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Page 2 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, March 5 2014
Twitter @kaleosports | sports@kaleo.org | Joey Ramirez Editor | Hayley Musashi Associate
Sports Seniors Kamilah Jackson, Diane Moore, Sydney Haydel and Pua Kailiawa have helped lead Hawai‘i to consecutive winning seasons for the first time since 2005-07.
A fantastic four JEREMY NIT TA Senior Staff Writer @Nitta_ Jeremy At some point, all good things must come to an end. And for four members of the Rainbow Wahine basketball team, their careers will come to a close on Senior Night this Thursday at Stan Sheriff Center. Sydney Haydel, Pua Kailiawa, Diane Moore and Kamilah Jackson will all suit up for the fi nal time as Rainbow Wahine on their home fl oor, and emotions promise to be running high.
P R E PA R I N G F O R G O O D BY E For the four seniors, the reality that their careers will soon be ending hasn’t really set in yet. But the quartet acknowledged that they are preparing themselves for the goodbyes that must be said on Senior Night. “This is defi nitely something we’ve all looked forward to,” Jackson said. “I think we’ll be looking forward to it and enjoying it, but when it actually gets here, you don’t wanna think about it. I’m just not ready for it to be over.” Even their coach is not quite ready to say goodbye to her seniors. “You don’t coach kids and
not develop an emotional connection with them,” head coach Laura Beeman said. “When you see how proud they are of your program and that the lessons you’ve tried to teach have hit home and how emotional they get, it’s impossible to not feel that pride in your heart.”
L AT E B L O OM E R After playing sporadically last season as a junior, Kailiawa has seen her minutes spike this season, as she has provided the team with a shooting spark off the bench, especially after Jackson’s ankle injury forced Kailiawa into the starting lineup. “Pua was the only one I actually recruited,” Beeman said. “Having seen her grow and develop into a contributor on the team now has been nice. It’s great as a coach to have seen her confi dence grow as she has started to make an impact and play in front of her home state.”
THE BRAINS OF THE TEAM Moore, who grew up in Nagoya, Japan, is the resident scholar on the team, majoring in architecture and environmental design. She was named the team’s top scholar-athlete at the end of last season.
“Diane is one of the most dedicated people I’ve seen, on and off the court,” Beeman said. “She’s carrying probably the toughest academic schedule of anyone on the team, so she always has to miss practice or come late and leave early. She knows that it has diminished her role a bit, but she still comes out here and gives it her all.” Moore began last season as a starter, but has since seen her playing time diminish. Still, she is regarded as one of the best shooters on the team. Regardless of playing time, Moore is happy to have experienced playing in the state of Hawai‘i. “I think I’m gonna miss the experience here most,” Moore said. “Hawai‘i is different from a lot of other states, because here, the whole state is your fan. I’m really gonna miss that the most.”
SILENT CONTRIBUTOR According to coaches and players, Haydel may be one of the most valuable players on the team. While the stats of the Woodland Hills, Calif., native may not blow most away; Haydel is the top defender on the team, evidenced by her being named the Big West Defensive Player of the Year last season.
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“There’s a lot of great things that have happened, not only for myself but for my team,” Haydel said. “But I think that last year, when so many people won awards after a great season, was an extremely proud moment for me. It showed how hard we had worked and how it all came together.” “Every night, she’s usually matching up with the opponent’s best player,” Beeman said. “There’s not a ton of recognition in that, and she never shows up on the stat sheet. But every night she shows up and does her job. She’s probably one of the hardest working players I’ve ever coached, and that says a lot, because I’ve coached a lot of kids.”
watch is so hard, but having been able to play on this fl oor has been so great. So knowing that this will be my last chance to play on this fl oor in my career makes me want to play here even more.” Regardless of if she plays, Beeman believes Jackson’s place in UH lore is set. “What she has accomplished in her life at such a young age, some people won’t experience in an entire lifetime,” Beeman said. “When she sets her mind to something, Mia can do whatever she wants to do. I hope that people can look at her and realize that with great work ethic, you can accomplish whatever you want in your life.”
