Hana Hou! Issue 26.3
Why We Kokua
On any given day in Hawai'i, you'll find a battalion of Hawaiian Airlines employees knee-deep in the mud weeding loi (taro patches).
Raising Spirits
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The Last Sampan
Eighteen years after Iwaji Minato finished his contract as a plantation worker near Hilo, he got himself a secondhand Ford ($500) and a chauffeur's license.
Temple on the Mount
There was a time when it was easy to miss the band of reedy wetland wedged between the Oahu Club's tennis courts and Hawaii Kai Drive.
A Cut Above
If it hadn't been for Hurricane Iniki in 1992, Kauai scientists might have never discovered the Wailua River yellow loosestrife.
Left Coast Aloha
SoCal’s four-string ‘ohana gathers at the Los Angeles International Ukulele Festival
A Knickerbocker in Hawaii
Oahu Cemetery, the most historic of Hawaii's many Western cemeteries, is full of famous folks, but there's one final resting place that gets visited more than any other.