (C.W.) Jones 2nd Class CTM Nathan L. Jones Travis E. Jordan Seaman William R. Kelly Seaman Johnathon L. Kersey Fireman Nathaniel L. Kersey Logistics Specialist Jesse Kunz Seaman Recruit: Tristan Lane Kyler Fire Controlman 2nd Class Tracy Mitchell Main Chief Petty Officer Cory Mason E-3Cody D. Maxwell HM5(FMF) Brian Patrick McKenna HA E2Joshua McManus MAC (EXW) Bobby McMi- chael MA1(MWD) Logan McMi- chael Shane V. Morey PR3Walter Moskal Airman Antonio Nava Jr. YNSN Mark Neal Jr. Petty Officer Third Class Cody A. Palmer Ensign Shannon Penne Joseph Picklesimer MM2David Pollack Ensign Christopher Reed Platner E-3CTTSN Michael Dalton Raschke Seaman Jeremy C. Rice Petty Officer Third Class Michael Roach E-2Robert Rodabaugh Lt. Ryan Ross Petty Officer Stan Ross E-6Kristopher Rotter Seaman Apprentice Ryan Schaul ET-1(IDW/SW/AW/PJ) Keith Shandley Petty Officer 3rd Class Col- leen Shine IT1(SW) Petty Officer Kurtis Christopher Slaugen- haupt E-2Daniel St. John Minesman 2nd Class Petty Officer John Staggs PS3Clarence S. Stevens E-5Petty Officer 2nd Class Intelligence Specialist Rob- ert C. Stenberg Petty Officer 3rd Class Walter H. Vassar Seaman Matthew Weston AMSC (AW-SW) William H. White AT Clarissa Williams- McPherson E-5Matthew Williams Quentin Winegar Commander Cathy Wise NATIONAL GUARD Spec. 4Melissa A. Ables P2C Amanda J. Adams SSgt. Keith A. Barron Pfc. Dennis Beam Pvt. Michael M. Bennett Pvt. Lee F. Branham Pvt. Samuel Bullington Pvt. Brad Chambers Spec. Don Chambers Spec. 4Michael Chaney 1st. Lt. Brent N. Dawson Pvt. Johnathan W. Fox Pvt. Ryan Dee Freemyers Spec. Brian D. Glaser Pvt. Carl F. Hawthorne CW3Darren Henley MSgt. James Holland Pfc. Antony Holloway Spec. Stanley Holmes Tech Sgt. Jonathan Huff SSgt. Laura Jumpp Spec. Deneva Marshall Sgt. Jerald Ray Phillips, Jr. Pfc. Jake Pluim Spec. Brandon Powell Spec. Michael O'dell Powers Spec. Jeffrey Neal Price Pvt. Dustin Rahming Nathan Scott Spec. Vincent Torres PV2Kevin Turner Sgt. Michael Wentzel Sgt. Jason C. Westlund Spec. Bill Wooden Spec. Candace Zepp COAST GUARD BMC Brett Bonner Petty Officer 2nd Class April M. Hambly AMT2Christopher Harris GM1Brandon P. Hayward BM2Anthony Longo E2Trevor A. Miller EM1Charly Ostrowski EM Nolan Schlereth P.O. 3 SN Jacob Schlereth ENS Trevor Siperek Petty Officer 2nd Class Harrison Stanley Richard W. Summers, Jr. Ifyouhaveamother, father, son or daughter serving in the military and would like to include the person's name on this list, call 527-2153 or send an e-mail to clerk@ redbluffdailynews. com. If this person gets discharged from the military, call and we will remove the name from the list. Military FROMPAGE3 By Justin Pritchard and Martha Mendoza The Associated Press Under pressure to pre- vent people from sneaking onto runways and planes at major U.S. airports, author- ities are cracking down — not on the intruders who slip through perimeter gates or jump over fences, but on the release of infor- mation about the breaches. A year after an Associ- ated Press investigation first revealed persistent problems with airports' outer defenses, breaches remain as frequent as ever — about once every 10 days — despite some investments to fortify the nation's air- fields. As Americans wait in ever-longer security screen- ing lines inside terminals, new documents show doz- ens more incidents happen- ing outside perimeters than airports have disclosed. At the same time, lead- ers at some airports and the U.S. Transportation Se- curity Administration are saying some of the 345 in- cidents AP found shouldn't count as security breaches, even when intruders got deep into secure areas. Was it a perimeter secu- rity breach in March 2015 when a woman walked past a vehicle exit gate at San Francisco International Air- port and onto the tarmac, where she tried to flag down a jet for a trip home to Gua- temala? No it was not, said theairportandTSAofficials, who also tried to suppress information about the case. After discussing intru- sions openly at first, offi- cials at several airports and the TSA started withhold- ing details, arguing the re- lease could expose vulner- abilities. Following a two-year le- gal struggle with the TSA, AP has now used newly re- leased information to cre- ate the most comprehensive public tally of perimeter se- curity breaches. The 345 in- cidents took place at 31 air- ports that handle three- quarters of U.S. passenger travel. And that's an under- count, because several air- ports refused to provide complete information. The count shows that an intruder broke through the security surrounding one of those airports on aver- age every 13 days from the beginning of 2004 through mid-February; starting in 2012, the average has been every 9.5 days. Many in- truders scaled barbed wire- topped fences or walked past vehicle checkpoints. Others crashed cars into chain link and concrete barriers. Airport officials point out that no case involved a known terrorist plot. Po- lice reports suggest many trespassers were disori- ented, intoxicated or delu- sional. Some came on skate- boards and bikes, while others commandeered ve- hicles on the tarmac. One man got into a helicopter cockpit and was preparing to take off. Five intruders brought knives and one a loaded gun. Over the past year, the TSA and airports have been focused less on perimeter security than on stopping weapons that passengers or baggage handlers try to sneak onto planes. Altogether, there were at least 39 breaches nation- wide in 2015, which also was the annual average from 2012 through 2015. FLIGHT SAFETY Report: Intruders breach US airport fences about every 10 days Tehama Country Real Estate This Week WESTERN REAL ESTATE MINCH PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 760MainSt.