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Protect marine life in Pacific monuments

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Dotted with atolls and islands, the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument is an extensive collection of coral reef, seabird and shorebird protected areas. Stretching from Wake Atoll in the northwest to Jarvis Island in the southeast, the 314-million acre haven is farther from human hamlets than any other U.S. site.

A fishing ban helps sustain this monument that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service describes as among the “last refugia for fish and wildlife rapidly vanishing from the remainder of the planet.” Among its residents: sea turtles, dolphins, whales, pearl oysters, giant clams, coconut crabs, sharks and bumphead parrotfishes.

In Hawaii — an endangered species capital — we have plenty of first-hand knowledge on just how quickly treasured wildlife species fade and disappear, unless we adhere to effective conservation strategies. Such strategies are seldom convenient, and often expensive. But unless we persist in protecting wild places like Pacific Remote Islands, they will perish.

In the interest of preservation, now is the time to forcefully oppose a proposal to lift the fishing ban there, put in place in 2009 when President George W. Bush established the monument. It was expanded by President Barack Obama in 2014.

Under a recommendation last week to President Donald Trump, U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is advising an unspecified amending of the monument’s boundaries and designating a regional fishery management council to regulate commercial fishing in the area.

The Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council, which previously managed commercial fishing there, supports the move. Three years ago, when the site’s expansion was in the works, it complained that virtually all of the nation’s “no-take” marine-protected areas are situated in the Pacific, weakening the fishing industry’s economic vitality.

At issue here, however, is whether to maintain a conservation area that gives depleted species a chance to repopulate. What’s more, such an area can serve as a win-win when thriving protected fish populations spill over into neighboring waters where fishing boats can reap benefits.

Zinke’s recommendation was part of a national monuments review initiated in April when Trump signed an executive order directing scrutiny of “all presidential designations or expansions of designations under the Antiquities Act” since Jan. 1, 1996, if they involve more than 100,000 acres. The wrongheaded aim: rescind or re-size some to reopen areas to various “traditional uses,” such as logging and mining, oil and gas exploration, and fishing.

In addition to 22 monuments spanning 11.2 million acres in 11 states, the review included five vast marine monuments, with one in the Atlantic Ocean and four in the Pacific. Trump is the first president to weigh removing so much acreage from federal protection. But in a world sizing up climate change and ocean acidification, among other threats, preserving environmental protections is crucial.

Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument and Marianas Trench Marine National Monument are not slated for changes. But those proposed for Pacific Remote Islands similarly apply to Rose Atoll Marine National Monument, which has had a fishing ban in place since it was established — also in 2009.

Consisting of 8.6 million acres in American Samoa, Rose Atoll is home to about 97 percent of the region’s seabird population, including one dozen species of federally protected migratory seabirds. Lifting the fishing ban there should also be opposed.

In September 2016, while the IUCN (International Union for the Conservation of Nature) World Conservation Congress was meeting in Honolulu, its members — representing some 180 countries and 700 conservation organizations — approved a motion urging world leaders to protect 30 percent of the planet’s oceans by 2030. Today, less than 4 percent are under some kind of protection.

For the sake of a brighter future for the Pacific, we cannot loosen or let go of wildlife protections in our marine monuments.


The 1980s are over: Rumours, Ryan’s closing

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Listen up, you baby boomers who used to party all night in the 1980s: the rumors are true. Rumours night club will be closing near the end of January after 34 years in business at the Ala Moana Hotel. The throwback club survived decades of changing music, aging patrons and hotel renovations. New ownership is reportedly shutting the club.

Another stalwart from back in the day — Ryan’s Grill at Ward Centre — also will be closing in January, after nearly 35 years in business. Both of these venues were go-to spots for a whole generation of clubbers and consumers. They will be missed.

More affordable apartments, coming none too soon

Despite putting dents in the problem, Hawaii continues to lead the nation with the highest per capita homelessness rate — 51 people for every 10,000, according to annual nationwide census. Conducted in January, this year’s count marked our first decrease in the overall tally since 2009.

Affordable housing is needed to help lower next year’s count. Among projects in the works: a vacant three-story building in the McCully neighborhood that Honolulu Hale recently purchased to convert into 30 studio apartments for people earning 50 to 60 percent of area median income (AMI).

At 50 percent AMI, a family of three would earn up to $47,100.

Park more than halfway to fundraising goal

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Several large donations have brought the Rotary Club of Honolulu more than halfway to its $550,000 goal for the creation of the first neighborhood park in central Waikiki.

A vacant gravel lot at 2551 Aloha Drive will be turned into a 35,000-square-foot park, which will be named Centennial Park to commemorate the club’s centennial. The club has raised more than $293,000, including $25,000 donations from the Kobayashi Group, MacNaughton Group, Bank of Hawaii Foundation and Queen’s Healthcare System. Irongate Capital gave $20,000, the Waikiki Improvement Association gave $10,000 and dozens of Rotarians and other individuals also have made contributions.

When Rotary raises enough money and completes the park, it will be given back to the city, which will pay for the park’s maintenance. The gated park will be open to the public daily but will be locked around 8 p.m. nightly to prevent camping.

To donate, visit centennialparkwaikiki.com or call 922-5526.

Maui

Public meeting Tuesday on lifeguard tower at Hanakaoo

The proposed relocation of the Hanakaoo Beach Park lifeguard tower to Kaanapali is the subject of a community meeting Tuesday in Lahaina.

The Department of Fire and Public Safety would like to hear community input on the proposal to move the tower to the vicinity of Black Rock at Kaanapali Beach, the scene of frequent drownings.

The meeting will be at 5:30 p.m. at the Kaunoa West Maui Senior Center, 788 Pauoa St. The proposal has the support of Fire Chief Jeff Murray and Mayor Alan Arakawa.

Hawaii island

Wife who allegedly burned husband to his death indicted

A woman who allegedly set her husband on fire in a jealous rage has been indicted for murder by a Kona grand jury.

Renee Kaaihue, 55, of Kailua-Kona was charged with second-degree murder and arson, West Hawaii Today reports.

Police said Renee Kaaihue confronted her husband, Ghenghis Khan Kaaihue, 55, as he was with another woman in a van parked at Kahaluu Beach Park on Feb. 15, 2015.

When Renee Kaaihue began pouring gasoline on the van, police said, her husband got out and a struggle ensued. Both got gasoline onto their clothing and bodies.

According to witnesses, the woman used a lighter to set herself and the man on fire.

Ghenghis Khan Kaaihue died of third-­degree burns on Feb. 18, 2015. Renee Kaaihue continues to receive treatment.

Mold can be present in clay craft kits

About 6,000 “totally me!” clay craft kits are being recalled. The model number of AD11244 is printed on the bottom of the box. The “totally me!” logo is printed on the front of the craft kit box. They were sold at Babies R Us and Toys R Us stores nationwide from January 2017 through October 2017. The mold can be present in the clay, posing a risk of respiratory or other infections in individuals with compromised immune systems, damaged lungs or an allergy to mold. There have been three reports of mold in the clay. No injuries have been reported. Call Toys R Us at 800-869-7787 from 4 a.m. to noon Hawaii time Monday through Friday or visit www.toysrus.com and click on “Product Recalls.”

State offers guidance on drug-abuse programs

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Question: Is there a state person or center or phone number we could contact in terms of getting drug rehabilitation for someone? Is there any state agency we can call to help us sort through this? It’s a difficult time, and there seem to be so many things to decide.

Answer: Yes, check with the state Department of Health’s Alcohol and Drug Abuse Division. Its website, 808ne.ws/listrehab, lists substance-abuse treatment options on all islands, for adults and adolescents. The information listed includes the name, location and phone number of each treatment program funded by the division, plus a brief description of the services offered at each. Call the division at 692-7522 for help sorting through the various options, which include residential and community-based programs for distinct types of problems.

“We take these type of calls often and work to provide details for the public so they can access the most appropriate treatment option for them,” said Edward Mersereau, the division’s chief.

After speaking to a division staffer, you might feel more comfortable calling a treatment agency directly for more detailed information.

Another option is to call 211, the confidential referral line run by Aloha United Way; you can also check online at auw211.org. The site has numerous references to substance-abuse treatment programs in Hawaii.

Q: How many private guards on Oahu can carry guns?

A: “At this time, just over 100 private security personnel are authorized by HPD to carry firearms while on duty and in uniform,” said Michelle Yu, a spokeswoman for the Honolulu Police Department.

As noted in Thursday’s Kokua Line (808ne.ws/­127kline), private detectives and guards may not carry weapons unless “specifically authorized in writing” by the appropriate state agency or chief of police in the county where they work.

Q: When will they finish the work at Diamond Head?

A: It’s done. The summit trail at Diamond Head State Monument was back to its regular hours as of Friday, following the completion of rockfall mitigation work. It’s open from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily.

Access had been disrupted since September so that crews could remove rockfall hazards along the popular trail, which offers a 360-degree view at the summit.

Auwe

Auwe to a few drivers on the H-1 westbound on Nov. 22 between 2:40 and 3 p.m. Because you started driving in the shoulder lane in the Aiea area, other drivers followed. When the drivers saw cars stopped in the shoulder lane, they had to merge to their left to get out. Then the rubberneckers emerged by the hundreds. All of this contributed to traffic being backed up for miles on the Moanalua Freeway and H-1 well before Radford Drive. Once drivers passed the area where police officers were writing tickets for the violators, the freeway was wide open. — Driver stuck in traffic

E kala mai

My apologies to the drivers behind me as I tried to enter a parking garage in Kakaako on Thursday. For some reason I couldn’t get the parking gate to work, and there was no staff on hand to help. I ended up having to back up, to the understandable unhappiness of the cars behind me. They were waiting in line to enter the structure and instead had to also back up to allow room for me to exit. I got some stink eye but no one honked. For that I am grateful. — Embarrassed driver

Mahalo

On the evening of Dec. 3, a Christmas angel appeared at the Hawaii Yacht Club disguised as Lena, a Karl’s Karolers member, who returned to me the credit card that I had left in the parking machine! — Maddie, an extremely grateful senior


Write to Kokua Line at Honolulu Star-Advertiser, 7 Waterfront Plaza, Suite 210, 500 Ala Moana Blvd., Honolulu 96813; call 529-4773; fax 529-4750; or email kokualine@staradvertiser.com.


Man operating moped injured in Kaneohe

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A 21-year-old man was injured Sunday when the moped he was operating struck a minivan in Kaneohe.

According to police, the man was riding the moped between a row of parked cars and a lane of cars stopped at a traffic light when he attempted to enter the lane of traffic and hit the side of a Dodge Caravan driven by a 34-year-old woman.

The moped then collided with a curb.

The man was transported in critical condition to The Queen’s Medical Center.

Police said excessive speed may have been a factor in the incident. Drugs and alcohol do not appear to be factors, they said.

Maili house fire causes $200K in damage

Fire swept through an abandoned house in Maili on Sunday.

The Honolulu Fire Department responded at 7:49 a.m. with 10 units and 32 firefighters to a report of a blaze at 87-911 Paakea Road.

The first unit arrived at 7:55 a.m. and found the single-story structure fully engulfed in flames. The fire was brought under control at 8:03 a.m., and all second-alarm units were canceled en route.

Damage was estimated at $150,000 to the structure and $50,000 to an adjacent, unoccupied structure.

No injuries were reported. The cause is under investigation.

NFL islanders

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UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII

>> Trevor Davis, Packers wide receiver — Set up the game-tying touchdown with a 65-yard punt return to the Cleveland 25. He also returned three kickoffs for 75 total yards, with a long return of 26 yards.

>> Rigo Sanchez, Colts punter — Punted seven times for an average of 38.4 yards and a net of 35.6 against Buffalo. He had a long punt of 47 yards and placed two inside the 20.

SAINT LOUIS

>> Marcus Mariota, Titans quarterback — Completed 16 of 31 passes for 159 yards and two interceptions against Arizona. His rating was 39.6. He also rushed twice for 11 yards.

>> Tyson Alualu, Steelers defensive end — Recorded two solo tackles against Baltimore.

>> Kamalei Correa, Ravens linebacker — Made a solo tackle and an assist against Pittsburgh.

PUNAHOU

>> DeForest Buckner, 49ers defensive line — Had one tackle, one assist, one sack for a loss of 7 yards and one quarterback hit against Houston.

>> Ka’imi Fairbairn, Texans place-kicker — Made a 55-yard field goal and an extra point but missed an extra point and a late fourth-quarter field goal against San Francisco.

>> Manti Te’o, Saints linebacker — Compiled eight solo tackles, two assists and two tackles for loss against Atlanta on Thursday.

KAHUKU

>> Hau’oli Kikaha, Saints linebacker — Had one sack for a loss of 10 yards and added a quarterback hit against Atlanta on Thursday.

KAMEHAMEHA

>> Kamu Grugier-Hill, Eagles linebacker — Made an assisted tackle on special teams against the Los Angeles Rams.

FARRINGTON

>> Shawn Lauvao, Redskins guard — On IR.

