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Honolulu Star-Bulletin from Honolulu, Hawaii • 2

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

Saturday, Nov. 19, 1966 A-2 Honolulu Star-Bulletin Telecast by satellite Soviets set rocket tests in S. Pacific LBJ leaves hospital, flies to Texas ranch ple of White House physicians. The doctors sail the 58- year-old President was in excellent shape and was making a characteristically fast recovery from the operations Wednesday to remove a sm al non-malignant growth from a vocal cord Hollywood teens riot HOLLYWOOD I) Teen-age violence broke out along the famed Sunset Strip area again last night with authorities barricading a four-block long area and arresting 55 to 65 persons. Yo uth swarmed along Sunset Boulevard, throwing eggs, rocking cars and setting off strings of firecrackers.

Sheriff's deputies arrested 17 juveniles and one adult on the Sunset Strip portion of the boulevard. Los Angeles police took into custody 12 juveniles and another 25 to 35 adults on the boulevard just east of the strip. Asked how many persons had been arrested, a weary oli officer replied this morning: "I have no idea. I a 11 couldn't tell you. They've been bailing out as fast as they come in here." and to repair an abdominal hernia.

The doctors hoped to keep the President fairly quiet but recognized this would be a problem for a man so normally active and vigorous. "Ile's a hard man to slow down, but we're going to try," said Dr. James Cain, longtime Johnson family doctor. He said the President's health is as good as it has been since his recovery from a severe 1955 heart attack. Before leaving the hospital toda Johnson conferred with two top aides, Robert Kintner and Walt W.

Ros abdominal Walt is tow. Rostow his special securil assistant for national ty affairs. 14 at meeting Fourteen language a ts specialists are representing Hawaii at the 56th annual convention of the National Council of Teachers of English in llouston, Texas, from November 24-26. MOSCOW (U D-- Soviet rocket troops will begin 40 days of test-firing of spare rockets into the South Pacific ocean tomorrow, it was announced Saturday night. The tests apparently are to bolster Russia's sagging space program.

It was the second consecutive year the Soviets have staged a November-December test firing into the area. The target lay near the American-owned Jarvis Island. Tass urged all ships and airplanes to stay out of the area between noon and midnight, local time, each day from tomorrow until December 30. The Soviet Union always announces such test firings in advance. GIGANTIC FAMOUS BRAND UNIFORM SPECIAL REG.

TO 19.95 6 414' Good selection of styles, 100 Dacron' Polyester. -cotton blends. Sizes in misses' ond juniors'. i ve 7' i GIGANTIC FAMOUS BRAND UNIF011111 I) I 1111 REG. TO 19.95 4,, -6, 6 0-.

Good selection of styles, 100 Polyes- ter. -cotton blends. Sizes i misse s' ond juniors'. .1. VASIIINGTON (II 11 President Johnson lett the hospital today under his own steam, three days after double surgery, and flew to his Johnson ranch to spend the rest of the year working and resting.

Johnson flew by helicopter directly from the big Bethesda Naval llospkal complex on Washington's outskirts to Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, on the other side of the capital to board Air Force 1, his jet, for a three-hour flight to Bergstrom Air Force Base, Texas, near the L.B.J. Ranch. Lady Bird Johnson and daughter LuciMrs. Patrick Nugentaccompanied the President, along with a cou I Notre Dame Continued from Page 1 Cavender, subbing for the injured Bob -kpisa, smashed four a ds over Notre Dame 's right side for a touchdown. This capped a 73-yard march in 10 plays.

The Spartans got another drive going from their own 18 to the Irish 25 but then were held and bare-footed kicker, Dick Kenney, booted a 47-yard field goal. Coley O'Brien quickly rallied Notre Dame and hit on three straight passes covering 54 yards with the payoff toss being a 3-1-yard shot to Bob Gladieux in the end zone. Joe Azzaro's conversion was good. At the half Michigan State led 10-7. Third quarter Despite the fact that both teams moved the ball well, the third period went scoreless, but it cost Notre Dame another injury victim.

Halfback Gladieux a hurt with two minutes left to play in the period. The Irish, utilizing a break the got when Michigan State was off side after recovering a Bleier fumble on the State's 25, drove to the Spartan 10 as the third perio ended with Michigan State still leading, 10-7. Fourth quarter Joe Azzaro tied the score for Notre Dame on the first play of the fourth quarter, kicking a 28-yard field goal. Azzaro had a chance to win it for the Irish late in the guar ter after Tom Schoen made his second interception, but he missed a 41-yard attempt. Students Continued from Page 1 denied or disproved by the defendants, Leavey pointed out.

The defendants did not testify but called friends and a woman spectator to testify they did not throw the bottles. "That word 'we' strikes me. It is all inclusive and to me it means all four defendants," Leavey said. Deputy Prosecutor Douglas Cushnie presented evidence during the trial that students brought two coolers of bottled beer. They wer arrested during the third quarter of the game.

