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The Honolulu Advertiser from Honolulu, Hawaii • 1

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

Weather Today: Cloudy with scattered showers; light southeasterly winds. Yesterday's temperatures: High 84, low 73. TL HAL BOUDREAU SHOW 9:05 p.m. KGU 760 nH(0)M an Amemin Yesterday's rainfall: A trace. -fa -fo 109th YEAR, NO.

54,527 FIRST WITH THE NEWS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1964 10 CENTS IS if coJulJ nn if Grand Jury Probes Probate Maudlin Rebels Seize U.S. Advisers session would involve the handling of probate calendar assignments was correct. At 1 p.m., 19 of the 23 members of the Grand Jury showed up for the special session in the buzzing Judiciary Building. not acting as any kind of "dictator," and assured Jamieson it was his "prerogative" to call the Grand Jury whenever Jamieson saw fit. Jamieson advised Tsukiyama that The Advertiser's report that the Grand Jury Jamieson who summoned the Grand Jury and Chief Justice Wilfred C.

Tsukiya-ma of the Hawaii Supreme Court. Tsukiyama told The Advertiser he called Jamieson yesterday morning to find By DREW McKILLIPS The Oahu Grand Jury met for three hours yesterday to discuss past handling of probate calendar assignments. The Advertiser learned that a full-scale inquiry into the matter may result. How out why he had called the Grand Jury into special session. Tsukiyama said he told Jamieson he had read of the session in yesterday morning's Advertiser, and asked what was going on.

Tsukiyama said he was LB Calls For Fight To Rout Extremism WMmmmmmmmm i are dying: at Sand Island vy i a Sand Island $250 Million Garbage Dump I Coconut trees left I ,4 1k Tt Radios, TV sets were By CHARLES TURNER Also on hand were Honolulu Prosecuting Attorney John H. Peters and State Deputy Attorney General Kenneth Saruwatari. Their appearance was somewhat unusual. Normally, Deputy See JURY on A-4 Col. 2 from lack of care.

ing, largely undeveloped area of Sand Island. BEFORE ANY work on developing the site can get under way, the State will have a mammoth cleanup job on its hands. This was made clear during a tour of the area yesterday. An Advertiser reporter-photographer team found an almost endless clutter of abandoned refrigerators, stoves, washing machines and other bulky items scattered throughout the island. Only a short distance from the well-kept Coast Guard base on Sand Island (which was not included in the land returned to the State), the debris lined both sides of the roadway.

A scavenger was comb ing through a jumbled mass of washing machines, hoping to find some needed parts. A little further down the road was a burned-out hulk of a sedan, probably a stolen car which had been stripped of all removable parts before being set afire. Another stolen car which had been parked beside it on Sunday had been towed away. MIDWAY DOWN the island, along one of the many side roads that criss cross the area, the underbrush was covered by thousands of feet of tabulating ma-See DUMP on A-4 Col. 8 of the Grand are, by law, there was a session of Oahii's Circuit Court judges, preceded by a chat between Circuit Judge Ronald B.

Jack Lacey, 22, and Victor J. Lima, 21. They are accused of assaulting the girl last Oct. 7 after they abducted her from the car of her boy friend on Round Top Drive. Questioned by Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Bert Tokairin, the girl said she was raped five times while being driven around Oahu.

She said she was threatened with a gun and was told she was going to be killed after the attack was over. The girl said: "I was sitting on the passenger side of the car and we (her boy friend, Daniel Miura) made love for awhile. Then I fell asleep. He had his head on my lap. "I LATER climbed into See TRIAL on A-4 Col.

2 OWED ever, details Jury session secret. Meanwhile, simultaneous WASHINGTON (UPI) In a gloves-off speech, President Johnson said yesterday Americans must stand up and be counted to prevent the country from being taken over by "reckless and rejected extremes." It was the strongest attack the President has made in this election campaign. It came before a union audience that roared its approval as he said: "The American way of life is under attack today from the fringe and from the extremes. "I CALL upon you, here and now, to begin this hour to start fighting in order to save it. "Our directions and our destiny must not be placed in the hands of those who would steer a reckless and a callous course.

