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BYU-Hawaii Devotionals and Speeches
Mike Foley | University Advancement | 21 February 2006
Two Hawaiian women from Kalihi, Oahu, who are longtime friends, told BYU-Hawaii business students in the February 21 entrepreneurship lecture how they have relied on local culture and aloha spirit to help get their scrapbook manufacturing business off the ground.
Bella Finau-Faumuina, a former musician, and Delia Parker-Ulima, a 1996 political science graduate from BYU-Hawaii who went on to earn a law degree from the University of Hawaii, started Native Creative Crafts out of their homes in 2001, launched a retail website three years ago, and opened a small retail store in Kaneohe last year.
Bella Finau-Faumuina, a former musician, and Delia Parker-Ulima, a 1996 political science graduate from BYU-Hawaii who went on to earn a law degree from the University of Hawaii, started Native Creative Crafts out of their homes in 2001, launched a retail website three years ago, and opened a small retail store in Kaneohe last year.
BYU-Hawaii Devotionals and Speeches
Rosemarie Howard | University Advancement | 16 February 2007
Building bridges for the future was the theme Sharon Samuelson spoke to, as the featured speaker at the February 16 luncheon of the BYU-Hawaii Women's Organization.
Sister Samuelson shared a story about her great, great grandmother to illustrate that the days of our ancestors are connected the present. "Each of us is crossing a bridge created by ancestors," said Sister Samuelson. "We are constructing bridges for those who come after us."
She went on to say that using the right tools and building blocks is essential to building strong bridges. Quoting President Monson, Sister Samuelson said that the supreme architect and builder of bridges is Jesus Christ.
Building bridges for the future was the theme Sharon Samuelson spoke to, as the featured speaker at the February 16 luncheon of the BYU-Hawaii Women's Organization.
Sister Samuelson shared a story about her great, great grandmother to illustrate that the days of our ancestors are connected the present. "Each of us is crossing a bridge created by ancestors," said Sister Samuelson. "We are constructing bridges for those who come after us."
She went on to say that using the right tools and building blocks is essential to building strong bridges. Quoting President Monson, Sister Samuelson said that the supreme architect and builder of bridges is Jesus Christ.
Two senior BYU-Hawaii computer science majors won $5,000, the largest-ever prize in the Mark and Laura Willes Center for International Entrepreneurship business plan competition on February 10, for their proposal to establish an online service for large-volume professional digital photographers and their various customers.
Richard W. Clark — an attorney from Calgary, Alberta, Canada, and a member the President's Advisory Council for the BYU-Hawaii School of Business — fanned interest in this week's upcoming entrepreneurship conference by sharing lessons he's learned from other entrepreneurs and from starting his own businesses.
Two major speakers, 20 free panel discussions on a wide range of topics and over 50 visiting entrepreneurs and venture capitalists, who will judge the business plan competition finalists, highlight the eighth annual Mark and Laura Willes Center for International Entrepreneurship conference at BYU-Hawaii from February 8-10, 2006. The theme of this year's conference, most of which is free and open to the public, is "Entrepreneurship: Empowering Students Worldwide."
Christopher Krey | University Advancement | 31 January 2006Brigham Young University Hawaii is co-hosting its first-ever International Conference of Egyptology on February 1-4, 2006. The conference, entitled Evolving Egypt: Innovation, Appropriation, and Reinterpretation in Ancient Egypt, brings scholars and students of Egyptology from all around the world together to discuss issues of ancient Egypt.
Staff | University Advancement | 31 January 2006
The BYU-Hawaii Center for Instructional Technology and Outreach (CITO) is
hosting an eBusiness conference to provide real-world "ability" training
to students and community members alike. The conference will teach participants
pragmatic skills, such as Web site creation, on-line market research, converting
traffic into buyers, and more.
“The conference aims to offer a unique platform for participants,” said Richie Norton, business development consultant and organizer of the eBusiness conference. “It will enable them to make significant contributions in the workplace and launch themselves into successful, innovative careers.”
“The conference aims to offer a unique platform for participants,” said Richie Norton, business development consultant and organizer of the eBusiness conference. “It will enable them to make significant contributions in the workplace and launch themselves into successful, innovative careers.”
BYU-Hawaii Devotionals
As a special traveling exhibit of the Dead Sea Scrolls opened in the Laie Temple Visitors Center on January 19, BYU-Hawaii students, faculty, staff and visitors filled the McKay Auditorium to capacity to hear Dr. Donald W. Parry, BYU Associate Professor of Hebrew Language and Literature and a member of an international team of translators working on the 2,000-year-old records, explain their significance to Latter-day Saints.