Hawaii
Top booster cuts university funding over shocking athletics ouster

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – One day after the abrupt firing of University of Hawaii athletics director Craig Angelos, questions remain on exactly why he was suddenly let go.
The decision has upset many UH supporters and they’re making their feelings known.
Longtime UH supporter and businessman Mike Kawazoe founded the Rainbow Collective in April of last year as a way to raise funds for the department and Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) money for student-athletes.
In that time, the collective raised over $1 million, and Kawazoe applauds Angelos’ work in generating revenue and securing successful business ventures for the program.
He says he was shocked at the firing and says no one from the university has reached out to him explaining the decision.
Related post: University of Hawaii abruptly fires athletics director Craig Angelos after 18 months
“I think that if there was an egregious reason for this to occur, I think that everyone would get on board and say we understand why this move was made. It’s been crickets,” he said.
“If you’re using performance as the excuse, that makes zero sense from anyone close to the program,” said Kawazoe.
Kawazoe said while the collective will still donate funds for individual student-athletes and NIL opportunities, he will personally no longer donate any money directly to the university.
“We’re at a critical juncture here as all of these moving parts are going on and transitioning with deals on the table,” he said. “The ink on the paper is not signed yet and details to be worked out. It’s a critical time. The timing could not be worse.”
Learn more: Student-athletes, sports community incensed over ousting of UH athletics director
Attorney Jeff Portnoy is the former athletics committee chair for the university’s Board of Regents. He says this kind of sudden dismissal shows dysfunction, and can damage a program for years.
“It’s just another nail in what has been, unfortunately, the building of a coffin and under what circumstances, can Hawaii maintain a Division I football program when you have this kind of discord, which is being played out not only locally, but nationally? No one can say it’s a good thing,” he said.
The university has had five athletics directors since 2008. When the search for Angelos’ replacement begins early next year, Portnoy is worried that the current state of the department will ward off any serious candidates.
“How do you run a Division I football program with not having the NIL money? With not having the institutional money and playing on a football field where you’re lucky if you get 10,000 people? I don’t know who would take the job, but I’m sure there’s somebody out there that will think about it.”
We have yet to hear from UH President David Lassner on the decision, but he will be speaking with the Board of Regents Thursday at 9 a.m. at UH Manoa.
The public is also welcome to submit testimony.
Copyright 2024 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.

Hawaii
Public sends off the crew of Hokule‘a, Hikianalia – The Garden Island
Hawaii
Exploring the extraordinary tradition of Hawaiian lei making:

From its golden sun to its turquoise surf, Hawaii can always take your breath away. But it’s the colorful leis that may dazzle the most.
The island’s exquisite array of flowers, valued for their fragrances, are harvested by Hawaiians for the ancient tradition of lei making.
Hawaii native Meleana Estes picks flowers – like the valued flower puakenikeni, known as the perfume flower tree ten cent flower – to create a colorful palette for her leis. A single lei can use 300 individual flowers and take hours to make.
An “expression of aloha”
CBS Sunday Morning
Hawaiians have been proudly sewing leis for more than 1,000 years. It’s a tradition that was introduced by early Polynesian settlers who wore garlands around their necks or heads as a gesture of respect for the gods.
There’s never a wrong time to bestow someone with a lei, Estes says. Today, Hawaiians hand out leis for nearly every occasion – from weddings to funerals, to airport pickups and beyond.
“Really a lei is your expression of aloha. Your love,” Estes explained, adding that it can also show a warm welcome to a house guest.
Estes learned the intricate art of lei-making from her grandmother or “Tutu,” and published a book called “Lei Aloha” to celebrate her traditions.
“She was very intentional. I feel like my Tutu would think about it for three days prior, you know, as she’d start gathering with intention for that one person,” Estes said.
With dozens ofspecies of flowers growing on the islands, the designs are endless. Estes makes extraordinary creations for family and friends using a long needle and thread.
“It’s beautiful, very architectural,” Estes said of the process.
You can see the colorful creations on display at the Annual Lei Day Celebration in Hawaii, held every May 1 since 1929. Dozens of master lei makers enter their work for a chance of being crowned best in show by judges, including Jamie Adams Detwiler.
“It’s really difficult” to pick just one winner, Detwiler said, noting that she looks for “what feeling” the leis bring to her and that they stay true to the lei method.
This year’s winner: a customary lei kui or sewn lei.
Getting creative
CBS Sunday Morning
But while lei making remains popular, its future could be in peril. Suburban sprawl has paved over many flower farms and climate change has overheated remaining land. An estimated 90 percent of flowers used in leis are now imported from countries like Thailand.
Andrew Mau, who owns a small Oahu boutique called ISLAND-BOY, where he makes leis from mostly family sourced flowers, said he’s seeing the impact firsthand.
“Everybody’s personal lei making stash or, you know, garden or mango tree or whatever you have, it’s been reduced,” he said.
The fact that a lei only lasts around two or three days has also added more stress on the island’s dwindling flower stock, forcing lei-makers like himself to adapt.
“We work with what we can get. Sometimes we don’t get enough flowers to make a lei. We use unripe fruit. An ornamental banana. We recently had someone bring in avocados from their tree,” said Mau, though he admits it breaks from tradition.
Mau’s work – particularly his “forever lei” – is so popular it regularly sells out.
“A forever lei is our response to the perishability of flowers. We work with wood beads – seeds, shells, nuts…it doesn’t have an expiration date,” he explained.
Hawaii
Man arrested for negligent homicide after deadly pedestrian crash in Hawaii Island

PUNA (HawaiiNewsNow) – Hawaii County police arrested a man for operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant and for negligent homicide after a deadly pedestrian crash Friday.
Dallas Brooks, 30, was arrested Friday evening after he hit Maxwell Robertson Sherword, 21, in Kurtistown.
According to police, at around 7:20 p.m. Brooks was traveling in an SUV eastbound on Orchidland Drive, near the intersection of 36th Avenue, when he struck Sherwood.
At the time of the crash, police said Sherwood was in the roadway and not in a marked crosswalk.
Officials said a witness told police that other vehicles had swerved to avoid hitting a man who was located in the middle of the roadway.
Sherwood was taken to the Hilo Benioff Medical Center, where he later died.
Police have ordered an autopsy to determine the exact cause of death.
Brooks was not injured as a result of the crash.
The investigation is ongoing, but police believe alcohol is a factor in the crash.
Brooks was arrested for operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant and for negligent homicide. He remains in custody at the Hilo Police Station pending further investigation.
Anyone with information is asked to call Officer Joshua Rodby-Tomas at (808) 961-2339 or email Joshua.Rodby-Tomas@hawaiicounty.gov.
Tipsters who prefer to remain anonymous may call CrimeStoppers at (808) 961-8300.
This is Hawaii County’s 13th traffic fatality of 2025 as compared to 16 traffic fatalities this same time last year.
Copyright 2025 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
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