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Sunday, October 06, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Sunday, Oct. 6, 2013

Ka`u Trojans traveled to Kalaupapa Lookout on Moloka`i yesterday morning before their game against Moloka`i
Farmers. ka`u High played its first regular season off-island game in the new eight-man football schedule.
Photo by Tanya Ibarra
HAWAIIAN VOLCANO OBSERVATORY’S MONITORING capability “will degrade over time,” according to the latest weekly Volcano Watch. Because of reduced staff, only critical sensors will be maintained, and all other instrument network maintenance will cease. 
      Basic volcano monitoring will continue, as will forecasts and regular updates of volcanic activity.
HVO continues seismic monitoring during the federal
government shutdown. Image from HVO
      The HVO website (hvo.wr.usgs.gov) will remain functional, but only those pages containing information about current volcano hazards will be maintained.
      Because the majority of the HVO staff has been furloughed, the Sunday Volcano Watch column will be suspended, but weekly Kilauea updates and felt earthquake reports will continue.
      HVO said Hawai`i County Civil Defense Agency is now the point-of-contact for the Great Hawai`i Shakeout, which is coming up on Thursday, Oct. 17 to raise awareness of earthquake safety.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

U.S. SEN. BRIAN SCHATZ is co-sponsoring the Storage Technology for Renewable and Green Energy Act of 2013 (STORAGE). This bipartisan bill promotes the deployment of energy storage technologies, which will accelerate the deployment of renewable energy.
      “The STORAGE 2013 Act is a smart piece of bipartisan legislation that would allow more renewable energy to be integrated onto the grid, increasing reliability while continuing to expand our clean energy economy,” Schatz said. “By promoting the development of energy storage technologies, we will be making strides toward easing our national dependence on foreign oil and creating good, clean energy jobs at home in Hawai`i,” he said.
      The STORAGE 2013 Act offers investment tax credits of up to 30 percent for energy storage facilities installed by utilities, businesses, and homes.
      The bill is designed to be technology-neutral, with qualifying equipment that includes batteries, flywheels, thermal systems and smart-grid-enabled, plug-in electric vehicles.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Brittleness of aging newspapers is evident in this
photo of a 1917 issue of O Luso. Photo from HHS
ANYONE FINDING PORTUGUESE AND OTHER ETHNIC newspapers and magazizines published in Hawai`i may want to contact the Hawaiian Historical Society, which has been scanning them so the public can see them digitally and even search them online. 
      Hawaiian Historical Society’s goals are to preserve and make the historical newspapers more accessible to the public, according to a story in Honolulu Star-Advertiser. “By digitizing the newspapers, the public will not need to handle the brittle pages, which causes further deterioration. And by putting them online, they will be available to more people around the globe,” said reporter Craig T. Kojima.
      Barbara Dunn, administrative director and librarian, said, “As the Hawaiian Historical Society, we really want to make all these materials available with free and open access.”
      The society’s current project, which focuses on historic Portuguese-language newspapers, is the first step toward digitizing all of the society’s holdings, which includes 64 newspapers published in English, Hawaiian and Portuguese.
      Historic papers and other ethnic memorabilia will be on display at Ka`u Plantation Days this Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Pahala Plantation Manager’s House.
      See more at staradvertiser.com.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Dr. Ishmael Stagner with Halau Hula Leionalani on Lana`i yesterday.
Stagner has a long hula lineage.
HALAU HULA LEIONALANI, FROM PAHALA, hopped the ferry this morning from Lana`i after sharing culture, dance and music with Lana`i over the last four days. On Lana`i, the halau met with Dr. Ishmael Stagner, author of the book Kumu Hula, Roots and Branches. Stagner was one of the only male hula dancers in the 1950s and organized one of the first male hula troupes at Polynesian Cultural Center. He spent years collecting the history and stories of kumu hula, from Frank Hewett to Pua Kamealoha Gomes and Hattie Lea Nuhi Au. They also teamed up with Cyril Pahinui and sister dancers from O`ahu, Japan and Lana`i. 
      On Lana`i, the Ka`u contingent enjoyed local recipes for deer meat and other local delicacies. Accompanying them was Wendell Kaehuaea, who filmed the event for public television, and Bobbie Tucker, who helped fund the cultural exchange along with Olson Trust, Science Camp and many individuals donating through a bake sale and other fundraisers.
      Kumu Hula Debbie Ryder said she hopes the Lana`i group will be invited to the next Ka`u Coffee Festival, where they have danced for the last three years.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

