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The San Francisco Examiner from San Francisco, California • 14

Location:
San Francisco, California
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

lic 57 52 57 B2 S.F. EXAMINER Dec. 12, 1981 Bay Area forecast A Today A Tomorrow Fair Overcast Fog Wind Drizzle Rain Today and tomorrow Clearing tonight. Mostly fair tomorrow. Highs 50s and low 60s today and upper 506 to mid 60s tomorrow.

Lows to mid 40s. Light southerly winds. Chance of measurable rain 40 percent today. Sunday through Tuesday Mostly fair except partly cloudy in the north about Tuesday with a few showers over the Sierra Nevada tapering off Wednesday. Widespread locally dense fog inland valleys.

Snow level near 7.000 feet. Near normal temperatures with highs in the 50s and 60s and lows 111 the 30s and 40s at lower elevations. VALLEYS Clearing tonight and mostly fair tomorrow. Patchy night and morning fog. Highs 50s to low 605 today and upper 50s to mid 60s tomorrow.

Lows in the upper 30s to mid 40s. Light winds. SANTA CLARA VALLEY Clearing tonight. Mostly fair tomorrow. Highs upper 305 to mid 60s.

Lows in the 30s and low 405. Temperatures Yesterday Marin Oak Rdwd Yesterday Marin Oak Adwd Yesterday Marin Oak Adwd S.F Cntr Arpet Cly S.F. Cntr Arpri Cty S.F. Cntr Arprt Cty mm mm mm mm 3p 55 57 56 mm mm mm 4p 55 57 56 59 mm mm 5p 544 56 54 55 Special San Francisco report High this year to date: 89 on April 29 Yesterday's high 55, low 50 Low this season to date: 47 on Nov. 27 Normal for date High 57, low 48 Sea level pressure at 4 a.m.: 30.07 in.

NORTHERN CALIF CALIFORNIA Hi Lo Prec Mi Lo Prec Today's forecast, Marysvie 57 mm Reno M4 21 Lo Hi Lo Prec Monrovia 66 48 Sacto 57 8 59 51 Apie V' 65 40 Monterey 58 40 Saunas 60 35 Oakiand 61 48 Beers id 30 Needles SanBrardno 63 45 Redwood City 63 47 Barstow 65 48 Nwort8ch 64 San Jose 59 8 San Jose 45 Beaumont 67 45 Oakland 60 SntaAna 68 53 Concord 45 shop 57 PimSorngs 57 SntaBbra 62 Livermore 57 43 Blythe 71 Pasdna 65 19 SniaCruz 66 40 53 Santa Rosa 57 45 Catalina 65 PasoRDis 60 33 SntaMaria mm 36 Monterey 57 50 Euren a 56 39 Riverside 61 47 SntaMnica mm mm Lake Tahoe 25 Fresno 8 Red Bluff 55 40 Stockton 59 32 Yosemite 57 35 Long Ben 56 49 RedwoCt mm 42 TahoeVly 48 22 denotes readings not taken Satellite photograph Yesterday's 2 15 m. photo shows a weakening low pressure area with precipitation moving northeastward towards Northern California. Another low pressure area is moving eastward towards California. Subtropical middle and high clouds are turning eastward across Southern California. Regional forecast NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA Chance of showers ending this evening then tonight SACRAMENTO VALLEY Clearing tonight, then mostly fair tomorrow Locally tonight and tomorrow morning.

Highs in the 50s. Lows In the upper 30s to mid SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY Locally dense tog tonight and tomorrow morning. Highs to low 60s. Lows upper 30s to upper 40s. Light winds MONTEREY BAY AREA Cleaning tonight and fair tomorrow.

Patchy morning 50s, lows 40s SALINAS VALLEY Fair tonight and tomorrow. Patchy night and morning tog. 50s to near 70. Lows 30s to low 40s SIERRA NEVADA Scattered rain likely of rain as tar south as Yosemite Snow south. Showers tapering off late tonight Lake Tahoe area north this evening with above 6,000 feet in the north to 8,000 and tomorrow morning.

LATEST 936-1212 Marine 876-2886 Funerals deURIOSTE. Adolfo GALLI, Anne M. (nee: Foley) KARESH. Eleanor R. PAUTIN.

