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Santa Cruz Sentinel from Santa Cruz, California • Page 17

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Santa Cruz, California
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17
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Santa Cruz Sentinel Sunday, Nov. 17, 1991 A-17 obituaries Town and gown Vital statistics to break ground on housing project FUNERALS NORMANS: family chapel By AMY ZUCKERMAN Sentinel staff writer SANTA CRUZ UC Santa Cruz and city officials will break ground Monday on a unique 36-unit university-city condominium project at 308 River St. The project, a collaboration between UCSC, the city and the development firm of Drooks Brose, aims to provide affordable housing for local residents and university personnel. Mayor Jane Yokoyama, UCSC Chancellor Karl Pister, City Manager Richard Wilson and project developers William Brooks and Don Brose will participate in the 8:30 a.m. ceremony.

"After the earthquake, some consultants downtown said the university should assist in efforts downtown," said Michael Houle-mard, director of community planning at UCSC. "We're really happy with how it's going," he said. Houlemard said other projects are being coordinated with the city's Redevelopment Agency. Five of the units on the 1.75-acre site will be available for purchase to qualified county residents through the city's Measure program. The development will sit between the Farmer's Exchange and San Lorenzo Lumber on the San Lorenzo riverfront.

UCSC faculty and executive staff who do not own a home within a reasonable commute distance of campus are eligible for mortgage assistance, said Stephanie Hauk, UCSC spokeswoman. A year ago, UC President David Gardner allocated $12 million to the UC-system's Mortgage Origination Program, stipulating that the supplemental funds be used by areas hit by natural disasters. UCSC has access to an $8 million fund to assist with housing construction. Most of the one-, two- and three-bedroom condominiums selling to university personnel will range in price from $125,000 to $145,000. Under the mortgage terms, down payments as low as 10 percent are accepted, and the adjustable mortgage rate will be below conventional rates.

The price of the Measure units will be determined when construction is completed. Measure housing-requirement information is available by calling the city Planning Department at 429-3555. Houlemard said although UCSC personnel will be considering the condominiums early on, the housing is open to the public. MARSH At her Santa Cruz residence on November 15, 1991 after a lengthy Illness. Lillian J.

Marsh. Survived by her husband of 49 years, Joseph Marsh Sr. of Santa Cruz and her two sons, Joseph Marsh Jr. and James Marsh, both of Santa Cruz and her three brothers. Melvln Dickerson, Robert Dickerson and Artsman Dickerson, all of Newport, Kentucky.

She is also survived by her four grandchildren. A native of Newport, Kentucky, age, 66 years. She has been one of Jehovah's Wit- nesses since 1960. She has resided in Santa Cruz since 1943. Memorial services will be this evening, (November 17, 1991, Sunday) at Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses at 170 Frederick Street In Santa Cruz beginning at seven o'clock p.m.

Friends may pay their, respects at Norman's Family Chapel (3420 Soquel Drive, Soquel, Vlnce Azzaro, director) today, Sunday November 17, 1991 from 10 a.m. until p.m. and again on Monday from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. There will be a private committal Monday at Soquel Cemetery.

Contributions are preferred to Hospice Caring Project of Santa Cruz County, P. O. Box 470, Aptos, CA 95003. 3620 SOQUEL DRIVE SOQUEL FUNERALS Santa Cruz Memorial Park Funeral Home FECI At his home In Watsonville on November 14, 1991. Mr.

Raymond P. Fed. Survived by his wife, Alice Feci of San Jose, and by his three sisters, Eleanor Meckler of San Jose, Edith Crisp of San Jose and Emma Speno. of San Jose. He Is also survived by numerous nieces and nephews, and grand nelces and grand nephews.

Native of San Jose, CA age 74. He was a Veteran of World War II, he served In the U.S. Army throughout the North African and European Theatres. He was a member of the Watsonville American Legion, Post 121. Member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, VFW Post 1716, Watsonville.

