View List of the Then Polynesian Collection at the Phoenix Library
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
09 1Bkrv.Donaghy.Pdf
book reviews 159 References Bickerton, Derek, and William H. Wilson. 1987. “Pidgin Hawaiian.” In Pidgin and Creole Lan- guages: Essays in Memory of John E. Reinecke, edited by Glenn G. Gilbert. Honolulu: Uni- versity of Hawai‘i Press. Drechsel, Emanuel J. 2014. Language Contact in the Early Colonial Pacific: Maritime Polynesian Pidgin before Pidgin English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Massam, Diane. 2000. “VSO and VOS: Aspects of Niuean Word Order.” In The Syntax of Verb Initial Languages, 97–117. Edited by Andrew Carnie and Eithne Guilfoyle. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Roberts, [S.] J. M. 1995. “Pidgin Hawaiian: A Sociohistorical Study.” Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 10: 1–56. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing. Romaine, Suzanne. 1988. Pidgin and Creole Languages. London: Longman. Hawaiian Music and Musicians (Ka Mele Hawai‘i A Me Ka Po‘e Mele): An Encyclopedic History, Second Edition. Edited by Dr. George S. Kanahele, revised and updated by John Berger. Honolulu: Mutual Publishing, 2012. xlix + 926 pp. Illus- trated. Appendix. Addendum. Index. $35.00 paper ‘Ōlelo Hō‘ulu‘ulu / Summary Ua puka maila ke pa‘i mua ‘ana o Hawaiian Music and Musicians ma ka MH 1979. ‘O ka hua ia o ka noi‘i lō‘ihi ma nā makahiki he nui na ke Kauka George S. Kanahele, ko The Hawaiian Music Foundation, a me nā kānaka ‘ē a‘e ho‘i he lehulehu. Ma ia puke nō i noelo piha mua ‘ia ai ka puolo Hawai‘i, me ka mana‘o, na ia puke nō e ho‘olako mai i ka nele o ka ‘ike pa‘a e pili ana i ka puolo Hawai‘i, kona mo‘olelo, kona mohala ‘ana a‘e, nā mea ho‘okani a pu‘ukani kaulana, a me nā kānaka kāko‘o pa‘a ma hope ona. -
Pacific Islands Program
/ '", ... it PACIFIC ISLANDS PROGRAM ! University of Hawaii j Miscellaneous Work Papers 1974:1 . BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HAWAIIAN LANGUAGE MATERIALS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII, MANOA CAMPUS Second Printing, 1979 Photocopy, Summer 1986 ,i ~ Foreword Each year the Pacific Islands Program plans to duplicate inexpensively a few work papers whose contents appear to justify a wider distribution than that of classroom contact or intra-University circulation. For the most part, they will consist of student papers submitted in academic courses and which, in their respective ways, represent a contribution to existing knowledge of the Pacific. Their subjects will be as varied as is the multi-disciplinary interests of the Program and the wealth of cooperation received from the many Pacific-interested members of the University faculty and the cooperating com munity. Pacific Islands Program Room 5, George Hall Annex 8 University of Hawaii • PRELIMINARY / BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HAWAIIAN LANGUAGE MATERIALS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII, MANOA CAMPUS Compiled by Nancy Jane Morris Verna H. F. Young Kehau Kahapea Velda Yamanaka , . • Revised 1974 Second Printing, 1979 PREFACE The Hawaiian Collection of the University of Hawaii Library is perhaps the world's largest, numbering more than 50,000 volumes. As students of the Hawaiian language, we have a particular interest in the Hawaiian language texts in the Collection. Up to now, however, there has been no single master list or file through which to gain access to all the Hawaiian language materials. This is an attempt to provide such list. We culled the bibliographical information from the Hawaiian Collection Catalog and the Library she1flists. We attempted to gather together all available materials in the Hawaiian language, on all subjects, whether imprinted on paper or microfilm, on tape or phonodisc. -
Hawai'ian Songs, Version 2.1.6
