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The Lompoc Record from Lompoc, California • 5
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The Lompoc Record du lieu suivant : Lompoc, California • 5

Publication:
The Lompoc Recordi
Lieu:
Lompoc, California
Date de parution:
Page:
5
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Sunday, January 24, 1999 LOMPOC RECORD (Lompoc, Calif.) A5 LUSD (Continued from page A1) is like a new line drawn in sand," Forinash said. "We've got a new (measuring) instrument put in and testing that's been intensified dramatically. This is a baseline year the first look at the test. The target (of working toward 90 percent) becomes more tangible now with the measurements available." The district is also working toward determining if students are achieving at grade level. Three standards will be used: the SAT-9 score, report card grades and district curriculum assessment scores.

The curriculum assessment criteria are still under development, so, for the Educational Progress Report, enly the first two standards were used. The goal for 1997-98 was to have at least 40 percent of the students demonstrating that they were working at grade level by scoring in the 50th percentile or higher in the mathematics and portions of the SAT-9 as well as earning an average grade of or better on their report cards. Robber (Continued from page A1) and then lifts his shirt to reveal the butt 6f a gun. The suspect orders all the money from the cash register placed in a bag and then flees the store. The suspect usually wears a sweat shirt or large shirt covering his upper body and has been wearing a dark-colored watch cap or "Beanie" covering his head, according to a description from the Sheriff's Office.

He is described as a white male, 25-35 years old, 6-feet tall, thin build, blue eyes and a pockedmarked or acne-scarred face. Anyone with information on the suspect is asked to call Detective Ross Ruth at 686-5031 or their local law enforcement agency. Owens (Continued from page A1) "Tm going to ask the judge for a change 1 based on these factors." Andrade's original motion included testimony from an expert witness who said his analysis of pretrial news coverage showed the coverage was "excessive and prejudicial." Dr. Ronald Dillehay, a social psychologist with the University of Nevada, also testified that a survey of North County residents showed more than 80 percent believed Owens was "probably guilty or definitely guilty" based on their knowledge of the case. Two members of the 9-woman, 3- man jury reside in Lompoc.

Andrade's motion to move the trial will be held tomorrow with opening statement slated for Tuesday. Owens is the second defendant to be tried for the takeover style robbery that resulted in the shooting death of Lompoc resident Christine Orciuch and wounding of Octavio Gallardo, also of Lompoc. Marcus Adams, 28, of Los Angeles, was the first to be tried. He was convicted last year by a Santa Maria jury of all charges and sentenced to 203 years to life without parole in state prison. The jury deadlocked on a charge that could have given him a -death sentence.

The state is not asking for the death penalty in the Owens case and even offered d'a plea agreement of 28 years to life with parole possible after he serves 85 percent of his sentence. Owens rejected the agreement because he fears for his safety i in if he testifies against the remaining two defendants, according to his attorney. Shauncy Bowen, 25, of Los Angeles, is scheduled for trial on March 11. Police and prosecutors believe Gregory Mitchell, 20, of Lompoc, is the suspect who fired the shots that killed Orciuch and wounded Gallardo. His trial is set for May 11.

Owens' trial expected to last three weeks and he faces a sentence of life in prison without parole if convicted on the felony murder charge. Lompoc Record Correction Policy The Lompoc Record will publish of errors in fact that have been printed in the newspaper. Corrections will be made as soon as possible after the error has been brought to the attention of the newspaper's editor at 736-2313. According to the report, students in grades three through eight met the standard i in reading language, with 51 percent of students in grades six and seven reaching that goal. Students in grades five through nine met the goal in math.

Grade two showed the lowest centage of students achieving at least in the 50th percentile and having "C' grades, with only 29.9 reaching this goal in math and 37 percent in reading, language. No reasons were evident for the second grade scores, Forinash said. He added that the district will be working with teachers to see that the curriculum covers what is on the test. He also pointed out that the state required Limited English Proficient students, those whose home language is not English, to take the SAT-9 in English. The district has approximately 1,600 LEP students.

Perry saw "a healthy trend" in the report's figures on the number of high school seniors taking and doing well on the Scholastic Aptitude Test. That test is taken by -bound students. Demographically, the student population has changed during the past five years, according to the report. The white population has declined five percent, to 5,600, or 50.1 percent of the enrollment while the Latino population has risen approximately five percent, to 3,700 or 33 percent. The black student population has been fairly stable at about 1,000,8.9 percent.

Asian students number about 522, or 4.7 percent, a decline of 0.7 in the. five year period. The report also stated that the number of students from families receiving welfare, Aid to Families with Dependent Children, is at a four -year low of 1,809, but still above the figure of 1,712 in the 1994-94 school year. Overall, Forinash expressed satisfaction with the picture of the district presented by the Progress Report. Obituaries Elmer S.

