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After nine months of service and many gifts given to BYU-Hawaii, Stephen and Bette Gibson have returned to their home in Provo, Utah and positions at the BYU campus there. During their short time here, the Gibsons served as volunteers, instructors, mentors and, as always, entrepreneurs.
Following a comprehensive, multi-stage review process over the past two years, the Western Association of Schools & Colleges (WASC) has reaffirmed Brigham Young University Hawaii's accreditation for the next 10 years.
Elder Stephen Peterson, president of the Hawaii Honolulu Mission, and his wife, Sister Cathy Peterson, expressed their excitement and gratitude at the opportunity to speak, in tandem, at a BYU Hawaii devotional. The message they shared was that of the mission motto:
Aloha Center rooms 155 and 165 were filled with need-to-know legal displays, posters, handouts, and reminders; all nicely complimented with a centerpiece filled with a wide array of elegant fruits. Savanna Dilts, graduate intern, and BYU-Hawaii supervising compliance auditor, orchestrated this year's compliance fair of speakers and presentations. Four different speakers addressed pertinent legal issues directed to university staff, faculty and students about how to be in compliance with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) and in copyright and safety law. Dilts invited all faculty, staff and students to learn and know their personal rights under the law.
The Polynesian Cultural Center offered free admission to Hawaii kamaaina, or resident families, Saturday, June 28, to celebrate the public dedication of the its Halau Wa’a O Iosepa, the new home of BYU-Hawaii’s 57-foot traditional style double-hulled canoe. Hawaii residents who attended enjoyed a cultural presentation, hula performances and a free concert by local musician Willie K.
Elder Stephen Biddulph, Service Missionary for BYU-Hawaii’s Counseling Services, delivered a devotional address in the McKay Auditorium on July 1 in which he taught the students to use trying experiences and sacrifice as a way to shape their souls and strengthen their testimonies.
Ryan Anderson | University Advancement | 27 June 2008
With deep emotion, an ailing William K. "Uncle Bill" Wallace III [pictured at right, below], director of the BYUH Hawaiian Studies program, chanted a tale from his birth island of Molokai on June 25 and thanked those who made the construction of the Halau Wa'a O Iosepa — new home of the University's 57-foot traditional twin-hulled Hawaiian voyaging canoe, Iosepa — in the Polynesian Cultural Center's Hawaiian village possible.
Bedecked with beautiful lei and a floral headband, BYU-Hawaii Vice President of University Advancement V. Napua Baker [pictured at left] looked a little wistful as she left a reception in honor of her retiring from the University after 27 years of service — the last 17 of them as the first female and first known Hawaiian or Polynesian vice president in the Church Educational System.
Elder Dallin H. Oaks of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles [pictured at left] admonished the 235 new BYU-Hawaii graduate candidates gathered in front of faculty, family and friends in the Cannon Activities Center this morning, "Don't be a slave."
As their leadership over BYU-Hawaii Student Activities comes to an end, William “Kaj” Kellgreen, President, and Cassandra Fa’amuli, Executive Vice President, addressed the students at the weekly devotional on June 17 and encouraged them to “be anxiously engaged in a good a cause.”
BYU-Hawaii’s 76th class, which will walk Saturday, June 21, includes 235 candidates for graduation. Elder Dallin H. Oaks of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, Roger G. Christensen, Assistant to the Commissioner of the Church Educational System and Abigail Guzman, Political Science major from Nelson, New Zealand, will speak at the upcoming commencement ceremony.