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The Honolulu Advertiser from Honolulu, Hawaii • 13

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

They Jump When Gabe Barks Out His Orders 6 Aloha Friday9 Caught With Its Shirttail In Wy Jy A 1 vvi is tr lyy Alf 1 't: jj mmm Mt I I HI i -Ill linn mil ll Ml I mi- I 1- 'iflli-'imrf- ft irfk ittM. Witt 3 Receive Camp Fire Certificates The Hawaii Council of Camp Fire Girls gave its National a a Service Award to three volunteers at a recognition coffee yesterday. The recipients were Mrs. Curtis Baskin, of 910 Malu-niu Kailua; Mrs. Charles Macnamara, of 407 Ililani Kailua, and Mr.

Richard Hamilton, of 91-536 Hu-leia Place, Ewa Beach. The award is given to volunteers who have given five years of "outstanding leadership" to the Camp Fire Girls. Dr. Paul Wheeler, president of the Hawaii Camp Fire Girls, presented the awards and certificates. The three women are the first to be given the award in Hawaii.

L. D. Baver Will Retire Leonard D. Baver will retire Sept. 1 as director emeritus and consulting scientist of the Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association Experiment Station.

Baver will become a professor of agronomy at Ohio State University, a post he held 25 years ago. In his new position he will also take part in Ohio State's International Agricultural Program as chief of party to the university's AID Contract at Udaipur, Rajasthan, India. Probationer Gets Term Willis K. H. Kam, 22, unemployed, of the 1600-block of Hau yesterday in Circuit Court lost his probation and was sentenced to 10 years in prison for larceny.

The sentence was imposed by Judge Frank A. McKinley. Kam was convicted last Dec. 14 of stealing automobile parts. On April 15, 1965, he was placed on five years' probation and ordered to spend weekends in jail while he worked.

McKinley revoked Kam's probation yesterday because Kam failed to report to the jail on weekends, was not gainfully employed, and did not report to the probation office as requested. Advertiser Photos by Jerry Y. Chong HARA KARIMOTO HO McCOY One out of four in Aloha Friday comfort seemed about average among business execs yesterday. Hawalt National Guard Photo Paratrooper jumps out of 35-foot tower. The Honolulu Advertiser SATURDAY, JUNE 19, 1965 B-l Tallett Must Pack His Pigs to cover themselves with something they can mount a carnation on.

"Could you imagine a Royal manager greeting an important guest with his shirt-tail out?" he asked. Pan American's Paul Kendall wore a suit. lie had to attend the wedding of Samoa Gov. Rex Lee's daughter. Postmaster George Hara, in a natty grey suit with black and white shoes, didn't have any excuses and wasn't looking for any.

"I plan to keep wearing suits." he said with a broad smile. "It's better to have a suit on when you meet the public. "Most of the boys wear shirts to work every day. but my top echelon here will keep wearing suits." ident of the Central Pacific Bank. "It's rather difficult to wear an aloha shirt if you have to go to some function that day," said Karimoto.

"If all the banks do it, I think it will be all right." He said the matter will be taken up at a Monday meeting of the Hawaii Bankers of which he is secretary. Richard Holtzman, president and general manager of the Sheraton Hawaii wore a crisp cream-tan suit. But then he explained he had to appear at the bank and couldn't risk appearing in an aloha shirt to ask for several million dollars. Holtzman said, however, that next Friday he will wear an aloha shirt. But he said his managers will have By BURT ANDERSON The Hawaiian Fashion Guild has some missionary work to do on "Aloha Friday." The Guild's idea, broached last Sunday, is to have Hawaii businessmen wear aloha shirts to work on Fridays, through Labor Day.

But an Advertiser reporter and photographer who made a tour of Honolulu offices yesterday the first Aloha Friday found very few executives wearing aloha shirts. Several liked the idea but for one reason or another hadn't yet adopted the practice. Chinn Ho, puffing on a cigar at his suite in the Ili-kai, thought Aloha Friday was a fine thing and said he encourages his employes to wear aloha shirts every day. lie had on a bold brown print and yellow slacks and looked very cool indeed. At Mclnerny's administrative offices we learned that its president, Lawson Riley, is on the Mainland and no directives about aloha shirts on Fridays had been issued to employes.

"We'll just have to wait until he gets back," his secretary said. William F. Quinn, president of the Dole was out but his secretary reported he had on a suit. William McCoy, president of Theo. H.

Davies and was seated at his desk wearing a short. sleeved white shirt and tie. "I've heard about Aloha Friday," said McCoy, "and I think it's a good idea. Maybe we'll start it here next William Mau, president of American Security Bank, was wearing a suit, his secretary said. So was C.

K. Karimoto. senior vice pres HILO Pig farmer Paul K. Tallett, was denied a request to continue his piggery at his home in residential Kraukaha yesterday by the Hawaii County Planning Commission. But the commission gave him three months to relocate.

