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Santa Cruz Sentinel from Santa Cruz, California • Page 10

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Santa Cruz, California
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10
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Vital Statistics It Santi Crui Sentinel Monday, March 19, 1973 Lauritz Melchior Succumbs At 83 Ex-Senator Benton, Britannica Chief, Dies BIRTHS Is I Milford, Michigan, and Louis Baal of Florida. Native if Trenton, New Jersey, aged 61 years, Services will be conducted at WESSENDORF AND HOLMES FUNERAL CHAPEL, 223 Church Street, Wednesday at 11:00 a.m. Rev. Neil Carlsen officiating. Friends may call at Wessendorf and Holmes Funeral Chapel, 223 Church Street, from 9 :00a.m.

to 9 :00 p.m. on Monday and Tuesday. Interment in Oakwood Memorial Park. 31966 NEARY -fn Santa Cruz, March 18, 1973. Miss Alice Margaret Neary, survived by numerous cousins and very close friends, Mr.

and Mr. John Mahoney of Cupertino, Calif. Native of California, aged 15 years. Member of Holy Cross Church. Miss Neary was the daughter of one of Santa Cruz' oldest families.

Her father operated a general store in Santa Cruz in tht Recitation of the Rosary will be at WESSENDORF AND HOLMES FUNERAL CHAPEL, 223 Church 8.00 p.m. Tuesday. Funeral services will be conducted from Wessendorf and Holmes Chapel on Wednesday at 8:45, thence to the Santa Cruz Mission where a mass for the repose of the soul will be said. Entombment at Holy Cross Mausoleum. Friends may call at Wessendorf and Holmes Chapel from 9:00 a.m.

until 9:00 p.m. Monday and Tuesday. 3-19-66 I'lieonp you would call, if yuii knew them all." 223 Church St. 423-4725 NEW YORK (AP) Former U.S. Sen.

William Benton of Connecticut, president and chairman of the board of Encyclopaedia Britannica, dead at 72. Benton, who had been recuperating" after being hospitalized for five weeks with pneumonia, died Sunday at his apartment. While serving as U.S. senator from Connecticut from 1949 to 1953, Benton introduced a resolution denouncing Sen. Joseph McCarthy, and calling for the expulsion of the anti-Communist crusader.

Benton was a cofounder of the Benton and Bowles advertising agency in 1926. When he sold his interest nine years later, the agency had grown into the sixth largest in the world. He was named vice president of the University of Chicago in 1935 and in 1943 he put up to purchase Ecncyclopaedia Britannica from Sears, Roebuck Co. He helped form the Committee for Economic Development for the rebuilding of Europe in 1942 and later served as secretary of state for public affairs in the Truman administration, organizing the Voice of America broadcasts and aiding in the establishment of the United Nations Educational, William Benton SANTA MONICA. Calif.

(AP) Lauritz Melchior, the durable, Danish-born tenor who became one of the top Wagene-rian heroic tenors of all time, is dead at 83. Melchior died at St. John's Hospital here Sunday. He earlier had undergone surgery for a gall bladder ailment, a hospital spokesman said. An authentic member of the so-called "Golden Age of Operatic Singers," Melchior more than held his own with the most noted Kirsten Flagstad, Helen Traubel and Set Svanholm, to name a few.

He had been inactive in music circles for several years prior to his death. Melchior's endurance was and from 1926 to 1950, his giant voice rang like a clarion call over the surging orchestral scores of the murderous Richard Wagner operas. The study heldentenor sang more than 1,000 operatic performancesmore than three times as many as any other Wagnerian singer including the roles of Tannhauser, Lohengrin, Siegfried, Tristan and Parsifal. In 1950 he left New York's Metropolitan Opera, when then-new general manager Rudolph Bing failed to sign the mountainous Melchoir forwhat would have been his silver anniversary season with the Met. Melchior a huge, jolly man who loved life shrugged his immense shoulders and went off on a string of concert dates across the country that kept him singing for several more years.

