Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Honolulu Star-Advertiser from Honolulu, Hawaii • B7

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
B7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Cemetery Plots Hawaiian Memorial Park 1 Plot in Koolau Circle $4,500. Please Call 808-227-0825 Hawaiian Memorial Park Beautiful Plot for 1 Casket or 2 Urns. $3,500 OBO Leave msg 808-220-6465 VALLEY OF THE TEMPLES 2 Plots in the Garden of Eternal Love. Regular Price $7,300 each. Asking $7,000 BOTH 845-2566 Serafina M.

Asuncion She wasborninthePhilippines. HeadMortuaryChapel.Inurnment: 11 at Valley of the Temples. Ronald Walter Benner asborninMaryland.Services over Calvary bytheSeaLutheran Church, Kalanianaole Hwy. Bobby Gene Biggs 2017.HewasbornonJanuary Servicestobeheldatalater date. Benjamin "Ben" De Mello, III inHiloonAugust19, 2017.HewasborninHilo.

ollowatHawaiiVeterans Cemetery No. 2. Archie G. Fujinaga inHonoluluonAugust4, 2017.HewasborninHonolulu. 2017 at Hosoi Garden Mortuary.

Derek K. Gasper HewasborninHonolulu. Moanalua Chapel. Pelagio B. Gray atBorthwickMortuaryMaunakea Chapel.Burial:2PMonSaturday, Memorial Park Cemetery.

Walter M. Land was born in Stockton, California. Dolores Nozawa Lott wasborninManoa.Private Services. Carol Jean (Thompson) Marshall QueensHospitalWestonAugust information, contact family. Maxine Ululani Matsuura a.m.onThursday,September7, 2017atDiamondHeadMortuary.

Memorial Park and Mortuary. Albert Medeiros, Sr. Church in Napoopoo, Hawaii. Harold Y. Nakamura wasborninHonolulu.Private Services.

Prima C. Nakamura 2017atBorthwickMortuaryMauka Chapel.Burial:10AMonFriday, September8atValleyofthe Temple Memorial Park. Henrietta Ulei New September8 atSt.AnnChurch,Kaneohe. Veterans Cemetery, Kaneohe. Arthur W.

Soares, Jr. wasborninHonolulu.Visitation: Chapel.Burial:3:00p.m.at Hawaiian Memorial Park Cemetery. Irene Katherine Villanueva inKailua-KonaonAugust20, 2017.ShewasborninPuna, Hawaii.ACelebrationoflifewill be held at later date. Janet Wong ShewasborninKauai.Visitation: HawaiianMemorialParkMortuary. September12atHawaiiState Veterans Cemetery.

GEORGE JOJI SUGITA PassedawayonAugust8th 2017.BorninHonoluluonMay 21st1933.Heissurvivedby andsister-in-lawRuthAntonizio atPunchbowlNationalCemetery ofthePacificwithhisbeloved wife Ethel. BARBARA LEIKO YANAGIHARA Passedawayattheageof80 herdaughterDawn(Christyan) Sumiko(James)ItoandEmiko Inurnmentserviceswillbeheld atDiamondHeadMemorial Park. No flowers. Aloha attire. ROY SEIKO IHA HewasborninHonoluluand wasaretiredautomechanicfor Universal Motors Company.

Hewaspredeceasedbyhis andPamelaKuwamura(Glenn), and Henry. Privateservicesheld.Nomonetary offerings. Arrangements Provided By: HOSOI GARDEN MORTUARY 538-NEWS source. DENOTES U.S. MILITARY VETERAN IN MEMORY SATURDAY HONOLULU STAR-ADVERTISER B7 By Sam Roberts New York Times Michael Cromartie, who shepherded a generation of journalists toward more informed coverage of evolving junction with politics and public policy, died Monday at his home in Arlington, Va.

He was 67. The cause was glandular cancer, his daughter, Heather Cromartie, said. A onetime agnostic, Cromartie (pronounced CRO-mar-tee) embraced Christianity as a teenage conscientious objector to the Vietnam War and then became an acolyte of Charles W. Colson, the Nixon administration special counsel who was convicted in the Watergate scandal. Cromartie veered toward evangelism and conservatism after he was the victim of a violent hotel room robbery.

