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The Net of Light Wednesday, July 24, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
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Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: BOMBS FOUND AT PALI LOOKOUT, SCARE AT AIRPORT
Herb Lau, a solo-bike officer with the Honolulu Police Department, was headed
up Pali Highway shortly after 6 a.m. today when he noticed the steel gates at
the entrance to the Nu`uanu Pali Lookout were still closed. When he rode past
the gate into the park, he apparently hit a trip-wire that detonated a small
bomb hidden in the brush. When another officer reporting to the scene opened
the gate, a second explosive device went off. Although no one was seriously
injured by the booby traps, Lau reportedly sustained a slight ear injury.
Police investigators described the devices as crude, the trip-wire -- one end
tied to the gate post -- ran to a simple detonator inside a plastic bag
filled with a yet-unidentified explosive material. Although the bombs were
not of the more dangerous fragmentary type, police say they had the potential
to badly hurt someone. Police kept the lookout closed while searching for
evidence and other devices in the thick brush lining the sides of the park
access road. Police have no suspects in the case. Meanwhile, bomb squads
briefly cleared the employee cafeteria at Honolulu International Airport when
diners reported hearing a loud sound coming from a small open area outside an
emergency exit. The Kama`aina Cafe, located in a restricted area of the
airport's main terminal, was closed during the hour-long search. Nothing was
found, and airport officials say the noise was likely the sound of a
fluorescent light exploding outside.
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Subject: UH HAWAIIAN STUDIES CENTER COMES TO LIFE
After more than 10 years of waiting and a few budget and legal battles, the
new Hawaiian Studies Center at the Manoa campus of the University of Hawai`i
opened today so that faculty and staff could begin moving in. The $7.5
million building -- about $1 million over its original budget -- overlooks
Manoa Stream along Dole Street. It has a design said to be inspired by
ancient Hawaiian architecture, the design highlighted by rock walls and tall,
angular domes covered with green copper. Inside, one of the university's
fastest growing departments will be able to host classes, performances and
exhibits. "What we're hoping to do is open up the building and therefore the
campus to people who are involved in things like hula, language instruction,
voyaging and weaving," said center director Haunani-Kay Trask. The Hawaiian
culture is flourishing, Trask said, and so is academic thirst for its history
and future. "When we started the Hawaiian Studies Center in 1987 we had 13
students," Trask said. "We now have 1,350 students." The center should be
ready for use by the beginning of the fall semester. Completion of the
center's was five years behind schedule, due in part to protests by a
community group that claimed that building the center would destroy historic
taro lo`i at the site. In 1992, Ho`o`kahe Wai tried to stop construction and
proposed a redesign of the center that would spare the lo`i. Although the
redesign was refused, Trask said despite the controversy and intense
construction work, the taro in question remains untouched today.
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Subject: MAYOR HARRIS DEFENDS PAWA`A HOUSING VENTURE
A city-backed housing project at the site of the old police station in Pawa`a
may be in jeopardy after the state denied the developer tax credits it says
were needed in order to take the job. Earlier this month, the state Housing
Finance and Development Corporation met to determine which developers would
get tax credits set aside for companies building affordable housing in
Hawai`i. The city endorsed developer Waldron Ventures for the Pawa`a project,
but the company said it wanted a $2.9 million tax credit -- $900,000 more
than the total available tax credits the state had to distribute year. The
HFDC decided to divide the available credits across four separate affordable
housing projects on the neighbor islands. The city hoped Gov. Ben Cayetano
would find the extra money to move ahead in Pawa`a, but this week Cayetano
said the city should not have backed a company that didn't have adequate
finances. "I think the governor made a very bad decision," Harris said.
"[Pawa`a] is a good project -- not only for people on this island that need
housing, but it's also a good project for people who need jobs." However, the
HFDC said the Pawa`a project had other disadvantages compared to the ventures
that did receive tax credits. The four projects -- located on the Big Island,
Moloka`i and Maui -- would bring 212 affordable housing units to the island
market in all, according HFDC spokesman Ron Lim. The Pawa`a project would
only build 128 units, he said. "It just didn't match up to the other
projects," Lim said. Waldron Ventures has filed a petition with the HFDC
board, questioning its selection process and criteria.
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Subject: EWA VILLAGES DEVELOPER BACKING OFF
The city had high hopes for its Ewa Village Revitalization Project, expecting
$45 million in home sales in its three subdivisions this year alone. To date,
however, only 20 people filed applications to buy lots in the first phase --
Green View Villas -- and only a handful qualified. No homes have been built
or sold since construction started near the municipal golf course. The slow
sales have prompted realtor Prudential Locations this week to suspend its
marketing efforts for the Ewa Village. Now, developer Armstrong Builders,
Ltd. has apparently started talks with the city to reconsider their strategy.
"Mr. Armstrong has discussed the situation with the city and has alerted us
that he wants to re-evaluate what types of homes he wants to build and sell
in the area," City Budget Director Malcolm Tom said. "We are looking at
alternative marketing approaches and looking at what he can do to increase
the sales rate." City Council Budget Chair Duke Bainum is calling for an
audit of the project. "What we've seen is a string of projects in which we
really were competing with the private sector," Bainum said. The Ewa Village
project was approved by the council in 1994. Although at the time the city
had committed to using union labor, Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris changed the
provisions of the contract a month after he took office allowing the
developer to pay less than union wages. The decision was protested by local
construction unions earlier this year.
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Subject: CONVENTION CENTER WORK HURTING BUSINESSES
Responding to growing complaints from Waikiki businesses and residents,
Convention Center Authority spokesman Alton Kuioka said they're doing what
they can, but that some problems are beyond their reach. "Some of the things
that they'd like us to do is really beyond the authority's level," Kuioka
said. Traffic around the construction site has been congested for weeks, and
the noise is grating on the nerves of neighbors. In addition, businesses near
the Hawai`i Convention Center site say the chaos has hurt them. Kevin
Gazzara, manager of Cafe Bellshiba, said sidewalk traffic in the area is down
and parking for his restaurant is almost impossible to reach. His business is
on Kapi`olani Boulevard, directly across from the site. "Our lunch hours have
been down about 50 percent," Gazzara said. Although the state is considering
moving its construction work to night hours, no final decisions have yet been
set. Although night work would solve the daytime traffic nightmare, Kuioka
said, problems with noise might increase.
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 87/72, Kaua`i 83/71, Moloka`i 82/70, Maui 88/72, Hilo 83/70
CASTS: Scattered showers, trades to 20MPH; South shore surf to 4 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High -:-- a.m.; Low -:-- p.m.
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The Net of Light Tuesday, July 23, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: KAUA`I TEENS RETURN FROM ATLANTA MISADVENTURES
A group of 87 high school students from Kaua`i were looking forward to three
weeks of Olympic excitement when they left the islands for Atlanta last week.
""Promises, promises, promises," said Donna Rodenhurst, one of several
chaperones who accompanied the teens on their trip. "They said someone would
meet us there, that we'd have jobs, places to stay -- nothing." Instead of
getting part-time jobs at Olympic Village kiosks, rooms at an Atlanta hotel
and tickets to Olympic events, the Kaua`i contingent got a bus-ride to a
small Georgia town and emergency food and shelter from the American Red
Cross. The students, along with about 2,000 other kids from across the
country, were left high and dry by the Atlanta-based travel agency Creative
Travel Services. They returned to Hawai`i today, thanks to the Anheiser-Busch
Corporation which arranged a special chartered flight to bring them home. The
company also gave the students souvenirs, tickets to an Olympic basketball
game for their last day in Atlanta, and closing their trip with a "real"
dinner. Each of the students spent about $500 for the ill-fated excursion.
"Our housing wasn't that great, the food wasn't that great," said Kaua`i High
School student David Michaud. "It was pretty bad." While sleeping on cots in
a middle-school gym, many compared the experience to weathering Hurricane
Iniki years ago. Kapa`a High School student Jodie Noma said the trip wasn't a
total disaster. "It was totally unforgettable, it was great," Noma said.
"There were some downtimes, but there were also uptimes, and I'm glad that's
how our trip ended -- on a positive note." The FBI is reportedly opening a
criminal investigation. Meanwhile, some parents of the Kaua`i teens were
critical of Gov. Ben Cayetano, who was also in Atlanta, saying he ignored the
island kids' plight. Lt. Gov. Mazie Hirono said that wasn't the case. "The
governor's office, as soon as they found out about it, took efforts to assess
the situation and to help out," Hirono said.
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Subject: HARRIS MAKES RE-ELECTION BID OFFICIAL
Before a crowd of about 300 supporters, Honolulu mayor Jeremy Harris today
came down from his third-floor office in Honolulu Hale to kick off his
campaign to return to his post, which he won two years ago after former mayor
Frank Fasi resigned to run for governor. Harris filed his election papers
today, the last day for any citizen to declare a run for office. In a
noontime speech in the courtyard, Harris lead his supporters in a three-time
cheer of "Hana hou!" As the incumbent, Harris is currently leading in the
polls, and he said he expects to win the non-partisan race outright in the
Sept. 23 primary. "Let's pull together once more, let's do it again from the
heart," Harris said. "If we keep pulling together as a community, there's no
reason the future can't be a bright and beautiful vision." Rainbow-dyed
pigeons were released, and free plate-lunches were distributed at today's
City Hall rally. Harris is being challenged by Fasi and Arnold Morgado, who
came in second in the 1994 election. Although Morgado supporters have
suggested that Harris would drop his city post in mid-term to run for
governor in 1998 (as Fasi had done), Harris said a gubernatorial run isn't
likely. "Right now I have no intention of running for governor," he said,
"but I'm not going to foreclose any options." Many political analysts believe
that Fasi's decision to run will undercut the Harris campaign, as both
supposedly share the same supporter base. Despite remarks made by Fasi
earlier this month characterizing him as a weak leader and a promise-breaker,
Harris said the race will not be a personal one. "There are some who would
cast this campaign as a personal fight between Frank Fasi and us," Harris
said. "I'm here to tell you that's not what this campaign is about."
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Subject: MAINLAND TOURISM CAMPAIGN UNVEILED
The Hawai`i Visitors Bureau got a new name today, and also kicked off a new
strategy in marketing the islands as a tourist destination for U.S. Mainland
travelers. A quick vote turned the Hawai`i Visitors Bureau into the Hawai`i
Visitors and Convention Bureau, a change that represents the agency's new
role in promoting and booking the Hawai`i Convention Center currently under
construction. The HVCB then announced a multi-million dollar television
advertising campaign to lure Americans to island shores. Last year's tourism
figures found growth in the number of visitors from nearly all markets,
except for those from the Mainland. "We've got a lot of business being taken
out of the market by the cruise business," said HVCB President Paul Casey.
"What we need to do is re-energize and reinvigorate the U.S. market." The
campaign marks a shift from the print-based strategies of the past, Casey
said, in part prompted by aggressive television advertising by other tourist
meccas like the Caribbean and Florida. The 18-month campaign will focus on
the dual theme of aloha and diversity, the main goal being to "rebuild the
brand of Hawai`i in North America." The plan was hailed by some local
hoteliers as a stronger partnership. "The message should be clear that HVCB's
job is to brand the product," said Hilton Hawaiian Village spokesman John
Votsis. "Those of us in private industry will be out there retailing the
product."
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Subject: SEVERAL TO BE RE-ELECTED AUTOMATICALLY
At least five state senators will automatically get their seats back in
September, as many incumbent candidates -- most of them democrats -- were
left unchallenged after today's campaign filing deadline. Several candidates
waited until the last minute to file their election papers, with security
guards securing the Lieutenant Governor's office at 4:30 p.m. sharp. Among
those re-elected by default are Kauai Rep. Bertha Kawakami, Maui Rep. Robert
Nakasone and Honolulu Reps. Dennis Arakaki, Romy Cachola and Nobu Yonamine.
More unchallenged posts may be identified later tonight as papers from the
satellite elections office in Pearl City are collated with those from the
state Capitol. Richard Port, standing chairman of the state's democratic
party, said the candidates winning free-rides to the state House deserve to
return. "Some of those names clearly are among the best and the finest that
the democratic party has in office today," Port said today. "I feel that
there is a lot of confidence among voters for some of those names." Jane
Tatibouet, chairwoman of the Hawai`i republican party, conceded that she
hoped to challenge every democratic legislator. "We were trying to field
quality candidates," Tatibouet said. "We wanted to make sure we could find
the best people."
