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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 27

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1978 Saturday September 30 Readings for Friday, September 29, 1978 MINNEAPOLIS READINGS: (Yesterday) Humidity at 7 p.m. 63 percent. Precipitation: 24 hours ending 7 p.m. none. Total Jan.

to date 27.35 inches. (Today) Sun rises 7:09 a.m., sets 6:56 p.m. Moon phase Last Quarter. Rises 5:42 a.m., sets 6:17 a.m. COMPARATIVE TEMPERATURES (24-hour period ending at 7 p.m.): High 73 (1 p.m.).

Low 56 (7 and 8 a.m.). Year ago high 62, low 51. All-time high for September 30, 87 in 1897. All-time low for September 30, 26 in 1939. HEATING UNITS as of September 28, 1978.

Heating units are used in estimating fuel consumption. The daily figure reflects the degrees by which average temperatures went below 65, the point at which artificial heating is generally considered necessary Cumulative figures report heating units since July J. Daily heating units, 10. Same date last year, 8. Normal for this date, 9.

Season total, 91. Season total on same date last year, 156. Normal season total for this date, 187. COOLING UNITS as of September 28, 1978. Cooling units are used in estimating fuel consumption.

The daily figure reflects the degrees by which average temperatures went above 65, the point at which artificial cooling is generally considered necessary. Daily cooling units, 0. Same date last year, 0. Normal for this date, 0. Season total, 911.

Season total on same date last year, 691. Normal season total for this date, 578. Friday's temperatures: a.m. 2 3 4 5 06 7 10 11 Noon temp. 59 60 58 58 58 57 56 009 57 61 64 69 p.m.

2 3 4 6 00 10 11 temp. 72 72 68 68 66 65 63 61 59 57 57 Forecasts: Twin Cities: Clearing and a little cooler today. Mostly clear tonight and Sunday. High today in the middle 60s. Low tonight in the low 40s.

High Sunday near 70. Northerly winds 5 to 10 miles per hour. Minnesota: Clearing today and mostly clear tonight. Increasing cloudiness Sunday. Highs today in the upper 50s to the upper 60s.

Lows tonight in the mid 30s to mid 40s. Highs Sunday in the low 60s to mid 70s. Wisconsin: Decreasing cloudiness west, mostly cloudy east with a chance of showers mainly in the morning today. Highs in the upper 50s to upper 60s. Fair west tonight, clearing east, with lows in the upper 30s to mid 40s.

Sunny and pleasant Sunday with highs mostly in the 60s. towa: Mostly sunny southwest, partly cloudy northeast today. Mostly clear and cool tonight. Sunny and mild Sunday. Highs today in the low 60s northeast to around 70 southwest.

Lows tonight in the 40s. Highs Sunday in the 70s. North Dakota: Partly cloudy through Sunday. Warming today with highs near 70. Low tonight in the low 40s.

Highs Sunday in the low to mid 70s. South Dakota: Mostly clear with a warming trend through Sunday. Highs today in the mid 70s west to the upper 60s east. Lows tonight in the low to mid 40s. Highs Sunday in the low 80s west to the upper 70s east.

Montana, East of the Divide: Increasing cloudiness, windy and warmer today with highs 75 to 85. A chance of rain west late tonight and east portions Sunday. Lows tonight in the 30s. Cooler Sunday with highs 55 to 65. Today's regional weather forecasts Made yesterday afternoon by the National Weather Service for September 30 Fair Cloudy Partly cloudy International Numbers indicate Devils Falls range of high Lake temperatures Grand Forks Es Rain Snow Duluth Fargos Fog Brainerd Showers El Drizzle 2' Freezing drizzle Aberdeen St.

Cloud Twin Cities, Eau Claire Thundershowers Twin Cities and metropolitan area forecast Worthington Rochester "La Sioux Crosser Fails 65 Mason City City Weather in other major U.S. cities Today's Tomorrow's Yesterday Lo HI Pcpn. Albuquerque 51 87 Amarillo 55 85 Anchorage 32 57 Asheville 54 67 Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Billings 67 Birmingham 82 Boston 43 63 Buffalo Casper 66 Charleston, S.C. 79 .04 Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati 75 Cleveland Dallas- Ft. Worth Denver Des Moines 67 Detroit 63 El Paso 55 85 Fairbanks 45 Great Falls 68 Honolulu 86 Houston 66 82 Indianapolis 43 74 Jacksonville 63 80 Kansas City 56 86 Las Vegas 68 102 Los Angeles 72 95 Louisville 79 Memphis 60 85 Miami Beach 78 86 Milwaukee 47 70 New Orleans 72 80 New York 45 66 Oklahoma City 60 90 Omaha 58 65 07 Orlando 67 90 Philadelphia 44 66 Phoenix 72 105 Pittsburgh 35 67 Portland, Me.

