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Reno Gazette-Journal from Reno, Nevada • Page 32

Location:
Reno, Nevada
Issue Date:
Page:
32
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2C Reno Gazette-Journal Thursday, November 8, 1934 V-cent sales tax for tourism Yes 677 1,740 Dayton Hospital District Yes 314 No 543 Lander County Airport Authority Seat A Robert Reaksecker (R) 818 Ron Hinton, incumbent (D) 468 Airport Authority Seat Marian L. Mauldin (D) 740 Jo Ella "Jody" Lee, (R) 506 El Dorado County Supervisor District 1 Robert Dorr, incumbent 5,507 Paul Richens 4,163 Supervisor District 2 Pat Lowe, incumbent 3,233 Terry Trupp 2,749 Supervisor District 3 James Sweeney 4,614 Allen Tuttle 4,233 Placer County Supervisor District 3 Teresa Cook, incumbent 30,220 Henry Gonzales 24,809 Lassen County Supervisor District 4 Gery Lemke 1,043 Carl E. Parks, incumbent 719 Sierra County Supervisor District 1 Donna M. Hayes 214 Jim "Yoho" 184 Wayne "Buck" Keene 46 Nevada County Supervisor District 1 Use Barnhart, incumbent 563 Todd Juvinall 515 Lynn Gerow 29,354 Benjamin Ray Green.1. 14,312 Robert Moore 30,776 Sparks Question 14 Ward elections Yes 6,519 No 7,029 Question 15 Majority votes In primary Yes 5,302 No 7,029 Carson City, rural Assembly District 37 LaVonne Frost (D) 1,955 Bob Thomas (R) 5,047 N.

Nevada Senatorial Dist. Dean Rhoads (R) 7,705 Mike Marfisi (D) 6,233 Assembly District 34 John Marvel (R). 4,711 Joyce Santos (D) 1,722 Mineral County Commission Seat A 1 Robert Lybarger 1,367 Don Moody (D) 1,139 Commission Seat Donald Anderson 1,285 Kathy Burke 1,198 School Board Area 2 Frances Hawkins 1,365 Beverly Beck 979 Grant General Hospital Dist. Sop 3 win 2-year terms) ebbie Ausgotharp 1,474 Carol S. Baker 1,158 Maurice Jackson 1,235 Steve Olsen 1,043 Charles Blackman 610 Election results Nevada Congress, District 2 Andrew Barbano (D) 36,130 Dan Becan (L) 4,201 B.

Vucanovich (R) 99,675 Supreme Court Noel Manoukian 123,161 Cliff Young 135,293 Question 1 Tax on food amendment Yes 225,619 No 45,281 Question 2 Mining tax Yes 126,899 No 133,648 Question 3 District judges appointments Yes 128,007 No 121,058 Question 4 Deposit of public money Yes 113,867 No 148,151 Question 5 Rules for changing statutes Yes 78,169 No 175,673 Question 6 Local government bonding Yes 73,169 No 179,787 Question 7 Legislative meeting rules Yes 131,271 Question 8 Tax on used cars Yes 99,257 No 162,541 Assembly District 30 Jim Stone (R) 3,103 Nick Wagner (D) 2,665 Assembly District 31 Eric Cronkhite (R) 2,646 Len Nevin (D) 3,862 Assembly District 32 Jim Dixon (R) ....2,843 BobSader(D) 3,605 County Commission Marcel Durant (D) 7,988 Belie Williams (R) 8,381 District Judge Dept. 2 Charles McGee 34,459 Clinton Wooster 30,781 District Judge Dept. 3 Deborah Agosti 44,102 Chan Griswold 23,183 District Judge Dept. 6 James Guinan 53,334 Robert Manley 26,057 District Judge Dept. 8 Richard Minor 28,069 Robin Wright 39,774 Justice of the Peace Dept.

