I see volumes on preserving relics of metal and stone, but not much on the flesh.
EL CAJON — At 93, Arnold V. “Max” Bauer is as proud a Pearl Harbor survivor as they come.
He’s always eager to recount the day the Japanese unleashed bombs by sea and air on his Navy ship. He’s always willing to talk about how he stayed aboard the USS Vestal and then dropped into the harbor to hunt for survivors.
He keeps a special, state-issued Pearl Harbor survivors license plate on his Mercedes-Benz sedan.
In recent years, though, the hero has fallen on hard times.
His wife of 62 years died in 2007. His body grew frail and a caregiver moved into his house in the rambling foothills east of El Cajon.
Then came this week’s news: Sheriff’s deputies arrested the caregiver after discovering that Bauer was living in squalor, his house filled with trash, rotting food and rat droppings. When deputies found him, he was gripping a photo of the Vestal.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/jan/27/pearl-harbor-veterans-case-case-sheds-renewed-ligh/
A Sheriff’s Department official said Bauer’s grown son and daughter, who both live in the Los Angeles area, had been unaware of their father’s condition.
The son, Timothy Bauer of Rancho Palos Verdes, said Thursday that his sister was “legally responsible” for their father, but would not elaborate.
EL CAJON — At 93, Arnold V. “Max” Bauer is as proud a Pearl Harbor survivor as they come.
He’s always eager to recount the day the Japanese unleashed bombs by sea and air on his Navy ship. He’s always willing to talk about how he stayed aboard the USS Vestal and then dropped into the harbor to hunt for survivors.
He keeps a special, state-issued Pearl Harbor survivors license plate on his Mercedes-Benz sedan.
In recent years, though, the hero has fallen on hard times.
His wife of 62 years died in 2007. His body grew frail and a caregiver moved into his house in the rambling foothills east of El Cajon.
Then came this week’s news: Sheriff’s deputies arrested the caregiver after discovering that Bauer was living in squalor, his house filled with trash, rotting food and rat droppings. When deputies found him, he was gripping a photo of the Vestal.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/jan/27/pearl-harbor-veterans-case-case-sheds-renewed-ligh/
A Sheriff’s Department official said Bauer’s grown son and daughter, who both live in the Los Angeles area, had been unaware of their father’s condition.
The son, Timothy Bauer of Rancho Palos Verdes, said Thursday that his sister was “legally responsible” for their father, but would not elaborate.
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