Download - 2013, september 11
KALEOEOT H E V O I C E
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 to THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2013VOLUME 109 ISSUE 7 www.kaleo.orgServing the students
of the University of Hawai‘i aat Mānoa.
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How do How do you get you get to campus?to campus?
NOELLE FUJII
News Editor Commuter Services at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa recommends that students who couldn’t get a park-ing pass this semester consider alternatives to driving and driving alone to campus. “We encourage students to take advantage of the UPass program (included in their student fees) and ride TheBus, when possible,” Phyllis Look, marketing and com-munications manager for Campus Services, said on behalf of Commuter Services in an email. “Those who live within a three mile radius should consider the health and environ-mental benefi ts of walking and biking, or take advantage of free Rainbow Shuttle routes, which connect the campus to Mānoa (Faculty Housing), Kaimuki (Wai‘alae) and new this semester, Mo‘ili‘ili.” Commuter Services said other alternative transporta-tion solutions are in development. According to a presenta-tion in September by Crystal Steiner, Transportation and Demand Management coordinator, Commuter Services is working with the university and city offi ces to improve bike and pedestrian facilities. A feasibility study is also un-derway on a bike-share program. According to Commuter Services, UH Mānoa has asked for two bike stations if the Honolulu Bike-Share project is found to be feasible.
Continued on Page 2
NewsPage 2 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, Sept. 11 2013 [email protected] |Noelle Fujii Editor
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PARKING ON CAMPUS According to Commuter Servic-es, there are about 5,700 permitted parking spaces on campus. There are 2,300 various student permits, 500 daily student parking and 130 up-per campus daily parking spaces. Ac-cording to a presentation by Steiner at UH Mānoa Chancellor Tom Ap-ple’s Campus-Wide Conversation in April, there are seven visitor parking lots available on campus. Steiner also said in her presen-tation that 28,000 people access the campus on a daily basis. “Parking has been in high de-mand for most students and employ-ees since the parking system was created in the 1970s,” Look said. “Commuter Services is constantly working to achieve a sustainable balance between our customer’s needs, economic realities and the sustainability goals and academic priorities of our university.” The cost of building ad-ditional parking structures is $50,000 per space, according to Steiner’s presentation. “Building on to the existing structures is not possible, and build-ing additional structures is cost-pro-hibitive. In addition, creating more parking structures is not in keeping with one of the University of Hawai‘i’s core values – environmental sustain-ability – as these facilities will reduce the amount of green spaces on our campus and only encourage more SOVs (single occupant vehicles), adding to traffi c congestion and air pollution,” Look said.
OTHER MODES OF TRANSPORTATION In 2010, TDM conducted a survey and found that 33 percent of all affiliates drive alone to campus. This includes students who live on campus. TDM also found that 43 per-cent of affi liates live within three miles of the campus and 20 per-cent live within a mile.
Steiner reported that there are 10 bus routes that directly service the campus. The 2010 TDM survey found that 83 percent of affi liates live within a quarter mile of a bus stop. Based on the survey results, Com-muter Services calculates that about 3,700 people who currently don’t ride transit, but who expressed interest in doing so, might change to that mode. The survey also found that 17 percent of affiliates who don’t walk to campus are willing to change to that mode. TDM found that eight percent of affi liates carpool to campus.