Kristol says that a neoconservative is a liberal who has been mugged by Cromartie told Pa theos, an online religion magazine, in 2010. was quite literally true for He began to realize, he said, there are very real people out there who mean harm and need to be restrained by the But rather than becoming embittered or more dogmatic, Cromartie made a career out of collaborating with journalists to demystify his fellow influence on politics. has served as a con sigliere for conservative Christians in the Timothy Dalrymple observed in 2013 in Christianity Today. In his book and Politics in America: A (2005), Cromartie wrote, religiously grounded moral arguments have become ever more influential factors in the national debate, ignorance about theological convictions has often worked to distort the public discourse on important policy He pursued a mission not to convert, but to advise both individually and at dozens of the Faith Angle forums he organized in Maine and Florida beginning in 1999 under the auspices of the Ethics Public Policy Center in Washington, where he was a vice president and director of the Evangelicals in Civic Life project. Cromartie did more to ensure that American political journalism is imbued with religious tolerance, biblical literacy, historical insight and an ecumenical spirit than any person Carl M.

Cannon, Washington bureau chief for the website RealClearPolitics, wrote this week. The New York Times columnist David Brooks said that when Cromartie started his forums, American journalists know the difference between a fundamentalist and an the years I watched the coverage get Brooks said. Cromartie never minimized his personal faith he described it as reformed, but he was neither doctrinaire nor defensive. Nor did he take himself too seriously. At one of his forums, when a speaker was asked by an audience member to identify who among his colleagues at the conference would be damned for eternity, Cromartie interjected, about eternal destination are best handled over the cocktail Michael Lewis Cromartie was born July 13, 1950, in Charlotte, N.C., and raised in Atlanta.

His mother was the former Doris Mingle, a power company executive and president of the Democratic Women of North Carolina. His father, James, was a regional Federal Highway Administration official. In addition to his daughter, Heather, he is survived by his wife, the former Jennifer Seel; their sons, Ethan and Eric Cromartie; his sister, Vicki Lipscomb; and his brother, James. By Peter Keepnews New York Times Shelley Berman, whose brittle persona and anxiety-ridden observations helped redefine stand-up comedy in the late 1950s and early died early Friday at his home in Bell Canyon, Calif. He was 92.

His publicist, Glenn Schwartz, said the cause was complications of disease. Berman, one of the first comedians to have as much success on records as in person or on television, was in the vanguard of a movement that transformed the comedy monologue from a rapid-fire string of gags to something more subtle, more thoughtful and more personal. Comedians like Berman, Mort Sahl and Lenny Bruce had a different approach. In 1959 Time magazine referred to this new breed as comics, and the term (which Berman hated) caught on. Perched on a stool un like most stand-up comedians, he did his entire act sitting down Berman focused on the little things.

He talked about passionate kisses that miss the mark so that wind up with the tip of her nose in the corner of your Or what to do when the person you are talking to accidentally spits in your face do you wipe the spit off or make believe it happen? Like his fellow Chicago comedian Bob Newhart, Berman specialized in telephone monologues, in which the humor came from his reactions to the unheard voice on the other end of the line. His monologues were more like short plays than traditional comedy routines, and many of them like the one in which he played his own father, trying to discourage young Sheldon from going into show business had a poignant undertone. Berman was theatrically trained, and for most of his career he thought of himself more as an actor than as a comedian. He was an actor both before and after he was a comedy star, and he continued acting well into his 80s, earning an Emmy Award nomination for his portrayal of Larry father on the HBO comedy series Your In the heady early days of his comedy career, he appeared on Broadway in Girls Against the (1959) and Family (1962), and on television shows, including and Twilight (on which he memorably played the misanthropic Archibald Beechcroft, who gains the power to remake the world to his own liking). Acting became main source of income when the comedy bookings began to dry up.