65 Portland, Ore. 77 Raleigh 56 70 St. Louis 63 Salt Lake City 48 74 San Antonio 60 86 San Diego 71 85 San Francisco 65 90 San Juan, P.R. 78 90 St. Ste.

Marie 45 51 .84 Seattle 53 73 Tampa- -St. Prbg. Washington 50 68 Forecast Forecast Sky Lo HI Sky Lo HI Sunny 81 Sunny 50 84 Fair 54 79 Fair 53 84 Sunny 31 55 Picidy 32 53 Cloudy 54 66 Rain 54 64 Picidy 79 Ptcidy 63 Sunny 47 Shwrs 58 Sunny 46 72 Cloudy Picidy 42 80 Shwrs 50 Pickdy 65 80 Ptcidy 67 79 Sunny 48 65 Picidy 54 69 Sunny 45 72 Picidy 53 Sunny 34 Picidy 37 Rain 62 Rain 62 77 Sunny 36 Picidy 40 Shwrs 58 68 Fair 48 68 Picidy 55 78 Cloudy 52 73 Picidy 51 75 Shwrs Fair 63 88 Fair 88 Sunny 43 78 Picidy 85 Sunny 50 68 Sunny 74 Cloudy 49 Picidy Fair 55 85 Fair Picidy 27 44 Fair 23 42 Picidy 40 78 Shwrs 45 58 738 Fair 73 87 Fair 62 88 Fair 63 84 Shwrs 52 73 Sunny 50 70 Shwrs 69 81 Shwrs 69 86 Sunny 52 75 Sunny 50 77 Sunny 68 100 Sunny 66 98 Fair 71 92 Fair 69 87 Cloudy 58 80 Picidy 73 Cloudy 63 82 Fair Picidy 75 88 Ptcidy Cloudy 52 65 Sunny 47 68 Cloudy 70 83 Ptcidy 69 87 Sunny 50 67 Rain 55 68 Fair 84 Fair 54 82 Sunny 70 Sunny 50 79 Shwrs 72 88 Ptcidy 72 89 Sunny 66 Shwrs 51 74 Sunny 101 Sunny 71 100 Picidy 73 Picidy 50 69 Fair 38 62 Picidy 44 67 Picidy Picidy 49 70 Cloudy 68 Rain 59 61 Picidy 55 Sunny 50 80 Sunny 49 81 Picidy 79 Fair 61 87 Fair 84 Fair 70 78 Picidy 68 76 Fair 58 70 Fair 55 70 Pickdy 78 89 Shwrs 78 88 Shwrs 44 55 Ptcidy 42 60 Cloudy 55 67 Shwrs 53 65 Shwrs 73 87 Picidy 89 Sunny 52 75 Cloudy 58 77 Temperatures are overnight lows and daytime highs. Reported precipitation is for the 24 hours ending at 7 a.m. yesterday (Minneapolis Time).

indicates information unavailable from National Weather Service. indicates trace. Today's National Weather Service forecasi Supplied by the Associate Press 70 70 70 -70 80 90 100 80 90 Cold Warm Occluded Stationary Figures show high temperatures expected today Rain Showers 5888 Snow xxx Flurries Air flow Updated reports Taped weather reports about the metropolitan area and Minnesota, revised every hour and broadcast 24 hours a day, can be received on the Weather Service radio station, KEC65, which operates at 162.55 Mhz on the upper FM band. H--High temperature reading in the 12-hour period ending at 7 p.In. Friday.

L-Low temperature reading in the 18-hour period ending at 7 p.m. Friday. P- Precipitation in the 24- hour period ending at 7 p.m. Friday. -Trace.