HAWAII PREP

>> Max Unger, Saints center — Started at center against Atlanta on Thursday.

State legislators aim to regulate high-interest payday loans

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State lawmakers plan to again consider imposing stricter regulations on so-called payday lenders issuing loans that can carry interest rates as high as 459 percent in Hawaii.

It’s unclear what proposals will be introduced in the upcoming legislative session, but past attempts to regulate the much-criticized industry have called for capping interest rates at 36 percent — mirroring a nationwide cap imposed on such loans for active military members.

“Payday lending is something that we’ve had some dealings with in the past, but hopefully we can shine some additional light and garner some additional support for making sure that our consumers are not unprotected and know what they’re getting into if they go this route and what other options might be available,” said state Sen. Roz Baker, chairwoman of the Senate Consumer Commerce, Consumer Protection and Health Committee.

Baker’s committee held a joint informational briefing on the topic Friday with the House Consumer Protection and Commerce Committee.

Hawaii legalized payday lending in 1999. Money is lent at a high rate of interest with the agreement that it will be repaid with the borrower’s next paycheck.

At the time, the law was supposed to be temporary, but the sunset date was later removed. Under the law a check casher can charge up to 15 percent of the face amount of a check for a deferred-deposit transaction, or payday loan. With the maximum amount of a check capped at $600, the annualized interest rate charged under this scenario amounts to 459 percent for a 14-day loan, according to lawmakers.

“The law around payday lending is broken,” Nick Bourke, consumer finance director for the Pew Charitable Trusts, said. “What was implemented 25 years ago maybe was intended with good sentiment, but we know a lot more now.”

Bourke called payday loans harmful and said Hawaii’s annualized interest rate, or APR, for payday loans is among the highest in the country. The national average is 391 percent; Colorado’s is the lowest at 120 percent. Eighteen states prohibit extremely high-interest payday lending.

“The choice in how to respond is to either eliminate high-cost credit, which is better than status quo, or reform it,” said Bourke, who is based in Washington, D.C.

To show how prevalent payday lending is in Hawaii, officials compared the number of payday loan retail stores with the number of 7-Eleven convenience stores in the islands. There are 91 payday loan stores in Hawaii, outnumbering the 7-Eleven stores at 64 statewide, according to the nonprofit Hawaii Community Lending.

Stephen Levins, executive director of the state’s Office of Consumer Protection, agreed that consumers need added protections.

State Rep. Roy Takumi, chairman of the House Consumer Protection and Commerce Committee, questioned whether imposing a 36 percent interest rate cap would force payday lenders out of business, which has happened in other states.

“There would be consequences, and it would adversely affect the business model,” Levinson said. “But that has to be weighted against what’s going on right now and the societal cost for the people who are taking out these loans.”

Bourke said those turning to payday loans are often financially vulnerable and unable to access traditional credit through banks or credit unions. He said they use the money to cover recurring bills like rent, utilities and car payments, adding that the average borrower earns about $30,000 in annual income and has a credit score of 517. (A perfect credit score is 850.)

Borrowers often get stuck in a cycle of debt by renewing or re-borrowing payday loans.

Bourke suggested reform efforts should include regulations to make payments affordable; spread costs evenly over the term of the loan; lower costs and guard against harmful practices such as prepayment penalties.

Baker (D, West Maui-South Maui) said she anticipates proposed legislation that “pulls some of the recommendations from (Friday’s) briefing.”

Gov’s chief of staff shifts to deputy role

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Mike McCartney, Gov. David Ige’s chief of staff, has been moved into a lower-­level position and salary — but gets to keep his old title — under what Ige describes as a reorganization of his office.

The change was prompted in October when the governor named former state Transportation Director Ford Fuchigami as his administrative director.

Some political observers questioned the legality of having two individuals separately serving in a constitutionally mandated role with a constitutionally prescribed salary. Under past governors the titles of chief of staff and administrative director were held simultaneously by one staffer.

McCartney, who resigned as head of the Hawaii Tourism Authority to join Ige’s administration shortly after the 2014 election, had been handling the functions of both jobs and was being paid the salary set for the administrative director. When Fuchigami’s appointment was announced, Ige’s office said Fuchigami’s new role would primarily involve the duties of a former deputy chief of staff, a position that became vacant in December 2016.

But Ige told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser last week that the deputy chief of staff position has been eliminated, and McCartney has assumed those duties as well as the lower $148,000 salary tied to that position. As administrative director, Fuchigami is receiving McCartney’s old salary of $151,776.

“So now it’s split but there’s no deputy anymore. … We took that deputy position, put me in that, put Ford in as administrative director,” McCartney said, adding that his title remains chief of staff.

McCartney said the reshuffling was not prompted by concerns that as chief of staff he was earning a salary constitutionally prescribed for the administrative director position, which Fuchigami now fills. He said the salary changes were effective at the time of Fuchigami’s appointment.

“It’s not constitution,” he said. “It’s ‘reorg’ to continue to meet the needs that we got to do out there.”

The state Constitution lists among the governor’s executive powers that he or she “shall appoint an administrative director,” and further requires the Commission on Salaries to set the pay for the position — currently $151,776.

The job’s duties are laid out in state law, which says the administrative director “shall assist the governor by gathering and collating information concerning the functioning of the state government, by establishing and maintaining liaison among the (departments) … and in such other manner as the governor may direct.”

Ige said Fuchigami is taking the lead on things like legislation, policy and the budget, while McCartney oversees functions including communications and collective bargaining.

“As we were looking at filling the staff requirements, we were exploring who would add value to serving up here, and I chose Ford,” Ige said. “So we looked at how we wanted to proceed in that regard and decided that we would use the administrative director title as provided, and he will assume the responsibilities that are outlined. … It’s really looking at the employees we have and figuring out where people can be most effective and then assigning the work.”

McCartney likened the administrative director to the city’s managing director, who serves as the No. 2 official under the mayor.

“That’s kind of how the idea evolved,” McCartney said. “It’s just finding the right place for everybody to do the best things. And so that’s the best fit.”


Purchase focuses on getting back shooting groove

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Jack Purchase gave himself something not to think about in Saturday’s 18-point victory over Hawaii Hilo.

The Hawaii stretch forward began the process of busting out of a lengthy shooting slump by scoring 10 points with four assists, four rebounds and no turnovers in the 82-64 decision at the Stan Sheriff Center.

He shot just 3-for-8 from the field. Compared to the four previous games, that counted as significant progress; over that span, he’d scored just seven points on a combined 2-for-23.

Purchase, who hit 72 3-pointers a season ago — a record for a UH sophomore — has been open about being bothered by the misses and acknowledged thinking too much.

“People scout me as a shooter,” the Australian said in the Hilo postgame press conference. “When I came into the game, everyone’s yelling ‘shooter, shooter, shooter.’ You’re thinking, ‘Man, I gotta start making these shots because everyone thinks I’m a shooter.’ I just gotta take the pressure off myself, I just gotta get myself more involved with the team. Gotta stop thinking about it. I’ll be all right. Just good to see a couple fall tonight.”

Purchase came into the game shooting a ghastly 6-for-37 on 3-pointers (16.7 percent) for the season, but hit multiple 3s in a game (2-for-5) for the first time since the season opener against Arkansas-Pine Bluff. It helped UH toward a season-best 10 triples, in 25 attempts (40 percent).

His first few shots off the bench did not exactly indicate a return to form. An attempt from the elbow sailed beyond the rim and off the backboard. After converting a layup, he had a layup spiked off the backboard by Denhym Brooke. Then, his first 3 missed everything.

But unlike previous games, he stayed with it. His second 3 of the second half gave UH its largest lead of 30.

“You always have (struggles) at different times with different guys,” UH coach Eran Ganot said. “Noah (Allen) stands out. Two years ago, Quincy (Smith) was really struggling at the free-throw line. It’s what you sign up for, as a player and a coach, especially here. You’ll get a lot of praise and criticism and you gotta continue to fight through (and) do things right.

“But it is one of those places, when you struggle, you can feel it. I mean, Jack hits a 3 and it was like he hit a buzzer-beater.”

Purchase’s rebounding and passing have been a constant, and he factored into the Rainbow Warriors outdoing Hilo handily in both categories. For the season, he’s grabbing 5.8 boards and has 29 assists against six turnovers.

UH (6-2) has only a matchup with Utah Valley (6-4) on Sunday remaining before facing an imposing field in the Hawaiian Airlines Diamond Head Classic. UH opens that against No. 10 Miami on Dec. 22.

Kosgei cruises to women’s mark

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When the initial pace was too fast, Brigid Kosgei slowed it down just a bit.

The 23-year-old Kenyan didn’t decelerate too much, pushing the pace and smashing the women’s record at Sunday’s Honolulu Marathon. Kosgei finished in 2 hours, 22 minutes, 15 seconds to shatter the record and repeat as marathon champion. The previous record of 2:27:19 was set by Lyubov Denisova in 2006.

“I’m happy,” said Kosgei, who averaged a 5:26 mile on the 26.2-mile course. “I broke the record in Honolulu and because I won again.”

Nancy Kiprop of Kenya was second in 2:29:16, Joyce Chepkirui of Kenya, the 2014 and 2015 champion, was third in 2:33:18 and Kenya’s Janet Rono finished fourth in 2:39:32. Kenyan women have won the last four races.

“I’m very happy,” Kiprop, 38, said of her runner-up finish.

The three women ran together off the start and hit a blistering 4:58 at the first mile and just a few steps behind the men’s lead pack. The pace slowed a bit after the quick start, averaging a sub-5:30 pace.

“It was too fast in the beginning,” said Kosgei, who earned $40,000 for winning the race and another $15,000 for breaking the record.

Chepkirui fell back after the 20-kilometer mark (12.4 miles) on Kalanianaole Highway, and Kosgei and Kiprop crossed the half-marathon mark at 1:11:50 (5:29 pace) in Aina Haina.

Kosgei made another move at the 25-kilometer mark (15.5 miles), creating a five-second gap between herself and Kiprop. She skipped the aid station at 25k, quickly increasing her lead and passing Dennis Kimetto, the men’s marathon world record holder, who had faded from the men’s lead pack.

“For me it was too fast,” said Kiprop. “We went too fast and I tried to fight back. Around 25 kilometers, I (decided) to run my own race.”

With the wind blowing behind her and the steady drizzle letting up, Kosgei increased the pace as she made her way out of Hawaii Kai. In cool conditions, Kosgei said she didn’t feel any effects of humidity and the light rain felt like running back in her training area.

“I tried to push us until somewhere and then I left and I pushed at 25 kilometer and then they dropped and then they dropped,” Kosgei said.

Running alone and with her competition far behind her, Kosgei pushed the pace in the latter half of the race and said she made another push at 30k (18.6 miles). As her lead grew and grew on Kalanianaole Highway, she occasionally glanced over her shoulder.

“Nothing I see,” said Kosgei.

Even a steep climb on Diamond Head heading to the finish at Kapiolani Park didn’t slow Kosgei, who shaved nine minutes off her winning time from last year. She finished second in October’s Chicago Marathon, hampered by her left hamstring, then went home to Kenya to train for Honolulu.

WOMAN’S TOP 3 BY AGE GROUP

Name Time
Age 15-19
1. Aya Kato 3:28:31
2. Yuuki Murakami, 3:33:13
3. Tsugumi Konno 3:44:10
Age 20-24
1. Miyuki Takano 2:54:27
2. Nanami Ohkubo 3:01:37
3. Hitomi Kaida 3:24:26
Age 25-29
1. Kaoru Nagao 2:49:24
2. Eriko Otsuka 2:51:45
3. Sakiko Matsumi 3:05:55
Age 30-34
1. Hiroko Yoshitomi 2:40:13
2. Yumiko Kinoshita 2:45:20
3. Eri Suzuki 2:46:47
Age 35-39
1. Sarah Hallas 2:55:43
2. Bree Wee 2:59:18
3. Eri Hayakawa 3:04:30
Name Time
Age 40-44
1. Johanna Ottosson 3:06:19
2. Dawn Smith 3:23:22
3. Akiko Patterson 3:23:24
Age 45-49
1. Minori Hayakari 3:03:21
2. Mina Nagaoka 3:11:33
3. Susan Burr 3:26:28
Age 50-54
1. Emi Matsutani 3:14:36
2. Barbara Schmid Stoller 3:30:18
3. Sachiko Spears 3:30:24
Age 55-59
1. Miyuki Ishiguro 3:39:24
2. Naomi Fukuda 3:41:03
3. Kathleen Champagne 3:45:13
Age 60-64
1. Michie Shimmoto 3:21:09
2. Yukari Miyamoto 3:59:21
3. Machimi Kameyama 4:05:37
Name Time
Age 65-69
1. Yoko Nishi 4:18:01
2. Yayoi Minami 4:30:51
3. Kazuko Ide 4:33:51
Age 70-74
1. Yoshiko Wakamatsu 4:59:36
2. Keiko Suzuki 5:18:23
3. Tsuyako Matsuo 5:26:57
Age 75-79
1. Yoshino Kimura 4:34:00
2. Machiko Itayama 6:04:11
3. Pamela Iwata 6:29:39
Age 80-84
1. Kayo Yoneta 7:31:29
2. Yoshiko Sato 8:20:23
3. Tomiko Inoue 8:39:39
Age 85-89
1. Mathea Allansmith 9:05:45
Age 90-94
1. Betty Jean McHugh 6:47:31