He was a charter member of the UFCW Union, Local 428, San Jose, and worked for Purity markets and later, Safeway. He later worked as a landscaped throughout the area. A resident of Santa Cruz County for over 30 years. Gravside Services will be conducted at Santa Cruz Memorial Garden of Honor on Wednesday, November 20, 1991 at The VFW will officiate. Under the direction of Santa Cruz Memorial Park Funeral Home (Douglas Martlne, Service Director).

Carbolic Blessing Service will be conducted in the Mission Chapel, Santa Cruz Memorial Park on Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1991 at 11:30 a.m. Interment In Santa Cruz Memorial Park Garden of Honor. Contributions preferred to vour local VFW Chapter or to your favorite chairty. 1927 Ocean Street 426-1601 (Cremation Service! MAKE IT SIMPLE Call today for your Free Pre-Nced Brochure.

It makes it simple for you to leave solutions for your family Not Problems. For Free Brochure or Immediate Need Call 475-6880 1570 Soquel Drive i Lillian J. Marsh Memorial services will be today for Lillian J. Marsh, who died Friday at her Santa Cruz residence after a lengthy illness. She was 66.

A native of Newport, Mrs. Marsh had resided in Santa Cruz since 1963. She had been one of Jehovah's Witnesses since I960. She is survived by her husband of 49 years, Joseph Marsh Sr. of Santa Cruz; two sons, Joseph Marsh Jr.

and James Marsh, both of Santa Cruz; three brothers, Mel-vin Dickerson, Robert Dickerson and Artsman Dickerson, all of Newport; and four grandchildren. Memorial services will begin at 7 p.m. at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses, 170 Frederick Santa Cruz. Friends may pay their respects from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

today and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday at Norman's Family Chapel, 3620 Soquel Drive, Soquel. A private committal will be held Monday at Soquel Cemetery. The family prefers contributions go to the Hospice Caring Project of Santa Cruz County, P.O.

Box 670, Aptos 95003. Raymond P. Feci Catholic blessing services will be Wednesday for Raymond P. Feci, who died Thursday at his home in Watsonville. He was 74.

A native of San Jose, Mr. Feci was a veteran of World War II, having served in the U.S. Army throughout the north African and European war theaters. He was a resident of Santa Cruz County for 30 years. Mr.

Feci was employed by Purity Markets and Safeway. He later worked as a landscaper through-. out the county. He was a charter member of the Retail Clerks International Association. Local 428 in San Jose.

Mr. Feci was a member of the Watsonville American Legion, Post No. 121, and a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 1716 in Watsonville. He is survived by his wife, Alice Feci of San Jose; his three sisters, Eleanor Meckler, Edith Crisp and Emma Speno, all of San Jose; and numerous nieces, nephews, grand-, nieces and grand-nephews. He was preceded in death by one brother, Fred Feci, and two sisters, Mary Rossi and Lena Figone.

Catholic blessing services will begin at 11:30 a.m. in the Mission Chapel at the Santa Cruz Memorial Park Funeral Home. Graveside services will be con-! ducted at 1 p.m. by the VFW at the Santa Cruz Memorial Park Garden of Honor. Contributions should be sent to a local VFW chapter or to a favorite charity.

City spies on cops to prevent sick-out I CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our appreciation to the friends and neighbors who expressed their kindness and sympathy to us during the recent illness and death of our beloved mother sister, GEORGIA L. CRABTREE. We also wish to thank Dr. Pomeroy and the Hospice Caring Prolect of Santa Cruz County. We also wish to thank Doug Mar-tine and the staff of Santa Cruz Memorial Park and Funeral Home and all those who sent floral offerings to the funeral services, and sympathy cards and letters to the family.

Thank you also for the memorial contributions in Georgia's memory to the Hospice Caring Prolect of Santa Cruz County. Danny Helen Crabtree Joanne, Timothy Gladys FUNERALS SLACK-On Sunday, November 10, 1991. Margaret Rankin Slack. Age 43. Memorial services will be held to honor and celebrate the life of Margaret Rankin Slack who died Sunday, November 10 In a small aircraft accident In Carmel.