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Subject: TWO CLOTHING CHAINS PULLING OUT OF HAWAI`I
After the phenomenal influx of discount retail stores in Honolulu over the
last few years, two major store chains are pulling out of the island market.
Off-price apparel stores Marshall's and T. J. Maxx will leave Hawai`i by
September, meaning about 250 employees in all will be losing their jobs.
Market analyst Eric Tema told KHON that a consolidation of the retail market
was inevitable following the mass arrival of national chains such as K-Mart
and Wal-Mart. Marshall's currently has 6 outlets in the state, while T.J.
Maxx has one at Stadium Mall in Aiea. All of the locations will be sold to
Ross, a competing retailer that will then be left as the only clothing chain
of its kind in the state. "Ross is going to be interviewing every manager and
every associate," said company spokeswoman Cathy Sharpe. "It is our
expectation that they will be able to retain many of the employees." At this
point, Sharpe said, Ross will probably not open stores in all six of the
acquired locations, instead subleasing them to other businesses. The transfer
is scheduled to become effective Sept. 1, although presently no final
contracts have been signed. Marshall's and T.J. Maxx recently announced a
partnership which involves closing 200 stores nationwide.
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Subject: BITS AND PIECES
UNDERWATER World is coming to the islands. The owners of the U.S. franchise,
which operates two other combination mall-and-aquarium centers on the
Mainland, today announced that it will be putting a 1.5 million gallon,
80,000 square foot tank at the Dole Cannery Square shopping complex. The
Underwater World in Honolulu will be the third one nationwide, the others
currently operating in San Francisco and Minnesota. It will feature a 400-
foot submerged acrylic tunnel, seven feet in diameter, that will allow
visitors to walk under the aquarium and view the sea life as if they were on
a deep sea dive. It is expected to open in late 1997 or early 1998...
FRANK Fasi Jr., son of the former Honolulu mayor, will receive a settlement
in excess of $100,000 from the city following an accident in Waikiki seven
years ago. Fasi was riding a bike along Kalakaua Avenue in 1989 when a police
cruiser allegedly cut across 3 lanes of traffic to cite him. The car struck
Fasi, who suffered back and neck injuries despite wearing a helmet at the
time. A City Council committee today voted to back the six-figure settlement.
The final amount will be determined pending approval by the full council...
DAIRY farmers in Hawai`i are asking the state for permission to raise the
amount they can charge for their milk. The state regulates the price
producers such as Foremost and Meadow Gold pay to farmers, which is currently
49 cents per gallon. The request, prompted by a 40 percent increase in the
cost of feed corn, seeks to raise the rate to 55 cents per gallon. Two years
of poor corn production has led to rising milk prices on the Mainland,
farmers say, and the added costs have now reached the islands...
WATER safety officials were kept busy today as surf on the state's southern
shores swelled to 8 feet, with 12-foot waves being reported on some neighbor
islands. The unusually high surf, caused by a storm system south of Tahiti,
began yesterday. At least 20 rescues were made on Monday, and lifeguards had
to render first aid and rescue lost surfboards today. No major injuries were
reported. Waves are expected to be strong through tomorrow...
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 89/74, Kaua`i 85/73, Moloka`i 84/72, Maui 90/73, Hilo 85/71
CASTS: Humid, some showers, trades to 15MPH; South shore surf to 5 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 11:52 a.m.; Low 6:41 p.m.
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The Net of Light Monday, July 22, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: MORGADO FILES, FORESEES UPHILL BATTLE
Leading a group of about 100 sign-carrying supporters, Arnold Morgado today
marched to Honolulu Hale and officially filed to run for Honolulu mayor.
Despite having the endorsement of Gov. Ben Cayetano and several state
employee unions, Morgado said he's facing several challenges that other
candidates don't. "There has been strong-arm tactics that have gone on with
this current administration with people in town who could support other
candidate's attempts to raise money," he said. "That creates a unique problem
for us." Morgado is referring to claims that he violated city ethics laws by
accepting support from a major O`ahu contractor. The charges, made last month
by supporters of incumbent Mayor Jeremy Harris, has prompted an investigation
by the state Attorney General. To date, Morgado said he's spent about half a
million dollars in his campaign, and will concentrate on winning the non-
partisan race primary on Sept. 21. "I want you to know this is not the first
quarter," Morgado said in a speech outside City Hall. "This is the fourth
quarter, this is the fourth down -- we need to make that yard, we need to
score." Harris said he has a $350,000 war chest, tonight hosting a $25-per-
person fund-raiser to raise about $50,000. Alluding to the charges hovering
over Morgado's campaign, he said he doesn't mind raising cash $25 at a time.
"We're following the campaign ethics law, which says no big contributions
from no big contractors," he said. "That's the law and we intend to follow
it." Although he said his campaign strategy isn't set, he he'll get the 'Hana
Hou!' his campaign posters call for. "We're going on to victory in
September," Harris said. Challenger Frank Fasi reportedly has about $450,000
for his campaign.
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Subject: TWO ARRESTED IN FRIDAY FREEWAY SHOOTING
All town-bound lanes of the H-2 freeway were closed Friday night when a
"stink-eye" staring contest between two cars turned deadly for one 18-year-
old passenger. Shortly after 8 p.m., five teens were traveling in two cars to
Pearlridge Plaza when a red Cadillac pulled along side one vehicle and
hostile looks were exchanged, according to Honolulu police Lt. Allen
Napoleon. All three cars pulled onto the shoulder just north of the Ka Uka
Boulevard off ramp and the victim, Travis Rollins of Mililani, apparently got
out of one car and approached the Cadillac. One of the two occupants of the
Cadillac then shot Rollins. Rollins' companions drove him to St. Francis-West
Medical Center, where he later died. The incident led police to route all
south-bound traffic off the H-2 at Mililani, and commuters had to take
Kamehameha Highway through Kipapa Gulch to rejoin the freeway at the Ka Uka
interchange. The next day, police responded to a call along Waipio Point
Access Road and found the Cadillac involved in the incident on fire, its
license plates missing. The plates were later recovered, and they led
investigators to a Halawa Height's home where they arrested two 22-year-old
male residents. One is reportedly a Schofield Barrack's soldier, and the
other -- discharged from the Army in May -- is believed to have fired the
deadly shot. The latter was booked on second-degree murder and firearm
violation charges while the first was charged with hindering prosecution. A
roommate of the two men said they told him that Rollins had a gun in his
waistband at the time of the shooting. However, police have not recovered
that gun nor the murder weapon. Napoleon said Rollins had a police record.
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Subject: STATE MULLS ANOTHER CHANGE TO FOOD RULES
The state Department of Health is thinking about relaxing its restrictions on
how food can be displayed and sold at isle eateries, supplanting them with a
new fee that would go towards educating food handlers about the dangers of
food poisoning. The plan, now before public hearings, would allow food
service outlets to leave food at room temperature for up to four hours before
refrigerating it. Meanwhile, the department would establish a fee for health
permits, ranging in cost from $60 to $430. Although the department says the
money would go towards training and awareness programs, some Hawai`i
merchants are crying foul. "The only reason to support this renewable fee
permit system is if you're trying to raise state revenues and believe the
people of Hawai`i are so dumb that they will never know you've found a way to
tax them," said Bryon Graper, a consultant for O`ahu restaurants. Last year,
concerns over growing numbers of food poisoning cases prompted the health
department to draft new rules governing how foods are sold in the islands.
All outlets -- from lunch wagons to banquet halls to musubi stands -- were
prohibited from displaying food at room temperature. Instead, to prevent
spoiling, food would have to be kept heated or refrigerated. Many said the
rules meant added costs in buying and maintaining new equipment, and that
refrigeration would turn favorites like the Spam musubi into rock-hard
bricks. Although opponents assert the average bento as non-lethal, the health
department said there were 800 cases of food poisoning reported in 1995.
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Subject: SENATORS HOLT, BUNDA ANNOUNCE CAMPAIGNS
Today, one state lawmaker said he wants to give it another shot, while
another is making a bid for the U.S. House. State Sen. Milton Holt, who was
the focus of much controversy as chair of the Consumer Protection Committee
this past legislative session, said he will run for re-election. Two years
ago, Holt said he would not return to the senate in order to spend more time
with his family. This year, Holt presided over two major legislative debates:
the state's no-fault insurance system and same-sex marriage. With
unsatisfactory resolutions in either issue, Holt said he decided he wants to
return. Holt, who also works for Kamehameha Schools/Bishop Estate, will be
facing fellow Democrat Suzanne Chun-Oakland for the Kalihi-Palama senate
seat. Chun-Oakland is currently a state representative, and unlike Holt is a
supporter of same-sex marriage. Holt said his past conviction for spouse
abuse shouldn't be a campaign issue, but if it is brought up he said he has
been up front and stood accountable for the difficult times in his life.
"These issues have surfaced in the past, and I've never shied away from those
issues," Holt said. Meanwhile, state Sen. Robert Bunda today announced that
he will be running for the U.S. House against fellow Democrat Patsy Mink.
Although there are two years left in his senate term, Bunda isn't required to
resign his current position to run for a federal seat under state law.
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Subject: BLIND VENDORS SUE OVER RETIREMENT BENEFITS
Claiming the state is diverting money that is supposed to cover their
retirement fund, a group of blind vendors today filed a lawsuit against the
city and the state. Although newspaper and snack stands in city and state
buildings bring in $100,000 a year, attorney Evan Shirely said only about
$800 goes towards an IRA for health benefits for each of the legally blind
citizens that run them. That means after 10 years on the job, only $8,000
will have been set aside for an employees retirement, he said. When asked at
a press conference today whether $8,000 would be enough to get by, vendor
Myles Tamashiro said, "There is no way." Tamashiro is one of many disabled
employees that works behind the register at the snack bar in the Honolulu
Municipal Building. "They just feel that we're just a minority group so
therefore, 'Who cares?'" said Filo Tu, another vendor. Tu said he didn't
think the government was taking them seriously. "We are very upset," he said.
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Subject: OLD ISLE EATERY RAZED FOR PARKING LOT
Chunky's Drive-In, known for its teriyaki beef plates and other local
cuisine, had been an O`ahu landmark since it first opened in 1957. Located
near the old stadium at the corner of King and Isenberg streets, Chunky's
closed four years ago but its familiar sign and orange-tiled facade remained
as a reminder of the days before fast food chains -- until today. Demolition
crews have flattened the once-popular eatery to make way for a parking lot
then later, a branch of First Hawaiian Bank. One of the men who was driving a
tractor over the rubble today was once a regular customer there. Stanley
Hashimoto, a 25-year veteran of the island demolition business, told KITV-4
that he's been involved in clearing away many of Honolulu's old hangouts in
the name of progress. "I've been wrecking a lot of old places, like the Civic
Auditorium, Scotties," Hashimoto said. Although he empathized with a lot of
the people who mourn the disappearance of old Hawai`i, Hashimoto said he
never went so far as to take souvenirs from the various sites he's cleared.
"It's just a job," he said. "Everything is pretty old already."
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 89/75, Kaua`i 84/76, Moloka`i 84/73, Maui 86/72, Hilo 85/71
CASTS: Cloudy, warm and humid, some showers; South Shore swell to 8 feet.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High 10:52 p.m.; Low 5:02 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
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The Net of Light Friday, July 19, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: KAUA`I KIDS STRANDED IN ATLANTA
While millions watched the festivities heralding the start of the 1996
Olympic games in Atlanta, a handful of kids from Kaua`i were crawling into
cots in a school auditorium 70 miles away. The Hawai`i youths are stranded
along with kids from high schools across the country after an Atlanta-based
travel company invited more students to work at Olympic Village kiosks and
hospitality stations than could be accommodated. Creative Travel Services of
Atlanta had assembled a package where students could attend some of the games
and pay their way by working for various vendors. The Kaua`i delegation paid
about $500 each to travel to Atlanta, but when they got there the jobs they
were to get had apparently dried up. Instead of the lodgings they were
promised, the Hawai`i students -- along with 300 other Mainland kids -- were
moved to a nearby motel. A fire marshal killed those arrangements, however,
when it was determined too many students were in the rooms. Their final
destination turned out to be at Forsyth Middle School in emergency lodgings
set up by the American Red Cross. Chaperone Bobby Kamakele said many of his
students don't have enough money to remain in Atlanta without work. Although
the students were told to go back to Hawai`i, Kamakele said their tickets
can't be used for two weeks. For tonight, however, they're just glad to have
a roof over their heads. "We're being housed and the people are being warm to
us," he said. Kamakele said the Hawai`i kids are coping better than most
because of their past experience with makeshift lodgings during Hurricane
Iniki. Allan Branco of Kapa`a told KHNL News-8 that he's worried for his 16-
year-old son, Justin. ""We don't know from one hour to the next where our
children are going to be," Branco said. Concerned parents can call the middle
school at (912) 993-3056.