WOMEN’S TOP 250 FINISHERS

Name Time
1. Brigid Kosgei 2:22:15
2. Nancy Kiprop 2:29:16
3. Joyce Chepkirui 2:33:18
4. Janet Rono 2:39:32
5. Hiroko Yoshitomi 2:40:13
6. Yumiko Kinoshita 2:45:20
7. Eri Suzuki 2:46:47
8. Kaoru Nagao 2:49:24
9. Eriko Otsuka 2:51:45
10. Polina Carlson 2:53:16
11. Miyuki Takano 2:54:27
12. Sarah Hallas 2:55:43
13. Maila Crouse 2:58:03
14. Bree Wee 2:59:18
15. Nanami Ohkubo 3:01:37
16. Minori Hayakari 3:03:21
17. Eri Hayakawa 3:04:30
18. Sakiko Matsumi 3:05:55
19. Johanna Ottosson 3:06:19
20. Mina Nagaoka 3:11:33
21. Sarah Deikun 3:11:35
22. Emi Matsutani 3:14:36
23. Yuko Tanimura 3:14:48
24. Ryan Paulaitis 3:15:41
25. Sharon Pena 3:17:16
26. Michie Shimmoto 3:21:09
27. Keiko Bando 3:21:34
28. Yui Taniguchi 3:21:55
29. Akiko Sasaki 3:22:14
30. Sonia McAllister 3:22:47
31. Dawn Smith 3:23:22
32. Akiko Patterson 3:23:24
33. Rie Yamaga 3:23:38
34. Allison Schroeder 3:23:40
35. Hitomi Kaida 3:24:26
36. Allison Sparacia 3:25:42
37. Susan Burr 3:26:28
38. Chihiro Nakai 3:27:27
39. Akiko Sato 3:27:46
40. Taylor Hall 3:27:49
41. Akemi Takahashi 3:28:22
42. Aya Kato 3:28:31
43. Shie Yamada 3:29:08
44. Paige Poehler 3:29:48
45. Ruth Fish 3:29:48
46. Chihiro Kajiwara 3:30:02
47. Satomi Fujii 3:30:07
48. Maiko Tsutsui 3:30:09
49. Keely McGhee 3:30:11
50. Barbara Schmid Stoller 3:30:18
51. Sachiko Spears 3:30:24
52. Teresa Haltom. 3:30:58
53. Satomi Mineta 3:31:34
54. Birgit Marzluf 3:31:36
55. Chihiro Kato 3:32:16
56. Mayumi Fukazawa 3:32:22
57. Anna Albrecht 3:32:54
58. Yuuki Murakami 3:33:13
59. Laci Hitchcock 3:33:22
60. Amanda Minacs 3:33:30
61. Anne Treadwell 3:34:09
62. Gillian Wood 3:34:37
63. Laura Darrow 3:34:46
64. Ayesha Makim 3:34:58
65. Jacqueline Anton 3:35:01
66. Isi Gschwandtner 3:35:25
67. Kiyomi Shimizu 3:35:35
68. Tracy Spaulding 3:35:50
69. Jennifer Okumura 3:35:51
70. Aireen De Peralta 3:35:52
71. Carly Forte 3:35:54
72. Chihiro Takita 3:36:06
73. Chelsey Freeman 3:36:14
74. Naho Matsumoto 3:36:36
75. Laury Eloy 3:36:59
76. Marissa Kunsch 3:37:11
77. Kira Heartwick 3:38:08
78. Kasumi Sato 3:38:10
79. Lori Nishida 3:38:20
80. Hiroko Matsuo 3:38:27
81. Jessica Kozuki 3:38:31
82. Margaret Hayes 3:38:37
83. Nana Nakayama 3:38:57
84. Miyuki Ishiguro 3:39:24
85. Karla Wayman 3:39:35
86. Erina Nakai 3:39:42
87. Pou I Chan 3:39:55
88. Kristen Imada 3:41:02
89. Naomi Fukuda 3:41:03
90. Allison Pon 3:42:01
91. Deydre Teyhen 3:42:13
92. Jatta Seppala 3:42:25
93. Susan Coleman 3:42:29
94. Adelina Smirnova 3:42:31
95. Heather Onders 3:42:32
96. Carey Colbert 3:42:34
97. Tiffany Heafner 3:42:52
98. Lisa Buch 3:43:00
99. Annarose Pandey 3:43:01
100. Naomi Shimabuku 3:43:03
101. Joan Durazzo 3:43:03
102. Kara Saiki 3:43:08
103. Tomoko Nogami 3:43:12
104. Yoko Yamazawa 3:43:13
105. Cora Freeman 3:43:19
106. Gretchen Smith 3:43:22
107. Jamilee Kempton 3:43:32
108. Sabine Pullins 3:43:46
109. Felicia Heisler 3:44:06
110. Sally Marrack 3:44:08
111. Tsugumi Konno 3:44:10
112. Bridget Colgan 3:44:37
113. Amy Hopkins 3:44:37
114. Shizue Kora 3:44:40
115. Kacie Ryan 3:44:43
116. Mika Nakashige 3:44:58
117. Lisa Zagura 3:45:00
118. Kathleen Champagne 3:45:13
119. Denise Adamic 3:45:13
120. Amy Stiller Jenkins 3:45:24
121. Cohen Lara 3:45:37
122. Yoko Aizu 3:45:38
123. Irina Lucaciu 3:45:40
124. Holly Bennett 3:45:50
125. Aki Kudo 3:45:55
126. Yuka Izumi 3:46:18
127. Tanya Parker 3:46:19
128. Eva Nilsson Bagenholm 3:46:28
129. Bessie Tran 3:47:04
130. Naoko Yamamoto 3:47:05
131. Sarah Strunk 3:47:05
132. Rahat Pluas 3:47:15
133. Korecki Chistiane 3:47:16
134. Akiko Kogure 3:47:20
135. Sari Peltonen 3:47:31
136. Susanna Byrne 3:47:48
137. Yuri Higashi 3:47:49
138. Murielle Baume 3:47:52
139. Jessica Wisse 3:47:54
140. Erin Sakai 3:47:55
141. Chikage Asami 3:48:01
142. Becki Lynn Lassley 3:48:02
143. Ashley Heidelberger 3:48:22
144. Kasey Ozaki 3:48:43
145. Yuki Nakamura 3:48:44
146. Ja Nay Wyss 3:48:51
147. Danielle Grimaldi 3:48:59
148. Kumiko Kiguchi 3:49:02
149. Hiroko Iijima 3:49:12
150. Kazue Matsumoto 3:49:22
151. Kristi Morton 3:49:28
152. Satomi Fujimura 3:50:08
153. Annette Char 3:50:12
154. Mie Sawada 3:50:26
155. Jennifer Harlan 3:50:26
156. Kazue Abe 3:50:34
157. Samantha Loving 3:50:34
158. Jessica Murphy 3:50:43
159. Emiko Kubo 3:50:45
160. Bonita Houseworth 3:50:51
161. Victoria Daniel 3:50:57
162. Ava Breck Lawler 3:51:11
163. Sophie Stirnimann 3:51:15
164. Naoko Onuki 3:51:15
165. Megan Beene 3:51:15
166. Miwako Obana 3:51:17
167. Ryo Kaneta 3:51:20
168. Mandi Jones 3:51:21
169. Christine Davis 3:51:33
170. Lindsey Sanborn 3:51:37
171. Miwako Senda 3:51:41
172. Rise Morisato 3:51:48
173. Brodie Harper 3:51:54
174. Takako Somei 3:51:57
175. Nao Furuta 3:52:13
176. Joyce Lee 3:52:14
177. Miho Imai 3:52:14
178. Ruth Bury 3:52:25
179. Elle Taylor 3:52:27
180. Renah Seay 3:52:37
181. Kazuko Hashimoto 3:52:38
182. Mari Tte Lowe 3:52:38
183. Mayumi Tsujii 3:52:39
184. Caryn Clements 3:52:43
185. Elizabeth Norris 3:52:47
186. Masami Motohara 3:52:49
187. Mihoko Nagumo 3:52:55
188. Lauren Aboussie 3:53:13
189. Deborah Yang 3:53:14
190. Miyuu Handa 3:53:17
191. Sylvia Ravaglia 3:53:33
192. Stacy Paquette 3:53:36
193. Miwa Koitabashi 3:53:36
194. Mari Nagashima 3:53:44
195. Risa Morishita 3:53:53
196. Evija Reine 3:53:53
197. Yumi Takano 3:54:03
198. Jessica Hanson 3:54:26
199. Gina Senkowski 3:54:26
200. Yukiko Miura 3:54:31
201. Ann Gill 3:54:38
202. Sachie Yuki 3:55:00
203. Joanne Quimada 3:55:04
204. Yukiko Matsuzaki 3:55:11
205. Noriko Taima 3:55:17
206. Sarah Parker 3:55:25
207. Rebecca Baker 3:55:27
208. Kayla Contreras 3:55:28
209. Chizuru Kosuge 3:55:35
210. Jo Anna Syverson 3:55:38
211. Miho Notagashira 3:55:48
212. Tomomi Yuda 3:55:49
213. Beth Downs 3:55:57
214. Stefanie Geringer 3:56:13
215. Anna Matsuzaki 3:56:16
216. Sara Augustine 3:56:24
217. Yuko Mukai 3:56:36
218. Briana Frank 3:56:40
219. Haley Cash 3:57:06
220. Shoko Kimura 3:57:11
221. Akiko Togashi 3:57:17
222. Manette Kearin 3:57:21
223. Leah Lagasse 3:57:24
224. Kasia Pytlik 3:57:25
225. Stacia Murray 3:57:29
226. Mizuki Enomoto 3:57:30
227. Atsuko Sekido 3:57:31
228. Eiko Nakano 3:57:31
229. Sandy Lam 3:57:32
230. Lali Handwerker 3:57:39
231. Christina Torres 3:57:42
232. Ayumi Yamamoto 3:57:58
233. Yumi Fuchiwaki 3:58:05
234. Ashton Leckrone 3:58:09
235. Yumiko Honda 3:58:13
236. Jillian Piaggione 3:58:16
237. Nikka Takane 3:58:22
238. Yuki Ando 3:58:35
239. Lesley Nakamura 3:58:36
240. Yuko Handa 3:58:39
241. Gay Renouf 3:58:43
242. Yoshiko Yamamori 3:58:45
243. Miyuki Tominaga 3:58:57
244. Chiharu Hemmi 3:59:02
245. Sayaka Regalado 3:59:14
246. Demi Greentree 3:59:18
247. Yukari Miyamoto 3:59:21
248. Sharee Nan Tie 3:59:40
249. Sabrina Hsu 3:59:49
250. Kazue Oka 4:00:01

The journey to 26.2 miles begins with a single step

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It’s 4 a.m., and I am prone on that low wall that separates Ala Moana Beach Park from Ala Moana Boulevard. I’m kept awake by repeated instructions, blaring in English and Japanese, to move out of the park and onto the roadway.

“Why am I here?” never enters my mind. I just know that I am where I should be, even though it is nearly absolute I will not accomplish the goal I’d set years prior. Not today, anyway.

It was in the works for about five years, this crazy idea of running the Honolulu Marathon again after 40 years. And I was on the right track: walking first, then gradually building up weekly jogging mileage. My nutrition was better, too, and I lost about a pound a week for around 25 weeks. I even entered road races. I was a runner again … much slower, but a runner still.

After completing the 13.1 Hapalua half-marathon last year, I was right on schedule.

Then, boom: Foot, knee and shoulder injuries. True, you don’t run on your shoulders, and that was the ailment to least affect my training. The worst was a nasty bronchitis attack earlier this year.

The base I’d been building since 2012 gradually eroded and I never regained momentum. I’d run a couple of miles a couple of times a week, and then find excuses not to push beyond that. I couldn’t get back to when a week without a 10- or 14-mile run was rare, when I had to force myself to back off and take a day off now and then.

As Sunday approached, I knew the chances of me finishing it were nil. But I also knew I would be there at 5 a.m., at the starting line.

Well, actually, not quite at the starting line.

When you’re among the 27,000 citizen runners (and walkers, and guys on stilts), you might not actually hit the starting line until 20 minutes or so after the pros have already started dashing through downtown and circling back toward Waikiki and beyond.

The fireworks go off precisely at 5, accompanied by Bon Jovi’s “Blaze of Glory,” and many of the people around me are taking pictures. They might as well, as there’s nothing else to do because we can’t start moving forward for another three minutes.

Most of those around me are from Japan. There are little kids and old ladies. Many seem to be teammates of some kind, including a bunch wearing blue Santa hats. I ran this thing in four hours in 1977, but the folks who estimate a finish time of eight hours are now my athletic peers — or, in many cases, superiors; a lot of them walk faster than I run. Also, unlike me, most of them will cover the distance they signed up for.