We must be guided not by those whose compass points backward, but by those whose eyes and hearts are fixed on the stars that lead us forward." AT ANOTHER point he said: Let there be no mistake: It is the heart of our American way of life that is under attack, and those who live it must go forth and save it. "Americans are not presented with a choice of parties. Americans are not presented with a choice of liberalism and conservatism. "Americans are faced today with a concerted bid for power by factions which oppose all that both parties have supported. It is a choice between the center and the fringe between the responsible mainstream of American experience and See JOHNSON on A-4 Col.

5 Where To Find It A SECTION Business and Finance tl, ii Comics Ship Movements 23 Temperatures SECTION Amusements 4, Editorial 2,3 In One Ear 1 Sports S-7 SECTION Ann Landers Classified Ads -13 Crossword Puzzle 14 Radio Programs 5 Sheinwold on Bridge 4 TV Programs 14 What to Do 5 Women's News, Features 1-5 Your Birthday 5 Advertiser Photo by Charles Okamura Defendants Lima, Crawford, Lacey enter court. Rape Jury Told Of, Girl's. Prayer BAN ME THOUT, South Viet Nam (UPI) Rebellious mountain tribesmen were reported today to have barricaded themselves inside a U.S.-operated Special Forces camp 25 miles from here and to be holding six Americans as hostages. Premier Nguyen Khanh flew to this village in the central highlands in a personal attempt to quell the rebellion. U.S.

ARMY advisers with the Vietnamese army's 23rd division here said the Mon-tagnard rebels have been holding Col. John Freund since the revolt began last Sunday. He is a deputy senior adviser to the Vietnamese army's ni Corps. A U.S. spokesman said five American Special Forces troops a captain and four enlisted men also were held hostage inside the camp.

The U.S. personnel are assigned to the camp to train the tribesmen in anti-guer- rilla tactics. COMMUNIST guerrillas yesterday shot down two U.S. piloted fighter-bomber planes during a bitter night battle in the jungles southwest of Saigon. One American pilot was missing, and feared killed or captured.

A U.S. military spokesman said the second U.S. Skyraider pilot escaped death when he rode his craft down to a "controlled crash landing." Both planes were destroyed, the spokesman said. A U.S. spokesman also reported that an American Army officer was wounded last night when the Communists shelled an outpost at Phuoc Tien, 340 miles north of Saigon.

The officer was taken to an army hospital in Nha Trang, where his condition was described as good. In Washington, the Air Force identified the missing American pilot as Lt. George See HOSTAGES on A-4 Col. 4 RESULTS THAT PAY When Neil Beasley, 737 Morrell Drive, wanted to sell liis '50 Ford, he ran a POP Ad Special. The results paid off.

you have something you want to sell, call 52-977 for a 7-day POP Ad Special. Senate gave its unanimous consent to a vote at 2:30 p.m. EDT today on the Anderson substitute. Senators who have been fighting the Dirksen amendment with a talkathon were jubilant over Mansfield's action. The "sense of Congress" proposal the Dirksen opponents are pushing would merely place Congress on record as favoring a reasonable delay in reapportionment.

The lower courts implementing the Supreme Court decision could honor or ignore it, as they wished. IN MANY states, the reapportionment ruling stands to take away from rural areas the representational advantage they have held for years over urban centers. Dirksen's measure would See APPORTION on A-4 Col. 1 4. 7 iiii'sri i 4 r.

1 over from "In Harm's Way" .1 1 V5 stripped, then discarded. ity was knocked out in the island's main town of Naze. Southern Kyushu was warned of the typhoon's fury by 20-foot waves pounding its coast early today. Fishermen pulled in their boats, and the inhabitants battened down doors and windows. Off Coast southern and central New England where gale warnings and predictions of driving rain had been posted for the past 24 hours.