Hawai’ian Songs 2.1.6 May 2020 Revision H2.1.6 Revision H2.1.6 Hawaiian Songs Title Page Days of My Youth H44 Aloha `Oe H01 I’ll Remember You H45 A Maile Lei for Your Hair H02 Kawena H46 Blue Hawaiian Moonlight H03 Opihi Man H47 Hawaii Calls H04 Somewhere Over the Rainbow H48 Hawaii Pono’i H05 Surfin’ Usa H49 Hawaiian War Chant H06 To You Sweetheart Aloha H50 Hawaiian Wedding Song H07 You Ku’uipo H51 He Aloha Mele H08 Hawai’ian Sup’paman H52 Holoholo Ka’a H09 Lover of Mine H53 Hukilau H10 E Huli Makou H54 I Ali’i No O’e H11 Molokai Slide H55 Island Style H12 Fish and Poi H56 Kalapana way H13 Take Me Home Country Road H57 Kipahulu H14 Hanalei Moon H58 Ku’u Home O Kahalu’u H15 Anthem to Musubi H59 Lahainaluna H16 Mahalo Nui H60 Little Brown Gal H17 Hawaiian Eyes H61 Little Grass Shack H18 Hula Heaven H62 Lovely Hula Hands H19 I Wonder Where My Little Hula H63 One Paddle, Two Paddle H20 Girl Has Gone Pakala H21 May Day is Lei Day H64 Pearly Shells H22 Pidgin English Hula H65 Pearly Shells / Ka’ahupahau H23 Ukulele Lady H66 Pipi Kiwi Nui H24 Hawaii H67 Pu’a Mana H25 Honolulu City Lights H68 Pu’a Mana/Seabreeze H26 Honolulu Lulu H69 Princess Pu-pu-lay H27 Manuela Boy H70 Quicksilver Morning H28 Margarita H71 Red Sails in the Sunset H29 My Hula Girl H72 Song of Old Hawaii H30 North Shore Serenade H73 Sweet Singing Bamboo H31 On the Beach at Waikiki H74 Tiny Bubbles H32 Someone to Lava H75 Waimanalo Blues H33 Sweet Lady of Waihole H76 White Sandy Beach of Hawaii H34 Waikiki H77 Keep Your Eyes on the Hands H35 I Miss You My Hawaii H36 Sweet and Slow H37 Ten Feet Away H38 Love and Honesty H39 Poli’ahu H40 Beautiful Kaua’i H41 Blue Hawaii H43 Revision H2.1.6 Pronouncing words in Hawaiian: Hawai'i is also the only state to have two official languages, Hawaiian and English. -
The Pleasures and Rewards of Hawaiian Music for an 'Outsider'
12 Living in Hawai‘i: The Pleasures and Rewards of Hawaiian Music for an ‘Outsider’ Ethnomusicologist Ricardo D . Trimillos Foreword I first met Stephen Wild at the 1976 Society for Ethnomusicology meeting in Philadelphia. Since that time we have enjoyed four decades as session- hopping colleagues and pub-crawling mates. In regard to the former, most memorable was the 1987 International Council for Traditional Music meeting in Berlin, where, appropriate to our honoree, one of the conference themes was ‘Ethnomusicology at Home’. It is this aspect of Stephen’s service that I celebrate in my modest effort for this festschrift. In 2006, the journal Ethnomusicology produced its ‘50th Anniversary Commemorative Issue’, which contained the essay ‘Ethnomusicology Down Under: A Distinctive Voice in the Antipodes?’ (Wild 2006). It was an informative and at times prescriptive account of the trajectory for ethnomusicology in Australia. I found the essay a most engaging exercise in personal positioning by an author within a historical narrative, one in which personality and persona were very much in evidence. Inspired by the spirit of that essay and emboldened by its novel approach, I share 335 A DISTINCTIVE VOICE IN ThE ANTIPODES observations about ‘doing ethnomusicology’ where I live—in Honolulu, Hawai‘i. This brief and personal account deliberately draws parallels with our honoree’s experiences and activities during a long career in his ‘homeplace’ (Cuba and Hummon 1993). The pleasures of Hawaiian music in California My first encounters with Hawaiian music were not in Hawai‘i but in San Jose,1 California, locale for the first two decades of my life. -
Download the 2016 Voa Tour Booklet
Voices Aloha Montréal to Manhattan 4–17 June 16 Voices Aloha WELCOME Welcome to the second biennial tour of the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa’s Voices of Aloha, an ensemble of current students and alumni of the University’s Chamber Singers, our school’s most selective choral ensemble. Singers in this group are members of some of Honolulu’s most prominent choirs, including: St. Andrew’s Cathedral Choir, the Lutheran Church of Honolulu Choir, Hawai‘i Opera Theatre chorus, Karol’s Karolers, Nā Wai Chamber Choir, O‘ahu Choral Society, and others. We are honored to sing for you today and hope to meet you after the performance. Aloha! 2015–2016 MINI-TOUR Students in the UH Chamber Singers began the summer tour with a local, O‘ahu ‘mini- tour’ during the 2015–16 academic year. In addition to curricular concerts and on-campus events, they visited high schools and festivals to prepare for our trip to the Northeast. HI-ACDA Round-Up 26 September ’15 Kūpuna Concerts (for our elders) 24 January ’16 Kamehameha High School 2 October E Hīmeni Kākou Festival 19–20 February ‘Iolani School 4 November Concert with Utah Valley University 18 March Kapōlei Middle & High Schools 2 December Mililani High School 15 April Sacred Hearts Academy 4 December Kapōlei High Choral Festival 22 April 2016 TOUR: MONTRÉAL TO MANHATTAN Voices of Aloha forms biennially from current students and alumni of the UH Chamber Singers ensemble. This 2016 edition began rehearsals in wintertime to learn the program you hear today. The 13-day tour includes free time and tourist activities alongside a busy schedule of performances, clinics, and workshops. -