ONE OF THE BEST
Sports Editor Joey Ramirez contributed to this story.
As a 5-foot-10 post player, not many people expected Jackson to take college basketball by storm the way she has. But Jackson will go down as one of the all-time greats in Hawai‘i history for her well-documented success in a Rainbow Wahine jersey. But Jackson, who has missed the last three games with an ankle injury, is just hoping that she will be able to suit up one more time as a Rainbow Wahine. “I defi nitely wanna play,” Jackson said. “Having to sit and
UPCOMING GAMES Hawai‘i vs. UC Santa Barbara (Senior Night) Thursday, 7 p.m. Hawai‘i at Cal State Fullerton Saturday, 4 p.m. All Rainbow Wahine home games are played at Stan Sheriff Center. Admission is free for students with valid UH IDs.
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E-mail advertising@kaleo.org Ad Manager Gabrielle Pangilinan PR Coordinator Tianna Barbier Ka Leo O Hawai‘i is the campus newspaper of the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. It is published by the Board of Publications three times a week except on holidays and during exam periods. Circulation is 10,000. Ka Leo is also published once a week during summer sessions with a circulation of 5,000. Ka Leo is funded by student fees and advertising. Its editorial content reflects only the views of its writers, reporters, columnists and editors, who are solely responsible for its content. No material that appears in Ka Leo may be reprinted or republished in any medium without permission. The first newsstand copy is free; for additional copies, please visit Ka Leo. Subscription rates are $50 for one semester and $85 for one year. ©2012 Board of Publications.
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Twitter @kaleoohawaii | news@kaleo.org | Noelle Fujii Editor | Fadi Youkhana Associate
News
Culture of sustainability: 17 campuses unite for a greener Hawai‘i (From left) Sanphawat Jatupatwarangkul (post doctorate student), Kevin Griffin (campus planner), Stephen Meder (interim assistant vice chancellor for physical, environmental & long range planning. PHOTO COURTESY OF UH SUSTAINABILITY
NOELLE F UJII News Editor
Local universities will collaborate in a work session to advance the University of Hawai‘i’s sustainability strategy at a three-day sustainability summit later this month. “Creating a culture of sustainability, with a goal of sustainability being second nature to everything from operations (and) curriculum to campus and community engagement, requires teamwork, partnerships and collaboration within all the departments within an institution, all institutions within our university system, all higher education organizations in Hawai‘i and ultimately all players of our state,” Event Coordinator Daita Serghi said. The goal of the Second Annual Hawai‘i Sustainability in Higher Education Summit is to build on the foundation created at the First Annual Summit for a statewide and UH System Sustainability Strategy. UH, Brigham Young University-Hawai‘i, Hawai‘i Pa-
cific University and Chaminade University will be participating in the summit. “Hawaiians didn’t have a word for sustainability, but they were practic-
said representatives from all campuses edited and revised the draft policy. Morton noted that the students in attendance took on the charge to help get the policy
year’s work session will build upon the new Board of Regents sustainability statement as well as the executive policy that was refi ned last year to defi ne targets
Hawaiians didn’t have a word for sustainability, but they were practicing it every day in all aspects of their life. We need to articulate a new model that is rooted in the values and practices that allowed Hawaiians to live in our fi nite biosystem for hundreds of years. –SERGHI
ing it every day in all aspects of their life,” Serghi said. “We need to articulate a new model that is rooted in the values and practices that allowed Hawaiians to live in our finite biosystem for hundreds of years.”
A GREENER UH That’s what happened at last year’s summit, according to Morton, as the new UH Board of Regents policy on sustainability was fi rst formulated there. Serghi
adopted. According to a previous Ka L eo article, the Board of Re gents adopted the sustainability policy on Jan. 23. “The new policy is a necessary first step but not sufficient in and of itself,” Morton said. “The second summit will allow further sharing and development of ideas, activities and future efforts.”