She is survived by her parents, Harris and Esther Slack of Guthrie, Kentucky; her brothers Jim Slack and Charles Slack, both of Tennessee; two nephews, a niece, and many friends. Margaret was a resident of Aptos for the past 10 years and was a field manager In the West Area Office of Big BrothersBig Sisters of America. She was a founding member of the Big BrothersBig Sisters affiliate In Nashville and had worked for Big BrothersBig Sisters at the local and national level for the past 17 years. Margaret was a great support of the arts, environmental causes and women's concerns. Memorial services will be held at the Unity Temple of Santa Cruz on Friday, November 22 at 4:00 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, contributions preferred to the Big Brothers Big Sisters of America West Area office, 350 Encinal Santa Cruz 95040, Margaret Slack Memorial Fund. Burial will be Friday In Guthrie, Kentucky MARY LOUISE SCRIVER WHEELER Mary Lou was born on 26 October 1915 In Minneapolis, MN, the daughter of Albert and Ruth Wingate Scriver. She attended Kenwood School and Northrop Collegiate School in Minneapolis and then the University of Minnesota for two years where she studied art and architecture. Mary Lou belonged to the Alpha Phi Sororltv. At the end of her sophomore year she transferred to Scripps College in Claremont, CA, where she received her B.A.

in art history with a minor in psychology In 1937. While at Scripps she met Ensign Frank K.B. Wheeler, USN, a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy. They were engaged in 1936 but because the Navy, at that time, would not allow ensigns to get married until two years after graduation, they delayed their military wedding at the Little Church of the Flowers in Glendale, CA, until IB December 1937.

Mary Lou is survived by her husband Frank K.B. Wheeler, Captain, USN (Ret); three children and their spouses (Mary Ann "Penny" Wheeler Robertson and Dale Masher; Frances Blasdell Wheeler Kindle and Charles Kindle; and Charles Knowles Wheeler and Irene Wheeler); and two grandchildren (Michael Lee Robertson and Jennifer Tuoml Wheeler). Mary Lou devoted her early married life, during the very difficult war years, to raising her family and helping with Navy Relief activities around the country, including a relief activity with Mrs. Eddie Rickenback-er in New York. Frank was at sea most of the time from 1939 through 1945 on destroyer patrols in the Atlantic when World War II started in Europe and when the U.S.

entered the war in the Mediterranean and Pacific. After the war Mary Lou became very active In the Naw Relief Thrift Shops on the East Coast, the West Coast, and in Hawaii. She received several awards for her unselfish and devoted service. She was a true Navy Wife, devoted to her family and always helping others. After the family retired from the Navy in 1960 to Los Altos Hills, CA, she again became involved with helping others, first as a Pink Lady at the El Camino Hospital and most recently with the Discovery Shop In Los Altos, an activity of the American Cancer Society.

She passed away unexpectedly in her sleep on 8 October 1991. Memorial services were held at the Navy Chapel, Moffett Field, Mountain View, CA, on 12 October 1991 with Navy Chaplain (Presbyterian) Bill Miller presiding. In accordance with her wishes, Mary Lou's ashes will be spread at sea. Memorial donations may be made to the American Cancer Society, co. The Discovery Shop, 142 Main Street, Los Altos, CA 94022.

SMITH ARNOLD'S chApeloFthe Four seasons ALLEN In Santa Cruz, CA on November 12, 1991. Mary D. Allen. Wife of the late John K. Allen.

Native of Ohio, age 88. Member of Valley of the Redwoods, Chapter 638, Order of the Eastern Star; Past President of Fleet Reserve Auxiliary 1 37; Scorts Valley-Senior Center. At her request no formal services will be held. Private cremation was held at Soquel Crematory. Ashes are to be scattered at sea.

