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priri",(i跳州き,jiaij^ダ)お notanls6leしbLitaゅ"l,39"
、ぉV^iaiWoH確さ:,e
辟r^kl4展"ーhtarみ""ぉl, ふov^neld ",拿nd of "N卜
V0r神veraf hundrきd n9.
yvhentゅ21'y的r,oW Ja-pa he辨pilotほndsるn the Island, heimmediately surrounded by several hundred
cate wけh thepilot with theけ sp的ch, a mixture of native kanaka and pidgin English. Th^y sendtvvo men on horseback to bring superintendent Harada. M的nwhile one of the natives manages to seはe a piece of paper from the dazed pilot
Harada arrives and learns about the raid for the first time. He tries to negotiate wはh the native who took ths paper for its return, but wけhout success.
Hi,扭1)„ ,參t hl8thSQiilも恤fiる輔,,,n
who铜showing signs力f »ioatl箭"y. Harada and the p"ot もvad卢t:he natlゅs ,nd run to the home of the native sus* pecte"ot hbiding the piece of paper, They search for thざ p a per細thさy are un success, f(i,, so they sぉfire to the ho use reasoning that If the paper Is hldddn there, It would be burned.
By this time, they are again surrounded by the natives, who are showing their hostility by throwing stones. For the second time, the two nnan age to evade the natives. They return to the plane, which they set afire. Then they escape into a wooded area and there they shoot themselves. The paper contained some miaps, and some code words for the operation.けs military importance was questionable if not trivほl.
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"Along side《Ser?. ~an> Cranston'sニ staff there was no comparison," th,ぉde n6ted. "So>hen—r we really wantedsoniethlngclone, we went to Cranston."
The former aide added, "にm not saying that the staff was perfect and couldn'thavさ done better, but It was very disheartening for the staff to do the ba6k-up work and have him (Hayakawa) not carry th« baH."
The poor guidance Hayakawa received from his staff was exempHfled in1977 when the senator went to a strictly social, non-partisan California State Society winter meeting. Hayakawa amazed his mostly Democratにparty-gioers by giving a partisan speech on how to bund the Republican Party into a majority. He later explained that an aide had told him It was a Republican affaに
A former staff member said that in many cases, perhaps, Hayakawa should have been guided better, but the senator was, in part, to j^lame as well, because he tended to hide In a corner, and did Htt,e mingling wけh people.
"I think the bottom line was that the senator could not make the transition from the academにworld to the politicat world.は's a vastly different thing. When he wrote books, he could research, and think, and ponder' and look at the ceiling. But here,け's bang-bang, and he couldn't handle that. Nor could he handle the wheeling and dealing. Much as he likes to be an exhlbけionist, he's really a timid man. He didn't feel as polished as the other senators, and that made him insecure," noted the aide.
"Ypu say, 'Now you've got to call this senator,' and he'd agree to doけ,but he'd put けoff. He was much more comfortable writing letters to the other senators and giving speeches on the floor That's not the wayけ's done though," he added.
A Canadはn.born Nlsei, Hayakawa was propelled into the public ,lmelight in1968 when, while acWng president of San Francisco State Uni-versはy, he climbed onto a sound truck being used by protesting students and pulled the wけes from theけloudspeakers.
support from many b,ue collar voters, and Hayakawa was viewed as a national symbol of resistance to protestors of the Vietnam War and other causes. He had been prev卜 ously known for h,s accomplishments In the dead em k;
■ ■■''■7-
;f〖争聰翻H,"h,'ぉぉ;
aill歸diゅfllfeh;(扭〖feir母帅,
jaず^Ojff^)rtiゃ,ほ)祸l"r^ sl ty of VVise—In) and Wri"n。
"し8ingudge ,n Th6ught抑cT A(Jt〖on/, 、
化19ケ6, althpuゅhMired at 化e age ofマ0, Hayakawa be* bame tれe surpiiseやQP entry In the, sens^torほにface, and he defeated Incumb—De-had a better record that Ws Image of a "playboy'; sen a, tor, b IJf Hayakawa, stilにremembered 化rtheSFSU 1バb卜 dent, emerged th$ victor.
However, once In the Sen. ate, Hayakawa could "never get in tune with that mdthod of operating," noted an aide. "He's a very bright man and he had wonderful accomplishments In his Hfe. But the Senate and poHtics were altogether new things to him."
In addition to his InablHty to be an effective politician, Hayakawa'$ chances of reelection in1982 were also eroded by his controversial publにstatements and incidents of falling asleep onthe job and in important meet, ings.
Or)e of his most no tec I statements was made in May 1979, when, after a師etlng wはh President J Immy Car-ter anc^ CaHfornla officials on the oil crisis, Hayiakawa offer, ed his own solution to ttie na* tion's energy crisis — let gasoline prices rise as much as $2 to $3 a gall on. When asked by a reporter, "What about the poor?" Hayakawa responded, "The poor don" need gas because they're not working."
(Continued on page 3>
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