I M P ROV I N G I N I T I AT I V E S According
to
Serghi,
this
and metrics for different functional areas of the policy. In addition to the work session, members of the newly launched statewide Student Sustainability Coalition of Hawai‘i will host a student forum on March 15 to “share experiences of their efforts in working toward more sustainable campuses and to organize crosscampus sustainability projects,” according to a press release. The summit will also include
a day of conference sharing with about 30 presentations. “These presentations, panels, posters and workshops are important to share case studies, research, best practices and skill building,” Serghi said.
S U S TA I N A B I L I T Y C U LT U R E Morton said the ultimate goal of these sustainability summits is to have the principles of sustainability become part of the culture of UH as an institution. “After all, small isolated projects don’t create the sustainability environment we are seeking,” Morton said. Nicholas Farrant, a sophomore majoring in physics at UH Mānoa and the president of Sustainable UH, will be attending the summit as a student delegate. Farrant said Hawai‘i is reaching a point where the majority of people acknowledge they are in a vulnerable position as they let the
.......... continued on page 6 ..........
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Twitter @kaleoohawaii | news@kaleo.org | Noelle Fujii Editor | Fadi Youkhana Associate
News INTERESTED IN A MANAGERIAL POSITION IN RADIO OR VIDEO PRODUCTION? Now accep ng applica ons for General Manager Posi ons for KTUH and UH Produc ons Open to all UH Manoa fee-paying students, great for resume. Applica ons available online at manoa.hawaii.edu/bca and in Campus Center Room 208. APPLICATIONS DUE WEDNESDAY APRIL 2 BY 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Broadcast Communica on Authority. Contact informa on bca@hawaii.edu or 956-4841
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‘Greener’ future .....................................continued from page 4...........................................
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“Sustainability, or as I like to think of it, Aloha ‘Āina, is our kuleana; our responsibility, but also our right,” Farrant said. “And it is in the fulfillment of our kuleana to Aloha ʻĀina that we earn our right to live in pono, or balance.” He noted the importance of the Hawaiian perspective being recognized more, such as with the summit. “Kānaka Maoli are the indigenous people of this land, and theirs was the culture which was able to live sustainably with the land for centuries,” Farrant said. “The culture we have adopted since the time of Cook, on the other hand, has led to the many environmental and political challenges we face today. If we can learn anything from the K naka perspective, it is how we can live sustainably with these islands. They are the ones who figured out how to do it in the first place.” Maui College sophomore sustainable management and Hawaiian
studies double-major Zhenya Delate said if the products being used in Hawai‘i are poisoning the Earth and the people on it, people need to wake up to what they’re doing and stop their destructive behaviors. “The reason this is important to me is because I believe we each have a responsibility (to) leave a healthy, beautiful environment for our next seven generations – 210 years into the future – of children to follow,” Delate said. “True Hawaiians understand this – the responsibility to honor the Mo‘okūʻauhau (genealogy) of the past and the future. To do this is our kuleana and is what is pono.” The Second Annual Hawai‘i Sustainability in Higher Education Summit will be held at Windward Community College from March 13-15. The deadline to register for the event is March 10. To register and fi nd more details about the event, go to web.hawaii.edu/sustainabilitysummit/.
Summit goes green Organizers and participants will try to be as close to zero waste as possible at the Second Annual Hawai‘i Sustainability in Higher Education Summit. According to event coordinator Daita Serghi, event participants are encouraged to bring their own reusable water bottles and coffee mugs, as no disposable plates and utensils will be provided. The event caterer will only provide reusable plates and utensil. Napkins will also be environmentally friendly as WorldCentric, a company that provides zero waste solutions to reduce environmental impact, is donating unbleached napkins made from 100 percent post-consumer waste recycled paper. Participants are also encouraged to bring a device that connects to the Internet at the event, as there will not be any printed programs. Participants can use Guidebook, an app that allows event organizers to share all of their event materials with their attendees on their mobile devices, for access to programs and event information. For Guidebook, visit m.guidebook.com/guide/14365/.
