BYU–Hawaii News
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Annual David O. McKay Lecture: BYU-Hawaii Biologist uses Advice of the Prophet to Explore Thoughts on Scientific Inquiry
Mike Foley | University Advancement | 12 February 2004
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BYU-Hawaii biology professor Dr. Robert Winget borrowed a thought from President David O. McKay, who founded the Church College of Hawaii 49 years ago and demonstrated a lifelong love of learning, to shape the annual lecture named in the prophet's honor.
Winget told of a school friend who "had a hard time understanding the contention people displayed when discussing what he was learning in geology and paleontology. Why did people get so defensive when he mentioned evidences supporting the age of the earth being in the billions of years and of extinct species of plants and animals that had lived millions of years before the time Adam and Eve lived in the Garden of Eden?"
He recalled some Church members thought the notion of such long-term geologic time was erroneous, and reminded us "evolution was
BYUHSA, Alumni Association Honor Current and Former Students During Homecoming Banquet
Mike Foley | University Advancement | 12 February 2004
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The
BYUH Student Association recognized the accomplishments
of seven current undergraduates during the 49th annual
homecoming banquet on February 11 while the CCH/BYU-Hawaii
Alumni Association honored four of its members and named
a retired professor an honorary alumnus.
The BYUHSA first presented its awards to Chelsea Smith, exercise and sports science; Ikaika Perreira, elementary education; Kaisu "Teddy" Zhuang, computer science; Manea Tuahu, School of Business; Natalia Martins, international business management; Juri Widiger, political science; and Tanya Morimoto, English. |
BYU-Hawaii CIO Compares Overcoming Computer Challenges With Choosing to Serve the Lord
Mike Foley | University Advancement | 6 February 2004
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BYU-Hawaii's Chief Information Officer drew parallels at the Feb. 5 devotional between the challenges of running the University's large computer system and choosing to serve the Lord.
Dr. Bret Ellis explained his Information Services team often battles computer viruses, back doors, worms and denial of service attacks with vigilance and anti-virus technology.
He compared prophets with "anti-virus providers [who] are always scanning the horizon, looking for, and detecting false messages sent by the adversary. They have counseled us to keep our guard up against the evil influences and stains of the world. They have named and enumerated these evil influences," Ellis said.
Family's Commitment to High Quality Turns a Sunset Beach Bakery into a Big Success
Mike Foley | University Advancement | 4 February 2004
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Two brothers who graduated from Kahuku High in the mid-70s have seen their Sunset Beach bakery grow dramatically because of a commitment to high quality products, such as their best-selling chilled chocolate haupia [Hawaiian coconut custard] and cream pie.
Glenn and Ted Nakamura told BYU-Hawaii business students during the Entrepreneurship Lecture Series on Feb. 3 that they have seen Ted's Bakery, which started in 1987, grow from selling a few pies a week to a peak of over 14,000 during a recent Thanksgiving week.
Glenn Nakamura, the older brother who graduated from Kahuku in 1974, told how his parents initially opened a fruit and vegetable stand on their five-acre farm in Sunset Beach in 1956, but soon discovered "it was a lot easier to run a grocery business than it was to farm."
Hong Kong Restroom, Mongolian Ice Factory Ideas Win Annual BYU-Hawaii Business Plan Competition
Mike Foley | University Advancement | 2 February 2004
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Proposals from three students to establish a first-class pay-stall restroom in a busy Hong Kong shopping district and from two Mongolian students to build an ice factory in their capital city won the business plan competition for developed and developing countries during the annual BYU-Hawaii School of Business Entrepreneurship Conference on Jan. 28.
Judges selected from among visiting entrepreneurs awarded King Lun "Kisslan" Chan, Wing Yi "Stella" Chu and Yan "Letitia" Ho a $4,000 first prize for their detailed business plan that calls for building a 22-stall pay restroom in the busy Mongkok section of Hong Kong, which has daily traffic of over 800,000 people.
Ho explained to the judges and the large crowd of BYU-Hawaii business
Leadership Council Member Advocates Personal Prayers and Covenants
Mike Foley | University Advancement | 31 January 2004
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The chairman of the BYU Center for Entrepreneurship board of directors urged BYU-Hawaii students and faculty in the Jan. 29 devotional to consistently offer personal prayers and make personal covenants with the Lord.
"I sense your desire to be faithful, to love our Heavenly Father, to love the Savior, and to walk in obedience to their commandments," said Larry Linton, a businessman from Portland, Oregon, and a member of the President's Leadership Council of major donors to the university.
Linton, who is in Laie for the annual BYU-Hawaii entrepreneurship conference, said, "I sense your struggles to continue faithful in consistent daily prayers, consistent daily scripture reading, staying morally clean, finding your eternal companion, paying a full and completely honest tithing,
Tokyo-based IBM Executive Shares Asian Career Insights
Mike Foley | University Advancement | 29 January 2004
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The global executive and organizational development vice president for IBM in Asia and the Pacific recently told Japanese and other BYU-Hawaii students interested in Far East careers that they should start job planning years before they graduate and take advantage of a new mentoring program.
"One of the key messages I want to give you is your education in an American university is very important in Japan," said Bradley W. Hall, the IBM executive who visited BYU-Hawaii on Jan. 26 at the invitation of the Career Services program and also as part of his calling as a high councilor in the Tokyo South Stake, where many influential business executives live.
Hall, who served a two-year mission in Hokkaido, Japan in the late 1970s for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and went on to earn a Ph.D.
BYU President Samuelson Explores Why and How we Should Endure to the End
Mike Foley | University Advancement | 27 January 2004
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Cecil O. Samuelson, President of BYU in Provo, Utah, spoke on enduring to the end and emphasized how "we must realize that what we do and how we do it is inescapably wrapped up in our individual relationship with Jesus Christ" in his Jan. 22 devotional address to the BYU-Hawaii family.
"Enduring well means that we strive to live . . . in the way that the mortal Savior did, but especially to follow His pattern in the ways that He would have us face our own unique and personal challenges," said President Samuelson, who is also a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. "Having said this, for most of us, it is far easier to conceive of what enduring to the end is and why we should do it than it is to answer the basic question: Exactly how should we do it."
Humanitarian Marketing: Selling Desperately Needed Products for People Who Can't Afford to Buy Them
The co-founder and partner in a unique water pasteurization equipment company with widespread potential in developing countries faces the challenge of trying to market a desperately needed product to people who can't afford to buy it.
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Local Church Leader Marks Path to Entrepreneurial Success
Yohei Araki | University Advancement | 16 January 2004
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Keith Pierce, a local entrepreneur and president of the BYU-Hawaii 1st Stake for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, told BYU-Hawaii business students that the success of his contracting company stemmed from his reliance on the Lord and willingness to keep the commandments.
Addressing students and faculty in the first entrepreneurship lecture of 2004 in the McKay Auditorium, Pierce, who operates Pierce Construction throughout the Hawaiian Islands, emphasized specific business principles that have made his name well known locally.
Pierce explained that when he first started out, he wanted to be successful in whatever he decided to do as a career. He returned in 1986 to Laie where his extended family was living, to start his own business in contracting and