Council charged after his arrest that police use unnecessary force and brutality to subdue him, and carried him out of the stadium unconscious. This was denied by arresting officers and Government witnesses. Leavey did not rule on the alleged brutality because it was immaterial to the char ge of disorderly conduct. He commented, however, that policemen who have to quell an angry crowd cannot do it in a polite manner. "It is difficult to say 'pardon me, I want to They must bang their way through and get to the center of the cyclone.

That they did and I don 't blame them," Leavey said. Curriculum forum opens The first of seven curricu1 development forums, sponsored by the Department of Education, the University of Hawaii, and the Hawaii Curriculum Center, was held today at the Princess Kaiulani Hotel. The forums are planned for once a month from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. with program and curriculum specialists as participants.

Dr. Richard Ando, chairman of the State Board of Education. spoke at the for today outlining the board's curriculum policy. Domingo Los Banos, Leeward Oahu District superintendent, also spoke at the forum, reporting on sessions of the curriculum conference held in June. fonntuln tar-Vulittin Pub Waned Daily Except Sunday at 605 Kapiolani Blvd.

Entered as Second Class Matter in Honolulu, Hawaii Telephone 567-222 SUBSCRIPTION RATES DAILY INC. SUNDAY Per Mo. Deily Inc. Sunday, Oahu $2.60 Neighbor Islands Home Delivery $3.00 Mainland Ship Mail -13AILY ONLY Oahu $2.00 Neighbor Islands $1.40 Mainland Ship Mail $3.00 SUNDAY ONLY Sunday Star-Bulletin Advertiser Oahu Neighbor Islands $1.20 Mainland Ship Mail per month $200 IFor further Information please call or write Circulation Department (Phone 40422. P.O.

Box 3350, Honolulg-16001) He that quell do it "It don They throu ter ol did them to 1 spons ment versil Hawl was cess Th( for a.m. and as pa Dr. man Educ boar( Doi Leew perin the f( sions feren fit DAIL Daily Neisit Main Oh It. Oahu Neigt Mainl SOMI ftundi Oahu Atelgr Maini For write $67-22 Continued from Page 1 next to the Ala Wai Yacht Harbor. The 90-second spot transmission was to bring a bit of Hawaiian weather to those suffering a severe Mainland fall as proof that Hawaii has finally reached the modern age of television.

football game was preceded by a locally transmitted half hour film on the Communications Satellite Corporation and Lani Bird's Atlantic Ocean cousin, the Early Bird satellite. This was followed by a locally filmed report on the corporation's ec eiv in gtransmitting station at Paumalu on Oahu's North Shore. The report was interrupted twice by technical difficulties. Also cut off by technical difficulties was a live local telecast of Berger thanking Hawaiian Telephone Company, Comsat and ABC for cooperation i broadcasting the game. Berger singled out for recognition Seabron Calhoun of Hawaiian Telephone, George Milne of the ABC network and Matthew Mautz, Hawaii manager of Comsat.

Then with a flicker viewers were in East Lansing, Michigan. The picture was clear le ar er than many local transmissions. Twice in the first 12 minutes of the pre-game warm up, the telecast was cut off the air. After a five-minute interruption at 8:15. the picture came sputtering back on the screen.

From then on, the only interruptions NV commercials. Berger rated the image "excellent," the color "excellent." "We've had a lot of calls," Berger said soon after the start of the game. "All have reported great reception." Out on the field at East Lan sin g. Michigan State pompom girls romped in the chilly air wearing leis sent them by Comsat at the request of the Hawaiian Telephone Company. When asked if the station would conduct a special rating survey of the football game audience, Berger replied: "No.

we want to watch the game ourselves." The station subscribes to the Neilson Rating Service and receives the ARB reports. Berger said he did not know whether either service would conduct a poll of the audience. Meanwhile television rental services had been deluged with requests for color sets. "We don't have enough color sets," said a spokesman at Better Home Appliances. "Everyone is calling for one for the football game." Many Honolulu eating and drinking establishments announced to their customers that they would be open for business with a warmed up television set this morning.

Good-sized groups crowded into bars to watch the game. came down here because I didn't want to compete with my kods." said one beer-drinking viewer. Cheering throngs jammed into the lobbies and public room of major hotels. where the management had placed color TV sets. Color television dealers I ured prospective buyers into their stores by offering Intruder Continued from Page 1 then the roommate discovered the injured girl lying on the floor bleeding.

The roommate screamed a awakened the other girls and the cottage parents, two adult couples who live there. There were seven girls in the cottage and the four adults. Cottage parents called for an ambulance immediately and then called police. Etillwell said the victim was well-behaved and well-liked. He asid she was a "quiet" girl who read a lot.

