Red Bluff Daily News

November 25, 2016

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Today REDBLUFF Celebrate Recovery:7 p.m., High Point Assembly of God, 625Luther Road, 527-0445 Overeaters Anonymous: 12:15-1:30p.m., Presbyte- rian Church, 838Jefferson St., Ste. #3, Terri, 528- 8323 Red Bluff Rotary Club Sunrise: 7a.m., M&M Ranch House School Readiness Play Group: 9a.m. ages 0-2, 10a.m. ages 3-4, Jackson Heights Elementary School, Room 21, 225Jackson St., free, 527-7214 CORNING Achieve: 9a.m. to 1p.m., Family Resource Center, 824-7670 Car Show: 5-9p.m., Bar- tel's Giant Burger, 22355 Corning Road, local car clubs welcome, 824-2788 COTTONWOOD Singles Friendship Social: 7-8:30p.m., 20404Gas Point Road, unmarried adults late 30s to mid 60s, 347-3770 Saturday RED BLUFF Downtown Christmas Pa- rade: 5:30p.m., downtown, 527-6220 Saturday Market: 8a.m. to 12:30p.m., The Home Depot Parking lot, EBT accepted Tehama County Young Marine Drills: 9a.m. to 3 p.m., 1005Vista Way, Ste. C. 366-0813 TEHAMA Tehama County Museum: 1-4p.m., 275C St., group tours by appointment other days, 384-2595 Sunday RED BLUFF AA Live and Let Live: noon and 5:30p.m., 785Musick St., seven days a week except Thursday meets at 8p.m. Al-Anon New Comers At Heart: 6:30-7:30p.m., Presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson St., Room 3 Kelly-Griggs House Museum: 1-3p.m., 311 Washington St., group tours by appointment, 527-1129 Monday RED BLUFF Alcoholics Anonymous, Experience, Strength and Hope: 10a.m., Monday through Thursday, High Point Assembly of God, 625 Luther Road Community Band rehears- al: 7-9p.m. Presbyterian Church, 838Jefferson St., no auditions, 527-3486 English as a Second Lan- guage, citizenship class- es: 5:30-8:30p.m., 1295 Red Bud, 736-3308, same time Tuesday and Wednes- day and 9a.m. to 12:20p.m. Thursdays, free childcare from 9a.m. to 12:20p.m. classes in Richlieu Hall, 900 Johnson St. Hand and Foot Card Games: 12:30-3:30p.m., Community Center, 1500S. Jackson St. Head Injury Recreational Entity: 10a.m. to 2p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospi- tal, Wright Room, Rusty, 529-2059 Narcotics Anonymous: 11 a.m. to noon, 838Jeffer- son St., Room 3, Monday through Saturday and 5:30- 6:30p.m. Saturday Narcotics Anonymous: 7-8:30p.m., 785Musick St., every day except Thursday PAL Martial Arts: 3-5p.m., ages 5-18, 1005Vista Way, Ste. C, free, 529-7950 Playtime Pals school readiness playgroup: 10- 11:30a.m., ages 0-5, 900 Johnson St., free Red Bluff Masterworks Chorale rehearsal: 6:45 p.m., Presbyterian Church, 838Jefferson St. School Readiness Play Group, ages 0-5: 10a.m., Reeds Creek Elementary School, Room 6, 18335 Johnson Road, free, 528- 7348 Sun Country Quilters Community Service Group: 9a.m. to noon, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 528- 1126 Sun Country Quilters Guild Meeting: 7p.m., Westside Room, Community Center, 1500S. Jackson St. 528-1126 TeenScreen Mental Health Appointments: 10a.m. to 2 p.m., free, by appointment, 1900Walnut St., 527-8491, Ext. 3012 TOPS Club (take off pounds Sensibly): 8:30 a.m., First Christian Church, 926Madison Ave., 527-7541 or 347-6120, visit www. tops.org Venture Crew 1914meet- ing: 6:30-8p.m., Moose Lodge on 99W, coed ages 14-20 Widowed Persons Asso- ciation of Red Bluff cards: 1p.m., call 384-2471for location CORNING Achieve: 9a.m. to 1p.m., Family Resource Center, 175 Solano St., 824-7670 Alcoholics Anonymous: noon, Monday through Friday, 5p.m. Thursday, 7 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Saturday and 1p.m. Sunday, 783Solano St., behind the church Computer Lab hours: 2-4 p.m., 175Solano St., 