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Subject: CAYETANO FLIES TO ATLANTA ON AT&T TAB
Although Gov. Ben Cayetano was probably going to attend the opening
ceremonies of the centennial Olympic games in Atlanta tonight, his office
says that the purpose of his Mainland trip is to attend a telecommunications
symposium and meet with AT&T Pacific Region President Michael Antieri to
discuss the future of telecommunications in Hawai`i. The free trip,
accompanied by a pass to tonight's inaugural Olympic events, is a gift from
AT&T, a corporate sponsor of the games and one of several participants of
telecom summit also being held in Atlanta. AT&T only recently broke into the
Hawai`i interisland long-distance market, after decades of a GTE monopoly.
Some public-interest groups have cried foul, also citing the governor's past
history of accepting gifts and travel from private interests. Government
watchdogs fear such gifts may sway officials to favor their beneficiaries in
setting public policy. Randy Obata, an aide to the governor, said the claims
are unfounded. He said trips such as this one to Atlanta are valuable
opportunities to establish relations with investors, he said. Obata said
Cayetano hopes that Hawai`i can find draw fresh revenue sources by combining
telecommunications and sports-based tourism. The Olympics, where much of the
world's latest technologies have converged this summer, is an ideal place to
meet with corporate leaders and discuss expansion and investment in the
islands, Obata said. Making Hawai`i a major international sports venue is one
of the major objectives of Cayetano's administration, he added, building on
the state's established prominence in professional sports like golf,
marathons and bowl games.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: GROUP SUES TO STOP NATIVE HAWAIIAN VOTE
A federal lawsuit filed against the Hawai`i Sovereignty Elections Council and
Gov. Ben Cayetano yesterday claims the Native Hawaiian Vote -- which began
last month and is scheduled to close on Aug. 15 -- is unconstitutional.
Office Hawaiian Affairs Trustee Billie Beamer, Ka Lahui Hawai`i member Clara
Kakalia, Lela Hubbard and Stephen Kubota say the state has no jurisdiction
over the future of Hawaiian self-determination. Beamer, Kakalia and Hubbard
are of Hawaiian descent, and Kubota joined the lawsuit to represent non-
Hawaiians, according to attorney Thomas Watts. The lawsuit alleges the Native
Hawaiian Vote is an attempt to usurp the constitutional right of native
Hawaiians to independently seek redress from the U.S. government. In
addition, Watts said, since the vote for native Hawaiians is funded by
government money, it discriminates against non-native Hawaiians who cannot
participate. Over 85,000 ballots were mailed to native Hawaiians worldwide to
find the collective answer to the question, "Should the Hawaiian people elect
delegates to propose a native Hawaiian government?" The state-funded HSEC is
conducting the vote, and will announce the results in September. HSEC
attorney Poka Laenui called the lawsuit "grandstanding," saying its simply an
attempt to divert attention from the balloting effort. Instead of suing to
halt the vote, Laenui said, opponents of the process should just vote no.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
READERS of Ka `Upena Kukui who've followed along in the story of 2-year-old
Alana Dung, the leukemia patient who mobilized over 30,000 kama`aina this
year in her search for a bone-marrow donor, can now send their messages of
hope and aloha to her family. Although this week's transplant operation went
well, weeks of waiting lie ahead for the girl's family. Well-wishes are being
collected by "Bruddah" Jim Clement at jclement@hula.net. Although blessings
flooded in from islanders, Clement said Alana's family would be thrilled to
know people all over the world have been following and hoping too...
OVERCROWDING at the Hawai`i State Hospital in Kaneohe will be partly
alleviated this month with the opening of four transitional houses, adding a
total of 14 beds to the hospital's patient capacity. Earlier this year, the
hospital rejected the court-ordered transfer of a female prison inmate into
its mental health program because of a lack of space. An even more pressing
overcrowding situation at the women's prison, however, led to the inmate
being sent to the hospital after all. The new facilities, to be located
within existing psychiatric offices, will be run by a private contractor...
WELFARE recipients in Hawai`i are getting a one-time Christmas gift in July
thanks to $1.6 million in leftover grant funds. Everyone on general
assistance welfare will get $82 for each month they were registered for the
state's 1995-'96 fiscal year. The Department of Human Services got a $42
million grant from the Legislature to provide welfare benefits, but there
were less qualified recipients this year because qualifications were
tightened and some residents were placed on federal support programs. The
monthly allowance, which was originally cut from $418 to $217, will now be
increased to $268...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: ISLAND WEB WATCH
ReadToMe -- http://www.pixi.com/~reader1
Literacy and use of the Hawaiian language are both objectives of the Hawaii
Education Literacy Project (HELP), and its new web tool -- ReadToMe.
ReadToMe, which can work with content of any web page, is designed to help
parents and teachers to help children learn to read and ease them into the
classics of literature. A free beta-test version of ReadToMe is available at
HELP's web page, as are links to famous writings at Project Gutenberg on
which to try it. The local non-profit organization hopes to receive feedback
on ReadToMe's potential uses and possible problems or bugs...
Vote Maui! -- http://www.hookele.com/vote/
Vote Maui! is a site dedicated to bringing election and political information
to the residents of Maui, Moloka`i and Lanai. Vote Maui! gives candidates the
ability to directly convey their goals and platforms without the filters of
the media. Information on districts, parties, top issues and other goings-on
in the Maui County political scene can be found here, and the site's fax-on-
demand features allows visitors to get campaign promises on paper. Links to
other campaign news and politics-related sites are also provided...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 88/74, Kaua`i 83/72, Moloka`i 83/71, Maui 87/71, Hilo 84/68
CASTS: Scattered showers, trades to 25MPH; East shore surf to 3 feet.
SATURDAY'S TIDES: High 7:04 p.m.; Low 12:34 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Thursday, July 18, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: O`AHU FAMILY TOUCHED BY FALLEN FLIGHT 800
While the investigation of last night's explosion and crash of TWA flight 800
continues, a Hawai`i Kai woman and her three sons are en route tonight to St.
Louis to take care of teenagers orphaned by the tragedy. 41-year-old Barbara
Glenn barely got 2 hours of sleep last night, worrying and whispering on the
phone with family members on the Mainland. At 6 a.m., her worst fears became
reality. Glenn's sister and brother-in-law, Patty and Jay Henderson, were on
board the jumbo 747 which is now scattered across and under waters off Long
Island. "It's been a complete fog," Glenn said. Although she was initially
frustrated at TWA's delay in confirming whether her sister was on board the
downed plane, Glenn said in retrospect she understood the airline had to be
accurate in its notification. "By seven o'clock I heard from TWA that they
were going to fly us to St. Louis," she said. There, Glenn and her sons will
comfort and grieve with her parents, and try to take care of the Henderson's
three teenagers. "My sister's kids," Glenn said, pausing to take a breath. "I
can't imagine what it would be like to lose your parents like that." She said
her sons will help their cousins get through the tough times. As Glenn
boarded the 747 at Honolulu International Airport tonight, the TWA gate agent
hugged her and squeezed her hand. Airport officials said they have received
no orders to step up already high security measures, adding that more
attention will be paid to electronic devices brought on board.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: TRANSPLANT DONE, WAIT AHEAD FOR ALANA
Even after a bone-marrow transplant procedure that lasted over 4 hours, 2-
year-old leukemia patient Alana Dung still started the day with a smile. "She
got up this morning and said, 'Hi Dad!'" said Adelia Dung, the girl's mother.
Tonight, Alana Dung remains in satisfactory condition at the Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center in Seattle. Her father, Stephen Dung, said Alana slept
through most of the operation. "She was sleeping before it started, but when
[the marrow] came she got up and she touched the bag," he said. "It was
pretty touching." The procedure, comparable to a blood transfusion, was done
in the girl's hospital room, beginning at 9:40 p.m. and wrapping up shortly
after 2 a.m. Seattle time. "It went real well," Stephen Dung said. Doctors
say the girl now has a 60 percent chance of survival. Alana Dung will spend
several more weeks at the center, as doctors watch for signs of infection or
other problems. "Usually it takes about two to three weeks for the new marrow
to set up housekeeping and begin to grow," said center pediatrician Jean
Sanders. In 28 days or so, a sample of the transplanted marrow will be
extracted from the girl's bones to ensure cells are growing properly. The
family, meanwhile, continues to be inspired by her high spirits. "She gives
us a lot of strength," Adelia Dung said. "We stay optimistic because she's
optimistic."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: GRADUATES NOT UP TO PAR, EDUCATORS SAY
When students who graduate from Hawaii's public high schools take their first
classes at the University of Hawaii, instructors and professors are
frequently frustrated to find most of them don't have the basic skills needed
at the college level. "We do have a problem with the poorly prepared
students," said UH regent and community college chancellor Joyce Tsunoda. "We
have been spending nearly $1.5 million of the university's resources to
remediate them." In a joint meeting held today at the UH Manoa campus, UH and
state Department of Education officials discussed the common goal of
improving education in Hawai`i. "We need to focus our attention where it
really counts, and this is on the students in the classroom," said Department
of Education head Herman Aizawa. According to UH figures, anywhere from two
to 500 students who enter the university in the fall quit before the spring
term. While many at the university urged the Board of Education to raise
their standards, the state said one of the major problems is a shortage of
qualified teachers -- which UH is expected to provide. DOE officials say the
state needs to hire about 700 new teachers annually. "We're trying to address
that here at the College of Education," dean Charles Araki said. "We graduate
between 400 to 500 teachers yearly."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: PENNSYLVANIA PROFESSOR FOUND DEAD
Honolulu police have identified a body discovered yesterday morning in a
condominium at the Ilikai Hotel as 51-year-old Robert Henderson, and released
a few gruesome details. Henderson, in Hawai`i to attend a summer language
conference at the University of Hawai`i, was the director of the linguistics
department at the University of Pittsburgh. According to investigators, his
nude, partially decomposed body was found on its side in the living room.
More disconcerting, police say, is a message found penned across the man's
backside: "I rape little boys so I must die." Henderson's neck was fractured,
and a pen was reportedly found stabbed into his thigh. HPD investigator Allen
Napoleon asked for the public's help in untangling the case. Colleagues
enrolled the UH conference say they didn't notice anything unusual when
Henderson attended a session on Friday, when he was last seen.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
CLEAN Earth Products, a Haleiwa-based environmental company, may be the first
local agency to be prosecuted under the federal Clean Water Act. The company
and its owner, Dan Fredrickson, have been charged with 13 counts of
falsifying waste water test results and 13 counts of mail fraud. According to
court documents, Clean Earth Products sold an enzyme that it clamed naturally
disintegrated oil and grease. Prosecutors say Fredrickson filed fake reports
that hid the fact that the enzyme didn't work. If found guilty, Fredrickson
faces up to $6.5 million in fines and a 91 year prison sentence. The company,
meanwhile, faces fines of over $13 million...
PLANS to revamp the state's strict stance on animal importation may be
advancing just in time. The U.S. Justice Department today asked to join a
private lawsuit pending in federal court that claims Hawaii's quarantine law
discriminates against people with disabilities. Presently, people with
seeing-eye dogs must subject their guides to the same four-month confinement
as others moving to the island with pets. The law is being contested under
the American with Disabilities Act, which requires state and county
governments to modify policies if they discriminate against the disabled...
