Clips from The Daily (of the University of Washington)
Trans-Pacific flavors collide in Belltown
The Daily - November 5, 2003
Warm
with the spirit of aloha, Ohana sits at the heart of Belltown and
pulsates with the cultural energy of Hawaii, Japan and Polynesia. Though
it might seem like just another Belltown restaurant, this family-style
sushi lounge and tiki bar marches to its own drum when it comes to taste
and atmosphere.
Clips from the Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Blue-collar workers keep locale lively
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - September 28, 2003
Bulldozers crushed kiawe bushes and hauled away dirt to pave Mokauea
Street beside Leonard Kam's house in Kalihi Kai in 1964. Eight-year-old
Kam watched from his home, thrilled that a paved road would replace the
dirt one.
Arson damages gay cleric’s church
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - August 28, 2003Arson damages gay cleric’s church
Honolulu fire investigators said a fire yesterday morning at a Makiki
church headed by an openly gay pastor was intentionally set, which
several civil rights groups called a hate crime.
Tourist dies below Maui pools
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - August 20, 2003
A 41-year-old California man died after being swept out to sea while saving his son from drowning in the fast current of Palikea Stream in Haleakala National Park on Maui.
Neighbors aid family after fire levels home
Tourist dies below Maui pools
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - August 20, 2003
A 41-year-old California man died after being swept out to sea while saving his son from drowning in the fast current of Palikea Stream in Haleakala National Park on Maui.
Neighbors aid family after fire levels home
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - August 8, 2003
While bulldozers cleared the remnants of her burned-down house in Laie
yesterday, Teleni Tausinga wondered how she could rebuild the home where
she raised eight children over 30 years.
Few register for Philippine polls
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - August 3, 2003
Only a few of the several thousand Filipinos living in Hawaii who are eligible to vote in next year's Philippines elections have registered.
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - July 26, 2003
Rescue crews have found the body of missing hiker Daniel Levey, who had
been missing since Monday and apparently fell 150 feet from a Nuuanu
trail into a shallow pool of water on a ledge near a waterfall.
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - July 24, 2003
Honolulu police said a cardboard box in the middle of Farrington Highway
started a chain reaction of collisions that killed a 10-year-old girl
and a police motorcycle officer, injured five other people and snarled
Leeward traffic for hours yesterday.
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - July 20, 2003
City bus drivers and workers will vote tomorrow and Tuesday on whether
to authorize their leaders to call a strike over stalled negotiations
for a new three-year contract.
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - July 17, 2003
A federal grand jury has indicted a Hawaii man for allegedly conspiring
to transport at least 50 pounds of crystal methamphetamine in secret
compartments he designed in cars shipped from the West Coast.
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - July 9, 2003
A brush fire cut off traffic and power into Haleiwa yesterday and caused some store and homeowners to evacuate.
UH linguistics professor pushed for medicinal marijuana
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - July 3, 2003
Donald M. Topping, a retired University of Hawaii professor and advocate for medicinal marijuana, died Sunday at his Manoa home. He was 73.
Clips from Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
South Dakota media put public records law to the test
From the Fall 2002 issue of The News Media & The Law, page 38
Through Moody and Sully, and from Custer to Deuel, media employees traveled 10,000 miles through 66 South Dakota counties, made 300 stops and spent just $20.44 on copies to rate their state on openness. And they did it all in one day.
Claim against Potter author doesn't fly with federal judge
October 1, 2002
A struggle over “muggle” and Harry versus Larry ends in federal judge throwing out copyright suit against Harry Potter author and fining Pennsylvania author Nancy Stouffer $50,000 for falsifying evidence.
Committee convenes to clarify court-ordered privacy
September 30, 2002
A special committee met Sept. 23 to better define the circumstances under which government employee records should be made public and when privacy interests should prevail.
Media survey rates government openness
September 25, 2002
A statewide audit conducted by several media organizations and reported by South Dakota media in late September found that while many government agencies were willing to turn over public records, law enforcement officials rarely complied with records requests.
Judge refuses to let cameras into Runnion murder hearing
September 19, 2002
A Superior Court Judge in Santa Ana refused to allow camera coverage in the pretrial proceedings for the man accused in the kidnapping and death of 5-year-old Samantha Runnion.
Public television stations must open administrative records
September 19, 2002
Two Hawaii community television stations must abide by the same open record rules as government agencies to the extent that they are funded and administratively controlled by a state agency, the Office of Information Practices ruled in September.
Judge refuses to overturn guilty verdict in sunshine law violation
September 12, 2002
A decision convicting a county commissioner for holding secret meetings with other officials will stand.
Computer crash does not justify withholding records
September 12, 2002
The police agency must fix its computer record-keeping procedures, rather than denying access to the records, according to an attorney general opinion.
Judge bars still photographers from Westerfield penalty proceedings
September 5, 2002
A judge's anger over a photograph of the parents of a murdered child prompted a complete restriction on photographers in the courtroom.
UH linguistics professor pushed for medicinal marijuana
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - July 3, 2003
Donald M. Topping, a retired University of Hawaii professor and advocate for medicinal marijuana, died Sunday at his Manoa home. He was 73.
Clips from Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
South Dakota media put public records law to the test
From the Fall 2002 issue of The News Media & The Law, page 38
Through Moody and Sully, and from Custer to Deuel, media employees traveled 10,000 miles through 66 South Dakota counties, made 300 stops and spent just $20.44 on copies to rate their state on openness. And they did it all in one day.
Claim against Potter author doesn't fly with federal judge
October 1, 2002
A struggle over “muggle” and Harry versus Larry ends in federal judge throwing out copyright suit against Harry Potter author and fining Pennsylvania author Nancy Stouffer $50,000 for falsifying evidence.
Committee convenes to clarify court-ordered privacy
September 30, 2002
A special committee met Sept. 23 to better define the circumstances under which government employee records should be made public and when privacy interests should prevail.
Media survey rates government openness
September 25, 2002
A statewide audit conducted by several media organizations and reported by South Dakota media in late September found that while many government agencies were willing to turn over public records, law enforcement officials rarely complied with records requests.
Judge refuses to let cameras into Runnion murder hearing
September 19, 2002
A Superior Court Judge in Santa Ana refused to allow camera coverage in the pretrial proceedings for the man accused in the kidnapping and death of 5-year-old Samantha Runnion.
Public television stations must open administrative records
September 19, 2002
Two Hawaii community television stations must abide by the same open record rules as government agencies to the extent that they are funded and administratively controlled by a state agency, the Office of Information Practices ruled in September.
Judge refuses to overturn guilty verdict in sunshine law violation
September 12, 2002
A decision convicting a county commissioner for holding secret meetings with other officials will stand.
Computer crash does not justify withholding records
September 12, 2002
The police agency must fix its computer record-keeping procedures, rather than denying access to the records, according to an attorney general opinion.
Judge bars still photographers from Westerfield penalty proceedings
September 5, 2002
A judge's anger over a photograph of the parents of a murdered child prompted a complete restriction on photographers in the courtroom.
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