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Death Notices are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the news- paper's website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. Death notices must be provided by mortuaries to the news department, Rosa Dimaggio Rosa Dimaggio died Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012, at St. Elizabeth Community Hospital in Red Bluff. She was 71. Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers is handling the arrangements. Published Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Veronica D. Dodge Veronica D. Dodge died Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012, in Los Molinos. She was 84. Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers is handling the arrangements. Published Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Joanne V. Goldsmith Joanne V. Goldsmith of Corning died Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012, at Mercy Medical Center in Redding. She was 65. Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary is handling the arrangements. Published Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. George L. Herrington George L. Herrington died Saturday, Sept. 1, 2012, at his residence in Paskenta. He was 85. Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary is handling the arrangements. Published Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Virginia C. Hinkle Virgina C. Hinkle died Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012, at her residence in Red Bluff. She was 74. Neptune Society is handling the arrangements. Published Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Cynthia M. Osbourn Cynthia M. Osbourn died Saturday, Sept. 1, 2012, at her residence in Corning. She was 76. Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary is handling the arrangements. Published Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Martha S. Price Martha S. Price died Monday, Sept. 3, 2012, at her residence in Corning. She was 87. Hall Brothers Corn- ing Mortuary is handling the arrangements. Published Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. arrests, one citation No arrests were made Friday night during a five- hour Red Bluff Police Department DUI-Drivers License checkpoint. Checkpoint turns up no The department screened 260 drivers and issued one citation for driving without a drivers license and anoth- er for driving on a suspended or revoked license. Three drivers were given roadside sobriety tests. However no arrests were made for driving under the influence. The program was funded by a grant from the Cali- fornia Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Another checkpoint is planned for Sept. 21. Bay Area cat found after the valet parking area of a Reno casino 220 miles from home has been reunited with her owners. Washoe County animal control officers say 2- unintended trip to Reno RENO (AP) — A Bay Area cat that ended up in year-old Ponyo was reported in the Circus Circus parking lot the evening of Aug. 27. Officers were able to track the cat's owners in Dublin, Calif., through an ID tag and microchip embedded in her body. ROOM Continued from page 1A erally start around $110. The hotel will employ- ee around 16 workers and has a deal worked out with North Valley Services to employ special needs workers. Amenities include a fit- ness room, enclosed busi- ness center, indoor heated pool with spa, laundry room and complimentary hot breakfast served in the spacious Great Room. The room features 22- foot-high ceilings, a 70- inch flat screen television and personal laptop hookups within the couch- es. Wednesday, September 5, 2012 – Daily News 7A Dhugga said the hotel's location off the interstate is perfect for the business. "We need this kind of hotel in Red Bluff —top class on the Interstate 5 ARREST Continued from page 1A release, and continued to ignore orders. Deputies deployed a Taser in an RBPD Continued from page 1A FRAUD Continued from page 1A FRESNO (AP) — The federal government's long-awaited plan for managing the health of the largest forest of giant sequoias on earth limits logging and emphasizes fire as the primary means to restore the forest's health. vice's plan for the Giant Sequoia National Monu- ment in the Sierra Nevada was released Tuesday, and initial readings have environmental groups cheering that logging would be a method of last resort. The U.S. Forest Ser- corridor," he said. want to pigeon-hole his clientele, but he expects the hotel will cater to busi- Hobbs said he didn't ness travelers as well as those traveling up-and- down the interstate. munity, Hobbs has one know we're here." As for the local com- attempt to place Owens into cus- tody. However Owens was able to resist the Taser and broke the con- tact wires. He struck a deputy twice and a third foot pursuit occurred. was employed at the Lake County Sheriff's Office before coming to Red Bluff. Brown was pinned by simple message he's try- ing to get out. "We want to let them take Owens into custody after a short struggle. Deputies were eventually able to Owens was treated for minor injuries before being booked into jail for resisting arrest. His bail was $15,000. his 5-year-old daughter Kierra with his wife, Amy, watching in the audience. ——— Julie Zeeb can be William Shubb on Dec. 3 at 9:30 a.m. He faces a maximum statutory penalty of 20 years in prison, and a $500,000 fine. The actual sentence, however, will be determined at the plan unveiled Tuesday appears to be an improve- ment. ''In previous years, reached at 527-2153, extension 115 or jzeeb@redbluffdailynews. com. Follow her on Twitter @DN_Zeeb. discretion of the court after consid- eration of any applicable statutory factors and the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which take into account a number of variables. Plan for Giant Sequoia monument limits felling they never actually said that fire is going to be the default treatment, which is something we have been asking for as well,'' she said. Owner Devon Hayzlett says she and her husband were puzzled to get a call from animal control offi- cers in Reno after seeing their pet the night earlier. They hadn't noticed Ponyo was missing because she tends to hide away for long periods of time. The Hayzletts suspect Ponyo hitched a ride with their neighbors, who had taken a trip to Circus Cir- cus. Then-President Bill Clinton signed a procla- mation in 2000 that made the 33 sequoia groves in the forest a national mon- ument. Since then, scien- tists and environmental- ists have been debating how to best protect them after decades of logging and fire suppression across the Sequoia National Forest created unnatural ecosystems across swaths of the mon- ument. The first attempt under President George W. Bush's administration ended when a federal judge rejected a logging- heavy plan as too favor- able to timber interests. Sierra Club spokesman Sarah Matsumoto said the largest living things on earth, can withstand rapidly burning fires that serve to clear out brush and other trees