JAMES Aki, state senator and former Hawai`i senate president, was indicted
today on charges of promoting gambling and operating an illegal business. The
case stems from a 1994 investigation that found gambling was taking place at
a facility Aki supervised in Nanakuli. At the time, Aki said he didn't know
what the building was being used for. Three others were also indicted, along
with non-profit group Children of Polynesia...
SIX Honolulu residents were indicted today for welfare fraud. An O`ahu grand
jury found them guilty of stealing more than $20,000 each, falsifying claims
of income, assets or living arrangements to illegally extend public
assistance payments. The six are Joseph Kahwai, Leona and Jose Lucero,
Deborah Lesa, Dawn Naleiha and Alicia Pelekai...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 87/72, Kaua`i 83/71, Moloka`i 82/71, Maui 85/71, Hilo 84/68
CASTS: Some showers, trades to 25MPH; North and West shore surf to 3 feet.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: High 6:31 p.m.; Low 11:44 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Wednesday, July 17, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: AMNESIA VICTIM'S IDENTITY NO LONGER A MYSTERY
Philip Cutajar -- a former U.S. State Department diplomat turned substitute
teacher -- once served as an adviser to President Bush, worked at the U.S.
Embassy in London and graduated from New York's Columbia University with
honors. But until yesterday, he didn't remember doing any of those things.
After four months of investigation by Honolulu police and private
investigators both here and in New York, the identity of an amnesia patient
once known as William DeSouza appears to have been found. According to his
family, Cutajar had given up his embassy job in Port au Prince in 1988 and
left his home in Florida for points unknown. Cutajar's 36-year-old brother
Robert said Cutajar told him he was going on a humanitarian mission in the
Caribbean. Although he never wrote or called, family members say, no one
thought his silence was unusual. Now, Robert Cutajar said, his family has to
try and untangle the mystery of how he ended up in Hawai`i, and how he came
to be found beaten and robbed on Kailua Beach in March. When Cutajar regained
consciousness, amnesia apparently wiped away his identity. He thought his
name was William DeSouza, and gave what he thought was his social security
number. Both were wrong -- although now police have found the social security
number he provided was fairly close to the right one. Cutajar, unable to
remember more than 48 hours at a time, had been living at Castle Medical
Center. Family members and police have refused comment on reports that
Cutajar rented an apartment in Maryland soon after announcing his trip.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: LES MISERABLES RETURNING TO HAWAI`I
The Broadway musical Les Miserables, which played to sold out crowds in
Honolulu two years ago, is coming back to the islands. Producers today
announced the 16-show run at Blaisdell Music Hall from Sept. 11 to 22, a two
week engagement that could be extended to three if ticket sales are as
overwhelming as they were last time. Although a return engagement was
originally scheduled for last October, promoters later canceled it along with
two other major musicals originally planned for the Hawai`i stage. "Honolulu
loves Les Miz, and Les Miz loves Honolulu," said Richard Alexander, executive
director of the traveling production. "I know that Hawaii's had some quite
bad experiences and promises of shows coming but we're totally prepared to
bring Les Miz strong and better than ever." Because Hawai`i was so receptive
to the production in 1994, Alexander said he's pulling singer Craig Schulman
from the Broadway production to revisit his role of Jean Valjean in the
islands. "I'm just thrilled to death that Richard asked me to do it again,"
Schulman said today. Tony-award winning musical actress Lea Salonga will also
headline the Honolulu cast. The Philippine-born Salonga, who had her debut on
Broadway as the original star of the musical "Miss Saigon," will appear as
Eponine. Alexander said no expense will be spared to reproduce the massive
sets and stage design that musical-buffs enjoy in New York. "It's gonna be
the top notch full scale Broadway production," he said. Open auditions for
two key children's roles will be held at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at the University
of Hawaii's Orvis Auditorium. Ticket prices range from $30 to $79.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: HOTEL SEEKS PARDON FROM YOUNGSTERS
Last month, the Wailuku Hongwanji Summer Fun program took 98 kids on a field
trip to the Grand Wailua Resort, only to have them ejected from the pool. The
program had paid $4,000 for a day of activities at the Maui hotel. Although
Grand Wailea management was quick to apologize for the rude interruption,
refunding the money and offering another visit on the house, the children
weren't keen on a second tour. Tanya Ito-Shima, director of the summer fun
program, said many kids were angry, and that some told her they'd go back
only if their parents would go along. "Some of them were afraid to go back to
any hotel," Ito-Shima told the _Honolulu Advertiser_. Enter Donn Takahashi,
manager of the Maui Prince hotel. Fearing that the youngsters would grow up
with an unfavorable impression of the hotel industry, Takahashi put together
a day of summer fun at the Makena resort that could have made grown-up guests
jealous. With hotel staff and officers volunteering their time and
enthusiasm, 106 Wailuku children on Monday were treated to more activities
than they could handle. Sand-castle building had to be put aside for flower
arranging, painting, koi watching and feeding and cake decorating. Hotel
managers manned grills, cooking a lunch of hot-dogs and burgers that was
topped off with a dessert of shave ice. Takahashi said his staff had a great
time, as did the kids, who Ito-Shimo believes have forgiven hoteliers.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
SEVERAL items stolen this week from St. Mark Church on Kapahulu have been
returned after Honolulu police pulled over a truck in Kailua last night and
found an air-conditioning unit in its bed. Although the driver fled on foot,
police arrested a 37-year-old suspect after finding him with a computer in
his lap with the church's name marked on it. Also recovered was the church's
bank deposit bag. Over the weekend, burglars had taken just about everything
from the church office. "Just about anything that wasn't nailed down," said
pastor Bruce Betker. "But they didn't take any books or bibles..."
ALANA Dung, a 2-year-old Leukemia patient from Nu`uanu, is this minute
getting the gift of life. Dung began receiving healthy bone marrow from a
Taiwanese donor late this afternoon, and the procedure -- comparable to a
blood transfusion -- will take anywhere from 2 to 10 hours to complete. The
operation is taking place in the girl's hospital room at the Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Wash. Jean Sanders, head of pediatrics at
the center, hand-carried the marrow in a cooler on a morning flight from
Taipei. She arrived at the hospital at about 2 p.m. in a taxi cab...
POLICE are investigating a possible murder tonight after the discovery of a
body today at the Ilikai Hotel. Police reported to the Ala Moana Boulevard
hotel this morning after cleaning staff found more than unkempt sheets in a
room on the 14th floor. Investigators say the victim was a 51-year-old
Caucasian male, believed to be a language specialist from a Mainland college
who was in Honolulu to attend a seminar at UH. The victim was last seen on
Friday, and police believe he has been dead for about two days...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 90/74, Kaua`i 85/73, Moloka`i 83/71, Maui 87/72, Hilo 84/69
CASTS: Mostly sunny, trades to 25MPH; East shore surf to 4 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High 5:57 p.m.; Low 11:01 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Tuesday, July 16, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: TOMORROW IS DAY ZERO FOR LITTLE ALANA
2-year-old Alana Dung underwent her second-to-last radiation and chemotherapy
treatment today in preparation for a long-awaited bone marrow transplant.
"Tomorrow is considered day zero," her father, Steven Dung, said. "It's
finally coming and we're really really excited." The Nu`uanu girl, suffering
from a rare form of leukemia, had inspired over 30,000 island residents to
contribute to bone marrow registries earlier this year. Members of her family
accompanied her to Seattle when she checked into the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center last month, where she is now finishing up a week of high-
intensity radiation treatments that are needed to kill any remaining
infections before the new marrow is infused. The radiation she's been
subjected to this week is the most intense her body can withstand, Dung said.
Although she was throwing up five times a day at one point, Dung said his
daughter never complained. "We know she's getting the real stuff," he said.
"It's just amazing that she's so resilient." Despite spending hours a day
confined to a crib in a lead-lined room, her father says the girl's high
spirits have never faltered. "Even when she's having a rough day, or even as
we're finishing this radiation, the minute she sees you she will smile." A
doctor from the center will hand-carry the anonymous donor's marrow -- to be
extracted tonight -- from Taiwan to the operating room. The actual transplant
will take place at about noon Hawai`i time. Although today was his wife's
birthday, Dung said it might as well be his daughter's. "It's like a new
birth with the new bone marrow entering her body." Doctors say if all goes
well, Alana Dung has a 60 percent chance of remaining disease free.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: AMNESIA PATIENT'S FAMILY MAY HAVE BEEN FOUND
A man who has been unable to remember who he is or why he's in Hawai`i may
finally get some answers. Honolulu police today reported an interstate
investigation has found what is believed to be the mystery man's family. "We
spoke to, supposedly, his brother who resides in Florida," said HPD
investigator Joe Self. "He assured me that's his brother because he
recognized the voice." For now, police are using the name the amnesia victim
thinks is his -- William DeSousa. According to police, a woman claiming to be
the DeSousa's mother says her son has been missing since March, after he told
them he was going to the Caribbean for humanitarian work -- perhaps with the
U.S. Foreign Service. Both relatives have spoken to DeSousa, but so far he
doesn't recognize them. Self said the identity police are trying to pin on
DeSousa will not been released until a fingerprint match can be done. In
March, DeSousa was found face-down in the sand on Kailua Beach. He was taken
to Castle Medical Center, where his condition was determined to be good but
some swelling in his brain was reported. When he regained consciousness, he
told doctors he thought his name was William "Bill" DeSouza but couldn't
remember much else. His name turned out to be a dead end. "If we find out
this is his positive I.D., we know his name ain't William DeSousa, that's for
sure," Self said. A story in Newsday, a New York publication, prompted
investigators in Nassau County to contact Honolulu police, Self said. The
most useful clues were those supplied by DeSouza when he first regained
consciousness, he said. He has been living in Castle Medical Center housing
since he was found. If his name is confirmed, police will try to find the
hotel he checked into to see if any of his belongings can be recovered.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: JURY DISMISSES DEFENSE CLAIMS IN ROOMMATE MURDER
Luis Castillo, 44, said he was only trying to fend off the sexual advances of
his elderly roommate when he struck 63-year-old Boyd Petrie with a 2-by-4
last August. Prosecutors claimed Castillo maliciously struck Petrie with the
piece of lumber to rob him for drug money. A Circuit Court jury yesterday
rejected Castillo's claim that he acted in self-defense, convicting him of
murder and bypassing a lesser charge of manslaughter. During the trial,
Castillo said Petrie helped him when he was kicked out of his Kaka`ako home
by his ex-wife, giving him money and a room in his Nu`uanu apartment. Despite
their friendship, however, Castillo claimed Petrie soon started harassing him
and asking for oral sex. City prosecutor Franklin Pacarro said the
allegations of homosexuality and sexual advances were just an unsuccessful
attempt to distract from the relevant facts in the case. Castillo had
testified that after striking Petrie, he put a plastic bag over his head to
keep the blood from staining the bed. Pacarro said his intent was to
suffocate him. Medical witnesses disputed whether the blow to the skull was
fatal, or if Petrie's death was the result of a combination of the injury and
suffocation. Because the victim was over age 60, Castillo faces a minimum
sentence of 15 years and could get life in prison. Sentencing is scheduled
for Dec. 11. Deputy Public Defender Reginald Yee said an appeal is likely.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
FALLING just over 11 inches into a mis-aligned elevator at the airport was
hazardous enough to win a 37-year-old woman an estimated $1 million in
damages. The victim claims she was permanently disabled from the fall despite
several operations. A jury this week found Hawaii Protective Association --
an airport security agency -- liable for most of the $150,000 claim, with the
elevator company to pay 20 percent and the state 15 percent. State insurance
investigators said the elevator doors opened before it was level with the
floor, and that a guard with HPA had reported the problem days before the
incident with no preventative action taken...
NEARLY everything -- from an air-conditioner to a pencil-sharpener to a
computer and fax machine -- was stolen from Kaneohe's St. Mark Lutheran
Church earlier this week. In all, perpetrators took about $5,000 in equipment
from the church, apparently using a glass cutter to get in and taking the
time to steal anything of value. A chair, two calculators and the church seal
are also missing. Honolulu police currently have no suspects. Pastor Bruce
Betker said the burglars took enough supplies to run an office in the break-
in, saying they were apparently "one-stop shopping." The church's insurance
policy will cover replacement of the stolen goods...
