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The Honolulu Advertiser from Honolulu, Hawaii • 1

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

So Names Lunalilo H-l S(i(g(o)QX iJU 5 xvT: legend OTPrOUTE H-2. dmm MR MARINE CORPS WASHINGTON (UPI) Officials said yesterday action is expected soon on a proposal that the Lunalilo reeway on Oahu be incorporated into Hawaii's interstate-defense highway system. Indications were that the proposal, which was made by the State, would be accepted. This would mean a Federal refund to the State of more than $23 million in construction funds spent on the still-incomplete freeway. The refund would be the difference between the 50 per cent costs which the government has paid on the freeway and the 90 per cent it pays on interstate routes.

Rex Whitton of the Bureau of Public Roads said the state requested that plans for Interstate Highway H-l, which will run from Palailai to near Diamond Head, be changed to take in the freeway and eliminate the proposed construction of a five-mile stretch alongside the freeway. Whitton said details of the proposal, including the financial refund, were to be worked out by State authorities and submitted to the bureau's division engineer in Honolulu. He said a final decision would be up to the division engineer but would not be made without investigation by bureau officials here and the Defense Department, which is invited to make recommendations on all proposed interstate routes. The proposal was forwarded to the Defense Department on Jan. 7.

A spokesman for the department said it would file a report with the bureau after receiving an opinion from the Pacific command. This opinion, said the department, is expected within a week. The department report is expected to favor the proposal, but Whitton cautioned that this would "not necessarily" mean final acceptance by the bureau. Other sources, however, indicated that the proposal is likely to win final approval within two or three weeks. tjr r'iiwggMMMHW'tw- i -J Mi Cnmara Hawaii Sketch shows Lunalilo Freeway as part of H-l and approved H-2 routes.

State Department of Transportation is studying proposed H-3 alignment. For Iolani Comments See Page A-fi F. E. (Bill) Appel, superintendent for Gordon II. Ball, paving subcontractor on Kaimuki section of H-l route, checks with a worker on job.

In background is a slip-form paver, which will put concrete on 1st Ave. Ad. The Ole Log Splitter! J. AICU PU a.m. KGU 760 Uteltil ihkomM The Weather Today: Mostly sunny; northerly winds 10-20 mph.

Yesterday's temperatures: High 73, low 58. Yesterday's rainfall: None. FIRST WITH THE NEWS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1965 109th YEAR, NO. 54,664 1 Ban On Building In Keapuka Urged von' Hilo-Mainland Jet Flight Hailed -A: Boy, 14, with two teenage girls and a 9-year-old boy in an abandoned building. The victim, Ah IIou Siu, who lives at 354-D N.

Vineyard was treated at conducted tour of i JIIIX) A crowd estimated at 3.500 jammed the Hilo airport last night to greet the first passenger jet direct-flight from the Mainland. A Pan American Airways Intercontinental 707 landed here at 7:10 p.m. from Los Angeles, with a party of 40 persons aboard. In the party were the board directors of Pan American, their wives, and other Pan Am officials. The group was headed by Juan T.

Trippe, chairman of the board, and Harold E. Gray, Pan Am president. Despite a drizzling rain, about 1,500 persons were in the terminal building to watch a lei and key-to-the-island presentation to the dignitaries. Another 2,000 persons watched from outside the ter-See FLIGHT on A-6 Col. 6 10 CENTS By BOB JONES The State's new Emer gency Resources Manage- ment Agency (ERMA) yes terday announced a mobili- zation plan for Hawaii based upon a theoretical 5-megaton nuclear attack on Pearl Harbor.

Governor Burns also com- missioned the 13 men who will hparf thp rrnun anH writ) empowered to taKe over, control and distribute all re- sources in the event of war. The agency said such an atomic attack on Pearl Har- bor-y ever materialized, rw Kill 100,000 people on 0ahu and disable another 150,000. Wipe out 80 per cent of all industry and ware houses. Destroy 30,000 homes and result in the death of per cent of the skilled construction craftsmen. UPI Cablephoto This Air Force photo, taken by automatic camera during reprisal raid on Viet Cong military barracks near Vinh Linh, North Viet Nam, shows three persons (circled at left) running from a burning" truck; a fourth (circled right) seeking shelter in a slit trench; bomb craters (upper right) and demolished tin-roof barracks (top center).

Drunken M-WarMobilization Plan Unveiled Here Caretaker, 68, With Rock Bodies Of 19 Yanks Hunted SAIGON (UPI) U.S. soldiers today pulled the last survivor from the blasted wreckage of the barracks at Qui Nhon where 21 Americans died in a Communist terrorist attack. The survivor, Sp4 Arthur G. Abendschein, 30, of. New Jersey, was pulled from the More Stories, Photos On Pages A-L 12 debris after being buried 35 hours and 35 minutes.

