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Hawaii baseball team hammers 2 home runs in rout of UC San Diego

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Hawaii baseball team hammers 2 home runs in rout of UC San Diego


For more than a week, the Hawaii baseball team has done a great job living up to its new role of spoiler.

The Rainbow Warriors stacked 19 hits, including home runs by Kyson Donahue and Austin Machado, and claimed their road series at defending champion UC San Diego with a 14-6 win at Triton Ballpark in La Jolla, Calif., on Saturday.

All nine UH players in the lineup tallied a hit and a run scored.

UH (24-15, 8-9 Big West) will go for its first road sweep of the season at 10 a.m. Hawaii time Sunday. UCSD (26-13, 13-7) fell behind the Big West leaders by three in the loss column; UC Irvine, UC Santa Barbara and CSUN lead the way with 13-4 records.

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Last week, UH took two of three from Cal Poly, which is still in the hunt at 14-6.

The ‘Bows have gotten some quality starts of late. San Diego native Randy Abshier (2-4) shook off a pair of solo home runs by the Tritons in the first two innings and lasted 6 1/3 innings to pick up the win.

Danny Veloz and Connor Harrison finished the job; Harrison went the final 2 1/3 for his first save of the year.

UH scored seven straight runs between the third through sixth innings to take control.

Donahue’s two-run shot in the fifth was his team-high fourth homer of the season. Machado’s two-run homer in the eighth was his third. They have half of the team’s 14 long balls this season.

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Left fielder Jake Tsukada went 4-for-5, third baseman Elijah Ickes was 3-for-5 with four RBIs and center fielder Matthew Miura was 2-for-2 with three RBIs and three runs scored.

Right-hander Matthew Dalquist (5-1) went five innings and took his first loss of the season for the Tritons, who are in their final season of transitional Division I status. UCSD leadoff man Nick Costello went 3-for-5 with four RBIs.

Michael Crossland and Delshaun Lanier had the home runs for the Tritons.

Brian McInnis covers the state’s sports scene for Spectrum News Hawaii. He can be reached at brian.mcinnis@charter.com.



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Hawaii

Visitors warned after toddler nearly runs off 400-foot cliff near Hawaii volcano

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Visitors warned after toddler nearly runs off 400-foot cliff near Hawaii volcano


The National Park Service is warning parents to keep their children close after a toddler ran toward the edge of a 400-foot-tall cliff at Hawaii National Park on Christmas.

The young boy was at the park with his family to view the eruption of the Kilauea volcano. They were in a closed area at Kilauea Overlook when he wandered away from his family before the “near miss.” His mother, screaming, managed to grab him just about a foot away from a fatal fall.

“Park rangers remind visitors to stay on trail, stay out of closed areas and to keep their children close, especially when watching Kīlauea from viewpoints along Crater Rim Trail. Those who ignore the warnings, walk past closure signs, lose track of loved ones, and sneak into closed areas to get a closer look do so at great risk,” the agency warned.

People watch as an eruption takes place on the summit of the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii on Monday. The volcanic eruption, which started on Monday, is now in its second pause. But, park officials are issuing a warning to visitors after an almost disastrous incident occurred near the volcano

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People watch as an eruption takes place on the summit of the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii on Monday. The volcanic eruption, which started on Monday, is now in its second pause. But, park officials are issuing a warning to visitors after an almost disastrous incident occurred near the volcano ((Janice Wei/NPS via AP))

Rangers noted that dangers escalate during volcanic eruptions, as people flock to view the spectacle of lava flowing out of the Earth’s crust. The Park Service urged drivers to slow, and watch out for pedestrians, Hawaiian geese, and switch to low beams when other cars and pedestrians are present.

The eruption, which started on December 23, is now in its second pause, according to the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory. But, it could still restart at any time.

Furthermore, emissions of toxic gas remain high, including particulate matter called tephra. Billions of minuscule pieces of tephra, which include all fragments of rock ejected into the air by an erupting volcano, can be carried on winds for thousands of miles and can cause respiratory issues. Volcanoes also produce dangerous gases, like carbon dioxide and hydrogen chloride.

Tephra has blanketed the closed portion of Crater Rim Drive downwind of the lava.

Lava fountains erupt in Kīlauea crater as seen from Kūpinaʻi Pali in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on Monday. Hazards increase for parkgoers during volcanic eruptions

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Lava fountains erupt in Kīlauea crater as seen from Kūpinaʻi Pali in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on Monday. Hazards increase for parkgoers during volcanic eruptions (NPS)

“The hazards that coincide with an eruption are dangerous, and we have safety measures in place including closed areas, barriers, closure signs, and traffic management,” Park Superintendent Rhonda Loh said in a statement.

“Your safety is our utmost concern, but we rely on everyone to recreate responsibility. National parks showcase nature’s splendor but they are not playgrounds,” she said.



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Hawaii Supreme Court rejects county council candidate’s election lawsuit

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Hawaii Supreme Court rejects county council candidate’s election lawsuit


HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – The state Supreme Court has rejected a lawsuit by Maui County Council candidate Kelly King to overturn the general election results.

King lost her race last month to incumbent Tom Cook by 97 votes.

She argued the county rejected too many ballots because of missing or invalid signatures, and that voters weren’t offered enough help to fix the problems.

In Maui County, there were nearly 1,100 deficient ballots compared to the national average. King says Maui County’s rejection rate was nearly double the state average in 2022.

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But the high court ruled Tuesday that the County Clerk’s Office followed state law and all administrative rules to cure the deficient ballots.

View the full decision here.

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Unticketed passenger removed from Delta flight bound for Hawaii

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Unticketed passenger removed from Delta flight bound for Hawaii


HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Authorities are investigating how a passenger without a ticket got onto a Delta Airlines flight bound for Honolulu Christmas Eve.

According to Delta Airlines, the traveler boarded flight 487 from Seattle to Honolulu, on an Airbus A321neo aircraft.

The traveler has not been identified, but the airlines confirmed the person was discovered during the taxi out at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday.

The flight returned to the gate, where the person was removed and arrested. The Transportation Security Administration conducted additional security checks, including customer rescreening.

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The flight was delayed 2 hours and 15 minutes and continued on to Honolulu, the airline said.

Delta Airlines said in a statement: “As there are no matters more important than safety and security, Delta people followed procedures to have an unticketed passenger removed from the flight and then apprehended. We apologize to our customers for the delay in their travels and thank them for their patience and cooperation.”

Delta said early indications are the unticketed passenger boarded the flight at the gate without presenting a boarding pass.

TSA says the passenger made it through the standard screening, and did not possess any prohibited items.

The investigation is ongoing.

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This happened on the same day that a body was discovered in the wheel well of a United Airlines flight that arrived in Kahului from Chicago.

That incident also remains under investigation.



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