KA`U RANCHERS, FARMERS AND LANDOWNERS are invited to a public workshop in Hilo on Monday, Oct. 28 at the U.S. Department of Agriculture Pacific Basin Agriculture Research Center. According to a statement from the Natural Resource Conservation Service, the purpose is to increase the USDA, NRCS outreach to historically underserved farmers and landowners in Hawai`i. This includes ensuring that underserved farmers and landowners have access to and understand the conservation benefits derived from participation in NRCS Conservation Easement, Stewardship, Environmental Quality Incentives and Agricultural Water Enhancement programs which are provided through the federal Farm Bill.
      The workshop will focus on, but not be limited to Asian, Pacific Island and female landowners and producers. “These are all groups that have traditionally lacked access to the assistance available to farmers and ranchers elsewhere due to their race, gender, ethnicity, or relative lack of language proficiency,” the statement says.
      To register, call Big Island RC&D Council at 935-8426 or email brcd@hawaii.rr.com. The location is scheduled for the USDA Pacific Basin Agriculture Research Center, 64 Nowelo Street, Hilo, starting in the morning, with site visits in the afternoon.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Honu O Ka`u is the winning art for the cover of The Directory 2014. The carved gourd,
created by Susan Condie Jennings, of Ocean View, will be on display this Saturday at
Ka`u Plantation Days in Pahala. Photo by Peter Anderson
THE IPU, THE ART OF THE GOURD rose to take first prize in The Directory cover contest, sponsored annually by Ka`u Chamber of Commerce. Announced yesterday, the winning artwork, called Honu O Ka`u, by Susan Condie Jennings, of Ocean View, took first in both the popular and judges’ voting. 
      Jennings applied her art to the 18-inch-tall gourd by dying it inside out with Ka`u Coffee. She used the Ni`ihau method of gourd artistry, harvesting the gourd while the skin was still green. She drew a design into the skin and carved out the area to remain light colored. To provide the dark color of the design, she filled the gourd with black Ka`u coffee which dyed the skin left on the gourd. After several weeks, she poured out the coffee and scraped off the remaining skin, leaving the dark pattern. She dried the gourd and finished it with a tung oil, made from a relative of the Hawaiian kukui nut. Every other Wednesday, Jennings sells her ipu at the Ho`oulu Farmers Market and Artisans Fair at the Sheraton Keauhou Bay Resort & Spa, which supports Kumu Keala Ching’s halau. The winning gourd will be on display and for sale at Ka`u Plantation Days this Saturday, Oct. 12 at Pahala Plantation Manager’s House following the pa`u parade. To make an appointment, call her at 929-7255 or email finartgourds@yahoo.com.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

FIRE PREVENTION WEEK STARTS TODAY. This year’s message is Prevent Kitchen Fires. According to the National Fire Prevention Association, more fires start in the kitchen than any other part of the home. To learn how to prevent kitchen fires, take a trivia quiz at nfpa.org.   

HI TEA EXHIBIT OPENS FRIDAY at Volcano Art Center’s Rainforest Gallery in Volcano Village. The juried art exhibit celebrates Hawai`i’s unique tea industry in collaboration with Tea Hawai`i & Company’s first annual Community Cup Tour. Call 967-8222 or email volcanoartcenter.org.

KA`U PLANTATION DAYS IS THIS SATURDAY. Sponsored by Ka`u Multicultural Society, the event begins with a parade at 9 a.m. with pa`u horses and riders, cane trucks, classic vehicles, students and musical, cultural and agricultural groups. Following the parade are history and ethnic displays, music, dance, food and Ka`u coffee as well as Miss Hawaiian Islands at Pahala Plantation Manager’s House until 3 p.m.