KIKA News -May 2015
Home - Calendar - School events - ʻOhana searches - Place activities - Ku Ka Palia - Mai poina - Music Scene KHB notes - Mahalo piha - Community T H E K A P A L A K I K O N E W S L E T T E R THE KAPALAKIKO NEWSLETTER 330 LELAND AVENUE, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, 94134-2737 TELEPHONE (415) 468-7125 EMAIL: [email protected]; WEB SITE: www.kapalakiko.org A Quarterly Newsletter 2015 #2 THE ALOHA SPIRIT IS NOT FOR US TO OWN, BUT IS SOMETHING TO BE SHARED THE KAPALAKIKO NEWSLETTER, is the publication arm of Kapalakiko I Ke Aloha; Kapalakiko Music, Art & Craft Productions, The Kapalakiko Hawaiian Band, the Kapalakiko Hawaiian Music Workshop, and Nā Menehune O Kapalakiko. It is published in February, May, August, and November and deadlines are the 1st day of the preceding month. If you want publicity for public Hawaiian events anywhere in the world, please send full information (date, time, place - including street address, cost, contact person and phone number, etc.) as early as possible for maximum exposure. Posting conditions can be found in our Community section and our website www.kapalakiko.org under the tab Newsletter. EDITOR/WRITER; Saichi Kawahara, CIRCULATION: Evelyn Kawahara, COMPUTERS: George Bobias, WEBSITE: Randee Chin. Evelyn & Saichi Kawahara are the sole representatives of this newsletter. PLEASE READ THIS Notification of new issues of this newsletter are sent to our followers via email. Please contact us by email for any of the following reasons: • To request a new subscription to our newsletter • If you are a current subscriber and need to change your contact information • To submit questions and/or comments Please be sure to include the following information in your message: • First and Last Name • Address, City, State, Zip, • Phone/Mobile number • Email address. -
The Brothers Cazimero Hawaiian Hula Eyes Mp3, Flac, Wma
The Brothers Cazimero Hawaiian Hula Eyes mp3, flac, wma DOWNLOAD LINKS (Clickable) Genre: Folk, World, & Country Album: Hawaiian Hula Eyes Country: US Released: 1982 Style: Pacific MP3 version RAR size: 1777 mb FLAC version RAR size: 1891 mb WMA version RAR size: 1149 mb Rating: 4.2 Votes: 496 Other Formats: ADX AA TTA RA DXD MOD MPC Tracklist Hide Credits Hawaiian Hula Eyes A1 Written-By – Johnny Harbottle, Randy Oness Kapilimehana A2 Written-By – C. Manu Boyd* Ka Iwa Hulu Ena Kii Makalei A3 Written-By – Mapuana De Silva Kuwiliwili Iho Au A4 Written-By – Henry Berger Mai Lohilohi Mai Oe A5 Written-By – Lena Machado A6 Opae E Hawaiian Spirits Live Again B1 Written-By – Jon Osorio He Beauty Wale Oe B2 Written-By – J. Kauka* Mapuna Ka Hala O Kailua B3 Written-By – Kihei De Silva Mahina Hoku B4 Written-By – Lillian Awa Ka Ui E B5 Written-By – E. Kaipo Hale* Ka Manu B6 Written-By – Alice Namakelua Credits Mastered By – John Golden Photography By – Carl Shaneff Producer – Jon De Mello Production Manager – Leah Bernstein Notes The Brothers Cazimero LPs generally have a separate liner notes sheet inside the album cover. Unfortunately, the compiler's copy is missing the liner notes. Other versions Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year The Brothers Hawaiian Hula The Mountain MACD 1017 MACD 1017 US Unknown Cazimero Eyes (CD, Album) Apple Company Related Music albums to Hawaiian Hula Eyes by The Brothers Cazimero The Royal Hawaiian Guitars With The Merry Melody Singers - Hawaiian Golden Hits Palani Vaughan - Hawaiian Love Songs Hula Hawaiian Quartett - Dort In Hawaii George De Fretes And His Royal Hawaiian Minstrels - The Home Recordings Vol. -
Statement of JOHN DE FRIES Hawai'i Tourism Authority Before the SENATE COMMITTEE on ENERGY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, and TOURISM
