-Headline News
Plumas District Hospital physicians have treated several local individuals after learning that berries they had eaten were part of a recall. The berries may have been contaminated with hepatitis A.
The Centers for Disease Control reports that an outbreak of hepatitis A illnesses is linked to individuals who have consumed a contaminated frozen berry blend sold at Costco warehouse stores under the name Townsend Farms Organic Antioxidant Blend, 3-pound bag, UPC 0 78414 404448.
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Trina Cunningham points out the unique willows on the Heart K that have been used for basket making for hundreds of years. Photo courtesy Feather River Land Trust |
All are welcome to take a hike on the Heart K Ranch in Genesee Valley on Saturday, June 8, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. with Trina Cunningham entitled “The Heart K Ranch from a Maidu perspective.”
Cunningham’s ancestors founded the Davis Ranch (now part of Feather River Land Trust’s Heart K Ranch), where she grew up, and her Mountain Maidu ancestors have inhabited Genesee Valley from the beginning of memory. Cunningham is a member of the Maidu Summit Consortium composed of nine Mountain Maidu groups, with a vision of site protection and stewardship throughout the Maidu homeland.
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The Cauwets’ fireplace shows extensive damage after it crumbled during the May 23 earthquake. Stan Cauwet was buried under the rubble and suffered cuts, bruises and a broken leg. |
A Cupertino couple who were visiting their Lake Almanor home suffered injuries when their rock fireplace collapsed during the May 23 earthquake.
Stan and Marion Cauwet said they were sitting by the fireplace when the magnitude 5.7 quake struck.
Stan Cauwet, 55, sustained a broken left leg, a sprained right ankle and knee and a gash on his head that required stitches after the fireplace collapsed on top of him.
Marion Cauwet, 62, who said she was able to dive under a table, escaped with bruises to her back and head.
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| Feather River College President Kevin Trutna delivers his remarks to the Class of 2013 during the graduation ceremony May 24. Trutna said 194 graduates received 231 degrees and certificates. |
“Don’t dwell on the faults,” advised faculty presenter Darla DeRuiter at Feather River College’s commencement ceremony May 24, the day after a 5.7-magnitude earthquake rattled Plumas County and beyond.
DeRuiter presented two awards: Outstanding Alumnus to Elizabeth Powell for developing a local food movement, and a $1,000 Alice Foster Scholarship award to Michael Byrd, an environmental studies major.
Superintendent/President Kevin Trutna presided over the first class to graduate since he was appointed permanently to the head job at Feather River College last January.
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Sports Headlines
FRC rodeo riders compete at nationals
James Wilson Sports Reporter After an incredible season, winning the West Coast regionals and being ranked fourth in the nation, the Feather River College rodeo team...
Read More...Bowling supports therapeutic riding program
James Wilson Sports Reporter 6/20/2013 The annual Horses Unlimited Bowl-a-Thon is back and set to take place at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 22, at La Sierra Lanes in Quincy. The annual...
Read More...15th annual century rides scheduled for June 22
Samantha P. Hawthorne
Staff Writer
6/19/2013
Bicyclists of all ages will be treading through Indian...
















