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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. Arrest JasmynSvetic:25,was arrested Wednesday eve- ning at the O'Nite Trailer Park when police responded to report about 6:30p.m. of a domestic incident. She was booked into Tehama County Jail on the charge of battery. Collision Northbound Interstate 5, south of Chard Avenue: A three-vehicle collision that backed traffic up for at least a mile involving a southbound 2008Honda CRV driven by Chieko Uchida, 79, of Dublin that was driving the wrong way. There were no injuries. Uchida was driving south on I-5in the le lane when she dri ed into the center divider and started driving south in the right north- bound lane. Jose Reyes, 43, of Pamona was driving a big rig in the right lane with Sherilyn Thacker, 53, of Grants Pass, Oregon fol- lowing behind. Reyes saw Uchida pull into his lane and started pulling to the right to avoid a collision while Thacker braked and pulled to the le . Uchida ended up wedged in between. Suspicious Elizabeth Avenue: A Corn- ing woman reported about 12:40a.m. Wednesday seeing a flashlight over her fence and asked for an area check and extra patrol. Walton Avenue: A man in a black tank top was report- edly walking in the alley and looking into fences about 9 a.m. Wednesday. The s Mina Avenue: A Honda CBR street motorcycle was stolen from the front porch of a residence. Lakeside Drive: A motor- cycle was reported stolen from The Breakers Apart- ments about 5p.m. An hour prior, officers responded for report of a break-in to one of the residences at The Breakers. Solano Street: An officer was requested to the Corning Car Wash at 1:20 p.m. Wednesday for a report of the the of loose change from the vacuum machines. Solano Street: A Dollar Tree employee reported Wednesday that some- one stole her scanner for American Greetings greet- ing cards while she was restocking cards. Threats Walbridge Street: A man reported about 6:45p.m. Wednesday that a scam- mer kept calling him and had eventually threatened to send him a bomb in the mail. Vandalism Fourth Avenue: A Corning resident reported a hit and run at 6:18p.m. Wednesday involving a red or maroon F-150that had damaged a tree and a neighbor's vehicle. The parent was located and exchanged information. Douglass Street: A vehicle was keyed sometime Tues- day evening. PoliceLogs The Marine Corps League, Detachment 1140, Tehama and Red Bluff is hosting a gun show at the Elks Lodge, 355 Gilmore Road, Red Bluff, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sun- day, July 23-24. Tickets will be $6 for the general public and $5 for veterans with proof of service. Ages 12 years and younger, free with an adult. Admission is free for all active duty military in uniform. There will also be a rifle raffle on Sunday at 3 p.m. Tickets will be available at the door. A Federal Firearms Li- censee will be on site dur- ing the show. Of proceeds, 75 percent will be donated to local veterans service organi- zations. For additional informa- tion call Roy at 384-2134. MARINE CORPS LEAGUE Gun show scheduled at Elks Lodge Tammie McCoy and Kevin Delfs were wed May 14 by Pastor Gil DeLao of Calvary Chapel Red Bluff in a double-ring ceremony at the groom's parents' res- idence in Red Bluff. Maids of Honor were Jessie Ewing Heard, Sta- cey Smith and Nelli Car- penter. The bride's daugh- ter, Alycia Berglund, was the Junior Maid of Honor. Deanna Holler, Sarah Hoss and Chris Hettick served as bridesmaids with McK- enzie Runnels serving as junior bridesmaid. Kenzee Holler and Penny Bell-Mc- Coy were senior flower la- dies with Miranda Heard serving as flower girl. Best Men were Trevor Heard, Jerry Martin and Weston McCoy. Larry Ant- les, Beau Holler, Dale Hoo- fard and Harold Robinson were groom's men. Elijah Holler was the honorary ring holder and Jack Mc- Coy was the sign holder. The bride, a 1997 Red Bluff High School grad- uate, is the daughter of Jan McCoy and Micheal Kinzee of Red Bluff. She is employed by The Home Depot. The groom, a 1996 grad- uate of Red Bluff High School, is the son of Den- nis and Jenny Delfs of Red Bluff. He is employed with Lassen Forestry Products. The couple will make their home in Red Bluff. They honeymooned on the northern coastline. CELEBRATION In Louisiana and Minne- sota, police tragically killed two innocent black men. Later that same week, the city of Dallas was held hostage as a vile mur- derous repre- hensible indi- vidual ripped asunder the hopeful futures of five brave police officers, who were ironically protecting the rights of a crowd protest- ing the deaths of the two aforementioned black vic- tims. Of course these are not the only examples of violence tearing through our national fabric of late. As President Obama said while consoling a grieving, shocked city at the memo- rial, "I've been to too many of these." The loss of any life is a loss to more than one. Those who were touched or inspired by the victim's ac- tions, the loved ones and co-workers, are in many ways more damaged than the victim. After all, as hor- rific as is a killing, it is an end for the deceased. For those who soldier on, there is shock, grief, and an over- powering loss. The feel- ing of victim-ness is can- cerous, spreading far and wide, destroying silently from within, resulting in a need to find reason or to lash out. I've thought long and hard about whether to ven- ture down this road this week because my fear is that people will misinter- pret what I say (based in large extent on the theory I'm about to propose). Af- ter all, my intention when I write is to uplift and in- spire; hopefully tossing in a few chuckles now and then. It is very difficult to go to that place in