Upper Midwest MINNESOTA 4 Twin Cities 73 Alexandria 60 51 Duluth 61 49 Interntl. Fails 49 47 Redwood Falls 69 Rochester 67 50 40 St. Cloud 67 44 WISCONSIN Eau Claire 67 54 La Crosse 66 52 Madison 68 47 Wausau 58 47 29 NORTH DAKOTA Bismarck 51 Dickinson 58 48 .01 Fargo 57 Grand Forks 60 Jamestown 56 50 Minot 55 45 Williston 63 45 .02 SOUTH DAKOTA Aberdeen Huron 51 Lemmon Mobridoe .02 Pierre 68 54 Rapid City Sioux Falls 65 Watertown 61 51 Canada Calgary Edmonton 39 Montreal 32 Ottawa 34 Regina Toronto Vancouver Winnipeg 46 World Observations made Friday, September 29, 1978 City Time Temp. Aberdeen 1 p.m. 59 Amsterdam 1 p.rn.

57 Ankara 3 p.m. 86 Antigua 8 a.m. Athens 2 p.m. Auckland Mont. Beirut 2 p.m.

Berlin 1 p.m. Birmingham 1 p.m. Bonn 1 59 Brussels 1 p.m. 59 Cairo Casablanca Noon Copenhagen I p.m. 55 Dublin 1 p.m.

54 Geneva I p.m. Hong Kong 8 p.m. Lisbon Noon London 1 p.m. 59 Madrid 1 p.m. Malta 1 p.m.

75 Manila 8 p.m. Moscow 3 p.m. New Delhi 5 p.m. Nice 1 p.m. 70 Oslo 1 p.m.

46 Paris 1 p.m. 59 Peking 8 p.m. Rome 1 p.m. Saigon 8 p.m. Seoul 9 p.m.

Sofia 2 p.m. Stockholm 1 p.m. Sydney 10 p.m. 55 Taipei 8 p.m. 79 Teheran 3 p.m.

Tel Aviv Tokyo 9 p.m. Tunis 1 p.m. Vienna 1 p.m. Warsaw 1 p.m. 54 Latin America City Time Temp.

Asuncion 8 a.m. 68 Buenos Aires 8 a.m. 54 Lima 7 a.m. 59 Montevideo R. de Janeiro 9 a.m.

72 Highest temperatures recorded in the 24-hour period ending at Friday, September 29, 1973. City Temp. Acapulco Barbados Bermuda Bogola Culiacan Curacao Freeport Guadalajara Guadeloupe Havana 86 Kingston 89 Jeane Dixon Saturday, your horoscope Sept. 30, 1978 Your birthday today: Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept.

22): If you're a professional who depends on Skip Saturday routine. Companionship with public, next few months should prove lucra- younger person never happier. Could be tive. Increase savings; health problems of tension if friend asks to borrow money. family member could prove very expensive.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Romance will be reasonably happy. Busi- Romance starred. Attending wedding or soness and career goals more easily cial function will provide perfect setting to reached.

meet new romantic partner. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Aries (March 21-April 19): Someone in your past reappears. Overdue Good day for starting project at home.

letter could reverse emotional stand. RoFamily members will be cooperative. Get mantic impulse can lead you to important early start while vitality, interest is optimal. meeting tonight. Taurus (April 20-May 20): Sagittarius (Nov.

22-Dec. 21): Health is excellent. You may think you're Make certain you buy what you need. not the marrying kind. Look out, someone Someone from past wants to contact you may think otherwise.

about business matter. Gemini (May 21-June 20): Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Exercise will make you feel, look great. Ro- See out-of-town visitor early in day.

Mate mantic relationship will be very fulfilling. will not appreciate you doing business on Spend evening away from usual haunts. weekends. Cancer (June 21-July 22): Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.

18): Give time to self-improvement. Dance good You may be tempted to renew a romance. way to get needed exercise. Short outing to Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): country will raise spirits.

