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Veterans Day: More than Just Nov. 11

Friday, November 26th, 2010

On this past Wednesday, Nov. 10, my fourth graders at Kualapu`u School found out first-hand that Nov. 11 was more than just a holiday and a day without school. We were honored to have two veterans who had served in Vietnam come and share their mana`o and answer questions.  Many thanks to Larry Helm and Bo Mahoe for their time and insight as 20 fourth grade boys and girls got to find out the sacrifices and experiences that our veterans go through for our freedoms, as well as the things our military men and women do to benefit others during times of natural disasters such as earthquakes and tsunamis.
 

Hole in One

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Hole in One

Community Contributed

Provided by Amy Fujimoto


Congratulations to George Harada, who made a hole-in-one during a golf tournament last month, hosted by the Ironwood Hills Golf Club. It has been quite a few years since someone made a hole-in-one in our club!

Above, President Ron Nakagawa congratulates George Harada for making that hole-in-one at the Ironwood Hills Golf Course, #3 hole. 

Harada was playing in one of the club’s twice a month tournaments, with fellow members Nakagawa, Socho Nishihira, Paul Stevens, Jim Temple and Cheryl Tokuoka. Stevens was also the 2010 Ace of Aces winner – challenging 11 other golfers for this award on July 24.

Mahalo to all that participate!

A Healthy History

Friday, November 26th, 2010

A Healthy History

Back in the mid 1900s on Molokai, it wasn’t unusual to go into the hospital to get your tonsils out and perhaps see a gurney with a dead body down the hall. Your doctor would have just come from delivering a baby. Hours before that, he would have taken your neighbor’s appendix out. You would have stayed in that hospital for a few days while your tonsils healed.

That was health care on Molokai 50 years ago. Dr. Paul Stevens was one of those doctors – and one of the few that stuck around on Molokai to tell the tale.

shoulders.”

“We were constantly looking for new doctors to come to Molokai,” said Stevens. “There was a big turnover.”

A New Hospital
In 1961, the community began raising funds to build a new hospital after the Molokai Community Hospital building was condemned for being a fire hazard. Centrally located, Kaunakakai was chosen as the new location for the facility. Molokai Ranch gifted the land, and plantation workers put a portion of their salaries toward the fund. Organizations around the state donated what they could.

“It’s really inspirational that they would do that,” said Claire Iveson of the Family Support Office.

The July 15, 1961 issue of the Honolulu Advertiser reported that with field worker donations of over $100,000, a state grant of $250,000 and an anticipated $450,000 in federal funds, construction was imminent. “The people of Molokai have done a terrific job,” the Advertiser concluded.

The new 22,000 square foot facility, which became known as Molokai General Hospital, opened its doors in 1963. In 1985, the Women’s Health Center opened in association with the hospital, enabling certified nurse midwives to deliver babies on Molokai after private practice doctors’ insurance became too high for them to continue deliveries on the island.

By the mid 1980s, the building had fallen into disrepair and accumulated significant debt, according to Randy Lite, current Molokai General Hospital (MGH) vice president. Negotiations began with Queen’s Health System to take over the hospital, which became official in 1987. Queen’s purchased the building from its stakeholders, a community group called the Molokai Health Foundation, and rented land from the foundation for $10,000 a year in a 55-year agreement, according to Lite.

A building for private practice doctors working in cooperation with the hospital was built next door in 1992, which would later receive a federal Rural Health Clinic designation.

Healthy Choices
In 1984, the World Health Organization used Molokai residents in a health study – local Dr. Emmet Aluli became involved in the study, which examined diet in indigenous people. The advisory that formed to facilitate what became known as the “1985 Heart Study” morphed into today’s Na Pu`uwai, meaning “many hearts,” according to Akutagawa.

The 1987 federal Native Hawaiian Health Care Improvement Act jump-started a flow of funds into the organization, which began with a focus on research. In 1991, Na Pu`uwai began offering health services to the public.

After community discussions and the encouragement of Sen. Inouye, the Molokai Community Health Center was born in 2004 under the designation of a Federally Qualified Health Center. The federal designation was sought by community volunteers to fill the need for health care for the island’s indigent, uninsured and underinsured. The center currently operates in an office in the Kamoi Center, but has bought the old Pau Hana Inn and plans to expand its services there.

Health care on Molokai has come a long way in 50 years, and as technology grows, rural services expand, and specialists – rather than do-it-all doctors – dominate the medical scene, Molokai is changing with the times.

Read the second in the series next week to find out Molokai’s health care climate today.

Limited Time to Change Hunting Rules

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Conservation Council for Hawaii News Release

The Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources is proposing revisions to Hawaii Administrative Rules relating to hunting and game, and asking the public for their feedback. This is an opportunity to urge the state to change the hunting and game management paradigm to reduce the damage caused by introduced continental feral ungulates and game mammals, and provide more opportunities for hunters to help control animals and bring home the meat. 