Smith Arnold's, CHAPEL OF THE FOUR SEASONS, (Bob Podoll, Director) in charge of arrangements. Contributions preferred to SPCA- Santa Cruz, 2200 7th Avenue, Santa Cruz, CA 95062 IRVIN M. SMITH SONS KENNETH D. FERGUSON Funeral Directors 1050 CAYUGA SANTA CRUZ 423-5721 52? THE COYOTE by Mobility Engineering LIFETIME WARRANTY on powertrain Assembles disassembles in less than 1 minute ON BOARD, fully AUTOMATIC CHARGER CUSTOM BUILT MODELS available Call for our HOLIDAYS SPECIAL PRICE Call for FREE Home Demonstration I I I 1 IJrOOF REPLACEMENTS SEACLIFF BUILDERS Lie. 406986 Leak Repair i Gutter Replacement Leak Repair Gutter Replacement of in the hiring, he added.

"It was all part of the contingency plan." But police noticed the detective when he followed a group of 30 officers to a hotel meeting of the officers' bargaining unit earlier this week. Police detectives investigated the investigator, identifying him as William R. Selonek, an employee of D.Y. Jones and Associates, an investigative firm. Police officers complained to the city that city administrators had access to their personnel files and improperly passed information on to Selonek to assist him in his investigation.

City officials denied any impropriety. Police and the city have been engaged in bitter labor contract negotiations since April. At a Nov. 6 city council meeting, the city ordered its final offer into effect, a move opposed by the Police Officers Association, the law enforcement personnel's bargaining unit. The contract approved by the city included a 12 percent pay increase.

He read a statement from Hersh that two reporters of the Maxwell-owned Daily Mirror had asked a private detective to tap the telephones of journalists at The Sunday Times while they were receiving information from Vanunu. Flynn claims that he, under an alias, posed as that phony detective. Hersh told The Sunday Times he regretted not checking the facts by meeting Flynn. Evans, however, told the paper he did not recognize the alias Flynn said he used as the so-called private detective. "I can't say anything until I have spoken to Seymour Hersh.

There may be a lot more to this than meets the eye," Evans said. The newspapers did not quote Evans' reaction to Flynn's claim he was paid. Flynn said decided to reveal his ruse because Hersh had broken a promise to keep his claims secret. Hoaxer claims Maxwell's links to Israel were his invention The Associated Press WEST SACRAMENTO City officials hired a private detective to shadow police officers in order to find out whether they were planning a job-related action stemming from a recent labor contract, authorities said. City Manager Joseph Goeden said the private investigator, hired from a Glendale-based company with offices in Sacramento, "was one of many elements in the contingency plan we were forced to develop." Goeden said the city was concerned that officers would stage a sirjk-out and leave the area, making it difficult for court orders to be served personally on the officers that would require them to return to work.

He said Saturday that city authorities were "obligated to provide high-quality law enforcement services to the people who live and work here." "I have nothing to be ashamed of $44,250 for a pair of shoes he claimed belonged to Jimmy Hoffa. Hersh wrote in "The Samson Option," a recent book about Israel's nuclear weapons program, that Maxwell plotted to discredit Mor-dechai Vanunu, an Israeli technician who revealed Israeli nuclear secrets to The Sunday Times. Hersh alleged that Maxwell, who died in waters off his yacht Nov. 5, alerted Israel to Vanunu's whereabouts in London. Israeli intelligence spirited Vanunu back to Israel, and he was sentenced to 18 years in prison for treason.

Before Maxwell died, he vehemently denied the charges and sued Hersh and Faber and Faber for libel. Matthew Evans, the publishing company's chairman, said at a news conference on Nov. 12 that Hersh had fresh evidence that Maxwell was involved in Vanunu's 1986 kidnapping. Crime report 476-6211 You are welcome to write about your loved ones in an "In Memoriam" or "Card of Photos or pictures can be included. For details call Leslie Blankinship at Santa Cruz Srntinrl Classified Department 423-4242 Ext.