2 Janis Higginbotham 22,808 Donald Pope 23,489 Justice of the Peace Dept. 3 John Kadlic. 22,746 Clark Santini 22,401 School Trustee Virginia Palmer 9,470 Lois Robinson 3,171 Board of Regents James Frye 7,325 Daniel 23,994 Board of Education Frank Krajewski 15,355 Myra Ritter 13,752 Hospital Trustee (2 winners) T.C. Buchwald 16,003 Question 9 Library bonds Yes 152,253 No 114,572 Question 10 Mobile home tax Yes 103,389 No .156,676 Question 11 Tahoe basin bonds Yes 119,295 No 143,499 Question 12 Changing tax, fee structure Yes 132,683 No 143,877 Washoe County Question 13 Jail bond Yes 47,267 No 21,892 Senate District 1 Dave Bianchi (D) 11,692 David Huffman (L) 1,166 William Raggio (R) 15,352 Assembly District 23 Bob Bayer (R) 3,458 Dae Nicholas (R) 4,476 Assembly District 24 Erik Beyer (R) 5,459 Kelly Gould (D) 2,180 Assembly District 26 Keith Henrikson (D) 1,719 David Humke (R) 4,868 Assembly District 27 Bruce Bogaert (R) 3,107 Ken Haller(D) 2,917 Assembly District 28 Larry Pizorno (R) 2,589 Courtenay Swain 2,884 Assembly District 29 Chuck Bourne (D) 2,794 Joan Lambert (R) 2,961 Lyon County Commission District 1 Donald J. Cummings (R) 3,217 Ron Maloney (D) 2,615 Commission District 3 Roland Adams (R) 2,871 Bob Brinkley (D) 2,859 Commission District 4 Andrea Manor (D) 2,918 Leland Hill (D) 2,587 School Board District A Jim Bednark 3,157 Dennis Bobier 2,126 School Board District Gloria Brock 2,053 Linda Whalen 3,068 South Lyon Hospital District (Top two get four-year terms; next three get two-year terms) Benjamin Harrison 1,896 Beverley Landolt 2,185 Harry Pardick 2,124 Salvatore Pezzino 956 Robert Pumphrey 1,485 Franklin RoHer 1,044 Sam Ross 1,814 4-Cent County Gas Tax Yes 1,160 No 4,578 3-2 Femley Town Board Yes 1,017 No 257 Femley Hospital District Yes 650 No 606 Silver Springs-Stagecoach Hospital District Yes 563 No 531 shoot courtroom scenes ostensibly for a documentary about crime in Nevada, but in fact to be used in Manoukian's campaign.

Young captured 135,293 votes, or 52 percent, while Manoukian drew about 47 percent, or 123,161 votes. Young carried Washoe County with 35,167 votes to Manoukian's 33,314, and Clark County by a 76,120 to 57,559 margin. As expected, Manoukian won in the rural counties, 32,288 to 24,006. Young, a former congressman and state legislator, suspected he did poorly in the rural counties because the focus of his campaign centered on Washoe and Clark counties and because of his opposition to the Sagebrush Rebellion. The task of unseating an incumbent from the state high court is 2 women among county's 4 new judges Young From page 1C evidence that the court had no major problems.

Debate and disagreement are "healthy," and said, and make for equitable judgments. But Young insisted an institution such as the Supreme Court commands respect and is belittled if marked with unbecoming conduct by its members. "The evidence would indicate that the court has never functioned well since his (Manou-kian's) appointment seven years ago. There's been constant dissension and some disregard for the Supreme Court rules." He cited a recent incident when Manoukian allowed a film crew to Department 2 seat, and Jerry Whitehead, a lawyer and Washoe School District trustee, who was unopposed and received 52,835 votes in Department 1. Incumbent Judge James Guinan soundly defeated challenger Robert Manley in Department 6.

Guinan received 53,334 votes to Manley's 26,057. Four other incumbent judges were unopposed. Judge Roy Torvinen received 53,574 votes in Department 4, Judge William Forman received 53,300 votes in Department 5, Judge Peter Breen received 52,308 votes in Department 7, and Judge Robert Schouweiler received 51,832 votes in Department 9. In the Department 3 Justice of the Peace race, incumbent Judge John Kadlic's 22,746 votes narrowly beat the 22,401 votes received by his opponent, Clark Santini, an investigator for the state Equal Rights Commission. Lawyer Donald Pope defeated television reporter Janis Higginbotham, 23,489 to 22,808, to win the Department 2 Justice of the Peace race.