At 5:19, we finally get to the starting line. About half of the people around me start jogging and the other half continue walking.

For a while, I’m behind an older man wearing a T-shirt that reads, “I’m Tom, a stroke survivor, cheer me on.” I yell, “Go Tom,’ and he raises his left arm, fist clenched. It’s my favorite moment of the day.

Second favorite is on Kalakaua, where a woman smiles and holds a sign that reads, “You Are All Winners,” with presumably the same in Japanese under it. I’d forgotten how many people line the course just to watch and cheer on the marathoners, even the back of the pack. And the volunteers, 20,000 of them, all gracious — even when someone walking a 20-minute-mile pace throws an empty paper cup on the ground instead of into a nearby trash bag.

Honolulu Marathon president Jim Barahal told us last week that the “Start to Park” 10K would follow the same course as the first 6.2 miles of the marathon, with the same finishing area, Kapiolani Park. You just get to skip that little 20-mile Hawaii Kai swing. I asked if it would be OK if I just went down the “Start to Park” finishing chute, even though I had registered for the marathon and not the 10K.

“Don’t worry about it,” he said. “You won’t be the only one.”

Yes, there were some brief thoughts about Yogi Berra and forks in the road and Robert Frost and roads not taken. But since my body now feels after 6.2 miles what I remember it feeling like after 26.2 in 1977 — and I am not writing this from a medical tent — I made the right choice.

I crossed a finish line, but technically I’m a DNF (Did Not Finish), for the first time in my life. No medal, no finisher’s shirt … I could probably get myself a malasada, but that would be shameful. Coffee’s for closers.

Still, it’s a good day.

Sometimes, you just get yourself to the starting line, and anything beyond that is gravy.

I’m looking at Sunday’s 6.2 miles as a good start on training for next year’s 26.2. After 40 years, I can wait one more.


Reach Dave Reardon at dreardon@staradvertiser.com or 529-4783. His blog is at Hawaiiwarriorworld.com/quick-reads.


De Hart, Jones pace local men

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Evan De Hart began running at age 13 in Ohio. It was 2013 before James Jones, who grew up in Manoa, ran more than a mile in a single stretch.

The duo from disparate backgrounds in the sport ended up leading the local entrants in Sunday’s Honolulu Marathon.

Jones, a Punahou graduate who works for the University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization, earned top kama‘aina honors with his finish in 2 hours, 48 minutes, 24 seconds.

Jones had little interest in sports other than surfing until he completed his undergraduate work at UH. He began training consistently in 2016, entered his third marathon this year and placed 25th overall.

“I’m really happy with what I did with the conditions,” said Jones, who is pursuing his PhD in economics at UH. “There’s so many great runners here, there’s so many fast people, it was a surprise to me.”

De Hart’s work as a project manager with Moss Construction Management brought him to Hawaii about two years ago. He ran cross country and track and field at the University of Cincinnati and ran four marathons before entering his first Honolulu race.

The 32-year-old finished 22nd overall among the men with a time of 2:49:32.

“Ever since I moved here I frequently got the question, ‘have you run a Honolulu Marathon?’” De Hart said. “I figured I might as well do it because that seems like the pinnacle race in Hawaii. I figured I hate the marathon distance but I need to try to do it at least once before I get too old and beat up.”

Carlson, Crouse lead local women

Kailua’s Polina Carlson has finished many races and marathons, but her 10th-place showing for top resident honors in 2:53:16 had one major significance. It was her first as an American citizen.

“I didn’t know at first where running was going to take me,” said Carlson (nee Babkina), who was born in Russia. “I was running in college and I had a good experience running for HPU.

“Now it means so much more to me. I can be surrounded by amazing people here in Hawaii who support me so much. It means a lot to me and especially now that I’m a U.S. citizen. It’s really special. I’m grateful for that.”

Carlson used the race to prepare for another race next month.

“I was thinking that this marathon was an amazing opportunity to be around the community that I really love and to be able to be apart of it and to prepare myself for the Houston Marathon.”

Kahului’s Malia Crouse knew she wouldn’t be fresh for the marathon after finishing fourth at the XTERRA Kualoa Ranch 21K on Dec. 3. But she followed advice from friends and finished as the top kama‘aina female in 2:58:03.

“I knew I wasn’t going to feel super fresh but a lot of friends have done both and they said be consistent, be confident and I just tried to run an even race” said Crouse, who was the 13th woman to finish Sunday.

Crouse did well here in 2015 but lived in Colorado at the time. After 10 years, she returned to the Valley Isle and started Maui Running Company, which aims to support and foster the running community. She thought of her Sunday run group during the race.

“I’m thinking of my group run right now,” Crouse. “Every Sunday we meet, all levels. I try to pull all levels in. It’s really important to me.”

Soejima, Tsuchida retain wheelchair titles

Masazumi Soejima of Japan continued his domination of the marathon’s wheelchair division with his 11th title since 2005 on Sunday. Soejima finished in 1:39:24 to win his fifth straight title.

Wakako Tsuchida of Japan also repeated as the women’s champion. She finished in 1:49:33 to win her 11th title since 2000.

Nonagenarian sets world record

Canada’s Betty Jean McHugh broke the world marathon record for 90-year-olds, crossing the finish line in 6:47:31 (15:33 mile pace). The previous record was 8:53:08.

Two years ago, she broke the world record for 88-year-olds with a time of 6:31:32 at Honolulu. She was joined again in this year’s race with her son, grandson and granddaughter.

Asada draws a crowd

Former Olympic figure skater Mao Asada of Japan completed her first marathon in 4:34:13, drawing a large group of fans back to the finish area in hopes of snapping a photo of one of Japan’s most popular athletes.

Asada won the silver medal at the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver and claimed three world championships before retiring in April.

Nick Symmonds, a two-time Olympian and six-time U.S. champion at 800 meters, finished his first marathon in 3:00:35. He retired from track in June.

Perfect attendance

Former Honolulu resident Jerold Chun, now of La Jolla, Calif., finished in 5:37:37, having never missed a race in marathon history. Honolulu’s Gary Dill also kept his perfect attendance streak intact, finishing in 8:59.15.