Trojan coach Kainoa Ke watches his eight-man football team take on the Farmers of Moloka`i yesterday on the
Friendly Island. Photo by Tanya Ibarra

KA`U HIGH TROJANS EIGHT-MAN FOOTBALL team and Coach Kainoa Ke return home today with football staff and family and friends. They traveled by boat and plane to take on the Moloka`i Farmers yesterday on the Friendly Island. With much community fundraising and moral support, the Trojans were able to play their first off-island game in the new eight-man format. Moloka`i has been playing eight-man in a league in Maui County and overcame the Trojans 46-6 on the Farmers’ home turf. Randall Kahele, Jr. scored a touchdown on a defensive take-away, 49-yard run.
Trojans huddle on Moloka`i yesterday, where they playesd the Farmers in
their first Neighbor Island eight-man football game.
Photo by Tanya Ibarra
     The experience of traveling to play football took the Trojans across a channel from Maui to Kaunakakai on Moloka`i by ferry. They camped out in the Moloka`i High School gym and were able to tour parts of the island, including a trip to Kalaupapa Lookout. The Trojans looked out to the tallest sea cliffs in the world, some 4,000 feet high. They also looked over the tongue of land where Father Damien, now a s                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  aint, ministered to Hansen’s disease patients, who were required to live there.
      Ka`u hosts Moloka`i for the Trojan’s homecoming game on Friday, Nov. 8. Next game is Friday, Oct. 25, away at Kealakehe.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.

ALSO SEE KAUCALENDAR.COM AND FACEBOOK.COM/KAUCALENDAR.


 SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL BUSINESSES


Saturday, October 05, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013

Ka`u women take off their slippers and dance with their hula sisters from Japan and O`ahu at Dole Park on Lana`i
yesterday in preparation for today's performances. Photo by Malian Lahey
SIGN A PETITION TO REOPEN GOVERNMENT is what U.S. Sen. Mazie Hirono is urging. “We’ve already endured five days of the federal government shutdown, and out-of-control Republican leaders are still siding with tea party extremists, refusing to do their jobs and drop their irrational threats against the Affordable Care Act,” Ka`u’s senator said in statement to the public this morning. 
     “Well, Speaker John Boehner could end the shutdown, right now, if he did one simple thing: Bring the Senate-passed budget bill, with no partisan strings attached, up for a vote in the House, where it would pass with a bipartisan majority,” Hirono stated.
Sen. Mazie Hirono
      Hirono said she has hui’d up with Senate Democrats “to urge Speaker Boehner to do the right thing and end this devastating shutdown” by circulating a petition at endtheshutdown.org. Hirono said she would begin sharing powerful stories on the Senate floor about the damage done by the shutdown.
      Hirono wrote about “Scott and his wife, whose ability to retire soon (and take care of his deteriorating health) depends on the tourism industry near the now-shuttered Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park.” She writes about a woman named Steffany who has a husband, a federal worker whose job is to guard the public against food-borne illnesses and contamination. “As an essential employee, her husband still has to report to work, but is doing so without pay. Without a source of income, Steffany is struggling to pay bills, buy food and support her children – one of whom has special needs.” Hirono writes about “Josh, a Department of Defense worker who is the sole source of support for his two young daughters – and who now has no way to pay his bills or get health insurance.
      “Milton, a biologist whose work is funded by the National Institutes of Health, had to abruptly halt his research and can’t even access his computer to review existing experiments,” writes Hirono.
      Other senators urging constituents to sign the petition are Brian Schatz, Barbara Boxer, Dick Durbin, Tom Harkin, Mary Landrieu, Patrick Leahy, Claire McCaskill, Patty Murray, Jack Reed and Mark Udall.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Sen. Brian Schatz
HAWAI`I’S U.S. SENATORS’ AND REPRESENTATIVES’ OFFICES are closed to the public, even though the elected officials are voting and lobbying to reopen the federal government. A recording on the Washington, D.C. phone of Sen. Brian Schatz at the Hart Senate Office Building says: “We are all very disappointed that a shutdown of the federal government has occurred. Please know that Sen. Schatz is still doing all he can to represent our interests and to reopen the government as quickly as possible. Regretfully, our office has being told by legal counsel that during the shutdown we are unable to continue many of our usual functions, including all constituent service work. Both our Honolulu and D.C. offices cannot answer the phones, and much of our staff has been furloughed.” 
      The message at the top of Sen. Mazie Hirono’s government website says: “My office is currently closed due to the government shutdown. Correspondence with my office may be delayed once the office resumes normal business operations. Casework and tours will be suspended until operations resume. You can still use this site to make a request, and you will receive a reply once operations return. Mahalo.” Her phone at the Hart Senate Office Building also says her office is closed.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard
PAYING FURLOUGHED FEDERAL WORKERS, a bill co-sponsored by Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, passed the U.S. House of Representatives today with a 407 to zero vote. The Federal Employee Retroactive Pay Fairness Act (H.R. 3223) ensures federal employees will receive back pay, regardless of furlough status. The legislation now goes to the Senate for a vote. The Obama Administration yesterday announced its support for the bill. 
    “The House today voted to do the right thing and pay our furloughed federal workers,” Gabbard said. “These public servants have been unfairly caught in the midst of these partisan arguments. They and their families do not deserve to lose their paychecks because Congress is at an impasse. In Hawai`i, more than 17 percent of our workers are federal employees. That means more than 25,000 hard-working people have been furloughed during this government shutdown. Because the House passed the Federal Employee Retroactive Pay Fairness Act today, these workers and their families can look forward to some relief in the midst of this harmful shutdown.
      Democratic leaders urged the House to pass a clean continuing resolution to fund the federal govenrnment so that workers could go back to work and be paid for working rather than staying at home.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Demitrius Oliviera and Gene Beck back up Cyril Pahinui
 at Lana`i's cultural festival. Photo by Malian Lahey
DANCING AT DOLE PARK ON LANA`I, hula sisters from Ka`u, Japan and O`ahu practiced yesterday to prepare for today’s cultural festival. With community fundraising, this is the first time the Pahala contingent from Halau Hula O Leionalani has traveled to Lana`i. Debbie Ryder and her halau have been coming to Ka`u Coffee Festival each year. Joining the halau were men from Ka`u who helped build a Hawaiian Village at the park, along with musicians Demetrius Oliveira and Gene Beck with their Keaiwa band and backing up Cyril Pahinui, who also plays each year at Ka`u Coffee Festival. Most of the group from Ka`u reached Lana`i by boat.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