He w'as reported in good condition. Marines working in the wreckage of the four-story barracks said they tunneled, through 36. inches of concrete and past five bodies to reach Abendschein. Abendschein said he had been living on food passed to him through an opening in the debris. A Marine officer directing the rescue operation said his men now would tear the debris apart to recover the bodies of 19 Americans believed buried in the wreckage- The officer said he believed it would take four days to complete the job.

vh't vim See IhT NAM on A tol. 6 the barracks was demol- Dependents --v -m Mart I trlrtr On 2 Flights Tw flights carrying dependents from South Viet Nam were scheduled to ar- rive here today, the first of eight scheduled flights that will evacuate about 1.400 persons. Seven dependents arrived in Honolulu yesterday, and 22 came in Tuesday morn-' ing. Flights that were to bepin arriving todav wprp cnhori. Flights today were to ar-.

rive at 7 a.m. and 2:15 p.m.-Most of the evacuees will be here only a few hours be-; fore planes take them on to: the Mainland. I They are leaving South' See Dependents on A-fi Col. i A drunken 14-year-old boy struck a 68-year-old caretaker on the head with a rock yesterday to keep him from calling police after the man caught him drinking Fy ED ENGLEDOW City Councilman Frank F. Fasi said yesterday he will recommend a moratorium on building in the Keapuka subdivision until the area gets better flood protection.

He said he also plans to urge again that the i Council investigate the causes of last week's flood in the area which took two lives and damaged a large number of homes. The issue is scheduled for discussion at a special meeting of the Council at 1:15 p.m. today. Fasi charged that an interim report on the flood sent to the Council by Mayor Blaisdell is "inaccurate." Blaisdell's report, which See FASI on A-fi, Col. 3 Attacks Queen's Hospital for a scalp wound and released.

Patrolman Steven Burke arrested the boy at gun-point in a grassy lot behind the abandoned building at 1237 Aala Lane. Siu told police he entered the building about 5 p.m. and discovered four teenagers drinking cheap whisky in a back room. Some of the windows had been broken. Siu told them to leave.

When they refused, he left by the front door and went to an adjacent building to call police. Burke said the 14-year-old ran out the back door and See ROCK on A-6, Col. 6 "It Rented So Fast said Mrs. Rosalind A a 3738 Pukalani Place. She was speaking of her Wilhelmina studio cottage which she advertised in the classified section.

If you're in a hurry to rent your house or apartment, place an od in the classifieds. The number to call ii 52-977. Demos Ponder Their Image You are invited to join GEORGE BARATI Afir Abandoned SW Of Isle A Danish freighter was a-fire about 1,100 miles southwest of Oahu late last night and her crew had abondoned ship, the Coast Guard said. A Coast Guard plane is expected to reach the scene about 2:15 a.m. today.

The freighter Margit radioed for help about 8:15 last night, saying she was on fire. Minutes 1 a the Coast Guard picked up a. second message saying the crew had taken to lifeboats. Besides the Coast Guard HC130 aircraft which took off from Barber's Point after the freighter called for help, an Air Force plane and two snips were uu txien wajr the scene. The Air Force plane had been en route from Wake ISlH 0lthlU wnin verted to aid the burning i cVim The surface vessels head- ed for the scene were the USNS Greenville Victory and the SS Hugh Helm.

The Na- val ship is expected to reach the Margit about 6:30 a.m. today. The Coast Guard said the burning ship was a 427-foot freighter. No information was available on the number of crewmen or the ship's destination. The Margit had a doctor on board and a small por- iciuitr lauiu "i use when rescue planes ar- rive, the Coast Guard said, in his personally A Arfc Hirrufi How do you bolster your imaee as the "common man's" party? That's what Democratic House and Senate leaders had in mind yesterday as they to produce a pro.

gram of sociai and edu. cational legislation to offer at sessjon kept the details of thg tightly under Ve are just discussing things in broad categories and haven't gotten down to spelling out the specifics," said House Speaker Elmer Cravalho, Maui Democrat i i i me fv dinmdi committeeman. we are tn general agree- rnent in the direction we want to go but still have to get to the details." The Democratic legisla- tive leaders obviously have tneu- eyes cocxea on tne iybb elections "We don't want to be thought of as being satisfied with status quo, despite a booming economy and high employment," one conferee said. It was learned that some of the legislative proposals are certain to be regarded as "radical" and primarily See DEMOS on A-6 Col. 3 Women's News, Features 1-4 ccrT irtu comics 14 Programs 19 Sheinwold on Bridge 14 Your Birthday 14 Bob Krauss Special B-l 1965 EUROPEAN iUSIC FESTIVALS Leaving Saturday, July 31, 1965, for five weeks, with extension privileges Bayreuth Festival and Munich Opera, Germany Salzburg Festival, Austria Verona Festival, Italy St.

Cergue and Lucerne Festivals, Switzerland Edinburgh Festival, Scotland Additional stops at Amsterdam, Paris, London. $2530 Destroy two of the three uled as evacuation flights Hawaiian Electric Co. pow- and each plane will be carer plants and all but 15 per rying 175 dependents, a Pan cent of the State's petroleum American Airwavs spokes-supplies, man said. 1 Where To Find It Call 511-611 wan Destroy or contaminate 75 per cent of the dry gro ceries, leaving a food supply 1 -Kve i- a iru i. iwu wccia.

Burns defense a 1. workine with the State Defense agency, is empow- See DEFENSE A-6 Col. 5 CASTLE COOKE TRAVEL A SECTION Amusement Business and Finance Temperatures SECTION Editorial Sports SECTION 18. 72, 33 3. 1 Ann Lanrir Art.

cmword Purnt what i (Ftstivalt subject to change).

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About The Honolulu Advertiser Archive

Pages Available:
2,262,631
Years Available:
1856-2010