But from that date he lamented what he termed the lack of true heldentenors before the opera-going public. The true heroic tenor capable of standing up to Wagner's demanding epics, Melchior maintained, must be a big man physically, with a baritone voice that is boh sr 4and yet high enough to permit the addition of a tenor range on top of that. A tall order but the qualifications matched Melchior's own. Born March 20, 1890, in Copenhagen, Lauritz Lebracht Hommell Melchior grew into a baritone voice, a 6-foot-4 frame and a 225-pound body all of which, he insisted, only added to the muscle in his voice. He studied in Copenhagen and Munich, Germany, and made his operatic debut as a baritonein 1913.

To keep himself in godlike trim, Melchior ate heartily of steak dinners and nursed a lifelong devotion to Danish beer. During World War II, afraid that beer shipments might halt, he once stockpiled hundreds of cases of Danish beer, stashing them in the window seats of his eyrielike mansion, "The Viking," in the Santa Monica Mountains overlooking Los Angeles. A notorious practical joker, Melchior once removed a friend's priceless Stradivarius from its violin case and slipped in a cheap instrument; then, as the agonized owner looked on aghast, Melchior gleefully Ex-Scripps Editor Succumbs WASHINGTON (AP) -Walker Stone, who rose from copyreader on the old Washington Daily News to editor-in-chief of Scripps-Howard Newspapers, is dead at the age of 68. Stone, who retired four years ago, but still retained his post as chairman and president of the Scripps-Howard Foundation and as a director of the parent Scripps-Howard organization, succumbed to a heart. attack Sunday at his nearby country home.

He spent all of his 42 years in journalism with Scripps-Howard after taking his first job with the News, which was purchased last year by The Washington Star. Stone, a native of Okemah, came to Washington to study law and joined the News to finance that education. He decided, however, that he liked it enough to stay in the newspaper business. After spending eight years as a reporter and city editor of the paper, he became an editorial writer for all Scripps-Howard newspapers, and was named head of the Washington bureau. He traveled widely and interviewed many world leaders since the mid-1930s, including every chief of state of the Philippines since it became a Republic.

On the day China invaded Tibet, Stone was interviewing India's Prime Minister Jawahar-lal Nehru. Stone, since his retirement, has spent much of his time at his Woodville, 700-acre farm in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. He is survived by his widow, Donna; two daughters, Mrs. Allan Smith of Silver Spring, and Mrs. Sean Kilpa trick of Williamsburg, and three grandchildren.

No services are planned. The body will be cremated. Community Hospital MURRAY -March 3 at 4:54 a.m. to. Mr.

and Mrs Roger George Murray (Eileen Hartney), of Boulder Creek, a 7 pound, 4 ounce boy, Emerson. KNIGHT March at 3:36 a.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gary Knight (Maria Jean Hughes), of 6905 Freedom Aptos, a 6 pound, IS ounce girl, Rebecca Jean.

PALM March 6 at 10:50 p.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence August Palm (Mary Annette Gentry), of 25600 Mt. Charlie Road, Los Gatos, an I pound, II ounce boy, David Caleb.

CRAFT March 8 at 6:53 a.m. to Barbara Sue Lindsey and Ernest Ira Craft of 32 Grand View, Mt. Hermon, a 7 pound girl, Tamara Celeste. RUIZ March 8 at 1:52 p.m. to Mr.

and Mrs. Prudencio Herrera Ruiz (Olivia Molina Hernandez), of 3309 Axford Road, a 7-pound boy, Roberto Herrera. BOWE March 9 at 2:11 p.m. to Mr. and Mrs.

Michael Allen Bowe (Barbara Paulette Sieber), of 1852 Reinelt Ave, a 9 pound boy, Christopher Michael. WINEBRENNER March 12 at 9 18 a.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Larry Earl Winebrenner (Katharine Ellen Reel), of 2101 Felt a 7-pound, 11 ounce boy, Mark Earl.

Dominican Hospital HENRY Feb. 28 at 12:14 a.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Walter William Henry III (Mary Katherine Haynes), of 175 Archer Way, Ben Lomond, an 8 pound, 3 ounce girl, Ann Margaret.

