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San Mateo County, California Obituary and Death Notice Collection
(Obits and death notices from Various Funeral Homes in the San Mateo,
Redwood City, Menlo Park, Belmont, Burlingame, Daly City, Foster City,
Hillsborough and Pacifica areas.)

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San Mateo County, California Obituary Collection

GenealogyBuff.com - San Mateo County, California Obituary Collection - 2003 - 10

Posted By: GenealogyBuff.com
Date: Thursday, 4 November 2010, at 5:43 p.m.

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William Mein
Cement corporation executive

William Wallace Mein III, member of a prominent Woodside family, died unexpectedly September 24 while working in the garden of his Menlo Park home. He was 67.

Mr. Mein was born in San Francisco and grew up at the family's estate in Woodside. He graduated from Middlesex Preparatory School in Massachusetts, and attended Stanford University, where he crewed for the Cardinal. He graduated from Menlo College.

Mr. Mein served in the United States Marine Corps, and was an avid rugby player and officer of the Peninsula Rugby Football Club in the 1960s.

He was a sales manager of the family-owned Calaveras Cement Company, and went on to become vice president of sales at Mitsubishi Cement Corporation in Southern California. His work took him all over the world.

Mr. Mein was active in many clubs and volunteer groups, including the Menlo Park Rotary Club, the Bohemian Club, the Menlo Circus Club and the Beavers organization. He served as vice chairman of the board of trustees at Menlo College, and was instrumental in constructing a peace garden, due to be dedicated soon.

Mr. Mein enjoyed gardening, golfing and hunting. He recently planted 3,000 vines at his ranch in Freedom, near Monterey Bay, and was looking forward to producing his own organic wine. He enjoyed political discussions and was active in the Republican party.

Mr. Mein was marriage to his first wife, Isolde, the mother of his three sons and daughter, for 41 years. After her death he retired and returned from Newport Beach to Menlo Park. He marriage Susan Morey Lambert, and during their marriage they enjoyed many shared activities, including gardening, entertaining and traveling.

He is survived by his wife, Susan Morey Mein of Menlo Park; children, John Mein of Alameda, Roger Mein of Menlo Park, David Mein of San Jose, and Cynthia Mein of St. Helena; stepchildren Kyla Eller of Redwood City and Jeff Lambert of Menlo Park; a brother, Thomas Mein of Menlo Park; a sister, Tina Mein Fuller of Altadena; and eight grandchildren.

A memorial for Mr. Mein was held September 29 at St. Denis Church in Menlo Park. Memorials in his name may be sent to the Mid-Peninsula Pathways Hospice Foundation or Menlo College.

Janice Bull

Community volunteer

Janice Roche Bull of Menlo Park died September 15 of complications from pneumonia. She was 93.

Born in San Francisco, Ms. Bull was educated at San Francisco Girls' High School and attended the University of California at Berkeley.

After the untimely death of her father, she worked to help support her mother, sister and brother as an assistant buyer at Livingston Brothers. She later worked at a San Francisco bond firm, where she met her future husband, Henry Harding Bull, whom she marriage in 1936. The couple moved to Menlo Park in 1950. Mr. Bull died in 1983.

Ms. Bull was active in community affairs, volunteered at the Children's Health Council for 25 years, and was a mainstay at the Bargain Box resale shop. She held all of the officer positions of the Menlo Park Women's Club and was involved in fund raising for the American Cancer Society for several years.

Ms. Bull was known for the persimmon tree in her front yard and her generosity in sharing the fruit with friends and neighbors. Her family also enjoyed the jam and jelly she made from the many fruit trees in her garden.

Ms. Bull is survived by her three sons, William Bull and Robert Bull of Los Gatos, and Thomas Bull of Burbank; cousin, Marcella Rose of Rossmoor; six grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Family members are also grateful to Moli Vakaotia for the years of care she gave to their mother.

A celebration of Ms. Bull's life was held September 20. Memorials may be made to the Children's Health Council, Palo Alto; or the American Cancer Society, San Mateo.

William Lovell Bay

Retired Pan Am pilot

William Lovell Bay of Portola Valley, who was one of the few pilots to have flown the Boeing 314 Clipper Flying Boats for Pan American World Airways, died September 21 at age 82.