She is a senior in one of the public schools and was scheduled to leave the home at the end 7 the noel year. Stillwell said the Salvation Army had hoped to place her in a job. Stillwell said he was told the girl had multiple fractures of the skull and a broken jaw. Stilwell said no one knew of any enemies the girl may have had. He added that this type of attack had never happened at the home free coffee and doughnuts.

Along Kapiolani Boulevard, TV sounds blared from bars and television dealers, whfile the street was almost bare of cars. Many owners of color television planned game-watching parties for owners of black and white sets. Several more imaginative hosts promised to include popcorn, hot dogs and stadium blankets. The triumph of the live broadcast was preceded yesterday by news that the Lani Bird satellite, originally scheduled to be in use only for a few months, will circle the Earth for at least a year and a half, bouncing signals in the Pacific area for 12 hours a day. Meatless Continued from Page 1 in the 1840s on Fridays under a special dispensation granted in the 1840s.

Hawaii's dispensation was rescinded early this year with Catholics in the Islands given a grace period before being required to comply with the meatless Friday decree in effect elsewhere. Hawaii Catholics did not actually begin meatless Fridays until October 7. The regulations for Hawaii Catholics now will be the same as those for Catholics on the Mainland. The Very Reverend Monsignor Charles A. Kekumano, chancellor of the Diocese of Honolulu, said he was not surprised by the change, and noted that "the spirit of the church is to afford individual freedom now.

"We are living in an age when the pace of life is accelerated and the tensions of the day are probably penance in themselves to some The U.S. bishops, while leaving the question of meat on Fridays up to the individual. did place several limitations on this freedom. The bishops specified that Catholics still must abstain from meat and fast (limit the consumption of food in general) on the first day of Lent (Ash Wednesday) and on the Fridays of Lent. The bishops said that on Ash Wednesday and the Fridays of Lent -the obligation to abstain and fast is so subt antial that no Catholic Christian will lightly excuse himself from it." I a background document, the bishops stressed -a renewed call to penitential observance throughout the entire year.

'To stress only Friday abstinence would be to miss the major emphasis of a document which seeks to give a deeply spiritual and pastoral direction to the Catholic Christians' penitential practice for the whole year," the document said. The bishops re-emphasized the importance of penitential observance in the life of the Christian, and specified Lent as the principal season of penance in the Christian year. For the weekdays of Lent, the bishops "strongly recommended voluntary observance of fasting and the practice of other spiritual works such as participation in daily Mass, spiritual studies, traditional Lenten devotions, or other works of self-denial, of acts of mercy. Both of Hawaii's Catholic bishops, the Most Reverend James J. Sweeney, and his auxiliary, Most Reverend John J.

Scanlan, are in Washington, attending the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. Mainland reports from some fish industry executives said they expect the change to have a detrimental short-range effect on the fish industry. Owners of several stalls at the Oahu Fish Market seemed undisturbed. Mrs. Joseph Choy, of the Choy Fish Stall at Oahu Market, estimated that she has twice as many custome on Fridays as other days.

"But most of our customers are Chinese, and most Chinese are not Catholics. So, I don't think this new decision will change our business too much." K. Okada, of Okada and Company, said "we are in the fish business, but we also sell poultry and meat, so I'm not worried." The bulk of Okada's fish trade is on weekends, he says, but not necessarily on Fridays. "I really think this decision might have more effect on the business of the canned fish people." i 1 NEW SUNDAY 9 A Rh 1214 1 0 0 0 1 i 4 I i I HiL 7 1 THE RITZ DOWNTOWN ONLY! 4 PRE-HOLIDAY CLEANLJP CONTINUES THRU NOV. 231 -'-EXTRA "'r toosso 1 1,,211.

I i 1441P 4.... vtr, 3 golf 1ir'-'' ::.4 I BOXED XMAS CARDS i 111:111 1 'i A.7 N. 3 toe' Al REG. 12 PRICE 1.00-2.50 i 1. 2r 1: lt 4 1 ii i ATT 1:1 0 'WI '4 a I it i 4 i 1 REG.

10.98 4 MEN'S SPECIAL .4. 4' A VALUE 7.44 .0 i '''q 40 conversations-40 friends 4. I 4 3. e- TIE-- 1 t' 14 1'; --rt 11 BOYS' PONDEROSA I I 1 I SWEATERS CLEARANCE A Sk tlit, 1 I I n. 1 1 1 i ..5 I )4 'Ike' REG.

