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Hawai'i State Archives, Geneology #44, Cover Page. Mokuna I Eia Ka
Hawai‘i State Archives, Geneology #44, Cover page. Mokuna I Eia ka lani ke koi pae moku ka lauhulu paoki o ka aina. Hawai‘i State Archives, Geneology #44, page 1 Ka buke kuauhau o na lii a me na kanaka o ka lalani mamuli o ka hanau ana a Kumuhonua. Ka Kane Ka wahine 1 Kumuhonua Haloiho* 2 Ahukai Holehana 3 Kupili Alonainai 4 Kawakupua Heleaeiluna 5 Kawakahiko Kahohaia* 6 Kahikolupa Lukaua 7 Kahikolaikau Kupomakaikaelene* 8 Kahikolaiulu Kanemakaikaelene* 9 Kahikolaihonua Haakoakoaikeaukahonua* 10 Haakoakoalauleia Kaneiakoakanioe 11 Kupo Lanikupo 12 Nahaeikekaua Haneeiluna(Hanuiluna)* 13 Keakenui Laheamanu 14 Kahianahinakiiakea Luahinakii 15 Koluana Hana 16 Lima'na Onoana* 17 Hikuana* Waluana 18 Iwaana Lohanahinakiipapa 19 Welawahilaninui Owe 20 Kahiko Kupulanakehau 21 Wakea Papa He pono kakou e kamailio iki ma keia wahi, no ka mea, mai ka wa o Kumuhonua i hai ia aeneimaluna a hiki i ka wa o Wakoa, aole i hanau he kaikamahine, a i ka noho ana o Wakea ma laua o Papa, alaila e ike auanei kakou ua hanau ka laua keiki he kaikamahine oia hoi o Hoohokukalani, aka ma ka moolelo o keia pae moku hookahi no keia wahine mai ka wa o Kumuhonua mai no a ua kapaia oia o Kauahulihonua, o Papa kahi. A ma keia Hawai‘i State Archives, Geneology #44, page 2 wahi e ike ai kakou ua hanau o Hoohokukalani he wahine o Wakeano nae ke kane. Kane Wahine 1 Wakea Hoohokukalani 2 Haloa Hinamanouluae 3 Waiakalani Huhune 4 Hinanalo Haunuu 5 Nakehili Haulani 6 Wailoa Hikopuanea 7 Kio Kamole 8 Ole Hai Ma keia wahi e kamailio hou kakou no Ole a me Hai * i haiia aela maluna, no ka mea, mai ka wa o Kumuhonua a hiki i ka wa o Ole a me Hai *, aole he wahine–e hookahi noia wahine, o ka wahine no kakou i kamailio pu mai nei ma kela aoao, e waiho iki kakoua mahope aku alaila e hoopiha kakou ma keia i kona kamailio ana. -
Ruth Horie: an Oral History Biography and Feminist Analysis by Valerie
Ruth Horie: An Oral History Biography and Feminist Analysis By Valerie Brett Shaindlin THESIS Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Library and Information Science (MLISc) at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa 2018 Thesis Committee: Dr. Noriko Asato Dr. Vanessa Irvin Dr. Andrew Wertheimer (Chair) Ruth Horie: An Oral History Biography and Feminist Analysis 2 Table of Contents Acknowledgements………………………………………………………………...……..…….....5 A Note on Language…………………………...…………………………..….……………..…....6 Abstract……………………………………………………………………...…………….……....8 PART I: Oral History………………………….…………………....……………..….….….….....9 Family History…………….…....…………………………….....……………….……......9 Youth (1950-1968)……….……………....……………………....….……..……….……26 Childhood……………....………………………….…………...…..…………….26 School Years………..…………………………………..…..…………................35 Undergraduate Education (1968-1979)………….……..…………………………..........43 The Hawaiian Renaissance…………………………………………….………...45 Kahaluʻu Flood (1964) and Family Relocation (1974)……………..…...…...…..48 Employment………………………………………………………….……..……51 Graduate Education and Early Career (1979-1991)...........................................................54 Master’s Degree in Library Studies (1979-1981)……….…………………….....54 Employment at the East-West Center (1981-1986)…....……...…...………….....56 Employment at Bishop Museum (1986-1990).....……..……................……........60 University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa (1991-2012)...................................................................65 Employment at Hamilton -
Hydrologic Soil Groups
AppendixExhibitAppendix A: Hydrologic AB Soil Synthetic Groups Hydrologic for theRainfall United SoilStates Distributions Groups and Rainfall Data Sources Soils are classified into hydrologic soil groups (HSG’s) Disturbed soil profiles to indicate the minimum rate of infiltration obtained for bareThe highest soil after peak prolonged discharges wetting. from Thesmall HSG watersheds’s, which arein the UnitedAs a result States of areurbanization, usually caused the soil by profileintense, may brief be rain- con- A,falls B, that C, and may D, occur are one as distinctelement eventsused in or determining as part of a longersiderably storm. These