STARN March I at 2:22 a.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Gary Donald Starn (Joy Lynn Castiglioni of 933 Columbus Drive, Capitola, a 7 pound, 1 ounce girl, Amy Marie. WENTWORTH-March I at 6:37 p.m.

to Mr. and Mrs. Frank DeAlten Wentworlh (Carolyn Irene Eicher), of 2502 Bean Creek Road, Scotts Valley, a 7 pound, 1 ounce girl, Cristina Michelle. WYNKOOP March 2 at 9:52 a.m. to Mr.

and Mrs. Kenneth Ivan Wynkoop (Bertha Dorene Hines), of 212 Avalon an 8 pound, 4 Vi ounce boy, Kyle Duane. IE RRO March 2 at 8 02 p.m. to Mr. and Mrs.

Paul Eladio Fierro (Margaret Ann Bettencowt), of 204 North Aplos, a 6 pound girl, Dira Marie. TORRES March 3 at 3:20 p.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Ruben Vasquez Torres (Cheri Diane Chaperon), of 2215 Preakness a 6 pound, 12 ounce boy, Andrew C.

RASMUSSEN March 3 at 5:57 m. to Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Dean Rasmussen (Kathleen Louise Gibson), of 119 Rathburn Way, a 6 pound, 5 ounce girl, Jennifer Ann. LITEKY March 3 at 8:52 p.m.

to Lauritz Melchior jumped on the case, crunching it to flinders. Melchior's career also included radio and television performances and two Hollywood movies "Thrill of a Romance" and "This Time for Keeps." He was married three times. His first wife, Inger Nathensen, by whom he had two children, lb and Birte, died in 1925. In 1926, in Munich, European film star Maria Hacker was making a parachute jump for a film when a strong wind blew her off-course and plopped her down at Melchior's feet. Melchior married her in 1927; she died in 1963.

The next year Melchior told newsmen: "I have lived alone for a year and I have not liked it. So I thought I should have a companion for my sunset years." At the age of 74, he married his 40-year-old former secretary, Mary Markham. Six months later she divorced him, changing cruelty. He is survived by his son lb of Los Angeles. And his daughter, Brite, of Copenhagen.

Funeral arrengements were Scientific and Cultural Organization Benton was born in Minneapolis, Minn, in 1900 and was graduated from Vale University in 1921. On graduation, he turned down a Rhodes Scholarship for a job as an advertising copywriter. Survivors include his widow, the former Helen Hemingway; four children and eight grandchildren. A memorial service will be held Wednesday at Trinity Parish Episcopal Church in Southport, Conn. Private cremation will follow.

State Forecasts Sons Of Two Famous Men Launch Political Careers MORTUARY Inc. KNOFF In Santa Cruz, March 17, 1973 Donie O. Knoff, survived by her husband, Frank A. Kfeoff of Scotts Valley; a son. Jack Raichart of Piedmont, two brothers, Miner Pruitt of Sacramento and Lyford Pruitt of Bakersfield; two sisters, Mrs.

Margie Ritzman of Daly City and Mrs. Artie Doug of Santa Cruz Also surviving are three grandchildren. Native of Texas, aged 75 years. Member of Ivy Chapter No. 27, Order of Eastern Star and the White Shrine of San Francisco.

Services will be conducted at White's Chapel, 138 Walnut Santa Cruz, Tuesday, March 20, 1973 at 11:00 a.m., with the Rev. Roy Kraft of the Twin Lakes Baptist Church, and Idlewild Chapter No. 19, Order of Eastern Star of Santa Cruz jointly officiating. Friends may call at White's Chapel from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

on Monday, March 19 and from 9 a.m. to service time on Tuesday. Friends are respectfully invited to attend Interment in Oakwood Memorial Park Cemetery. 31965 MARTIN In Santa Cruz, March 18, 1973. E.

W. "Jack" Martin, survived by his wife, Grace; two sons, Ray Martin of Montana, Roy Martin of Los Angeles; three daughters, Dorothy Rebuffo of Reno, Nevada, Alice Layher of Denver, Colorado, Betty Hendren of Santa Cruz. Also surviving are two sisters and seven grandchildren. Native of Missouri, aged 76 years. Services will be conducted at White's Chapel, 138 Walnut Santa Cruz, Tuesday, March 20, 1973 at 2:00 p.m., with Dr.