824- 7670 Narcotics Anonymous: 7-8:30p.m., 820Marin St., 824-114or 586-0245, meetings daily LOS MOLINOS Community Dance: 7-10 p.m., Veterans Hall, 7980 Sherwood Blvd., $5pot luck, live band, 840-1084 Tuesday RED BLUFF Cribbage Club: 6p.m., Lariat Bowl, 527-4606 Low Impact Aerobics: 8-9 a.m., $1, Community Center, 1500S. Jackson St., 527- 8177 Oak Creek Women's Golf Club: 8a.m., 2620Mont- gomery Road, 530-529- 0674 PAL Kickboxing: 6p.m., 1450Schwab St., 529-8716 Penny Bingo: 9:30a.m., Community Center, 1500S. Jackson St. Pinochle for Seniors: 12:30-3:30p.m., 1500S. Jackson St., free, 527-8177 Red Bluff Derby Girls open tryouts and practice: 6:30 p.m., Tyler Jelly building, Tehama District Fairground Red Bluff Garden Club: 6:30p.m., Community Cen- ter, 1500S. Jackson St. Red Bluff Rotary: 12:30 p.m., Elks Lodge Take Off Pounds Sensi- bly - TOPS: 10a.m., First United Methodist Church, 525David Ave., 529-3312 Tehama County Board of Supervisors: 10a.m., board chamber, 727Oak St. Tehama County Tea Party Patriots: 6p.m., Grange Hall, 20794Walnut St. WWE self defense train- ing for women: 5:30-7 p.m., 1005Vista Way, Ste. C CORNING Achieve: 9a.m. to 1p.m., Family Resource Center, 175 Solano St., 824-7670 Bilingual Computer Class: 9-11a.m., Family Resource Center, 175Solano St., 824- 7670 Corning Alcoholics Anony- mous: noon and 7p.m., 783Solano St., behind the church Parkinson's Support Group: 2p.m., Corning Health District, 175Solano St. Pay It Forward: 1p.m., Edward Jones, Solano and Sixth streets,824-4290 Soccer training: 4-6p.m., except for holidays and rain, Woodson School Soccer Field, 150N. Toomes, 824- 7680 Tuesday Art Group,: 1-4 p.m., Corning Senior Center, 1015Fourth Avenue LOS MOLINOS School Readiness Play Group, ages 0-5: 10a.m., Los Molinos Elementary School, First Steps Building, 7700Stanford Ave., free, 384-7833 Wednesday RED BLUFF Al-Anon Steps to Seren- ity: noon, Presbyterian Church, 838Jefferson St., Room 2 Community Dance: 7-10 p.m., Westside Grange, 20794Walnut St. Living Well with Better Nutrition: 1-3p.m., St. Elizabeth Community Hospi- tal, Columba Room, 888 628-1948 Localcalendar TODAYINHISTORY LOTTERY Brad Pitt cleared by FBI in abuse case Brad Pitt cleared another hurdle in restoring his reputation as a decent father: TMZ is reporting that the FBI says there is no reason to further investigate the actor's confrontation with his teen son Maddox on Sept 14that reportedly spurred Angelina Jolie to file for divorce. "The FBI has conducted a review of the circumstanc- es and will not pursue further investigation," a statement from the FBI read. "No charges have been filed in this matter." The FBI's decision follows a decision by the Los An- geles County Department of Children and Family Services to close its inves- tigation, concluding there was nochild abuse. — Martha Ross, Bay Area News Group Star report Birthdays Actress Kathryn Crosby is 83. Actor Christopher Riordan is 79. Pro Foot- ball Hall of Fame coach Joe Gibbs is 76. Singer Bob Lind is 74. Author, actor and economist Ben Stein is 72. Actor John Larroquette is 69. Actor Tracey Walter is 69. Movie director Jonathan Kaplan is 69. Author Charlaine Harris is 65. Retired MLB All- Star Bucky Dent is 65. Dance judge Bruno To- nioli (TV: "Dancing with the Stars") is 61. Singer Amy Grant is 56. 1783 The British evacuated New York, their last military position in the United States during the Revolutionary War. 1864 During the Civil War, Confederate agents set a series of arson fires in New York; the blazes were quickly extin- guished. 