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The Peninsula Times Tribune from Palo Alto, California • 12

Location:
Palo Alto, California
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Nrrvcwcf i. i no 'r 12 JALO ALTO. CALIF- MONDAY. MAY 8, 1972 Donald Pritzker, Hyatt president, dies WEATHER REPORT TIDES AT SAN FRANCISCO (GOLDEN GATE) PACIFIC STANDARD TIME MAY 1972 Sunnyvale! Prior to moving to Sunnyvale two years ago, the couple resided In San Carlos. Pefley is also survived by a son, Richard J.

Pefley of Mountain View, and two grandchildren. He was a native of Reno, Nev. Funeral cervices will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Howard H. Wyant Funeral Home, 174 N.

Sunnyvale Sunnyvale. Interment will be in Mission City Cemetery, Santa Clara. water High water 1 Low water bate High wtter Low 9:23 am O' 3:09 am 4.4, 11:35 am 4.6. 449 am I 1 -I 8:27 12:09 am 6.8, 7:15 am 12:54 am 6.4: 8:09 am 6.li i 10. 11.

-42. 23. fis. i 18. 17.

2:46 am 5.7i 9:58 am Alto Dorothy T. Boldemarirr Mrs. Dorothy T. Boldemann, of 431-A Stevens Road, llflBun- tain View, died Saturdqvat HospuaL Stanford University She was 63. Mrs.

Boldcmanns husjgnd is Adolph Boldemann, retived regional manager for JTYhe Libby-Owens Ford Co. She was a native of "San Jose and had lived all In Santa Clara County. Mrs. Boldemann also is survived by her father, Feed Theuerkauf of Mountain and a sister and brother. Funeral services will-be held at 11 a.m.

Tuesday at the Mountain View Chapel of Mortuaries, 799 Castro St. Interment will be in Alta Mesa Cemetery, Palo Alto. The family has requested that memorials be donations to the American Cancer Society. had been a Palo resident for 10 years. She was a native of Panto-sus.

Pa. She was the mother of Tom Tracy of I os Altos. Funeral services were under the arrangement of Tlnney Sons, 555 College Palo Alto. mo sity In the District of Columbia In 1927. Before joining the Times, Harris, worked 22 years for the San Francisco Examiner, 15 as head proofreader.

He has received his 50-year membership pin from the International Typographical Union. He also was a member of Pentalpha Lodge of the Masons in Washington, D.C. He and his wife, Rachel, lived at 433 Sylvan Mountain View. Harris had traveled extensively and had visited Europe and Hawaii as well as Mexico. Besides his wife, he is sup vived by a son, Mathew Harris III of Sunnyvale; a daughter, Mrs.

Esther P. Wilson of Florida; a brother, Earl Harris of Finksburg, four grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. Services were held at the Colonial Mortuary in Mountain View. Interment was at Alta Mesa Cemetery, Palo Alto. Helen Tracy Private funeral services were held today for Mrs.

Helen A. Tracy, 72, wife of John Tracy of Palo Alto. Mrs. Tracy died Saturday at her home after, on illness of several weeks! Mrs. Tracy of 501 Forest Area temperatures Ernest E.

Harris Funeral services held today for Ernest E. Harris, a proofreader at the Palo Alto Times for 11 years who began his newspaper career as a teen-ager. He died Saturday In Kaiser Hospital, Santa Clara, after returning from vacation trip with his wife in Mazatlan, Mexico. He was 77. Harris was bom in Baltimore.

He began working for' the Baltimore Sun as a proofreader while he was still a teen-ager. Later he worked as a proofreader for the U.S. Government Printing Office in Washington, D.C. He was graduated from the Chiropractic Research Univer DONALD N. PRITZKER and Telegraph died Saturday at El Camino Hospital in Mountain View- of cancer.

He was 62. Until his retirement in 1969, Pefley had worked In the Redwood City-Palo Alto region for PT4T. He was with the firm tat 20 years. He lived with is wife. Fern, at 1230 Lawrence Expressway, 0.8.