Twitter @kaleofeatures | features@kaleo.org |Brad Dell Editor |Nicolyn Charlot Associate
Page 7 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, March 5 2014
Features
Hawai‘i Review
publishes poetry by female offenders
JOSEPH H AN Managing Editor “What about the place where I store my stuff?/ Or the place I keep my kids?/ Is it there? Or should it/ be here? Now./ I don’t know./ Maybe it’s somewhere off in the dream/ I have for the future. My place.” Amourelle’s poem about navigating through various homes in her life represents one of eight voices, poets from TJ Mahoney & Associates, who have been featured in the online chapbook “Whea You From…And Whea You Going?” published by Hawai‘i Review. Ka Hale Ho‘āla Hou No Nā Wāhine – The Home of Reawakening for Women – is a nonprofit program of TJ Mahone. It is the only “halfway house” in Hawai‘i that helps former female offenders transition back into society. Housing 30 residents who were incarcerated at the Women’s Community Correctional Center, the state’s only prison for females, TJ Mahoney seeks to reduce chances of a return to incarceration and help residents seek employment, learn life skills and engage in positive activities – including creative writing. Amalia Bueno, a graduate of the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, led an 8-week creative writing class that included discussions of readings by local writers, various guest speakers and workshopping poetry written by the residents. “I think the majority of people would rather forget our prison population – out of sight, out of mind,” Bueno said in an email interview. “I had worked in the field of corrections before, and I really enjoyed taking on projects dealing with gender-responsive
PHOTO COURTESY OF KATIE CALDWELL
Guest speake Brandy Nālani McDougal (clockwise from center), teacher Amalia Bueno and TJ Mahoney residents Kimmy, Kitty, Amourelle and Dianne gather to discuss issues of place and home. programs throughout the years.”
W H E R E T H E C L A S S WA S F ROM , W H E R E I T W E N T Bueno started working at TJ Mahoney when she was asked by Executive Director Lorraine Robinson to do a reading of prison-
f lect the human face of incarceration and present the very real challenges of women’s lives in transition,” Bueno said. According to Robinson, the criminal justice system is set up to deal with anti-social, violent men,
ents and by her character.” Bueno believes in the power of writing to create change and make sense of the world. In this way, the act of writing poetry for these women was an important medium to communicate their relationships to their
I think the majority of people would rather forget our prison –AMELIA BUENO population – out of sight, out of mind. related short stories and poems inspired by her time working in corrections. The positive reception of the work motivated Bueno to create a course themed “whea you from, whea you going,” with sections dealing with home, food and culture, family and consequence, perceptions of others, identity and shame, as well as myths and personal histories. “I envisioned this class as a way for the students to use poetry as a tool for understanding themselves. … I was hopeful that what they wrote would re-
so TJ Mahoney seeks to be both gender and culturally responsive – with a trauma-informed approach – and understand the different pathways to crime for women. Having aligned with these goals, Bueno’s ambitious and deliberately planned course, as well as her personality, allowed her to connect to the residents. “She’s just an incredible teacher: The amount of time and energy that she put into every aspect of this (the course) was like you would do for a full time job,” Robinson said. “She’s so able to engage the women, both by the material that she pres-
pasts and futures. “There is an element of poetry that is also subversive, especially when it comes to remembering something painful or traumatic,” Bueno said. “There is an urgency that comes through in these poems, often liberating. Poetry then becomes a way to transcend – to empower.”