Statement of JOHN DE FRIES Hawai‘i Tourism Authority before the SENATE COMMITTEE ON ENERGY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM Monday, February 8, 2021 3:00 PM State Capitol, Conference Room #224 In consideration of SENATE BILL NO. 916 RELATING TO TAXATION Chair Wakai, Vice Chair Misalucha, and members of the Committee on Energy, Economic Development, and Tourism: the Hawai‘i Tourism Authority (HTA) supports Senate Bill 916, which specifies that the $1,000,000 of Transient Accommodations Tax revenues currently allocated to operate a Hawaiian center and the Museum of Hawaiian Music and Dance may also be used to plan, design, and construct these facilities at an unspecified location. SB 916 is needed as we move forward to create the new Museum of Hawaiian Music and Dance. This measure will allow the funds to be utilized both for operations and development of the center. Currently, the law does not provide clear guidance as to how the funds may be utilized. The term “operations,” as found in the current statute, appears to restrict the use of the funds to the day-to- day activities of a center. Since this will be a new endeavor, we believe that allowing the funds to also be used for the planning, design, and construction will encourage more interest as we move forward in the Request for Proposal (RFP) process. It is for these reasons that HTA supports SB 916. We appreciate this opportunity to provide testimony. Managed by the Festival Companies 2201 Kalākaua Avenue, Suite A500 Honolulu, Hawaiʽi 96815 • (808) 931-3100 • RoyalHawaiianCenter.com TO: Hon. -
Share Your Thoughts with PBS Hawaii
HENRY LIVE An evening with Marchone of 8Hawaii’s | 8PM favorite sons, Henry Kapono MARCH 2009 As our PBS HawaiiLeslie board chairman, Wilcox, Neil Presidentand care in training& CEO about 20 paid college In Hawaii, it’s about our commitment to Hannahs, sometimes Alohareminds board Kakou and students in television production. each other and to the whole. And to future staff in considering what’s best: “It’s a Our small size and important educa- generations. k akou - thing.” tional mission mean that we perform as a Mahalo for being one of these caring K akou - , of course, refers to the Hawaiian team, with each member prepared to shift people. It is indeed a k akou - thing. value of inclusiveness. It’s about all of us. focus as needed. We all work shoulder to We feel privileged to steward resources that serve the entire community in these most isolated islands in the world. Mahalo, Neil’s paying job is managing agricul- shoulder while still handling our primary tural lands for the Kamehameha Schools, responsibilities. stewarding resources in an island state. He We feel privileged to steward resources cares about doing the right thing now and that serve the entire community in these for future generations. most isolated islands in the world. I see k akou - at work every day at Hawaii’s PBS Hawaii relies on viewer support in only public television station. addition to grants, corporate underwriting It may surprise you to learn that PBS and other funding. Many people, working Hawaii has only 30 staffers, considerably together across our island chain and on less than the workforce of the local (com- the continent, elevate the quality of life in mercial) TV network affiliates. -
October-2010.Pdf
By Genie Kincaid Outrigger's ho'e wa·a members rolled Masters Front: Genie Kincaid, Paula out of the State Championships into distance Crabb, Lisa Livington, Kisi Haine. racing with the 43rd Annual Duke Ka Back: Linda Fernandez, Laurie hanamoku Race from Lanikai to Waikiki on Lawson, Li sa Stringer, Diana August 15. Team Primo, representing Wailea Allen. Not pictured: Tana Feeley. Canoe Club of Maui, topped the 49 crews entered in the 26-mile race with a time of 2:54. Team Primo was last year's runner-up to the Tahitians who dominate the Molokai Hoe. The runners-up followed about a half minute later: Hui Lanakila (2:58.24), Lanikai (3:00.08), Team Livestrong (3:00.44) and in fifth, Outrigger Canoe Club (3:04.15). "We ace Blue got spanked, " Jimmy Austin conceded. Out Kneeling: Michele St. John, Nand rigger Masters men took the Masters Divi