Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/92906
Local Calendar Submit calendar items to P.O.Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 or clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. SATURDAY,NOVEMBER 10 Red Bluff BMX racing, 5:30 p.m., Red Rock BMX Track, Tehama District Fairground, $10 Decorative Brushes of No. California, 10 a.m., Community, 1500 S. Jackson St., 527-7449 Frontier Village Farmers Market, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., EBT accepted, 526-2843 Red Bluff Outlaws Points Race 4, gates open at 10 a.m., trophy dashes start at 6 p.m., Tehama District Fairground SRDC Birdwalk, 8 a.m., 1000 Sale Lane, 527-1196 Weight Watchers meeting, 8 a.m, 485 Antelope Blvd., #N, 1-800-651-6000 Senior Dance, 7 p.m., Senior Center, Josephine Street, 384-2100 Los Molinos Tehama Tehama County Museum, 1-4 p.m., tours by appointment, donation, 275 C St., 384-2595 SUNDAY,NOVEMBER 11 Red Bluff Emblem club dinner at Elks Lodge, 350 Gilmore Road, 5:30 p.m. Veterans Breakfast, 8 a.m. to noon, Veterans Memorial Hall, Oak and Main streets Tehama County Museum, 1-4 p.m., tours by appointment, donation, 275 C St., 384-2595 Tehama Igo Veterans Day service, Northern California Veter- ans Cemetery, 11 a.m. MONDAY,NOVEMBER 12 Red Bluff 3101 Antelope 4-H, 6:30 p.m., Antelope School, 527- Cardiac Support Group, 7 p.m., Columbua Room in Coyne Health Education Center across from the hospital, 527-5077 English as a Second Language class, 5:30-8:30 p.m., 1295 Red Bud, 736-3308, same time Tuesday and Wednesday and 9 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. Thursdays, free childcare, in Richlieu Hall, 900 Johnson St. Head Injury Recreational Entity, 10 a.m., St. Eliz- abeth Community Hospital, Coyne Center, Rusty, 529- 2059 Key to Life, 6 p.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 528-8066 Masterworks Chorale rehearsal, 6:45-8 p.m., Presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson St., 527-4203 PAL Martial Arts, 3-5 p.m., ages 5-18, 529-7920, www.tehamaso.org Red Bluff Community Band Practice, 7-9 p.m., Presbyterian Church, Jefferson St., 527-3486 Red Bluff Senior Writing Class, 10: a.m.-noon, at Sycamore Center, 220 Sycamore St., 527-5762 Salvation Army Writing Class, 9:30-11:30 a.m., 940 Walnut St., 527-8530 Spartan Athletic Booster Club, 6:30 p.m. Red Bluff Union High School Library Sun Country Quilters Community Service Group, 9 a.m.to 3 p.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St. Ste. 101, 528-1126 TeenScreen Mental Health Appointments, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., free, by appointment only, 1900 Walnut St., 527-8491, Ext. 3012 Tehama County Sheriff's Search and Rescue, 7 p.m., Stillwell Training Center, Park Avenue near Baker Road, 527-7546 US citizenship preparation class, 5:30-8:30 p.m., Red Bluff High School Adult Ed building, 1295 Red Bud, 736-3308, same time Tuesday and Wednesday Venture Crew 1914 meeting, 6:30-8 p.m., Moose Lodge on 99W, co-ed ages 14-20 welcome Women's Domestic Violence Information and Support Group, Spanish speaking only, and location, 528-0226 Los Molinos Los Molinos 4-H, 7 p.m., Los Molinos Elementary School, 527-3101 Richfield Richfield Neighborhood Watch Program, 6 p.m., Richfield School, 23875 River Road, 824-6260 Gerber Union Elementary School Board, 6 p.m., 23014 Chard Ave. Gerber Mineral Mineral County Water District meetin, 6:30 p.m., 38292 Scenic Ave., 595-3479 Harvest of Hearts 5th Annual Benefit Dinner Homes of Hope for Victims in Domestic Violence Sat. Nov. 10th Guest Speaker: Jennifer Scarborough Music: Stacy Stone RB Community Center tickets 347-1330 or 527-7449 Silent Auction 6pm Dinner 6:30 also available at The Loft Daily News photo by Julie Zeeb Disabled Veterans JE Wilson 115 Commander Mike Clay gives a forget me not to Corning City Manager John Brewer at the Oct. 23 Corning City Council meeting. Corning declared Oct. 28- Nov. 3 Disabled Veterans Forget-me-not days and Nov. 3-10 Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Buddy Poppy Days. Representing VFW were Jim Darrow of Post 4218 and VFW Auxiliary member Alice Bechelli.The two groups will be selling the flowers during the designated days at local stores such as Safeway and Sav-More. Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) has been recognized as one of America's most community-mind- ed companies in The Civic 50 -sur- vey—the first comprehensive ranking of S&P 500 corporations that best use their time, talent and resources to improve the quality of life in the com- munities where they do business. The survey was conducted by the National Conference on Citizenship (NCoC) and Points of Light, both experts on civic engagement, in part- nership with Bloomberg LP. The full Civic 50 ranking is posted at Bloomberg Businessweek's web- site: http://www.businessweek.com/inter- active_reports/civic_50_2012.html> . "It's an honor to achieve national recognition for the work we do every day to serve our communities, beyond the basics of delivering safe, reliable and affordable gas and electricity," said Ezra Garrett, vice president of community relations and chief sus- tainability officer for PG&E. "Our corporate charitable giving—focused on advancing the causes of education, environmental stewardship, and com- Police reports The following infor- mation is compiled from Red Bluff Police Depart- ment, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corning Police Depart- ment and California Highway Patrol. call for time Arrests • Angela Rachelle Clark, 37, Los Molinos aka Angie Maas and Angela Vereshagin was arrested at 8320 Highway 99E for felony attempting to stop a victim from seeking prosecution and misdemeanors of obstruc- tion, battery, driving on a suspended license, public intoxication and three charges of failure to appear. Bail was $110,500. • Branda Kaye Dimitri- adis, 20, Los Molinos was arrested at 25273 Grant St. for failure to appear on a felony charge. Bail was $25,000. • Cooper Shad Hiller, 35, Corning was arrested at 22840 Antelope Blvd. for embezzlement of property under a lease and grand theft. Bail was $60,000. •William Miles Richter, 29, Anderson was arrested at Potter and Spaghetti, Meatballs & Garlic Toast (served w/ choice of soup or salad) Shredded Beef Taco w/ Rice & Beans Tuesday Special: $8.95 Monday Special: $10.49 Corn Beef & Cabbage (served w/ choice of potato & veggies, soup or salad) Thursday Special: $10.49 Wednesday Special: $9.99 (stuffed w/ bell peppers, onion, mushrooms and cheese, topped w/ gravy) (served w/ choice of potato & veggies, soup or salad) Stuffed Burger Steak Best Homemade Pies in Town • Ice Cream Orders to go 731 Main St., 530.529.4012 open 7 days 5:30am-9pm Utility among top 50 community-minded companies To identify The Civic 50, compa- munity and economic vitality—is just the start for PG&E. Our employees demonstrate a selfless spirit of giving, which we embrace and encourage by linking them with opportunities to donate their time and dollars." "Today, in the aftermath of Hurri- cane Sandy, we can see clearly how much corporate America pitches in— with expertise, talent, time and money—to help communities meet critical needs," said Jackie Norris, executive director of the Points of Light Corporate Institute. "In times of disaster and in relative calm, The Civic 50's work is transformative, innovative and critically important." To assist those affected by Hurri- cane Sandy, PG&E is one of several utilities nationwide that have sent electrical workers and equipment to help restore power in the hardest-hit areas. Additionally, PG&E extended its annual employee giving campaign to allow time to donate to relief efforts, and the company announced it will match cash donations up to a total of $50,000 to the American Red Cross' Hurricane Sandy response. Walnut for possession of a narcotic with the purpose for sale, transportation of a narcotic, possession of marijuana for sale and selling marijuana. Bail was $80,000. • Ou Nai Saetern, 26, Redding was arrested for felony child cruelty with the possibility of injury or death and misdemeanors of assault with a deadly weapon not