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Honolulu Star-Bulletin from Honolulu, Hawaii • 1

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Oiiwkuku utlilletch Mostly fair tonight and sunny tomorrow. Trades to 20 m.p.h. Low tonight in low 70s, high tomorrow in mid 80s. Details on Page 2. VOL.

64, NO. 172 Hawaii's Greatest Newspaper HONOLULU, HAWAII Saturday, June 21, 1975 20c on Oahu 25c on the Neighbor blonds Two Sections 28 Pages The Weather 1 11,1 16'4hS Itt 11 4414 No fa toz e) Cambodia Retaliation Story Denied SLkfuTI11JS. perialists" had created a situation in the Korean peninsula where "war may break out at any moment." A North Korean broadcast monitored in Tokyo called U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Fred C.

Weyand "one of the U.S. imperialist war maniacs and -4, 0 1 f. f' 'N, 1, -I, i lip 1 i S'. .1 if 'i i''. z.

4 4, i 1 i 4 ii, v- 47 ....44 i I i -1 oit''''' il, 1, l'' 4., I oi PO1 I 1.1:1,. -vi SS I At 1 1 -i IA I 0 .4,: 4.: i'' 5 gig' i' 4 't ..1.. 't $. I l' 9 i i I 41 6 I 'r i NEW YORK (UPI) Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger proposed bombing Cambodian cities with a squadron of B-52 bombers in retaliation for the seizure of the American freighter Mayaguez, Parade Magazine reported today.

Although Vice President Nelson Rockefeller thought the idea was worth considering, President Ford and his other advisers vetoed the suggestion, Parade said. The State Department today said, "We can categorically deny this report," when asked whether it was true. In a copyrighted article, the magazine quoted a White House source as describing the mid-May Marine assault operation rescueing the ship and its crew as a "Ford triumph, not a Kissinger one." "DURING the Mayaguez incident, in which various retaliatory options on the Cambodians were considered, Henry raised the possibility of flying a squadron of 8-52 bombers from Guam to drop bombs on Cambodian cities," Parade quotes the White House source as saying. "Vice President Rockefeller seemed to think it was a feasible suggestion, but President Ford, Defense Secretary Schlesinger and the Joint Chiefs of Staff quickly discarded the idea," Parade quoted the spokesman. Seoul government to counter North Korean government actions that South Korea sees as threats to its sovereignty in the wake of Communist victories in Indochina.

Last night the official North Korean news agency said that "criminal machinations of U.S. im A French it A :4 '4' :7 it 1 I 4,.. Nit, .) 4 6 14k :4,,054:. ifb "0- 'f' ay ,..,1 4444, -Y, ISc" '''''44 yp'' iSt 2 i'i iy 4' 1 4 f.po.. 400, 0,, ,:4, 1., A .4 4.

1- 0.0-.. r- I tip4, ee" 4, ii, it 4 4kti I If 744 4,, it, 't 0, 0 -4. -5 '6a fe 7:: i ,..,..7" l' ,1, l'. r''--: 3., gf, 4'9'3' 0,, 10 -4 1 "ri I 40 c. 4 3, SEOUL (UPI) The South Korean government ordered all its employes on alert today and canceled leaves to shore up national security in the face of what it called rising provocations and threats from the North Korean Communists.

The government also ordered a step-up in night Nuclear Warning Issued by U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of Defense James R. Schlesinger, in a new warning to North Korea, says use of tactical nuclear weapons "would be carefully considered" in event of a new invasion of South Korea. Schlesinger underscored his warning by acknowledging publicly that the United States has tactical nuclear weapons deployed in South Korea. "If circumstances were to require the use of tactical nuclear weapons I think that that would be carefully considered," Schlesinger said at a news conference yesterday.

and holiday duty by government personnel. The order was issued four days before the 25th anniversary of the outbreak of the Korean War on June 25, 1950. It came while the government pushed a plan to organize a civil defense corps made up of men between 17 and 50 and women volunteers. Officials said the corps, when organized, will have 3 million to 3.5 million members. IT WAS THE latest in a series of moves by the Seats Buckley won as a Conservative in New York last time.