Tallett had one six-month extension which has run out and had asked for another. The piggery is at his home at 2140 Kalanianaole Ave. Two of Tallett's neighbors Mrs. Rosey Harada and Richard 1 1 i were among those who spoke in opposition to his request for a six-month extension. Tallett told the commis- Tolays Thought Lin Yufang, the Chinese philosopher, once said, "True peace of mind comes By BOB JONES Advertiser Military Editor The most ornery man on Oahu (when he is training new paratroopers) is Cpl.

Stephen F. "Gabe" Gabriel of the Marine 6th Force Reconnaissance Company. He is apt to rap a man across the knuckles with his jumpmaster's stick, call him a name or threaten to throw him out of the 35-foot jump tower at Schofield Barracks. The most weary group of men on Oahu is the batch of 6th Force, 1st Anglico and Navy Reserve students who today graduate from nine long days of paratrooper training here. Gabriel has been helping train and harden them.

Schofield is now training all the Hawaii paratroopers, thereby saving the taxpayers $100,000 annually the cost of sending the men to Ft. Benning, or Okinawa, as in the past. Most of them were "assisted" out of the high jump tower by Gabriel at least once in the past nine days, and most of them are bruised, dog-tired, pounds lighter and "graduate" paratroopers. The Marine jump school has a hardened outlook: Treat a new paratrooper so rough the course will either make him or break him. Only one man quit the class, and only three were washed out.

The others stuck it out. 1st Anglico Lt. Barney Bailey bruised a tendon in his heel so badly the doctor told him to stay in bed for four days. Bailey said no, and has kept on in spite of his limp. Pvt.

Ken F. Larusso has his arm in a sling he cracked his collar bone in hard landing. But Vs been out there every iv doing calisthenics that don't involve his arm. His father was a World War II paratrooper and he's going to be one, too. Pvt.

John K. Kobayashi, a nephew of State Attorney General Bert Kobayashi, banged up his arm, too. But still he hasn't missed a day. The Marine and Navy instructors first make the would-be paratrooper feel lower than the sawdust they fall on in landing training. Navy Lt.

Cmdr. Al Price, a teacher at Punahou School, got no officer's preference while Cpl. Blue Makua was putting him through the paces yesterday. Makua ordered Price to crawl face down in the sawdustand Price crawled. Another Punahou teacher, reserve Lt.

Cmdr. James Klein, got much the same treatment. And when 6th Force 1st Sgt. Robert F. Snyder yells the new paratroopers fall to the ground, do 10 pushups and one more for "airborne." Snyder ordered another student to lie on his back with full parachute gear for 15 minutes yelling, "I am a dying cockroach." It's all part of the deliberate rough treatment, which the instructors claim makes a man "think airborne" and keeps him alert at all times.

For nine days the "weekend soldiers" have been living at Schofield. They get up at 4:45 a.m. They are inspected at 6:45 a.m. They have an hour of calesthen-ics. The paratrooper training then goes on until 5:15 p.m.

By noon, most of the men are ready to drop but dare not. One man who just fizzled out found instructor Makua ordering him to run for one hour around the training area. Even Episcopalian minister Keith MacPherson, the Navy Reserve chaplain and a teacher at Iolani School, discovered that instructors are breathing down your neck 12 hours a day. As the men climb up the step to the tower from which they jump while attached to overhead cables, their comrades chant: "We are airborneMighty, mighty airborne Everywhere we goPeople want to knowWho we areWe are airborne At the top of the tower is Gabriel, watching for an error, a grin and WHACK his stick flashes out at the offender. But it made men out of thsm.

lftfe CARPET Ifeh SPECIALS rMiffy TODAY ONLY MITCHELL GARCIA FATHER'S DAY SALE! By JOE FERNANDEZ 5, sion he was unable to find another location for his pigs, but had been promised a priority when the State opens its Panaewa farm lot subdivision. Opening date for that project is unknown. Tallett. who has 16 pigs, asked for consideration because he had been in business almost 20 years. But Mrs.

Harada denied this and produced a letter from the State Tax Office saying Tallett was granted a business license for the piggery on March 1, 1962. Dollnig said he had been told by the Tax Office that Tallett had not been promised priority when the Panaewa project opens. The commission debated the issue more than an hour, then visited Tallett's piggery. Several time limits for him to move the piggery were discussed, but none got the necessary number of votes. Eight commissioners were present.

A recent ruling by the County Attorney said that a majority of the 11 members must approve all actions. That ruling upset another commission action yesterday. The commission had approved a variance to allow a mortuary and funeral chapel in Puueo by a 4-3 vote at its last meeting, but the County Attorney's ruling made that void. Yesterday, the commission deferred further action on the variance. Good Kodak has just come out with a whole new system for making home movies.