Gandy, Stephanie DeWeese, sion in 3:13:30, while another OCC men's Standing: Bonnie Rice, Nani Blake, Kiki Fordham, Anna crew won the Koa Division in 3:26:01. Grune, Maggie Parks, Dianne Es· There are just a handful of distance ecson, Shawn Moynahan, Aloha races - two men's and two women's events - Yoza, Shannon Ferris. culminating in the Na Wahine 0 Ke Kai and Molokai Hoe, the women's and men's ver sions of the 41-mile Molokai-to-Oahu race. On August 22, the wahine raced the same course in Outrigger's Dad Center Race. Hawaiian Kanaktion, a nucleus of former Hui Lanakila paddlers, finished first in a time of 3:11.35, edging Waiki ki Beach Boys (3:12.25) ace Red and five-time defending Na Wahine 0 Ke Traci Phillips, Donna Kahakui, Malia Kamisugi·Pietsch, Anella Kai champion, Team Bradley of Hawaiian Borges, Mary Smolenski, Jane Canoe Club (3:14.04). -
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 262 131 UD 024 468 TITLE Hawaiian
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 262 131 UD 024 468 TITLE Hawaiian Studies Curriculum Guide. Grade 3. INSTITUTION Hawaii State Dept. of Education, Honolulu. Office of Instructional Services. PUB DATE Jan 85 NOTE 517p.; For the Curriculum Guides for Grades K-1, 2, and 4, see UD 024 466-467, and ED 255 597. PUB TYPE Guides - Classroom Use - Guides (For Teachers) (052) EDRS PRICE MF02/PC21 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Cultural Awareness; *Cultural Education; Elementary Education; *Environmental Education; Geography; *Grade 3; *Hawaiian; Hawaiians; Instructional Materials; *Learning Activities; Pacific Americans IDENTIFIERS *Hawaii ABSTRACT This curriculum guide suggests activities and educational experiences within a Hawaiian cultural context for Grade 3 students in Hawaiian schools. First, an introduction discussesthe contents of the guide; the relationship of classroom teacher and the kupuna (Hawaiian-speaking elder); the identification and scheduling of Kupunas; and how to use the guide. The remainder of thetext is divided into two major units. Each is preceded byan overview which outlines the subject areas into which Hawaiian Studies instructionis integrated; the emphases or major lesson topics takenup within each subject area; the learning objectives addressed by the instructional activities; and a key to the unit's appendices, which provide cultural information to supplement the activities. Unit I focuseson the location of Hawaii as one of the many groups of islands in the Pacific Ocean. The learning activities suggestedare intended to teach children about place names, flora and fauna,songs, and historical facts about their community, so that they learnto formulate generalizations about location, adaptation, utilization, and conservation of their Hawaiian environment. Unit II presents activities which immerse children in the study of diverse urban and rural communities in Hawaii. -
Ohana-2000-09To10-Web.Pdf
lAKE MEAD & BUFFALO SUMMERLI N SUN C ITY lor 1M 1.oa:!1oa GIld HOIII , r , ..... '-,1( ' phd l l ll' "t 7 ..\ ~ () W('st Lakc, M!:'dd Blvd 4(.10 'N. ".II1,l r d A v e ., ( ~<lh<lr<l 1950 V illilge (enter (ir( Ie Y4 10 Ocl \l\lehb Blvd . ~I tilt Htomt loq\ Drwgl & I)('l dllll ) In the Sdhar.l PavilH"11l 10 Y09, Cal J.&oo-a6Hi47 Stun' 4 <; O· ()406 Store 233-971 7 Store 363·4959 Sture 255·2234 Store 8 77·6220 IHOG-IMOIIi.IJ. w,'" A..... r. Ph "rm 'H. y 450· 1 H6 2 I~harm acy 233·9721 Pharmacy 3 6 3·5292 Pharmacy 255·2554 ltI.aY_Ilon!iol!...., · frWr!. I' h a rrnacy 6 77·9 778 " ,s.,.. W,,'II ..... ,_iIMI Phuto 45U· 1 »72 Ph oto 233·9 720 Photo 8 7 0 ·20 2 6 Photo 3(,3·4978 -~"'.-.. City of Las Vegas C ONTENTS •••••••• Cultural & Community Affairs Division Department of Leisure Services presents -f {)ElI5-> 'Bows & 'REBS COACHES LOOK To STELLAR SEASONS ...... •.... .... 20 FE"<T URES SEPTEMBER - I<EPAKEMAPA • O CTOBER - 'OKAKOPA N ATURE'S BE AUTY: RE D RO CK CANYON ..... 12 TH E TEST: I RONMAN T RIATH LON ..... ... 16 Kaau Crater Boys .COMS T AKE GIANT STEP cosponsored with the T o LI NK AOHA & SILVER STATES . .. ... ... 18 Las Vegas Hawaiian Civic Club Friends Er You won't find a more in concert OHANA M AGAZ INE delicious website anywhere. Sept. 23 & 24, 2000 Sept. 23 , T o HIGHLIGHT AJAs IN WW II ....