Tutu’s Corner
Community Contributed
Column by Tutu and Me
Literacy is the ability to communicate by listening, speaking, reading and writing in a language. It is an internal – listening and reading – and an external – speaking and writing – process.
Community Contributed
Column by Tutu and Me
Literacy is the ability to communicate by listening, speaking, reading and writing in a language. It is an internal – listening and reading – and an external – speaking and writing – process.
Oceanic Time Warner News Release
Beep, beep! Oceanic Time Warner Cable has launched its first ever Road Runner High School High Speed Video Contest, inviting high school students from across the state to test their filmmaking skills for a chance to win a grand prize of $10,000 for their school’s Multimedia Department. Students are challenged with creating a short video of 90 seconds or less that creatively answers the question, “What Does Road Runner Do For You?”
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Community Contributed
By Kim Markham
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Anticipation is building for Molokai High School’s (MHS) newly minted football team as the players gear up for their first scrimmage on Oct. 2 against Seabury Hall and St. Anthony high schools on Maui.
“This is huge,” said Hanohano Naehu, assistant coach. “We keep telling the boys there’s been no team since 50 years ago.”
For the past six weeks, the team of about 20 guys has been practicing drills, plays and fundamentals – without full padding or helmets. Head Coach Mike Kahale said the team will be receiving more equipment this week, but will have to borrow St. Anthony’s helmets for this weekend’s games.
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For 32 years, the toughest wahine paddlers from Hawaii and around the world have taken on the challenge of the Kaiwi Channel – paddling a rough 41 miles from Hale o Lono Harbor on Molokai to Duke Kahanamoku Beach on Oahu.
“We did it because there wasn’t a race for women – the guys didn’t want to do it for us,” said Carleen Ornellas, one of the founding organizers. “We said, oh yes we can…and we did it.”
Their first crossing was in 1975, but Na Wahine o Ke Kai – Women of the Sea – officially became the Molokai to Oahu canoe race for women in 1979.
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The Public Utilities Commission (PUC) approved of the water rate hikes, which came at the request of Molokai Properties Ltd. (MPL), also known as Molokai Ranch. The PUC finalized the rate increase of 126.5 percent for one of MPL’s companies, Molokai Public Utilities, Inc. (MPU), but it is unclear if the higher water rates will be finalized for MPL’s other utilities company, Waiale O Molokai.
Residents have rallied against the hikes, which increased water bills by hundreds of dollars a month. More than 3,000 customers use the services of MPL’s two utilities companies. The PUC decision comes more than a year of the interim rates, which increased MPL’s annual revenue by nearly $550,000.
Honua Consulting News Release
The Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) is sponsoring free workshops for small Native Hawaiian serving organizations, to help them come into compliance with tax requirements by the Oct. 15 deadline.
A network of Hawaiian organizations and businesses have banded together to help small Native Hawaiian organizations maintain their tax exemption status. The IRS recently announced that October 15, 2010 will be the final day for small charities to take advantage of a one-time tax relief program before losing their tax exemption status.
With the passing of September’s deadline, the Molokai Veterans Caring for Veterans have entered into federal litigation against Maui County and Mayor Charmaine Tavares. The Molokai Veterans filed a 41-page law suit in the Hawaii District Court on Sept. 17 over a delayed building permit for their new center.
The lawsuit lays out the nearly five-year history of obtaining their building permit, and claims first amendment and due process violations, among others. James Fosbinder, the Veterans Maui-based lawyer, said they are asking for a jury trial, but also for an injunctive release – to allow construction to begin as soon as possible.
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With a gym full of animated spectators donning green shirts and faces, the Molokai High School (MHS) girls’ volleyball team brought Seabury Hall to its knees in two consecutive wins last weekend.
The undefeated Lady Farmers celebrated senior night at The Barn on Friday by shutting out the Spartans in a 25-16, 25-19, 25-16 victory.
“[Seabury Hall] was better competition,” Coach Matt Helm said. “Seabury did a great job defending. They kept us on our toes, which is what we need.”
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Dozens of farmers and enthusiasts plowed through a field of tall and broad-leaf plants rising from a paddy-like patch near Ho`olehua last Saturday morning. All were in search of a suitable variety of taro, one that could thrive in either the dry heat of Molokai’s west end or lush terrain of its east end.
Known as Molokai Taro Variety Field Day, participants got the chance to get their hands on more than 70 rare native Hawaiian taro varieties. The event, held at Molokai Agriculture Park, began with a cultural and informative discussion on taro, followed by the vegetative cutting.
“Our goal is to help perpetuate the plant and its cultural significance,” said Alton Arakaki, organizer and county extension agent for University of Hawaii – Maui College.