928 pm5B 2:51 pm 1.0 -0. 1 oTl 1.4 -0A 10:45 pni 0l 4:22 pm 1J pm 4.7', 2i -l-9; pm75j0pm2j 2:29 pm 4.7; 2J 3:24 pm 4.7, 7:44 pm 3.0 -U 4.7, 11 5:20 pm 4.7,10:03 pm IQ Tuosdoy; high both dm In 70s; law to- nght la 40s; light Joaquin Valiav: Tuesday: high today In 70s; high Tuan-day tram mid TBs to low IQs; low tonight wnds 5-15 m.pLh. Salinas valley: Fair through Tuesday; high today fram low 40s to low 70s; high Tuesday 45-75; low tonight In 4gs; northwest winds 1050 m-Lh. afternoons; high today end low tanipit Salinas 45-45. Pass Room 71-40.

Santa Maria. San Luis Obispo coastal area: Fair through Tuesday; high today tram law 40s to low 70s high Tuesday tram high 40s la mid 70s; low tonight In 40s; northwest winds nhpJk after- Area: Foi Tuesday; high both days In 40s; low tonight tram add 40s to low 50s; northwest winds WOO nkpJL afternoons. Santa Clara Valley: Fair through Tuesday; high hath dm from mid 40s to low IBs; low tonight from mid 40s to low 50s; northwest winds 10-15 m.p.h. otter- Livermora Valley: Fair and slightly warmer days through Tuesday: west winds WOO m.p.h. aliarnosns.

Diablo. San Ramon and Moraga voilevs: Fair through Tuesday; high both days 45-75; law anight from mid 40s to law 50s; west winds 10-15 m-pjv. Nona and Sonoma volleys: Fair and i through Tuesday; high today and low tonight Santa Rosa BO; light winds. SUNRISE-SUNSET FORECAST SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)- Skies in Northern California should be fair Wednesday and Friday although on Thursday it will be partly cloudy with a chance of showers, the Weather Bureau says. Temperatures should range from 85 to the low 40s.

In Central California, there should be low clouds along the coast Wednesday and partly loudy in the Sierra Nevada an Thursday with a chance of showers. Friday should be clear. I Temperatures are to range from the upper 80s to the low 40s. Son Frandico Bay Area: daring toaay; loir tonight and Tuoaday; high today In 40s; high Tuaidoy franim id 4Si fa Mil 70s; tow tonight tram mid 40s to low 50s; west winds 14-X m.p.h. iftor- California: Clearing chance of showers over northern mountains; Mr tonight end Tuesday; slightly warmer.

Northwestern California: Clearing with chance of showers over Mr tonight and Tuesday; Slightly warmer Inland; high today and low tonight Uklah 45-45. AM. siwstaSiskfyou area: Cloudy with chance of showers today; clearing early tamgnt. then Mr through Tuesday; warmer Tuesday. Sierra Nevada: Cloudy Chance of showers In north; and Tuesday; warmer Tuesday; locally Valley: Fata-through Tuesday; high both days In 70s; low tonight In 40s; gentle winds.

Socramonto volley: Fair through Nationwide temperatures ar THB ASSOCIATED PRESS Noth Leer Fr. ji ii Arag.f?icar'' jj jj JJ Biunarck, cHy SI 41 2 'HRCI ft a iS Cltvdond, Dmwi 1 On Moines, relit Detroit, ratal Dututti. deor Fort Worth, cldy Fresno, door Green Boy. dear Helena, ram door ddy Is. ddy Josksonville.

ddy Kansas City, ratal St 44 .14 41 .17 SI 44 SS 41 J1 41 11 7S 71 54 14 44 17 14 71 71 44 Ut 74 tl 7f 41 41 Los Veaas. pt cldy 04 41 Little Rock, ddy 77 Los Angelos, ddy 40 54 Louisville, ddy 75 Memohis. ddy 75 41 J4 Miami, dear 7 71 Milwaukee, ratal 40 14 Jt Mlnneasolls-St. Paul, dear 40 New Orleans, ddy .14 New York, ddy 01 51 J4 Oakland Airport, ddy 40 54 Oklahoma City, ddy 51 44 Omaha, ddy 4J 45 Palm Springs, door 7 41 Philadelphia, ddy 50 Phoenix, dear ...17 40 S.a ddy City, ddy ,.54 luff. Clear 47 10 clear 44 14 Richmond, ddy 5 JJ St.

Louis, ratal 71 57 .10 Socramonto. door 75 Salt Lake, day 50 San Diego, ddy 45 4 San Frandsca. dear JJ 51 Seoffle, rain 40 4t Sookana. ratal 44 -J Tampa, ddy 5 JJ Woshingtan. ddy 2 40 M-M Using.