Mr. Bay was born in Evanston, Illinois, and attended Virginia Military Institute. Shortly after leaving VMI, he began taking flying lessons and joined Pan American in 1941. During his career, he flew the Boeing 314 Clipper Flying Boats for the airline. He retired as a 747 captain after 39 years with Pan Am.

Mr. Bay's lifelong hobby was live steam railroads. He built several locomotives and was fascinated with anything mechanical, according to family members. He enjoyed spending summers at his family's resort, Rex Terrace, on Elk Lake, Michigan.

Mr. Bay is survived by his children, Cindy Gilsing of Bellevue, Washington, Christopher Lovell Bay of Medford, Oregon, and Richard Alan Bay of Pleasanton; brothers Ken Bay of Moneta, Virginia, and John Bay of Traverse City, Michigan; and two grandchildren.

The family prefers memorials in Mr. Bay's name to Pan Am Historical Foundation, The Wings Club, P.O. Box 4464, New York, New York 10163-4464; or to a favorite charity.

Ward Schweizer

Pacific Bell executive

Ward Cotrell Schweizer, who in his 42-year career rose from entry-level clerk to become a member of the board of directors of Pacific Bell, died September 16 at his home in Atherton. He was 95.

Mr. Schweizer's career paralleled the growth of the telecommunications company. He became an executive vice president and officer in the AT&T Bell System and served on the boards of Pacific Bell and Nevada Bell. After his retirement in 1972, he joined the board of telecom equipment provider Lynch Communications.

Mr. Schweizer was born in Los Angeles and graduated from Occidental College, where he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Alpha Tau Omega. He served in World War II and achieved the rank of colonel in the U.S. Army. He joined Pacific Telephone in 1930 and moved to San Francisco in 1940.

"He was a business leader when people did not go into business to make a fortune," said his son, John Schweizer. "He enjoyed the work. To him, it was more about customer service. He was more like what corporate America used to be."

Mr. Schweizer wore a hat to work every day, and smoked seven cigars a day until he was 90, said his son.

In 1958, Mr. Schweizer marriage Constance McPherson, and they lived in Atherton for 45 years. He was a member of the Olympic Club, Transportation Club, and the Bankers Club.

He is survived by his wife, Constance of Atherton; sons, John Schweizer of Paris, France, and Marc Schweizer of Fernley, Nevada; and two grandchildren. At Mr. Schweizer's request, no funeral is planned.

Rose Dell'Aquila

Longtime Menlo Park resident

Rose Dell'Aquila, who lived in Menlo Park for 58 years, died on August 6. She was 82.

Ms. Dell'Aquila was born in San Francisco in 1920. In 1945, she and her husband, Carl, moved to Menlo Park -- the same year they were married.

Her family remembers her as a devoted wife, mother and grandmother. "Family and friends gathered many times every year to share in great meals at the house in Menlo Park," said her daughter, Cindy. "Her caring and love for all showed in the many cards and creative handmade gifts she gave throughout her life."

In addition to her husband, Carl, she is survived by her children Leighton, Diane, Rosann and Cindy; and nine grandchildren.

A private memorial service was held.

The family prefers donations in her memory to Pathways Home Health & Hospice, 201 San Antonio Circle, #104, Mountain View 94040.

Irwin "Pierre" Levy

Retired Air Force officer

Irwin Joel "Pierre" Levy, who lived in Menlo Park for 31 years, died September 10 in Reno. He will be buried icon with full military honors in Arlington Cemetery, Washington, D.C., on October 22.

Mr. Levy was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1923. He attended the Haaren High School of Aviation in New York City. In 1941 he joined the Royal Canadian Air Force, but transferred to the U.S. Army Air Corps when the United States entered World War II. He was assigned to the Eighth Air Force in Europe, where he met his wife, Miriam Diskin. They were marriage in 1942 in London.

After the war, Mr. Levy re-enlisted and later graduated from Officers Candidate School in 1948. He served during the Korean War. From 1964 to 1968 he served at the Pentagon in the Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff, Research and Development of Electronic Warfare. During this time, he spearheaded a project to neutralize the surface to air missile threat encountered in Vietnam by U.S. bombers and fighters, according to family members. He received many medals and decorations, including the Air Medal and the Air Force Commendation Medal.

Mr. Levy retired from the military in 1968, then moved to Menlo Park, where he was employed by Lockheed and, later, Applied Technology Incorporated, before forming his own consulting company, Aliron, in 1972. He was a member of the Masons and served as a neighborhood commissioner for the Boy Scouts of America.