altered intense and the rainstorms listed group do not classification usually ex- may runofftended curve over anumbers large area (see and chapter intensities 2). For vary the greatly. conve- One commonno longer practice apply. inIn rainfall-runoffthese circumstances, analysis use is tothe develop follow- niencea synthetic of TR-55 rainfall users, distribution exhibit A-1 to uselists in the lieu HSG of actualclassifi- storming events. to determine This distribution HSG according includes to themaximum texture rainfall of the cationintensities of United for the States selected soils. design frequency arranged in a sequencenew surface that soil, is critical provided for thatproducing significant peak compaction runoff. has not occurred (Brakensiek and Rawls 1983). TheSynthetic infiltration raterainfall is the rate distributions at which water enters the soil at the soil surface. It is controlled by surface condi- HSG Soil textures tions.The length HSG ofalso the indicates most intense the transmission rainfall period rate contributing—the rate to the peak runoff rate is related to the time of concen- A Sand, loamy sand, or sandy loam attration which (T thec) for water the watershed.moves within In thea hydrograph soil. -
STATE of HAWAII DEPARTMENT of LAND and NATURAL RESOURCES Land Division Honolulu, Hawaii 96813
STATE OF HAWAII DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES Land Division Honolulu, Hawaii 96813 June 22, 2018 Board of Land and Natural Resources PSF No. 180D-025 State of Hawaii Honolulu, Hawaii Oahu Grant of Perpetual, Non-Exclusive Easement, Issuance of a Construction and Management Right-of-Entry to the City and County of Honolulu for Sewer Line Purposes, Kalihi Kai, Moanalua, Honolulu, Oahu, Tax Map Keys: (1) 1-1-003:003, 004, 138, 204, 205, 206, 207, 212, and 239; (1) 1-2-021:035, 036 and 037. APPLICANT: City and County of Honolulu LEGAL REFERENCE: Sections 17 1-13, -55, and -95, Hawaii Revised Statutes, as amended. LOCATION: Portion of Government lands situated at Kalihi Kai, Moanalua, Honolulu, Oahu, Tax Map Keys: (1) 1-1-003:003, 004, 138 (portion of Moanalua Stream)*, 204, 205, 206, 207, 212, 239; (1) 1-2-021:035, 036 and 037, and portion of Kalihi Stream*, as shown on the attached maps labeled as Exhibit A. *portions of Moanalua Stream and Kalihi Stream are Conservation District Lands. AREA: To be determined, and further subject to the review and approval by the Department of Accounting and General Services, Survey Division. ZONING: State Land Use District: Urban City and County of Honolulu Land Use Ordinance: P-i, P-2, and 1-2. TRUST LAND STATUS: Section 5(b) lands of the Hawaii Admission Act D-3 BLNR —Issue Sewer Page 2 June 22, 2018 Easement to CCH DHHL 30% entitlement lands pursuant to the Hawaii State Constitution: No CURRENT USE STATUS: TMK Agency Pennittee Encumbrances Purposes 1-1-003:003, City & County of EO 4513 Affordable Housing 204, 205, 206, Honolulu Project for Homeless 207,212 Families 1-1-003:004 Division of State EU 3967 Pacific War Memorial Parks Site 1-1-003:138 Unencumbered Moanalua Stream 1-1-003:239 City and County of EU 1838 Keehi Lagoon Beach -______________ Honolulu Park 1-1-021:035 City and County of L0D24090 Non-Exclusive Perpetual Honolulu Easement for Sewer System 1-1-021:035 The Gas Company, L0D28331 Non-Exclusive Perpetual LLC Easement for Gas Lines 1-2-021:036 JSR Equipment, Inc. -
Waipio Acres Kahaluu
Naval Cptr & Telecom Area Mstr Stn S tH Whitmore Village w y 04 8 S y 8 Molli Pond 0 tH Hw Ave) 3 w St re y mo 80 hit W StHwy 99 ( Wahiawa Wahiawa Reservoir Schofield Barracks Military Res Ku Tree Reservoir P Schofield Barracks Mil Res S t H w Schofield Barracks y 8 3 109th Congress of the United States ( Waikane K a m e h a m e h a r H St w a y u ) la a k Military Waik a Military Res Naval Fleet Operation Res Control Center Pacific Waikalani Dr Wheeler AFB Wikao St Wheeler Army Afld StHwy 99 Waipio Acres Kahaluu Kahaluu Pond Military Upper Kipapa Res Military Res Mililani DISTRICT Town Naval Computer and Kaneohe Station H2 Telecommunications Area Master Station Pacific 2 Kaneohe Marine Corps Air Sta Ahuimanu Halekou Pond Heeia Kaluapuhi S Pond t Pond H w y S Nuupia Pond 7 t H Nuupia 5 HONOLULU w 0 Pond ( y K 8 u 3 n 0 