AFTER three days of looking, Coast Guard and Hawai`i County officials today
called off a search for a University of Hawai`i-Hilo student who left last
Wednesday on a spearfishing expedition and never returned home. 20-year-old
Mark Cajski was reported missing on Friday, and on Sunday police found the
1972 Landrover he'd borrowed from a friend at Anaeho`omalu Beach Park. Big
Island personnel were concentrating on the waters of Waikaloa. Cajski, a
graduate of Damien High School, was described by friends to be an avid and
experienced fisherman. Unless other leads turn up, Coast Guard officials say
they will not resume the search...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 89/74, Kaua`i 84/72, Moloka`i 83/70, Maui 87/69, Hilo 82/69
CASTS: Mostly sunny, trades to 25MPH; South and East shore surf to 4 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 5:26 p.m.; Low 10:21 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Monday, July 15, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: "GOLDEN BUDDHA" TRIAL BRINGS MARCOS JR. TO ISLES
The son of late Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos testified in Circuit
Court today that he never saw a solid gold, diamond-filled statue of Buddha
that a treasure hunter -- now deceased -- claimed was stolen during the
Marcos regime. Ferdinand "Bong Bong" Marcos Jr., 38, arrived in Honolulu
yesterday to appear in the civil case, now in its third week. Lawyers
representing the late Rogelio Roxas are seeking billions of dollars in
damages for the alleged theft of discovered treasure. Roxas filed his lawsuit
in 1992, claiming he found the buried statue in 1971 where a Japanese general
had stashed it during World War II. According to Roxas, the treasure once
belonged to Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita, who reportedly pillaged Southeast Asia
during the war. Roxas claimed soldiers under Marcos' rule took the treasure,
then imprisoned and tortured him for over two years. Before he died in 1993,
Roxas gave his claim to the treasure to a group of Atlanta investors that
incorporated to form the Golden Buddha Corp. Attorneys for the Marcos estate
say the statue never existed. "I've never seen a golden-colored Buddha,"
Marcos Jr. said. "I never saw gold except in jewelry." He said his father
kept a lot of his wealth in the form of gold as a sign of his power. "It is
important that one be perceived as having the wealth to be a political
player," he said. "I think that applies to all politics but moreso in the
Philippines." Marcos Jr. said he was looking forward to refuting the charges
against his father, who was ousted in 1986 and died in the islands in exile
in 1989. Marcos Jr. said he will be returning to the Philippines on
Wednesday.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: STATE UNSURE WHO WILL PAY FOR DUMP CLEANUP
State Health Department officials today reported finding no toxic material or
fumes at the site of an illegal dump in Waianae that went up in flames last
week. It took several fire companies over 900 man-hours to extinguish, and as
the smoke clears the state is still left with the question of who will pay
for the cleanup. Preliminary estimates put the cost at nearly $1 million. "We
will be pursuing enforcement action against the landowner or landowners to
assure the problem is dealt with aggressively," said department spokesman
Bruce Anderson. Anderson admitted, however, that it's still unclear who the
liable landowner is. The former owner of the Puhawai Road property had put it
up for foreclosure, and the site is now technically owned by Bank of America.
However, Anderson said, the bank is protected from having to pay for cleanup
costs by state law. One thing Anderson said is clear is that taxpayers
shouldn't have to foot the bill. He said testing the air and soil has already
cost between $5,000 and $10,000, but those costs are covered by the Emergency
Response Fund. With no health hazards found so far, the Fund shouldn't be
used for the full cleanup, Anderson said. Meanwhile, a local topsoil company
has expressed an interest in buying the property. David Souza of Island
Topsoil said today that he will be offering $45,000 for the abandoned lot,
and hoped to close the deal by next week. Souza asserted that he would not be
paying for the cleanup either.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: 3-YEAR-OLD SAFE AFTER BUS ADVENTURE
Jessica Fisher rode the city bus all by herself, and all she got was a T-
shirt. The mother of the 3-year-old dropped the girl off at an aunt's this
morning on her way to work. Much to her chagrin, police and reporters were on
hand when she picked her daughter up -- at the bus depot. "Everything came
out all right," said Honolulu police Sgt. Gary Nihipali. "The child is safe,
that's the most important thing." Fisher's adventure began at about 9 a.m.
this morning when her aunt reportedly fell asleep. Fisher wandered out of the
yard and to a bus stop at the corner of Gulick Avenue and School Street. With
her aunt's purse and about $26 in cash, she boarded a city bus. The driver
didn't think anything of the young passenger. "When little Jessica got on the
bus with an older boy, the driver assumed they were together," TheBus driver
Roger Morton said. Fisher rode the bus to the end of the line, and
disembarked at the terminal on Middle Street. "One of our employees simply
noticed a young girl by herself," said TheBus spokeswoman Marilynne
Nascimento. Police were called, and Fisher was given a company shirt. The
lost girl's plight was announced on local radio station KSSK, and her mother
heard it. Ducking the press, she picked her daughter up and took her home.
Fisher told reporters she just wanted to ride the bus on her own, but when
asked why replied, "I don't know." The aunt who was supposed to be watching
the girl was a teenager, Nihipali said, and was warned to be more careful.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
CITING unspecified health problems, Hawai`i Democratic Party Chair Richard
Port announced on Saturday that he would be resigning his position. Port's
announcement came as a surprise to many, noting that he was elected to a
second term at the helm of the party two months ago. While a party committee
considers a successor, local lawmakers praised Port's accomplishments and
dedication. Rep. Dennis Arakaki said Port's courage and conviction will be
missed by the party's leadership. Although his health problems are reportedly
not life-threatening, Port has made no public comment about his condition...
AFTER successfully using the full-closure strategy to resurface parts of the
H-1 freeway last month, state Department of Transportation officials have
announced that all but one lane of Likelike Highway will be shut down during
the next two Sundays for various repairs. Between 6 a.m. and 2 p.m. on July
21 and 28, all Kaneohe-bound lanes and one town-bound lane will be blocked
off as state workers tackle long-overdue maintenance projects en masse. The
state hopes to get drains cleared, guardrails repaired, streetlights replaced
and trees trimmed during the shutdown...
POLICE today arrested a 14-year-old boy suspected in the pellet-gun shooting
of two elderly Kailua residents earlier this year. A man and woman suffered
minor injuries after a "pellet-gun sniper" fired at them along Uluniu Street
in March. The suspect, a Kalaheo High School student, had a prior arrest
record but denied the shootings, police say. The boy was released pending
further investigation, and faces second-degree assault charges...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 88/74, Kaua`i 84/72, Moloka`i 83/71, Maui 87/69, Hilo 83/69
CASTS: Cloudy, light rains, traes to 25MPH; all shore surf to 3 feet.
MONDAY'S TIDES: High 4:55 p.m.; Low 9:45 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Friday, July 12, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: COURT REFUSES MOTION TO SET ASIDE ETHICS LAW
A Circuit Court judge today turned down a motion filed on behalf of mayoral
candidate Arnold Morgado which sought a temporary restraining order against a
1994 campaign ethics law. Morgado's supporters claim the city law restricting
campaign contributions was engineered by Mayor Jeremy Harris to discourage
people from supporting Morgado's campaign. The law makes it illegal for a
contractor or other lobbyist awarded city contracts or permits to support an
election campaign within two years. Dan Foley, Morgado's attorney, said the
law is unconstitutional. "Mr. Morgado and his campaign have the right to
associate with these people and this ordinance prohibits them," Foley said.
City Attorney Mark Bennet argued that the law is a long-needed measure to
restore the public's trust in government. "Members of the public have the
perception that elected city officers give preferential treatment to special
interests which make substantial campaign contributions," Bennet said. "This
perception must be dispelled." In May, Harris supporters cried foul when
local contractor Dennis Mitsunaga -- who had recently received several
contracts with the city -- was actively involved in Morgado's campaign. The
motion refused today would have given Morgado 10 days of immunity from
prosecution under the law so that his campaign could accept contributions it
currently deems illegal. An injunction in the case will be heard later this
month, when representatives for all parties involved will appear in court.
Morgado's suit names Harris, City Prosecutor Keith Kaneshiro and state
Attorney General Margery Bronster.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: CONVENTION CENTER CONSTRUCTION IRKS SOME
While construction of the Hawai`i Convention Center is racing along, people
living near the site are fed up with the traffic and noise. A group of
representatives from the surrounding neighborhood held a press conference
today urging the state to recognize and fix problems more quickly. Earlier
this year, pile-drivers shook the ground and rattled windows for weeks. "They
were really driving people insane down there," said Waikiki resident Mary
Jane-McMurdo, who like many complained to the state and endured the ruckus
for weeks before the contractor shielded and muffled the noise. Now, Hawaiian
Electric is in the midst of major installation and renovation work under
Kapi`olani, closing off lanes of the major thoroughfare every day. The maze
of cones and blocked sidewalks are just asking for disaster, Jane-McMurdo
said. "I would say the Convention Center Authority has been very lucky that
we haven't lost somebody along that road," she said. Tourists and residents
blocked from walking into Waikiki around the site perimeter are still darting
across Kapi`olani, residents say. Center authority spokesman Alan Hayashi
said he's working to address their concerns, proposing the addition of a
temporary traffic light and hiring a security guard to keep people from
crossing Kapi`olani on the wrong side. Though in favor of the ideas, the
Convention Center Community Network wants progress now. "If they continue to
operate in dealing with the community at the speed they are currently
operating at," group spokesman Jack Levin said, "nothing will ever happen."
The group plans to kick off a petition campaign next week.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: ILLEGAL WAIANAE DUMP BURNS, SOME EVACUATED
Fire fighters are still working to extinguish a fire in an empty lot off
Puhawai Road in Waianae. The first call reporting the rubbish fire came in
last night shortly after 9:30 p.m., and nearby residents reported hearing
explosions. Fearing that hazardous materials may be involved, fire department
officials evacuated at least 10 residents from the area. The Red Cross
arranged for evacuees to spend the night at the Waianae Community Center. "At
lest they gave us a place to stay," resident Bill Kingerly said. "We weren't
left out on the streets." Fire crews were called in from Manoa to Olomana to
battle the blaze. "We did a scene assessment, atmospheric testing with our
team," said fire battalion chief John Coe. "Their recommendation was for us
to go in with our full protection equipment." Coe said the property was
definitely being used as an illegal dump. Neighbors said the property owner
had been misusing the lot since she acquired it 10 years ago. The owner,
Sebrina Grace, reportedly claims she's been trying to clean the property for
years. Others disagree. "She's baloney," said Rose Acosta, a Puhawai resident
for 43 years. "Big dump trucks would go sometimes 15, 20 times a day." Acosta
said the fire could be just what the neighborhood needs. "It's good now,
maybe something can be done about it," she said. According to state Health
Department spokesman Bruce Anderson, responsibility for the cleanup is up in
the air as Grace had filed for bankruptcy and the bank had initiated
foreclosure proceedings. Sale of the property was expected today, Anderson
said, but the buyer dropped out this morning.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: FIREFIGHTER, WIFE ARRESTED IN DRUG INVESTIGATION
A Honolulu firefighter and his wife were arrested last night and booked on
several drug and drug paraphernalia charges following an 8 p.m. search of
their Waihawa home. After a two month police investigation, 52-year-old
Conrad Buenconsejo and his 35-year-old wife Velvet Buenconsejo are suspected
of running a "good sized" drug operation. Narcotics officers found 1 ounce of
cocaine, 3 grams of crystal methamphetamine (or "ice"), 10 grams of marijuana
and several pipes and small scales in the home. Also confiscated were swords,
cameras, jewelry, stereos, televisions and a 22-caliber handgun with the
serial number filed off. Over $750 in food stamps were also recovered. Police
say judging by the amount of goods found, the volume of drugs involved is a
sizable one. Conrad Buenconsejo is currently on leave for unrelated reasons
from his new position with the fire department's training bureau. Deputy Fire
Chief Attilio Leonardi said he was "surprised and shocked" by Buencosejo's
arrest. "We have probably the strictest of drug testing programs in the
state, and we've had it for 4 years," Attilio said. "We don't tolerate drugs
in the department." Buenconsejo is a 24-year veteran of the fire department,
having recently served at the Nanakuli Fire Station. Attilio said the
department will probably wait for the outcome of the police investigation
before looking into any internal action.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: A NOTE TO READERS
On Sunday, the UH Office of Information and Technology Services will be
performing a major upgrade of the "listproc" mailing-list software on the
university system. I am already trying to familiarize myself with the minor
changes in list administration and new features provided in the new version.