HAWAII’S TOP 500 FINISHERS

Name Time
1. James Jones 2:48:24
2. Kenneth Stover 2:48:38
3. Evan De Hart 2:49:32
4. Polina Carlson 2:53:16
5. Adam Irons 2:54:15
6. Takahiro Oue 2:55:03
7. Humberto Baeza 2:55:57
8. Maila Crouse 2:58:03
9. Patrick Dolan 2:58:35
10. Bree Wee 2:59:18
11. Kengo Yoshimoto 2:59:20
12. Hayato Date 2:59:21
13. John Barile 2:59:51
14. Daniel Rivera 3:01:29
15. Tom Steidler 3:03:16
16. Andrew Taylor 3:04:38
17. Matthew Foster 3:06:35
18. Rich Hayes 3:08:05
19. Yoshihisa Kita 3:08:37
20. Reimon Wada 3:09:38
21. Justin Young 3:09:44
22. Thomas Alm 3:10:00
23. Lyman Perry 3:10:23
24. Motoki Nakamura 3:10:53
25. Derek Birn 3:10:55
26. Pete Boksanski 3:11:09
27. Sarah Deikun 3:11:35
28. Tomoaki Shirakawa 3:11:44
29. Shane Murray 3:11:53
30. Alan Ryan 3:11:59
31. Anthony Laglia 3:12:33
32. Justin Kline 3:13:01
33. Frankie Sparacia 3:13:42
34. Zachary Lee 3:14:00
35. Valentine Roberts 3:14:03
36. Gabriel Tom 3:14:15
37. Brandon Devie 3:14:19
38. Michael De Carli 3:14:55
39. Jay Catbagan 3:15:15
40. Jacob Fansler 3:16:28
41. Aaron Kent 3:16:41
42. Sharon Pena 3:17:16
43. Takeshi Yamada 3:17:52
44. Andrew Penny 3:18:32
45. Jake Shiraki 3:18:52
46. Jonathan Fleming 3:19:54
47. James Hodges 3:19:55
48. Yoshinari Hamamoto 3:20:39
49. Paul Roman 3:21:12
50. Jay Mannle 3:21:46
51. Nicholas Abbott 3:22:23
52. Randy Taniguchi 3:22:55
53. Jeff Haring 3:23:17
54. Carlos Haen 3:23:18
55. William Gardner 3:23:23
56. Akiko Patterson 3:23:24
57. Eiji Kondo 3:23:28
58. David Miller 3:23:50
59. Edward Drielak 3:23:55
60. Brennon Moore 3:24:04
61. Mark Ravaglia 3:24:06
62. Andres Caicedo 3:24:26
63. Sean Haight 3:24:39
64. Allison Sparacia 3:25:42
65. Susan Burr 3:26:28
66. Joseph Hatzinikolis 3:26:48
67. Kentaro Aoki 3:26:58
68. Frans Juola 3:27:10
69. Timothy Busby 3:27:14
70. Tomohiro Suhara 3:27:35
71. Naoki Mangoku 3:27:38
72. Brent Inouye 3:27:40
73. Taylor Hall 3:27:49
74. Satoru Fujita 3:27:50
75. Karl Israelsen 3:27:52
76. Linus Candelaria 3:27:54
77. Grant Miller 3:28:01
78. George Munoz 3:28:02
79. Bennett Avis 3:28:02
80. Daniel Coleman 3:28:06
81. David Caswell 3:28:58
82. Keisuke Suzuki 3:29:31
83. Paige Poehler 3:29:48
84. Ruth Fish 3:29:48
85. Motomasa Mitsui 3:29:55
86. Satomi Fujii 3:30:07
87. Keely McGhee 3:30:11
88. Ian Miller 3:30:13
89. Harald Ebeling 3:30:24
90. Jeff Dizon 3:30:34
91. Joon Hyuk Park 3:30:46
92. Keawe M 3:30:53
93. Rommel Tejer 3:30:54
94. Gavin Fujitani 3:30:57
95. Teresa Haltom 3:30:58
96. Brandon Woods 3:31:00
97. Nicholas Moskevich 3:31:35
98. Adam Doehrel 3:32:26
99. Tsuyoshi Yoshino 3:32:34
100. Lane Shimonishi 3:32:38
101. Anna Albrecht 3:32:54
102. Andrew Fisher 3:32:57
103. Hitoshi Takahashi 3:33:07
104. Bradley Kukral 3:33:10
105. Laci Hitchcock 3:33:22
106. Jack Pease 3:33:26
107. Nick Kalmeta 3:33:31
108. Douglas Baker 3:33:44
109. Alessandro Sperduti 3:34:02
110. Greg Kodama 3:34:27
111. Gillian Wood 3:34:37
112. Laura Darrow 3:34:46
113. Jacqueline Anton 3:35:01
114. Yukiya Oba 3:35:07
115. Hideharu Honda 3:35:21
116. Kiyomi Shimizu 3:35:35
117. Michael Cheng 3:35:38
118. Shin Nishibori 3:35:39
119. Kyle Vares 3:35:39
120. Akihiko Futaki 3:35:44
121. Jacob Head 3:35:48
122. Jennifer Okumura 3:35:51
123. Carly Forte 3:35:54
124. Chelsey Freeman 3:36:14
125. Julius Pham 3:36:23
126. Brent Wong 3:36:40
127. Roberto Villamil 3:36:50
128. Hiroaki Watanabe 3:36:55
129. Marissa Kunsch 3:37:11
130. Jon Jokiel 3:37:27
131. Naruhiko Yamada 3:37:35
132. Preston Sims 3:37:38
133. Daniel Suzuki 3:37:41
134. Andrew Kamikawa 3:37:50
135. Jon Kurz 3:37:52
136. Kira Heartwick 3:38:08
137. Lori Nishida 3:38:20
138. Jessica Kozuki 3:38:31
139. Mark Morgan 3:38:32
140. Alton Dunnigan 3:38:49
141. Karla Wayman 3:39:35
142. Katsuhiko Hara 3:39:35
143. Kenneth Ruggles 3:39:37
144. Marcelo Bautista 3:39:38
145. Nobuyuki Tsuchiya 3:39:38
146. Scott Terry 3:40:02
147. Nathaniel Herron 3:40:10
148. Tim Briggs 3:40:15
149. Jerome Williams 3:40:15
150. Chris Domaloan 3:40:27
151. Nathan Bodey 3:40:28
152. Charles Vierra 3:40:35
153. Delvin Monden 3:40:43
154. Scott Okagawa 3:40:45
155. David Bradford 3:40:51
156. Grant Akamine 3:40:57
157. Kristen Imada 3:41:02
158. Dejen Hagos 3:41:10
159. Kawaihoola Curnan 3:41:41
160. Jordan Bongolan 3:41:46
161. Laurentiu Grigore 3:41:57
162. George Hart 3:42:06
163. Deydre Teyhen 3:42:13
164. Shawn Mishler 3:42:24
165. Carey Colbert 3:42:34
166. Evan Nishimura 3:42:44
167. Nathan Weir 3:42:45
168. Tiffany Heafner 3:42:52
169. Ted Calvero 3:43:00
170. Naomi Shimabuku 3:43:03
171. Joan Durazzo 3:43:03
172. Kara Saiki 3:43:08
173. Toyohiko Ohyama 3:43:13
174. Yoko Yamazawa 3:43:13
175. Travis Lau 3:43:15
176. Sven Vahsen 3:43:17
177. Cora Freeman 3:43:19
178. Bryce Silver 3:43:23
179. Bill Buley 3:43:23
180. Nathanael Harter 3:43:32
181. Jamilee Kempton 3:43:32
182. Shingo Awaji 3:43:37
183. Sabine Pullins 3:43:46
184. Nathaniel Conkey 3:43:51
185. Brian Ginty 3:43:57
186. Robert Gutierrez 3:43:58
187. Max Karg 3:44:01
188. Felicia Heisler 3:44:06
189. Sally Marrack 3:44:08
190. Steven Campbell 3:44:10
191. Andrew Klink 3:44:21
192. Everett Tom 3:44:32
193. Bridget Colgan 3:44:37
194. Kacie Ryan 3:44:43
195. Steven Nash 3:44:45
196. Millard Mark Sappington 3:44:47
197. Mika Nakashige 3:44:58
198. Hidemasa Mitsui 3:44:58
199. Fumiyuki Tahara 3:44:59
200. Yuta Tawrahara 3:45:05
201. Shawn Hirose 3:45:08
202. Masaomi Uchida 3:45:11
203. Denise Adamic 3:45:13
204. Jeffrey Mack 3:45:21
205. Amy Stiller Jenkins 3:45:24
206. Jae Han 3:45:32
207. Francis Lee 3:45:38
208. Kent Reisdorff 3:45:45
209. Tanya Parker 3:46:19
210. Reynaldo Ventura 3:46:34
211. Cory Tengan 3:46:41
212. Raymond Davidson 3:46:52
213. Bessie Tran 3:47:04
214. Andrew Chong 3:47:04
215. Mike Donabedian 3:47:05
216. Rahat Pluas 3:47:15
217. Brent Fujimoto 3:47:38
218. Gaston Ly 3:47:39
219. Susanna Byrne 3:47:48
220. Yuri Higashi 3:47:49
221. Yusuke Shibata 3:47:50
222. Erin Sakai 3:47:55
223. Kyle Shifflett 3:48:10
224 Richard Winter 3:48:13
225. Ashley Heidelberger 3:48:22
226. Tetsuya Tabuchi 3:48:33
227. Kasey Ozaki 3:48:43
228. Steven Marzo 3:48:45
229. Hayden Harneck 3:48:48
230. Hiroyuki Hirayama 3:48:50
231. Ja Nay Wyss 3:48:51
232. Bryan Cantero 3:48:59
233. Hiroko Iijima 3:49:12
234. Ichiro Kubo 3:49:18
235. Atsushi Onishi 3:49:20
236. Jeffrey Fong 3:49:22
237. Alexander Cunningham 3:49:37
238. Makoto Hasegawa 3:49:54
239. Steven Manning 3:49:55
240. Chasen Dayton 3:49:58
241. Jason Estes 3:50:00
242. Satomi Fujimura 3:50:08
243. Annette Char 3:50:12
244. Edmon Battulayan 3:50:18
245. Jennifer Harlan 3:50:26
246. Samantha Loving 3:50:34
247. Calvin Shiroma 3:50:37
248. Patrick Jenkins 3:50:39
249. Masahiro Hashimoto 3:50:45
250. Griffin Riedel 3:50:47
251. Victoria Daniel 3:50:57
252. Hirotaka Miura 3:51:00
253. Cruser Barnes 3:51:13
254. Mandi Jones 3:51:21
255. Jeremy Correa 3:51:29
256. Lindsey Sanborn 3:51:37
257. Rise Morisato 3:51:48
258. Kazuhiro Sakai 3:51:51
259. Alexis Diego 3:51:51
260. Charles K. Willett Jr 3:51:53
261. Adam McGhee 3:51:58
262. Christopher Hale 3:52:05
263. Elle Taylor 3:52:27
264. Keith Murayama 3:52:35
265. Alex Wood 3:52:37
266. Renah Seay 3:52:37
267. Mari Tte Lowe 3:52:38
268. Corey Wilson 3:52:40
269. Christopher Boyer 3:52:42
270. Caryn Clements 3:52:43
271. Masabumi Sasaki 3:52:46
272. Craig Inouye 3:52:47
273. Elizabeth Norris 3:52:47
274. Patrick Gey 3:52:49
275. Christian Guzman 3:52:50
276. Tatsuya Koyama 3:53:06
277. Ryan Anthony Villar 3:53:09
278. Deborah Yang 3:53:14
279. Miyuu Handa 3:53:17
280. Hiroaki Tamura 3:53:21
281. Changwook Shin 3:53:21
282. Luning Ye 3:53:22
283. Sylvia Ravaglia 3:53:33
284. Stacy Paquette 3:53:36
285. Giorgio Tran 3:53:46
286. Yoshitaka Iwata 3:53:46
287. Ian McMillan 3:53:54
288. Ryan Moore 3:53:57
289. Hideki Daimon 3:54:04
290. Stephen Foley 3:54:11
291. Randal Morita 3:54:15
292. Adam Jackson 3:54:19
293. Gina Senkowski 3:54:26
294. John Lohr 3:54:27
295. Kenneth Segelhorst 3:54:30
296. Nicholas Geraci 3:54:30
297. Stephen Shields 3:54:32
298. Brandon Lau 3:54:38
299. Nathaniel Angel 3:54:42
300. Takuya Uryu 3:54:52
301. Robert McAlman 3:55:08
302. Jorge Diaz 3:55:13
303. Hitoshi Hayakawa 3:55:18
304. Ryoji Shiotsuki 3:55:18
305. Kayla Contreras 3:55:28
306. Jo Anna Syverson 3:55:38
307. Jerry Bartolome 3:55:43
308. Jomar Matias 3:55:48
309. Derrick Olson 3:55:51
310. Beth Downs 3:55:57
311. Cheyne Eugenio 3:55:58
312. Elton Koroly 3:56:01
313. Dan Peterson 3:56:03
314. Samuel Lareau 3:56:07
315. Kenneth Porter 3:56:14
316. Anna Matsuzaki 3:56:16
317. Edward Ho 3:56:17
318. Noah Strong 3:56:20
319. Sara Augustine 3:56:24
320. Kenny McCullough 3:56:28
321. Yuta Mori 3:56:37
322. Briana Frank 3:56:40
323. Brent Isono 3:56:54
324. Andres Chacon 3:56:57
325. Andrew Otero 3:56:58
326. Sean Thompson 3:57:03
327. Jason Densley 3:57:03
328. Haley Cash 3:57:06
329. Akiko Togashi 3:57:17
330. Eric Garcia 3:57:17
331. Roland Laliberte 3:57:19
332. Takashi Endo 3:57:24
333. Leah Lagasse 3:57:24
334. Bryan Lagasse 3:57:24
335. Stacia Murray 3:57:29
336. Atsuko Sekido 3:57:31
337. Eiko Nakano 3:57:31
338. Christopher Salas 3:57:37
339. Russell Vea 3:57:42
340. Christina Torres 3:57:42
341. Timothy Connelly 3:57:50
342. Jason Sabado 3:58:03
343. Kazuhisa Nagashima 3:58:03
344. Mark Shorter 3:58:04
345. Michael Chong 3:58:08
346. Aaron Irons 3:58:09
347. Ashton Leckrone 3:58:09
348. Yumiko Honda 3:58:13
349. Tomohiro Okuya 3:58:15
350. Jillian Piaggione 3:58:16
351. Nikka Takane 3:58:22
352. Brian Sperlongano 3:58:23
353. Phuoc Dinh 3:58:25
354. Aries Tolentino 3:58:26
355. Andy Rollins 3:58:26
356. Brandon Peterson 3:58:28
357. Howard Matthews 3:58:30
358. John Ellis 3:58:34
359. Jaron Hanus 3:58:34
360. Wayne Gardener 3:58:35
361. Rafael Mercado 3:58:36
362. Lesley Nakamura 3:58:36
363. Yuko Handa 3:58:39
364. Yoshiko Yamamori 3:58:45
365. Micah Wada 3:58:45
366. George Victorious 3:58:55
367. Peter Michael Seidel 3:58:56
368. Stephen Resch 3:59:02
369. Aaron Goins 3:59:03
370. Mike Taratko 3:59:03
371. Gary Asato 3:59:07
372. Dai Kelly 3:59:12
373. Henry Hughes 3:59:13
374. Sayaka Regalado 3:59:14
375. Michael Buelsing 3:59:17
376. Patrick Pluas 3:59:24
377. Robert Young 3:59:25
378. Morgan Carter 3:59:46
379. Kimo Clark 3:59:49
380. Sabrina Hsu 3:59:49
381. Mark Hayes 3:59:51
382. Ted Leon 3:59:52
383. Tom Collins Jr. 4:00:00
384. Eric Churchill 4:00:09
385. Aaron Matthes 4:00:21
386. Richard Boge 4:00:22
387. Arthur Gwozdz 4:00:34
388. Stanford Oyama 4:00:41
389. Jun Luga 4:00:44
390. Spencer Lynn 4:00:44
391. Eric Sanders 4:00:47
392. Brooke Myers 4:00:50
393. Jacob Foote 4:01:12
394. Haruna Horiuchi 4:01:14
395. Daniel Garrity 4:01:22
396. John Gorman 4:01:27
397. Daron Yim 4:01:28
398. Deven Sakamoto 4:01:34
399. Paul Wilson 4:01:36
400. Thomas Williams 4:01:44
401. Sean Gleason 4:01:45
402. Gregory Harbison 4:01:48
403. Taylor Chock 4:01:50
404. Matthew Koenig 4:01:57
405. Jordan Lee 4:01:59
406. Jeffrey Loh 4:02:01
407. Kyle Stahlecker 4:02:09
408. Eiji Yoshizaki 4:02:13
409. Dawn Villanueva 4:02:14
410. George Krischke 4:02:17
411. Carl Dunaway 4:02:21
412. Wilson Camejo 4:02:32
413. David Fitzpatrick 4:02:42
414. Rod Huddleston 4:02:46
415. Jonathan Vasquez 4:02:47
416. Justin Cramer 4:02:57
417. Brandon Mesa 4:03:00
418. Sara Santilli 4:03:10
419. Hironao Suzuki 4:03:10
420. Rudy Navor 4:03:11
421. Nathaniel Pak 4:03:20
422. Carmen Vega 4:03:21
423. Linnea Kiyabu 4:03:34
424. Mark Pacris 4:03:36
425. Rigo Pena Arvizo 4:03:47
426. Miyuki Hendrickson 4:03:51
427. Scott Molzhon 4:04:05
428. Eric Brueckner 4:04:05
429. Sara Verga 4:04:14
430. Randy Baldemor 4:04:15
431. Hiromi Yamada 4:04:24
432. Hao Yang 4:04:28
433. Blaise Hode 4:04:31
434. Jay Dela Cruz 4:04:35
435. Megumi Enomoto 4:04:43
436. Yuya Yamanaka 4:04:44
437. Fuchsia Yamashiro 4:04:44
438. Jackie Kerns 4:04:44
439. Jade Yim 4:04:49
440. Christian Santomauro 4:04:57
441. Jeremy Tria 4:05:00
442. Eric Oshiro 4:05:05
443. Andrea Epple 4:05:10
444. Shoichi Kubota 4:05:13
445. Philip Dureza 4:05:19
446. Carlos Rosa 4:05:26
447. Lenny Au 4:05:26
448. Katherine Page 4:05:28
449. Sealey Desoto 4:05:36
450. Eric Allen 4:05:37
451. Mark Miles 4:05:42
452. Shane Ruether 4:05:46
453. Madeline Ruether 4:05:47
454. Luis Castillo 4:05:51
455. Paul Campbell 4:06:02
456. Masako Kurokawa 4:06:06
457. Peter Chong 4:06:08
458. Diane Gillis 4:06:09
459. James Ramsey 4:06:16
460. Jeffrey Kaemmerlen 4:06:29
461. Cameron Nevin 4:06:37
462. Hiroyuki Kitani 4:06:38
463. Damien Lorentz 4:06:50
464. Nathan Fosket 4:07:03
465. Emma Broderick 4:07:15
466. James Reams 4:07:17
467. Robert King 4:07:27
468. Mayuko Shimada 4:07:30
469. Bryan Charron 4:07:32
470. Caasi Nakasone 4:07:35
471. Zachary Tokumoto 4:07:42
472. Louiegy Ponce 4:07:42
473. Sergio Valle Bastidas 4:07:43
474. Jonathan Shirley 4:07:50
475. Eugene Cho 4:07:52
476. Thomas Williams 4:07:56
477. Billy Tollett 4:07:56
478. Leslie Young 4:08:01
479. Nicholas Poehler 4:08:12
480. Brian Ford 4:08:16
481. Soeren Svane 4:08:30
482. Benito Quintana 4:08:39
483. Chad Kurahara 4:08:41
484. Jessica Orfe 4:08:45
485. Kim Hailer 4:08:46
486. Herman Tam 4:09:00
487. Nathan Duran 4:09:12
488. Jeremy Pederson 4:09:16
489. Francisco Flores 4:09:21
490. Addy Thongsonlone 4:09:21
491. Glen Yokotake 4:09:23
492. Kathryn Taylor 4:09:30
493. Victoria Lee 4:09:31
494. Alicia Hopkins 4:09:32
495. Jan Deveney 4:09:38
496. Kyllie Siu 4:09:39
497. Nikolaus Treziok 4:09:55
498. Alexander Kupratty. 4:09:56
499. Amanda Coupland 4:09:56
500. Masato Hibi 4:10:04

Cherono reduces course record

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This sequel far exceeded the original.

