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Honolulu Star-Bulletin from Honolulu, Hawaii • 58

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
58
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

E-2 Honolulu Star-Bulletin Thursday, April 28, 1983 Dave Donnelly's Hawaii A Appearing with Loyal will be her brother, Kimo out with a new catalog and all the pictures in it were taken at the Hyatt Regency Maui. The catalog even doubles as a pitch for Isle tourism, stating on one page, "Your holdiay in Hawaii. THREE former members of the Buster frabbe Aquacade got together at the Oahu Country Club this week to say aloha to their late boss Patricia Bryan, Rochelle Charleston and Garner, who performs regularly at Kauai's Wain-Thai Hotel KCCN will rebroadcast the Scries" program focusing on slack key guitar on May 4 it features such artists as Sonny Chillingworth, Raymond Kane and the late Atta- Isaacs, whose death came just two weeks after recording the program AFTER bidding goodbye to the "Greasers" at, HCT, Punahou dance director Marian Jay has been surrounded by "Munchkins." She's producV, ing and directing "The Wizard of Oz" at Jakki Milici had the table set for four with a picture of Crabbe, like Mark Twain's in 1866 and Garfinkel's for Spring 1983. will be a beautiful memory forever." Former Hawaii Islanders manager Doug Rader is off to a good start as If v-iV" 1 Raneers. which is whv Pete school with a huge cast of 75U dancers (ages rive some roses ana a lit candle at the fourth setting Dominador Asis called "Jun" (short for Junior) by his pals, was in town to complete the ar ii Axthelm chose to profile With "Children of a to 70) May 6-8 how didn't warrant an entire week and she hopes on behalf of nurses throughout the Islands that business continues to blossom for flower shops and restaurants For the first time since 1977, Anna Pcrry-Fisk is opening her Big Isle ranch for "Old Hawaii on Horseback." Some 126 riders will parade past spectators while portraying people in Hawaii's past who helped make the state what it is today.

The show, which begins with a picnic at noon on May 21. will benefit the Hawaii Heart Association IF you can't make it to the Big Isle to see the real cowboys at work, you might try taking in the Paniolo Country Carnival tomorrow and Saturday at Our Lady of Sorrows School in Wahiawa. Among the attractions are the dunking booth (where you can drench the likes of politicos Bobby Bunda and Arnold Morgado) and the entertainment stage where you can be entertained by Al Harrington, Jay Larrin, various dance troupes and KDEO d.j.'s Honolulu's Dr. Cyrus Loo will be keynote speaker at the annual convention of the American Association of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine May 8-9 in Washington D.C. "Roses for Mama" is the theme of Loyal Garner's Mother's Day luncheon show at the Pacific Beach Hotel on May 8 with each mama in the audience receiving a red rose.

God" being rehearsed at the; Manoa Little Theater, co director Howie Seago and ac- tress Wanda Peterson were going over a scene in the-" I i HPAC office when a man t- Rader in the May 2 issue of 1 Newsweek Former Isle hJ v-XU Noe) Gray has turnea to Racier the restaurant business and is now operating Noel's Restaurant and Bar on Waialae Ave. across from the Kahala Mall, specializing in Mexican food. Still keeping a link with the music biz, he's employing Brother No-land to perform there tomorrow and Saturday nights AND if you'd like to spend a nght in Margari-taville. be advised that Jimmy Buffett and friends return to the Waikiki Shell May 21 at 7 p.m. Registered Nurse Sharon Karp has nothing against secretaries being feted during their "week," but she thinks it's only fair that doctors are aware that May 6 is Nurses Day they some rangements with Lee Gray to be exclusive Maytag dealer in the Philippines.

Asis may turn out to be his own best customer he and his family already own seven major laundry establishments and he plans to open a fleet of self-service launderettes t'o compete with himself all using Maytag, to be sure It turns out that Sen. Dan Inouye didn't "purchase" that Otsuka painting mentioned here recently Images International merely loaned it to him for display in his Washington DC. office SPEAKING of Washington, a major department store in the nation's capital, Garfinkel's, is i walked in brandishing a gun, Both Seago and who are deaf, froze in tracks. Seago was startled, but managed to lip read one l' word "Props." It was then he realized with relief Jay the man was donating the gun to the theater to use as a prop in future productions. Huge of relief all around Mothers Day Gifts wh TV News: Race to Be No.