Plans made with friends may not materialLeo (July 23-Aug. 22): ize. You may at loose ends. Evening Finish pet project to your satisfaction. You may give you opportunity to combine busiwill spend less than you thought.

ness with Jeane Dixon casts your horoscope every morning in the Tribune. A Wedding' should please Altman fans Watching Robert Altman's "A Wedding" I experienced some of the same sort of confusion bordering on panic that has beset me at real weddings. At a big wedding it's sometimes hard to figure out who is related to whom, and how, and for that matter, why. After a period of pondering the reasons for all these others to be here, I begin to wonder why I'm there my- Altman's technique of plunging the audience into the middle of the wedding and accompanying festivities with little exposition, in effect causing his paying onlookers to wander about among the crowd figuring out relationships and situations for themselves, does make for an entertaining set of tensions. Thus it takes until the end of the movie to come close to understanding the position of the father of the bridegroom, an Italian played by Vittorio Gassman, in an upper-crust Midwestern household otherwise presided over by a matriarch played by Lillian Gish; and even at movie's end the subtleties aren't fully spelled out.

I sat through the whole movie assuming that a doctor character played by Howard Duff was married to one of the women in the bridegroom's family, only to learn later from the press notes that such was not the case. I watched Carol Burnett, fully identified as the mother of the bride, being pursued through most of the movie by Pat McCormick as a married relative of the bridegroom's, without fully understanding which of the women was the pursuer's wife. As long as I've mentioned Burnett and McCormick, I might as well dispose of my major quarrel with the movie. It's those two. They're troublesome.

McCormick's passionate pleadings of "I can't help myself, Tulip!" and Burnett's surprised responses are funny enough, but they're schtick-funny, as though the pair were Rent-a-Guest clowns hired in case of dullness of party. Will Jones after last night The other participants do a more credible job of acting to bring off Altman's dizzying slice-of-life stunt, letting a lot of small stories and nuances surface and unfold in the context of an expensive wedding. A far funnier and more legitimate running gag is Geraldine Chaplin's portrayal of an overeager wedding consultant who gets entirely too emotionally involved in her work. "A Wedding" is the kind a guest could gossip about for days afterward. Old Nettie, the bridegroom's grandmother, dies in her bedroom before the guests are even back from the church.

Doctor and nurse conspire not to let the guests know so as not to spoil the reception. Terribly self-important security people, ever on the alert for intruders, insult and Director Robert Altman, center, rehearsed a scene in "The Wedding" with Mia Farrow, left, and Vittorio Gassman, right. chooses WTCN operation at all," said Swartz. He recentlystrengthened the news staff and hired a new news director and coanchor. WTCN General Manager Bob Fransen said Metromedia promised NBC "a first-class news operation equipment and personnel." He said WTCN now has a news staff of 10; he estimated an ultimate size of 40 to 60.

He said he plans to keep Gil Amundson as news director. Annual news operating costs might be $1.5 to $1.7 million, Fransen said, and he and Krivin estimated spending about $1 million for news equipment. The change leaves both stations undecided about programing and will offer viewers a muddle: Some programs now on Ch. 9 will be on Ch. 5, some now on Ch.

5 will be on Ch. 11 and some now on 11 may vanish. "Of course, we'll be nonaffiliated," Swartz said, "but with a programming concept that the viewing public and advertisers will be happy with we plan on doing some local innovations, if possible development of programs and personalities." Swartz said the station probably will offer a mixture of movies and reruns, much like present programing of WTCN, which he praised. Fransen said decisions about popular programs would come next year. "The matinee movie will not be on, of course," he said, "but Mel Jass, the host, will be retained on the staff and given other assignments.

He also does a lot of commercials." No decision has been made about the Merv Griffin show, which is produced by Metromedia; WTCN now runs it from 8 to 9:30 p.m. Kriven said it is not unusual for Metromedia to sell programs it produces or syndicates to its stations' competitors; conceivably, some of the programs now seen on Ch. 11 could wind up on Ch. 9. Fransen said the network runs from 7 a.m.

to 3 p.m., then 7 to 10 p.m. followed by the "Tonight" and "Tomorrow" programs. Stations do not have to run all the network's programs, but they're paid for running commercials on network programs, and insert local advertis- rough up no one other than legitimate family members. The bridegroom's mother, played by Nina Van Pallandt, seems to have a drug habit. The bride, played by Amy Stryker, still has braces on her teeth.