Money Available for Farming Conservation

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Community Contributed

Provided by Wally Jennings

The Ho`olehua Field Office is seeking land owners and managers that would be interested is conservation practices to address resource concern to come sign-up of conservation planning.  This service is free and may offer opportunities for assistance do conservation on farmed and ranched lands.

Through the Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service, two programs are available for Molokai farmers to assist in wildlife habitat and erosion and conservation techniques.

Surf and Turf

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Editorial by Todd Yamashita

Do we need to control feral animal populations humanely? Yes. Do we deserve great neighborhood restaurants? Absolutely. Letters to the editor this week remind us that we live in a compassionate and active community. While we all have varying opinions, one thing is certain – most of us have good intentions in making our community a better place.

Unfortunately, as Walter Ritte says, good intentions are not enough. Some of the problems we face in our community are complicated – they are difficult to understand and require complex solutions.

Tutu’s Corner

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Tutu’s Corner

Community Contributed

Column by Tutu and Me

Children are natural born creators! In their play, they are engrossed in the process of creating. Unfortunately, adults have become conditioned to be concerned with the final outcome or product.

To children, the very act of painting, drawing, dancing or singing is more important than finishing or making sure it is perfect. Children only care about the “final outcome” if they think that it is important to the adults in their lives. This, in turn, causes blockage to the free flow of creative expression.


At Tutu and Me Traveling Preschool, there are many opportunities for children to engage in creative artistic activities, such as indoor art, easel painting, writing, etc. The very act of trying out different things and using imagination is encouraged.

Try This at Home:
•    Encourage your child in their attempts at artistic expression.
•    Supply crayons, colored pencils, plenty of plain drawing paper (brown paper bags are excellent) for drawing lines, circles, happy and sad feelings, etc.
•    Collect bits and pieces of fabric, cotton balls, stickers, ribbon etc. to create art.
•    Let your child experiment with a paper punch and then use the dots to create something.
•    Inspire art with art – put on some music and together with your child, draw or paint the way the music makes you feel.
•    Keep singing! Sing familiar songs together -- while working around the house, or riding in the car.
•    Take time to rhyme – learn favorite poems/chants/ rhymes together.
•    Make or buy puppets, and have the puppets tell stories.
•    After reading to your keiki, talk to them about the story.

Remember: Letting children use their imaginations and express themselves creatively is an important part of early childhood development.

Contributions from Tutu and Me Traveling Preschool, a program of Partners in Development Foundation.  Tutu and Me is funded through a grant from the U.S. Department of Education.

Kuaolamaikekuahiwi Chin

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Kuaolamaikekuahiwi Chin

Kuaolamaikekuahiwi Kamiloloa Chung Kyu Chin was born September 17, 2010 at 9:56 a.m. in Hilo, Hawaii Island, to proud parents Kanoe Davis and Keone Chin. She weighed 4 lbs, 15.5 oz and was 18.5 inches. Sisters Nahoni, Ko`i`ula and Miliopuna Davis, brothers Wainoho Tolentino-Chin and Pauahi Tolentino-Chin, grandparents Iokepa and Theresa Wong, Maria Wong-Mikhail and Alice and Donald Chin, and great-grandparents Nani and Francis Wong welcomed her to the world.

Theodore Dudoit

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Theodore Dudoit Sr, 64, of Ualapue, Molokai, died on November 10, 2010 at his home in Honouliwai, Molokai. He was born September 13, 1946 in Ualapue.
He is survived by sons Theodore Dudoit Jr. of Waialua, Allin (Grace) Dudoit of Wailuku, Maui, Jesse (Kelly) Dudoit of Ho`olehua; daughters Marietta (Akida) Alapai of Honouliwai, Clare Dudoit of Springfield, Illinois, Kimberly Kai of Hauula, Oahu; brothers Mitchell Balutski, Jesse Dudoit Jr. and Andrew Dudoit; sisters Maggie Duvauchelle, Marilyn Ah Yat, Louise Linker, Eliza Kane; and 17 grandchildren.
Friends may call at a memorial service on Saturday, November 27, 2010, at 8 a.m. with service at 9 a.m. at the Waialua Congregational Church pavilion in Waialua, Molokai. Scattering of his ashes at sea to follow.

Robert Cooke

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Robert “Bobby” M. Cooke, Jr, 67, of Molokai, died on October 29, 2010 in Honolulu. He was born in Honolulu on February 12, 1943.
He is survived by his son, Erick Cooke, and his sisters Susan Harrington and Marie Vail. Memorial services will be held at a later date. Donations may be made to your favorite charity.