A 12-YEAR-OLD Wakefield, R.I., boy was swept into Narragansett Bay while standing on rocks watching the heavy ocean swell and was in the water more than an hour before he was rescued by a heroic Coast See GLADYS on A-4 Col. 1 i A packed courtroom heard a striking strawberry blonde recite from the witness stand yesterday the words of the Hail Mary prayer, which she testified she spoke as she was being dragged away by three abductors. The three are on trial in Circuit Court for rape. The girl, who is 22, testified for three hours. The audience listened in rapt silence.

At one point, a juror cried. The girl said the three men broke into her boy friend's car, locked him in the trunk compartment, drove away and assaulted her repeated ly after she was bound hand and foot and gagged. The girl was the only witness yesterday in the third day of the rape trial of Gulston Crawford, 20, Nearly $250 million worth of State-owned land fronting Honolulu's business district has been turned into a mas- sive dumping ground. The scene of this giant garbage dump is Sand Island, which was returned to the State last December by presidential order. There are more than 500 acres, each acre valued at about $500,000, in the sprawl- Advertiser Photos by Y.

Ishii to kiawe trees. Bandits Will Face Judge Today Accused bank robbers Donald P. Dawson, 25, and Charles T. Carter, 30, will appear before a Federal judge at 9 a.m. today to be charged in the attempted holdup of the First National Bank's Waikiki branch.

U.S. Attorney Herman T. F. Lum said the pair will be charged by information, rather than have the case go to the Federal Grand Jury. A separate charge of robbing the Denham Trust Co.

of Walpole, of on Sept. 8 will be held in abeyance pending the outcome of the Hawaii case. DAWSON AND Carter are being held for Federal authorities in the City-County jail at Halawa in lieu of a $40,000 bond each. They were arrested Monday in Waikiki 90 minutes after they allegedly tried to hold up the First National Bank's branch on Lewers St Mounds of tabulating paper pose fire threat MR CONDI 1 1 Apportionment Impasse Broken Fear's Worst Typhoon Lashes Japan Islands If Jflllt WASHINGTON (U I) Opponents of the "strong Dirksen amendment on state legislative reapportionment scored a big breakthrough yesterday when Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield swung over to their side. Mansfield announced that he was withdrawing support from the "rider" amendment sponsored by himself and Senate Republican Leader Everett M.

Dirksen. He announced that he would support instead Sen. Clinton P. Anderson in a non binding amendment. This would merely express the "sense of Congress" that the courts should give the states reasonable time to comply with legislative reapportionment on an equal population basis.

SHORTLY after Mansfield announced his switch, the and uprooted trees on Ama-ni-Sohima Island. FRINGE WINDS from the typhoon, which was packing center winds of more than 100 miles per hour, caused considerable damage to vegetable, banana and sugar cane fields on Anami-Sohima. Electric Gladys Veers BOSTON (UPI) Treacherous hurricane Gladys churned up 6 to 10-foot ocean swells off the fog-shrcuded New England coastline last night but veered sharply out to sea when nudged by a cold upper air mass. The hurricane, which picked up forward speed shortly before 6 p.m. EDT after a sluggish 12-hour daytime pace, moved rapidly away from storm-braced TOKYO (UPI) The most powerful Pacific typhoon of season swept across Japan's Amani-So-hima island with destructive winds today and smashed into the main southernmost island of Kyushu.

Weather forecasters said a high pressure ridge appeared to be turning the storm, called vviiaa, away from Tokyo, phoon's outer gered heavy capital and But the ty-fringes trig-rains in the some minor flooding was reported. THE JAPANESE Meteorological Agency said heavy rains and high winds would continue in Tokyo through tomorrow. Flooding was reported in the lower levels of the stadium built for next month's Olympic Games. The typhoon tore off roofs, smashed windows One of the many jet-age conveniences found only on Aloha Airlines is the air-conditioning on the ground and in the air for every flight. You're assured a cool, comfortable, pleasant flight on Aloha Airlines.

Hawaii's only all jet-powered airline. The friendliest name in flight FOR RESERVATIONS SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT OR CALL 814-211 WAIKIKI: 2235 Kalakaua Aver.ua DOWNTOWN: 1055 Bishop Streat Honolulu International Airport.

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About The Honolulu Advertiser Archive

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