ʻS OM E T H I N G U N I V E R S A Lʼ Themes concerning belonging and self-definition, longing and loss, as well as moving beyond trauma and anxiety, course through the echapbook. A reading by the poets last
year at the Honolulu Friends Meeting House inspired Anjoli Roy, editor in chief of Hawai‘i Review, who was in attendance, to publish their work through an avenue online. “I wanted to honor the work that the TJ Mahoney poets were doing, as well as Amalia’s good work as their instructor,” Roy said. “I felt so fortunate to be a witness to the conversation about healing and recovery. … Writing creates change for the writers themselves and for people in the community whose chords are struck by these creative works.” According to Robinson, it took resilience and courage for these women to express themselves through poetry, and their work humanizes them and could educate the community. “There’s something universal about these poems: (They) do not have to be written by female offenders,” Robinson said. “They’re really addressing stuff that’s about being a human being. To me, that creates a bridge between ‘us’ and ‘them’.” “Will a couple dozen poems change the world? I don’t think so, but it’s surely a start toward empathy and understanding, which may lead to more effective solutions toward the intergenerational cycle of criminalization and prisons,” Bueno said. “If we can find common ground, that incarcerated women have families, children, memories – they feel shame, anxiety and make mistakes like all of us – then the power of words, the power of poetry, well, it’s truth and beauty.” NOTE: Last names not disclosed for privacy reasons.
To read the poems, visit issuu.com/hawaiireview/ docs/tj_mahoney_poets
Page 8 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, March 5 2014
Twitter @kaleoopinions | opinions@kaleo.org | Doorae Shin Editor | Kristen Bonifacio Associate
Opinions
If everything was free: the economics of abundance ROMAN K ALINOWSKI Senior Staff Writer Imagine going online and, with a single click, printing out any physical object. With a miniature production plant in every home, there would be no need for retail stores, factories, shipping or the pollution associated with those activities. Large-scale automation of a huge segment of the workforce, combined with free worldwide-Internet, 3D printing and renewable off-grid energy will free humanity to achieve anything without worrying about basic material needs.
FREE WIFI FOR ALL In the next few years, everyone on the planet with a wireless device will likely have access to high speed, uncensored Internet. A futuristic project spearheaded by the New York-based Media Development Investment Fund will see 150 miniature satellites launched into low Earth orbit beginning in June 2015. These satellites will “datacast” the Internet around the planet in a manner similar to satellite television, with plans to make the signal two-way soon after. Citizens of the planet will be able
to educate themselves on any topic at no cost, exchange billions of ideas at the speed of light and organize to overthrow oppressive governing regimes should the need arise. The Internet has already been responsible for the rapid rise of free software and entertainment including music, movies, books, news and video games and will continue improving when combined with 3D printing. RICH SUGG/ KANSAS CITY STAR/ MCT
THE LIBERT Y OF 3D PRINTING The capabilities of 3D printers have grown exponentially during the past decade. The Nanoscribe 3D printer can replicate the Empire State Building within the width of a human hair and can construct models 30 millionths of a meter in diameter by layering of liquid plastic. It’s a matter of time before 3D printers are able to print at an atomic and molecular level; this development could allow people in the comfort of their own home to download designs off the Internet and print tools, parts and robot assistants to perform repetitive tasks. Larger 3D printers could construct infi nitely customizable houses, cars, boats and planes within 24 hours for anyone who wanted one.
Some 3D printers now cost less than $500. While hugely liberating for the modern working class consumer, 3D printing threatens established institutions of power and wealth that may resist the coming technological revolution.
W I T H A B U N DA N C E , D O W E N E E D G OV E R N A N C E? The overwhelming majority of confl icts in human history have occurred between governments as a result of resource scarcity. Spain, Portugal, England, France, Holland and Germany fought hundreds of battles while spreading disease and forcing the coloniza-
tion of millions of natives around the world in order to bring home cheap crops, minerals and labor. The Empire of Japan attacked the U.S. in World War II to secure access to oil and commodities in Southeast Asia and the Pacific, and the main reason the Southern Confederacy wanted slavery to remain legal was to avoid many of the costs of labor involved in the production of cotton, tobacco and other agricultural commodities for European export. Governing bodies have only existed just as long as organized agriculture, and their function has largely been to redistribute surplus resources in the form of taxes as
payment for safeguarding consumers and stockpiles of goods from those who would raid them. If ideas, resources, goods, labor and energy become abundant, there would be no need for Social Security or welfare, and maintaining a defense force would be pointless as resources and goods would be available to all free of charge. Money would also become obsolete, because it has no intrinsic use or value. In a world of free and uncensored Internet, 3D printing and near-limitless clean energy, organized central government would no longer be necessary nor serve much purpose.
