b'Smart said in an interview with People magazine. In 1967, he sold 25,500 acres of Waikoloa Nui to Boise Cascade Properties Inc., the timber and paper companys real estate division, headed by Ron Boeddeker. The remaining 5,500 acres would be negotiated later.Between 1967 and the unveiling of Boise Cascades develop-ment plans in 1969, speculative talk projected a future Waikoloa with a population of 200,000, and sprawling subdivisions from Kawaihae to Kona. Part gossip, part misinformation, the coconut wireless created concern and controversy. So much concern and controversy, in fact, that Boise Cascade took out full page ads in local newspapers, spelling out its plans in detail, clarifying rumors, and asking for support.Theirbigpicturewasaseven-partdevelopmentof Waikoloa:8,430 acres of ranch/agricultural land in 500-1,500 acre parcels10,000 acres of perpetual recreational open space for horseback riding, hunting, hiking, golf, etc., owned in com-mon by the communityA 2,795-acre recreational village with a Robert Trent Jones, Jr. golf course, club house, swimming pool, tennis courts, 18481957The Great Mahele, a new systemBoise Cascade Corporation of land division signed into lawis established in Boise, Idaho, by Kamehameha III, establisheswith the merger of two sawmill private land ownership incompanies. Its first Hawai`i Hawai`i for the first time. Thepurchase is Honolulu Paper population at `Anaeho`omaluCompany (Hopaco) in 1964. As all but disappears.profits increase, it expands into real estate development.2 7'