Lawrence Cherono’s second Honolulu Marathon victory followed much of the same script as the first and again closed with a record-breaking surge into Kapiolani Park.

Just about 12 months after breaking the marathon’s 12-year-old record, Cherono slashed more than a minute off the mark again Sunday in completing the 26.2-mile course in 2 hours, 8 minutes, 27 seconds while defending his Honolulu title in the event’s 45th running.

“I ran in good position and I was in good condition again,” Cherono said.

“I am happy again because I came here for a second time and breaking a course record is a great achievement to me.”

Part of a tight pack that maintained a brisk pace through wind and rain in East Honolulu, Cherono answered a push by 2014 champion Wilson Chebet on the return leg along Kalanianaole Highway, just as he did on his way to his 2:09:38 finish last year.

Cherono dropped the other contenders even earlier this time around and when he broke the tape at Kapiolani Park, the 29-year-old Kenyan became the ninth runner to win consecutive Honolulu Marathons and the first back-to-back champion since Nicholas Chelimo in 2010 and ’11. If Cherono returns next year, he’ll take a shot at joining Ibrahim Hussein (1985-87) and Jimmy Muindi (2003-05) in winning three straight.

Chebet, 32, also stayed on record pace for most of Sunday’s race and improved on his time of last year in finishing in 2:09:55. But Cherono was already draped with a Kenyan flag when Chebet held off Vincent Yator to complete his third straight runner-up finish.

“He’s my colleague and he has done two course records … and it’s good for him and I’m also proud of him,” Chebet said of Cherono. “I also proud of myself because I bested my time from last year.”

Yator came in third at 2:10:38 followed by Titus Ekiru at 2:12:19. Dennis Kimetto, the world-record holder in the marathon, fell off the pace before the lead pack reached the 10-mile mark and did not finish.

Last year, Cherono arrived in Honolulu after running a marathon in September and surged away from Chebet in Kahala to crush the previous record of 2:11:12 set by Muindi in 2004.

Cherono went on to win the Amsterdam Marathon in a personal-best 2:05:09 in October and the shorter recovery and training time prior his return to Honolulu tempered his expectations for Sunday’s race.

But not long after the 5 a.m. fireworks show boomed over Ala Moana Boulevard, Cherono sensed the record might again be within reach.

“I was not expecting (the record), but after the 5 kilometer (mark) I felt like my body was moving so I had to keep up with the pace,” Cherono said.

While Kimetto fell off the pack early, the group of seven elite runners remained tight while fighting through wind and rain in East Honolulu.

They hit the halfway point in 65 minutes and stayed close through the Hawaii Kai loop before Chebet made his push as they passed Kalani High School heading back toward Kahala. But Cherono quickly swallowed up the gap, passed Chebet in the 22nd mile and had opened up a 25-second lead by the time they reached Waialae Country Club.

“My body was really strong and I kept pushing the pace along,” Chebet said. “I left my colleagues but Cherono came from behind and then I fought one-on-one with him, (but) I was bit too tired and then he made a move.”

After becoming the second man to record a sub-2:10 finish in the race’s 45-year history, Chebet might be wondering what it’ll take to win a second Honolulu title.

“Maybe I’ll start another new strategy,” he said with a broad smile, “because I’m sure next year I’ll be with him again.”

Cherono had all but secured his second straight title while running alone through Kahala and covered his 25th mile, the climb around Diamond Head, in 4:59 to keep the record in sight and again added a $15,000 bonus for setting the course mark to the $40,000 winner’s check. Chebet earned $16,000 for second place.

MEN’S TOP 3 BY AGE GROUP

Name Time
Age 15-19
1. Riku Aihara 2:51:39
2. Takuma Kusumoto 2:55:43
3. Mahiro Shirasaki 3:05:48
Age 20-24
1. Ibuki Shimokawa 2:34:40
2. Isamu Toda 2:50:24
3. Ryosuke Itomi 2:57:46
Age 25-29
1. Masato Endo 2:30:40
2. Shuhei Moriya 2:37:55
3. Chen Huang 2:44:45
Age 30-34
1. Hirotaka Tanimoto 2:29:07
2. Shuji Tsukamoto 2:35:01
3. Wojciec Kopec 2:37:45
Age 35-39
1. Shigeto Osumi 2:43:45
2. Koji Sakimoto 2:43:54
3. Takeshi Araki 2:44:20
Name Time
Age 40-44
1. Ko Nishimura 2:48:58
2. Masanori Imazawa 2:51:45
3. Takeshi Sato 2:53:56
Age 45-49
1. Helmuth Noesner 2:53:54
2. Takayuki Ogawa, 2:54:07
3. Koji Kimura 2:57:13
Age 50-54
1. Fumio Yamane 2:52:16
2. Michael Quispe 2:54:54
3. Kazuya Mukai 2:57:38
Age 55-59
1. Scott Tucker 2:51:55
2. Hideyuki Aota 3:13:14
3. Koji Higashida 3:17:04
Age 60-64
1. Tsugufumi Matsuoka 3:13:11
2. Erich Hofstaetter 3:14:30
3. Yoshiki Ueno 3:31:25
Name Time
Age 65-69
1. Hideo Uchiyama 3:13:58
2. Masahiro Uchimura 3:18:58
3. Mitsuji Ushijima 3:28:29
Age 70-74
1. Pasquale Filannino 3:46:27
2. Hideo Katsube 3:51:01
3. Sakae Tanaka 3:51:18
Age 75-79
1. Kiichi Ikai 4:00:49
2. Hidekazu Yonehara 4:01:22
3. Satoshi Watanabe 4:17:19
Age 80-84
1. Hachizaemon Kazama 5:34:20
2. Patrick Higgins 6:38:29
3. Akira Hiraoka 6:43:06
Age 85-89
1. Michio Kumamoto 5:20:53
2. Chikara Abe 6:21:46
3. Gordon Martin 7:41:42
Age 90-94
1. Takeo Baba 9:34:19
2. Jerry Ogata 10:22:51

MEN’S TOP 250 FINISHERS

Name Time
1. Lawrence Cherono 2:08:27
2. Wilson Chebet 2:09:55
3. Vincent Yator 2:10:38
4. Titus Ekiru. 2:12:19
5. Festus Talam 2:17:26
6. Hirotaka Tanimoto 2:29:07
7. Masato Endo 2:30:40
8. Ibuki Shimokawa 2:34:40
9. Shuji Tsukamoto 2:35:01
10. Wojciech Kopec. 2:37:45
11. Shuhei Moriya. 2:37:55
12. Shigeto Osumi 2:43:45
13. Koji Sakimoto 2:43:54
14. Takeshi Araki 2:44:20
15. Yutaka Sawato 2:44:44
16. Chen Huang 2:44:45
17. Adrian Sherrod 2:46:54
18. James Jones 2:48:24
19. Kenneth Stover 2:48:38
20. Ko Nishimura 2:48:58
21. Akira Goma 2:49:11
22. Evan De Hart 2:49:32
23. Akinori Yamanaka 2:49:39
24. Isamu Toda 2:50:24
25. Riku Aihara 2:51:39
26. Masanori Imazawa 2:51:45
27. Scott Tucker 2:51:55
28. Fumio Yamane 2:52:16
29. Andrew Felbinger 2:52:40
30. Helmuth Noesner 2:53:54
31. Takeshi Sato 2:53:56
32. Takayuki Ogawa 2:54:07
33. Adam Irons 2:54:15
34. Hironori Makita 2:54:52
35. Michael Quispe 2:54:54
36. Takahiro Oue 2:55:03
37. Takuma Kusumoto. 2:55:43
38. Humberto Baeza 2:55:57
39. Kota Kiriyama 2:56:26
40. Koji Kimura 2:57:13
41. Kiyoshi Kanezawa 2:57:34
42. Kazuya Mukai 2:57:38
43. Ryosuke Itomi 2:57:46
44. Takashi Aihara 2:57:55
45. Ivan Ruchkin 2:58:26
46. Patrick Dolan 2:58:35
47. Akiya Matsuno 2:58:40
48. Atsushi Ito 2:58:49
49. Junji Dobashi 2:59:10
50. Kengo Yoshimoto 2:59:20
51. Takashi Kuroki 2:59:21
52. Hayato Date 2:59:21
53. Yusuke Hoshino 2:59:30
54. Nathan Kot 2:59:33
55. John Barile 2:59:51
56. Yuki Murakami 3:00:00
57. Nick Symmonds 3:00:35
58. Kyle Morrison 3:00:39
59. Daniel Rivera 3:01:29
60. Conor Quinn 3:01:59
61. Taketoshi Kuramoto 3:02:04
62. Michael Marshall 3:02:38
63. Tom Steidler 3:03:16
64. Matthieu Gancedo 3:03:25
65. Atsuo Honda 3:04:12
66. Tomohiro Horata 3:04:24
67. Andrew Taylor 3:04:38
68. Michel Rojkind 3:05:38
69. Hitoshi Saito 3:05:46
70. Mahiro Shirasaki 3:05:48
71. Kazuya Matsui 3:06:18
72. Matthew Foster 3:06:35
73. Tomotsugu Kaneko 3:07:12
74. Kazuya Kato 3:07:42
75. Christopher Kalima 3:07:52
76. Atushi Gonda 3:08:03
77. Rich Hayes 3:08:05
78. Yoshihisa Kita 3:08:37
79. Kosuke Uchiyama 3:08:50
80. Reimon Wada 3:09:38
81. Justin Young 3:09:44
82. Kazuyoshi Masuda 3:09:51
83. Thomas Alm 3:10:00
84. Kiyokazu Masuda 3:10:15
85. Lyman Perry 3:10:23
86. Motoki Nakamura 3:10:53
87. Derek Birn 3:10:55
88. Hiroto Sawaki 3:11:07
89. Pete Boksanski 3:11:09
90. Takaaki Koyama. 3:11:13
91. Katsuya Nakano 3:11:22
92. Tomoaki Shirakawa 3:11:44
93.Ryo Fukumaru 3:11:44
94. Kazutaka Kemmoku 3:11:45
95. Shane Murray 3:11:53
96. Alan Ryan 3:11:59
97. Takuya Obana 3:12:04
98. Mark Zuelsdorf 3:12:14
99. Humphrey Chau 3:12:22
100. Petrus Lundstrom 3:12:31
101. Anthony Laglia 3:12:33
102. Roman Gurule 3:12:40
103. Yoshiaki Tanaka 3:13:00
104. Justin Kline 3:13:01
105. Tsugufumi Matsuoka 3:13:11
106. Hideyuki Aota 3:13:14
107. Ricky Whitaker 3:13:14
108. Bando Kensei 3:13:38
109. Frankie Sparacia 3:13:42
110. Hans Peter Fikus 3:13:44
111. Hideo Uchiyama 3:13:58
112. Zachary Lee 3:14:00
113. Valentine Roberts 3:14:03
114. Takashi Kamiyama 3:14:08
115. Gabriel Tom 3:14:15
116. Brandon Devie 3:14:19
117. Kazuhiro Ueshiro 3:14:27
118. Erich Hofstaetter 3:14:30
119. Daisuke Maruyama 3:14:44
120. Michael De Carli 3:14:55
121. Jonathan Moniatis 3:15:14
122. Masashi Kubo 3:15:14
123. Jay Catbagan 3:15:15
124. Jun Osanai 3:15:28
125. Antti Per L 3:15:54
126. Tomoyori Matsukage 3:16:05
127. Junichi Tamura 3:16:07
128. Jacob Fansler 3:16:28
129. Aaron Kent 3:16:41
130. Koji Higashida 3:17:04
131. Bill Burns 3:17:11
132. Joaquin Escanellas Lopez 3:17:15
133. Matt Heacock 3:17:24
134. Kenichi Furuhashi 3:17:27
135. Takeshi Yamada 3:17:52
136. Keitaro Otsubo 3:18:08
137. Masakazu Tani 3:18:19
138. Andrew Penny 3:18:32
139. Brett Burnham 3:18:33
140. Jake Shiraki 3:18:52
141. Dmitry Geranin 3:18:55
142. Masahiro Uchimura 3:18:58
143. Christopher Imai 3:19:08
144. Timothy Whitegoat 3:19:17
145. Michael Aboussie 3:19:28
146. Wei Cao 3:19:34
147. Fernando Mejia 3:19:37
148. Darcey Harder 3:19:38
149. Toshio Hashimoto 3:19:41
150. Nhien Dang Le 3:19:43
151. Jonathan Fleming 3:19:54
152. James Hodges 3:19:55
153. Masashi Morooka 3:20:20
154. Minoru Yoneda 3:20:20
155. Matt Bergum 3:20:25
156. Shigeru Kumagai 3:20:34
157. Kimiaki Maruo 3:20:37
158. Yoshinari Hamamoto 3:20:39
159. Tomoyuki Wada 3:20:44
160. Andre Schmelzer 3:20:44
161. Kenji Sakaguchi 3:20:46
162. Yuki Shiota 3:20:48
163. Shuhei Sakamoto 3:21:04
164. Paul Roman 3:21:12
165. Jose Floresaguirre 3:21:15
166. Kevin Hanna 3:21:27
167. Ryusuke Ishizumi 3:21:37
168. Jay Mannle 3:21:46
169. Genki Onishi 3:21:52
170. Shun Ito 3:21:57
171. Hisao Tamura 3:22:02
172. Israel Arteaga 3:22:04
173. Kazuharu Iwata 3:22:05
174. Tomohiro Inoue 3:22:06
175. Daijiro Yamamoto 3:22:10
176. Yoshinori Akiyama 3:22:14
177. Nicholas Abbott 3:22:23
178. David Dawson 3:22:33
179. Hidefumi Mori 3:22:35
180. Colin Chovin 3:22:35
181. David Rothenburger 3:22:52
182. Randy Taniguchi 3:22:55
183.Kentaro Makihara 3:23:09
184. Jeff Haring 3:23:17
185. Carlos Haen 3:23:18
186. William Gardner 3:23:23
187. Eiji Kondo 3:23:28
188. Alexander Hebenstreit 3:23:41
189. David Miller 3:23:50
190. Suzuya Mori 3:23:52
191. Edward Drielak 3:23:55
192. Daniel Vogel 3:23:56
193. Markus Ribery Hammer 3:24:00
194. Ippei Terakawa 3:24:03
195. Brennon Moore 3:24:04
196. Mark Ravaglia 3:24:06
197. Akinobu Ueno 3:24:08
198. Takatomi Horiuchi 3:24:10
199. Andres Caicedo 3:24:26
200. Kentaro Onishi 3:24:27
201. Yosuke Katsuyama 3:24:31
202. Stephan Heiliger 3:24:38
203. Yoshiaki Ota 3:24:38
204. Sean Haight 3:24:39
205. Olafur Asgeirsson 3:24:57
206. Nobuki Shimada 3:24:59
207. Hiroshi Kurabe 3:25:13
208. Keito Morimoto 3:25:23
209. Mitchell Lurie 3:25:27
210. Enishi Izutsu 3:25:28
211. Chris Sina Jessiman 3:25:32
212. Andrew Cook 3:25:51
213. Hideo Shimizu 3:26:02
214. Norito Nakajima 3:26:04
215. Mitsuhiro Yamamoto 3:26:07
216. Jeff Lessie 3:26:07
217. Yuta Tanimoto 3:26:13
218. Takayuki Ogawa 3:26:23
219. James London 3:26:40
220. Ginga Takahashi 3:26:46
221. Joseph Hatzinikolis 3:26:48
222. Masaaki Kaneko 3:26:50
223. Masanori Suwa 3:26:55
224. Kentaro Aoki 3:26:58
225. Claudio Mascolo 3:27:06
226. Hojun Hwang 3:27:07
227. Kazuyuki Washio 3:27:07
228. Frans Juola 3:27:10
229. Pascal Andr Auger 3:27:11
230. Don Sims 3:27:11
231. Timothy Busby 3:27:14
232. Yasuhiko Mizukami 3:27:14
233. Tomohiro Suhara 3:27:35
234. Shigeto Hiranuma 3:27:37
235. Naoki Mangoku 3:27:38
236. Brent Inouye 3:27:40
237. Wai Yat Yuen 3:27:40
238. Satoru Fujita 3:27:50
239. Karl Israelsen 3:27:52
240. Joseph Cirnigliaro 3:27:53
241. Dennis Grewe 3:27:54
242. Kengo Sato 3:27:54
243. Linus Candelaria 3:27:54
244. Daisuke Horiguchi 3:27:54
245. Grant Miller 3:28:01
246. George Munoz 3:28:02
247. Bennett Avis 3:28:02
248. Daniel Coleman 3:28:06
249. Scott Huntley 3:28:09
250. Rob Bailey 3:28:15