Hemillano SLOAN, Charles W. (Chuck) VOLPONE, Adeline deURIOSTE, Adolfo In this city. Dec 10. 1981. dearly beloved husband of Mary Kathryn deUnoste: beloved father of George Adoito deUnoste, Elita Rausch.

Anita Ormsby and Rostta Wraith, son of the late George Adolfo and Hannah Barry de Unoste; Idolized grandfather of George Adolto. Carmelita and Douglas deUnoste, Elisa, Richard, Celia Mary and Michael Rausch, Jonn, Joseph and Robert Ormsby, James, Matthew and Charles Adolph Wraith. dear brother-in-law of Martha Shankland and Margaret Sherwood, born March 12. 1897 In San Francisco, Friends may attend the RoSary at 3 p.m Sunday. Dec 13 at the memorial chapels of CAREW AND ENGLISH.

Masonic at Golden Gate Ave A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered on Monday, Dec 14 at 10 a.m at St Agnes Church, Masonic Ave near Page Street interment. Holy Cross Cemetery GALLI, Anne M. (nee: Foley) December 10, 1981, loving wife of the late George Galli, beloved sister of the late St Mary Regis, ND. loving aunt of Judge T. Lester Foley, a retired pubschool teacher.

a native of S.F Friends may call after 12 noon Saturday Rosary Sunday at 7.30 m. Valet parking Funeral Monday at 9.30 a.m. from the memorial Chapels of CAREW ENGLISH. Masonic at Golden Gate Ave, thence to St Ignatius Church where a Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 10 Interment Golden Gate Natonal Cemetery Contributions to St Anthony's Dining Room preferred Edgar Kaiser National forecast NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 AM EST. 12-13-81 3000.

30.00 SEATTLE COLD BOSTON (LOW NEW YORK FREEZING 30 24 CHICAGO FRANCISCO DENVER MIGN SAN LOS ANGELES CATLANTA LOWEST DALLAS TEMPERATURES 20 NEW MIAMI 32 ORLEANS LEGEND 32 RAIN SNOW 50 AIR 50 72 SHOWERS FLOW UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST Tonight, snow is expected In the northern Rockies, while generally fair weather is indicated elsewhere across the nation. Travelers' forecast Hi Lo Wea Hi Lo Wea Hi Lo Wea Atlanta 47 Las Vegas 65 Cidy Pittsburgh 32 23 Cidy 48 35 Cidy 42 Pcidy 35 25 Cidy Boston 37 25 Snow LosAngeles 70 55 Portland, Or 45 34 Cidy 39 27 Sunny 68 57 Pcidy 47 36 Pcidy Chicago 33 25 Pcidy MiamiBch 70 56 Pcidy Reno 49 24 Cidy 35 20 Pcidy 73 62 Pcidy 47 24 Pcidy Dallas 50 42 Cidy Minneaplis 31 25 Snow St.Louis 39 28 Cidy 50 46 Rain 28 10 Cidy 42 30 Cidy Denver 46 22 Cidy Nashville 42 29 Pcidy Tampa 58 54 Pcidy 41 18 Cidy 48 32 Pcidy 67 56 Pcidy Detroit 33 22 Cidy NwOrleans 66 46 Rain SaltLake 48 35 Pcidy 36 20 Cidy 64 45 Rain 43 26 Shwrs Honolulu mm mm Pcidy NewYork 42 29 Pcidy SanDiego 68 58 Cidy mm mm Pcidy 45 32 Sunny 67 58 Pcidy Houston 73 45 Cidy Philadiphia 38 22 Pcidy Seattle 44 32 Sunny 60 44 Rain 40 21 Sunny 45 35 Sunny KansasCity 39 30 Cidy Phoenix 73 51 Pcidy Washngton 45 30 Sunny 41 30 Cidy 70 47 44 31 Sunny Weather elsewhere EUROPE AFRICA Hi Lo Wthr Hi Lo Wthr Hi Lo Prec ASIA SO. AMERICA Jersim 63 39 cir Tel Aviv 66 46 cir MxicoCty 70 41 Noon GMT yesterday Jo'burg 66 50 cdy Tokyo 45 36 rn Montrry 88 57 Hi Lo Wthr Kiev 34 23 cdy Vienna 39 29 cdy Nassau 68 57 Amstrdm 37 28 cdv Lima 72 65 cir MEXICO CARIBBEAN SnJuan 78 mm 26 Athens 68 54 cdy Lisbon 64 55 rn Yesterday's readings St. Kitts mm mm Bngkok 84 77 cir London 34 sn Hi Lo Prec, Tegcgaipa 73 59 Beirut 71 cir Madrid 59 48 cdy Acapulco 90 72 Trinidad 88 75 08 Bigrade 52 41 cdy Manila 86 72 cdy Barbados 87 77 Vera Crz 75 mm .20 Berlin 34 21 cdy Moscow 27 23 cdy Bermuda 60 52 .26 Bogota 66 36 cdy NwDelhi 75 49 cir Bogota 63 mm CANADA Brussels 34 sn Nicosia 68 45 cir Curacao 85 75. .08 Yesterday's readings B' Aires 86 60 cir Osio 18 16 sn Freeport 66 51 Hi Lo Prec Cairo 72 50 cir Paris 43 39 cdy Guadliara 75 41 Calgry 32 18 Copnhgn 28 23 sn Rio 77 70 cdy Guadiope 88 78 Edmntn 25 03 Dublin 35 25 cdy Rome 61 52 cdy Havana 70 66 Montri 34 25 3.6 Frankirt 36 28 sn Singpr 82 75 rn Kingston 85 70 Ottawa 34 23 4 Geneva 45 41 rn Stckhim 21 16 cdy MontgoBy 77 68 Regina 18 10 Helsinki 14 3 cir Sydney Maztin mm mm Tornto 28 21 HngKng 70 55 cir Taipei 68 59 cdy Merida 87 50 Vancovr 43 32 Winpeg 30 23 1.3 denotes readings not taken.