Roy Kraft of the Twin Lakes Baptist church officiating Friends are respcctifully invited to attend. Private committal will be held in 1.0. OF. Cemetery, Santa Cruz, Calif. Contributions may be made to the Heart Fund.

31965 i St rmix (ircali Santa Crui SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA -Showers tonight. Cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday. Highs in the 50s to low 60s. Lows in the 40s. Small craft advisory for southerly winds shifting to west and decreasing tonight.

Chance of rain 70 per cent tonight 40 per cent Tuesday. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL CALIFORNIA Rain northwest likely spreading to Point Sur Stockton and Yosemite northward. Rain turning' to showers tonight then cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday. Snow spreading southward in the mountains with snow level lowering to 2,500 feet north and 3,000 feet northern Sierra Nevada and to 5,000 feet southern Sierra Nevada tonight. Cooler Tuesday.

Gale warnings on coast north of Cape Mendocino and small craft advisory south to Point Sur. Locally windy elsewhere in the north. SACRAMENTO VALLEY Increasing cloudiness with rain spreading over the valley turning to showers tonight. Cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday and cooler. Highs mid 50s to low 60s and Tuesday in the 50s.

Lows In upper 30s to mid 40s. Souther wind decreasing tonight. SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY Increasing cloudiness with rain likely from near Stockton northward. Rain likely spreading to all of valley tonight then becoming cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday and cooler. High in upper 50s to mid 60s and Tuesday in the 50s to low 60s.

Lows in the 40s. Light winds becoming south to southeast 10 to 20 mph. NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA- Partly cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday. Cooler Tuesday. Snow level near feet in mountains lowering to near 2,500 feet tonight.

High Tuesday at Fort Bragg 50, Ukiah 52. Gale warning Cape Mendocino north for southerly winds 25 to 45 mph and small craft advisory to the south. SANTA MARIA, SAN LUIS OBISPO COASTAL AREA-Partly cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday. Cooler Tuesday. High Tuesday in the 50s to low 60s.

Lows tonight in the upper 30s to mid 40s. SALINAS VALLEY Chance of showers Tuesday. Cooler Tuesday. Highs Tuesday in the 50s to low 60s. Lows in upper 30s to mid 40s.

MOUNT SHASTA, SISKIYOU AREA Showers likely Tuesday. Cooler Tuesday. Snow level near feet lowering to near 2,500 feet. High Tuesday at Shasta Dam 46. Strong gusty southerly winds with local blowing and drifting snow.

SIERRA NEVADA Snow spreading to all of area tonight and continuing on and off through Tuesday. Colder Tuesday. Snow level lowering to near 3,000 feet north and 5,000 feet south. Wind in the north with local blowing and drifting snow. LAKE TAHOE BASIN-Snow showers continuing, off and on through Tuesday.

Cooler. Highs Tuesday in the 30s. Lows tonight in the mid teens and 20s. Gusty winds. Locally blowing and drifting snow.

SANTA CLARA VALLEY partly cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday. Cooler Tuesday. Highs Tuesday in the 50s to low 60s. Lows in the upper 30s to mid 40s. Gusty southerly winds 15 to 25 mph.

High Tuesday at San Jose 55, Hollister 55. LIVERMORE VALLE Y-Partly cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday. Cooler Tuesday. High Tuesday at Livermore 55. Southerly winds increasing to 15 to 30 mph.

DIABLO, SAN RAMON AND MORAGA VALLEY-Partly cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday. Cooler Tuesday. High Tuesday in the 50s to low 60s. Lows tonight in the upper 30s to mid NAPA AND SONOMA VALLEYS AND SANTA ROSA PLAIN-Partly cloudy with chance of showers Tuesday. Cooler Tuesday.

High Tuesday at Santa Rosa 53. Extended Forecasts WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, THROUGH FRIDAY, MARCH 23. CENTRAL CALIFORNIA Mostly fair weather. Slightly warming trend. Highest temperatures in the mid 50s to mid 60s Wednesday warming into 60s by Friday.

Lowest in the upper 30s and 40s. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA Rain at times through the period mainly north por-' tion. Slightly warming trend. Highest temperatures in the mid 50s to mid 60s Wednesday warming into the 60s by Thursday. Lowest in the upper 30s and 40s.

