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Honolulu Star-Bulletin from Honolulu, Hawaii • 2

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

FEIFF EH 2 Honolulu Star-Bulletin Saturday, Sept. 5, 1964 jr Air Force Golf Course Work Halted at Seaward Runway YOUM)Y00Rh I CAN you turn hoti I mmw; THAT'S All THINK' OF! Tm5 WOT sol i YO0 HAVE WRITTEN All OVR YOVft SOFflTY! HOT! 1 PITY FACE'. objected to construction of the links. Inouye said Major General Augustus M. Minton, deputy chief of staff for the Pacific Air Force Command, will fly to Washington about September 20 to discuss the golf course plans with members of the Hawaii Congressional al review by Zuckert.

Inouye had asked the air force to halt the construction. He said he was shocked at the plans to build the golf course which he contends would be in the path of a possible seaward jet runway at the air field. Senator Hiram L. Fong, Republican of Hawaii, also WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of the Air Force Eugene Zuckert has ordered a halt to construction of a golf course at Hickam Air Force Base, Honolulu, Senator Daniel K. Inouye, Democrat of Hawaii, reported yesterday.

The senator said he was advised that all work will be halted pending a person i-i mpfmp icaxv MAK yOU UHPBRr STAND MET YO0 lift TO TWti Ycxfez a wee BH. YOU'RE HOT A MB 6VY-WRZ SEE YQQMMl I THAT? LIE! I WHAT I CAXT why you ueren TO All TWb. QO YOU BtiJOY You AXE I YOU cm TAKE TUB TRUTH CAM YOU? YOU MUST miiv ME. ffJSKT NOV fHYPOCRlTB! Malaysia and Indonesia Move Close to Open War Pi TORH APART? i i New Prison Site Typhoon one proclaimed yesterday. The new decree permits local authorities to impose curfews and ban unlawful assembly and gives police sweeping powers.

(The King of Malaysia is Raja of Pedis, Syed Putra Ibni Almarhum Syed Hassan Jumulullail. He was the King of Malaya and when the Federation of Malaysia was formed September 16 of last year, he became King of the Federation.) In Indonesia, President KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) New race rioting flared in Singapore today as Malaysia and Indonesia moved closer to open war. The rioting, blamed by pome Malaysian officials on Indonesian agents, has left 10 dead. The King of Malaysia signed a decree today which proclaimed the entire country a national "security area." It was a stiff er emergency decree than the Sukarno, who has vowed to "crush" Malaysia, held another emergency meeting with his top advisers. The official Indonesian News Agency Antara said he will soon make an im-p a announcement about the "present critical situation." special meeting of the U.N.

Security Council will be held in New York Wednesday to consider Malaysia's charges that Indonesia is- committing aggression against the Federation. Teacher Pay much." Nevertheless, Belnap said, the present facility will be unsafe if a new prison doesn't materialize by 1970 the target date of the Corrections Division. He said the prison is so congested that the dormitories are badly overcrowded. This will be alleviated somewhat in December with completion of a new third floor above the existing dorms the first major construction there in some 40 years to accommodate atout 54 men. Belnap pointed out that the jamned dormitory arrangement "leads to discontent because of lack of privacy for an individual." He said, "From my standpoint and position, the new facility will have individual rooms.

No more dormitories in the State Prison. "The inmate has to be considered as a human being, and he needs some degree of privacy to maintain his own mental health. "He has to be receptive to any training we may introduce and he is apt to be more receptive if for a few hours a day he is in a room which is basically his own." Belnap said he also is encouraging a view that the new institution "should not be looked at merely as a State Prison, but also as a reception, diagnostic and treatment center." All new committments would go to the facility for diagnosis of personality, capacity of education and so on. "We would be far ahead of ourselves in treatment," Belnap commented. He said the new prison also will incorporate the honor camp system, as well as maximum to minimum control facilities for recalcitrant inmates.

"We do not want a new State Prison just for the sake of having a prison, to replace the one we have," he emphasized. "It will be a total plan." But this will take some seven years to accomplish and hinges, first, on agreement of a site. Continued from Page 1 Reverend Hiro Higuchl, Alfred Suga and former State Senator Lawrence Kunihisa. The prison project has been the longtime victim of political squabbling in the Legislature. Maui and Big Island members have fought to an impasse for the location.

And both these factions have been opposed by most Oahu legislators who contend that the prison should remain here because the majority of inmates are from this Island. LAST DECEMBER Before Burns appointed his site committee last December, he threw his support to a Maui location, tentatively an abandoned airport at Puunene. Ray V. Belnap, chief of the Corrections Division of the Social Services Department, has said he prefers keeping the prison on Oahu. And the prisoners, themselves, in their institutional newspaper have protested a Neighbor Island move because their relatives can't readily visit them While the site hassle goes on the crowded, ramshackle conditions of the present Hawaii State Prion aren't getting any better.

