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The Honolulu Advertiser du lieu suivant : Honolulu, Hawaii • 8

Lieu:
Honolulu, Hawaii
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8
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HONOLULU ADVERTISER Tides: High a.m., 5:27 p.m. Low 12:25 p.m., 11:16 p.m. 1 Maui Pine Cannery Unif Votes Expulsion Of Feig 4 Candidates Get Free Radio Time KGMB radio and television yesterday offered free broadcast time to major local general election candidates on Saturday, Oct. 31. The station said it would give 15 minutes to each candidate for the U.S..

Senate, U.S. House and for Mayor, starting at 8 p.m. if debates are decided upon, the station said it would offer the services of Sunday newspaper political columnist Dan Turtle as moderator. At the same time, Senate candidate Thomas P. Gill repeated his challenge to Republican incumbent Hiram L.

Fong for a debate. In a letter to Fong, Gill asked for a "clear and unequivocal answer" to the debate question. Fong probably will be faced with this question at a news conference he has scheduled for this morning. Gill suggested for debate these subjects on which the two candidates differ: Medicare, urban mass transit, delaying legislative reapportionment and some facets of Federal, aid to education. i i r-t ti i M'lfiii By ROBERT JOHNSON KAHULUI After a lively stopwork meeting here yesterday, members of the Maui Pineapple Co.

cannery unit of the. ILWU voted 277 Jewelry Hit For NEW YORK (UPI) Gunmen invaded another mid-town New York jewelry establishment yesterday and escaped with $80,000 in loot after threatening to kill four persons in the office. It was the third such holdup in as many days. The new robbery brought to $205,000 the total value of gems, gold and cash taken by bandits in the three-day period. POLICE AID description of the three men who invaded the George B.

Unger firm on 47th St. fitted those of the trio which took in loot at gun point from a jewelry manufacturing company two blocks away Tuesday. HOLLYWOOD U.S. Sen. Pierre Salinger of California, (left) former press secretary to two presidents, and his Republican opponent, former movie actor George Murphy, are shown at a press conference following a televised debate on issues in California's November election.

LB Supporters Waver Over Honesty Question Missing Beatle Fans Picked Up By SAMUEL LUBELL President Johnson is being hurt politically by suspicions of his personal honesty and by how the Bobby Baker case has been handled. During the past month there has been a sharp increase in the number of voters Democrats as well as Republicans who have volunteered criticisms of the President's personal finances. This spreading concern over the President's integrity clearly reflects the campaigning attacks by both Goldwater and his running mate, William E. Miller. This is the one issue stressed in their campaign which, my interviews show, has had appreciable impact on the voters.

the "voter criticisms of President Johnson take the form of a generalized "he's 'a politician and all politicians are out for themselves." But often the to 183 to expel Isaac B. Feig from the union. Among the members who urged Feig's expulsion was Tom Tagawa, one of the unit's organizers in 1944, a Store $80,000 A lone bandit on Monday pistol-whipped the owner of the Herbert I. Berrent jewelry store on Madison Ave. and fled with $70,000 worth of diamond bracelets and rings." THE BANDITS yesterday suddenly produced pistols and ordered Unger, 42, two employes and a fourth person, to lie on the floor.

They handcuffed Unger to one of the employes, then took $575 in cash and looted showcases of bracelets, rings and other jewelry. As they left they warned their victims not to move for 10 minutes, "otherwise we'll come back and kill you." women walking down Oxford St. with an English boy. When they stopped her she gave 'the Holland Park address. Police found Martha there, and seven suitcases of clothing.

Gill Stars In Party's TV Show Hawaii's top Democratic candidates met yesterday and taped an hour long television show to be aired at 7 p.m. tomorrow over KGMB. Aside from a few minutes of filmed material, Congressman Thomas Gill, candidate for the Senate, is on camera for the entire show. Congressional candidates Sparky Matsunaga, the incumbent, and Patsy Mink also appear as does mayoralty aspirant Masato DoL Also on the show are Congressman Dan Inouye, State House Speaker Elmer Cra-valho, Senate President Nelson Doi and Senate Majority Leader Sakae Takahashi. Spies Choose Destination NEW YORK (UPI) Accused Russian spies Alexandre Sokolov and his wife chose Czechoslovakia yesterday as the country to which they wish to be deported.