138 WALNUT AVENUE PHONE 423-4800 Tuesday Rites For Janet Townsend, 94 Janet Townsend, 94. former Scotts Valley and Santa Cruz resident, died Sunday at her home in Redwood City after a long illness. Born in Scotland, she lived most of here life in Californa, spending 64 years here. She and her husband, Robert R. Townsend, moved to Santa Cruz after his retirement.

They moved to Redwood City eight years ago. Also surviving in addition to her husband, is a son, Robert H. Townsend of San Gabriel; a daughter, Mary E. Rogers of Redwood City, and one granddaughter. She was a member of the Burlingame Presbyterian Church, and a past chief daughter of the the Daughters of Scotia Lodge of Santa Cruz.

Services will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the Carlmont Funeral Chapel in Belmont. Inurnment will be at Skylawn Memorial Park in San Mateo. GOP gathering. "That kind of spiked my interest enough to attend a caucus." But he added: "My interest in politics is very recent like about when they asked me to run." Lombardi was elected by about 1,200 votes a fairly large margin in a district with close to a 60 per cent Democratic majority.

Asked if he thought his name was a factor, he replied: "Let's face it, that didn't hurt. At this level of running for office name identification and exposure that's the name of the game." Lombardi is fairly certain that politics will not be a lifelong career. "I have a very avid interest in football. I wouldn't be at all surprised not in the near future perhaps to some day be in football. It's something that's not on the horizon but it's down the road a piece." He would be interested in a job as a general manager or in some other front office position.

Humphrey hesitates to talk about his political future, recalling "dynasty" charges raised in his campaign. His father once complained publicly that he wasn't being allowed to help out enough in the campaign, and young Humphrey acknowledged: "We had a hard time keeping him out." He emphasized that it was his own decision to run and he wasn't recruited by the party hierarchy as a famous name. Humphrey defeated Rep. Donald Forseth, a three-term House veteran who is a well-known Republican in that area. Humphrey is a member of the ruling majority in the Senate, where Democrats are in control for the first time in the state's 114-year history.

Democrats control the House for the first time in 12 years. Mr. and Mrs. John Patrick Lileky (Patricia Janis Badeaux), of 330 Cress Road, a 7 pound, 13 ounce boy, Joshua David. DOUGLAS March 6 at 5:02 a m.

to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Allen Douglas (Nancy Elaine Huff), of 225 Heath a 10 pound, 5 ounce boy, Robert Addam. BAULEKE March 7 at 3:38 p.m. to Mr.

and Mrs. Terry Thomas Bauleke (Patricia Anne Hennessey), of 5420 Jigger Drive, Soquel, an 8 pound, 6 ounce boy, Matthew Sean. RIVAS March 8 at 1:22 p.m. to Mr. and Mrs.

George Carbaial Rivas (Carmen Irene Reynaga), of 415 Maple an 8 pound, 7 Vj ounce boy, Hector Jonathan. HEPPE March 8 at 3:10 p.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Girard Heppe (Barbara Lee Collins), of 3348 Fairway Drive, Soquel, a 7 pound, 12 Vi ounce boy, Travis Jon.

CLARK March 9 at 8:06 a.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Darrell Clark (Janna Lyn Baldwin), of 113 S. Navarra Drive, Scotts Valley, a 6-pound, 14 Vi ounce girl, Rebecca Jane.

SHE RMAN March 9 at 1:36 p.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Terry Sherman (Katherine Mary Neef), of 310 Baltusrol Drive, Aptos, a 6 pound, 1 ounce boy, Michael Zachary. MARTINEZ March 10 at 4:35 a m.

to Mr. and Mrs. Heliodoro Garcia Martinez (Terri Lynn Fassio). of 210 Windham a 7 pound, 5 ounce boy, Robert. ROSE March 10 at 2:52 p.m.

to Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Rose II (Linda Faye Colby), of 1545 Linnea Court, a 7 pound, 3 ounce girl, Sencery Renata. FUNERAL NOTICES HOLMES' Inc. A Funrnl D.

rectors Since 1880 BAAL In Santa Cruz, March 18, 1971. Sebastian Baal, survived by his wife, Irma of Aptos; a son, James Baal of Mountain View; two brothers, Wendell Baal of. Crash SAIGON (AP) An Air Vietnam airliner crashed in flames today while coming in to land at the Ban Me Thuot airport in the central highlands, killing at least 58 persons. ST. PAUL, Minn.