a firearm and driving under the influ- ence. Bail was $40,000. • James Wesley Smith, 47, Red Bluff was arrest- ed at 460 Main St. for a felony parole violation. • Jeremy Lee Yates, 34, Corning was arrested at 2015 Solano St. for pos- session of a controlled substance for sale. Bail was $25,000. man was pointing a gun near Riverside Plaza around 11:30 p.m. Thurs- day. He was in a white Chevy Avalanche with another man. Brandishing • Someone reported a Suspicious •Two men were reported snooping around vehicles in the Motel 6 parking lot around mid- Downtown Red Bluff Business Association & Many Business Community Co-Sponsors bring to you Appreciation Breakfast Veteran's 8am to Noon Nov. 11th Veteran's Memorial Hall Oak & Jackson St. in RB Plus a Peppy Patriotic Program with live entertainment Complementary to Veterans, Non-Veteran tickets $5.00 each Tickets are available at the Gold Exchange, Sugar Shack Café, Tremont Café, Crystal Art & Apparel, and at the door. Call 528-8000 for more information TEA AND BOUTIQUE Fri., Nov. 30th 10AM to 3PM 25076 Sycamore Avenue, behind La Corona, Los Molinos 9AM to 8PM Sat., Dec. 1st , 2012 , 2012 night Friday. Theft •A barbecue grill, bri- quets and a phone were reported stolen from Fly- ing A Trailer Park. • Kimberly Sue Nix, 26, of Corning was cited and released for posses- sion of a controlled sub- stance Thursday evening at Bob's Tire Center on Solano Street in Corning. Citation • The cause of a resi- dential structure fire reported at 8:09 p.m. Thursday on Rawson Road is under investiga- tion. The fire was con- tained at 8:51 p.m. •A fire at 5:44 p.m. Fires Wednesday caused by dis- carded hot ashes destroyed a curbside garbage can in the 21000 block of Highway 36W. There was no spread to the structure. The fire was contained at 5:52 p.m. Damage was $100. Missing • On Thursday, a miss- ing persons report was filed with Corning police for Jose Javier Guzman, 37th Annual Saturday, November 10, 2012 – Daily News 3A Veterans selling forget me nots nies' civic engagement programs were evaluated on seven specific met- rics: leadership, measurement and strategy, design, employee civic health, community partnerships, cause alignment and transparency. Winning companies employed increasingly sophisticated tools to measure the impact of community engagement and alignment of these programs with their business's core competencies. More than two-thirds of the top 50 companies, including PG&E, say they "frequently" or "always" use the pro- fessional skills of their workforce to address social issues and real commu- nity challenges. PG&E is also among the 66 percent of the top 50 that say they have "mission-level" alignment with the community partners, mean- ing they work with them on the high- est strategic level, not just on individ- ual programs or events. An article about The Civic 50, looking at the philanthropic efforts of some of the top companies, appears in the Nov. 12-18, 2012, issue of Bloomberg Businessweek. 14. Guzman is 5' 8" Weighs 150 pounds and has black hair and brown eyes. Transients • Someone at Burger King on Highway 99W in Corning reported Thurs- day morning that a tran- sient camp appeared to have been set up on the back of the property. Two men were contacted and advised of no trespass at Burger King per manage- ment. A short time later, one of the men was recon- tacted at Petro Shopping Center on South Avenue. An employee had called Corning Police to report a man with possible reality issues talking to himself. They've asked him to leave, but he won't. The man was advised of the no trespass at Petro's. Vandalism • Someone at the Spring Mountain Apart- ments, 240 Edith Ave., reported Thursday having two tires on his 1996 Green Ford Explorer sometime Wednesday night. Former Holiday Market ALL FRESH WREATHS, ARRANGEMENTS & MORE CHRISTMAS BOUTIQUE 616 CEDAR ST. RED BLUFF Red Bluff Garden Club SCHOLARSHIP Thursday-Friday-Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Dec. 6, 7 & 8 Call 527-4578 or 526-4578 Proceeds go to For Custom Wreaths & Designs High School Scholarships