And even if you've never been a home movie fan, you owe it to your family to see this latest development instant-loading Kodak movie cameras for the easiest-to-take, brighter, sharpest home movies you've ever seen. e3SA At trom accepting the worst." Do not despair when you think the worst has come. It may not be as bad ROOM-SIZE-RUGS 304 GARCIA REEL with 2 pe. matching A98 RarJ 6' Ft 302 GARCIA REEL and 265S Garcia Matching 33 13' ft. Fiberglass $Q98 BLANKS COLEMAN SINGLE $1A98 MANTLE LAMP I LUXOR SPINNING $0198 REEL ir3 Schwinn STING RAY LIMITED SUPPLY 100 DUP0NT CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON EASY TO CLEAN DURABLE MOTHPROOF LUXURIOUS PILE NO FUZZING ALLERGY FREE as vou may think.

Rcv- sumi Even though you find yourself in an extremely adverse circumstance, you can, with God's help, make the best of it. Rev. Paul S. Osumi. Nuiianu Congregational Church.

$55.95 Jr. Model $47.95 nvar in 1 iCV I Mi 1 1 muuet 39" VICTORIAN HEADBOARD (Twin Bed Size) Choice of: Beige, Ivory, Green, Maize and Rose Beigt SIZES SPECIAL 9'xl2' our retail value $119.00 s59oo 10'xl2' our retail value $132.00 s6600 12'xl2' our retail value $159.00 $79oo 12'xl5' our retail value $199.00 $9900 12'xl8' our retail value $238.00 $11900 12'x2r our retail value $278.00 $,3900 12'x24' our retail value $318.00 To begin with, there are three KODAK INSTAMATIC Movie Cameras. All three load instantly with a new kind of film cartridge that is factory-loaded with KODACHROME II Film. No threading. Just drop in the KODAPAK Movie Cartridge and you're set to shoot.

All three cameras have electric film drive, so you never have to wind them. You don't bother flipping over the film half way through the roll. You can shoot a full 50-foot roll without stopping, without missing a frame of the action. And the movies you get are the best-looking movies ever. Because the new Super 8 film has 50 more picture area than regular 8 mm film.

Lets more light get on to your screen for better projection detail. And the new Super 8 KODACHROME II Film, Type is, itself, greatly improved in color rendition. Then there are six new KODAK INSTAMATIC Movie Projectors that make Super 8 shows a story in themselves. All thread themselves automatically. All make the most of Super 8 film's advantages.

From the simplest KODAK INSTAMATIC M50 model at just $72.50, to a model that shows both the Super 8 and regular 8 mm films at seven different speeds, these projectors are loaded with new features. See our demonstration. We think you'll get as excited about Super 8 movies as we are. Now that you own your new Super 8 camera. Here are some hints on how to take better pictures.

The natural look. Let your camera look at things as you do. Try to avoid posed group shots when you can. Getting a line of people to say "cheese" while the shutter snaps, frequently makes for cheesy pictures. The more natural the activity, the better you'll like the picture result.

Tell a story. Your day at the beach starts long before you get your feet wet. Start shooting when the gang is packing up and get the whole day. Arriving. Unloading.

First dash for the water. Lunch. Afternoon activity. Sunset and return trip. You can make picture-stories of the little-league game, the backyard barbecue, or just washing the car.

Check the background. A cluttered background can detract from pictures of people. Whenever possible choose something plain. Grass, sky, dense trees or a plain wall. JOE FERNANDEZ T-BIRD with Chrome $0Q98 Wheel? and Fender Tandem SQQ98 SCHWINN II Duke Kohanamoku $10050 98 SURF BOARD I A Bicycle TIRES Sl98 I Eveready 6 Volti QQ BATTERY Penn So93 JIGMASTEP WALL-TO-WALL EXTRA SPECIAL MILL CLOSE-OUT 3 vAj'' 501 DUP0NT CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON yx I -I Junn SO 0 3 "r- 3 H.P.

7jSfl $69 per Choice of 6 colors Our retail price $16.95 sq. yd. Price includes padding and installation. NOW No Down Payment Budget Financed With Approved $1195 Reg. $13.95 SALE IB Bonkoh Charg Plan Accepted 848 SOUTH BERET ANIA CIM FURNITUEU PHONE 586-933 treoil s-jvj Tore 19" WHIRLWIND $QQ98 POWER MOWER VVAIPAHU BICYCLE SPORTING GOODS Woipohu Shopping Center Ph.

673-611 or 675-011 Open Fri. to Prices aood thru June 1 BANKOH Charge Welcome or budget financed Ph. 586-451 1357 S. Beretonio St. opp.

Palace Theatre OPEN THURS. I FRI. TILL 9:00 P.M. Plui State Tax FREE PARKING IN REAR OUTSIDE ISLAND INQUIRIES WELCOME PH. 991-087 OPEN FRI.

TIL 9 SAT. TIL 5 WATERHOUSE PHOTO 1356 Kapiolani Blvd. Ik.

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About The Honolulu Advertiser Archive

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