5.95 VALUES -ay iti 1 FAMOUS BRANDS, Sizes 8-20 i Tremendous assortment of i 1 colorful shirts, polos, knits, 1 1 REG. 6.95 5 a Ivys, Henleys, xl. 1 17 9 9- i I BOYS' 1 00 l''. 0 NYLON 1 110-IRON BOYS MOD GEAR CORDUROY SLACKS SPECIALS RE i KIIII SHELLS ea Olive or Brown G. 4.99 VALUE Sizes 8-18 5.95 1 4it 29 9 BLOUSES ..4 MAD MOD CAPS if corduroy, vinyl, suede 7.4.'.

cloth. Alli IP REG. TO 5.952.99-4.95 Asstd. colors l'i 1 Sizes I. TVIDAL4U9ES8 a 1 5 0 6" 2 5 0 Iv 4 41 1 Cottons, dacron-cottons, sizes 4-6x, EPAULET SHIRTS 7-14, 8-14 teens! REG.

4.95 4.00 GIRLS' 2-PIECE SPECIAL SALE MOD SHIFTS LOW RISE SLACKS All cotton and bonded acetate I NYLON FULL REG. 8.98 7.98 ii styles, 744 .1 .1 -4 HALF SLIPS 9 a 0 0 i I'. VALUES TO 6.00 4- ili Reg. 11.00 -t i CIA vte CRYSTAL CUT 24 7 JUI dit'Ack; 11 JUICE GLASSES 0,.... 1 4.

i N10, Fancy styles, asstd. colors, Crystal Clear etched designs! I 7- 32-40. a) 41 -1 Reg. 4.00 DOZEN 2.99 ifilf---4--, I Iv, ASSORTED EARRINGS JUST 4 -4 7 I ARRIVED ''rl COORDINATE .4:4..14, Gold or silver colored, assfd. sizes.

.4. VALUES l'' 4 1 I If, sAvINGs! 4,..,. TO 1.99 3 1 0 0 .4. 1 TEEN AND ALL COTTON CHUBBETTE CHAIN NECKLACES I BLOUSES ,,:0,:: I POOR BOY SHIFTS 'N CAPRIS 4,.,..::: Choker, Matinee, and Pendant ti: styles. 51- I '14 A 88c I 12.98 VALUE! 1 7 REG.

2.98-3.98 4. Reg. to 1.99 qi 4.k:it,i;e9',C-' 2 3 0 0 11 9 8 2 Blouses -3- I CORDUROY FABRICS i or 2 Caprisl SOLIDS PRINTS Swinging cotton knit tops on Asstd. mix 'n. I printed, corduroy or match colors, REG.

TO "suede" skirt. Teens 6-14 32-38, 8-18. i 1.29 YD. li i Yd. 88 Chubbettes 812-1412.

THE RITZ DEPARTMENT STORE 1143 FORT DOWNTOWN NOW OPEN MON. THRU FRI, SPECIAL SALE! COORDINATE SAVINGS! ALL COTTON BLOUSES 'N CAPRIS REG. 2.98-3.98 23.00 2 Blouses or 2 Copris! Asstd. mix 'n match colors, 32-38, 8-18. THE RITZ PRE-HOLIDAY 100 NYLON MIT SHELLS REG.

4.99 VALUE Asstd. colors Sizes I. NYLON FULL HALF SLIPS VALUES TO 6.00 2.47 Fancy styles, asstd. colors, 32-40. DEPARTMENT STORE 1143 THE RITZ DOWNTOWN ONLY! CLEAN UP CONTINUES THRU NOV.

23! BOXED XMAS CARDS 7.Eot 2 12 PRICE MATTEL-0-PHONE REG. 10.98 7.44 VALUE 40 conversations-40 friends BOYS' PONDEROSA SWEATERS REG. 6.95 1163L3Iyii6 CORDUROY SLACKS Olive or Brown Sizes 8-18 GIRLS' BLOUSES VALUES Cottons, docron-cottons, sizes 4 7-14, 8-14 teens! OtTiiiiris All cotton and bonded acetate styles, 744 Reg. 11.00 JuicerTGALLAcilEs Crystal Clear etched designs! Reg. COO DOZEN 2.99 Gold or silver colored, assfd.

sizes. VALUES TO 1.99 31.00 CHAIN NECKLACES Choker, Matinee, and Pendant styles. Reg. to 1.99 CORDUROY FABRICS SOLIDS PRINTS REG. TO 88C 1.29 YD.

Yd. Aoh11104 Tremendous assortment of colorful shirts, polos, knits, lvys, Henleys, xl. 6x, JUST ARRIVED TEEN AND CHUBBETTE POOR BOY SHIFTS 12.98 VALUE! Swinging cotton knit tops printed, corduroy "suede" skirt. Teens 6 Chubbettes 812-1412. MEN'S SPECIAL CLEARANCE! REG.

5.95 VALUES BOYS' MOD GEAR SPECIALS MAD MOD CAPS corduroy, vinyl, suede cloth. REG. TO 5.952.99-4.95 EPAULET SHIRTS REG. 4.95 41 LOW RISE REG. 8.98 on or 14, I' 4.

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About Honolulu Star-Bulletin Archive

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