Mr. Levy moved to Reno after the death of his wife, Miriam, in 1999. He established the Aerospace Education Foundation Miriam Diskin Levy scholarship through the Dale O. Smith chapter of the Air Force Association.

Mr. Levy is survived by his two sons, Douglas and Phillip, and five grandchildren.

Marc Chaput

Former Peninsula resident

Marc Chaput, a former resident of Emerald Hills, died of leukemia September 16 at his home in southern Oregon, where he moved seven years ago. He was 57.

A member of a well-known local family, Mr. Chaput ran the family business, E. Chaput Precious Stones in San Francisco, established by his grandfather in 1906, and was a member of the Olympic Club.

He was a former member of the Applegate Fire District in Oregon, and recently signed on as a member of the Medford police department.

He is survived by his wife, Carey, of Applegate; children, Chris, Paul, and Nicole of the Bay Area; mother, Lucille, of Menlo Park; and brother, Gene Chaput of Portola Valley. A memorial service is planned.

Erma Smith
Former Encinal teacher

A memorial service for Erma Parkinson Lloyd Smith of Menlo Park will be held Saturday, October 18, at 1 p.m. at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, 3862 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. Ms. Smith died October 3 at age 95.

Raymond Kelly

Airline pioneer

Raymond D. Kelly, a member of the Aviation Hall of Fame, United Airlines career engineer, and longtime Bay Area resident, died September 29 at the Sequoias retirement community in Portola Valley. He was 102.

Born in 1901 in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, Mr. Kelly decided on a career in aviation after riding with a barnstormer offering flights from an Indiana wheat field. At the time he was a sophomore chemistry major at Franklin College, Franklin, Indiana.

Because of an eye condition, Mr. Kelly had limited potential as a pilot, so he concentrated on the design and manufacture of airplanes. He transferred to Purdue University where he earned a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering.

From 1925 to 1928 he helped the Army design airplanes. In those formative years of aviation, he met many famed aviators, including Orville Wright.

During the Depression, he helped develop such aviation instruments as the altimeter. In 1930 he went to work for Boeing Air Transport in Cheyenne, Wyoming, a company that eventually merged with three other companies to form United Airlines. For the next 37 years, he worked with United in Chicago, Denver and San Francisco.

His work helped establish the feasibility that passenger jets could out-perform the era's 50-seat "propliners" and smaller jets. In 1955, United made a historic decision to order 30 100DC-8s.

Mr. Kelly retired in 1967 as director of technical development in San Francisco.

After retiring, he remained active in aviation. He received many professional awards including the Flight Safety Award by the Society of Automotive Engineers, a fellowship in both the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics and the Institute of Aerospace Sciences. In 1971, he was named to the Aviation Hall of Fame in Dayton, Ohio.

Mr. Kelly is survived by his children, Joyce Allen of Lacey, Washington, and Douglas Kelly of Derwood, Maryland; sisters Mary Kelly of Portola Valley and Esther Kelly of Dayton, Ohio; 12 grandchildren; and 23 great-grandchildren. He is preceded in death by two wives, Enid McCaslin of 50 years and Elsie Miller of 22 years.

Stanford Steinbeck

Atherton resident

Stanford E. Steinbeck, cousin of author John Steinbeck, who had been living in Atherton for the past seven years, died September 27. He was 96.

"He was a true gentleman. A rare breed you don't find anymore," said Gail Steinbeck of Southern California, whose husband, Thomas, is John Steinbeck's son.

Stanford Steinbeck grew up near Hollister, in the same Salinas Valley as Salinas, John Steinbeck's birthplace. His father, Charles Minor Steinbeck and John Ernst Steinbeck, the author's father, were brothers. Like his famous cousin, Stanford Steinbeck attended Stanford University.

A former investment manager, Mr. Steinbeck lived in San Diego for many years. He was past president of the San Diego Art Museum, a member of the San Diego Historical Society and the San Diego Yacht Club. He moved to Atherton seven years ago to be with his niece, Carolyn Countryman.

Mr. Steinbeck is survived by his sister, Helen Solomon of Bakersfield; several nieces, great-nieces and nephews. His wife, Beatrice, preceded him in death.

Private services are pending in San Diego. Arrangements were under the direction of Redwood Chapel in Redwood City.