Marriage residency, self petitioned employment residency for professionals, researchers, and academics.
comics@kaleo.org | Nicholas Smith Editor
Page 9 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, March 5 2014
Comics
Page 10 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, March 5 2014
Games
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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Hawai‘i
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
OR
CAR-MEL L Either way, it ’s good.
Caramel Macchiato
Manoa Marketplace
2754 Woodlawn Dr., Unit 7-106 Open Daily: 5:30 a.m.–9:30 a.m. 9 p.m.
ACROSS 1 Humanities degs. 4 Bullpen stats 8 Not exceeding 12 “__ way!” 14 Soft tissue 15 Consequences of most missed birdie putts 16 Outing for four 18 __-Z: classic Camaro 19 Make beloved 20 Pixar film in which Richard Petty had a voice role 22 FDR power project 23 Some Iberian kings 24 “Don’t tell me!” 26 Soak (up) 28 Days gone by 29 Took out for a while 34 Dvorak’s last symphony 37 Three-part snack 38 Delight 41 Work with an artist, perhaps 42 Make sense 44 “Hawaii” novelist 46 Decorative sewing case 48 Star quality 49 World waters 53 Meet competitor 58 Hero in the air 59 Patio furniture protector 60 Concert hall cry 61 “Copacabana” temptress 63 Author suggested by the starts of 16-, 24- and 49-Across 65 __ vera lotion 66 Mr. T’s TV outfit 67 “A Streetcar Named Desire” director Kazan 68 Quick swims 69 Frosty coating 70 Cong. bigwig DOWN 1 Justice Ruth __ Ginsburg 2 Advice to a sinner
3 Quiet room 4 Former times, formerly 5 Get through to 6 Take __ at: try 7 Amontillado, for one 8 News gp. 9 Acropolis temple 10 Hidden treasure 11 Boxer De La Hoya 13 Busy as __ 14 Not agin 17 Rodeo ring 21 Shortly 24 Autobahn auto 25 Baloney 27 Haven’t paid off yet 29 Something to wrap around one’s neck ... or maybe not 30 Traffic reg. 31 Improve, as a downtown area 32 Travel plan 33 Water holder? 35 “The Waste Land” poet’s monogram 36 “... and sat down beside __ ...” 39 Gifts for grads or dads 40 Heart chart, for short 43 Pre-euro Irish coin 45 Lena of “The Wiz” 47 “Swords into plowshares” prophet 49 Dieter’s lunch 50 Bacteria in rare meat, maybe 51 Muse for Shelley 52 Sleep lab subject 54 Cartoon supplier of anvils and explosive tennis balls 55 Hoses are often stored in them 56 Adopted son on “My Three Sons” 57 Sister of Goneril 60 Scary movie street 62 DDE rival 64 “__ out!”
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Page 11 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, March 5 2014
Photos
VESTIGES: THINGS LEFT BEHIND During the turn of the century, the so-called Alaskan “Last Frontier” experienced an influx of hopeful pioneers eager to make their fortune in the mining and fishing industries. However, the boom of natural resources did not last forever, and people moved on to find other, more promising opportunities elsewhere. All that remains of this golden age of exploration in Alaska are a few scattered vestiges of fishing ports, mining equipment and canning factories. Today, they fade into the landscape as these once-bustling areas are reclaimed by nature.