But his bid to run as both a Republican and a Conservative this time is being challenged by some moderates in the GOP, and such a split could result in the seat going to a Democrat. Currently Democrats control the Senate 61-38, with the dispute over one of New Hampshire's seats still unresolved from last year's election. CHIVALRY LIVESAmerican feminist Betty Friedan is protected from the rain by anumbralla-carrying Mexican policeman as she walks to her car yesterday after addressing a group of women at the Mexico City Medical Center. Ms. Friedan told the International Women's Year Conference that big business, not men, is the real enemy of the women's movement.Associated Press Photo.

Director in Airponq nq nq Ilargaux Hemingway Marries in Paris The plane's pilot refused to take off with them aboard and they disembarked quietly. But when passenger agent Steve Jackson, 28, told Peckinpah he couldn't get his baggage off the plane before it left for Hawaii, Peckinpah hit him. this account of the incident: Pecldnpah and a friend, MGM property manager Robert Visciglia, 49, had been aboard a Continental Airlines jet bound for Honolulu and were drinking while sitting out a delay in takeoff. last night at Los Angeles International Airport after allegedly slugging an airline official in the mouth, police said. Peckinpah was not available for comment.

Airport authorities gave executors of their war plan." Weyand has been in Korea on an inspection tour and the North Koreans said his visit coincided with joint U.S.. South Korean army exercises which were scheduled to start yesterday and last until June 28. Wetsons. "But his major objective was the Ritz. They came in and assured security making sure nobody else could get to the wine cellar." The six-feet tall, dimpled bride kissed her calm husband for photographers and then announced her views on marriage: "Two make one.

You know what I mean everybody does it." Editorials A-10 Entertainment A8-9 Obituaries A-6 Sports B-1-3 Temperatures A-2 TV Logs A-4 a 11(kU1t Keep Fong's guest congratulates the Errol The father of the bride, Jack Hemingway, said he thought it fitting that his daughter, who soared to sudden fame as a New York's highest-paid model, should honeymoon in the hangout of an earlier famous Hemingway. 'When French troops entered Paris in August 1944, Papa came in from Rambouillet and first liberated the Explorers' Club," said Jack with some hearty laughs. Inside the Aloha Eden A-12 Astrology A-4 Church News A-6-7 Classified B-4-16 Comics A-4 Crossword A4 Hopes to Gain Los ANGELES (AP) Director Sam Peckinpah, whose films "The Wild Bunch" and "Straw Dogs" added a new dimension of violence to movies, is free on bond after being arrested for investigation of battery. Peckinpah was arrested See Fight to GOP WASHINGTON (UPI) Republicans are hoping to cut into the lopsided Democratic Senate majority in the 1976 elections, but they acknowledge that not even a strong run by President Ford will give them control. The GOP has targeted Democratic seats in Missouri, Michigan, Nevada, Florida, Indiana, New Mexico, Utah and California as their "best shots." At the same time, they Last Public PARIS (UPI) Million-dollar New York cover girl Margaux Hemingway, 20, and hamburger baron Errol Wetson, 34, were married here today and are honeymooning in the favorite hotel of her late grandfather, Ernest Hemingway.

The couple wore pristine white Margaux a ruffled cotton eyelet Victorian-style gown and the mustached bridegroom a white suit, shirt and tie. They said "oui" in a civil ceremony in the office of Paris' first district, near the Louvre museum. Then the ranch girl from Ketchum, Idaho, giggled and joked her way through a champagne reception for the small wedding party at the Hotel Ritz, where "Papa" Hemingway was a familiar fixture beginning in the 1920s. Senate FONG, WHO will be 69 the day before the primary next year, is weary of Washington and reportedly is considering retirement. He is not keen to retire, however, unless the GOP can come up with a strong potential successor with a chance of winning.