The government withdrew its case against the Sokolovs last Friday on the fifth day of their trial on charges of espionage conspiracy. Authorities feared information would be revealed at the trial which would be against the interests of national security. The pair appeared yesterday morning before special inquiry officer Ira Fieldsteen in the deportation section of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. Their attorney, Edward Brodsky, said they would offer no objection to a final deportation order.

A-8 Thursday, Oct. 8, 1984 Kauai Asks Study On Jet Airport LIHUE Kauai Supervisors yesterday adopted a resolution seeking Governor Burns' assistance in a feasibility study for the location of a jet air strip here. The resolution noted the need for direct jet flights to Kauai as a tourist destination. It also said the jet strip would encourage farmers to ship fresh produce directly to the Mainland. The board also passed a resolution backing the future acquisition of a site for a branch botanic garden.

THE ACTION was taken as part of a Federal plan to establish a Pacific Tropical Botanic Garden, probably on Oahu, with branch gardens on the Neighbor Islands. In other actions, the board: Approved a special committee recommendation to realign, widen and resurface the existing Lawai Road in Koloa. Approved the appropri-' ation of $1,920 for a bituminous power unit for road work. Approved $1,500 for surf boards to be used by the fire department for sea rescue work. Denied a Police Commission request that its chairman, Alexander Gomez, be sent with the Kauai police chief to a Mainland conference of police officials.

Turned over to the county engineer a request for eight sections of bleachers for the Kapaa and Hana-pepe ball parks. Copter Continued from Page 1 Vietnamese army, sub-Brig. Gen. Nguyen Due Thang, confirmed that some government troops had been killed by armed American helicopters. But he refused to disclose the exact number.

THE DISTRICT chief of Ben Luc district just west of the capital, in a confidential report which reached Saigon last night, reported that 25 of his militia were killed and 26 wounded when a U.S. Army HU1B made rocket and machinegun strafing passes near the scene of yesterday's first helicopter crash. The black-clad militiamen had swarmed around the wreckage of the helicopter in which five Americans were killed. An American military spokesman in the capital said the second aircraft was shot down while trying to provide air cover for possi ble survivors of the first crash. THE SPOKESMAN said the second aircraft was hit and so severely damaged by ''presumably" Communist groundfire that it had to make a forced landing in a secure area close to the nearby district capital of Due Hoa, twelve and a half miles due west of the capital.

Vietnamese military sources blamed the unfortunate incident on "lack of communiciations" between the non-English speaking militiamen and the American pilots aboard the armed "Hueys." Gen. Thang said the miltia troops "were too close to the Viet Cong." Apparently the American pilot passed over the wreckage of the first helicopter shot down by Communists saw swarms of black-clad troops around the wreckage. Thinking they were Viet Cong guerrillas, who usually don black pajamas very similar to the militia's black uniforms, the Americans cut loose on the friendly militia troops, who returned the fire. Until yesterday 286 Americans had died in defense of South Viet Nam, 196 of them in direct combat. A third American aircraft was shot down by the Viet Cong yesterday.

The twin-engined Army Mohawk reconnaissance plane crashed in Kien Phong province 50 miles southwest of Saigon. The American pilot and his Vietnamese observer parachuted to safety. Hangs Himself A Makiki man apparently hanged himself from a closet door in his home yesterday. Police identified him as Yoshio Okubo, 44, of 1266 Matlock Street, Apt. 4.