 

Non-native birds thrive where coquis abide, study finds

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The proliferation of coqui frogs in Hawaii has had a significant, and surprising, impact on non-­native birds — not that indigenous birds have bothered to notice.

A new study by researchers at Utah State University, conducted at 15 sites on Hawaii island in 2014, found that the increased presence of the racket-producing little frogs actually boosted the number of non-native birds in the affected areas while registering no adverse affect on native birds.

Puerto Rican coqui frogs first arrived in Hawaii in the 1980s and now number as many as 91,000 per hectare in some locations.

It was long assumed that the introduction of the frogs would negatively affect local bird populations by increasing competition for available food.

The Utah State researchers found quite the opposite.

The study found that native birds showed no response to the presence of coqui frogs, likely because the frogs forage in leaf litter while native insect-eating birds forage mostly in the canopy and understory of forests.

Even more unexpected, non-native bird numbers actually increased where coqui density was the highest.

The scientists think non-native birds may be feeding on adult or juvenile frogs and that the frogs’ excrement and carcasses might increase fly populations, which increases the food supply for insect-eating birds.

“I was very surprised with the results for birds,” researcher Karen Beard said in a news release. “It had been hypothesized before our study that coquis would compete with birds, particularly natives, because we know that coquis reduce insects where they invade. In retrospect, I guess it’s not too surprising that predation is a more important interaction than competition … but it was definitely not what we went in to test.

“The response we see for common mynas and red-billed leiothrix is pretty convincing,” she said. “We’re pretty sure that some of this increase is due to these species eating live or dead coquis, and we’re suggesting that some non-native birds are likely consuming coquis and this novel resource appears to be increasing their populations.”

The findings are published in the latest edition of the journal The Condor: Ornithological Applications.

High spirits make every runner a winner

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Jerold Chun, 58, finished his 45th consecutive Hono­lulu Marathon in high spirits despite nursing a hamstring injury and a large blister on his foot.

Running marathons is like life, said Chun, who was one of 26,003 entered in Sunday’s Honolulu Marathon: Sometimes the most important thing is that you show up, and finish what you started.

“I finished in 5:37:37. That’s a snail’s pace to me, but it’s still a win since I finished with a hamstring injury,” Chun said. “I had a tough time out there today. I changed my gait and took out my insoles to finish without aggravating the injury. I ended up with a blister, but it was absolutely worth it.”

Evidently, Chun’s sentiments are shared by thousands. Despite the 5 a.m. start time and a grueling 26.2-mile course some 20,442 finishers crossed the line — making the event one of the nations’ largest.

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All runners and walkers shared a common goal to finish the race, but their motivations were as varied as they were.

Christine Youngblood, a 29-year-old from Houston, got up at 3 a.m. for months to train so she could complete her first marathon in under five hours. Youngblood was so happy with her time of 4:47:38 that she cried at the finish.

“I’ve trained for this for 226 days,” she said. “It was just a magical day.”

Wahiawa resident David Schultz, 24, ran to honor fallen soldier Cpl. Andrew A. Aimesbury, who died Dec. 9, 2015, following live training exercises.

“Completing this race was significant for me,” said Schultz, who finished his first marathon in 5:05:02. “I did it for my buddy ‘Ranger.’”

The pursuit of good health was the primary motivator for Jon Kulhanek, 55, a first-time marathoner from Alaska, and his wife, Paula Kulhanek, a 47-year-old who was one of 4,222 finishers in the Start-to-Park 10K companion event.

“We were going to run the marathon together, but I got pneumonia so I switched to the 10K,” said Paula Kulhanek, who walked her first Honolulu Marathon last year after losing 75 pounds. “Hopefully, we’ll be back next year. It’s a super fun race with great energy. We loved the Santa passing out hugs when we ran by Murphy’s Bar & Grill.”

Chun, who ran his first Honolulu marathon at age 13, developed his passion for the event as a member of a well-known local family running team assembled by his father, the late Hing Hua “Hunky” Chun. The eight-member team — Hing Hua Chun, his second wife, Connie Beltran Chun, and his three boys and her three girls from prior marriages — came to be known as the “Hunky Bunch” because the family’s composition resembled the popular TV show “The Brady Bunch.”

In addition to running the Honolulu Marathon, Chun said, the bunch ran the Boston Marathon together. During their peak year the bunch ran more than 25,000 miles collectively and wore out 24 pairs of running shoes.

Chun is the last member of the “Hunky Bunch” still running in the Honolulu Marathon, and he’s one of only two runners, the other being Gary Dill, who can claim to have run in all 45 races. Dill, who lives in Hono­lulu, ran the race in 8:59:15 at a 20:35-per-mile pace.

“I remember when there were 10 runners who had run them all, then seven, then five. Now it’s down to only two,” said Honolulu Marathon President Jim Barahal. “It’s like a survivors club. I think once you become one of those people, it kind of takes on a life of its own.”

Chun, who now lives in La Jolla, Calif., said his Sunday pace of 12:53 per mile was a far cry from his best Honolulu Marathon time. He recalls finishing the race in about 2 hours and 48 minutes sometime during the 1970s.

“My family were considered reasonably good runners back in the day,” said Chun, who won the Oahu Interscholastic Association 2-mile championship in 1977 as a Roosevelt High School senior. “Now I’m the only one still crazy enough to keep doing it.”

Chun said he runs in memory of his father, who ran the marathon 25 years in a row and only stopped in 2002 after succumbing to lung cancer.

“My dad loved the marathon. When he was alive, I enjoyed coming home and spending time running with him,” he said. “Now running is a way to remember him. I plan to keep coming back.”

Chun, who is a professor and senior vice president at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute, said he shares his doctor father’s philosophy that running is “a great way to stay active and in good health.” He’s determined to stay on track even though he’s had all kinds of race-day challenges — from the year he ran with the flu to the one where he was recovering from a car accident.

”The Honolulu Marathon is a metaphor for life. Things happen, but you just get through them, you do it,” Chun said. “It’s really a celebration of life.”


Television and radio

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On the air
Listings are for Spectrum and Hawaiianˆˆ analog/digital. *—premium station.
**—retelecast. ***—delayed. Check your TV guide for latest updates.
TODAY
  TIME TV spec HT
BASKETBALL: NBA
Pelicans at Rockets 3 p.m. NBATV NA/242* 92*
Raptors at Clippers 5:30 p.m. FSPT 31/228 82*
Raptors at Clippers 5:30 p.m. NBATV NA/242* 92*
BASKETBALL: COLLEGE MEN
Chicago State at Northwestern 2 p.m. FS1 NA/214 75
Bryant at Louisville 2 p.m. ESPNU NA/221* 73
Drake at Minnesota 3 p.m. BIGTEN NA/248* 79*
Alabama A&M at DePaul 4 p.m. FS1 NA/214 75
Texas Southern at Oregon 5 p.m. PAC12 NA/232* 31*
BASKETBALL: COLLEGE WOMEN
Loyola (Md.) at Maryland 1 p.m. BIGTEN NA/248* 79*
FOOTBALL: NFL
Patriots at Dolphins 3:30 p.m. ESPN 22/222 70
HOCKEY: NHL
Hurricanes at Ducks 5 p.m. FSW 20/226 81*
RODEO
Wrangler National Finals Rodeo 5 p.m. CBSSN NA/247* 83
SOCCER
Italian: Genoa vs. Atalanta 7:55 a.m. BEIN NA/229* NA
Italian: Lazio vs. Torino 9:55 a.m. BEIN NA/229* NA
SURFING
Billabong Pipe Masters 7:30 a.m. SURF NA/250 NA
TUESDAY
  TIME TV spec HT
basketball: nba
Lakers at Knicks 2 p.m. SPCSN 23/218 69
Lakers at Knicks 2 p.m. ESPN 22/222 70
76ers at Timberwolves 4:30 p.m. ESPN 22/222 70
basketball: college men
St. Peter’s at Seton Hall 2 p.m. FS1 NA/214 75
Fordham at Rutgers 2 p.m. ESPNU NA/221* 73
Mississippi State at Cincinnati 2 p.m. ESPN2 21/224 74
San Diego at Colorado 3 p.m. PAC12 NA/232* 31*
Murray State at St. Louis 3 p.m. FCSA NA/244* NA
Albany (N.Y.) at Memphis 4 p.m. ESPNU NA/221* 73
Michigan at Texas 4 p.m. ESPN2 21/224 74
Jacksonville State at Oregon State 5 p.m. PAC12 NA/232* 31*
basketball: college women
North Florida at Michigan 2 p.m. BIGTEN NA/248* 79*
hockey: nhl
Kings at Devils 2 p.m. FSW 20/226 81*
Lightning at Blues 3 p.m. NBCSN 19/210 87
RODEO
Wrangler National Finals Rodeo 5 p.m. CBSSN NA/247* 83
soccer
German: Wolfsburg vs. Leipzig 7:20 a.m. FS2 NA/241* 76*
German: Mainz vs. Borussia Dortmund 9:30 a.m. FS1 NA/214 75
German: Freiburg vs. Bor. Monchenglad 9:30 a.m. FSP NA/231* NA
German: Hamburg vs. Eintracht Frankfurt 9:30 a.m. FS2 NA/241* 76*
English: Huddersfield Town vs. Chelsea 9:55 a.m. NBCSN 19/210 87
French: AS Monaco vs. Caen 10 a.m. BEIN NA/229* NA
SURFING
Billabong Pipe Masters 7:30 a.m. SURF NA/250 NA
 
RADIO
TODAY
  TIME STATION
NFL: Patriots at Dolphins 3:30 p.m. 1500-AM
TUESDAY
  TIME STATION
NBA: Lakers at Knicks 2 p.m. 990-AM

 

Community blasts USPS decision to close Lihue office

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The U.S. Postal Service is under criticism for giving the Kauai community “false hope” that it would prevail in its appeal to save the historic Lihue Post Office.

