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Page 61 text:
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t Second place student wmner: enihe Aribta. Thu- photo is of Laura Yim, orchestra! Concert 'strc-ss. I got the idea while I was practiri g in the mirror. I thought, 'I'II get a real violin player V in he' WY 6 try this, so I started screaming for Laura. I was trying ww. to C I Ihiratc the obscure and artistic side of Kamehameha. It's ahffiece of art creativity rn:-rdf. a pluc of art and creativity. It AM EIL '37 If 40' If
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Page 60 text:
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KNA A It's easy enough to snap snapshots, it's considera- bly more difficult to shoot legitimate photographs. Taking our cue again from A Day in the Life of Hawai'i, we decided to offer two pages of our year book to students and faculty who thought they might like to compete for free yearbooks and a chance to get a different kind of their picture in Ka Na'i Aupqni. The response to our contest was not quite overwhelming- slightly less than 50 images were submitted- First place faculty winner: Al Apo. Right-side brain. Third place student winner: Leslie Burns. Neal Wong and Shannon Morey in Midkiff offer two reactions to school pressure: study and sleep. But the field was certainly large enough to offer the judges a wide range of choices. After 20 minutes of spirited discussion, Bruce Lum CKS Photographerl, Bob Whiting fLearning Center C ordinatorj, and John White QSPC boss D, selecte the following winners. Their advice to everyone who entered and to next year's hopefuls: avoid photo cliches: try to see what is overlooked or not ordinarily seen, avoid dead-center subjectsg and PLEASE, no more shaka signs. .First place student winner: Shelly Wakamatsu. Reflections . . . It really was an accident, but after I got the pictures back, I liked it enough to enter. Fourth place student winner: Kevin Ka'auwai.
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Page 62 text:
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W 1 . M, X '- , . i -31,1-. KF 4 L -. f A ' : l The Welcome Back Assembly, our first big event of the year, was held at Kekuhaupi'o during the activity period which, according to our revised seven-minute-passing-time-schedule, lasts from 2:36 to 3:16 p.m. No one, however, kept track of the time with the same bored attention that we exercise during a Group Guidance or Ka Na'i Pono. This was a fun event and not, by any measure, an exercise in clock-watching. Above: New Zealand exchange student Robin Richardson is given a lei of greeting by ASKS representative Bruce Bryant. Photographer: Bonnie Ishii. Right and Far right: Seniors Toni Costa, Linda Kepa'a, Dory Chang, Leo Delatori, and Noe Jay evince moods of exhiliration and quiet amusement during Wren Wescoatt's rain dance Csee next pagej and a musical offering by four brave and talented members of Hui Mele. Photographer: Bonnie Ishii. 1 .cwwwt
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