Lachenmaier Elmer S. Lachenmaier, 82, of Orcutt, died Jan. 21 of natural causes. He was born Sept. 4, 1916, in Lodi, California, and moved to Shafter and the Bakersfield area at the age of four.

He attended Shafter High School where he played football and after graduation played semi-pro baseball. He was a veteran of WWII serving with the U.S. Army in New Guinea, the East Indies and southern Philippines. Lachenmaier is survived by his wife, Eleanor, of Orcutt; daughters, Sherri McMurtry of Bakersfield, and Contra Guggia of Oxnard; son, John Barca of Santa Maria; and sister, Virginia Zenk of Shafter. He is also survived by two grandchildren and two He was preceded in death by his parents, Samuel and Pauline." Lachenmaier was a member of American Legion Post 534 in Orcutt and St.

Andrew United Methodist Church. Funeral services will be held Jan. 25, at 1 p.m. at DudleyHoffman Mortuary. Pastor Al Jansen of St.

Andrew United Methodist Church will officiate. Interment will follow at Santa Maria Cemetery with military honors by American Legion Post 534. Visitation will be Sunday, Jan. 24, from 3-7 p.m. at the mortuary.

Memorials may be made to Visiting Nurses, P.O. Box 1029, Santa Maria, CA 93456; or American Cancer Society, 104-A East Boone Street, Santa Maria, CA 93454. Jeanne Schoenefeld pice, 1300 E. Cypress Santa Maria 93454. Linda Doreen Kennedy Services for Jeanne M.

Schoenefeld, 68 of Vandenberg Village, are 2 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 27, 1999 at the chapel of Starbuck-Lind Mortuary with the Rev. James Bullock of Peace Lutheran Church officiating. Private interment will be at Lompoc Cemetery.

Mrs. Schoenefeld was born March 27, 1930 in Boston, Mass. to Edward and Marie Schubert Anderson. She was raised and educated in Glendale, Calif. She lived in Santa Maria from 1958 until moving to Lompoc in 1974 and had worked as a secretary with the Santa Maria Unified School District, retiring i in 1991.

She was a past member of Miguelito Chapter 176 O.E.S., had been a devoted den mother with the Boy Scouts and had served as a docent at La Purisima Mission. She also enjoyed reading. She died Thursday, Jan. 21, 1999 at her home. Survivors include her husband of 46 years, Stan Schoenefeld of Vandenberg Village; daughter, Pamela McCarty of Santa Maria; sons, Scott Schoenefeld of Oxnard and Steve Schoenefeld of Laughlin, brother, Andy Anderson of Simi Valley; three grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews.

Contributions may be made to Marian Hospital Home Care Hos- At her request there will be no services for Linda D. Kennedy, 51 of Lompoc. Interment will be private. Ms. Kennedy was born February 19, 1947 in Santa Barbara to Robert and Mary Francis Roe Kennedy and came to Lompoc in 1982 from Orcutt.

She graduated from St. Marcas High School in Santa Barbara in 1965 and was a member of the Loyal Order of the Moose, Lodge She liked building and furnishing shadow boxes, spending time with her cat Sady, tending her house plants, teddy bears, watching auto racing and laughing with her grandchildren. She died Thursday, January 21, 1999 at her home. Survivors include her daughters Kimberlee Ann Miller of Mammoth, Az. and Melissa Sylvester of Buellton; sisters Shirley Kennedy of South Dakota, Turtle Klein of Lompoc and Kelly Jean Kennedy of Irvine, brothers William Richard Kennedy of Lodi, James Robert Kennedy of Walnut Creek, four grandchildren and many nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by her mother. Mary Francis Kennedy. Memorial contributions may be made to the Cancer Foundation of Santa Barbara, P.O. Box 837, Santa Barbara 93102. Cremation arrangements by Starbuck-Lind Mortuary.

Irene Leonard Arrangements are pending at Starbuck-Lind Mortuary for Irene Leonard, 71 of Lompoc, who died Friday, Jan. 22, 1999 at her home. Robert Campbell Arrangements are pending at Starbuck-Lind Mortuary for Robert Campbell, 72 of Lompoc, who died Friday, Jan. 22, 1999 at his home. We are in Lompoc to serve you! Supplies Equipment Oxygen Wheelchairs Hospital Beds Breast Prosthetics Diabetic Supplies Bathroom Aids Ostomy Walkers Free delivery and 24 Hour Emergency Service We accept Medicare and most Insurances "Your Only Local Healthcare Store" VALLEY HOMECARE 118 East Ocean Lompoc 735-7766 Monica available to the White House.