(AP)-Hubert H. Humphrey and Vince Lombardi, who grew up in the worlds of their namesake fathers, have quietly launched their own careers in the Minnesota Legislature. Both Humphrey and Lombardi are 30-year-old lawyers who were elected last November in their first tries for public office. Hubert Horatio Humphrey III, oldest son of the former vice president and long-time U.S. senator from Minnesota, is a state senator from a suburban Minneapolis district.

He is a Democrat, like his father. Vince Lombardi son of the late professional football coach, is a Republican who holds a House seat from a suburban St. Paul area. So far, the other 199 members of the state legislature have not heard much from Humphrey or Lombardi. "I'm going to sit back and listen," young Humphrey says.

He almost bristles at any comparison with the other Sen. Humphrey. "I'm me," the younger Humphrey said in an interview. "Some people are going to be sadly mistaken if they thought they were voting for me because they thought I was going to be like my old Although it may have helped them get elected, both Humphrey, known as "Skip." and Two Arrested In Big Basin Two young men were arrested early Saturday morning by sheriff's deputies outside of the Big Basin State Park Gift shop. Witnesses said their car matched one seen in the area of an attempted break in earlier in the evening.

John Francis Heffenan, 21, of Hayward, and Randolph Charles Harman, 23, also of Hayward, were arrested on burglary charges, and Harman also was charged with possession of marijuana. Weather Elsewhere IRVIN M. SMITH SONS chApel of the fouR seAsons IL'MK AI Ol'NMIOKS 1050 Cayuga Street, Sonta Cruz, California 95060 (408) 423-5721 Lombardi have shown a reluctance to use their famous names to get attention. "People aren't going to judge me on what I did on a given day, on the noise that I can make on the floor," Humphrey said. "They're going to judge me, one.

by the work that I do in my office and, two, how I handle my bills and how I support the good reason of other bills." Lombardi said he does not see the legislature as a vehicle to expound his views. He said he "rarely turns down the opportunity to make a public speech about my father and the things he stood for But I don't consider it a mission, a task, to continue to say those things he was unable to say because of his untimely death." His father died of cancer about 2''2 years ago. after a decade as one of professional football's most successful coaches, mostly with the Green Bay Packers. Of his father. Lombardi says: "For a long time he considered himself a football coach.

He was the first to admit that he did't know much about anything else. But I think the last couple years of his life he did realize that maybe some of the things he stood for that some of the things he was articulating had an application beyond football. I think he was slowly getting to articulate those things and I think people wanted to listen." Humphrey practices law alone. Lombardi is in partnership with Rep. Julian Hook, captain of the 1961 University of Minnesota football team which played in the Rose Bowl.

When young Lombardi graduated from the William Mitchell College of law in St. Paul in 1969, the elder Lombardi "was very proud that I did it." Both Lombardi and Humphrey are married. Lombardi has four children, Humphrey three. One of the Humphrey children is Hubert Horatio Humphrey IV. known at home as "Buck." After his father's death.

Lombardi became active in the American Cancer Society, and the chairmanship of its statewide fund drive lead to his first contact with politics. Lombardi and Rudy Boschw-itz. Minnesota Republican national committeeman, who is also active in the cancer society, were in Duluth for a society meeting, and Boschwitz suggested they also attend a By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS nign low pr. clr cdy cdy clr dr Albany 41 30 cdy Albuquerque 68 34 Amarillo 72 45 Anchorage 21 Asheville 54 35 Atlanta 60 36 Richmond 55 30 Sacramento 40 44 St. Louis 54 35 Salt Lake City 45 30 San Diego 64 55 San Francisco 57 49 Seattle 53 31 Spokane 46 41 Tampa 68 46 Thermal 76 45 Washington 44 47 Bakersfield clr clr clr Btrmmaham 64 Bismarck 47 Florists CANADIAN CITIES Edmonton 33 21 cdy Montreal 37 32 .15 cdy Toronto 28 25 .01 cdy Winnipeg 36 28 .09 sn Boise 50 42 Boston 47 33 Brownsville 77 66 Buffalo 27 26 Charleston 65 46 Charlotte 59 27 Chicago 44 34 Cincinnati 44 25 Cleveland 34 30 Denver 59 34 Des Moines 47 39 Detroit .34 30 Duluth 41 15 Fort Worth 77 61 Fresno 59 36 Helena 44 21 Honolulu 79 68 Houston 73 60 Indianapolis 42 26 FERRARI the Florist "THE FINEST IN FLOWERS" 1222 Pacific Ave.

