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Family Owners Preserve Kualoa Ranch Heritage Through Diversification

November 28, 2003 12:00 AM
The descendants of the first doctor to move to the Sandwich Islands still own the family ranch at Kualoa and have significantly diversified its resources over the past 15 years to preserve the unique heritage and scenic beauty of the property.
Millions of tourists are familiar with the breathtaking backdrop of the "long ridge" or kualoa of the Koolau Mountains on the property and the uniquely shaped offshore islet popularly called Chinaman's Hat. Many more millions around the world have seen the far reaches and vistas of the ranch in movies such as Jurassic Park, Godzilla and more recently, Wind Talkers.
"Kaaawa Valley is one of the most filmed places in Hawaii," said John Morgan, president of Kualoa Ranch, which he described as a "magical place. It has a great history and legacy to it."
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A Successful Hospitality Industry Consultant Shares Insights Into his Trade

November 26, 2003 12:00 AM
A self-described "country boy" who grew up on a truck farm in Maui and is now a successful hospital industry consultant, shared insights into his trade with BYU-Hawaii business students during the University's entrepreneurship lecture on November 25.
Ron Watanabe, president and CEO of Ron Watanabe & Associates, Inc., has traveled extensively developing real estate and golf courses, analyzing hospitality industry businesses and brokering hotels. But he got his start working his way through the University of Hawaii as a night auditor at a Waikiki hotel.
"In those days they talked about visitor counts in the thousands," Watanabe recalled. "It took tourists 9-12 hours to fly here, and planes featured sleeper berths. There were fewer hotels, and the tourists stayed longer. Hotel
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A PCC Executive Cautions Against Letting Ingratitude Grow

November 24, 2003 12:00 AM
A Polynesian Cultural Center manager who grew up in Samoa said she thought her early life was heavenly, until she began to notice the things she didn't have.
"Our family didn't own a television set until I was about 8 or 9. We had only one large bedroom in our house and our whole family of seven fit in there quite comfortably for many years. We found our sweets in the yard: in the guava tree, mango tree, vi tree, papaya tree and banana trees," said Delsa Moe, PCC Director of Cultural Presentations, at the November 22 devotional in the Cannon Activities Center.
"Then things began to change as I got older," she continued. " I became increasingly aware of what I didn't have. Unfortunately, I started resenting the simple life in Samoa because my choice of material belongings was
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Public TV Executive Provides Insights into Values-Driven Organizations

November 19, 2003 12:00 AM
Lurline McGregor, President & CEO of Olelo Community Television for the past six years, told BYU-Hawaii business students that people concerned with values should consider careers in nonprofit organizations.
"There's a fine line between profit and nonprofit organizations," McGregor said at the Nov. 18 School of Business entrepreneurship lecture. "Nonprofits still have basic business values as well as more esoteric ones."
She explained that Olelo, Hawaii's main public access TV broadcasting company, has "no commercials nor are we driven by commercial purposes. We're trying to build communities and make the world a better place to live."
"Core values are the most important thing in any endeavor. I feel very fortunate to have spent my career working in nonprofit organizations," she
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Annual Asia-Pacific Basketball Classic Marks Second Successful Year

November 17, 2003 12:00 AM
The BYU-Hawaii Seasiders basketball team kicked off the new season with the 2nd annual Asia-Pacific Basketball Classic held on Nov. 14-15 at the BYU-Hawaii Cannon Activities Center.
BYU-Hawaii hosted teams from South Korea and Samoa, as well as local rivals Hawaii Pacific University and Chaminade University in this year's tournament which was played in a round-robin format. The Seasiders prevailed in both of their games in a thriller over Song Kyun Kwan University from Seoul, South Korea, 96-89 on Friday, and doubled up Team Samoa 100-50 in the Saturday night match.
The National Collegiate Athletics Association allows each college in the U.S. to host two pre-season basketball games that do not count toward its season record. BYU-Hawaii officials wanted their pre-season games to contribute to what they see as one of the university's main purposes -- building
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Truman and Ann Madsen Share Joseph Smith Insights

November 15, 2003 12:00 AM
Noted BYU in Provo, Utah, professor emeritus of philosophy and author Truman Madsen, and his wife Ann, took turns during the Nov. 13 devotional sharing first-hand testimonies and insights into the life and character Joseph Smith, former president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Ann started by remembering she asked her husband why he was studying Joseph Smith one day when he was in graduate school at Harvard. "I remember his reply to this moment: 'Ann, I need to know what Joseph said about the issues I'm studying.' Happily, I understood. He has never stopped," she said.
"Our family feels profound love for the Prophet Joseph Smith because of Truman," she continued, pointing out they have lived with the first-hand accounts ever since. She added she would speak for the women, and her husband for the men.
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Former P.E. Professor Returns on Exchange After 22 Years

November 11, 2003 12:00 AM
A former BYU-Hawaii P.E. professor who left in 1982 to teach elementary physical education at BYU in Provo, Utah, has returned to the Laie campus on a one-year faculty exchange. Read Full Story

Hawaiian Studies Director Compares the Iosepa Sailing Canoe to Life

November 07, 2003 12:00 AM
The director of Hawaiian Studies at BYU-Hawaii used the experience and images of building, preparing and sailing the program's traditional double-hulled canoe, Iosepa, as a metaphor for safely undertaking the voyage through life during the Nov. 6 campus devotional.

William Kaua'iwiulaokalani Wallace III, Director and Associate Professor of BYU-Hawaii's Jonathan Napela Center for Hawaiian Language & Cultural Studies who everybody calls "Uncle Bill," told the large devotional audience in the Cannon Activities Center that a recent training experience on rough waters reminded him of the hymn refrain: Master the tempest is raging.

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Bank of Hawaii CEO Points to Critical Decisions in Turnaround

November 04, 2003 12:00 AM
The head of Hawaii's largest financial institution explained how appearing in a series of television ads, among other critical decisions, helped the state's largest financial institution turn its performance around over the past three years. Read Full Story

Choral Professor Doubles As a Creative Arts Entrepreneur

October 29, 2003 12:00 AM
Most BYU-Hawaii students know Merrilee Webb as an outstanding choral music teacher, so they might be surprised to learn she's also an entrepreneur who has been running her own successful businesses since the age of 18.

Speaking at the School of Business entrepreneurial lecture series on Oct. 28, Webb told the students she has always been a musician. "I've always loved to practice. That's weird. It's not normal for a child to practice. I loved what it did for me to play the piano," Webb said.

"It would be wonderful in your life if you loved to do something, and nobody made you do it," she said. Webb encouraged the students to "do something that you love, something that lights you up."

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