PARKING AFFECTS STUDENTS Kayne McCarthy, a senior ma-joring in biology and English, said that parking is expensive and ill-partitioned for students. “Although parking may be available, it does not provide the ca-pacity for all who need and desire it,” McCarthy said in an email. “Ex-periences as both a commuter and resident on campus, much of my parking experience has been pure-ly avoiding off campus parking and looking for residential parking op-tions, which are far distanced, un-reliable and not as secure.” Although McCarthy has been able to get a parking pass for the last three years, he still believes there is a parking problem due to the lack of available parking on campus. “But like many other universi-ty campuses, this is not a unique issue to the University of Hawai‘i and is inevitable with the amount of students/faculty/staff on cam-pus,” McCarthy said. “However, I believe that parking could be managed more efficiently for both student and faculty.” Throughout his college career, McCarthy said he has tried different modes of transportation to commute to campus, including biking, walk-ing, carpooling and taking the bus. “I believe that commuting in
environmentally friendly ways is im-portant and should be supported,” McCarthy said. “Unfortunately, the best way to travel far distances is us-ing the state’s TheBus system.” He said TheBus system is inef-fi cient on many of its routes. “For students, like myself, walk-ing, biking, and the bus, are unable to get me to my destination of work within the required time,” McCarthy said. “As most jobs are weekly 8-5, in which classes are also held, and time becomes a major factor from getting from work to school. Waiting for TheBus’ services becomes a major expenditure of time due to possible 30-45 minute wait for the bus to ar-rive and also the need to transfer.” Troy Ballard, a junior with a double major in political science and American Studies, said that “parking is an absolute night-mare on campus.” Ballard currently parks on Dole Street and said that he some-times has to park farther. He dorms on campus and has had to occasionally walk up to 30 min-utes to get to the residence halls. He said he was unable to obtain a parking pass at the Zone 22 and Zone 20 parking structures. Ballard said students waking up at 2 or 3 a.m., in some cases camping
out to receive a parking pass on the fi rst day of school, is like something out of a bad movie. “These aren’t tickets to the Su-per Bowl – this is a parking pass,” Ballard said in an email. Ballard said he would not con-sider taking an alternative mode of transportation to campus “for the simple reason that all alternatives are not only historically dangerous (biking accident rates in Honolulu are the highest in the U.S.), and The-Bus is hardly consistent.” “The autonomy that comes with driving is something that every col-lege student looks for in transporta-tion options, and if you have a run-ning vehicle, why not be afforded this liberty?” Ballard said. Ballard believes the student body needs to show the admin-istration that parking is an is -sue and that it needs to be ad-dressed immediately. “There needs to be a col-lective ef fort, across the board, to communicate the expansive needs for parking at UH. … Parking has been an issue for students at this university for far too long, and students need to rally around that frustra-tion and convert it directly into change,” Ballard said.
Alternatives to drivingfrom page 1
ISMAEL MA / KA LEO O HAWAI‘I
Parking passes for cars and trucks cost $142 per semester.
Page 3 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, Sept. 11 2013
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NewsPage 4 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, Sept. 11 2013 [email protected] |Noelle Fujii Editor
“What do you think about taking alternative “What do you think about taking alternative modes of transportation modes of transportation
(other than driving or driving alone) to campus? (other than driving or driving alone) to campus? Would you take an alternative mode?”Would you take an alternative mode?”
BR ANDON LI SENIORB IOLOGY
I’m not really too sure. I don’t really have a per-sonal vehicle. I really just catch rides with friends. … I live on campus, but like as far as getting to other places, I just get a ride from somebody.
“
”
MANA HIR AOKJUNIOR K INES IOLOGY
SASHA MADANSOPHOMOREPSYCHOLOGY
I think it’s a good idea. I mean, it’s environmental-ly effi cient. And it like re-duces traffi c on the roads. So I think it’s a great idea. ... Yeah, I would (take an alternative mode of trans-portation).
“
” THOMAS WANG
SENIORPOL IT IC AL SC IENCE
AND ANTHROPOLOGY
I think it’s better if they just provide us money so we can all get mopeds or bicycles. Because TheBus is pretty slow too. TheBus is ineffi cient. The transporta-tion they give us, the Rain-bow Shuttle thing, is ineffi -cient too. It’s better off they just give us electric scooters so we can go off around the school. … Pretty much they should just give us our own transportation, our own pri-vate transportation and just increase the parking lots. … I take a motorcycle.
“
”
It offers more op-tions. I’m currently tak-ing TheBus to school right now. So it’s an alternative way to kind of cut back costs.
