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The Honolulu Advertiser from Honolulu, Hawaii • 2

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A2 Monday, Jamtxry XI, 1991 He Honolulu Advertiser THE WEATHER lFTSl TOMORROW TONIGHT TODAY 1. A Ye if S5 ii if wvir 4. i V. V. AS Cjs -ir mr V-.

Photo eourtwy N0AA-NES0I3 Considerable tow clouds are banked up against the windward and mauka areas pf the Islands but few If any showers are likely, A surface high pressure system (H) far north of Kauai Is forecast to weaken as it moves toward the northeast. Thin arrows denote winds near the surface. Advertiser photo by Bruce Asato A surge in the cookie market ISLAND SKIES ISLAND FORECASTS Elizabeth Yee, right, and Dawin Sugihara of Senior Girl Scout Troop 14 load up on boxes of Caramel Delites cookies yesterday at a Pier 10 warehouse in preparation for today's start of the annual Girl Scout cookie campaign. Officials estimate about 500,000 cases of the cookies have been stockpiled for the sale, which ends Feb. 3.

Sunrise: 7:12 Set 6:15 Moonrler.1Cr43 am Set 11:38 pm Moon phases: 1st, Jan 23; full, Jan 29; 3rd, Feb 6: new. Feb 14 Source: Bishop Museum Ninon Weather Service Honolulu: Mostly sunny leeward; cloudy windward, mauka; near 80; trades 10-25 mph. Partly cloudy tonight. Hilo: Mostly cloudy; trades 10-20 mph. Kona: Mostly sunny; p.m.

cloudy periods; variable winds 5-15 mph. Maui: Mostly sunny leeward; cloudy windward; trades 10-25 mph. Kauai: Mostly sunny lee sections; cloudy mauka; trades 10-20 mph. Oahu Surf North shore: 8-12 feet. South shore: 1-3 feet.

DON CHAPMAN is on vacation. His column returns tomorrow. A 2-day forum celebrating THE BICENTENNIAL. OF THE BILL OF RIGHTS Sponsored by Honolulu Community-Media Council Oceanic Cablevision Foundation Hawaii Newspaper Agency Foundation on behalf of the Honolulu Advertiser and the Honolulu Star-Bulletin William S. Richardson School of Law and the Journalism Department of the University of Hawaii FRIDAY.

FEBRUARY 8. 1991 at the PACIFIC CLUB SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 9 ORVIS AUDITORIUM. p.m. no Most uocKtans 7:00 p.m.

Opening Banquet ISLAND TIDES Honolulu High HI Low Le Tiro ML Trin Mt 21 7 03 a m. 1.4 109 a.m. 06 Jan 911pm 1 4 2 05 m. 00 22 7 42 am. 1 2 2 43 am.

OS Jan. 1023 p.m. 16 241 m. 00 23 8 24 m. 09 6:03 a m.

06 Jan. 11:33 p.m. 1 8 3 30 p.m. 0.0 Elsewhere Using Honolulu tides as a basis, add or subtract the hgures below, or multiply if the height figure la preceded by an aster' Win Tltn HlflM High Low High Low Oahu: Heletwa -1 04 084 084 Haneume -048 01 00 Kaneohe -148 -1 21 04 02 Waianae 018 0:15 00 00 Waimanalo TJ.92 '0 92 Maul: Hana 0 8 0 0 Kahului 0.5 02 Lehema -0 43 03 01 Maalaea -0 25 04 0.0 Kauai: HanaW -1 30 0 1 0.0 Nawiliwlll 0.1 0.0 Pt. Allen -0 38 '0 92 '0 92 Big Island: Hilo -056 05 01 Honuapo -028 06 0.1 Kailua-Kona -028 0 2 0 0 Kawaihae -006 01 00 KealakeKua 0.2 0.0 Molokel: Kaunakakai 0.2 0 0 Una Kaumalapau 0:00 0:00 0.3 0.0 POLICE BEAT 2 robbers heist Dom Perignon Two men, one armed with a handgun, tied up a Honolulu waterfront wine atore clerk yesterday, then fled with six cases of Dom Perignon champagne 38 bottles priced at $3,600, detectives said.

Also taken was nearly $4,000 in cash, they said. No one was injured In the 4 p.m. holdup at R. Field Wine Company's store at Restaurant Row, 500 Ala Moana. The clerk told police one robber carried a pistol.

The robbers walked in as customers, then accosted the clerk, tied him up, and carried out the wine and money. The clerk managed to crawl to a doorway and get help. Less than an hour later, a man with a pistol robbed a J.C Penney's street-level men's department cashier at Ala Moana Center. She was not injured and he fled with an undisclosed amount of money. Detective Clinton Park said the two robberies were not related.