Road conditions To 10 a.m. Yesterday Route Condition Comments North Open South. Open Lane closures at various locations. Donner Open Carry chains US-50, Echo Open Some icy spots. Carry chains US-101, North Open CAL-36 Open Some icy spots CAL-88, Carson Pass Some icy spots.

Carry chains. CAL-89, Lake Tahoe Open Some icy spots. Carry chains. CAL-120, Yosemite Open Icy spots West Bdry. to Yosemite Valley.

information supplied by CalTrans. Mountain winter conditions change rapidly, motorists should always carry chains Sun and moon Sun Today Moon Today Rises 7:17 a.m. Rises 7:45 p.m. Sets 4:51 p.m. Sets 9:36 a.m.

Sun Tomorrow Moon Tomorrow Rises 7:17 a.m. Rises 8:52 p.m. Sets 4.51 p.m. Sets 10:28 a.m. Full Last Qtr.

New First Qtr. Jan. 9 Dec. 17 Dec. 26 Jan.

2 11:53 a.m. 9.47 p.m. 2:10 a.m 8:45 p.m 876-0111 Road conditions 557-3755. 14. 1981 at 8:30 a.m.

from the Chapels of VALENTE-MARINIPERATA CO, 4840 Mission thence to Mission Dolores Church where a Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 9 a.m. Interment, Holy Cross Cemetery. Rosary Sun. 7. 7:30 pm 333-0161 Cemeteries-Lots clearing late dense fog 40s.

in the 50s tog Highs Highs upper a chance feet in the Aviation SPOUSES Beautiful expanded area Pre-need reservations avail. FOR ALL FAITHS. WOODLAWN Memorial Colma-inspection Invited 755-1727 NEPTUNE SOCIETY A Beautiful Alternative To The Costly, Involved Funeral-Cemetery System Pre-Death Arrangements Made Immediate HELP Call FREE Literature Call 771-0717 680 Beach Street, SF 94109 DIRECT CREMATION Arrangements by 632-3377 Skyview Memorial Lawn Se Serving Bay Area from Vallejo BYRGAN SOCIETY $345 COMPLETE SF441-4699 Burl 343-5511 Edgar Fosburgh Kaiser, a California rarity, a homegrown industrial titan who successfully challenged the Eastern establishment, has died here at 73. He succumbed yesterday to complications from long-term ailments at the University of California Medical Center's Moffitt Hospital Starting as a teenager, helping in his father's sand and gravel business, Mr. Kaiser retired about a year ago with the titles of chairman emeritus and honorary director of the five residual corporate components of a Western empire that the late Henry J.