“
”
M a n on the Street COMPLIED BY NOELLE FUJII
News Editor
Tell us what you think. Follow us on Twitter at @kaleoohawaii and use at @kaleoohawaii and use
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FeaturesPage 5 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, Sept. 11 [email protected] |Jackie Perreira Editor |Karissa Montania Associate
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Move With Aloha volunteers marched around campus to promote safety awareness and courtesy on the road and on campus on Sept. 4.
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KARISSA MONTANIA
Associate Features Editor
“The lens is the brush, the camera is the canvas, the fi le is the sheet music and the print is the symphony.” This is the title of photographer Vincent Versace’s public lecture that he will be host-ing at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa from Sept. 12 to 14, along with two other workshops: “How to Light with a Single Solar Point Light Source” and “From Soup to Nuts: A Photoshop Workfl ow for Photographers.”
UH Mānoa invited Versace to host a public talk focusing on his journey in photography. Versace will speak about the methods he takes in creating images, his use of cameras, and the process be-hind why he makes certain deci-sions within his photography. “The world around me (in-spires me). From the f lower growing in a f lowerpot to the Taj Mahal: The world we live in is an inspiring place,” Versace said in an email interview. “I don’t take photographs – they take me. I believe that you
should not take a photograph but be taken by your photo-graphs. It is my job to tell the truth and see the pretty.” Based in Los Angeles, Ver-sace began his interest with pho-tography at the age of seven with the help of his uncle, a wedding photographer, who introduced it to him. Versace is also the author of how-to books, “From Oz to Kansas: Almost Every Black & White Tech-nique Known to Mankind” and “Welcome to Oz 2.0: A Cinematic Approach to Digital Still Photogra-phy with Photoshop.”
Versace advises aspiring pho-tographers to take photos daily. “Be tenacious, don’t let self doubt be the beast that consumes you from the inside,” Versace said. “Always carry a camera, other than your smart phone, and take at least one photograph – one of your lunch with an iPhone doesn’t count – every day and create at least one fi nished photograph a week.” Versace’s public lecture will be on Thursday, Sept. 12 at 7 p.m. in the UH Mānoa Art Building Auditorium. His noncredit workshop, “How to Light with a Single Solar Point
Light Source,” will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sept.13 and 14 at Krauss Hall 12 for $225. The workshop will explore concepts of shooting por-traits as landscapes and focusing on forms of natural light. The last workshop will be on Sept. 15 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. “From Soup to Nuts: A Photoshop Workfl ow for Photographers,” will be held at the Sinclair Library Base-ment 3 for $150. This workshop will be an all day intensive class special-izing in techniques used to create images that best showcase the pho-tographer’s voice and vision.
Calling all photographers: workshops on campus
VINCENT VERSACE
Pick up RIO Funding Applications at the ASUH offi ce today!
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Interviews on September 20th and 21st. The ASUH Offi ce is located in Campus Center 211A
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OpinionsPage 11 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, Sept. 11 [email protected] | Tim Metra Editor
PIA LOPEZ
The Sacramento Bee
The United Nations special envoy to Syria warned, “The situation in Syria is bad. Very, very bad.” He continued, “If, God forbid, this crisis continues for another year, it will not only kill 25,000. It will kill 100,000.” That was December. Today, the civil war in Syria is a humanitarian disaster. In 2 1/2 years, 110,000 people have been killed. More than 2 million refugees have fl ed Syria. Some 4.25 million people have been dis-placed from their homes. That is nearly one-third of Syria’s prewar population of 22.5 million. Yet the U.N. Security Council has not act-ed, blocked by Russia and China. Nor has the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, with Euro-pean countries divided. Nor the Arab League, whose 22 members also are divided. Even after poison gas killed more than 1,400 people in the eastern suburbs of Da-mascus on Aug. 21, the international com-munity remains paralyzed. That atrocity has changed the debate in the United States, but with the prospect of acting largely alone — with support only from France, Turkey and Israel, and behind-the-scenes support from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. We are seeing a post-Iraq hangover. World leaders who support intervention face extreme public skepticism about any