No one was injured in either robbery and no suspects were arrested. Hunter shott A Hilo hunter was in guarded condition last night after being hit by a shotgun blast to his head and chest in an accidental shooting at Ke-mole on the slopes of Mauna Kea. Police said the 65-year-old man was taken by rescue helicopter to Hilo Hospital with multiple wounds to the chest, right arm and temple. The man, whose name was not disclosed, apparently was shot by his 53-year-old hunting companion. Police said the two were 40 yards apart when a pheasant appeared.

The younger man shot, killing the bird and shooting his friend at the same time. Escapee returned: Roy William Hartsock, 27, who escaped Dec. 13 from state prison with forged release papers, was brought back to Honolulu on Saturday night from Chicago, police said. He had been arrested there on unrelated charges. He was charged here on a bench warrant with second-degree escape.

Bail was set at $50,000, and he was taken back to Oahu Community Correctional Center pending arraignment tomorrow in Circuit Court. He was booked into, the Honolulu Police cellblock by detective John Lim of the forgery detail and officer Russell Ko-moda of the Pearl City police Crime Reduction Unit, who went to Chicago last week to extradite him. Also arrested in Chicago was Todd Mueller, 23, a former state prison inmate here who is fighting extradition to Honolulu for arrest on warrants charging him with forging stolen checks. An Illinois governor's warrant of extradition is being sought for Mueller. Detectives also list Mueller as the suspect in forgeries of three Hawaii judges' names to court orders, one of which caused Hartsock's release from prison, and two that resulted in bank transfers of $76,000 to Mueller's bank account from estates of two deceased persons here.

Purse grabbers: Three 15-year-old Makaha boys and a 20-year-old Makaha man were chased down and stopped by hotel security officers after they reportedly tried to snatch a Japanese visitor's purse on a Waikiki street corner at 9:15 p.m. Saturday. The woman, 24, held onto her purse and screamed as security guards from nearby hotels responded. All four were booked for in KEYNOTE ADDRESS: J. ANTHONY LEWIS "Should the 1st Amendment Guaranteeing Freedom of Speech and the Press Survive its 200th Birthday?" Mr.

Lewis, a syndicated columnist of The New York Times. is a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the American Newspaper Guild's Heywood Broun Award for outstanding journalism. He also is the author of several books, among them "Gideon's (The dinner cost is $30 per person and is the ONLY charge for forum participants.) ABOUT YESTERDAY At Honolulu Airport Temperatures High: 77 Low: 64 Jan. Norm: 8065 Jan. 20 records High: 87 (1986) Low: 53 (1969) Rainfall 24 Hours to 8 p.m.: 0 Humidity 2 p.m.: 46 8 p.m.: 59 Rain In Jan.

0 07 Norm: 2.52 Rain this year 0.07 Norm: 2.52 Around the state 24-hr. Low High Rain Kaneohe, Oahu Kahului. Maui 69 77 0 Uhue, Kauai 68 75 0 Hilo, Hawaii 65 75 trace National Weather Service forecasts for Honolulu (833-2849). Oahu (836-0121), surf (838-1952), Hawaiian waters (836-3921), MAREPS'marine observations (834-7674). UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII MANOA CAMPUS 8:30 a.m.

Free Coffee 9:00 a.m. ADDRESS BY JON VAN DYKE 'THE PRECIOUS LIBERTIES OF FREE SPEECH AND FREE PRESS: THEIR ORIGINS AND UNIQUENESS" 10:00 a.m. PANEL DISCUSSION AND DEBATE Moderator Richard S. Miller' Panelists'. Jeffrey Portnoy, Media Attorney and Partner, Cades, Schutte, Fleming Wright Jay Dratler Gerry Keir, Editor-in-Chief, Honolulu Advertiser Amy Kastely Vanessa Chong, Executive Director, American Civil Liberties Union Carl Monk, former Dean, Washburn University Law School; former Deputy Director, American Association of Law Schools, and visiting law school professor A.

A. Smyser, Contributing Editor, Honolulu Star-Bulletin Anthony Lewis. Syndicated Columnist, The New York Times Clip and Mail Honolulu Community-Media Council P. O. Box 22415 Honolulu.

Hawaii 96823-2415 Please reserve places for me at the dinner. Enclosed is my check for at $30 per person. (Make checks payable to the Media Council.) ON THE MAINLAND Name Address 'Professor. William S. Richardson School of Law.

University of Hawaii. THIS BICENTENNIAL FORUM IS OPEN FREE OF CHARGE TO THE PUBLIC. FORECAST: for 6 p.m. (EST) today (1 p.m., Hawaii time) A i. I 2J- en 40 Urns show Xkjh mnpeiaajwe.

II I 111 HaX mmn T-eme Ran Mas anew iBMaiaMaal Lawl YESTERDAY'S WEATHER: Heavy snow wrapped parts of Wisconsin and Michigan in winter white and rain splattered southern Florida. Light snow fell in the Mississippi Valley and Plains. Ohio, Indiana and the Appalachian states were warned of snow by today. About a foot of snow blanketed portions of Wisconsin and accumulations were heavy in parts of Michigan. Sunny skies prevailed in the Northwest.