SIG ZANE, THE FAMED HAWAI`I ISLAND designer, has teamed up with Hawaiian Electric Co. to introduce a Native Hawaiian-themed logo for the utility company serving this county, Maui and O`ahu.
      A statement from HECO says that “the new logo was developed by respected designer Sig Zane of Hilo and combines traditional Hawaiian design elements with a modern look. Zane worked on the design with his wife, cultural expert Nalani Kanakaole, and their son Kuhao. They drew upon Hawaiian Electric’s 122-year history for their inspiration.”
      The statement quotes Sig Zane saying, “From the very beginning, when King Kalakaua pioneered electricity at Iolani Palace and chartered Hawaiian Electric, the company has played a key role in Hawai`i’s growth. We wanted to create a design that captures that history and reflects the way the company connects our communities.”
      More information and a video on the development of the logo can be found at hawaiianelectric.com.

Lori Lei Shirakawa and her halau performed at Prince Kuhio Plaza
in Hilo last week.
OCTOBER IS ENERGY ACTION & ENERGY AWARENESS MONTH, and Ka`u residents helped kick it off by performing at Prince Kuhio Plaza Energy Fair in Hilo last week. Lori Lei Shirakawa’s halau danced hula and offered music as those attending visited many displays on energy efficiency and new forms of alternative energy, sponsored by Hawai`i Electric Light Co. for Energy Awareness Month. This year’s federal outreach for Energy Action Month calls for empowering leadership, innovation and excellence “to move beyond business as usual and raise the bar for operational excellence and a secure energy future.” 
      See a home energy checklist at http://www1.eere.energy.gov/femp/services/energy_aware_hec.html.

