Out of the rough
The Richesin family, paramedics and doctors all say the same thing: “It’s a miracle.”
Hess, union settle dispute
Hess Collection Winery has settled a majority of outstanding grievances with the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 1096, which represents 60 farmworkers at the winery.
Some may save on sewer service
Low income homeowners can save $30 a year on their sewer bills if they are willing to jump through a few bureaucratic hoops.
Berryessa brawl ends with two arrests
A free-for-all at a Lake Berryessa resort Wednesday night landed a Dixon man and a teen behind bars.
A lifetime of firefighting
Sixty years ago Angwin resident Lyle McCoy responded to a cry for help. His decisive action not only saved a family’s home but set the course of his future.
Calistoga announces new public works director/city engineer
The city of Calistoga has tapped Dan Takasugi, a 22-year veteran of the U.S. Coast Guard, as its new public works director/city engineer, effective May 1
Chocolate and reading come together
NapaLit, Napa’s new connection to literacy programs, continues its collaboration with Cacao Anasa, purveyors of fine chocolate, until Sunday.
Two days of Independence fun in AmCan
American Canyon’s Fourth of July celebration will begin a day early this year if enough money is raised for a two-day event.
Florida firm buys JV Wine site, to build resort
A Miami-based real estate group has purchased the JV Wine & Spirits property on First Street, and is also building a resort next door.
Desert nation of Mauritania struggles to keep its head above the sand
CHINGUETTI, Mauritania — On nights when the wind hisses across the dunes, the old man sits on his straw mat, draws a blanket around his shoulders and counts his dwindling money.
Around the globe: Arctic sea ice just missed record low
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Arctic sea ice this winter just missed setting the record for fewest square miles covered since monitoring by satellite began, according to University of Colorado researchers.
Warm welcome greets freed British crew
ROYAL MARINE BASE CHIVENOR, England — With Champagne bottles popping, a Royal Navy crew celebrated at home Thursday after nearly two weeks in Iranian captivity, hugging tearful relatives as Britons expressed outraged that the team was used by Tehran for propaganda.
Paralyzed football player Stingley dies at 55
Darryl Stingley spent more than half his life in a wheelchair, a symbol of the violence of the NFL, where large bodies collide at high speeds on every play.
California seeks Iraq voter initiative
BERKELEY — The state Senate leader on Thursday announced plans for an advisory ballot measure calling for the immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, hoping to prompt debate among presidential candidates campaigning in California.
Peanut butter’s Salmonella source identified
OMAHA, Neb. — Now that it has identified the conditions that allowed a salmonella outbreak in peanut butter — a leaky roof and a faulty sprinkler — ConAgra Foods Inc. has to rebuild more than just parts of its plant. It has to rebuild trust.
Housecat rouses owner from bed as carbon monoxide fills home, saving family
NEW CASTLE, Ind. — A cat helped spare a family from death by carbon monoxide poisoning by jumping on the bed and meowing wildly as fumes filled the home, the owners said.
Do Not Call list expanded to 132M U.S. phone numbers
WASHINGTON — Almost 25 million phone numbers were added to the federal government’s Do Not Call list in fiscal 2006, demonstrating that more and more Americans don’t want their dinners disturbed by telemarketers.
In brief: Long Beach father arrested for methamphetamine operation
LONG BEACH — A father of three was arrested for allegedly running a methamphetamine manufacturing and sales operation in his home.
Crackdown on fugitive illegal immigrants casts a wide net
SAN DIEGO — More than one-third of 18,000 people arrested in a nearly yearlong federal crackdown on illegal immigrants were not the people authorities targeted, according to government figures.
PG&E breaks ground on storage facility for spent nuclear fuel
EUREKA — Spent nuclear fuel rods currently resting in a decommissioned nuclear power facility in the King Salmon area appear to be destined for a safer location from the North Coast’s hefty seismic hazards.
Secret underlies Hatfield-McCoy feud; disease may have fueled McCoy outbursts
The most infamous feud in American folklore, the long-running battle between the Hatfields and McCoys, may be partly explained by a rare, inherited disease that can lead to hair-trigger rage and violent outbursts.
Return to the 9th Ward
NEW ORLEANS — Today, the Lower 9th Ward is a dreary landscape of deserted brick and wood-frame structures, concrete slabs where homes once stood, unshaded streets and sidewalks buckled by uprooted live oaks and weeks of standing water. At night, a graveyard silence is broken only by the skittering of rats.