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Job Well Done!

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

Hi 4-H’ers! We just finished two steaks off the barbecue. They were great – it takes a lot of work to raise good beef cattle. I know it was hard to walk away and know the animal you worked so hard to raise will end up on the meat counter.
Still, think back on what you have learnt about raising animals. More important, think about what qualities you have developed in your strength of character to care and tend for any animal, the records you kept on food and water, the time it took to halter break and groom and trim the animal. Think – you have matured greatly in this process to become a better, wiser person with the character to meet the responsibility of doing what is needed to meet a task and goal set before you.

Wally Newcombe

Tutu’s Corner

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

The Hawaiian value “malama” means to take care of, watch out for and attend to. One of our primary duties as adults is taking proper care of our children. It includes loving and providing the fundamental basics like food, clothing and shelter.  It includes creating and maintaining healthy and safe environments. And perhaps most importantly, it includes giving our children tools for taking care of themselves.  If children are secure in the knowledge that they are loved and well taken care of, they will in turn be inclined to love and take care of themselves and others around them. If children have been taught how to love and take care of themselves, they will be inclined to love and take care of the environment.

Get Your State ID

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

Need a State ID? Your chance is coming up. State ID personnel will be at the Kaunakakai Elementary School to process applications for State ID cards on Saturday, Oct. 15 from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. The fee is $10 for senior citizens 65 years and older, and $15 for all others, payable in cash only. State ID cards will be processed and mailed to applicants within 10 business days.

Priority will be given to applicants with completed application forms and required certified documents. Applications without these documents cannot be processed.

• New applicants must provide at a minimum an original social security card and a
certified copy of their birth certificate (or resident alien card, if applicable).

Local Vendors Invited to Showcase at Mainland Show

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

Are you a local vendor who wants to market your products nationally? This is your chance. Maui County is looking to showcase Hawaii-made products and cultural crafts at the Philadelphia International Flower Show, held from March 4 to 11, 2012.  The theme of the flower show this year is “Hawai`i, Islands of Aloha.”

The Maui County Office of Economic Development (OED) has announced that it has purchased ten booths at the show, which is the largest fresh flower and products show in North America. Show organizers have offered vendors from all counties in Hawaii a “Hawai`i Market Place.” Hawaii Tourism Authority and the Maui Visitor’s Bureau will also be participating in the show to promote Hawaii and Maui County.

Veteran’s Corner

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

Veteran’s Corner

Hello veterans, old Jesse here with all the veterans’ news and upcoming events. Have you ever wondered why gun salutes are rendered in odd numbers? According to the Marine Corps History Division, even numbers are considered unlucky. In naval terms, dating as far back as 1685, firing an even number of shots in a gun salute came to signify that the ships’ captain, master or master gunner had died on a voyage. During the days of sail, superstitions were taken seriously because of the danger of sea voyages, according to the Library of Congress’ American Folklife Center.

Two private companies are working with the Department of Defense to develop people-tracking devices for the military to wear on their body, allowing team leaders and platoon commanders to know their every move. It sounds like something out of a Hollywood thriller but both companies brought their systems to a recent demonstration, hosted by the Naval Space and Warfare Systems Center Pacific in San Diego. Representatives say their products, each created independently using existing off-the-shelf technologies, will ultimately save lives with better command-and-control of small-level units dispersed across the battlefield.

A new study indicates veterans who have tried suicide once are at significantly higher risk for eventually dying at their own hands. A review of Veterans Affairs Dept. records for 10,163 veterans who had attempted suicide between 1993 and 1998 showed that by 2002, some 1,836 had died, a rate three times higher than for the same age and gender group in the general population. Among male veterans, suicide was the second-leading cause of death, behind heart disease. For female veterans, suicide was the number one cause of death. In all, suicides accounted for more than 13 percent of deaths in the subject group. In comparison, suicide was the cause of death for 1.8 percent of the general population during the same time period.

I would like to share a little history I find interesting. On July 29, 1846, the sloop Cyane anchored in San Diego Bay, sending a detachment of Marines and sailors to claim San Diego and part of Mexico for the U.S., according to the Naval Heritage and History Command. The landing occurred as part of the Mexican-American war, which began that year. The war started due to the U.S. annexation of Texas, which Mexico still considered part of its territory. Landing at La Playa in an area of what is now Point Loma, the Marines and sailors marched five miles to the heart of town. There, they raised the national flag for the first time over the town, according to the National Park Service. Their landing went unopposed as they were warmly welcomed by pro-American civilians. The Marines and sailors established an outpost and named it Fort Dupont after the Cyane’s skipper Capt. Samuel F. Dupont. The detachment stayed only 11 days before marching to Los Angeles, leaving only a small guard behind. Shortly thereafter, it was renamed Fort Stockton after Commodore Robert F. Stockton. The war ended in 1848 with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and r¬¬¬¬¬esulted in the U.S. gaining more than 525,000 square miles of territory, according the Library of Congress. As compensation for the land lost, the U.S. paid Mexico $15 million and assumed the debt that the Mexican government owed to private citizens in the newly acquired territory.

