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- Written by: Elizabeth Larson
The California Highway Patrol reported Wednesday the crash victim was 76-year-old Colleen Infeld of Clearlake.
Infeld died Friday following a head-on collision along Highway 29 north of Hofacker Lane between Lower Lake and Hidden Valley, as Lake County News reported.
CHP reported Infeld was driving southbound on Highway 29 shortly before 10 a.m. when her 2004 Ford Focus crossed into the northbound lane.
She collided head-on with a 2005 Chevy Impala driven by an 85-year-old Clearlake Oaks man, who CHP did not identify. The man was taken to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital by air ambulance.
E-mail Elizabeth Larson at
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- Written by: Lake County News reports

LAKE COUNTY – The skies over Lake County held special wonder for stargazers Wednesday, with a total lunar eclipse.
Lake County News correspondent Harold LaBonte captured the eclipse with his digital camera from the lakeshore in Lakeport.
The total eclipse lasted from 8:01 p.m. to 8:51 p.m., NASA reported. A partial eclipse of the moon lasted longer, from 5:43 p.m. to 9:09 p.m.
NASA reports that the next total lunar eclipse that will be visible in North American will take place on Dec. 21, 2010.
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- Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Radio reports indicated that shots were fired in the area of Brookside Drive – between Forest Lake Drive and Dogwood Way – at about 9 p.m.
An individual was reported to have been injured and medical personnel were summoned to the scene.
Deputies who arrived at the scene reported over the radio that they had fired at the suspect, who barricaded himself into a home in the 10300 block of Brookside Drive.
The suspect then reportedly slipped out a back window at the residence and escaped into the heavily forested area.
There were more than half a dozen sheriff's units on scene, according to radio reports, along with a medical unit and at least one California Highway Patrol vehicle.
Sheriff's personnel set up a perimeter that extended several streets over to Maple Shadows Drive.
At least two K-9s also were requested to the “Brookside Incident” at 9:12 p.m., and were deployed to search for the suspect at 9:51 p.m.
CHP officers at one point had found an individual matching the suspect's description near the Loch Lomond bar.
However, at about 10:50 p.m. deputies reported that a shot was fired in their direction, which may have come from the area of a nearby residence.
Just after 11 p.m. two sheriff's detectives were called to the scene.
There was no further information available early Wednesday morning.
E-mail Elizabeth Larson at
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- Written by: Lake County News Reports

KELSEYVILLE – A school board agenda featuring a possible change of the high school mascot from the “Knights” back to the “Indians” drew a crowd of 150 here Tuesday night.
Public comments ranged from “Let’s move on,” which arose repeatedly, to County Supervisor Rob Brown waving a check for $1,000 in the air to support the cost of changing back.
The open-ended “Approve/Disapprove/Discuss” item followed a controversial but unanimous decision almost two years ago to change from the Indian mascot, at the request of a local Native American tribal member. The decision to change the name was unanimously upheld two months later then was hotly debated during the most recent school board election.
Speaking to neither side of the issue Tuesday night was high school English and world history teacher Meredith Lahmann. “Is the cartoon we use while playing games really a top priority compared to our children’s academic needs?” she asked.
“Where were the outcries from the community when test scores plummeted?” she continued.
“I was happy as a Kelseyville Indian but I am also happy as a Kelseyville Knight because a mascot is a cartoon used to represent a team when it is playing a game,” she said. “Therefore, I do not invest much energy in it.”
Marr Olsen, wearing an Indian-logo black sweatshirt that read “ALWAYS AN INDIAN” on the back, objected. “It’s not a cartoon character,” he said.
“It’s like the eagle on top of the flag,” he explained, “that’s not a cartoon.”
Responding to remarks from Kelseyville resident and attorney Peter Windrem, who stated clearly that he is descended from “the earliest settlers,” Olsen said, “If anyone wants to be that sensitive about it, then deed your land back to ‘em.”
Windrem had reviewed the origin of the term “Indian,” noting that it was applied to Native Americans by early travelers from Europe who thought they had reached India. He said the name “Indian” is owned by a group of people who have now requested it not be used.
“The graceful thing to do,” Windrem advised, would be to thank the group for its permitted use and now that permission is withdrawn we stop using the name … “and we go on with our lives.”
Members of Mendocino County’s Native American community spoke as well, including a woman who identified herself as “Tony,” who said the issue is about respect.
“If my people went out and massacred your people and then called ourselves 'The Oakies' or something,” she said, that would not be respectful.
But Leah Palmer disagreed. Palmer, who identified herself as a member of Kelseyville’s class of ’93, addressed the crowd while holding an infant. She said she is teaching her daughter cheers that use the term “Indian” with respect.
“If anyone thinks they were disrespected, it was because they didn’t understand,” she said.
Palmer said that abandoning the “Indian” mascot name is like “uprooting a family.”
Several speakers commented that the discussion was creating “strife” and “derision” in the community.
“Our billboards on the highway call Kelseyville a Friendly Country Town,” Lahmann said. “Are we?”
The board decided to continue the mascot discussion until next month.
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