Dial 426-1122 Stewart's Flower Shop 1430Soqul 4J3 0640 475 4161 flOWfUS SAY IT SttlEU or cdv clr clr dr elr cdy cdy cdy cdy cdy .28 sn clr clr cdy clr cdy .45 cdy cdy cdy cdy cdy clr clr .04 cdy cdy cdy 44 clr cdy rn clr rn clr cdy cdy clr clr cdy cdy .02 cdy cdy cdy cdy clr dr clr cdy clr cdy .01 cdy .51 rn cdy cdy cdy Jacksonville i Juneau 34 27 43 Kansas City 52 Las Veoas 64 44 Jack Martin Died Sunday E. W. "Jack" Martin, 76, a 40 year resident of this area, died Sunday in a local hospital. A native of Missouri, he was active in ranching and worked for the Santa Cruz County Road Department before retiring. Surviving are his wife, Grace, two sons, Ray Martin of Montana, and Roy Martin of Los Angeles; three daughters, Dorothy Rebuffo of Reno, Alice Layher of Denver, and Betty Hendren of Santa Cruz; two sisters and seven grandchildren.

Services will be conducted at White's Chapel. Tuesday, 2 p.m., with Dr. Roy Kraft of Twin Lakes Baptist church officiating. Private committal will be held in the IOOF Cemetery. Contributions may be made to the heart fund.

Little Rock 70 53 Los Angeles 67 50 Louisville 42 28 Memphis 64 46 56 27 28 47 Miami 74 Milwaukee 42 Minneapolis-St Paul 45 New Orleans 72 New York 39 33 Oakland Airport 56 47 Oklahoma City 73 55 Omaha 52 36 Orlando 71 52 Palm Springs 79 49 Paso Robies 58 33 Philadelphia 40 36 Phoenix 70 48 Del Mar Meeting Set Parents of seventh grade students at Del Mar Middle School have been invited to an informal coffee hour with Principal George Chaney Tuesday at 9 a.m. in the teachers lunchroom. Members of theDel Mar -TA will act as hostesses. Pittsburoh Portland, Me 41 55 38 Portland, Ore. Rapid City 30 Red Bluff 59 45 die to changes lv MIEHDICAHaiE SEW SUPPLEMENT XOW AVAILABLE FOR 1973 Coreriiig Hospitalixation Doctors Physicians Surgeons Nurses Pre-Existing Conditions May Be Covered Guarant Renewable for lAle WORLDWIDE COVERAGE I a FOR FREE INFORMATION FILL OUT COUPON I AND MAIL TO: SENIOR CITIZEN DIVISION AND MAIL TO: SENIOR CITIZEN DIVISION 24 Reno 51 Donie Knoff's Rites Tuesday Services will be Tuesday at 11 a.m.

in White's Chapel, 138 Walnut for Donie O. Knoff who died in a local hospital Saturday night of a sudden illness. Mrs. Knoff, 75. was a native of Texas, but left that state at the age of one year.

She came to California in 1919, moving first to the San Diego area, then to San Francisco. She was employed by the White House department store in that city for more than 14 years. She moved to Santa Cruz after her retirement. She was a member of Ivy Chapter 27, Order of Eastern Star, and the White Shrine of San Francisco. Survivors include her husband, Frank A.