The first of his several albums, Shelley (1959), put both Berman and the phenomenon of long-playing comedy records on the map. There had been stand-up comedy albums before this, but none had made as much of a splash as this one. Shelley won a Grammy Award, reached No. 2 on the Billboard album chart and led the way for hit records by Newhart, Bill Cosby and Steve Martin. was nervous about that record because I thought no one would want to see me anymore if they could just play Berman said in 2003.

after it came out, I went to play a show on Sunset Boulevard, and there was a line around the block! I told my wife, can buy two suits Sheldon Leonard Berman was born in Chicago on Feb. 3, 1925, the son of Nathan Berman, who owned a tavern on the West Side, and the former Irene Marks. He was a showoff as a child; his parents, he once said, told him, your mouth you could be a Berman is survived by his wife; their daughter, Rachel Berman; and two grandsons. A son, Joshua, died of cancer in 1977. MICHAEL CROMARTIE 1950-2017 Evangelical schooled journalists in religion SHELLEY BERMAN 1925-2017 Comedian helped bring more depth to stand-up RICHARD ANDERSON 1926-2017 Popular actor won fame on Million Dollar By John Rogers Associated Press LOS ANGELES Richard Anderson, the tall, handsome actor best known for co-starring simultaneously in the popular 1970s television shows Six Million Dollar and Bionic has died at age 91.

Anderson died of natural causes Thursday, family spokesman Jonathan Taylor said. Six Million Dollar brought a new wave of supernatural heroes to television. Based on the novel by Martin Caidin, it starred Lee Majors as U.S. astronaut Steve Austin, who is severely injured in a crash. The government saves his life by rebuilding his body with atom-powered artificial limbs and other parts, giving him superhuman strength, speed and other powers.

Anderson played Oscar Goldman, boss at the secret government spy agency the astronaut went to work for after becoming a cyborg. became a dear and loyal friend, and I have never met a man like Majors said in a statement Thursday, adding the two first met when they filmed several episodes of another hit television show, the 1960s Western Big called him His always stylish attire, his class, calmness and knowledge never faltered in his 91 Majors said, adding Anderson was the sweet, charming when they spoke just a few weeks ago. Six Million Dollar began as a TV movie in 1973, and when it proved a hit it was turned into a weekly series the following year. Its popularity led to the 1976 spinoff show, Bionic starring Lindsay Wagner. Anderson took on the Oscar Goldman role in that show, too, sometimes appearing from week to week in both series.

begin to say how much I have always admired and have been grateful for the elegance and loving friendship I was blessed to have with Richard Wagner said in a statement. In real life, Majors re called, it was Anderson who embraced tennis, traveling the world to play in tournaments. loved his daughters, tennis and his work as an he said. Anderson, who stood 6-feet-4, began his career in 1949 with a small role as a wounded soldier in Soon after, his comedy scenes in a TV series called Camera, drew the attention of MGM, which offered him a screen test and a contract. He had decided to try acting after watching Gary Cooper movies, and at the screen test he performed a scene from Cowboy and the At MGM he played secondary roles in such movies as Magnificent the Wide Story of Three Student the and people ask me where I received my education, I tell them it was at MGM the Internet Movie Database quoted him as saying.

biggest lessons that I learned is that acting is a talent. You teach it. And even if you have the talent, you have to get the When MGM began thinning out its contract list in the late 1950s, Anderson was let go. He went on to make movies for other studios, appearing in such films as Stanley of Long Hot Wackiest Ship in the Gathering of Days in and Tora! Anderson was also a frequent guest on TV series and had regular roles on and Other TV credits included and Mod Richard Norman Anderson was born in Long Branch, N.J., on Aug. 8, 1926.

He later moved to Los Angeles, where he began appearing in high school plays. After two years in the Army, he began studying at the Actors Laboratory in Los Angeles. Soon he was landing work in radio and summer stock productions. Anderson was married and divorced twice. His first wife, Carol Lee Ladd, was the daughter of actor Alan Ladd.

His second wife, Katharine Thalberg, was the daughter of actress Norma Shearer and movie mogul Irvin Thalberg. The couple had three daughters, His daughters, Ashley Anderson, Brooke Anderson and Deva Anderson, survive him. ASSOCIATED PRESS 2004 Shelley Berman COURTESY PHOTO 1976 Richard Anderson CHRISTIANITY TODAY VIA NEW YORK TIMES Michael Cromartie, who shepherded a generation of journalists toward more informed coverage of evolving junction with politics and public policy, died Thursday at his home in Arlington, Va..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Honolulu Star-Advertiser
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Honolulu Star-Advertiser Archive

Pages Available:
434,313
Years Available:
2010-2024