Kaneohe Bay ia R d Heeia ) Military Res Waipio S Waikele Br Naval t Magazine Lualualei H StHwy 99 w y ) 8 5 3 6 (K y a w h tH e S k ( i l 0 i 3 H 6 DISTRICT w wy Waikele Naval y StH Ammunition Dpo Naval ) aneohe Bay Dr) 0 (K Res 63 Pearl City wy 1 S tH Naval Res Waimalu Kaneohe d R H1 s Kailua s m e a c e c tr A S l H3 u Village a l v u a p N e Park l Naval S e t a Res H H1 w K y 8 StHwy 93 Camp H M 3 Waipahu Pearl City Naval Sta ) Aiea Smith d R a StHwy 99 H3 u il StHwya 61 (K Waipio Peninsula Naval Res Kaelepulu Pond Halawa Red Hill Naval Res Naval Res East Loch Pearl Harbor Ulumoku Fish Pond StHwy 72 StHwy 93 Middle Loch Maunawili Pearl Harbor StHwy 99 StHwy 63 Honolulu Cg Base Ford Island Naval Res Makalapa Tripler -
Katrina-Ann R. Kapāʻanaokalāokeola (Nākoa) Oliveira
Curriculum Vitae KATRINA-ANN R. KAPĀʻANAOKALĀOKEOLA (NĀKOA) OLIVEIRA University Address: Kawaihuelani Center for Hawaiian Language University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa 2540 Maile Way, Spalding 253 Honolulu, HI 96822 ACADEMIC QUALIFICATIONS Executive Master of Business Administration (Projected Graduation: May 2019) University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI Doctor of Philosophy in Geography (2006) University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI Master of Arts in Geography (1999) University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI Bachelor of Arts in Hawaiian Language (1996) University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI Bachelor of Arts in Hawaiian Studies (1996) University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS Director (a.k.a. Department Chair 2011 - 2016)* Kawaihuelani Center for Hawaiian Language Hawaiʻinuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa *Served as Coordinator of the Hawaiian Language Section of Department of Indo-Pacific Languages and Literature until the formation of Hawaiʻinuiākea in 2017. Served as Interim Director 2007-2011 pre-tenure. Upon receiving tenure in 2011, title changed to Director. Served as Interim Director/Director from 2007-2016. Professor (2017) Kawaihuelani Center for Hawaiian Language Hawaiʻinuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Katrina-Ann R.K. “Kapā” Oliveira Page 2 of 23 Graduate Chair (2016 – present) Kawaihuelani Center for Hawaiian Language Hawaiʻinuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Full Graduate Faculty (2013 -
October 1988
THE LONG BATTLE FOR EQUAL PAY-TRUMPS OR TRUCE? TENTH YEAR OF PUBLICATION OCTOBER 1988 Playwright Renee Talks for the first tii The Mervyn Thomi VIOTHERHOOi wo W om en’s Stories WAHIA PUBLI < Growing Future or M aori Artists t Writers LIBRARY AUCKLAND OLLEGE OF El REBEL OR REACTIONARY? t u r n % The Gluepot Hotel in Ponsonby will host two seasons of comedy cabaret Dare Swan during the Festival. Tickets $16 inc. Booking and GST. O C3 Tue 25th to Sat 29th October. 8pm nightly, Matinee 2pm Sat. The Auckland Comedy Festival will showcase a season by Sydney dance company Dare Swan at the Maidment Theatre in the last week of October. Dare Swan (pictured below) was founded in 1982 and comprises New Zealanders Chris Jannides and Kilda Northcott, founding members of Limbs Dance Cabaret — Week One. Company, Peta Rutter, formerly of Slick Stage, as Oct 26-29. Gluepot. well as Australian’s Kaye Freeman and Anastasi Siotasis. Red Mole join local Comedy- store star Chris Hegan, Sydney mime Ira Seidenstein, and the father of the Christchurch Fringe, River, for a three hour cabaret show, running Wednesday to Saturday in the first week of the Festival. Aucklanders will remember Red Mole from their work in the late seventies, and their appearance at the Sweetwaters Festival in 1980. The core of the group (pictured above), now based in Wellington after a decade of work in America and Europe, will return to Auckland for the Comedy Festival with newly created B O O K ^ a ^ S cabaret material. MmmoKmm Mmmmmm ■ m m H p e r iv n I 1 L f J U 1 T VJL i Presented by Expression Multi-media and the Aotea Centre in association with No Ordinary beer. -
Commemorating the Hawaiian Mission Bicentennial