Knoff of Scotts Valley; a son. Jack Raichart of Piedmont; two brothers, Miner Pruitt of Sacramento and Lyford Pruitt of Bakersfield, and two sisters, Mrs. Margie Ritzman of Daly City And Mrs. Artie Doug of Santa CRuz. Also surviving are three grandchildren.

The Rev. Roy Kraft of Twin Lakes Baptist Church and Idlewild Chapter 19, oes, will officiate the last rites. Friends may call at the chapel today from 5 to 9 p.m. and from 9 a.m. iHiti itme for services on Tuesday.

Interment wijl be in Oakwood Memorial Park. TIDES TIMES AND HEIGHTS OF TIDES AT SANTA CRUZ. MONTEREY BAY, CALIFORNIA FURNISHED BY MARINE EXCHANGE, FROM COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY DATA PACIFIC STANDARD TIME MARCH 1973 LOW HIGH 20 05:16 0 3 II 33 4 3 17:07 1.4 23:19 5 0 21 05:56 0 2 -12 22 4 0 17:36 19 23 40 4 9 22 06:40 0 2 13:11 3.7 10:11 23 HIGH LOW 23 00:23 4 7 07:25 0 3 14:11 34 18 48 29 24 00:52 4 5 08:17 04 15:19 33 1 25 29 25 01:39 4 4 09 22 0 5 16 35 3 2 20 37 3 1 26 02:31 4 2 10 26 17:48 3.3 22 00 3 2 27 03:44 4.1 II 25 0 4 11:35 3.5 23 16 3 0 28 04:55 4 2 12:14 0 3 19:17 31 LOW HIGH 29 00 .17 2 6 06 02 4 2 12 59 0 3 1 46 4 0 30 01:1 2 2 07 04 4 4 13:40 0 3 20 1 5 4 3 31 01 54 1 6 07 56 4 5 14 1 5 0 4 20 43 4 6 P.O. Box 387, Santa Cruz, Cal. 95060 Sebastian Baal Dies At 61 Sebastian Baal, a native of Trenton, N.J., died Sunday in a local hospital at the age of 61.

Services will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. in Wessendorf andHolmes Chapel, 223 Church with theRev. Neil Carlsen officiating. Interment will be in Oakwood Memorial Park. Survivors include his wife, Irma Baal of Aptos; a son, James Baal of Mountain View, and two brothers, Wendall Baal of Milford, and Louis Baal of Florida.

Explosion Rocks Kansas Town GALENA, Kan. (AP) -Three explosions ripped through a half-block downtown area and set ablaze a hotel, a cafe and a recreation Authorities said no one was seriously injured. Fire companies from more than 15 surrounding communities rushed to the southeast Kansas town of 3,800 Sunday night to aid in fighting the fires at the Galena Hotel, Reed's Cafe and a recreation center. All were open at the time of the explosions. Harry Natwick Died Sunday Harry Judd Natwick, the head sawyer for Santa Cruz Lumber Co.

from 1942 to 1956, died Sunday in Eureka. Natwick, 80, is survived by two daughters, Jeanice Hopkins of Santa Cruz and Joyce Iskra of Eureka: a sister, Julia Mulley of Eureka; a brother, Warren Natwick of Walnut Creek; and five grandchildren. Funeral services will be Wednesday at 10 a m. at the Pierce Funeral Home in Eureka. NAME.

Fire Calls Sunday, March 18, 1973 Santa Crui Fir Departmant 12:34 a m. First aid call, Younglove Station. 4:19 a.m. Couch on fire, 505 Leibrandt St. 1:07 p.m.

TrucK fire in garage, 3340 Oxford Way. 4 p.m. Illegal burn, Seabright Beach Courts. 4 47 p.m. Lockout, 124 Belvedere Terrace.

9:24 p.m. False alarm. Pacific Avenue at Elm Street. 10 41 p.m. False alarm at County Center.

Felton Fire Department 5:19 p.m. Resuscitator call for Grea Thul, Ashley Street. Taken to Dominican hospital. Monday, March 19, 1973 Aptos Firt Department 7 40 a m. Illegal burn, 3283 Valencia Ave.

-AGE. STREET. -STATE. CITY. I PHONE.

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About Santa Cruz Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
909,325
Years Available:
1884-2005