1915 A new version of the Ku Klux Klan, targeting blacks, Jews, Catholics and immigrants, was founded by William Joseph Simmons, who proclaimed himself Imperial Wizard as he staged a cross-burning on Stone Mountain outside Atlanta. 1940 The cartoon character Woody Woodpecker made his debut in the animated short "Knock Knock" produced by Walter Lantz. 1947 Movie studio executives meeting in New York agreed to blacklist the "Hollywood Ten" who'd been cited for contempt of Congress the day before. WINNING NUMBERS Daily 3A ernoon: 7, 7, 8 Daily 3Evening: 3, 8, 8 Daily 4: 0, 4, 5, 5 Fantasy 5: 3, 5, 20, 31, 33 Daily Derby 1st: 1, Gold Rush 2nd: 5, California Classic 3rd: 9, Winning Spirit Race Time: 1:42.43 SUPER LOTTO PLUS Wednesday's drawing: 15, 25, 27, 30, 34 Mega number: 1 Saturday's estimated jackpot: $55million MEGA MILLIONS Tuesday's drawing: 1, 43, 45, 66, 69 Mega number: 7 Today's estimated jackpot: $20million POWERBALL Wednesday's drawing: 7, 32, 41, 47, 61 Powerball: 3 Saturday's estimated jackpot: $403million ThismessagesponsoredbyTheDailyNewsandwww.redbluffdailynews.com TOPTENREASONSTOSHOPLOCALINTEHAMACOUNTY! Red Bluff - Corning - Los Molinos 6. Get Better Service! Local businesses tend to hire people with some knowledge of the products they are selling and provide better service by giving locally- relevant attention to each individual customer. 7. Support Community Service and Quality of Life! Local businesses on average support non-profit groups, organizations, youth sports teams and local "good causes" at a higher rate than big businesses. They are more likely to give back to the community. 8. Encourage Local Prosperity! Research indicates that entrepreneurs and experienced workers and professionals will more likely invest and live in communities that support locally owned businesses. 9. Keep Your Community Unique! Locally owned businesses cater to the cultural base of the market they serve. As local businesses diversity and adapt, residents can find new adventure in a familiar, nearby environment. Where we live, shop and play is the foundation of our communities. Unique businesses are vital to the diverse character of the place we call home. 10. Save Time and Money! If you don't have to travel an hour and a half round trip to make a purchase that can be found right in your town, you just saved a lot of time and gas money. For most of us life is busy. Why take the extra drive when you can find it close to home? 1. Put Your Taxes To Good Use! Local business anchors a city's infrastructure and supports the city and county tax base, from which public services like law enforcement and firefighters are paid. Local shopping ads substance and security to a community by increasing its revenue. 2. Buy Local-Support Yourself! Local business strengthens the economic base of every community. A good deal of the dollars spent with local businesses is used by those businesses to make purchases from other local businesses - creating a domino affect that can preserve a business market even during an economic slow-down. 3. Invest in Your Community! Most Local business owners live in the market they serve; this lessens the possibility of the business moving and increases the owners' investment in the future of the community. 4. Create More Good Jobs! Local business provide jobs for local residents. All together, independently owned businesses amount to one of the largest employers, nationwide. 5. Reduce Environmental Impact! When locally owned businesses, along with local residents, purchase locally, it results in less travel and reduced air pollution. | NEWS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2016 2 A

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