Kaiser and his son had fashioned during the wrenching middle years of this century. The Kaiser Foundation Health Plan and Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, spawned by Mr. Kaiser's interest 1 in employee health, today stand with Kaiser Aluminum Chemical, Kaiser Cement and Kaiser Steel Corps. as independent stockholder firms, operating in the United States and more than 50 foreign countries. For 20 years before the corporate dispersement, Mr.

Kaiser commanded these and varied related activities. He had noted: "We must make our investment of heart and soul as surely as we make our investment of money. Our returns must be in terms of people, their aspirations, their hopes and ideals as much as on the balance sheet." Mr. Kaiser, winner of the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1969 for his efforts to expand housing for low- and moderate income families, served four Democratic presidents. Some of his prodigious energy went to Oakland and Bay Area civic affairs.

He led a United Crusade drive, served as president of the Bay Area Council. as a trustee of the Oakland Stadium and Coliseum Corp. and battled in the public meeting halls of the region for a regional authority to operate bridges, ports and airports and for rapid transit. He was born in Spokane, where his father ran a small paving firm. Mr.

Kaiser attended high school in Oakland, working for his father's company after school. He attended the University of California at Berkeley for years, majoring in economics, and left in 1930 to work on a gas pipeline project in Kansas as his restless father scratched around for fresh challenges. In succeeding joint ventures, Kaiser companies engaged in the biggest construction projects in the history of the West Boulder Dam, Bonneville Dam. Grand Coulee Dam and Mr. Kaiser, before he was 30.

was serving as vice president of Consolidated Builders Inc. He played a major part in building Grand Coulee's powerhouse and supplemental structures. In World War Il. Kaiser ingenuity was applied to shipbuilding. Mr.

Kaiser managed the Kaiser shipyards in Portland, and Vancouver, producing hundreds of vessels and winning Portland's First Citizen award. Searching in the postwar period to apply the mass production techniques and marketing skills acquired on its construction and wartime projects, the Kaisers, father and son, embarked upon the peacetime ventures that became a -dollar empire over the last 35 years. Among these was Mr. Kaiser's fling at automobile manufacture. which began with buying Graham-Paige Motor Co.

stock in 1946 and included acquisition of the famous British Willys Overland Engine Co. in 1953. Mr. Kaiser, heading the auto operation with a major assembly line at Willow Run, outside Detroit, produced the first small, inexpensive American car, the Henry J. It boasted a Willys Overland engine, but the motoring public, enjoying cheap gasoline and general prosperity, favored the larger, luxurious styles of older firms.

In 1958, Kaiser Motors was reorganized, along with some of the other post-war enterprises, into Kaiser Indus tries. Mr. Kaiser was its president, with Curtis Roberts Curtis Roberts, a wry do gooder and publicist who brought the auction to public television as a fund-raising device and who helped elect two San Francisco mayors and a U.S. Senator, was found dead in his apartment here yesterday, the apparent victim of chronic emphysema. He was 68.

The Public Broadcasting Service presented him with a special award in 1979 in gratitude for introducing the concept of an auction as a fund-raising device. Now, widely employed by public TV stations around the nation, Roberts launched the system at station KQED here in 1955. A year later, he led the statewide campaign to defeat the right to work initiative espoused by the late U.S. Republican Senator William F. Knowland of Oakland.

He managed the Northern California campaign that elected Thomas Kuchel to the U.S. Senate in 1962. He managed the successful election campaigns of San Francisco mayors John F. Shelley in 1963 and Joseph L. Alioto in 1967.