Hopefully the work will be completely invisible to subscribers, but things on
my end may be a little hairy for a while. One feature that you should be
aware of will be fully automated subscription cancellations for subscribers
whose accounts bounce or otherwise generate errors when messages go out. With
the number of recipients on the Hawai`i NewsList (arguably one of the largest
hosted by the generous folks at UH ITS), every item sent out results into at
least twenty messages coming back at me, which require manual compilation and
repair. The automated system will be a godsend for me, but may be an
inconvenience if your system happens to be unreachable one day or if your
mailbox is known to plug up. For this I apologize. Note that I will also be
combing through the subscriber list to remove BITNET users, who as of next
month will no longer be reachable from the UH mail server. If you're getting
HNL reports on a BITNET account, please unsubscribe now.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
SUBJECT: BITS AND PIECES
RESIDENTS in Hawai`i are not as healthy or fit as some may think. According
to a survey by the state Health Department, about half of the island
population lead sedentary lives. Over 52 percent of Hawaii's women don't
exercise regularly, while among men the figure is 43 percent. Overall, over
20 percent of adults in the state responded that they participate in no
physical activities during leisure time, although physical activity among
begins to rebound upwards at age 65. State Health Director Lawrence Miike
announced the results yesterday in conjunction with a similar report issued
by the U.S. Surgeon General...
WHILE getting her Big Island mayoral bid off the ground, Hawai`i County
Council Chairwoman Keiko Bonk this week was hit with allegations of violating
ethics laws by hiring her boyfriend, Michael Christopher, for a city job with
a $49,000 salary. The charge, stemming from a complaint by former council
candidate Bob Lerro, was dismissed on Wednesday due to a procedural error.
Lerro plans to resubmit his complaint next week. Although Christopher is not
married to Bonk, Lerro claims he qualifies as a family member and should not
be granted special privileges...
AFTER examining the process used to conduct the Native Hawaiian Vote, an
international human rights group concluded that the vote is vulnerable to
fraud and will support a resolution urging the state to call it off. The
Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization came to the islands on the
invitation of Ka Lahui Hawai`i, a Hawaiian sovereignty group which has been a
longtime opponent of the state-funded vote. Representatives with the Hawaiian
Sovereignty Elections Council, the agency responsible for conducting the
vote, questioned the objectivity of the organization, pointing out that Ka
Lahui leader Mililani Trask also serves as its vice chair...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 86/81, Kaua`i 84/70, Moloka`i 83/81, Maui 87/70, Hilo 82/69
CASTS: Sunny and clear, trades to 20MPH; North shore surf to 4 feet.
SATURDAY'S TIDES: High -:-- p.m.; Low -:-- a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Thursday, July 11, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: FASI ANNOUNCES NINTH MAYORAL BID
Frank Fasi today officially announced that he will be running for mayor of
Honolulu, saying he's dissatisfied with the job Mayor Jeremy Harris --
formerly his Managing Director -- has done. "He doesn't tell the truth, he
has no record," Fasi said at a press conference this morning. "All he has
done is been a stand in for two years and not too good at that." Harris
succeeded Fasi after Fasi resigned as mayor in 1994 in an unsuccessful
gubernatorial bid. Fasi said Harris was partly to blame for his loss to Ben
Cayetano. Harris promised to support him during the governor's race, Fasi
said. "He would have been doing the job honorably and in the right manner and
I'd be helping him." Instead, Fasi claims Harris broke his word, adding that
he would probably not have run for governor if Harris refused to back him.
Harris disagreed. "I think I was on the news during that period saying he was
the best candidate and I was going to support him," Harris said, "But I'm not
going to get in this mudslinging with Mr. Fasi." The rivalry between the Fasi
and Harris campaign is seen as a potential boost for Arnold Morgado, who also
wants to be Honolulu's next mayor. "With Frank Fasi coming in I don't think
any candidate is going to get 51 percent of the vote," Morgado said. "It's
going to be a longer race." Fasi has already been elected and re-elected as
mayor six times out of eight tries; his first win was in 1960.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: MORGADO CAMP SUES OVER CAMPAIGN ETHICS LAW
Claiming a law implemented by Mayor Jeremy Harris in 1994 was engineered to
discourage people from backing Arnold Morgado's mayoral campaign, Morgado
supporters today filed a lawsuit against Harris, City Prosecutor Keith
Kaneshiro and state Attorney General Margery Bronster. Bill Meheula, Morgado
Campaign Chair, said the campaign contribution law is vague and should be
overturned. "Jeremy Harris knows its unconstitutional and yet he attempted to
have Morgado criminally prosecuted [under it]," Meheula said. The law
prohibits contributions or campaign help from anyone who is seeking
government work or approval. Two months ago, Harris supporters pointed out
that local contractor Dennis Mitsunaga was actively involved in Morgado's
campaign, recently receiving several contracts from the city. "The reason why
Jeremy Harris attempted to do this is to try to discourage supporters from
supporting Arnold Morgado," Meheula said. "It is having an effect." Dan
Foley, Morgado's attorney, said people who would support Morgado are now
afraid of Harris' scrutiny. "People are afraid to hold a sign for Arnold
Morgado for fear or prosecution -- or to give money or to make phone calls or
participate in a picnic," Foley said. Harris, however, said Morgado is just
looking to get out of following city rules. "I think that Mr. Morgado should
be ashamed for trying to avoid prosecution by suing the prosecutor and the
attorney general to try to get in a position where he alone doesn't have to
follow the campaign ethics law," Harris said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: SUMMIT WITH MAYOR A LECTURE, GANG MEMBERS SAY
Members of a Waipahu gang met with Mayor Jeremy Harris today, telling him
that they feel Honolulu police were just "headhunting" when 16-year-old
fellow gang member Jarred Fe Benito was killed in a police shootout last
month. "Why they had shoot so much times?" gang member Mark Marino asked.
"They wanted for kill him, that's why." Fe Benito was driving a stolen car
when police stopped him on June 7. Officers opened fire when Fe Benito
suddenly reversed towards an officer. The youths told the mayor that warning
shots should have been fired, and claimed a history of harassment by police
officers. After the meeting, Harris said had only one thing to say. "My
message was loud and clear and simple," Harris said. "We're not going to
tolerate any retaliation, any threats, any violence against any police
officer." Weeks after Fe Benito's death, another stolen car was found near
Ewa Beach with threats against police scratched into the paint. The gang
reportedly used the car for their message because it was the last car Fe
Benito allegedly stole. The gang said today's meeting was unproductive and
frustrating, and that Harris clearly just wanted to lecture rather than
listen. "When we was telling him about the police brutality, he never talk
about that -- just talking about us threatening them," Marino said. "Why he
never tell us about the police brutality?" Youth counselor Sid Rosen, who
helped arrange the meeting, said he saw their point of view but still felt
the summit was a success. "The boys had their say," Rosen said. "I think that
the mayor felt an obligation to make a statement upholding law and order...
but I think he was very attentive to their concerns."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: DANNO MAY BE REVIVED ON THE BIG SCREEN
Although it's not the first time someone has suggested making the long-
running television show "Hawaii Five-O" into a movie, one Hollywood producer
is betting he can pull it off. According to the Hawai`i Film Office, film
producer George Litto is making plans to begin shooting the crossover picture
in the islands as early as next year. If arrangements with investors and
other backers are finalized, the production could bring $10 million into
Hawaii's economy. Georgette Deemer, spokeswoman for the film office, said
setting the movie in the islands will be the most valuable part. Deemer said
movies filmed in Hawai`i, such as the upcoming Brady Bunch sequel, can be
seen as 90-minute promotional material that can boost island tourism. Litto
is hoping the movie will be a major production, and estimates it could bring
in $50 to $70 million. In an interview with the _Honolulu Advertiser_, Litto
said he was looking for input from fans of the show on who to cast in the
various roles. James MacArther and Kam Fong, who starred in "Hawai`i Five-O,"
have said they would consider cameo or other roles if they're asked. Litto
said he hopes to reproduce as much of the style and look of the series in the
movie -- theme song and catch phrases included. "Hawai`i Five-O," which aired
from 1968 to 1980, is the longest-running police series in history.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
DANCERS with the local group "Island Breeze" left for Atlanta today to appear
at the 1996 Olympics. They will perform at the Olympic Village on opening
day, then perform at several venues in the city for the remainder of the
games. The Big Island troupe formed in 1982, and has performed at the Merrie
Monarch hula festival. The group was selected in February for the prestigious
exhibition of world cultures. "Island Breeze" will represent the many faces
of the South Pacific. "What we try to convey is really the heart of each
culture," member Kealoha Kaopua said...
ALTHOUGH state tax collections for the month of June were down $14.6 million
or 7.1 percent from the same period last year, officials aren't frowning.
Even with last month's low state tax revenues, the total collected this year
overall is $166 million more than in 1996 -- an increase of 6.4 percent.
Favorable revenue figures are believed to be behind Gov. Ben Cayetano's
revised list of budget restrictions for the current fiscal year, reportedly
reducing the size of cuts that will be handed down to state agencies
including the University of Hawai`i...
CHAUNCEY HATA, 16, was officially charged and arrested yesterday for auto
theft and criminal property damage. Hata was one of three boys who were
stopped by police while riding in a stolen car near Pearlridge. When they
attempted to flee, police opened fire on the car. Hata was hit by three
bullets, but escaped on foot and sought medical attention on his own. The
driver, 16-year-old Jarred Fe Benito, was killed in the altercation. The
third passenger, 17-year-old Sundance Cambra, was not injured...
DANIEL Inouye, U.S. senator, announced today that the Senate Appropriations
Committee has approved an $18.2 million budget package for various Hawai`i
projects. Among the items included in the bill include $16 million to
complete construction of the Spark Matsunaga veteran's health care facility
near Tripler Medical Center. Also included, funds for the Ala Wai Canal
watershed improvement program and the National Science Foundation...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 87/72, Kaua`i 84/71, Moloka`i 84/70, Maui 88/70, Hilo 83/71
CASTS: Partly cloudy, trades to 20MPH; South, west shore surf to 3 feet.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: High -:-- p.m.; Low -:-- a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Wednesday, July 10, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: FINAL CUTS TO UH, STATE MAY BE SMALLER
Although the numbers aren't confirmed, several state departments may be
getting some reprieve from budget cuts initially proposed earlier this year.
The University of Hawai`i, which was first told to expect a cut of $14
million for the 1996-97 fiscal year, has been told by the Governor's office
that it should instead plan for a $10 million reduction. UH President Kenneth
Mortimer has declined comment, but said he plans to make a formal budget
announcement at this month's meeting of the UH Board of Regents. University
officials say they are concerned that UH may still end up taking a large
share of Cayetano's total restrictions package. According to wire and
newspaper reports, the final budget restrictions for other state departments
will also be smaller than expected. The package of restrictions set by the
governor are in addition to the $130 million cut systemwide by the
Legislature earlier this year. Funding for the Department of Business,
Economic Development and Tourism will be reduced by 5 percent, losing over $4
million from its $43.5 million budget. The Hawaii Visitor's Bureau, however,
will get to keep $2 million that the governor initially planned to cut. The
Labor Department will lose $126,000 from its $25 million budget, and the
Agriculture Department's $13 million will be cut by $117,000. Despite the
widely reported figures, state Budget Director Earl Anzai said yesterday that
the media is acting prematurely, and that some of the numbers are inaccurate.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BEACHGOERS FACE DOUBLE RASH ATTACK
On Oahu's south shores, the regular swarms of box jellyfish arrived this
morning in larger numbers than usual. Off Kailua Beach, state health
officials have found toxic seaweed floating in the water. Both developments
are adding up to a perilous week for those hoping to splash in the surf.