Hawaiian Mission Bicentennial Commemorating the Hawaiian Mission Bicentennial The Second Great Awakening was a Protestant religious revival during the early 19th-century in the United States. During this time, several missionary societies were formed. The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) was organized under Calvinist ecumenical auspices at Bradford, Massachusetts, on the June 29, 1810. The first of the missions of the ABCFM were to Ceylon (Sri Lanka) and India, as well as to the Cherokee and Choctaw of the southeast US. In October 1816, the ABCFM established the Foreign Mission School in Cornwall, CT, for the instruction of native youth to become missionaries, physicians, surgeons, schoolmasters or interpreters. By 1817, a dozen students, six of them Hawaiians, were training at the Foreign Mission School to become missionaries to teach the Christian faith to people around the world. One of those was ʻŌpūkahaʻia, a young Hawaiian who came to the US in 1809, who was being groomed to be a key figure in a mission to Hawai‘i. ʻŌpūkahaʻia yearned “with great earnestness that he would (return to Hawaiʻi) and preach the Gospel to his poor countrymen.” Unfortunately, ʻŌpūkahaʻia died unexpectedly at Cornwall on February 17, 1818. The life and memoirs of ʻŌpūkahaʻia inspired other missionaries to volunteer to carry his message to the Hawaiian Islands. On October 23, 1819, the Pioneer Company of ABCFM missionaries from the northeast US, set sail on the Thaddeus for the Hawaiian Islands. They first sighted the Islands and arrived at Kawaihae on March 30, 1820, and finally anchored at Kailua-Kona, April 4, 1820. -
UC Santa Barbara Dissertation Template
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Santa Barbara Laser Spectroscopy and Photodynamics of Alternative Nucleobases and Organic Dyes A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Chemistry by Jacob Alan Berenbeim Committee in charge: Professor Mattanjah de Vries, Chair Professor Steve Buratto Professor Michael Gordon Professor Martin Moskovits December 2017 The dissertation of Jacob Alan Berenbeim is approved. ____________________________________________ Steve Buratto ____________________________________________ Michael Gordon ____________________________________________ Martin Moskovits ____________________________________________ Mattanjah de Vries, Committee Chair October 2017 Laser Spectroscopy and Photodynamics of Alternative Nucleobases and Organic Dyes Copyright © 2017 by Jacob Alan Berenbeim iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS To my wife Amy thank you for your endless support and for inspiring me to match your own relentless drive towards reaching our goals. To my parents and my brothers Eli and Gabe thank you for your love and visits to Santa Barbara, CA. To my advisor Mattanjah and my lab mates thank you for the incredible opportunity to share ideas and play puppets with the fabric of space. And to my cat Lola, you’re a good cat. iv VITA OF JACOB ALAN BERENBEIM October 2017 EDUCATION University of California, Santa Barbara CA Fall 2017 PhD, Physical Chemistry Advisor: Prof. Mattanjah S. de Vries University of Puget Sound, Tacoma WA 2009 BS, Chemistry Advisor: Prof. Daniel Burgard LABORATORY TECHNIQUES Photophysics by UV/VIS and IR pulsed laser spectroscopy, optical alignment, oa-TOF mass spectrometry (multiphoton ionization, MALDI, ESI+), molecular beam high vacuum apparatus, high voltage electronics, molecular computational modeling with Gaussian, data acquisition with LabView, and data manipulation with Mathematica and Origin RESEARCH EXPERIENCE Graduate Student Researcher 2012-2017 • Time dependent (transient) photo relaxation of organic molecules, including PAHs and aromatic biological molecules. -
Concentric Lunar Craters