Showers developed into thunderstorms in southern Tlorida. The weather service said 14 tornadoes were reported in Florida on Saturday night. MAINLAND TEMPERATURES, FORECASTS vestigation of second-degree robbery but were later released when the victim said she would not return here to testify against tnem. The adult suspect, however. El Paso 5545cdy Fairbanks 3710cdy Fargo 3600cdy Flagstaff 4619sn Grand Rapids 46'35sn Great Falls 2809dr Greensboro.N.C 4741dr Hertford 4134sn Helena 370cOy Houston 5641cdy Indianapolis 4339'clr Jackson.

Miss 5143cdy Jacksonville 6556cdy Juneau 3734m Kansas City 4429dr Las Vegas 60'40cdy Little Rock 4743cdy Los Angeles 6951 'dr Louisville 54'43cdy Lubbock 6333cdy Memphis 5047clr Miami Beach 7772cdy Milwaukee 4431sn Mptt-St Paul 3906cJr Nashvtlte 4946'dr New Orleans 5547cdy New York City 4542cdy Norfotk.Va 5043clr Oklahoma City 5436cfly Omaha 4126dr Albany. 3833sn Albuquerque 51'28sn Anchorage 4630Vcdy Atlanta 4943cdy Atlantic City 5237dr Austin 6543rn Baltimore 5538dr Billings 431 8dr Birmingham 4846cdy Bismarck 3902cdy Bone 3826dr Boston 383an Buffalo 4437sn Burlington.Vt 3532sn Charleston, C. 5953cdy Charleston.W V. 5341an Chartotte.N.C 4441dr Cheyenne 4004cdy Chicago 4434cdy Cincinnati 4940cdy Cleveland 4839sn Columbis.S C. 49M5ody Columbus.

Oh 10 4738sn Concord.N 2917'sn Dallas-Ft Worth 5940erJy Dayton 4639sn Denver 50V10Jy Des Moines 4419c Detroit 4638sn Dukith 3806dr Orlando B056cdy Phlladelpnia Phoenix 6847m Pittsburgh 4539sn Portland, Maine 2925sn Porlland.Ore 5227dr Providence 4033sn Raleigh-Durham 49 41 clr Reno 5220clr Richmond 6143clr Sacramento 70739dr St Louis 4837dr Salt Lake City 4010crr San Antonio 6340m San Diego 6548clr San Francisco 6747dr San Juan, R. BaWclr Santa Fe 43m an St Ste Marie 37'06'sn Seattle 45'32clr Shreveport 5037cdy Sioux Falls 3715cdy Spokane 3518'dr Syracuse 4539sn Tempa-St Pete aiSStody Topeka 4731 dr Tucson M42m Tulsa 6437cdy Washington.O.C. 5442dr WHkee-Barre 44734tn PER ANNUM was charged with a misdemeanor count of third-degree assault against one of the security guards who grabbed him. The guard and the woman were not injured, detectives said. Street attacks: A man was arrested early yesterday in connection with two $5,000 minimum deposit.

Safety plus high yield. FDIC Insured. street robberies in Waikiki. Police said the first victim pointed out the suspect as he was try ing to rob the second victim. The first victim held onto his WEATHER AROUND THE WORLD First Hawaiian backpack when it was grabbed about 11:40 p.m.

Saturday by a ureditcorp Amsterdam 4128ody Frankfurt -4-1 Paris Athena 4137cdy Geneva 3423ecy Rio Auckland 7759cdy Hong Kong 6863clr Rome Bangkok 9175dr Istanbul 4539cdy Seoul Beijing 3423cdy Jerusalem -M Singapore Berlin -l-t Jo burg 799cdy Stockholm 4334orJ 8673ody S423fdr 452rVdr 8677m 2433Wy man who also demanded mon ey, police said. The attacker fled when his victim resisted. As that victim talked to hotel security officers S471C 6863edy Brisbane 9073m Lisbon 63.48.dr Sydney Brussele 4830r Barcelona 52'48df Taipei RurlanM, Madrid Tal Avh, 54.39'dr Kauai 245-3945 B'Amss B6 Mania 88V68dr Tokyo Cairo 6448dr Mexico City 7248dr Toronto Calgary 43Wcdy Montreal 4510sn Vancouver Hilo 935-0848 Maui 877-3918 Moanalua 839-1961 Pearl City 488-7735 Waipahu 677-0751 Kona 329-7741 Windward 261-3341 Kahala 732-6641 Downtown 538-6781 Keeaumoku 946-9555 Copenhagen 3A32 ody Moecow 25'25'cdy Vienna Dubwt 52j46cdy New Datii 6M1C Warsaw -t-4 2512edy and police, they saw the suspect nearby grabbing another man by his shirt front and demanding money. The suspect was held last night with charg es pending. Ratt subject to change without notice.

Substantial penalty (or early withdrawal. Member FDIC 4.

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About The Honolulu Advertiser Archive

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