Red Bluff Daily News

October 11, 2016

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ByJulieZeeb jzeeb@redbluffdailynews.com @DN_Zeeb on Twitter REDBLUFF Sunnyweathermade for great conditions for the in- augural Tehama County Cattle- Women Two-Man Ranch Sorting event held Saturday at the Te- hama District Fairground. The event drew 147 teams for its first year and was made pos- sible by support from various community partners, said event chairwoman Renee Ewing. Main sponsors included Pine Creek Cattle, Jim Bass of El Rancho Ca- pay, Jeanne and Richard Smith, Lonnie and Marianna Franklin, Reynolds Ranch and Nor Cal Sort- ers. Money raised from the event will be used for beef promotion and education as well as the an- nual scholarship fund given out by the Tehama County Cattle- Women. CATTLEWOMEN Newranch sorting event debuts By Heather Hoelscher hhoelscher@redbluffdailynews.com @DN_Heather on Twitter CORNING City staff will be hold- ing a special meeting at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 11 at the City Coun- cil chambers, 794 Third St., to ad- dress concerns and answer ques- tions the community may have re- garding the recently completed CorningStreetscapeStreetProject. A presentation of the project's history, objectives and funding will begin at 5:05 p.m., including information on the project's pur- pose, plans and requirements. The community will have time toaskanyquestionstheymayhave publicly to the project's coordina- tors, Public Works Director Dawn GrineandCityEngineerEdAnder- son, at 5:25 p.m. The meeting is scheduled to close around 6:15 p.m. to allow for the City Council to set up for a council meeting scheduled for 6:30 p.m. During the council meeting, the streetscapeproject'sbulb-outalter- ation project will be discussed and authorizationtomoveforwardwill be requested by city staff. CORNING Me et in g scheduled to d is cu ss streets project By Julie Zeeb jzeeb@redbluffdailynews.com @DN_Zeeb on Twitter RED BLUFF The second annual Color Dash 5K was held Saturday at Sacred Heart Parish School, where at least 100 racers had pre- registered for the event and be- tween 200-300 runners were ex- pected. The race replaced the fun run previously held by Sacred Heart and Mercy High School and is an annual event that helps promote health living. While numbers were a little down from the first year, organizers fully expect it to come back up as the race becomes an es- tablished event in the community, said Principal Richard Cherveny. The school appreciates the support of the community for the event, which is a fundraiser for technology upgrades for the school, Cherveny said. There were more vendors who came out this year and he thanked the city for its support, with the Red Bluff Fire Department raising the American flag from a ladder truck. "The money we raise is going into the technology fund," Cher- veny said. "We just bought a 3-D printer so we will be channeling the funds into sending students to competitions, engineering and design legos, robotics, developing 3-D models to print, programs and trainings to bring stuff back to the school." COLOR DASH SacredHeartruntofundtechnology Arunnertakes a look at a tutu to see if it will fit while waiting for the race to start Saturday at the Sacred Heart Color Dash 5K. JULIE ZEEB — DAILY NEWS By Julie Zeeb jzeeb@redbluffdailynews.com @DN_Zeeb on Twitter CORNING The annual Corning Olive Festival was held Satur- day with the normally two-day event compacted into one day starting with the Corning Vol- unteer Fire Department Pan- cake Breakfast. "We wanted to make it a one- day commitment to encour- age people to go to the pan- cake breakfast at the fire hall and then go watch the parade and bed races before coming out to the park," said Corning Chamber of Commerce Execu- tive Director J.C. Pendergraft. "We wanted to make it a circu- lar motion to get people to at- tend all parts of the day." The main event moved from Woodson Park to the new Corn- ing Community Park on Toomes Avenue, which allowed orga- nizers to have more space for booths and bring in more ven- dors, Pendergraft said. "We've had mixed feelings from folks on the change, but it allowed us to have more space and showcase the new park that the city worked so hard on," Pendergraft said. "It's a warm atmosphere and we were able to get over 70 vendors in includ- ing Nova Vine from Santa Rosa with olive trees and Lucero Ol- ive Oil and Olive Pit." The olive theme was car- ried over into the newest addi- tion in a barbecue competition that Pendergraft said he hoped would draw more people out to the park. While olives were not required for the main dish, any side dish had to include olives. Musical entertainment was provided by High Voltage, Dane Barbo and To The Moon And Back with Anne's Dance Studio performing as well. Prior to the festival, there were 42 entries in the parade and there were three teams competing in the bed races that included a team from Napa Auto Parts, Burger King and St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Garyth Todd-Hill, 7, of Corn- ing was declared winner of the Missing Olive Contest after finding it in a palm tree across from the Corning Police Depart- ment. He won $150. Winners of the parade were Shirley Hall and Sue Boat- man with their Equestrian Horse and Buggy in first place, Tonatzin with the Aztec Dance in second place and in third place was the Tehama County Fire Department of Rancho Te- hama with the Dancing Ghouls. The winners of the Bed Races were St. Andrew's Epis- copal Church Youth Group in first place, Corning Napa Auto Parts in second place and in third place Burger King. In the Olive Spitting Compe- tition, the winner in the chil- dren's division was Mathew Woodall, winning a gift donated by the Corning Senior Center. The winner of the adults was Flint Emmons, winning $25. This year the Olive Festival held the first annual Smokin' Hot BBQ Competition with the big trophy and $250 going to the North Valley Services for its "Meat the Challenge" barbe- cue. Coming in second, winning a trophy and $150, was Papa Dave's BBQ, in third, winning a trophy and $100, was Hometown Cafe and in fourth, winning $25, was The Underdogs. CORNING OLIVE FEST SPORTS NEW LOCATION, EVENTS PHOTOS BY JULIE ZEEB — DAILY NEWS Three teams race down Solano Street toward Fi h Street in the Corning Does It Bedder Bed Races Saturday for the annual Olive Festival. Team Napa and Team St. Andrew's Episocopal are almost nose to nose with Team Burger King not far behind. The Corning High School Cardinal Band marches down Solano Street Saturday during the Olive Festival parade. Community.....A3 Business .........A4 Lifestyles........A5 Opinion............A6 Sports.............. B1 Classifieds......B7 Weather ..........B8 INDEX Have a great day, Norma Bakerville. GOOD MORNING In Colorado case, high court will tackle tenets of trial by impartial jury vs. secrecy in jury deliberations. PAGEB6 SUPREME COURT Justicesweighracial bias in the jury room House speaker focuses efforts on preserving Republican con- gressional majority in light of Trump's stumbles. PAGE B5 POLITICS Paul Ryan appears to break up with Trump RUN PAGE 7 MEETING PAGE 7 RANCH PAGE 7 FESTIVAL PAGE 7 Check out what's going on in your neighborhood and the community. PAGE A3 WHAT'S HAPPENING U Dow Jones Industrial 18,329.04 (+88.55) U Standard & Poor's 2163.66 (+9.92) U Nasdaq 5328.67 (+36.26) BUSINESS » redbluffdailynews.com Tuesday, October 11, 2016 50CENTS AN EDITION OF THE CHICO ENTERPRISE-RECORD Online Find more news on our website. redbluffdailynews.com Solano Street Corning clinic celebrates grand opening Business A4 Football Bulldogs take tough loss at homecoming Sports B1 LiketheDailyNews on Facebook and stay in the loop on local news, sports and more. VISITFACEBOOK.COM/ RBDAILYNEWS LIKEUSON FACEBOOK Volume131,issue233 7 58551 69001 9 Sunny High: Low: 82 51 PAGE B8

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