Trace L. D. Gahagan Funeral services were held In Redwood City today for Lawrence Depeyster Gahagan, 28, a broadcasting executive found dead last Wednesday at his home, 125 La Honda Road, Woodside. Gahagan was part-owner and co-general manager of FM radio station KPEN, Mountain View, for the past four years. He was a partner i Peninsula Broadcasting KPENs parent firm, and owned radio station KPGM in Sacramento, according to his associates at KPEN.

Gahagan was a native of New York, and a Princeton University graduate. He was a bachelor. Survivors include his parents. Dr. and Mrs.

Lawrence Gahagan of New York City, and an aunt, Mrs. Florence Bailey, Sunnyvale. The funeral services were held privately at Crippen Flynn Chapel, Redwood City. Inurnment will take place at Woodlawn Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y. Janice Gough Mrs.

Janice Earl Gough, a former Atherton resident, died at her home in SL Louis, Friday. She was 55. Mrs. Gough, formerly of 71 Heather Drive, Atherton, was the wife of Harry P. Gough, a General Electric Co.

vice president The Goughs had lived in Atherton for 20 years before moving to Geneva, Switzerland, four years ago. Gough was transferred to St Louis two years ago. Mrs. Gough was a native of Idaho and was reared in Utah. While on the Midpeninsula, she was active In the Red Cross, the Sweet Adelines Binging group and Childrens Health Council of Palo Alto.

She is survived, in addition to her husband, by two daughters, Judith Ann Graf of Palo Alto and Margaret Jane Sign-man of New York City end a son, David Earl Gough, a student at DePauw University. Another son, Larry, was killed in in automobile accident in St. Louis in 1970. Funeral services and interment will be held in St. Anthony, Idaho, Tuesday.

The family prefers that memorials be contributions to the Childrens Health Council, 700 Willow Road, Palo Alto. Donald N. Pritzker of Atherton, the 39-year-old president of Hyatt died Saturday of a heart attack while on vacation in Hawaii. Pritzker complained of chest pains after playing tennis Saturday afternoon and died a short time later in his hotel room. His wife, Sue, and father, A.

N. Pritzker of Chicago, were with him on the trip at the new Kullima resort hotel on the Island of Oahu. He is also survived by three children, Penny, 13; Tony, 11, and Jay 7, of Atherton; by an uncle, Jack N. Pritzker, and two brothers, Jay A. Pritzker and Robert A.

Pritzker, ail of Chicago. Pritzker was also president of Hyatt International, an overseas operator of hotels in Acapulco, Singapore, Ceylon, and other locales. Hyatt based in Burlingame, operates 24 hotels and 43 motels in the U.S. It has nine more under construction, including two in San Francisco. Pritzkers aim was to emphasize spectacular architecture in his new hotels, with the Regency Hyatt House in Atlanta among the early examples.

Pritzker came to California in I960, several yean after he and other family members bought the Los Angeles Hyatt House. Taro yean later the group purchased the former Rickeys Studio Inn in Palo Alto. In 1969 they acquired the Cabana Hotel, also in Palo Alto. Although the hotel chain began with medium size operations, in recent yean its extensive building and acquisition programs placed it hr competition with such giants as Hilton and Sheraton. Hyatt Corp.

became a publicly held company in 1967, although the Pritzker family retained much of the stock. Pritzker was a cum laude graduate of Harvard College in 1954. He was graduated from the University of Chicago law school in 1959. The legal tradition in his family dates back to his grandfather, who came from the Ukraine, although none of the family has practiced law since the 1940s. From 1954 to 1956 Pritzker served as a lieutenant (J.g.) in the U.S.

Navy. Pritzker had recently served as national finance chairman for the campaign of Edmund Muskie for the Democratic presidential nomination. With his wife. Sue, Pritzker was active in Midoeninsula and San Francisco charitable and cultural affairs. They were sponsors of numerous benefits, especially those involving children.

They have been active with the Childrens Hospital at Stanford, and Mrs. Pritzker is a former president of its Woodside-Atherton Auxiliary. The Pritzkers also lent their support to the Peninsula Childrens Center and a week ago Saturday Pritzker took an active role in the centers charity party consisting of a train ride to San Francisco and a dinner dance. Last year the Pritzkers opened their showplace Atherton home for a benefit art tour. He was a director of the Mount Zion Hospital, San Francisco, a director of the Jewish Welfare Federation, and a member of the board of trustees of the San Francisco Museum of Art.