It the White House were to ask us to do that, we would honor that The White House did not immediately take up Starr's offer. "We are respecting the will of the Senate and abiding by its procedures, unlike the House spokesman James Kennedy said late Saturday. Meanwhile, congressional sources who spoke on condition of anonymity, said House- prosecutors hoped to (Continued from page A1) interview Ms. Lewinsky Sunday afternoon, but that final plans had not been made. In another development, former Clinton political adviser Dick Morris said he had agreed to meet with the House impeachment managers Sunday afternoon at a House office building.

Clinton's lawyers and Senate Democrats were outraged that House prosecutors sought to interview Ms. Lewinsky before the Senate decides whether witnesses will be called in the impeachment trial, and that they would not be allowed to attend. Harkin's letter to Rehnquist said, questioning would violate the Senate's sole authority under the Constitution to try impeachments' because Senate trial rules require witnesses to be interviewed with both sides present. Harkin said he was asking Rehnquist to use his authority as the presiding officer in the Senate trial to prevent Ms. Lewinsky from being interviewed.

White House counsel Charles Ruff said during Saturday's question-andanswer period in the trial: No other lawyer that I know of gets to have a prosecutor sitting in the room with them and saying talk to these people or your immunity deal is gone and you go to jail." Ruff also suggested Starr had wrongly injected himself into the Senate impeachment trial and had become "the moving force in the development of the truth and the a role the Constitution had reserved for the senators. It isn't the first time that Starr has been accused of injecting himself in the impeachment drama. Starr's ethics adviser, Sam Dash, abruptly resigned to protest the prosecutor's decision to testify at House impeachment hearings late last year. r. Dash said Starr had wrongly become an advocate of impeachment.

Starr denied those allegations. His office offered no comment Saturday, although House prosecutors firmly defended their request and Starr's intervention. "What are they afraid of? Are they afraid of our talking to Monica Lewinsky? Rep. Bill McCollum, R- one of the House prosecutors, said. We're not doing anything abnormal.

We are exercising our privileges, our rights." Paul McNulty, a spokesman for the 13 Republican House prosecutors, said the interview was necessary for the prosecutors to decide whether to submit Ms. Lewinsky's name to the Senate as a possible trial witness. Clinton has denied the House impeachment charges of perjury and obstruction of justice growing out of his affair with the young woman and efforts to cover it up. Daily Record Editors Note: The Lompoc Police Department's new Community Hot Line accepts information, which may be provided anonymously, on criminal activity 24 hours a day. Messages are left on a tape Police Emergency 9-1-1 Police Business 736-2341 COMMUNITY HOT LINE 736-0519 Roundup The following arrests and incidents are from reports by law enforcement and other public service agencies for Friday through Saturday afternoon: Lompoc Police Department A car was reported broken into in the 500 block of West College Avenue Friday.

A classroom at Lompoc High School was reported broken into Friday. Police report the arrest Friday of William Arthur Kirk, 54, of the 600 block of West Maple Avenue, on suspicion of commercial burglary in the 1100 block of West Ocean Avenue. Kirk was transferred to county jail in Santa Barbara and is being held on $5,000 bail. Police report the arrest of Cullane Garret Thomas, 19, of the 400 block of Terra Way, on suspicion of possession of a concealed deadly weapon, possession of a concealed weapon in a vehicle, possession of a loaded weapon in a vehicle, possession of armor piercing ammunition, and possession of a weapon with an altered serial number. He was arrested Friday in the 100 block of North Street and jailed on $5,000 bail.

He posted bond and was released. The rear window of a car was reported smashed in the 300 block of South Seventh Street Saturday. Police report the arrest of a juvenile Saturday in the area of West Chestnut Avenue and North Street on suspicion of driving without a license and providing false information to a peace officer. The 16-yearold male was booked at the police station and transported to juvenile hall in Santa Maria. An auto theft was reported Saturday in the 300 block of South Street.

The auto is described as a beige 1989 Honda Accord, license 3HYN751. A residential burglary was reported in the 200 block of West Pine Avenue Saturday. 0, Lompoc Fire Department Units responded to the following calls: public assistance call in the 400 block of South Street at 7:12 a.m. Friday. emergency medical call in the 800 block of West Laurel Avenue at 3:53 p.m.

Friday. hazardous condition call in the 500 block of North Street at 4:22 p.m. Friday. public service call in the 1300 block of North Street at 4:36 p.m. Friday.

emergency medical call for a traffic accident at North Street and College Avenue at 4:39 p.m. Friday. -Russ Stockton Presenting LIVE IN CONCERT, Debbie Reynolds Saturday, January 30th (The competition) Color Copies? get Sure the crayons. Not all print shops offer the same quality services. Use Graphic Systems PRINT 403 North Street 736-2737 8 p.m.

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