this instance, as these recent actions il- luminate that something is horribly, desperately mis- aligned. Nonetheless, here I am. Whereby the violence and bloodshed are ghastly and unjust, their ferocity and resultant name-call- ing belies a deeper prob- lem; a bedrock on which this viciousness is built. It is an all-or-nothing, right- or-wrong, up-or-down, my-way-or-the-highway, thought meme infecting so- ciety. It is past time to accept that multiple realities can — and do — exist in the same sphere, each accu- rate even while in competi- tion with each other. There is room for many while still not having to crowd out others. I believe many are unfairly persecuted while at the same time I possess immense respect for police who everyday willingly risk their lives to protect me. I admit I am not that brave. We can believe that too many people of color are hurt at the hands of law en- forcement while still also believing that law enforce- ment does an excellent, dif- ficult job in perilous cir- cumstances. I can and do believe that law-abiding black men should never be killed, while also finding it equally spot-on that police officers deserve — and are entitled — to return home to loving families at day's end, unafraid of a sniper's bullet or being shot in their squad cars. It's a matter of respect for all. We must be courageous and open enough to ac- cept others' realities, while not so bull-headed to ex- pect that our perception is the One Universal Truth applicable to all without variation. Yelling over oth- ers doesn't make me more truthful. Might does not equal right. My personal perceptions are filtered through a prism of being a white middle class, aging, educated, het- ero, happily married male, living in a (mostly) safe neighborhood in a small, beautiful relatively pro- gressive area. I simply can't know what it's like to be a man of color residing in the inner city, nor a dedicated police officer striving dil- igently to protect a large community, any more than I can understand what it is to be a conservative elderly Baptist woman in the Bible Belt, or a wealthy gay Asian executive in San Francisco. My life view doesn't make me wrong — and it equally doesn't make me right. It merely makes me who I am. As part of that percep- tion which I call "reality", I also personally believe that others with differing view- points can be equally accu- rate for them. Denial solves nothing. Only through com- passion, comprehension, and non-fearful, lovingly honest discussion, will we find the common ground to create a more inclusive, sup- portive, cooperative society that works for all. That's what I believe. Scott"Q"Marcusis a nationally known weight loss expert for baby boomers and the CRP — Chief Recovering Perfectionist — of www. ThisTimeIMeanIt.com. Check out his new series of free weight loss videos and other inspirational material at www. FourMonthsToGoal.com. SCOTT MARCUS Multipleangles,tumultreigns Scott Marcus ERIC LESLIE PHOTOGRAPHY — CONTRIBUTED Tammie McCoy and Kevin Delfs were married May 14, 2016, at the groom's parents' residence in Red Bluff. McCoy and Delfs get married The spectacle of a Ford automobile chasing a young lady through the street and being itself closely pursued by another young lady could never have happened a hun- dred years ago. There were youngladiesahundredyears ago, we dare say, but there were no Ford automobiles. TheFordownedbyMissMa- mie B. Lang is so young that it is not yet thoroughly do- mesticated, as can be shown by the vicious disposition that it sometimes manifests. On this particular occa- sion it was slow in starting. MissAnnieGodboltstraight- enedupfromaheartlessand nerve destroying siege of cranking and looked wist- fully as Miss Lang, who sat at the steering gear ready to feed the animal gasoline and keep it in the road. The appeal was answered. Miss Lang descended from the machine to try her more ex- perienced had at cranking. The Ford appeared sud- denly to realize that it was at liberty. With a great siz- zle and splutter it darted at Miss Godbolt. Naturally she turned and ran. Miss Lang startedaftertheFord.Justas Miss Godbolt darted behind atreeandtheFordattempted to crawl under a watering trough Miss Lang grabbed it firmly in her left hand and with the other choked it to death with gasoline. Its pe- culiar actions are believed to be due to atmospheric condi- tionsgrowingoutofapartial eclipse of the moon. A total eclipsemighthadresultedse- riously. — July 15, 1916 100 YEARS AGO... Crazy automobile moved by eclipse chases a lady ARetirementCommunity 750 David Avenue Red Bluff, CA. 96080 (530) 527-9193 www.tehamaestatesretirement.com Tours Provided Daily LaCorona Garden Center 7769Hwy99E,LosMolinos 530-576-3118 General Hydroponics Fox Farm Soil Grow More Fertilizer YaraMila Fertilizer Chicken Feed Garden Plants 607MainStreet,RedBluff 527-0772 DailyCheeseburger Special with Fries 11am to 3pm $ 5.29 Senior Breakfast Special 6:30am to 11am $ 5.99 TUSCANPOOL SUPPLY MonthlyPoolService Equipment Upgrades and more Licensed, Bonded & Insured CLS#944446 40 CHESTNUT AVENUE (530) 527-3262 Bankruptcy: $ 899 (Forindividualchapter7does not include filing fee) Flexible Payment Arrangements Free Consultations LawOfficesof DerekD.Soriano Offices also in Chico, Willows 530-402-8281 Hablamos Espanol : 530.636.2529 derek.soriano@dereksoriano.com 734MainStreet 530-690-2477 11am-9pm Mon.-Thur. 11am - 10pm Fri. & Sat. 11am-8pm Sun. 9 CRAFT BEERS ON TAP Pizza Restaurant Round Up Saloon Round Up Saloon 610WashingtonSt. Red Bluff Supporting Farmers Market with live music on Wednesdaynites call for dates (530) 527-9901 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. 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