A native of Oakland, he was graduated from Oakland High School and the University of California at Berkeley, where he was active in little theater. He worked as a radio announcer for a time, sharing salad day experiences with Ralph Edwards and Art Linkletter until he entered the advertising business with the firm Gross, Roberts, Rockey. In the 1940s he managed promotion for the San Francisco Community Chest drives, forerunner of the Bay Area United Crusade campaigns. His fund-raising efforts were rewarded by the Girl Scouts in 1945 by designation as an honorary member. He was 1970 president of the Stepping Stone recovery program for female alcoholics and in 1972 managed the campaign against the so-called Watson initiative to change assessment prac- EDGAR KAISER West Coast tycoon headquarters in the $40 million new Kaiser Center tower in downtown Oakland.

His father retired to his estate in Hawaii and died in 1967. Mr. Kaiser became a director of Bank of America and was a director emeritus and past chairman of SRI International. Know-how from his auto-building days went into a hydroplane hobby, which produced the Hawaii Kai Ill. winner of the Sahara Cup at Lake Mead.

Mr. Kaiser donated $100,000 toward the new Stanford University Medical Center, among countless charities to which he contributed over the years as he lent his attention and interest by serving as chairman of the Oakland Symphony Assocation, director of the San Francisco Opera Association, trustee and former chairman of the Bay Area Council, member of the New Oakland Committee and the Advisory Board of the Oakland Museum Association. President John F. Kennedy called upon Mr. Kaiser to serve on the Missile Sites Labor Commission and the Committee on Equal Employment Presidnt Lyndon Johnson had Mr.

Kaiser head the Committee on Urban Housing and his Advisory Committee on Labor Management Policy. President Gerald Ford appointed him to the Advisory Committee on Refugees and President Jimmy Carter named him to the Advisory Committee on National Health Insurance Issues. Mr. Kaiser's concept of pre-paid medical care, which he evolved while on the Grand Coulee Dam project. established a pattern for health insur ance programs the last two genera tions.

His enlightened approach to labor negotiations during a threatened steel worker strike in 1961 brought him the wrath of other steelmakers, momentar ily, but was credited with avoiding much friction late on. Essentally a bright, inquisitive man. imbued with the optimism of his more flamboyant father. Mr. Kaiser was voted "Industrialist of The Year" 11) 1966 by the California Museum of Science and Industry.

He was chosen "Construction Man of the Year" by Engineering News- Report in 1968, and "Manufacturer of The Year" in 1976 by the California Manufacturers Associa tion. The World Trade Club bestowed on him its "International Achievement Award" in 1975 and Coro Foundation gave him a public affairs award in 1979. He was a recipient of the Hoover Medal and the Beavers' Award. He leaves his wife, Nina: sons, Edgar F. owner of the Denver Broncos professional football team.

Henry Mead of Oakland and Kim John of Washington State: daughters Mrs. Franklin Stark of Oakland, Mrs. Martin Drobac of Santa Cruz and Mrs. Wallace Gudgell of Washington State; and 20 grandchildren. Times, heights of tides at Golden Gate Dec High Low 12 12:40 5.2 5:12 2.6 11:25 7.1 6:09 13 1:33 5.3 6:04 2.8 12:13 6.8 6:57 14 2:25 5.3 7:01 2.9 1:05 6.4 7:49 Tidal difference San Mateo Bridge 39 min.

high, 74 min. low. leet high. feet low Richmond 21 min. high; 29 min.

low, feet high, 00 leet low Dumbarton Bridge 48 min. high, 87 min low, 2.7 feet high. 0.1 teet low Carquinez Strait 114 min. high. 136 min low.

teet high, -0 1 feet low. Weather broadcast 162.55 MHz Maurice S. Argent Maurice S. Argent, former teacher at Lowell High School here and a popular local actor, is dead at the age of 65. Mr.

Argent died Monday at Kaiser Hospital. At his request, no funeral services will be held for the Allentown, Pa. native who came to San Francisco in 1951. Mr. Argent was a graduate of University of Washington and during World I was a first lieutenant and director of USO shows in Italy.

He taught English at Lowell for more than two decades and was a member of The Actor's Workshop, predecessor of the American Conservatory Theater here. Playing the part of Willie Loman in a local production of Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman" was a highlight of Mr. Argent's acting career. He also had a leading role in a production of Clifford Odets' comedy "Flowering Peach" in which his "striking and remarkable portrayal" of Noah caused former Examiner drama critic Hortense Morton to hail Mr. Argent as "one of the finest actors in Bay Area little theater circles." His other acting credits include several appearances on the television series "Streets of San Francisco." Survivors include his wife.