•530-527-5514 Commercial Properties For Sale: • 212 thru 238 S. Main St. (Stripmallcenter) .............................$700,000 • 3/4 Acre Vacant Lot (Nexttonewlibrarysite).............DiamondAve. • 13545 Saint Marys Ave. (Orlease) .......................................... 40,000 sq/ft Commercial Properties For Lease: • 345 Hickory at Washington St. two professional suites available • 232 S. Main Street (OfficeSpace) ...........................................................950 sq/ft • 750 Main Street (Retail/Professional) ................................................1,825 sq/ft • 741 Main Street (Upstairsw/MainSt.Frontage) • 22690 Antelope Blvd......................................................................................18,240 sf South Main Street stripmall several suites available RE/MAX American Dream 1704 Solano St. Corning, CA. 96021 (530) 824-8100 Serving.... Tehama County Northern Glenn County Southern Shasta County 2016 Tehama County Health and Wellness Guide & Directory A reference guide to North State medical professionals and related medical services available to Tehama County residents. Advertising Rates (cost includes same-size adjacent space for promotional copy, provided by advertiser) 1/8 Pg...................................$199.00 1/4 Pg...................................$325.00 Half Pg.................................$485.00 Full Pg..................................$765.00 Inside Front...........................$1150.00 Inside Back............................$1015.00 Back Cover............................$1275.00 Center Double Truck.............$2175.00 Advertising&CopyDeadline:FRIDAY,JUNE3,2016 INSERTS: THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 2016 GaylaEckels: geckels@redbluffdailynews.com(530) 737-5044 Suzy Noble: snoble@redbluffdailynews.com(530) 737-5056 We're taking a new approach with this popular annual glossy magazine publication to increase its reach and reminder to consumers in Tehama County and within the Redding-Chico DMA. As before, 5,000 copies will be inserted in a full edition of The Daily News, with advance in-paper and front page promotion. 3,000 additional printed copies will be produced for year-round provision to medical waiting rooms, Chambers of Commerce, local hotels, and advertiser counter-top distribution. Also as before, the online version of this magazine Guide will be hosted for a full year under the Special Publications tab on the front page of redbluffdailynews.com, for 24/7 viewability. Advertisers may embed a URL to their own website, to which readers of the publication can be sent directly to advertisers' own web pages! Advertisers are invited to provide copy for promotional copy on their practice or business, to be published in the Guide the same size space as their advertisement. Alternatively, advertisers can double the size of the ad space sizes listed below at no extra cost. NEW THIS YEAR! The Guide will feature a directory of local medical and health service providers, provided by St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, published by category. Advertisers in the publication will have their listings printed in bold text.. Advertising businesses that may not be included on the list of providers provided by St. Elizabeth will have their listings added in bold in the appropriate business category. Once monthly during the life of the publication, the Daily News will post a different aspect of the Guide and Directory as a post to The Daily News' Facebook page, which currently has over 5,000 "Likers." The post will refer them to the link to the digital edition. We will "boost" these posts to reach 2-3,000 additional Facebook users who may not yet be "likers" of our Facebook page. We've saved the best for last: Using the AdTaxi digital advertising agency's targeted email service, we will send a promotion and link to the digital edition of the Guide and Directory to 50,0000 emails of men and women 40 and older across the Redding-Chico DMA in September of 2016. This publication is an ideal promotional vehicle not only for medical practitioners, but alsoanybusiness the services of which promotes and supports health and wellness; health food sellers, gyms and health clubs, medical equipment providers and more! Contact your Daily News advertising representative to reserve your space today! proudly announces the RED BLUFF TEHAMA COUNTY FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2016 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM | NEWS | 5 B

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