296 VOLUNTEER CENTER Santa Cruz County (408) 423-0554 NORMAN BENITO Director to take or what to do in order to get better. BOTH the client and the counselor have responsibilities for engaging in a relationship that will produce new understandings, choices, and actions. A helping relationship implies action; not passivity. It is a mutual process in which the ultimate decision making responsibility rest with the client. It is the client who must make the "informed choices" and take the "meaningful actions." Skylight Installation Specialists in replacing wood shake and shingle with fire retardant roofs 10 Years Experience CALL (408) 429-5855 The Associated Press LONDON A known hoaxer claimed he fooled investigative journalist Seymour Hersh into believing phony "new evidence" that publisher Robert Maxwell had close links to Israeli leaders, news- papers said Sunday.

Joe Flynn told The Sunday Times, The Sunday Express and News of the World that he provided the false information and was paid $2,230 by Hersh's publisher, Faber and Faber. "I accept it was this man Flynn we were dealing with and that he is a con-man," the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist told The Sunday Times. "He must be brilliant. Some of the things he told me checked out." Flynn is the author of numerous ruses against British newspapers and has served two prison terms for fraud. His most celebrated was bilking publisher Rupert Murdoch Jfh WHAT IS COUNSELING? Man assaults girl in wheelchair Many people have tried to define counseling.

What is it? Does it do any good? Who does it best? While there is no universal set of answers to the questions, there are one or two aspects of counseling that most people would agree about. For one thing, counseling is a HELPING relationship. Counseling is not simply extending the feelings of sympathy for the circumstances of another individual. Counseling is also not doing for another. Counseling is not telling someone what SCOTTS VALLEY A 17-year-old girl with multiple sclerosis was attacked by an unknown man who asked for her father by name, according to sheriffs reports.

The victim, who uses a wheelchair, said she saw a white, male adult with a mustache come to the gate of her home on Green Valley Road at 11:30 a.m. Friday. The man came to the front door and asked for the girl's father by name, reports said. When the girl told him her father wasn't home, the man began walking away, but suddenly turned around and allegedly slapped her in the face. The girl was then knocked out of her wheelchair onto her side and kicked repeatedly by the assailant, reports said.

The girl said she saw the man speed away in a small blue pickup. She was taken to Dominican Hospital complaining of swelling to her right cheek and pain in her ribs. Reports said she was treated for her injuries and released. SANTA CRUZ A cellular tele- under the influence of cocaine and for possession of the drug. Deputies also seized over $1,800 in cash from Brit.

SANTA CRUZ A young man unsuccessfully tried to rob the East Cliff Village Liquor store Friday, leaving 12 Budweiser cans scattered on the sidewalk outside the store. Sheriffs reports said that a neighbor witnessed a white man, about 6 feet tall, loitering in front of the store at 2-1509 East Cliff Drive at 11:15 p.m. The neighbor then heard a crash, someone yelling, and then saw the man run around the side of the building. The neighbor told deputies that she saw the man come back and smash the glass front doors of the store with a long object. When deputies arrived, a dozen 12-ounce cans of beer were scattered on the sidewalk.

Nothing else appeared to be taken, according to reports. Compiled by Amy Zuckerman phone led to the arrest of a suspected cocaine dealer and three customers Friday. Sheriffs reports said the office's Special Enforcement Team received information that John Russell Robins, 54, of Santa Cruz, was selling cocaine via a cellular telephone in his vehicle. Deputies searched his home on Begonia Place late Friday night and found 30 bindles of cocaine, a scale and packaging materials. Deputies also seized his telephone, reports said.

Robins, who was on probation, was charged with possession of cocaine and soliciting for cocaine sales. The three people arrested for soliciting cocaine were identified as Timothy Whitlow. 36, of Capitola; Delfina Alvarez. 31. of Santa Cruz: and Dana Edward Brit, 31, of Soquel.

Brit was also charged with being IVUX NORMANS 1 familv chanel Phone 476-6211 3620 SOQUEL DRIVE SOQUEL LOCALLY OWNED I FAMILY OPERATED I ORIGINAL DEFECTIVE.

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About Santa Cruz Sentinel Archive

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