Blanche, a son. Stefan of Campbell; a daughter, Leslie Epstein of Los Angeles, and four grandchildren. tices. A short, trim, handsome chap with a keen eye for the upside of situations and a persuasive, confidential manner. he moved largely in Democratic Party circles, though he managed New York Gov.

Nelson Rockefeller's ill starred. last-minute attempt to win the California Republican presidential primary in 1964. Mr. Roberts was an avid fly fisher man, tied his own flies and participated in a number of conservation issues. He was a member of the Press Club and the Green Hills Country Club.

He is survived by a son, Dr. David Roberts, a clinical psychologist, and a brother, Walter, both of Oakland. A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 19 at St.

Stephens Church, Belvedere. KARESH, Eleanor R. In this City. Dec 10. 1981, Eleanor Karesh; beloved wife of Abe Karesh.

loving sister of Dr. Henry and Dr Alvin Rittenberg of Charleston, C. and the late Julia Brewer. step-sister of Jack Pearlstine of Columbia, S.C Services will be held Sunday, 11.30 a.m. at SINAI MEMORIAL CHAPEL, Divisadero St at Geary Contributions to your favorite charity preferred.

PAUTIN. Hemiliano In Oakland, Dec. 4, 1981; beloved husband of Elizabeth; adored son of Cipnana and the late Anstacio; loved brother of Rudy, Reny, Diokno, Tony. Rogel, Grittie. Henry, Susan and Lolit; a native of Capas Tarlac, PI; aged 47 years: disabled Navy veteran of Viet Nam Friends may call after 8 a.m Saturday and are invited to attend the funeral Monday at 930 a.m.

from the Chapels of CO, 4840 Mission thence to Corpus Christi Church where a Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 10 am Interment. Holy Cross Cemetery. Rosary Sunday 4 p.m, 333-0161 SLOAN, Charles W. (Chuck) Dec. 10, 1981, beloved husband of Bernice Sloan.

devoted stepfather of David Berosh, loving grandfather of Natasha Berosh, a native of Boston. Mass. aged 64 yrs. a 36 year member of Hotel and Restaurant Employees Union Local maitre de of SF Giants Stadium Club for 16 years Services Saturday afternoon 5 o'clock at HALSTED-N. GRAY CO 4000 19th.

Ave at Sargent HALSTED-N. GRAY CO Complimentary Parking VOLPONE, Adeline M. At rest. Dec. 10, 1981; dearly beloved wife of the late Henry (Enrico) Voipone; idolized mother of Georgette Scardina, loving sister of Theresa Nassarre, Claire Paradiso and Dorothy Ist.

survived by nieces, nephews and cousins, a native of S.F. Friends may call after 1 p.m. Saturday and are invited to attend the funeral Monday, Dec. Funeral Directors N. GRAY CO.

1123 4000 19th Ave. SF 673-3000 24 Hrs. All Services Itemized Valente Marini Perata Co. 4840 Mission SF 333-0161 In Memoriam HOCTOR. Ed Memories of the way we were.

If you are looking for bottles, bats, bells. brooms, bird cages, batteries, blankets, barber chairs. beer kegs, baby sitters, Beagles, they're all in the Want Ad Phone 777-7777 At least 2 killed in copter crash LAKESIDE, San Diego County (AP) At least two people were killed yesterday after a helicopter crashed onto Highway 8 in east San Diego County. It apparently had hit three power lines, authorities said. Deputy Coroner Robert Grubb said two people were reported dead and because the helicopter burned after crashing there was a possibility more bodies could be found.

Highway Patrol service desk operator Debbie Russell said a one-mile stretch of highway was closed to rushhour traffic because of the burning wreckage and because power lines went down on the highway's frontage road. Downing of the power lines left about 1,600 customers without power in the Lakeside and Lake Jennings area, said San Diego Gas Electric Co. spokesman Maurice Luque. He said substations at Barrett Junction and Loveland also failed because of the crash..

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