Belnap calls the present plant "really deplorable." He said, "I told the legislators in 1961 that the prison was outdated 10 years earlier, and by the time a new one is ready( hopefully) in 1970 we will have another 10 years of outdated institution." Because of the eventual possibility of a new prison, he said, "funds for maintenance and repair are kept at the lowest level consistent with reasonable safety." Actually, only the barest upkeep is being done. "The figure we're going on for 1964-65 is $20,000, which is ridiculously low," Belnap said. "We are doing no renovations because they would cost too Continued from Page 1 across 'downtown streets while hundreds of people crouched in shop doorways to escape the deadly lash. The power later was turned off. Pounding waves on the waterfront washed foot' long fish and crabs into the main foyer of the City Hall, where the Olympic flame was to have ceremoniously begun its trip to Formosa en route to Tokyo.

The typhoon caused cancellation of the flight. Ships were ripped from their moorings and set adrift. At least two sank from the battering winds and another 10 ran aground. One of the sunken ships was described as a "large vessel." Weather Bureau officials said the center of Typhoon Ruby passed 20 miles south of Hong Kong and was roaring off toward the coast of Communist China. Officials said Ruby was the worst storm to hit this British Crown Colony off the South China coast since Typhoon Wanda took 138 lives on September 1, 1962.

Weathermen said the nearby Portuguese island of Macao undoubtedly also suffered severe damage from Ruby, but the extent was not immediately known. Sky-Bus Continued from Page 1 mile limit. He also challenged Padgett's claim that the U.S. Government is "inconsistent" in matters relating to boundary determinations. Doolittle said the subsequent repeal of the 1846 statute and new law in 1859 pointedly omitted any boundary reference.

Much of the four-hour hearing veered off on the subjects of Hawaiian history, fishing rights, submerged lands, airways and other points closely related to the boundary issue. Judge Pence issued a permanent injunction last year grounding I.A.L., saying it needed Federal sanction since it flew over international waters. He purposely avoided a definition of Hawaii's boundaries, however. I.A.L. appealed to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, and this court handed the case back to Judge Pence.

Further hearings were ordered and a boundary determination lishment of a Class IV salary rating and the provision of "higher salaries for teachers in remote or "critical" areas. The Board members agreed that there is a need to make positive recommendations in both areas, and referred the subjects to Yarberry for further study. Other areas of study turned over to the Superintendent included a recommendation to remove the three-year residency requirement for teachers and a motion to increase the overlap in salaries between higher teachers and lower administrative personnel. The meeting was concluded last night with a discussion of whether the Board should make recommendations to the i 1 a-ture about where tax monies might come from to finance the new salary rates. Ralph Brown, Board member from Honolulu's 5th Senatorial District, warned against the dangers of meddling with a matter which belongs solely to the Legislature.

"We're not tax experts," he said. The subject was temporarily tabled. GUIDELINES The purpose of the meeting was to lay guidelines for starting salaries, salary ranges, and teacher classification. Yarberry and his staff will now make a thorough study of the guidelines, filling in the details, then consult the Board at its regular monthly meeting September 24. The final recommendations will then be presented by Yarberry to the Legislature next February.

Continued from Tage 1 Service length of six annual increments and three longevity steps. Maintaining that 21 or 24 years to reach maximum scale is "too long a time to wait for the ultimate reward," Board member Myer Ueoka of Maui said he favors eliminating the longevity steps entirely. INCREMENT SYSTEM James R. McDonough, executive secretary of the Hawaii Education Association, was called on by the Board to give his opinion of readjusting the increment system. He pointed out that although it is common practice for school systems to require their teachers to strive for "professional improvement" every so many summers as does Kame-bameha Schools here the Hawaii school system does not provide any compensation for any such self-improvement.

"Yet it is estimated that one-third of our teachers attend summer schools, workshops and the like on a voluntary basis, and I believe they ought to receive some payment for it," McDonough said. The Board' voted to point out a general need to compress the present increment system of pay raises in order to provide more incentive for teachers to remain in Hawaii. The matter was turned over to R. Burl Yar-berry. State Superintendent of Public Instruction, for further study.

CLASS IV SALARY Other areas discussed by the Board were the estab- Typographers Launch 106th Annual Session FkMk- 1 a Is Will you always be as BIG as he thinks you are? State Labor Department, and James M. Dooley, president of the A.F.L.-C.I.O. Central Labor Council of Honolulu, also delivered greetings. Elmer Brown, president of the I.T.U., then delivered his major address of the convention, after which he convened the week-long meetings of the participants. The 106th annual convention of the International Typographical Union opened today at the Princess Kaiu-lani Hotel Meeting House with approximately 200 delegates from Canada and the United States, including Hawaii.

Patricia Anderson, former Miss Hawaii, opened the affair by singing both the Canadian and American national anthems with the Royal Hawaiian Band. The convention was opened by Charles O'Bevan, chairman of the Hawaii Local's portion of the program. Ralph Perez, president of Honolulu Local 37, welcomed the delegates. Governor John A. Burns, Mayor Neal S.

