Red Bluff Daily News

October 30, 2012

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Obituaries lived for many years in Norco, Ca. where she raised her family with husband Bill. She was active in 4-H and FFA, the Norco fair and many equestrian activities. She was elected to the Norco City Council for 3 terms and served as mayor twice. Upon her husband's death, she moved to Manton to be close to her family. She leaves behind her daughters; Bree (and son in-law Kurt) Zimmerman , Brittney Mailhes, 5 grandchildren; Torry and Garret Zimmerman and Savaughn Foster, Rayne and Breez Acevez. A memorial service will be held at on November 3, 2012 at 11:00 a.m. Barbara Carmichael, 63 a lifelong California resident, BARBARA J. CARMICHAEL April 19, 1949 - October 17, 2012 the Manton Grange Cops catch burglar exiting window ment was able to catch a burglary suspect coming out of a window Sunday afternoon after an apart- ment neighbor called in suspi- cious activity. Logs show the department The Red Bluff Police Depart- received a call shortly before 4 p.m. from a neighbor who said WIND Continued from page 1A renewable energy, but its commitment to saving money and thus providing better lives for its cus- they heard bumping and moving around in the apartment and knew the property owner wasn't there. Officers arrived and located Sean Latriel Landry, also known by the last name Williams, climb- ing out of a window in the back of apartment. The 40-year-old tomers and employees. Foundation Windpower CEO Matt Wilson said the project did not come about because two companies negotiated, but rather that two companies made a commitment. He said for entrepre- WALNUTS Continued from page 1A nos on Oct. 23. The walnuts were bound for Hill Country Bakery Dis- FIDDLE Continued from page 1A 2. Tallon Sandoval, Janesville CA 3. Hannah Allison, Mike Rust died unexpectedly on Saturday, October 21, 2012, at his home in Sacramento. He was a good man.- Born February 6, 1944 to Bart Rust and Marjorie Beaty, Mike moved to Red Bluff in 1956. He attended most, if not all, of the schools in the Red Bluff area, graduating from RBUHS in 1962. His college career at Chico State was interrupted by four years in the US Navy. Mike com- pleted a tour of duty in Vietnam, where he worked as a sonar-technician (aka "winch-man"), on a pilot-rescue helicopter. After his discharge, Mike graduated from San Jose State University, and Hastings Law School, while working as a restaurant/bar manager in Palo Alto, and a ski instructor at Dodge Ridge. It was during this time that he met and married Karen (Schmidt) Rust, the future mother of his adored daughter, Heather. Yes, Virginia, there really are two Karen Rusts. His love of skiing led Mike to become one of the first "ski" attorneys in Califor- nia, and thereby find a sports equipment related legal ni- che for the rest of his life. A relished side benefit was the frequent travel to Europe and other areas of the world where his clients were headquartered. Besides work and travel, Mike enjoyed playing classical guitar, reading vora- ciously, and being with his family and friends. Mike was last seen thoroughly enjoying life, looking forward to ski season, and eagerly awaiting the birth of his first grand- child, expected in early January. Mike was preceded in death by his mother, Marge Pflugrad, and his father and step-mother, Bart and Phyllis Rust. He is survived by his lovely and talented daughter, Heather Kavanaugh (Mat- thew): former wife, Karen Rust: his loving sisters; Karen Rust (Deborah), and children Gary and Geneva; Gayle Kreek (Jeff),and children, Andy (Raisa J), Alex and Liz: his steadfast and loyal brother, Warren Rust (Kim ) and chil- dren, Rebecca, Kirsten Privett (Jason), Jordan, and Camp- bell: his fond and funny step-father, Jerry Pflugrad: ex- wife and friend Linda Kleeman: loved step-daughter, Krista Kleeman: close friends Kurt Campbell and Claudia Bordin; and, as you knew there would be, several former lady friends. Per Mike's wishes, there will be no services. A gathering to commit his ashes to the sea will take place next Spring/Summer. D. MICHAEL RUST February 6, 1944 - October 21, 2012 Top Cat has left the building. 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, Robert L. Dunn Robert L. Dunn, of Gerber, died Oct. 17 at Red Bluff Healthcare. He was 75. Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Services is handling the arrangements. Published Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. POT Continued from page 1A sales, Bruner said. value of the marijuana is about $5,000, he said. The information for the deal came from a source that is a part of an on- The potential street going investigation, how- ever, Monday's bust was part of a week-long inves- tigation, Bruner said. ——— Julie Zeeb can be reached at 527-2153, extension 115 or jzeeb@redbluffdailynews. com. Follow her on Twitter @DN_Zeeb. New approach lowers arrest rate of Calif. ex-cons SACRAMENTO (AP) — The rate at which Cal- ifornia prison parolees commit new crimes has dropped slightly for the second straight year, according to a report released Monday, an improve- ment that corrections officials partly attribute to recent rehabilitation efforts. The study is the first to track the results of a pro- gram that evaluates felons based on their risk of reoffending. The program helps prison officials tar- get high-risk inmates with additional supervision and rehabilitation before and after their release. For example, inmates receiving drug treatment before their release were half as likely to commit new crimes as addicts who did not. The program is intended to lower a recidivism rate that is among the highest for the nation's prison systems. Even with the steady improvement, nearly two-thirds of ex-convicts in California still wind up back in custody within three years of their release. Bend OR 4. Christopher Cul- breath, Chico CA 5. Dempsey, Nampa ID Young Adult (ages 18- Amaya Rose 36) Valley CA 2. Christine Smith, Whitmore CA 3. Kate Gray Tioran, Redding CA 1. Darin Smith, Potter CA Adult (ages 37-54) 1. Billy Coker, Shasta latch ID 2. Johny McDonald, Senior (ages 55-69) 1. Mabel Vogt, Pot- Quincy CA 3. Nicki Carlisle, Shin- gletown CA 4. Dan Touchstone, San Diego CA 5. Randy Warner, Washoe Valley NV and up) 1. Hughie Smith, Bak- ersfield CA 2. Bozeman MT coln CA 4. Tuesday, October 30, 2012 – Daily News 9A Red Bluff man was arrested. Landry is on probation and was booked into Tehama County Jail for burglary on a $50,000 bond. The stolen property was recov- ered and held as evidence. The victim was contacted and advised of the circumstances. neurs like himself, it was important for companies such as Walmart to send signals to the market. Wilkin said Walmart is committed to one day hav- ing 100 percent of its power come form renew- able sources. tribution Center in San Antonio. A check with the trucking com- Answering a question from the audience, Distri- bution Center General Manager Darwyn Jones said he would like to see more wind turbines built at the site, but that has yet to be determined. pany contracted by Hill County Bakery revealed the driver and truck that picked up the walnuts was not the one hired. 3. Carl Malotte, Lin- Anderson CA 5. Bill Whitfield, Pat- terson CA 84 The man in both cases is described as 6-foot, 2 inches and 198 pounds with a very distinctive Russian accent. The driver present- ed the correct purchase order num- bers when picking up the loads. Alma Reitan, Johny Sandoval Oldest Fiddler 1. Leon Ranney, Age Open (any age) 1. Amanda Kerr, Anchorage AK 2. Anderson CA 3. Tricia Ferguson, Redding CA 4. Amy Culbreath, Chico CA 5. Eric Anderson, Lin- Darren Reitan, and Nicki Carlisle 3. Tallon Sandoval and Junior Picking (age 17 and under) 1. Jacob Akana, Red- ding CA 2. Trevor Allison, Bend OR 3. Macy Lynn Keller, Nampa ID ding CA 2. Tom Spence, Red- ding CA 5. Eric Anderson, Lin- 4. Tom Spence, Red- coln CA Robert Strawn Award (most beautiful waltz) CA Open Picking (any age) 1. Jesse Winton, Red- coln CA 6. Melissa Lincoln, Sacramento CA 7. Starr McMullen, Corvallis OR 8. Ally Lincoln, Sacra- mento CA 9. Nick Righos, Lin- coln CA Junior Twin Fiddle (age 17 and under) 1. Lauren and Hannah Allison 2. Celeste and Sophie Senior Senior (ages 70 Jim McMillan, Pena 3. Monica and Eliza- beth McDonough Adult Twin Fiddle (age 18 and up) 1. Amy and Christo- pher Culbreath 2. Kathy Kampschmidt they've arrested the 28-year-old driver of a van in the death of his friend, a passenger who was shot by another person in Northern California. assault. ding CA 3. Patrick Murray, Redding CA Junior Jukebox (age 17 and under) 1. Bend OR 2. Redding CA 3. Clara Boyle, Cotton- wood CA age) 1. Johny McDonald, Lauren Allison, Ryan Czarniak, Open Jukebox (any Quincy CA 2. Tori May Gillam, Chico CA 3. Matthew Ziesing, Shingletown CA Accompanist 1. Nampa ID 2. CA Weaverville CA 3. Al Myers, Redding Nick Righos, Lincoln SchOLLIEship (teacher with the most students competing) town CA to CA CA CA Nicki Carlisle, Shingle- Fiddle