The Strolling Astronomer Feature Story: Concentric Lunar Craters By Howard Eskildsen, [email protected] Online Readers Left-click your mouse on the e-mail address in blue text to contact the author of this article, and selected references also in blue text at the end of this paper for more information there. This paper by ALPO member and astrophotographer Howard Eskidsen is only one of many that ratios were calculated using Lunar averaged 0.065, much shallower than were presented at ALCon 2013, Reconnaissance Orbiter data. Crater the T/D ratio of 0.20 that is typical for held in Atlanta, Georgia. coordinates were reproducible to within non-concentric craters. Mean crater rim 0.02°. Outer rim diameters (D) ranged elevations were below the mean lunar Abstract from 2.3km to 24.2 km with the mean radius of 1737.4 km with the mean 1.5 8.2 km with error of ± 0.2 km. Inner km lower than the mean lunar radius. Fifty-five concentric caters were toroid rim diameters (T) averaged 4.3 identified and measured for diameter, km, and calculated toroid to diameter depth, toroid crest diameter, ratios (T/D ratio) averaged 0.51. The d/ coordinates, and depth/diameter (d/D) D ratios for the concentric craters Table 1: Eastern Hemisphere Diameter Data Page 36 Volume 56, No. 1, Winter 2014 The Strolling Astronomer Table 1A: Eastern Hemisphere Elevation/Depth Data Concentric Craters pure highland areas. None are found in While the most notable concentrics have A small percentage of craters that would the central maria (Wood 1978). -
For Services and Resources in French Polynesia 3 a B C
For Services and Resources in French Polynesia Last update: 28 Sep 2021 Please send your tips to [email protected] • • • • • • • • • Table of Contents 3 3D Printing A Acrylic • Agents • Airlines / Airports • Alcohol • Alternator And Starter Repairs • Aluminum (Fabrication, Bending, Welding) • Anchorages • Anchors • Animal Rescue / Animal Adoption • Apple Computers • Appliances (Washing Machine, Fridges, etc) • Art Supplies • Attorney • Auto Parts & Supplies B BBQ • Bakery • Batteries • Bearings, Belts, Seals • Bed Linen • Bicycle Repairs • Boat Brokers • Boat Watchers • Boat Workers • Books, English • Books, Fish Identification • Bottom Cleaning • Brass Fittings & Copper Tubing • Buses • Buy / Sell C CO2 Refills • Camera Repair / Camera Battery Replacement • Canon • Canvas Supplies • Canvas Work • Carpentry • Carpet Cleaning • Cars (Buy/Rent) • Chains • Chandlery See Marine Suppliers • Charts • Charts / Cruising Guides • Chinese Medicines / Herbs • Ciguatera Fish Poisoning • Coffee & Teas • Compass Adjustment • Composting Head - see Toilet • Computer Repairs / Services • Computers • Construction Materials • Consulates • Cooking Gas see Propane • Copy / Print • Courtesy Flags • Covid Testing • Craft Supplies • Craigs List Tahiti Style • Crew • Customs D DPAM - Direction Polynesiennes des Affaires Maritime • Delivery Service • Dentist / Dental Surgeon • Diesel / Gas • Diesel Mechanic • Diesel Parts • Dinghy New / Repair • Disinfestation/Anti-termite • Diving Services • Doctor, General • Doctor, Specialists & Surgeons • Donations -
For the First Time and Be Friendly with People from Galoma in the East, at This Port. 'L'here Must Have Been Fully 2,000 People
81 for the first time and be friendly with people from Galoma in the east, at this port. 'l'here must have been fully 2,000 people asRembled here for about a week in .January, the young men amusing themselves, while the elders were sitting on the verandahs convOI'sing and chewing betel nut on the most friendly terms. The Toaripi people came to port in larger numbers than usual. This is an occasion when there is generally trouble, but this year the trading was conducted in a quiet and friendly manner. Mr. A. C. English, the Govemment Agent at Rigo Station, has done good work in his district. All the Sinaugolo tribe are now at peace with each other and the surrounding tribes. Those of the Rigo village, who scattered during the famine, are now collecting and forming a large village at Gomuridobu, close to the Government station. The Bono people have also joined them there. The Manukolo people are collecting and building a new village. 'I' hey are now at peace with all their neighbours and with the hill tribes. The Balaguaia and Ikoru tribes have also collected and settled down peaceably. The villages of Kelirupu and Tupulamu have been visited for the first time by Mr. English and the constabulary. They are now friendly and peaceful, sending in reports to the Government station when anything goes wrong. Kala and Kwaipo now interchange :friendly visits, as do also Kwaipo and Ganimarupu, Galoma, and Aliba. I have sent messengers from Koapara overland to the Government station. They had to pass through Balaguaia and Ikorn, formerly their deadly foes.