The body was found by a brother 10 p.m. i i i i i i I I I i ij comments are a blunt "he's a crook." So far these suspicions, seem to be switching only a limited number of But this sense of distrust is causing considerable wavering among Johnson supporters and contributes strongly to the lack of enthusiasm for the President so evident among the voters. In one precinct in Dayton, Ohio, nearly a fourth of the persons I talked with voiced some criticism touching on the President's honesty. The wife of one Delco worker said she had decided not to register because "I won't vote for either man." Asked why, she replied, "Johnson is crooked and Goldwater is irrational." A SALESMAN in the Chicago suburb of Berwyn said, "I have one reservation about Johnson. I think he's involved in that Bobby Baker case." This uneasiness about the President's finances could prove much more damaging politically if Goldwater that indicate he thinks that a small tactical nuclear weapon is roughly comparable to a huge artillery shell." He called this a "grave error of fact" and said "the average tactical nuclear bomb which we have in Western Europe today is five times greater in blast effect than the single bomb that destroyed Hiroshima decision for Cushman to make." FRASER SAID the union's national AMC negotiating team will return to home locals in Milwaukee and Kenosha, and Grand Rapids, Mich.

No further meetings were scheduled. Hopes of-a quick end to the 13-day General Motors strike brightened. GM spokesmen said two key locals have agreed to new plant-level agreements. The locals, at Pontiac and Lansing, covered about 25,000 workers from Pontiac and Oldsmobile divisions of the corporation. marching group as the most outstanding group in the opening parade.

The Filipino cultural group was the most original, and the Japanese group was judged most colorful. Of the high school units, first place went to Lahaina-luna and second to Baldwin, and St. Anthony's ROTC was judged the best marching unit. RESULTS OF THE official judging of the orchid show and the commercial building exhibits were available as the fair began. The best of show orchid, a Vanda sanderiana, was Lilienthal Sees BarryiPistrust! former Maui Supervisor and Territorial legislator, and now a member of the State House of Representatives.

TAGAWA SAID, "I have known Isaac Feig since 1946. Now, I have been thinking about this matter seriously. The principle of the thing is very important here. "You have to decide the right thing to do. In 20 years we have had many struggles.

Our unit has always supported the decisions of the executive board. They (the board) have supported the trial committee (that expelled Feig.) "I recommend that in order to preserve our unit here at Maui Pine, support the executive board." ONE UNIT member, Mary Benavides, spoke up for Feig, first from her seat in the gathering on the lawn fronting the cannery, and then from the microphone. Feig was again denied the use of his tape recorder. And he was limited to 15 minutes to talk. As Carl Damasco, Hawaii local 142 president, was speaking, Mrs.

Benavides called out, "We want to hear the recording." She shouted at Damasco, "Don't say we pay union dues if we have nothing to say." She went up and tried to speak at the same time. There were shouts of "Wait, wait Mary, you'll have your chance." WHEN SHE GOT her chance, she said, "Brothers and sisters, in my opinion this is not fair. He (Feig) says he wants to be a union member, why not let him be a union member. He don't want anything at all, just to be a brother and sister just like us." There were cries from one side of "Right, right," and from the other side of "No, no, you don't know him." Moriyasu Watanabe said, "I agree with our sister here that we should have a place to vote. During the election those ladies had to go house to house for the ballots.

But if you think we weren't sincere, get rid of us. It was not done with dishonesty in mind, it was done up and up, not so we could fix the ballots." WATANABE SAID that when Feig first challenged the 1963 union election he thought that "maybe this was a good things but then, the thing was violated again by Isaac. He put his padlock on the ballot box and kept the keys himself. "He wasn't a balloting committee member. Is that right? I strongly recommend a 'yes' vote to oust Feig." Damaso told the workers, "Last week some time Feig was talking to Arthur Rut-ledge (of the Hawaii Teamsters).

We don't want outside people to interfere with our union." Feig asked for time to answer Damasco, but it was denied. TAI SUNG YANG, acting Maui division director, told the members, "It's not me or (Director Thomas) Yagi, or Jack Hall's decision (to oust Feig.) It was your executive board, including your unit officers." He urged a "yes" vote. State Rep. Mamoru Yama-saki, a union business agent, told them, "We are duty bound as officers to uphold the trial committee and the executive board. Vote a strong 'yes'.