Judges Kate Busey, Sacramen- Anita Marley, Patterson Willie Randel, El Cajon Pat Scott, Red Bluff CA Bobby Taylor, St. Albans WV Picking Judges CA Bluff CA Jukebox MCs Matthew Hartz, CA Jim French, ding CA Weaverville CA Rich Reynolds, Red Eric Anderson, Lincoln Jim French, John Eaden, Corona Adrienne Jacoby, Red- Contest MC Tex Ash, Red Bluff CA Police in Calif. arrest man in friend's gun death REDDING (AP) — Police say The Redding Record-Search- light reports that William Roy Thietje was taken into custody Sunday for investigation of invol- untary manslaughter and felony SACRAMENTO (AP) — As employees at one of Northern Califor- nia's largest supermar- ket chains prepare to strike, the company says it will unilaterally impose a proposed labor contract that would Shasta County sheriff's offi- cials say the incident began when Thietje rammed his van into another parked car in a fit of rage while looking for an ex-girlfriend at Shasta Lake. Officials say a neighbor then shot at the van to stop it from running over a pedestrian. The bullet struck and killed Thietje's reduce its workers' wages. The Sacramento Bee reports that Raley's supermarkets said it would implement its final contract offer on Thursday to the United Food and Commercial friend. believe Thietje's actions caused the death, and the homeowner saved the pedestrian's life. Sheriff 's officials told The Associated Press that Thietje is being held at the Shasta County Jail but doesn't have an attorney. His arraignment is scheduled for Wednesday. California grocery chain vows to impose wage cuts Workers International Union. Raley's said the union failed to offer an up- and-down vote to its members on the contract offer, which included a two-year wage freeze. Raley's worker Ronda Zanelli, a 32-year veter- an, told the paper that no one wants to strike but that they are prepared to do so. It would be the first labor strike in the West Sacramento-based com- pany's 77-year history. is brewing in California over high school newspaper and yearbook advertising content. The Sacramento Bee (http://sacb.ee/S6CVGK ) says Squabble over school newspaper ad content ROSEVILLE (AP) — A First Amendment squabble the Roseville Joint Union High School District's deci- sion this month to give the superintendent the right to approve ads before they can run in the district's five stu- dent newspapers has raised legal issues that could have implications districts statewide. The Roseville school board voted on Oct. 9 to bar all political campaigning and religious symbols from advertisements that appear in student publications and the superintendent authority to reject ads for any rea- son. The revised policy was based on a model crafted by the California School Boards Association, and other school districts have adopted similar restrictions on reli- gious ads or given education officials final say over paid ads, according to The Bee. Those provisions could lead to students filing law- advertising compared to editorial content. ''I think he is misinterpreting the law,'' she said of Goldstein's complaints. Sheriff 's officials say they Karl Grubaugh, a journalist who advises Granite Bay High School's student newspaper, agrees the school dis- trict's policy goes too far in infringing on students' rights to control the content in school publications. ''If a tattoo parlor wants to come and put an ad in my paper — you could get a tattoo with parent signature at 16 — we will run that ad.'' Grubaugh said. ''If a church wants to advertise Sunday services, we are going to run that ad.'' The blowback has persuaded the Roseville school district to take another look at the policy, with an eye toward presenting changes to the school board on Nov. 13, Assistant Superintendent Ron Severson told The Bee. suits over free speech rights and advertisers going to court complaining their right to religious speech has been quashed, Attorney Adam Goldstein of the Student Press Law Center in Virginia said. ''The district is opening themselves up to a lot more liability than they are protecting themselves from,'' Goldstein told The Bee. But Elaine Yama-Garcia, an attorney for the school boards association, said the sample policy is sound because different First Amendment standards apply to You DO have a choice in the Red Bluff area. Caring & Compassionate Service Full traditional burial service or cremation Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff, FD Lic. 1931 527-1732

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