1 14K Heavy Barrel Bracelet EXTRA SPECIAL UK Barrel Rinn 6mm $429.00 8mm $499.00 10mm $599.00 1 6mm $109.00 8mm $139.00 4 14K HEAVY Flat Vertical Pendant 6mm 29 8mm $439 10mm S519 Mi S7Q00 6mm i 8mmS95CV "He is the original Mr. Laid-Back. And he always said that he does not try to pass himself off as a newsman. He is a performer. That's how he looks at himself.

He was hired to go out there on the air and wind him up and he goes out there and does this really smooth delivery. He's known for when everything goes wrong he never loses his cool on the air, just absolutely Mr. Steady." Tindall says he moved over to KITV to co-anchor with Lynne Waters last June because "It was time for a comes a time when you feel you have to make a change for the sake of making a change." KHON's Moore did not go to that station in mid-1978 as its anchor but as sportscaster director. He says he left KGMB, his first job in commercial TV, after nine years because of professional opportunity KHON offered him more say-so over sports broadcasting. KHON wanted Moore because he was a hot property.

Two years ago the anchor spot opened up at KHON. The station had research, commissioned by its parent company, that showed there were two dominant personalities in Hawaii TV, says news editor Kent Baker. One was Sevey The other was Moore Moore started building his following as a sportscaster, where he says he thinks he "gained credibility as a guy who would give you the story, would have fun when he could, was somber and serious when it was required but that you didn't get this impression that 'Here it is bigger than life and more important Turn to Page E-3 14K ID Bracslel Any Style Available 6mm BARREL s2 3000 Continued from Page E-l But a highly professional job of news reporting, quality technical production, good promotion and supportive programming are not rnough to attract large audiences to a newscast. That is where the anchor comes in. There seems to be a general belief in television that a great anchor cannot save a miserable newscast.

But if all or most of the other elements are in place, the anchor can be the key. "Unfortunately, 1 think probably most people turn in principally because of the anchor," says Sevey. He isn't likely to get much, if any, of an argument from others in television. KHON's Baker puts it another way: If viewers don't like the anchor, they tune out the newscast. "All of the research in broadcasting and advertising say that the anchor the most important element of it ratings)." says KITV co-anchor Tindall.

"I don't see any reason to dispute that except that I know it can be bolstered by good reporting staffs, by good technical all of the research says that anchor person, the person who is hanging his face out there on the screen, is the most important aspect of it." For that reason, it makes sense that a station would want as an anchor someone that viewers know and like. That's hy Channels 2 and 4 14K HEAVY Horizontal Pendant wo chain Sevey, Moore, Jones and Tindall in 1975. Barrel 6mm $109 8mm $119 1 Cultured PEARL 14K JADE 2-SECTION BANGLE Special $149.00 Specials z8 Necklace Rino wanted Moore and Tindall, respectively. Says KITV's Rockwell about the Tindall hire: "I think the idea was simply you've got a guy with 17 years in the market at the number-one station who becomes available and you don't turn your back on a thing like that because in this market, particularly, longevity and image are everything." Tindall, who got into broadcasting at age 15 as a rock 'n' roll disc jockey, started out at KGMB in mid-1965. He left a job as a corporate broadcasting executive in Chicago to work for the new owner of KGMB radio and TV, a man who'd owned the radio station where Tindall worked while in college in Denver.

The man was Cecil Ileftel, who sold KGMB TV to Lee Enterprises of Iowa after his 1976 election to Congress. Tindall was hired to program KGMB radio but ended up in television where he co-anchored the late-evening news for almost all of the time he was at KGMB. And although most people "don't seem to remember it," he says, for 13 years he did a segment of the 6 p.m. weekday news with Sevey. Says Jones, Tindall's former 10 p.m.

anchor partner at KGMB: 2 now thru 53 Shop and save for In the of Kafihi at WO Haiti St. xmmif kauhi fj. nfllL store' JIF hours: srT jLfi PEANUT TE ra ifl butter 7 PIUS ONE SUPER DISC. BOOK jji 28 02. am7pm EXP.

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About Honolulu Star-Bulletin Archive

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