Jellyfish stings sent at least two people to the hospital today, according to
city officials. Because they were stung while swimming sometime around 3
a.m., signs warning of the pests' presence hadn't been put up yet. In
addition, said lifeguard Paul Merino, no lifeguards were present to provide
treatment. The victims eventually had to be taken to the hospital for shots,
he said. The swarms of box jellyfish arrive in Hawaii's southern waters --
almost like clockwork -- 10 days after a full moon. This month, Merino said,
the swarms are larger than usual. Meanwhile, "swimmers itch" has struck
swimmers who went into the ocean off Kailua and the Kaneohe Marine Base this
week. State health officials say a toxic algae called microcoleus lyngbyaceus
is causing the irritation, which can range from rashes to blisters and often
causes inflammation around the eyes. Marine officials say the seaweed often
separates into small strands that get caught in bathing suits. State
officials say the algae is thriving because of unusual ocean and climate
conditions, and should dissipate within a week.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: GANG MEMBERS, MAYOR AGREE TO SUMMIT
Twelve members of a Waipahu gang will meet with Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris
tomorrow to air their grievances over the shooting death of one of their
members last month. Jarred Fe Benito, 16, was killed by Honolulu police June
7 while attempting to flee several officers in a stolen car. The summit was
arranged by local youth outreach counselors, who say gang members are looking
for a chance to present their view of the antagonism between gangs and
police. Local gang members think of the police department as just another
gang, said Sid Rosen, a counselor with Adult Friends for Youth. Fe Benito's
death has many gang members feeling angry and others feeling vengeful and
talking of retaliation. "I think it's foolish not to consider it seriously,"
Rosen said. "Certainly we know that a lot of these youth have the potential
for violence." Police were already wary of that possibility when another
stolen car was discovered on July 3. The car was left in plain view with
death threats against HPD and the officer who shot Fe Benito scratched into
the paint. "Their feeling is that their friend was murdered and that the
action of shooting him was completely unnecessary," Rosen said. The gang
members attending tomorrow's meeting will bring ideas of how to mend
relations with police, he said. Five gang members arrested and later released
in the second stolen car case will not be among those present.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: YOSHIDA ENTERS RACE FOR CITY PROSECUTOR
Randall Yoshida today formally filed to run for Honolulu City Prosecutor. His
friends and family accompanied him this morning to the city clerk's office,
where he paid the appropriate fees and said, "It's official." Yoshida, who
will leave his private law practice for the campaign, said he was frustrated
with the ineffectiveness of the prosecutor's office. Yoshida served as the
office's division chief for eight years until an unsuccessful bid for
prosecutor in 1988. Yoshida said the city's legal and law-enforcement system
just isn't working. If elected, Yoshida said he will work aggressively bring
down property and violent crimes. "With strict prosecution against drug
dealers and gang leaders, we will bring down the crime rate," he said. "I'm
convinced of that." Education programs to keep children from criminal
activities will also priority of his administration, he said. Yoshida has
also been a longtime advocate of legislation that would make criminals pay
full restitution to victims. "I know we can push back the tide of rising
crime and make sure that this community is safe," he said. Yoshida is the
second person to file to run for city prosecutor. David Arakawa made his bid
official two months ago. Meanwhile, local attorney Peter Carlisle is expected
to file for candidacy within the month.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
MAKING a phone call to a neighbor island will never be the same. As of today,
Hawai`i residents can now choose and use one of four long distance carriers
without having to first dial a five-digit access code. Last year, MCI, Sprint
and AT&T officially entered the market, but because GTE Hawaiian Tel had
monopolized transmission lines, customers would have to enter a code to
select any other carrier. Now use of a competing service will be automatic
provided residents specifically ask to leave GTE. The development is expected
to set off a price war that will mean lower costs for customers. Hawai`i is
the last state that to comply with federal regulations, which mandate open
competition in intrastate long-distance telephone service...
OVERTURNING a ruling by a lower court, the state Supreme Court today told
Wendy Touchette that she can sue the wife of the man who killed her family.
In its ruling, the court said Mabel Ganal was partially responsible for the
actions of her husband, Orlando Ganal. Touchette was the only survivor of an
arson attack by Orlando Ganal in August 1991. The fire killed Touchette's
husband, their two children and Mabel Ganal's parents. Orlando Ganal has
already been convicted for the killings. Mabel Ganal was reportedly having an
extramarital affair with Touchette's brother-in-law, and taunted her husband
with it. Touchette had to undergo massive reconstructive surgery due to the
burns and other injuries she suffered in the blaze...
FEDERAL regulations require that highway overpasses be built no lower than 16
feet. Those rules, however, came after the Gulick Avenue overpass was built
over the H-1 freeway. Yesterday, he driver of a Marine Corps tractor-trailer
discovered just how low Hawai`i bridges go when the vehicle struck the
overpass and was stopped cold. Although the trailer wasn't unusually tall,
the Gulick bridge stands just under 14 feet over the freeway below. Local
trucking companies say they are very familiar with the overpass, as their
drivers often must take a short detour off H-1 to avoid it. Another Marine
truck had crashed into the Gulick overpass two years ago...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 88/74, Kaua`i 84/72, Moloka`i 84/72, Maui 90/71, Hilo 84/70
CASTS: Partly cloudy, trades to 25MPH; North shore surf to 3 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High 2:16 p.m.; Low 6:41 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Tuesday, July 9, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: HELICOPTER, PLANE COLLIDE DURING VIDEO SHOOT
A helicopter used to film a commercial for a private flight school collided
with a single-engine plane yesterday afternoon off Kahala Beach. The three-
person video team and pilot in the helicopter escaped with their lives
moments before it crashed and sank in 75 feet of water. The plane landed
safely at Honolulu International Airport with three feet of its right wing
missing. Japanese crew members Kioshi Matsunaga and Hideo Sasaki and
Katsuhita Uto of Hawai`i Kai were treated for minor injuries and released.
Matsunaga said after they hit the plane, the pilot -- Atsushi Ohara --
managed to keep them in the air for a few moments before splashdown. Those
seconds gave them a chance to put on life vests, Matsunaga said, saying he
and his fellow passengers were "very lucky." The fire department rescue
helicopter successfully plucked them from the water with a suspended basket
less than half an hour later. According to the Federal Aviation
Administration, there were three aircraft flying in formation off Oahu's
south shore to film a commercial for Cosmo Flying School. They were cruising
side by side at about 1,000 feet when the collision occurred. The third
airplane was not hit, officials say. A standard FAA investigation is being
initiated, said inspector Jeffrey Weller, but it is unlikely that it will
result in tighter rules or penalties. The flight crews knew what they were
doing, Weller said. "Just as in making movies, there is a certain amount of
risk," he said. This past weekend, Cosmo instructor Tim Strickland was forced
to land another plane in waters off the island of Lana`i when a
malfunctioning fuel gauge reported more fuel than was actually on board.
Strickland was not injured.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: STATE OWES OHA $200 MILLION, JUDGE RULES
Under a 1990 law, the Office Hawaiian Affairs is entitled to 20 percent of
all revenues generated on most ceded Native Hawaiian lands. Under a ruling
yesterday in a federal court, OHA is therefore entitled to the same share of
money made from rent at certain public housing projects, sales at Duty Free
stores at the airport and in Waikiki and payments collected at Hilo Hospital
on the Big Island. If the ruling stands, the state may end up owing $200
million to OHA. "That's very satisfying," said Clayton Hee, OHA chair.
"Revenues which by law are entitlements to Native Hawaiians now must be
accounted for by the state, and be paid for the betterment of the conditions
of Native Hawaiians." The case will now go to trial to determine exactly how
much is owed. In his ruling, Heely also determined that the state violated
rules governing the use of money made at the airport, which by law can only
be used for airport operations. That may mean the state will have to pay an
additional 20 percent of airport revenues back to the federal fund. Gov. Ben
Cayetano said yesterday's ruling will definitely be appealed. "Clearly what
it means is we're either going to have to find more revenue or the cost of
providing these services will just go up," Cayetano said. "It will be a
burden on everyone else." He pointed out that if state laws requires airport
money to go to OHA, they violate federal law. The governor put some of the
blame for the predicament on the state Senate, which he said failed to take
decisive action on clarifying the law. The state already paid OHA $135
million in 1993 for revenues generated on other ceded properties between 1981
and 1990; OHA may also file to collect on money collected since.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: TEEN PULLS MAN FROM HIGH-RISE FIRE
Residents of the Kahala Tower Apartments discovered that one of the units in
their building was on fire by watching traffic on the freeway. Cars driving
along the H-1 freeway slowed and some stopped as drivers saw smoke billowing
from the building looming nearby. The burning apartment belonged to 79-year-
old Henry Mortara, who first tried to put the fire out himself. He said he
found his bedroom filled with smoke and the blankets on his bed in flames.
"I've been suffering from vertigo for several months -- by the time I got my
cane and tried to move around I couldn't go very fast," Mortara said today.
"Trying to get buckets of water, I didn't get very far. Finally I decided to
make my way out to the lanai." Just as Mortara was beginning to make his way
through the smoke-filled living room, his 17-year-old neighbor pulled him to
safety. Conrad Takenami, who lived in the apartment directly above Mortara's,
shuns the title of hero. "The place was covered with smoke, so I just pulled
Henry out," Takenami recalled. "I was first scared because when I saw his
color he was all black." Mortara remains in good condition today in Straub
Hospital. Mortara said he used to smoke, but after yesterday's scare he will
quite cold turkey. Fire investigators have not determined the cause of the
fire, but estimate damage near $100,000. His wife, Connie Mortara, told
reporters that her initial terror upon hearing the news didn't last too long.
"I walked in the emergency room [and] he's sitting there kind of dusty,
joking with a lovely nurse," she said. "I knew he was fine -- that's Henry."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: CITY COUNCIL DOES THE SHUFFLE
With a few grumbles and gritted teeth, three Honolulu City Council members
yesterday called in friends and movers to relocate their offices a few steps
to their new places in City Hall. Council Chair John DeSoto ordered
councilman Andy Mirikitani to move into the office of councilman Steve
Holmes, who in turn moved into the office of Rene Mansho, who would then take
Mirikitani's original spot. DeSoto said the office shuffle is the best
solution he could come up with to ease tensions between Colleen Sakai, his
chief aide, and Mirikitani. The move puts Mirikitani in the furthest office
from Sakai's -- an increase in distance of about 20 feet. "They don't want
movement, I don't want movement," DeSoto conceded yesterday. "But I had to do
it to ensure the safety of a female employee." Sakai filed a police report
last month claiming she was verbally attacked by Mirikitani. The charge
prompted DeSoto to initially order Mirikitani to move to the City Hall
Watchtower, which Mirikitani refused and threatened to counter with a
lawsuit. Instead, Mirikitani, DeSoto and Sakai agreed to mediation. Those
talks broke down last week, leaving many concerned over the estimated $2,400
price tag. DeSoto, however, said it was worth it. "$175 an hour is just
peanuts compared to what the city might have been sued [for by Sakai] if I
didn't do anything about it," he said. Councilman Rene Mansho tried to make
the move as painless as possible. "I'm hoping to be positive coming out of
this," she said. Councilman Steve Holmes was less than pleased. "I certainly
did not want Rene Mansho's office," he said. "If we hadn't had a need to put
Andy in my office, we wouldn't have been moving."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
CANADIAN visitors were central to a 4.4 percent increase in visitors to
Hawai`i seen in the first four months of this year, the Hawai`i Visitors
Bureau reported this week. Tourists from Canada were up 27 percent compared
to the same period in 1995, a large increase that countered a drop in the
number of Asian visitors. Despite an increase in the number of visitors from
Japan, travelers from the East were down overall because of huge drops in
figures from Korea and the Philippines. Thanks to recent increases in the
number of available airline seats coming into the islands, the HVB is hopeful
about the rest of the summer despite competition from the Olympics...
ALANA Dung will begin an intensive series of chemotherapy and radiation
treatments tomorrow, as her bone marrow transplant operation -- scheduled for
next Wednesday -- draws near. The 2-year-old leukemia patient has already
undergone several low-level treatments to clear diseases and prevent other
complications. The next few treatments are much more intense, required to
destroy cancerous marrow before she's able to receive new marrow. Once the
high-dose treatments begin, there will be no going back for the Nu`uanu girl.
