Document 54259

B2 | Saturday, December 27, 2008
The Honolulu Advertiser •
OBITUARIES
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p.m. Sunday at Mililani Downtown
Mortuary; service 6:30 p.m. Burial
10 a.m. Monday at Hawaiian
Memorial Park. Casual attire.
Arrangements by Mililani Mortuary..
Shi and Ai Shi; four grandchildren.
Visitation 9 a.m. Wednesday at
Borthwick Mortuary; service 10
a.m.; burial 1 p.m. at Hawaiian
Memorial Park. Aloha attire.
SHIONG-SHIANG LEE
74, died Aug. 20, 2008. Born in
Taiwan. A former Honolulu pathologist. Survived by wife, Wang-Yen;
sons, Chong-Chia and Richard;
daughters, Men-Jean and MingShing; seven grandsons; a granddaughter. Service 2 p.m. tomorrow
at Community Church of Honolulu.
Ashes were buried at Hawaiian
Memorial Park. Donations to the
VIOLET QUINTANA COCKETT
S.S. Lee Fund, Cancer and Fertili81, of çAiea, died Dec. 15, 2008. ty Society, www.cancerandfertili
Born in çOçökala, Hawaiçi. Retired tysociety.org.
Radford High School teacher and
librarian. Survived by husband, RUI YING LIU LIN
CLEO ELIZABETH
Reuben; sons, Reuben “Marty” Jr., 71, of Honolulu, died Dec. 12,
IAEA BERMOY
Randy; Keala and Kevin; daugh- 2008. Born in Huzhou Village Ban77, of Kaläheo, Kauaçi, died Dec. ters, Maura Alvaro and Jonell; sis- fu Town, Zhong Shan Guangdong,
24, 2008. Born in Honolulu. Sur- ters, Victoria Sanborn and Peggy China. A homemaker. Survived by
vived by husband, Henry Sr.; sons, Echavez; 16 grandchildren; nine sons, Jie Shan, Jie Peng and Jie
Henry Jr. and Wayne; daughters, great-grandchildren. Visitation 5 Chuang; daughters, Feng Shi, Li
BRIAN KUNIYUKI MIYAGI
60, of çAiea, died Dec. 14,
2008. Born in Honolulu.
Retired from the state of Hawaiçi.
Survived by wife, Jill; son, Scott;
daughter, Shannon; a grandson;
mother, Barbara; brothers, Gary
and Paul. Visitation 5 p.m. Tuesday at Mililani Mortuary Mauka
Chapel; service 6 p.m. No flowers.
Casual attire.
LLOYD PCLARIN ALBINIO JR.
30, of Kapaça, Kauaçi, died Dec. 11,
2008. Born in Honolulu. A landscaper with Stonetree Construction. Survived by father, Lloyd Sr.;
mother, Joni O’Donnell; son, Lloyd;
daughter, Leiani; brothers, Lloyd
N. and Lloyd J.K.; grandmother,
Betty Wilson. Visitation 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday at The Kapaça Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses;
service 2:30 p.m. Private inurnment. No flowers. Aloha attire.
Arrangements by Kauaçi Memorial
Gardens & Funeral Home.
Sandra Quinsaat, Stephanie
Bermoy, Colleen Kapu, Trudy
Silva, Linda Nicolas and Charlene
Paden; grandchildren; brothers,
Joseph Jr., Huddy, Jonah,
Christopher, Harold, Lani and Neki
Iaea; sisters, Nani Trelor, Olivia
Miller and Hedy Iaea. Visitation 9 to
10 a.m. Jan. 3 at Garden Island
Mortuary; service 10 a.m. Casual
attire.
HARLAN WADE SILVA
56, of Waiçanae, died Dec. 14,
2008. Born in Honolulu. Survived
by father, Frederick; brothers,
Alfred and Christopher; sisters,
Fredlyn Nishikawa and Christina
Silva. Mass 11 a.m. Tuesday at CoCathedral of St. Theresa; inurnment 1 p.m. at Mililani Memorial
Park. Arrangements by Mililani
CHRISTMAS IS OVER, BRING ON THE NEW YEAR
Downtown Mortuary.