that com- pete for sunlight and water. Forest service officials hope that the new plan will work to restore watersheds and habitat for wildlife that depend on old forests for food and shelter. ''They're under stress and there is concern about their future,'' Kevin B. Elliott, supervisor of the 328,000-acre pre- serve, said of the trees. ''We want to make sure these objects of interest continue to exist.'' Giant sequoias, the Under the plan, only sequoias with a diameter less than 12 inches can be cut — or 20 inches for all other trees — and only as a last resort or to protect for public safety. The report sets the criteria for tree removal, and no cut sequoias can be sold. ''Any timber that may, Cal State faculty approve 4-year contract LOS ANGELES (AP) — The California State University faculty has overwhelmingly approved a new four-year labor contract, end- ing more than two years of con- tentious bargaining with the admin- istration, the union said Tuesday. Lillian Taiz, president of the Cal- ifornia Faculty Association, said the contract, which largely preserves current working conditions and contains no salary raises, won 91 percent of approval by voting mem- bers. 12,500 voting members cast ballots over several weeks last month. Many faculty members were out of town on research assignments, Taiz said. About 45 percent of the union's ratified by the university's board of trustees at its meeting later this month, covers 23,000 professors, The contract, which must still be lecturers and other professional employees throughout CSU's 23 campuses. Not all are voting mem- bers. John Swarbrick, associate vice chancellor for labor relations, said in a statement that he was pleased that the union has passed the agree- ment and added that he expects the board to also ratify it. Faculty members have been $250 million starting in January. ''It's one of those moments, and working without a contract for the last 2 1/2 years during a contentious bargaining process that spurred a strike-authorization vote and inter- vention of a mediator last spring. With that issue now resolved, Taiz said faculty will be fully engaged in lobbying for passage of Proposition 30, which calls for increasing the sales tax and income taxes for the wealthy to raise funds for public education. If the measure fails in November, CSU will lose CARE TO COMMENT? At redbluffdailynews.com, scroll to the end of any story, click the link and type away. it doesn't happen too often, when faculty and the board are on the same page,'' Taiz said. ''We are 100 percent engaged in what happens next.'' With class sizes increasing, no pay raises for four years, and pro- gram cuts that threaten jobs, employees said morale is low on campuses. ''The faculty are feeling fairly beaten down,'' said Jonathan Karpf, an anthropology lecturer at San Jose State University. ''But the majority are feeling better that we've reached an agreement.'' The changes in the new contract are modest. Most of the union's bat- tle was to preserve items the univer- sity wanted to cut. More than $750 million has been cut from CSU's budget over the past three years. in fact, be removed is going to be an outcome of our proposed manage- ment, and outcome based on site-specific analysis and it will have public involvement,'' Elliot said. The plan also sets aside 15,110 acres of a region now known as the Moses Inventoried Road- less Area for the new Moses Wilderness. While environmental groups had wanted the entire tract set aside for the highest Con- gressional protections, they say that designating this two-thirds as wilder- ness will help wildlife and plants adapt to cli- mate change. At 3,600 feet, the area with Giant Sequoias, lush meadows and clear streams, will connect with land already federal- ly designated up to the 14,505-foot Mount Whit- ney. It has been under threat from logging in the past. ''Protecting habitat at various altitudes is criti- cally important,'' Ryan Henson, senior con- servation director for the California Wilderness Coalition. ''In an era of climate change, when you protect lower elevations areas and the highlands are also protected, it helps facilitate the movement of wildlife.'' said effect in 30 days, but for the next 90 days citizens can file a notice of written appeal to the Chief of the Forest Service in Wash- ington, D.C. The plan will go into THE PASSING PARADE (I wrote in August 1988) A couple listed a house with us. Other houses are selling but theirs has not and they desire to move sooner than later. An agent from another office calls and asks to show the house. We agree to meet at the house that afternoon. As we enter the residence…the owners are not present, I note a cat in the front room. The potential buyers ask about the confines of the parcel and we go outside to show the corners. Later, they leave, I lock up and depart. At home that evening, the lady owner of the house calls. She says, "I see you left your card and were evidently in the house today, but did you let the cat out? We can't find her anywhere. I am ready to feed her before we go out to dinner, but she does not come when I call her." I think, did I allow the cat to get out when we stepped outside to view the lot? "No", I respond confidently, "I was careful not to let the cat out….must be around some place…but call me if you don't find her, and I will come help you look." I keep thinking of this childless couple and their cat. I am eating my dinner but not eating it all that well. Finally I decide to go back and take a look around. I dash up to their home and there's nobody home….but the cat in question, is hanging around the front door! Aha! I say to myself. The cat was out but they did not find it. They probably went to dinner thinking their kitty was gone forever…and what a fine broker they have employed! I decided to put the cat back in the house but I did not have a key. I race back to my office, get the key, and return hoping the cat has not wandered away. She is not at the front door but I find her around back. She waves her tail at me and I am thinking a good Siamese cat, for a change. Not so. As soon as I approach her, she walks off a ways and lies down again. We play this game all around the house We are now at the front of the house again. The cat is near the front door which I have opened. The cat is deciding whether to go into the house where dinner must surely await…or to dash down the hill to the highway and speeding cars. "Go for the food, kitty" I yell. The cat, startled, bolts into the house. I lock up and scurry home wondering if I put the right cat in the house. Later the missus takes a call from the lady cat owner who reports, "Well, silly me. The cat was in the house all the time. Sorry to have bothered you." Robert Minch 1929- The Passing Parade is brought to you by by Minch Property Management, 760 Main Street specializing in commercial leasing and sales. 530 527 5514 The missus tells the lady she will relay the message to me. She then hangs up, turns to me and says, "Your move." Right. What is my move? Please advise.