He belonged to the Ameri-c a Bar Association and served the University of California School of Business as a consultant board member. Tennis and skiing were among his hobbies. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Plser Memorial Chapel, 5206 N. Broadway, Chicago.

Jack Pefley Jack Pefley, retired foreman for the Pacific Telephone XliI DEATHS When you spend 1.69 for our Agilon panti-hose, thats all you spend for a long, long time. BOLDEMANN At root In Palo Alta, Saturday. May 5. 152, Dorothy Thouorkouf Bol-. domonn, wifa at Adolph C.

Sal-. damann of Mountain Viow; daughter of Fred Thauarhauf, also of Mountain Viow; sister of Betty Stemch of Redwood City and Goorgo Thauarhauf of see-done; a nativo of California, egad S3 years. Friends era invit- ad to attend ssrvii Tuesday, May 5, 1172, at 11 a.m. at the Mountain Viow chapel pf Spangler Mortuary, 799 Cactro Mountain View. Interment, AKa Mesa Memorial Park.

Donations to tha Cancar Society preferred. PLAN PAYS FUNERAL BILLS Atony people will be pleosod to know that there is now a plan which pays funeral expanses. It is available to persons up to 90. There are no enrollment fees and a few cents a day provides complete protection from funeral expenses regardless of where death occurs. Tha plan is good anywhere in the World ond any funeral director may ba chosen.

Tha plan is colled tha American Funeral Plan and is underwritten by tha American Guaranty Life Insurance Company. Complete information without cost or obligation con ba obtained by writing, American Funeral Plan, P.O. Box 4328, Burlingama, California 94010 HARRIS In Santa Clara, Saturday, May 1172. Ernest Edwin Harris, beloved hue bend of Rachel Horns of Mountain View; loving lather of Matthow Harris III of Sunnyvale and Mrs. Noil Wilson of Capa Coral.

Fla-; brother of Earl Harris of Finks-burg. alio survived by four (rend children and ana greatgrandchild; a nativo of Baltimore. aged 77 years. A member of International Typo- graphical Union No. 521 of Polo Alto and Pantalpha Lada No.

2 FSAM, Washington. D.C. Funeral sorvlcoo ware hold Monday, May 1972, at I p.m. at Colonial Mortuary (Jaaapti Cusi-mono, Director) 94 El Camilla Real Wait, Mountain View. Interment.

Alta Mail Memorial Park, Pale Alto. PEFLEY In Mountain View. Saturday. May S. 1172, John B.

Policy, balovod husband of Mr. Fom O. Polity of Sun-nyvola; toying father of Richard John Pofloy of Mountain Viow; grandfathar of two: nativo of Nevada, and S2 years. Frianda are invited to attend oarvicoo Tuoaday. May 1972, at 2 p.m.

In thn Chapal of tha Howard H. Wyant Homo, 174 N. Sunnyvale Sunnyvale. Inurnment private. TRACY In Palo Alto.

Saturday, May 5, 1972, Holon A. Tracy, wife of John E. Tracy of Polo Alto; mother pf Tom Tracy of Loo Altoo; a nativo of Parnassus. a gad 72 yaaro- Private oarvicoo ware hold today at the Tinnov Sant Funeral Chapal, 555 Collage Palo Alto. Inurnment.

Alta Mna Memorial Park. FLOWERS by LUM TOY Wo Mnrkt ril lay Arte Mortums 1800 Cdmina, M.P. 324- 0061 cor Um year Shell, Matter Charge ar SankAmaricartf With This Coupon And Any Gasoline Tank Fin Up Of 12 Gallons or More Mud AH look la lako advantage of ttali fraa after. COUPON OOOD 7 DATS A WEEK SAT. A SUN.

INCLUDED, AM TO PM JCPenney The values are here every day. LSE1 Vn7SIK MT. VIEW I I offer expires IN 10 PAYS i LOS ALTOS a 2690 El Caalno Real N0W 0PEN RAIN SHINE Charge It at this Penney store: MAYFIELD MALL, Mt. View-Palo Alto. Open Monday thru; Friday til 9:30 p.m., Saturday from 9:30 a.m.

to 5:30 p.m., Sunday 12 to 5 p.m..

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Pages Available:
881,151
Years Available:
1893-1990