She is in satisfactory condition and reportedly in good spirits tonight at
the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle...
KEIKO Bonk, chair of the Hawai`i County Council, announced today that she
will be running for Big Island Mayor as a member of the Green Party. Bonk
hopes to unseat Mayor Steve Yamashiro, who said he plans to run for re-
election. Currently, there are three democratic candidates, one republican
and one non-partisan who have filed papers to run for mayor...
CORRECTIONS: The headline in a story in yesterday's edition of Ka `Upena
Kukui was incorrect, although the article was accurate. The headline should
have read "alcohol related traffic deaths hit 49 percent." Also, the Sierra
Club Legal Defense Fund is not working with the Friends of the Red Road. The
defense fund's involvement was wrongly reported in the Jun. 28 edition.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 85/73, Kaua`i 83/71, Moloka`i 84/72, Maui 86/71, Hilo 84/69
CASTS: Sunny with isolated rains; surf on most shores to peak at 3 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 1:37 p.m.; Low 8:43 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Monday, July 8, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: GROUPS PUSH HAWAII BID FOR USS MISSOURI
Honolulu is among three American cities hoping to be the final home port of a
World War II battleship, its presence likely bringing $9 million a year in
tourism alone to the local economy. The Navy is expected to decide this
summer whether San Francisco, Bremerton, Wash. or Pearl Harbor will get the
USS Missouri, the ship on which the Japanese emperor formally surrendered to
the U.S. more than half a century ago. The USS Missouri Memorial Association,
a Hawai`i-based group of veterans and retired military officers, last month
unveiled its master plan for the ship's place in the islands. Ed Carter, head
of the association, said the group has lined up over $6 million in donations
and private loans to build a memorial park for the Missouri. The facility,
which would feature a museum, visitors' center and other exhibits, would also
touch on the history of the USS Arizona and the USS Bowfin. Its construction
is expected to cost between $15 and $25 million. With the pivotal role Hawaii
plays in America's military past, Carter said, the Navy couldn't pick a
better home for the Missouri. Its presence would make Hawaii's "Battleship
Row" an even more complete picture of the Navy's efforts during World War II,
he said, which was set off by Japan's Dec. 7, 1941 bombing of Pearl Harbor.
U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye issued a statement last week supporting Hawaii's bid,
saying the USS Missouri belongs alongside the memorial for the sunken USS
Arizona. "The two together represent the beginning and the end of World War
II," he said. "Hawaii is the ideal location for this majestic ship."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: RENTAL CAR CLAIMS TANGLED BY FEDERAL COURT
The burden of tracking down the driver of a rental car involved in an
accident now falls on the shoulders of the other parties involved rather than
on the rental car company. Under a recent ruling by federal judge David Ezra,
rental agencies were released from much of their accountability in accidents
involving their vehicles. For residents of Hawai`i, the change means having
to find visitors from other states or even countries on their own in order to
seek damages or injury claims. Local attorneys who specialize in accident
litigation say Japanese laws in particular create major barriers to
recovering costs. Although the federal ruling would not necessarily supersede
state laws that hold rental car companies responsible for finding drivers,
proposals that would enact them failed to pass the Legislature last session.
Insurers of rental agencies say the ruling was justified, the industry having
long backed holding drivers at fault. However others charge shift isn't
practical. Wayne Metcalf, state insurance commissioner, said last week that
rental car companies have far greater resources to expend on finding its out-
of-state customers than the average Hawai`i motorist. The Honolulu police
department says it hasn't compiled specific records on the number of
accidents that involve rental cars. An appeal of the ruling has already been
filed.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: PLANTS MUST BE KILLED TO STOP VIRUS, STATE SAYS
Every three days, state agriculture officials say, a new virus infection is
discovered in a banana plant somewhere on the Big Island. So far, the "banana
bunchy-top virus" -- spread primarily by aphids -- has been found at nearly
100 spots in Hawai`i County, forcing officials and residents to kill well
over 500 infected plants. The swiftly spreading plant pandemic has prompted
the state to declare an outright war against the virus, which poses a serious
threat to the Big Island's $5 million a year banana crops. This week, the
agriculture department has called upon the residents of Kailua-Kona to
inspect their banana plants for tell-tale signs of the virus: white dust
under leaves, shorter and stiffer leaves and an absence of bananas. If they
find infected plants, state officials say, they should call the state and
leave the extermination to them. Agriculture division head Wayne Kobayashi
told the _Honolulu Advertiser_ that a quarantine of banana plant exports from
the West Hawaii district is in the works, on top of an existing ban on plants
being sent to any other island from O`ahu. Until last year, the virus was
confined to Honolulu. The first outbreak on the Big Island was reported in
August. The virus is believed to be part of the reason Oahu's banana crops
have dropped by nearly 30 percent in under seven years, Kobayashi said.
Neighborhoods under alert include Sea View, Kilohana and Hualalai Road.
Hawaii County residents should call 933-4447.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: ALCOHOL-LINKED TRAFFIC DEATHS UP 49 PERCENT
Hawai`i ranks eighth in the nation in alcohol-related road fatalities,
according to a report recently released by the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration. Drinking was involved in 49.1 percent of all traffic
deaths last year, an increase of 0.7 percent since 1994. According to the
local chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, the figure represents the 64
people who have died as either passengers or pedestrians on Hawaii's streets.
Maui County alone saw alcohol-related traffic fatalities rise to 44 percent
from 33 percent in 1994, city officials report. Part of that increase might
be attributed to the reduction in the number of police roadblocks used to
catch drunk-drivers, officials say. The national average was 41.4 percent.
Although island-wide statistics haven't surpassed the record high of 55
percent set in 1993 -- placing Hawai`i fourth in the U.S. -- it is indicative
of a rising trend across the country. Last year's U.S. average is the first
time it has gone up for over 10 years.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
WAIMEA Falls Park and Sea Life Park have been unable to keep up with payments
for loans granted in 1989, leading Bank of Hawai`i to file foreclosure orders
against their owner, Attractions Hawai`i, on Friday. The $12 million was used
to renovate facilities at both parks, but a major downturn in tourism --
coupled with new restrictions on tour package wholesalers and a jump in
competition -- caused attendance at the parks to drop considerably.
Attractions Hawai`i had been freed of its payment obligations since last
February, but could not allow the hiatus to continue. The company said it is
preparing to sell the parks to a group of investors...
CITY Council Chairman John DeSoto may have spoken too soon in offering to pay
for half the cost of mediation services recently rendered by retired judge
Patrick Yim. DeSoto had intended to pay a portion of the estimated $2,500
bill with money from his campaign fund. However, state Campaign Spending
Commission head Bob Watada said last week that use of campaign funds is
limited to regular and essential expenses related to county jobs. The
mediation effort to resolve a dispute between DeSoto, councilman Andy
Mirikitani and DeSoto's chief aide ended without an agreement last week...
POWER companies on Maui and the Big Island will introduce a new program that
would encourage the use of alternative energy sources. Under the Hawaiian
Electric Co. proposal, the company would give homeowners an $800 rebate for
installing a solar water heater. Added to the state's current 35 percent tax
credit, residents should find themselves paying for only half the final price
tag. Developed from suggestions from the public and environmental groups,
details for the neighbor island program are expected to be released this
week. A similar plan is already weeks from implementation on O`ahu...
TIGHTER state laws, a plethora of large public shows and more than a few
downpours kept fires to a minimum during Independence Day observances this
year. Although fires were reported statewide, including a brush fire in Kihei
on Maui, there were fewer than usual for the fireworks filled federal
holiday. While fire crews had a moderately busy night, Honolulu police had
their hands full managing the traffic created by a heavily promoted fireworks
show and live concert at Ala Moana shopping center. Over 10,000 people came
to see the aerial display, filling the parking lot of Ala Moana Beach Park...
AFTER intensive research and a number of delays, the names listed on a series
of memorial plaques at the Arizona Memorial were corrected last week in a
ceremony at the Arizona Memorial Visitors Center. The names of military
personnel that died in the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor are listed on 34
porcelain plaques at the center's "Remembrance" exhibit. Several errors were
discovered over the years, from misspelled and missing names to names of
people who were still alive. Among the names added is Pvt. Torao Migita, who
was "killed in downtown Honolulu by 'friendly fire.'"
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 88/74, Kaua`i 84/74, Moloka`i 85/71, Maui 87/72, Hilo 85/70
CASTS: Some showers, trades to 25MPH; East Shore surf to 3 feet.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High 12:49 p.m.; Low 7:44 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Wednesday, July 3, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: FEDS TO SHUT DOWN ANTENNA, NO H-3 CAGE
The Omega Radio Transmitter Station in Haiku Valley -- along with eight other
outposts worldwide -- will be shut down next year, federal weather officials
announced yesterday. "To keep the stations open would cost something like $8
million a year," said Julian Wright, a federal meteorology spokesman.
"There's no $8 million anywhere in the federal government to do that." As a
result, state transportation officials say, a controversial electromagnetic
shield will no longer need to be installed. "There's no need to put the cage
over the freeway," Wright confirmed, "assuming they won't be driving under it
before September 1997." Marilyn Kaji, transportation department spokeswoman,
said the freeway is scheduled to open in October. "The timing is excellent
for us," she said. Kaji said it would have cost taxpayers $2.5 million to put
a Faraday Shield -- a cage of steel poles and heavy-gauge wire -- over the
one-mile stretch of the H-3 that passes nearest the Omega station. "The
shield would have basically created a shield between the antennae and the
user of the highway and prevented anything from going through that would be a
danger to an individual," Kaji said. Several hundred steel frames and over 25
miles of cable were already purchased to put it up. The shield was opposed by
several community groups, some who refute the alleged dangers of
electromagnetic fields and many who were concerned that the shield would
obstruct the scenic view of the Ko`olau mountains. With its closure, the
Omega station's towering antenna is expected to be dismantled. Carolyn
Heinrich of the Outdoor Circle said today she is pleased motorists on the H-3
would be spared the "visual pollution" of both the shield and the antenna.
Federal weather researchers say their work will not be adversely affected by
the closure of the navigational transmitters, as more and more science
agencies are now depending on satellite information instead.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: VERDICTS COME FOR THREE IN GANG DEATH CASE
All three teenagers involved in the June 1995 beating death of 17-year-old
Misiona Faumuina face several years in prison, but none for murder. A Circuit
Court jury today found Marc Umi, 17, guilty of manslaughter. His co-
defendants, 17-year-old Emanuela Tunoa and 18-year-old Ricky Lealaitafea,
were both convicted for second-degree assault. The family of the victim was
outraged. "My brother's gone -- he's dead. He cannot defend himself," said
Sapena Faumuina. "These boys got away easy with this." Prosecuting attorney
Christopher Young said he was surprised at the ruling. "The evidence was
clear that [Faumuina] was hit at least 52 times and we cannot understand why
this jury would not find them guilty as charged." Defense attorneys, however,
were satisfied. "We're very happy with the result," said Nelson Goo,
Lealaitafea's attorney. "We felt that it was not a murder case all along."
All three defendants were in the same gang as Faumuina, but Faumuina had
asked to leave the group. The defendants punched and kicked Faumuina as part
of a ritual known as "jumping out." During the trial, Tunoa and Lealaitafea
said the beating was Umi's idea. "All of the witnesses shaded their testimony
towards making [Umi] look more guilty than the others, said Umi's attorney
Timothy Ho "Marc himself got on the stand and took the brunt of the blame." A
tearful Lea Umi told reporters that she hoped her son's conviction would
serve as a warning to other youths to stay away from gangs. The three will be
sentenced in September. Umi faces a maximum prison sentence of 10 years,
Tunoa and Lealaitafea up to five years.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: ASSORTMENT OF LAWS SIGNED INTO LAW
Acting Governor Mazie Hirono today approved 14 bills concerning issues
ranging from drug sentencing to child care. Gov. Ben Cayetano is currently in
the Philippines, representing Pres. Clinton in American-Philippines
Friendship Day observances scheduled for July 4. One law enacted today makes
it illegal for lunch wagons an