ART FOR THE COVER OF THE DIRECTORY 2014, the annual publication of the Ka`u Chamber of Commerce, is announced today. A reception with light refreshments takes place until 11 a.m. at CU Hawai`i credit union in Na`alehu to announce winners of the art show that has been on display all week.
      Memberships and advertising are also being taken by the Chamber for The Directory 2014, which raises money for scholarships for Ka`u college students. Call 928-6471.

Ka`u Trojans practiced at Lahinaluna Field on Moloka`i
yesterday for today's game against the Farmers.
Photo from Ka`u Athletics
KA`U PLANTATION DAYS IS A WEEK FROM TODAY. The event begins with a parade at 9 a.m. with pa`u horses and riders, cane trucks, classic vehicles, students and musical, cultural and agricultural groups. Following the parade are history and ethnic displays, music, dance, food and Ka`u coffee as well as Miss Hawaiian Islands at Pahala Plantation Manager’s House until 3 p.m. Sponsored by Ka`u Multicultural Society. 

IN SPORTS, KA`U HIGH SCHOOL’S eight-man Trojan football team plays the Moloka`i Farmers today at 11 a.m. Air riflery is at Waiakea at 10 a.m., girls volleyball is at Honoka`a at 10 a.m., and cross country is at Kamehameha at 3 p.m.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.

ALSO SEE KAUCALENDAR.COM AND FACEBOOK.COM/KAUCALENDAR.

SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL BUSINESSES


Friday, October 04, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Friday, Oct. 4, 2013

Eight-Man Football Team, the Ka`u High School Trojans, flew to Moloka`i today to play their first off-island game
in the new, faster, higher-scoring football. Photo by Tanya Ibarra
PLANNING DIRECTOR DUANE KANUHA has issued a letter to Ocean View Partners, LLC and its agent, Bradley Westervelt, notifying them of a complaint from Hawaiian Ranchos Road Maintenance Corp. and his intention to have a hearing on the matter. According to Kanuha’s letter, Hawaiian Ranchos Road Maintenance Corp. alleges violations of conditions of the special permit “by not providing on-site parking for the farmers market, allowing overflow vehicles to park on privately owned roads and operating the farmers market on weekdays,” according to a story by Erin Miller in West Hawai`i Today.
Duane Kanuha
      According to a formal complaint filed by Hawaiian Ranchos Road Maintenance Corp. in August, overflow vehicles are creating a “dangerous road condition” on a privately owned road. The complaint said the corporation asked the swap meet owners to hire traffic control for market days, to no avail, Miller said.
      The special permit was first issued in 1987 to allow commercial development on the property. In 2002, the Planning Commission amended the permit to expand uses to include an open storage facility and farmers market.
      “Letters submitted to the Planning Department from (Hawaiian Ranchos Road Maintenance Corp.) indicate that (the swap meet owners) from Ocean View Partners, LLC have communicated by email and met with (road maintenance group) representatives regarding heavy traffic and parking problems associated with the farmers market,” Kanuha’s letter said. “However, based on the complaint we recently received, it appears that Ocean View Partners, LLC has been unable to resolve the complaint.”
      A hearing date has not yet been set. The next scheduled meeting of the Windward Planning Commission is Thursday, Nov. 7.
      See more at westhawaii.com.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

SCOTT WALLACE IS THE NEW PRESIDENT AND CEO of Royal Hawaiian Resources, Inc., general partner of Royal Hawaiian Orchards. Wallace succeeds John Kai, who has held the position on an interim basis since June and remains a director of the general partner. 
      Kai, who has been a director of the company since 2004, was named interim president in June following the departure of Dennis Simonis.
      In his role as executive vice president of sales and marketing since Jan. 2012, Wallace has led the effort to develop and grow the branded products expansion of the partnership, said a statement from the company. It launched its first products in the fourth quarter of 2012 under the brand name Royal Hawaiian Orchards.
      The Hilo-based partnership with offices in Pahala is one of the leading growers and processors of macadamia nuts in the world, processing and marketing macadamia nuts in-shell, bulk kernel and all natural, “better for you” snack products, according to the statement.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Brenda Ford
BILLS BANNING FRACKING and GMOs on Hawai`i Island will be heard at the next Hawai`i County Council meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 16, according to Ka`u’s County Council member Brenda Ford. 
      It will be the second reading of Bill 129, introduced by Ford as a pre-emptive measure to ban fracking because of her concerns that it could damage drinking water sources. The bill passed its first reading at Council this week with a vote of 7-0. Two of the nine Council members were absent.
      Bill 113, banning most genetically modified organisms, was introduced by Kohala Council member Margaret Wille. It received a positive recommendation from the Public Safety & Mass Transit Committee and now moves to the full Council. The vote was 6-2, with one absent.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