Someone discovers that the bride's sister, played by Mia Farrow, is pregnant, and the father-to-be is none other than the bridegroom, played by Desi Arnaz Jr. Toward the end there are twists involving some violence. self. NBC By Neal Gendler Staff Writer NBC has chosen WTCN to be its new Twin Cities affiliate. Selection of the independent station, announced Friday, will leave KMSP, Ch.

9, without a network. KMSP took ABC from WTCN 1961. NBC's decision, made after a month of deliberation, was necessitated by KSTP's move from NBC, with which it always has been affiliated, to ABC. That change is to occur March 5, while the NBC move to WTCN, Ch. 11, will be about March 15, NBC said.

Ray Timothy, NBC executive vice president for affiliate relations, said, "We decided WTCN is the better station and would provide us a better KMSP manager Don Swartz said he was stunned, but added, "In this world of network politics, you never know what's behind every deal that's being made." NBC would reveal little about WTCN's appeal over KMSP. NBC officials visited both stations last month, and favorably considered performance of WTCN and its owning firm, Metromedia. Apparently WTCN's facilities, built four years ago in Golden Valley at a cost of $6 million, also contributed. KMSP is in a modern but less elaborate Edina building. Al Krivin, a senior vice president of Metromedia, said from his office in Los Angeles that he thought the reason was simple.

"We're broadcasters. We operate seven television stations," all but one independent, "and we operate them well." News, an element in ABC's decision to leave KMSP, could show the greatest change as a result of the affiliation changes. If promises are kept, all four commercial stations could enter heavy news competition; for years, WCCO and KSTP have worked hard for top news ratings, while KMSP has run a distant third and WTCN has programed less news than the others and stayed out of the 10 p.m. fray by running its news at 9:30. "We plan no cutback in our news Altman, working partly from scripts, partly through improvisation, brought off the film by keeping the party rolling for nine weeks in a wealthy Chicago suburb on the shore -of Lake Michigan.

It's not Altman at his very best, but there are still plenty of delicious detail and tumult to keep the faithful happy. Healthy haze Monday's "People" show (7:30 p.m., Ch. 4) promises a strange story about the national launching of a 10-man rock group from the Twin Cities called Crystal Haze. Harry and Lee Geissler, Delaware promoters who got rich with Farrah Fawcett-Majors and "Star Wars" T- shirts and such merchandise, decided that their Factors Etc. company should go into the music promotion business.

They envisioned a new form called honest rock featuring a healthy, clean-living band that wouldn't get pooped after a 45-minute set but would give the customers several hours of concert for their $15 tickets. So for several months, Crystal Haze has been confined to a kind of combination summer camp, health club, music studio and rehearsal-hall compound at Bear, jogging and working out each morning and rehearsing the music all afternoon. CBS sent a "People" crew there to spend the better part of a week filming the musicians' routine. Crystal Haze has recorded an album, and H. Lee Geissler says its release will be timed to coincide with the "People" hoopla next week.

Band members are Willie Ternoir and Sonny Knight, vocals; Soli Hughes, guitar; Paul Johnson, bass; Peter Johnson, keyboards; Dag Dupre, trumpet and congas; Dany Crosser, trombone and piano; Gary McKean, trumpet and flugelhorn; Bob Hagglund, trombone and flute; Stephen Powers, drums, and Roger Egge, engineer. as new ing around them. Showing network programs means fewer spaces for local commercials than local programs offer, but network programs frequently deliver the largest audiences, and commercial time around big-audience programs commands top rates. Swartz said KMSP probably would not be hurt in dollar volume, because only about $1 million of a Twin Cities station's revenue comes from networks. "It's the smallest percentage of the total revenue of the station," he said, adding that $2.9 million of the four Twin Cities TV stations' aggregate 1977 revenues of $48 million came from networks.

Without the network, he said, station rates may fall but space for local commercials will jump. "You buy audience, whether affiliated or independent," said Ken Oelschlager, a managing partner of Carmichael-Lynch advertising agency. affiliate "In the main, I believe with the exception of news, people watch programs, not stations," he said. "Ch. 11 has just as good or maybe the strongest independent operation in the United States.

It has great strength. But Ch. 11, like Ch. 9, has not built any strength in the news side. "Building an audience takes years," he said." State zoo to alter hoursbecause days shorter United Press International The Minnesota Zoological Garden in Apple Valley will begin limiting its regular visiting hours Sunday to coincide with the beginning of shorter daylight hours.