The Democrats have a big majority in Hawaii but Fong has a strong personal political following. Ago party's Senatorial Campaign Committee. Stevens said the Republican outlook could be even brighter if the Democratic presidential battle forces some veteranssuch as Henry Jack-soh of Washington, Edmund Muskie of Maine or Lloyd Bentsen of Texas to give up their seats. Stevens acknowledged there could be problems in New York and Hawaii. 10 Years are worried about losing Sen.

James Buckley, the New York Conservative who votes with the GOP, and a seat in Hawaii, should Sen. Hiram Fong decide not to run. "BASICALLY the numbers are running in our favor because there are 22 Democratic seats up for election and only II Republican ones," said Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, chairman of the Uproar was a Series State's Woes with Criminally Insane Not New He said hospital psychiatrists paid very little attention to patients like him. "All they do is give you medicine to quiet you down," he said.

a (4 4 r'''' a I i Li ki." By Tomi Knaefter Star-Bulletin Writer Hawaii's sytem of handling the criminally insane is a topic pointedly consuming the public mind in the wake of these disclosures: The 30-year-old man charged in the May 28 knife slaying of 16-year-old Barbara Seibel of Hawaii Kai was acquitted last year of sexual attacks on three young women. He had been adjudged mentally incompetent at the time of the offenses. The construction worker reported by his psychiatrist to be highly motivated and responsive to psychotherapy, begun the year before, after his original ar What to do with these patients in the meantime is still being considered. Likely, they will remain quartered where they are, supervised by the same four or five persons who must watch over some 50 other patients. The only assurance of security in the existing ward comes through locking the patients up in individual cells where heavy bars were ordered installed only this week.

The cell arrangement is inadequate and moved Yuen, following an inspection tour this week, to comment: "That's rough confinement. Yes, you might say inhumane. No wonder they want to get out of there." AS A STOPGAP MEASURE, before the intensively supervised unit program is hospital officials have been asked to work out activity programs to keep the patients busy," to keep them off the streets, Yuen said. He said there may be a possibility of "opening a farm or something. Maybe raising vegetables and flowers.

I think it's good therapy to keep them occupied." The hospital could have had a security unit several years ago if it had pushed harder in the right three-ton, or, perhaps, if it had harnessed strong public support. The 1970 Legislature appropriated $.700.000 to renoTurn to Page A-3, Col. 5 Second of THE LAST MAJOR UPROAR over the actions of persons adjudged criminally insane came 10 years ago, when Michael Patrick Moeller with a record of two previous sniper shootings was released from the State Hospital. In less than a month. Moeller was involved in another shooting spree, killing a police officer and wounding six others.

Moeller later was convicted and is still in prison. There have been some changes since 1965 and the Moeller case, but not many. The State Hospital still has no intensively-supervised security unit for potentially dangerous patients. The Legislature did provide some $300,000 to renovate a unit with a 20-person capacity. It also al), proved funding for 40 of the 45 staff positions requested for the ward.

But the unit is not expected to be in final shape for at least a year and a half. IN THE WAKE OF PUBLICITY this week over the escapes, and the mounting public pressure, State Health Director George Yuen announced he is determined to make the unit operable much earlier. Recruitment of special staffing not easy to come by is to start soon. week, when it was almost accidentally extracted from hospital officials. THE QUESTION CONCERNING the adequacy or inadequacy of Hawaii's handling of the criminally insane is not new.

rest had been released on condition that he continue his therapy. His therapist was told to submit to the court a monthly report on the patient's progress. Four men, adjudged potentially violent and committed to the State Hospital. simply walked away from the facility. Three of them still are loose in the community.

One of them has been free since 1970. Despite the nature of the cases, neither the police nor hospital authorities informed the public of the escapes. The information did not surface until tact Richard D. Texeira, committed to the State Hospital because of criminal insanity, once called a news conference during one of his numerous escapes. lie told newsmen the hospital was a "danger to the community" because there was no security ward for the violent and no rehabilitative treatment programs for ratients like him who "need treatment." 1.

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