THE STATE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION continues to receive public testimony regarding the `Aina Koa Pono project, which would involve constructing a refinery off Wood Valley Road and harvesting trees, brushes and grasses between Pahala and Na`alehu to burn in a microwave facility to create biofuel for Hawai`i Electric Light Co. and Hawaiian Electric to use in power plants. 
      “`Aina Koa Pono is proposing to build a large refinery near our town of Pahala. AKP is asking a lot of us. Placing a large microwave refinery here while using our air, land, and water for the AKP promise,” wrote Stephanie Kawaauhau, of Pahala. “As people who have lived on this land for many generations, we have a strong connection to this land and want it to be considered. We have questions.
      “AIR: What are the possible air pollution impacts on the region? How would pollutants from a refinery interact with the already present vog from the volcano? What chemicals will be used at the refinery? Where will they be dumped? We understand there will be several byproducts including biochar. If biochar is burned at the refinery, what chemicals might be spewed? If the biochar is put on the land, what are the risks of it making the dust that we breathe? Has the biochar been tested for its makeup? Will the air emissions be carefully considered before erecting the refinery?
      “WATER: Wastewater is a concern. What will it contain, and where will it go? The proposed site is located over a large aquifer and above the water well for the village. What assurance do we have that our drinking water and ground water will not be polluted? Has AKP tested whether aromatics, furans, and/or dioxins might leach into the waters, then make its way down to the ocean and accumulate in the fish? What assurances that the land and as well as the ocean will not be harmed?
      “Where will the water come from to grow AKP’s crops? What other farmers and ranchers won’t get water if AKP needs it? Who will be denied? Ka`u has been plagued by drought, so water is treasured.
      “LAND: AKP plans to first scrape off the current vegetation on the land for its first batch of biomass. Is that good for the land? (the land, the water, the climate) What biomass crops will AKP grow? What are the demonstrated yields of these crops on Ka`u lands? What field trials have been done and by whom? What chemical will be used, and what will be the effect on the water, land and air?
      “AKP projects they will produce 180-270 tons of biochar per day. Where will the 180-270 tons x 360 days go?
      “This land has deep pockets of soil that are good for growing food and many fingers of lava and rocky surface that can support small herds of cattle. Within this landscape are many archaeological sites. The Heiau and the families who have direct links to the first Polynesians and the families who immigrated from Asia and Europe remain at home in Ka`u. Such a long family line still connected to a place is hard to find these days in Hawai`i. Will they be protected? Will the air, water and land be considered?”
      This and other testimony is available at puc.hawaii.gov. Docket number is 2012-0185.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Lisa Louise Adams
HARDBOUND BOOKBINDING IS THE TOPIC tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Volcano Art Center’s Ni`aulani Campus in Volcano Village. Lisa Louise Adams offers creative and traditional bookmaking techniques. Students learn basics of materials and techniques and complete two hardbound books covered in cloth. Fees are $75 or $67.50 for VAC members plus $25 supply fee. Pre-registration required. Call 967-8222, email britten@volcanoartcenter.org or see volcanoartcenter.org

ART FOR THE COVER CONTEST FOR THE DIRECTORY 2014, the annual publication of the Ka`u Chamber of Commerce, is on display at CU Hawai`i Federal Credit Union in Na`alehu. Tomorrow, the popular vote determines the winner of the cover contest. A reception with light refreshments takes place from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
      Memberships and advertising are also being taken by the Chamber for The Directory 2014, which raises money for scholarships for Ka`u college students. Call 928-6471.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.

ALSO SEE KAUCALENDAR.COM AND FACEBOOK.COM/KAUCALENDAR.

SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL BUSINESSES