By LILA FUJIMOTO Washoe County's District Court will have four new judges, including the county's first two women district court judges, following Tuesday's election. There also will be a new justice of the peace in the county's Justice Court, after two lawyers reversed primary election trends to defeat their layman opponents in the general election. Reno Municipal Judge Robin Wright, 31, will preside in Department 8 after defeating incumbent Judge Richard Minor, 39,774 votes to 28,069, for a six-year district court term. Wright is the youngest judge ever elected to district court. Also elected was Justice of the Peace Deborah Agosti, 33, who outpolled lawyer- Chan Griswold, 44,102 votes to 23,183, to win the Department 3 seat.

The other new District Court judges will be Juvenile Master Charles McGee who defeated attorney Clinton Wooster, 34,459 votes to 30,781 to win the Reno planners affirm plans for 28-story Aloha project formidable no incumbent had lost since 1950. But Young, concerned that Manoukian had tarnished the image of the court with feuds and improprieties, entered the race at Gunderson's urging, and campaigned on what he said was Manoukian's misconduct. He is untroubled that his attacks on Manoukian may have added to the court's image of disruption. "It's possible the campaign made some people aware of the he said. "But it was necessary if there was going to be a change." He said the average voters "don't want a court involved in controversy even if they don't understand the nature of the controversy." i Phone.

By MORGAN CARTWRIGHT Plans for the 28-story Aloha Hotel-Casino to be built on East Second Street just north of the MGM Grand-Reno were approved Wednesday by the Reno City Planning Commission. The $60 million project was approved on a 4-3 vote, despite concerns it would add to a growing water and sewer capacity shortage and would also contribute to worsening air pollution in the Truckee Meadows. Reno architect William Morris, representing the developers, defended the project, saying it would not be built unless the owners could first purchase sufficient water rights. Commissioner Kathryn Wishart noted that 25 percent of the Aloha employees would earn less than $10,000 a year and only 4 percent would earn more than $20,000. Wishart concluded there would not be enough low-income housing for many of the anticipated 843 employees.

Tabulation From page 1C that holes are properly punched and that only one hole is punched for each ballot item. Damaged ballots are usually repunched by election clerks who are watched over by a state-mandated election accuracy board. The time it took to examine an additional 10,000 ballots accounted for the longer time it took to compile results this year, officials said. "It's not just a matter of running 10,000 more ballots through the computer we could do that in 10 minutes," said Al Henslin, assistant director of the county Information Management Service, which operates the ballot-counting computer. "Some of these ballots come in with ban-daids, gum, even notes to the registrar apologizing for the condition of the ballot.

It takes time for lUMUUBUn BOAOO.OO I Morris termed objections that the hotel-casino would add to a growing housing crunch as a "narrow viewpoint" and pointed out the city has over 16,000 dwelling units on its "approved but not built" list. Most critical of the project was Commissioner George De Long, who emphasized the water shortage in the region and complained tourists at the Aloha would not likely conserve water in a drought as local residents would be forced to do. Wishart, De Long and Patricia Miltenberger voted against the Eroject while commissioners H.B. prenger, Walter Wilson, Ted Osgood and Kenneth York voted in favor. Also objecting to the project was an executive of the MGM Grand-Reno and two members of the Reno Citizens for Controlled Growth.

Morris said the project, if approved in December by the City Council, could be completed by the fall of 1986. us to repunch them so they'll go through the computer." Ballots are examined twice before being sent into the computer, Cornwall said, to ensure the accuracy of the vote. "If there's a recall, I don't want any discrepancies," she said. "If the numbers change, no one will trust the system." Washoe workers had final results an hour before Clark County, but their eight-hour counting time was slower than some similar-size counties elsewhere. In Ada County, Idaho, where 81,000 ballots were cast, vote counters needed only 6V2 hours.

They even experienced a one-hour delay caused by a computer malfunction. "I liken it to putting up wallpaper," Cornwall said about the vote-counting procedure. "It doesn't take long to buy the wallpaper, but it takes a long time to put it up." SUNDOWNER HOTEL CASINO 10 GAMES M3 SDMESS COTIRLIL CEOTEIRL Fbr more information send in this coupon or call our information center toll-free. 1-800-367-2346, extension 156. Motorola Privacy Plus" radiophone keeps you in touch.

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