Woods, Julia Ann deForest
Karlsson and David deForest
JACOB JAMES TRANNEL
Woods; four grandchildren; broth15, of Onalaska, Wis., died Dec. er, Peter Hills; and sister, Susan
16, 2008. Born in Honolulu. Avid Coursey. Service in February 2009
soccer and hockey player who at First Presbyterian Church of
played with Team Wisconsin and Koçolau. Cremation held. Condothe Western Wisconsin Blue Dev- lences: www.CrosbyNeal.com.
ils. Survived by parents, Thomas Arrangements by Crosby & Neal,
and Dena; brother, Nathan; sister, Newport, Maine.
Molly;
grandparents,
Karen
Vandermillen, Jim Vandermillen CHARLES ISAO YAMASHIRO
and Bette Trannel; special friend, 91, of Honolulu, died Dec. 21,
Morgan Poss. Mass held in Wis- 2008. Born in Nïnole, Hawaiçi. Reconsin. No flowers. Donations to tired MTL bus driver who formerly
the Jacob James Trannel Memor- owned Beauty Clothes Cleaners.
ial Fund. Condolences to: Survived by wife, Haruko; sons,
w w w . s c h u m a c h e r - k i s h . c o m . Daniel and Ronald; daughters,
Arrangements by Schumacher- Lillian Goda and Cynthia Mishina;
Kish Funeral Home, Onalaska, Wis. five grandchildren; a great-grandchild; brothers, Harold and Minoru;
JUDITH MISAKO TSUKIYAMA
sister, Theresa Yamamoto. Visita66, of Honolulu, died Dec. 14, tion 5 to 6 p.m. Friday at Hosoi
2008. Born in Hilo, Hawaiçi. Sur- Garden Mortuary; service 6 p.m.
vived by sisters, Betty Tsukiyama, No flowers. Casual attire.
Matsuko Motooka, Lily Tsukiyama
KATOSHI “KATO” YANO
and Amy Okada. Private service
held. Arrangements by Nuçuanu 94, of Honolulu, died Nov. 26,
2008. Born in Honolulu. Retired
Memorial Park & Mortuary.
Universal Motors journeyman parts
EDITH “DEE DEE” WOODS
employee. Survived by wife,
65, of Maine, died Dec. 21, 2008. Nancy Misao Yano; nieces;
Born in Port Chester, N.Y. A dental nephews. Private service held.
hygenist and longtime Oçahu resi- Arrangements by Nuuanu Memordent. Survived by children, Paul ial Park & Mortuary.
go!
CONTINUED FROM B1
had ever inadvertently fallen
asleep during a flight before.
But the captain did say he had
taken “intentional naps” before.
After undergoing a sleep evaluation, he was diagnosed with
“severe obstructive sleep apnea,” which his doctor said
could lead to “significant fatigue.”
The captain also reported
feeling “burnt out” in recent
months. The captain lived in
Missouri and had been based in
Tennessee, before taking a temporary assignment in Kahului
in January. The assignment was
supposed to last until Feb. 9,
but was extended by 28 days.
The first officer of the flight
said he had never fallen asleep
on a flight before.
pany of go! airlines, admitting
that he and his co-pilot inadvertently fell asleep about 9:33
a.m. — 17 minutes after take-off
from Honolulu. The two were
suspended and later fired.
The report says the flight
crew had been experiencing
“operational stressors” before
the incident, including being assigned an aircraft with a “faulty
flight management system” the
day before. Also, on the day of
the flight, the crew started 30
minutes late because of a scheduling error. That meant that the
crew had to rush during several flights to make up for the de- Reach Mary Vorsino at mvorsi
[email protected] or
lay.
The report said neither pilot 754-8286.
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CHRISTMAS FUND
RICHARD AMBO | The Honolulu Advertiser
Meg Genone, sales clerk at Pacific Fireworks on Nimitz Highway, puts out a sign showing the company has New Year’s fireworks for sale.
Lands
CONTINUED FROM B1
nomic base,” Khan said. “We’d
like to have a decision made by
the Hawaiian nation as to what
happens to those lands.”
Others at the rally such as
Takamine and Clifford Hashimoto, aliçi nui for the Royal Order,
said they do not believe the state
should sell or transfer ceded
lands — period.
Hashimoto, in a statement read
by Royal Order spokesman
William Souza, said “the fall of
the Crown Lands will result in
the final solution of Hawaiians.
The actions of the Old Order are
back.”