Blaisdell, Alfred Laureta, director of the Races School Administrators Are Confirmed by Board Chile Continued from Page 1 large group to be arrested under the new curfew law, were booked as delinquents and turned over to their parents at Pearl City. The adults were booked as trespassers, under $25 bond. Half of them posted cash bail at Pearl City and were released there. The other half needed bondsman and were processed through the downtown receiving desk. The adults are scheduled for arraignment in Pearl City District Court Wednesday.

Sfmtnlulu Star-lSuUrtUt Published Daily Exctpt Sunday at 05 Kapiolani Blvd. You will if you're always able to provide adequate eecurity for your family. Family security, as you know, depends on a steady income for food, clothing and shelter and the other necessities for healthful living. Does your life insurance give your family financial help only after your death? Learn how it can provide working dollars when you retire or when accident or illness prevents you from working and earning. Your Royal State National agent has a "Working Dollars" plan so flexible that he can fit it into any program you may have.

Your R.S.N. agent will be glad to consult with you and advise you without obligation. He will show you how the R.S.N. "Working Dol-larsw plan can guarantee cash income for you and your family during your lifetime and be continued to your family after your death. iz i Continued from Page 1 Allende shouted, ignoring his appeals for calm.

They charged that President Johnson and Pope Paul VI had contributed money to defeat Allende, a plump 56-year-old physician who has lost three times in a bid for the presidency. Frei, a Senator, will take the reins November 4 for a six-year term, succeeding Centrist President Jorge Alessandir, barred by the constitution from seeking re-election. Nearly complete unofficial returns: Frei 1,463,535. Allende 975,690. Julio Duran, candidate of the Centrist Radical Party, was far behind with 128,350.

iMI r) 1 1 pJ Entered as Second Class Matter in Honolulu, Hawaii Telephone M7-222 The State Board of Education yesterday confirmed the appointment of eight administrators to positions within the Department of Education and also approved the appointment of 41 principals and vice-principals. The highest official appointed was Yoshitsugu Ya-mada, a Hawaii-educated school administrator who also holds a law degree and is licensed to practice law here. He will be administrative assistant to R. Burl Yarberry, superintendent of public instruction. Yamada's primary duty will be to act as a liaison man between the superintendent's office and the Governor, the Legislature, various State departments, and private agencies.

OTHER DUTIES He will also conduct studies of administrative and education problems, participate in the development of top-level departmental policies, review legislation which might have an effect cn the D.O.E., and prepare information which might be used by Yarberry at meetings and conferences. Yamada has taught at Mc-Kinley High, Hana High, Ka-wananakoa Intermediate, Pearl Harbor, Jarrett Intermediate, and Aliamanu schools, and has been prin cipal of Ross, Hakalau Elementary and Intermediate, and Makaha schools. Seven other educators ere appointed to state positions. They are: James Okamura, as director of school and public library facilities; Mrs. Delor-es Wininger, as supervisor of health education; Mrs.

Barbara Nakagawa, as supervisor of home economics education; Irwin Tanaka, as program specialist for the education of the gifted. Also Paul T. Kobayashi, as supervisor of occupational information services; Ai-ko Otomo, as program assistant for elementary education in Oahu District III; and Mrs. Mary as program assistant for curriculum study in Kauai District. The total number of principals and vice-principals appointed for Oahu wras 30, Hawaii 7, Kauai 3, and Maui 1.

Most of the State appointments are effective Tuesday and all the principal and vice-principal appointments were effective August 28. Morris Ankrum PASADENA, Calif. (AP) Morris Ankrum, 67, longtime character actor of the movies, died Wednesday, apparently of a heart attack in his sleep. SUBSCRIPTION RAT IS DAILY INC. SUNDAY Per Mo Daily Inc.

Sunday, Oahu SI. 25 Neighbor Islands Home Delivery 1.50 Mainland Ship Mall 1.50 DAILY ONLY Oahu 1 Neighbor 1.7S Mainland Ship Mall 1.00 SUNDAY ONLY Sunday Star-Bulletin ft Advertiser Mainland Ship Mail per month. 1.S0 For further Information please call or write Circulation Department (Phone M7-IJI. P.O. Box 3350, Honolulu MM1 Per Issue -JO Satellite Switch your ANSWERING SERVICE ROYAL STATE NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED Home Office: 1575 South Beretania Street Honolulu, Hawaii Phone 991-091 Continued from Page 1 away.

It was reported unofficially today that pressure in the argon gas system evaporated. This lack of pressure, it was said, affects the chances of the satellite locking on Earth, and also the deployment of its booms and antenna. G. Alan Freeland Preiident Harry Y. S.

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About Honolulu Star-Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
1,993,314
Years Available:
1912-2010