Edith Hubbard

Longtime Menlo Park resident

A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, October 15, at Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, 330 Ravenswood Ave., Menlo Park, for Edith Hubbard who died October 8 after a lengthy illness. She was 92.

A 52-year resident of Menlo Park, Ms. Hubbard relished her role as a homemaker and was known by friends and family for her well-stocked cookie jar of chocolate chip cookies or brownies.

She was active in the community during her daughter's school years. Her interest in sewing led to many long-term friendships through her sewing "class." She also enjoyed traveling and was proud to have visited every continent, except Antarctica, say family members.

Ms. Hubbard is survived by her husband of 67 years, John Hubbard of Menlo Park; daughter Linda Hubbard Gulker of Menlo Park; one grandson; and numerous nieces and nephews.

Services are pending. The family prefers donations to the Northern California and Northern Nevada chapter of the Alzheimer's Association or the Pathways Hospice Foundation.

Leonard Bugna

Former Menlo Park resident

Leonard D. Bugna, who lived in Menlo Park from 1928 until 1988, died October 8 at Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital in Grass Valley. He was 95.

Mr. Bugna was born Avila, Pennsylvania, one of nine children. He moved to Italy with his parents when he was one year old, and lived there until age 12. The family then moved to San Jose, and two years later moved to Menlo Park. Mr. Bugna obtained an electrical engineering degree, and marriage Edith Paganini in 1933.

Mr. Bugna operated a tree surgeon and landscape business in Palo Alto. After retiring, he built a home in Nevada City in 1972 and moved there full-time in 1988. He and his wife celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary on September 17 of this year.

Mr. Bugna's hobbies were orchid growing and hunting. He was a former member of the Menlo Park Chamber of Commerce.

Mr. Bugna is survived by his wife, Edith, of Nevada City; son John of San Jose; brother Joseph Bugna of San Jose; sisters Johanna Lozzio of San Jose and Elizabeth Cassazza of Aptos; eight grandchildren; 13 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild. He was preceded in death by his son, Dan Bugna.

Services will be conducted on Wednesday, October 15, at 11:30 a.m. at Oakhill Mortuary in San Jose.

Marilyn Balser

Former medical technologist

A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Friday, October 17, at Valley Presbyterian Church, Portola Valley, for Marilyn S. Balser of Menlo Park who died October 7 at Stanford Medical Center. She was 83.

Ms. Balser was a native of Minneapolis, Minnesota, attended Carleton College, and graduated from the University of Minnesota with a degree in medical technology. She worked as a medical technologist at Sequoia Hospital for 30 years.

A resident of Menlo Park since 1976, Ms. Balser was a deacon of Valley Presbyterian Church and a member of the Q.K. chapter of PEO, a philanthropic organization. She enjoyed gardening and travel, say family members.

Ms. Balser is survived by her children, Sarah Knutsen of Fremont, George Timothy Smithwick of Danville, and Rebecca Wade of Willow Glen; and six grandchildren. She was marriage to the late George D. Southwick and, later, to the late Robert M. Balser.

The family prefers donations to the PEO scholarship fund, administrative assistant, P.O. Box 1099, Alhambra, CA 91802-1099. Arrangements are under the direction of the Menlo Park Chapel of Spangler Mortuaries.

Nancy Katherine Boone
37-year resident of Woodside

Nancy Katherine Boone, who was an active member of the Woodside community, died September 4 at Sequoia Hospital. She was 80.

Born in Quincy, Massachusetts, Mrs. Boone graduated in 1945 from Boston University, where she was a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority.

She met her husband, Howard, in 1945 on an airplane -- she was a stewardess on board. They marriage in 1946.

The Boones lived in Woodside from 1960 to 1997, when they moved to Redwood City.

Mrs. Boone was active in community affairs, including the Girl Scouts and the PTA. She was a member and past president of the Children's Home Society. As a member of the Service League of San Mateo County, she worked with prison inmates and their families.

In Woodside, she was chairperson of the Livestock and Animal Control Committee and the Trails Committee, and was a deacon at the Woodside Village Church.

She is survived by her husband, Howard, of Redwood City; daughters Kathleen Boone of Palo Alto, Betsy Harms of Half Moon Bay and Bonnie Boone-Altshuld of Portland; and six grandchildren.

A memorial service was held at the Woodside Village Church.

The family prefers donations to Rosener House, 500 Arbor Road, Menlo Park 94023.

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