“It’s a very sad situation to have something so historical closing after all these years,” said state Rep. James Tokioka (D, Wailua-Hana­maulu-­Lihue), who, along with hundreds of community members and officials had called on the Postal Service to continue operating out of the building in the heart of old-town Lihue.

Tokioka said he’s disappointed in USPS managers who met with the community earlier this year. “In my opinion, they gave people on Kauai a false hope that if they came out that we could possibly save the post office from closing.”

Despite hundreds of postcards and letters — and more than 100 coconuts sent to the Postal Service in support of remaining at the Rice Street location — it was announced Friday that USPS would proceed with the move to its carrier annex facility at 3230 Kapule Highway next to Lihue Airport.

“The main reason for this relocation is to improve our operational efficiency,” said Duke Gonzales, U.S. Postal Service spokesman. “It will allow the Lihue Post Office to consolidate its delivery and retail operations, which are currently split between the two facilities.

“Increasing our efficiency will help decrease the financial burdens facing our organization,” Gonzales said Monday in a written statement.

When the Lihue Post Office will close hasn’t been determined.

Gonzales said a buyer for the historic building will be sought, and construction work is needed to transform the annex to a multipurpose facility.

The Postal Service’s announcement Friday said it had “carefully considered” concerns about the relocation raised at two meetings held in Lihue — the first in February and the other in October. USPS said it also took into consideration comments submitted before and after the meetings.

“In my opinion, they knew all along they were going to close it,” Tokioka said.

Gonzales apologized Monday for any confusion concerning the intent of the meetings. In announcements, he said, the public meetings were described as “informational meetings” to notify attendees of the relocation proposal. “The meetings were not intended to be public hearings.”

The Historic Hawai‘i Foundation earlier this year joined with the Lihue Business Association and National Trust for Historic Preservation in an effort to save the Lihue Post Office. Supporters mailed about 850 postcards and 115 coconuts to the U.S. Postal Service in San Francisco.

Gov. David Ige, Kauai Mayor Bernard Carvalho, congressional leaders and area lawmakers also expressed support.

State Sen. Ron Kouchi (D, Kauai-Niihau) said he thinks the decision to close the historic post office was “predetermined” before the first meeting in February. Kouchi added he’s disappointed that concerns from the people of Kauai went unheard.

Kiersten Faulkner, executive director of the Historic Hawai‘i Foundation, said she questioned the Postal Service’s sincerity.

“It’s rather shocking that they disregarded the wishes of the community,” she said last week.

“It’s an integral part of life in Lihue,” Faulkner said of the post office. “It’s a gathering place. It’s the civic heart of Rice Street along with the civic center.”

Built in 1939, the Lihue Post Office is listed in both the national and state registers of historic places. “It’s a really charming building,” Faulkner said, adding the structure was built during the territorial period and during the Great Depression.

In a written statement, Carvalho said, “We are disappointed with the postal service’s decision to close the Lihue post office. We believe that it is premature and we will make sure that all the proper input and processes were considered and followed before a decision was made.”

Police search for man suspected in Kauai sex assaults

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Kauai police are searching for Jesse Korn, a suspect wanted for the alleged sexual assault of two females on Sunday morning in Koloa. A warrant has been issued for his arrest.

Korn, 26, is described of as 5 feet 9 inches tall, about 185 pounds, with black hair and brown eyes. He was last seen wearing denim shorts and no shirt.

At 6:30 a.m. and 8 a.m. on Sunday, police responded to reports of a suspect unlawfully entering two different units in Kawailehua low-income housing and sexually assaulting two females. The suspect fled the scene before police could locate and detain him.

Anyone with information on Korn’s whereabouts is urged to call Police Dispatch at 241-1711 or to make an anonymous report to CrimeStoppers at 246-8300.

Scoreboard

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calendar
TODAY
BASKETBALL
ILH Division II girls: Damien at Le Jardin, 5 p.m.; ‘Iolani at La Pietra, 6 p.m.
ILH Division III girls: Lanakila Baptist vs. Hawaiian Mission, 6:30 p.m., at Hanalani.
OIA East girls: Kalani at McKinley. JV game at 5:30 p.m., varsity to follow.
SOCCER
ILH boys: Punahou at Mid-Pacific, 4 p.m.; ‘Iolani at Saint Louis, 4 p.m.; Pac-Five at Kamehameha, 6:15 p.m.
tuesday
BASKETBALL
ILH Division I girls: Kamehameha at ‘Iolani, 6:30 p.m.
ILH Division II girls: Hawaii Baptist at Hanalani, 6 p.m.
CANOE PADDLING
ILH: Event 1, Magic Island to Kewalo Basin and back, 4:30 p.m.
SOCCER
OIA East boys: Moanalua at Farrington, JV starts at 5:30 p.m., varsity to follow.
OIA East girls: Kalaheo at Roosevelt, JV starts at 5:30 p.m., varsity to follow.
OIA West boys: Waialua at Kapolei, Nanakuli at Mililani, 5:30 p.m.; Radford at Pearl City, Leilehua at Waianae, JV starts at 5:30 p.m., varsity to follow; Aiea at Waipahu, following 5:30 p.m. varsity girls.
OIA West girls: Kapolei at Waialua, Aiea at Waipahu, Mililani at Nanakuli, 5:30 p.m.; Pearl City at Radford, Waianae at Leilehua, JV starts at 5:30 p.m., varsity to follow.

SOCCER
OIA East
Saturday
Boys Varsity
Roosevelt 2, Kahuku 2
Kalaheo 1, Moanalua 1
Kaiser 2, McKinley 0   
Kalani 2, Castle 0
Farrington 8, Kaimuki 0
Girls Varsity
Kahuku 2, Roosevelt 1
Moanalua 8, Kalaheo 1
Kaiser 12, McKinley 0   
Castle 3, Kalani 2
Boys Junior varsity
Kahuku 7, Roosevelt 1
Moanalua 5, Kalaheo 0
Girls Junior varsity
Roosevelt 2, Kahuku 0   
Moanalua 5, Kalaheo 0
ILH
Saturday
Girls Varsity
Pac-Five 6, Le Jardin 0
Punahou 8, Sacred Hearts 0
Boys Junior varsity
‘Iolani 2, Punahou-blue 0
Mid-Pacific 1, Kamehameha-blue 0
Punahou-gold 4, Pac-Five 1

 

Pipe bomb attack hits NYC subway

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NEW YORK >> A would-be suicide bomber inspired by Islamic State extremists strapped on a crude pipe bomb, slipped unnoticed into the nation’s busiest subway system and set the device off at rush hour today in a scenario that New York has dreaded for years, authorities said.

In the end, the only serious wounds were to the suspect identified as Akayed Ullah, a 27-year-old Bangladeshi immigrant and former cab driver. But the attack sent terrified commuters fleeing through a smoky passageway, and three people suffered headaches and ringing ears from the first bomb blast in the subway in more than two decades.

“This was an attempted terrorist attack,” Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio said. “Thank God the perpetrator did not achieve his ultimate goals.”

The suspect had looked as Islamic State propaganda online and told investigators he acted alone in retaliation for U.S. military aggression, law enforcement officials said.

In Washington, President Donald Trump said the explosion highlighted the need to change immigration policies, including the type of family-based visa Ullah obtained to come to the U.S. in 2011. Such visas are “incompatible with national security,” the Republican president said in a statement.

“America must fix its lax immigration system, which allows far too many dangerous, inadequately vetted people to access our country,” said Trump, who campaigned on cracking down on immigration.

The attack near Times Square came less than two months after eight people died near the World Trade Center in a truck attack authorities said was carried out by an Uzbek immigrant who admired the Islamic State group.

Law enforcement officials said Ullah was inspired by IS but apparently did not have any direct contact with the group. Gov. Andrew Cuomo said there was no evidence, so far, of other bombs or a larger plot. He said officials were exploring whether Ullah had been on authorities’ radar, but there was no indication yet that he was.

Cuomo said there was reason to believe the attacker looked at bomb-making instructions online.

Investigators described the bomb as a low-tech explosive device attached to Ullah with “Velcro and plastic ties.” It was ignited with a Christmas light, matches and a nine-volt battery. The short pipe was packed with explosive powder but did not work as intended. It was not powerful enough to turn the pipe into deadly shrapnel, the officials said.

Investigators said the suspect was seen on surveillance footage putting the circuits together with his hands and igniting the bomb.

Some of the bomb-making materials may have been bought commercially. The pipe may have been obtained from his job where he worked as an electrician, one official said.

Authorities were searching Ullah’s Brooklyn home and a nearby rented space, interviewing witnesses and relatives, reviewing his subway fare card and looking for surveillance footage that might show his movements in the moments before the 7:20 a.m. attack.

Security cameras captured the attacker walking casually through a crowded passageway under 42nd Street between Seventh and Eighth avenues when the bomb went off amid a plume of white smoke, which cleared to show the man sprawled on the ground and commuters scattering.

“All we could hear was the chaos,” said Elrana Peralta, a Greyhound customer-service worker who was working at the Port Authority bus terminal near the blast, though she did not hear it. Instead, she heard people yelling, “Get out! Get out! Get out!”

Port Authority police said officers found the man injured on the ground, with wires protruding from his jacket to his pants and the device strapped to his torso under his coat. They said he was reaching for a cellphone and they grabbed his hands.

A photo published by the New York Post showed a bearded man crumpled on the ground with his shirt apparently blown off and black soot covering his bare midriff.

Law enforcement officials said the suspect was speaking with investigators from the hospital bed where he was being treated for burns to his hands and abdomen.

He was “all over the place” on the question of motive, but indicated he wanted to avenge U.S. aggression against the Islamic State, one official said.

The officials spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the blast.

Ullah came to the U.S. on an F-4 visa, available for those with family in the U.S. who are citizens, the Department of Homeland Security said. Trump’s administration has called for a “merit-based” immigration system that would limit family-based green cards to spouses and minor children. A White House spokeswoman said today that the proposed policy would have kept Ullah out of the U.S.

He had been licensed to drive a livery cab between 2012 and 2015, but the license was allowed to lapse, according to law enforcement officials and New York City’s Taxi and Limousine Commission. He had been in two car accidents during his time driving, one law enforcement official said.

Ullah lived with his father, mother and brother in a Brooklyn neighborhood with a large Bangladeshi community, residents said. The family’s red, two-story brick home is just off a shopping strip.

A statement on behalf of the family sent by the New York Chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations said they were “deeply saddened” by the attack but also “outraged by the way we have been targeted by law enforcement, including a teenage relative of the suspect who was pulled from class and questioned in his school without a parent guardian or attorney.”

News of Ullah’s arrest stunned Alan Butrico, who owns the house next door and a locksmith business two doors down.

“It’s very weird,” Butrico said. “You never know who your neighbors are.”

The last bomb to go off in the subway system was believed to be in December 1994, when an explosive made from mayonnaise jars and batteries wounded 48 people in a car in lower Manhattan.

The Times Square subway station is the city’s busiest, with 64 million riders passing through every year. The subway system as a whole carried over 1.7 billion people last year.

Monday’s explosion triggered a massive emergency response both above and below ground, halting what would ordinarily be a bustling rush hour at the “Crossroads of the World.” But streets quickly began returning to normal.

“This is one of my nightmares, right: a terrorist attack in the subway system,” Cuomo, a Democrat, later told cable channel NY1.

“The good news is: We were on top of it,” he said, and “the reality was not as bad as the fear.”

Associated Press Writers Jake Pearson and Michael Balsamo in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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