Let us remember that we have thousands of American troops around the world, with a good many in harm’s way. Let’s give them our support and let them know we appreciate all they do for us. Let’s also remember our veterans at home for all they have done for us. I would like to send a big mahalo to all military personnel, veterans and the people of Molokai. You are the best and I love you all. If you have any news or stories that you would like to share, give old Jesse a yell at 553-3323.

Seal Talk

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

Seal Talk

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has proposed actions to help preserve the endangered Hawaiian monk seals.  Below, students reflect on how they feel about the native species and human interactions with them.



We should all come together and protect the Hawaiian Monk seals. Without our help the next generations would be without Hawaiian Monk seals. They wouldn’t get to experience what we did with them. I hope that everyone can just forget what bad things they do and find a way to help them out.
Ky-lee Dudoit-English

A Mighty Good Fellow

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

A Mighty Good Fellow

Robert Stephenson, president of the Molokai Chamber of Commerce, recently became the second Molokai resident accepted to the Pacific Century Fellows Program, founded by politician Mufi Hannemann in 1996 to develop Hawaii’s young leaders.

opportunities on Molokai or if they have an interest in Molokai, Rob is going to be in a unique position to bring those kinds of key stakeholders to Molokai.

“The other aspect that Rob has going for him is that he’s a heck of a musician,” he added, laughing. “He’s going to be a catalyst to get a Pacific Century Fellows music group going.”

Pili Pa`a

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

Pili Pa`a

Heartfelt harmonies, fast-paced strings, peppy bass lines and something you can’t quite put your finger on? You’re probably listening to Pili Pa`a. The four-man local band mix traditional Hawaiian sounds with modern, unusual flavors hinting of reggae, rock and even country. Made up of members George Aiwohi (bass), Justin Avalino (ukulele), Joshua Adachi (guitar) and his son Jeremy Adachi (drums), Pili Pa`a’s friendly banter between songs will keep you laughing – if Joshua Adachi talks plans for a yard sale, be prepared for Aiwohi to ask how much his yard costs.

Three-fourths of Pili Pa`a talked story with the Dispatch last Tuesday between sets at Hotel Molokai, where they played songs about everything from surfing to women to food, and about places as close as Kalama`ula and as far away as Arkansas. (A plan for a song about Ranch Camp is on the way – they say they’re joking, but we’ll have to wait and see.)

The Molokai Dispatch (TMD): How long have you been playing together?

Joshua Adachi: We’ve been playing six or seven years. George and I used to play together, and we had group members interchanging. [A few years later] we put together a group to play a graduation party for Justin’s family in Alaska, and it kind of evolved to different things. We’re pretty versatile in our music.



Avalino: We could record someday but it would have to be our Top 12 or something, and we should have six originals on the CD.

TMD: Anything else you wanna say about playing on Molokai?

Avalino: Molokai got plenty talent.

Aiwohi: You gotta be confident, but we have fun too. The most important thing is having fun. If not, no sense play.

Health Care Task Force Considered

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

At the last of four public meetings hosted by the Department of Health (DOH) last week, members of Molokai’s healthcare community said it’s time to put aside old differences and look toward the future. Now, a task force is being organized to move their efforts forward.

“We all live here, we all know one another and we’re all friends,” said Cedric Alonzo, who works at the Molokai Community Health Center (MCHC). “We need collaboration.”

The group of about 60 attendees – including workers from MCHC and the Molokai General Hospital (MGH), as well as private practitioners and other professionals – designated Beverly Pauole-Moore to coordinate the task force.

Comic Relief

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

Comic Relief

Frank DeLima spent four years in a seminary preparing to become a priest. Augie Tulba trained to become a boxer, winning Golden Gloves in Hawaii in 1985 and ’86.

But somehow the pair’s paths changed – and eventually crossed. DeLima, a 36-year comedy veteran from Oahu, and Tulba, better known as

that lends itself to a parody,” he said.

Molokai is one of 14 stops on this year’s Da Babooze Braddahs tour, including four shows on the mainland and several on the neighbor islands, including Hana, Hilo, Lihue and more. Augie said he’s working on a month-long show to take place in March 2012 that will feature himself, DeLima, Mel Cabang, Andy Bumatai and Ed Kaahea.

If Island Air sponsors airfare, he’d like the tour to stop on Molokai, he said – and if that happens, he hopes to pack the house.

“You guys are an awesome audience,” Augie told the crowd. “Go and tell everybody what they missed.”