Former OHA Trustee Adelaide
“Frenchy” DeSoto said ceded
lands should be used to benefit
Native Hawaiians by providing
them housing and health services.
“Maybe our people don’t have
to be on their knees all the time
begging,” DeSoto said.
Native Hawaiian rights attorney Dexter Kaiama took issue
with the state’s position that
Hawaiians may have a “moral”
but not “legal” high ground when
it comes to ceded lands.
Rather than have a U.S. court
decide what happens to ceded
lands, “ask your country to submit itself to the international
courts,” Kaiama said.
The Lingle administration has
insisted that it has and will continue to support Native Hawaiian
causes and that its appeal to the
U.S. Supreme Court, which is being backed by a brief supporting
the appeal by 29 other states,
does nothing to diminish that.
Attorney General Mark Bennett, after yesterday’s rally, also
reiterated his view that the state’s
position on the case has not
changed since it was filed against
JEFF WIDENER | The Honolulu Advertiser
Kaho‘onei Panoke with the Ilioulaokalani Coalition spoke to the rally at the state Capitol.
the Cayetano administration in
1994.
The original lawsuits brought
by four Native Hawaiians and
the Office of Hawaiian Affairs,
and then later joined, sought to
temporarily halt the sale of about
1,500 acres in Lahaina and Kona
to private interests to finance affordable-housing projects for
moderate- and low-income families regardless of whether they
have Hawaiian blood, until
Hawaiian claims to the lands had
been resolved.
“We continue to believe that
the Hawai‘i Supreme Court’s decision was legally incorrect and
that it’s our responsibility to ask
the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse the decision because we
believe it was fundamentally,
legally incorrect,” Bennett said.
The Lingle administration be-
lieves the issues raised by Native Hawaiian groups should be
addressed by the legislative
branch of government, he said.
That’s why both he and Lingle
have lobbied hard for Congressional passage of the Akaka bill,
which creates a process that
leads to federal recognition of a
Native Hawaiian government entity.
There is no inconsistency in
arguing that ceded lands are the
managerial jurisdiction of the
state government while lobbying for the Akaka bill, he said.
Some of the groups at yesterday’s rally oppose the Akaka bill
while others support it.
Ceded lands are the 1.2 million
acres once owned by the Hawaiian government and subsequently taken over by the U.S.
as a result of the 1898 annexa-
tion. Those lands were then
passed to the state and designated for five purposes, including
but not exclusively for the betterment of Native Hawaiians.
They make up a bulk of stateowned lands and 29 percent of
the state’s land mass.
Takamine said her group
planned yesterday’s rally to coincide with the Christmas vacation visit by President-elect
Barack Obama in hopes in gaining his attention on the matter.
Takamine’s group is planning
a larger event that will take place
in Waikïkï on Jan. 17, the anniversary of the 1893 overthrow
of Liliu‘okalani, Hawai‘i’s last
monarch.
Reach Gordon Y.K. Pang at
[email protected]
or 690-8908.
In Loving Memory of
Florence Morinaga . . . . . . 1000
City Council Secretaries &
City Council Administration Gemma, Paulyne, Harriet,
Ann, Mark, Faith, Dot,
Sylvia, Nanette, Clayton,
Colleen, & Ruth. . . . . . . . . . 395
Pali Momi - Respiratory
Department Staff . . . . . . . . 344
The Staff at Queen's
Federal Credit Union . . . . . 200
Eleanor Y. McCabe. . . . . . . 200
Elaine & Jamie Wong . . . . 200
James Smith . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
In Memory of Derek Arita. . 100
In Memory of Barney
Nakagawara . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Dan & Wilma Seeman . . . . 100
In Memory of Charles A.
Wothke . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Office of Council District
VII - Sharleen, Corinne,
Ryan & Ruth . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
Ralph & Gregoria Aranita . . . 50
In Memory of Pete &
Peggy Ewart . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
In Memory of Policarpio
& Leonarda Pizarras
Aneuber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Enid Pittman & Randi
Creamer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Betty Joao . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
In Memory of Kenji &
Mitsuo Sagawa . . . . . . . . . . . 25
In Memory of Brigit . . . . . . . . 20
Dana Kalima &
Dawnyette Sheldon . . . . . . . 10
Anonymous . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,314
Previous total . . . 142,432.24
Grand total . . . . . 145,746.24