All photos by Kinsey Justa
Page 12 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, March 5 2014
Twitter @kaleosports | sports@kaleo.org | Joey Ramirez Editor | Hayley Musashi Associate
Sports
The new queen of Queen’s Beach? All-American Tiegs makes long-awaited debut TARYN SHIMIZU Contributing Writer As the No. 5 Rainbow Wahine sand volleyball team pre pares to host its first slate of competition this weekend, fans will finally be able to witness the long-awaited debut of A llA merican Brittany Tiegs. Tiegs, a junior transfer from Florida State University, sat out last season, but is poised to return to beach competition. “I would like to think my redshirting will only make me come back and play even harder and better,” Tiegs said. “I’m excited to get back in the swing of college beach and hopefully compete for a national championship with my partner.”
SA N D S O F T I M E
JAY METZGER / UH SPORTS MEDIA RELATIONS
Tiegs set a Jensen Beach High School record with 352 kills in her senior season.
As a sophomore at Florida State, Tiegs and partner Aurora Newgard compiled a 50-7-1 record during the 2012 season. With Newgard, she captured the No. 1 seed in the inaugural AVCA National Collegiate Sand Pairs Championship, where the tandem placed third. The duo
won three regular-season tournaments and was vital to the Seminoles’ 15-0 record. Tiegs spent her freshman year at Palm Beach State College, where she had 152 kills, as well as a team-high 3.9 per set. The freshman also posted 25 blocks, 100 digs and 17 aces for PBSC in the 2010-11 season, for which she was named to the All-Southern Conference and junior college All-State fi rst teams. After sitting out her fi rst season with the Rainbow Wahine, Tiegs took her game to the international level with partner Meg Norton as one of two U.S. pairs to qualify for the Beach Volleyball U-23 World Championships held in Myslowice, Poland, last June.
BAC K T O T H E B E AC H While the physicality of beach volleyball differs from indoor, Tiegs is quick to recognize that the sport is not entirely physical. “I like always being involved in the beach game since you touch the ball every play, and it’s more of a chess game – beating your opponent physically and
mentally a lot of time,” she said. “A great athlete can not only compete in their sports physically, but also mentally. In some sports, athletic talent can win it all for you, but also being humble and helping others counts toward a true athlete for me.” The Rainbow Wahine boast one of the toughest schedules on the beach circuit, facing no less than six preseason top 10 teams. Hawai‘i will look to qualify for the national championships in Gulf Shores, Ala., after failing to do so in last season’s 6 -7 campaign.
UPCOMING GAMES Hawai‘i vs. No. 10 Stanford Friday, 9 a.m. Hawai‘i vs. Loyola Marymount Friday, 11 a.m. Hawai‘i vs. No. 3 Long Beach State
Friday, 2 p.m. Rainbow Wahine Invitational Saturday All Rainbow Wahine home matches are played at Queen’s Beach. Admission is free.
ADMISSION WITH VALID UH MANOA ID VISIT HAWAIIATHLETICS.COM FOR SEASON SCHEDULE S RAINBOW WAHINE SOFTBALL - Jack in the Box Spring Fling Tournament Wednesday vs. California @ 6:00PM Thursday vs. Pacific @ 6:00PM Friday vs. California @ 6:00PM
Saturday vs. Pacific @ 4:00PM Sunday vs. James Madison @ 2:00PM
RAINBOW WAHINE BASKETBALL Thursday vs. UC Santa Barbara @ 7PM (WEAR WHITE FOR SENIOR NIGHT. FREE WHITE RALLY TOWELS TO FIRST 300 STUDENTS) *
RAINBOW WARRIOR VOLLEYBALL Friday vs. #8 UC Irvine @ 7PM *
Sunday vs. #8 UC Irvine @ 5PM
RAINBOW WARRIOR BASKETBALL Saturday vs. Cal State Fullerton @ 7PM (WEAR WHITE FOR SENIOR NIGHT. FREE WHITE RALLY TOWELS TO FIRST 500 STUDENTS) * * = Manoa Maniacs will distribute promotional items such as drawstring backpacks, water bottles, lanyards, pens, and t-shirts at Gate B while supplies last.
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