It's up to you to support the officers of this unit." Feig will carry his appeal next to Wailuku Sugar Co. Monday and to Lanai Tuesday. The overall vote now stands 843 to expel, 653 to reinstate, with less than half the membership polled. Deal. and Great Falls, until this summer, when he sold his interests.

Other principals in Pacific Broadcasting are William H. Brown, Fred Good-stein, and Charles L. Tang-ney, all of Casper, and Marcus Loew II of Los Angeles. Berger said no changes in programming or in the staffs of KHVH-TV and radio are planned. The sale was handled by G.

Bennett Larson for Blackburn Co. of Washington, D.C. UPI Photo picks up popular appeal between now and November. As it is now. many voters seem to be suppressing their misgivings about the President because they fear Goldwater more.

In New York City (Queens), a garage worker's wife, who will be casting her first ballot, remarked, "I don't trust Goldwater. He says wild things and then he takes them back." Then she added, "I don't trust Johnson, either. You know the Bobby Baker business. But he's better than Goldwater." A POLICE officer in Los Angeles said, "Johnson's a con man, but I'll probably vote for him because of the screwy things Goldwater says." As late as two months ago few voters seemed troubled by stories of how Johnson had acquired his wealth or by how the Bobby Baker investigation was handled. Many Democrats protest indignantly against "all that mud being dug up." A milk route salesman in Buffalo argued, "There's scandal on both sides that they drag out at election time." Other-Democrats have argued, "Johnson is too smart to get mixed up in anything like that" or, "Look at all the presents Eisenhower got." STILL OTHER Johnson supporters seem to accept the validity of the charges and shrug them off.

To sum up, these suspicions are not likely to make a decisive difference in the election outcome. But unless the charges are refuted the image of the President in the minds of many voters may remain somewhat tarnished. They marked the first car divisions that reached local settlements. The current strike by 250,000 workers cannot end until new local agreements are substantially cleared up at 130 bargaining units around the country. General Motors also announced reaching settlement of a new three-year contract covering about 25,000 members of the International Union of Electrical and Radio Workers.

The benefits were substantially the same as those included in the GM-UAW national agreement reached Monday. Awards Opening exhibited by Shigeo (Boss) Yokouchi. First place in the commercial building, including a trophy donated by The Advertiser, went to Iwao Sato of Sato Tropical Fish Hatcheries. THE FAIR reopens at 3 p.m. tomorrow and the 4-H livestock, dairy and beef judging starts at 3:30 p.m.

The Lahainaluna-M a i High football game begins at 7 p.m. E. K. Fernandez will present the Tom Moffatt International Review at 7, 8 and 9 p.m. Director of this year's fair is Norio (Butch) Terao.

Continued from Page 1 tion" that "are most likely to lead us through these difficult years without the unleashing of unimaginably destructive nuclear weapons, the ultimate catastrophe for civilization." -HE SAID that Goldwater has spoken about small tactical atomic weapons and "referred to them in terms Parents Continued from Page 1 attacked some of the 55 police on duty at the school, deflated the tires on one paddywagon and removed its radiator cap. Many of the parents handed babies from the police vans to sympathetic members of the mob. They had been arrested for refusing to leave the school corridors despite orders from police and school officials. "THIS IS the last act of desperation by desperate mothers," declared Mrs. Rosemary Gunning, head of the Parents and Taxpayers Organization (PAT) which has long opposed Board of Education integration plans.

The group also sponsored a school boycott at the opening of the current term. The parents object to the busing of their children from their own neighborhoods to others under school board plans to eliminate de facto segregation. Courier Continued from Page 1 uments "in bulk," normally without knowledge of the contents. JOHNSON, 43 LIVED in Las Vegas, Nevada, before joining the Army. He lived with his wife, Hedwig, and two children in nearby Alexandria.

Mrs. Johnson said her husband had never left unexpectedly before. She had no idea where he had gone. The Army said Johnson started working at the Pentagon in May. "Results of inventories of classified material in the office to which Sgt.