Visiting hours at the zoo will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. seven days of the week through next April. ADDITIONAL OBITUARIES AND FUNERALS 5 Obituaries and Funerals 5 Obituaries and Funerals Obituaries and Funerals Bloch William age 78, of Mpis. on Friday.

Survived by wife, Agnes; son, Alien of 4 grandchildren. Services Monday 11 AM at (South Chapel), 1825 Chicago Av. Interment Glen Haven Memorial Gardens. Friends may call from 6 to 8 PM on Sunday. Memorials may be directed to the cancer fund.

Cordes Carl age 85, of 11400 Normandale Rd. Survived by wife Clara sisters, Sophia Miller, San Diego, Olga Linder, Bloomington, Erna Schmidt Lillian Goodlund, both of Funeral service Sunday 3 PM Werness Brothers Funeral Chapel, 2300 W. Oid Shakopee Rd. Services will be under the Auspices of Bloomington Lodge AF AM. Friends may call al Chapel 1 hour previous to service.

Interment Fort SnellNalional Cemetery. If 50 desired, memorials may be directed to donor's choice. Crawford Charlie, age 52, of 5101 W. 70th St. Survived by wife, Opal; sons, Don, Charlotte, NC, Paul, Bloomington, Tony.

Lexington, KY; daughter, Gayle Nelson, mother, Pearl Crawford, Evansville, IN; 3 grandsons. Services Mon. 10 am at Morris Nilsen Chapel, 6527 Portland Av. S. Interment Fort Sneiling.

Visilation Sun. 6-8 pm. Katharine Densford, res. 853 W. Nebraska St.

Paul, Sept. 28th. Survived by 5 nieces. In 1930 she was appointed Professor Director of the University of Minnesota School of Nursing, a position she held until her retirement in 1959. Services 1 pm Mon.

at St. Paul's United Church of Christ, 900 Summit St. Paul. Interment Acacia Park Cemetery. Friends may call from 2-5 pm Sun.

at Listoe Wold Chapel, 531 S. Snelling St. Paul. Memorials preferred to Katharine Densford Dreves Scholarship Fund, University of Minnesota, Mpis. or the doner's choice.

Holman Stanley age 74, res. 16 Inner Drive, St. Paul, passed away Sept. 28th. Survived by brother-in-law, Everett Bopp, Seattle, WA; niece, Mrs.

Elizabeth Brumbaugh, Bellevue, WA. Graveside services of cremains Tues. Oct. 2nd, 11 am at Lakewood Cemetery with memorial services 1 pm at Gethsemane Episcopal Church, 905 4th Av. S.

Arrangements WelanderQuist (South Chapel), 1825 Chicago Av. No reviewal or visitation. Keefe Msgr. George Sept. 29th, age 83, of Regina Residence, Hastings.

Complete notice later. Arrangements O'Halloran Murphy, 698-0796. Shore Roger age 57, of 2119 70th Av. Brooklyn Center. Survived by wite, Eunice, daughters, Linda Holland Diane Cossette; sister, Lorraine.

Services Mon. 10:30 am at the Malone Funeral Home, Fremont at Lowry N. Interment Fort Snelling National Cemetery. Reviewal after 4 pm Sun. Member of the I.B.E.W.

292, Veteran of Foreign Wars, Clarence LaBelle Post 217 American Legion Westphal Post 251. Sullivan John age 67, of Beigrade, MN. Sept. 29. Survived by wife Irene; 5 daughters; 2 sons; Gene of Metrose, Dennis, of St.

Cloud, Mrs. Stewart (Kathy) Laird of LaCrosse, Mrs. Jeff (Carol) Berg of Mrs. Jeff (Nancy) Gibson of Fort Campbell, Mrs. Mike (Mary) Rieland of Meirose, Connie of Sauk Centre; 1 brother, Leo of Belle Plaine, MN; 1 sister, Mrs.

George Donovan of Lee Centre. Services Mon. 10:30 am, St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church, Belgrade, MN. Visitation Johnson Funeral Home in Belgrade 2-9 pm Sun.

Parish prayers Sun. eve. 8 pm. Interment Church Cemetery. Memorials preferred to the Human Life Center, St.

John's Univ. St. Cloud, MN.

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