BYU–Hawaii News
Recent News
Asher Dispenses Grad School Admission Strategies
Donald Asher, author of nine books on career development who regularly gives presentations at more than 100 major universities around the U.S. each year, shared strategies with BYU-Hawaii students in the September 25 Career Services forum on how to land scholarships, take standardized tests, stand out from the crowd and write amazing essays to gain admission to highly competitive graduate school programs.
Read Full Story
Faculty Member Ford Exhorts Audience to be 'On the Move'
Individuals must be the change they wish to see in order to be on the move with God, faculty member Chad Ford told the audience at Thursday's devotional.
Read Full Story
Feeling the Love
Stace Hall | University Advancement | 19 September 2007
When BYU-Hawaii tennis player Shenley Searing steps on to the tennis court, she wants her opponent to feel the love—reflected in the match's final score.
"I love the competition and it gives me satisfaction. I just have a drive and I feel at home on the tennis court," she said.
But a different kind of love motivated her to trade in her racket for gardening tools over the summer. Searing's solid serves down the line were put on hold in order to serve in a different way.
Read Full Story
When BYU-Hawaii tennis player Shenley Searing steps on to the tennis court, she wants her opponent to feel the love—reflected in the match's final score.
"I love the competition and it gives me satisfaction. I just have a drive and I feel at home on the tennis court," she said.
But a different kind of love motivated her to trade in her racket for gardening tools over the summer. Searing's solid serves down the line were put on hold in order to serve in a different way.
Read Full Story
BYU-Hawaii Basketball Alum Extols Entrepreneurship
Alan Akina, a BYU-Hawaii basketball player from 1991-95, told School of Business students in the September 18 entrepreneurship lecture how he was inspired to start several businesses while still a full-time student at the university. He also shared some of the keys to the success he has enjoyed since then and encouraged the students to begin developing networks with professors and peers.
Read Full Story
Seasider Basketball Goes to China
Over the summer, around 100 teenage Chinese athletes played basketball Seasider-style. In cooperation with the China University Basketball Association (CUBA), BYU-Hawaii conducted the first-ever American basketball academy for high school players in China.
Read Full Story
BYU-Hawaii Conducts Mentored Internship Project in Brazil
While hundreds of BYU-Hawaii students now go on individual internships each summer, a much smaller number participate in mentored projects such as the one this year where five international students and three faculty members are producing a case-based multimedia training tool for mental health workers with one of the top medical schools in Brazil.
Read Full Story
Alumni go the Distance Against Varsity Volleyball Team
Alumni players from the BYU-Hawaii women's volleyball team came together in the Cannon Activities Center on September 13, and showed they still got game by forcing the varsity into a two-two tie before bowing in the fifth game of the match.
Read Full Story
“Ka Ua Ka’a” Shares Magic of Hawaiian Culture
Rosemarie Howard | University Advancement | 14 September 2007
“There is a Wind and Rain particular to Maui that rises at twilight. It whispers of other places and other times, both mythic and real. It blows between daylight and night, between times and worlds. It is hopeful and cleansing. The ancient Hawaiian name for the wind and rain is ‘Ulalena !”
So begins the storyline for “Ka Ua Ka’a,” the traveling 45-minute version of ‘Ulalena. Written by former cast member, Pono Murray, the production “intertwines Hawaiian myths and legends through dramatic interpretation, modern and traditional hula, acrobatics, song and chant,” said Matthew Erickson, marketing and sales manager for the production company.
Read Full Story
“There is a Wind and Rain particular to Maui that rises at twilight. It whispers of other places and other times, both mythic and real. It blows between daylight and night, between times and worlds. It is hopeful and cleansing. The ancient Hawaiian name for the wind and rain is ‘Ulalena !”
So begins the storyline for “Ka Ua Ka’a,” the traveling 45-minute version of ‘Ulalena. Written by former cast member, Pono Murray, the production “intertwines Hawaiian myths and legends through dramatic interpretation, modern and traditional hula, acrobatics, song and chant,” said Matthew Erickson, marketing and sales manager for the production company.
Read Full Story
BYU-Hawaii Vice President Connects Charity with Peacemaking
Stace Hall | University Advancement | 13 September 2007
During the second devotional of the 2007-2008 school year, Isileli T. Kongaika told audience members as they develop characteristics of charity they will be a force to spread peace internationally, as President David O. McKay prophesied over 50 years ago.
'Without doubt, my brothers and sisters, our purpose here at this university is to fulfill this prophetic vision to become international peacemakers. To you…I extend this invitation," the vice president of student life said.
The biggest challenge facing this goal is not accepting racial and cultural differences, Kongaika said. "How about asking yourself this question: Do you, as an international peacemaker, still have an issue with this, because somebody is different?"
Read Full Story
During the second devotional of the 2007-2008 school year, Isileli T. Kongaika told audience members as they develop characteristics of charity they will be a force to spread peace internationally, as President David O. McKay prophesied over 50 years ago.
'Without doubt, my brothers and sisters, our purpose here at this university is to fulfill this prophetic vision to become international peacemakers. To you…I extend this invitation," the vice president of student life said.
The biggest challenge facing this goal is not accepting racial and cultural differences, Kongaika said. "How about asking yourself this question: Do you, as an international peacemaker, still have an issue with this, because somebody is different?"
Read Full Story
New Entrepreneur-in-Residence Opens Lecture Series
Stephen W. Gibson, the new Entrepreneur-in-Residence in the Mark and Laura Willes Center for International Entrepreneurship shared seven highly effective habits with BYU-Hawaii School of Business students today during the first lecture in the CIE's 2007-08 series.
Read Full Story