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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 72

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
72
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

LOS ANGELES TIMES 1 0 MONDAY. DECEMBER 4, 1989 5D WMnMMMMsSfMsm LOS ANGELES COUNTY PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR SINGLE FAMILY HOMES, DUPLEX, TRIPLEX, UNITS LOS ANGELES, PACOIMA, PRK; EL 8ERENO, BOYLE HEIGHTS, HAWTHORNE THE FOUOWIM I PROPERTIES WILL SOLI THEIR IITEI IUNBAV. IEC. 1711. ITARTIM 10 OMR I KXIH ST.PACdMA, CA.

3 Bdfm. horn. INSPECT: Surl. Oec t0" 10:00 AM 2. 130 A.M.

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personal check. All properties open tor Inspection hour before auction. SO-SO broker split. Sold subject to Court confirmation. Call for tree brochure; Broderick Judge Signs Temporary Gag Order By AMY WALLACE TIMES STAFF WRITER A Municipal Court judge has signed a temporary order to keep murder suspect Elisabeth (Betty) Broderick and others associated with her case from talking to the press, according to a spokesman for the San Diego County district attorney's office.

Spokesman Steven J. Casey said his office requested the gag order Friday in the hope of preventing prospective jurors from being prejudiced by publicity. Broderick's lawyer, Mark Alexander Wolf, did not object te the order, which was signed by Judge Ronald Domnitz. A hearing to determine whether the order will be extended is scheduled for Dec. 11.

Broderick is accused of murdering her ex-husband, Daniel T. Broderick III, and his new Linda Kolkena Broderick, in the bedroom of their Hillcrest home Nov. 5. She has pleaded not guilty. Casey said that an article in The Times last week, which was based on the first jailhouse interview with Broderick, "was certainly a factor" in his office's decision to seek the order.

"But our concern predated that. We looked at the number and the nature of the stories and statements that had been made," Casey said. "Our concern is that an avalanche of pretrial publicity is at least a possibility if not a certainty. I don't know when a snowfall becomes an avalanche, but an awful lot of snow has already fallen." sSSt -1 mrL TROTTER TREADMILL Stephen Thome The Rev. Billy Falling ESCONDIDO: Wild Cards Enliven Race Proven at Prltikin Now MVtilabl for your own Corporate Health Club HomeOffice CondoApt.

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By Sunday night, however, only Module 1A was locked down. "Everything's back to normal, except for that module," said Sgt. Chris Von Olnhausen. More than 100 inmates at the County Jail in Chula Vista remained locked down in their cells Sunday night as jailers continued to investigate a brawl that sent four inmates to the hospital Saturday. The fight erupted about 10 p.m.

in a medium-security cellblock, Module 1A, after two inmates had a disagreement, according to Sgt. Paul Nevills of the San Diego County Sherriff's Department. Soon 25 to 30 inmates joined the fray, he said, and, by the time Our Supplier Overstocked! CENTRAL AC HEATING Take Advantage of This Tremendous Money -Saving Offer. it i I 1 This Hatjanalty FanHMn Unit REBATE; I Sarins. The new faster-format To begin home delivery, call 1-800-LA TIMES.

supporting him. "That would be unfortunate. I'd like to think it won't interfere with people, and a very low percentage of people we're calling have a problem with it. More of them either don't know I'm an atheist I don't call people and say, 'Hi, I'm Steve Thome, an atheist, running for school board' or they don't care. I want them to think I'm a reasonable guy who's listed in the phone book who they can call at home, who is widely read and open-minded to new ideas." But if you ask Thome who he believes the top three vote getters will be Tuesday, he's willing to name two: himself and Falling.

Another front-runner is acknowledged to be Bill Horn, 46, a Valley Center resident who was initially appointed to the school board to fill the vacancy last summer. His appointment was criticized by Bill Tomkins, 69, a retired salesman, who in turn garnered enough signatures to force a special election to fill the vacancy, and who announced his own candidacy for the post when the only other announced candidate at the time was Horn. Horn says he is the only one of the eight candidates or of the four sitting trustees, for that matter who currently has a child in an Escondido high school, and therefore argues that he would be the best spokesman for parents in the district. Horn is a property manager and avocado grower. Horn downplays any influence that Thome and Falling might have on the race.

"They provide more options, but I think people are more interested in the business of the district than the other issues they Falling and Thome are The voters are not dumb. They can see through the chaff of some of that stuff." Of the eight candidates, only Coyle, Lawrence and Horn had applied for the appointment to the vacancy last summer. The remaining candidates are Harold Polesetsky, 60, an architect and general contractor, and Terry Cottrell, 41, a real estate property manager. The winner will finish the term vacated by Don McArthur, who resigned last June, VA years short of his term. The cost of the special election, which was sparked by the petition with I little more than 1,000 signatures, is estimated at $120,000.

I Continued from B4 stopped prayer in the classroom. Now when it comes to students with religious convictions who say they don't want to read a book aloud that uses God's name in vain, we send that student to the library. That's real hypocrisy." Falling said he has not read all of "Death of a Salesman" and that, since the play is on the state's list of recommended reading, he doesn't want it banned simply not read aloud. "But some books already are censored and we'll continue to censor books in the future. We practice it all the time," he said.

"The Bible is censored from the state reading list." Falling also insists that creation -ism should be taught alongside evolution to high school students "as one of the explanations for the origin of life. Both should be taught, not as a science but as a belief system, a theory, a faith. I argue that evolution is a theory and should never be categorized as undisputed fact." On that point, of course, Thome disagrees and it's a disagreement in which Falling offers a sort of backhanded compliment to the atheist. "The two sides are polarized," Falling said. "Unfortunately, I think Steve Thome and I represent the real issues in public education." His own mission, Falling said, is to inject greater morality into the classroom.

"This is not a place for evangelism. But Christians should be witnesses -to Christ wherever they serve. That doesn't mean they try to impose religious doctrine in their public leadership, but it does mean they don't compromise their moral values and principles in their public leadership." And that, he said, is why he. opposed the reading of "Death of a Salesman." "God's name was continually taken in vain. That's in violation of the Ten Commandments.

We're back to moral absolutes," he said. For his part, Thome said he would prefer that his atheism not surface as an issue in the election, but concedes that it has, if for no other reason than Falling's constant references to it. "We need to teach people to teach basic skills better, but we see Falling telling people we don't need to teach, we just need to believe," Thome said. "Creation -ism has its place, but not in a science classroom. Literature, perhaps, or philosophy or in a comparative literature course, where you can discuss creationism and Christianity all you want." Thome said he believes his atheism won't stop Christians from A LEGENDARY CHRISTMAS THE WILSHIRE COLLECTION Pure ballantyne, pure wool Give the legendary look and quality of Ballantyne of Scotland in the color-rich luxury of seasonless Merino wool.

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