Johnson was assigned revealed that no classified material is missing," a Defense Depart-' ment statement said. Johnson has been in the Army for 22 years. An alert for him was broadcast in all eastern seaboard states. Miller Continued from Page 1 Goldwater is elected President. THE NEW YORK congressman directed himself particularly to Cuban exiles, including a group of Cuban Bay of Pigs veterans, saying: "It is because of you and the thousands of others like you that I know Cuba will be free I know Mr.

Castro one day will be reduced to a memory of evil as that of Adolf Hitler." Miller said a Republican victory next month is necessary to ensure Cuba's freedom from communism. Signs Continued from Page 1 meet with their aesthetic approvaL" A SPOKESMAN for the association said there was no quarrel with the Circle's anti-billboard stand. "Hawaii has not had billboards for many years "and they are controlled by law in section 6684 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii; 1945," the statement said. "The Sign Improvement Assn. is opposed to billboard advertising in American Motors, UAW Balk On Profit Sharing LONDON (UPI) Young Beatle fans Martha Schen-dell and Janice Hockings, who followed their idols here from their Cleveland, Ohio, homes three weeks ago, were picked up last night by police.

A nationwide alert has been issued for the two 16-year-olds. Scotland Yard officials said they were "none the worse" for their Odyssey. "They are pop music mad and have been going to various West End clubs and also took a trip up to Liverpool," police said. Liverpool is the home of the Beatles. PICTURES AND descriptions of the girls had been published in the afternoon newspapers here.

The two were taken to the West End central police station, where arrangements were made with American embassy officials for their accommodation overnight. Officials said the girls had spent two nights in a West End London hotel after flying here Sept. 17. Then they took an apartment at Holland Park, Kensington, in Southeast London. THEY APPARENTLY had ample money with them.

While various persons had reported sighting them at one time or another during their stay here, they had avoided contact with authorities and the press. Janice was seen last night by two uniformed police- Electrieian Dies At P.H. Thomas Bo Tong Leong, 47, of 2564-A Kapiolani collapsed and died at 8:55 a.m. yesterday on the Navy Shipyard's Bravo 13 dock. He was an electrician who worked at Pearl Harbor.

Mr. Leong, who last was seen carrying batteries ashore from the destroyer Epperson at the same dock, worked for Shop 51. The City-County Medical Examiner's Office is investigating the cause of death. Funeral arrangements are pending with Borthwick Mortuary. Kaiser In 4 Continued from Page 1 tries in Hawaii would con-' tinue their expansions.

These include the Hawaii-Kai project; Kaiser Cement Gypsum Corporation's I manufacturing plant at Wai-anae and distribution plants on four islands, and the Kaiser Foundation Hospital and Health Plan program. Kaiser emphasized that his broadcasting corporation would continue its development programs in radio and television in major metropolitan areas on the DETROIT (UPI) American Motors and the United Auto Workers Union broke off negotiations yesterday following a dispute over whether to scrap the first and only profit sharing labor contract in automotive history. Edward L. Cushman, AMC vice president, said "At this point it seems extremely unlikely that we will develop a settlement plan that will include profit sharing." But Douglas Fraser, director of the union's AMC department, replied, "Profit sharing is a bargainable matter. It's not a unilateral Sells KI1VI1 Parade, Trophy Mark Maui Fair Million KAISER Broadcasting has construction permits for ultra-high frequency (UHF) channels in the Detroit, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and San Francisco areas.

Its Detroit station is expected to begin broadcasting in The company also owns KFOG-FM in San Francisco. THE NEW OWNER of KHVH-TV and the Kaiser radio stations in Hawaii, Berger, was executive vice president and general manager of radio and television stations in Casper, KAHULUI The 42nd Maui County Fair opened its gates here last night under smiling skies and graced by the presence of Leinaala Aim Teruya, Miss Hawaii of 1964 and a Maui girl. New at this year's fair were exhibits of tropical fish, scientific activities on Haleakala, and a museum of early Amricana promoting the Lahaina Whaling Spree to be held next month. Lieutenant Governor Richardson represented Governor Burns at the opening ceremonies at 5:30 p.m. for the four-dav fair.

TROPHIES WERE awarded to the Portuguese r-.

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