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News for Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Stealth health

It’s not unusual to see a cluster of novice cooks gathered around a master at the stoves in the massive teaching kitchen of the Culinary Institute of America in St. Helena.

AmCan loses a strong supporter

American Canyon lost its one of its most generous patrons last week, when Bernice Newell died Friday afternoon at her American Canyon home at age 88.

Two AmCan teachers’ dismissals spark debate

The dismissal of two teachers at different schools in American Canyon continues to stir protests from parents and others.

Night paving of Soscol extension

Paving of the new Soscol realignment at Trancas Street is expected to wrap up tonight.

Water work in Browns Valley

Napa will be replacing plastic water lines to 260 houses in Browns Valley.

Students give blood to help others

When Dana Williamson’s mom was a teenager, she was injured in a car crash and many people donated blood to help.

Alcohol use a factor in motorcycle crash

Michael Forsythe, the 50-year-old Yountville resident who crashed his motorcycle along Dry Creek Road Sunday afternoon, is in critical condition at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital’s critical care unit. The California Highway Patrol said Monday that alcohol was a factor in the crash.

Macklin named Napa rep for Wiggins

Sharon Macklin is the new Napa County field representative for state Sen. Patricia Wiggins, D–Santa Rosa.

4.0 quake above Santa Rosa barely rattles Napa

A small earthquake struck Sonoma County Tuesday afternoon, but there were no immediate reports of injuries or damages.

Napa teen is an origami master

If you spend much time with Michael Pickett, you'll meet creatures such as a stegosaurus, a dragon, a spider and an elephant. You might even spy a a man in a canoe or a Star Wars X-Wing fighter.

20 tons of cocaine seized in record bust

ALAMEDA — The U.S. Coast Guard on Monday began unloading more than 40,000 pounds of cocaine seized from three ships off the Central American coast, including one bust called the largest in U.S. maritime history.

Social Security, Medicare trust funds will last a year longer before they’re gone

WASHINGTON — Fewer benefits, more tax money and some accounting magic have bought an extra year of life for Social Security and Medicare, trustees of the government’s two largest benefit programs said Monday.

Calif. tops “cyberstate” list as broader tech sector surges

SAN JOSE — California continues to employ far more technology workers, pay higher wages and attract more venture capital than any other state. But the overall U.S. tech sector is also growing at a surprisingly brisk clip — for now.

Nigerian ruling party candidate wins flawed election

ABUJA, Nigeria — A former chemistry professor hand-picked by President Olusegun Obasanjo won Nigeria’s presidential election in a landslide Monday, a vote denounced as deeply flawed by international observers and the opposition.

Coalition aims to build nation’s first artificial surf reef

VENTURA — Californians have created plenty of surf spots by accident with harbor jetties, power plant outflows and even drainage pipes.

Jury acquits South Carolina man of sexually assaulting girls in dungeon

DARLINGTON, S.C. — A jury acquitted a convicted sex offender Monday of raping two teenage girls who police say escaped after they were left to die in an underground bunker he had built.

Boris Yeltsin dead at 76

MOSCOW — Former President Boris Yeltsin, who hastened the collapse of the Soviet Union by scrambling atop a tank to rally opposition against a hard-line coup and later pushed Russia to embrace democracy and a market economy, died Monday at age 76.

Halberstam killed in Bay Area crash

SAN FRANCISCO — Pulitzer Prize-winning author and journalist David Halberstam was killed in a car crash Monday, a county coroner said. He was 73.

Around the globe: Olmert says Israel prepared for concessions with Palestinians

JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Ehud Olmert marked Israel’s Memorial Day for fallen soldiers Monday with a new call for peace with the Palestinians, saying his country was prepared to make “far-reaching compromises” and “very painful concessions.”

Virginia Tech students return to class, but focus is on hugs and stories, not schoolwork

BLACKSBURG, Va.  — Chemistry professor Joe Merola tried to give a lecture Monday, but looking out at 100 Virginia Tech students’ faces — and the sweat shirt he’d placed on the seat of a wounded student — he couldn’t do it.

Democrats challenge Bush on Iraq bill

WASHINGTON — A historic veto showdown assured, Democratic leaders agreed Monday on legislation that requires the first U.S. combat troops to be withdrawn from Iraq by Oct. 1 with a goal of a complete pullout six months later.

New grants for charities from Community Foundation

Register Staff

Crossed 'Swords :' Same game, new name

For the Register

St. John the Baptist Catholic School Honor Roll

Second Trimester 2006-2007

Local sources of help, information

Anne Payne, program manager for Alzheimer's Day Care Resource Center -- part of Adult Day Services of Napa Valley -- is a great resource for memory issues.

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