claims of chemical weapons use after the Bush administration’s deliberate — or deluded — misinformation about Saddam Hussein’s “weapons of mass destruction” to sell the Iraq invasion in 2003. That was a major fac-tor in the British Parliament’s Aug. 30 vote not to support military action. Equally damaging, Hussein used mus-tard gas and sarin against Iran in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War and against his own people in northern Iraq in 1988, killing 3,000 to 5,000 people. Though the State Department argued at the time that the United States should respond or lose credibility in our of-fi cial opposition to chemical weapons, the Reagan administration balked and contin-ued to provide support to Hussein. That emboldened Hussein to further aggression. If we do nothing again, Syria’s Bashar Assad will use every weapon at his disposal to survive — and rogue regimes elsewhere will take comfort. That past also makes it diffi cult for the United States to argue that Russia should drop its support for Assad – and gives cover to the Russians and Chinese who denounce U.S. condemnation of the Syrian regime’s use of chemical weapons for crossing “hu-manity’s red line” as hypocrisy. Historian Keith David Watenpaugh, who directs the UC Davis Human Rights Initia-tive, pointed out that civil wars tend to end in two ways: One side has a decisive victory (U.S. Civil War, 1861-65) or the sides reach a state of
mental and moral exhaustion where the cost of continuing war is more than the cost of talking with the enemy (Lebanon, 1975-90). Decisive victory either by the regime or the rebels is not going to happen in Syria. Observ-ers note that the rebels control 60 percent to 70 percent of Syrian territory while the regime controls 60 percent to 70 percent of the popu-lation. Outside nations provide weapons and money to both sides. With momentum in the last couple of months shifting to the regime, President Barack Obama is asking Congress for authority to “degrade” the regime’s capa-bilities to change the balance, with the aim of bringing both sides to the negotiating table. UCLA historian James Gelvin said that this strategy to “restore a stalemate” is an “extraordinarily cynical plan, prolonging the bloodbath deliberately.” The idea that limited surgical strikes would force Assad and the rebels to the bargaining ta-ble Gelvin believes is a “harebrained scheme.” A third way that civil wars end, Gelvin points out, is in failed states like Somalia, with both sides locked down into militia-controlled areas. Syria already has become a sectarian confl ict, pitting the Sunni Arab majority against the ruling Alawite Shias. Watenpaugh rightly observes that, “The president’s proposed course of action is not about protecting the lives of Syrians — in that way it isn’t a humanitarian interven-tion.” He believes the United States should reset its Syria policy around two principles
– civilian protection, and relief for refugees and internally displaced persons. Lebanon has 716,000 registered refugees from Syria — Jordan, 515,000; Turkey, 460,000; Iraq, 168,000; Egypt, 110,000. This, of course, is destabilizing these countries. The best way to minimize the harm to the region, Watenpaugh believes, is to “miti-gate the effects of the refugees on Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and Egypt — it is also the humane thing to do.” He adds: “By helping Syrians we build a reservoir of good will for ourselves in the region that will benefi t us. Trust me, the refugee camps are full of re-cruiters for jihadi groups like al-Qaida.” A solution, he says, also should include “civilian safe zones” within Syria. Turkey supports the idea; it shouldn’t be difficult to win support from other neighboring na-tions with refugees. A successful model would be “Opera-tion Provide Comfort,” where the United States and allies established a civilian safe zone in northern Iraq after the first Gulf War. This, however, is not for the faint of heart. It requires major military inter-vention – a no-f ly zone and boots on the ground, such as Arab League forces. A strike to deter future chemical attacks certainly is morally and legally justifi ed. Hu-manitarian relief for Syrians is a human respon-sibility. But let’s not pretend that Obama’s pro-posed limited surgical strike will bring about a negotiated settlement or save civilian lives.
U.S. policy should turn its focus to protecting civiliansU.S. policy should turn its focus to protecting civilians
ANSWER Coalition and other groups
organized a mass protest
on Sept. 7.
ABACA PRESSMCT
ADMISSION FOR SEASON SCHEDULESVISIT HAWAIIATHLETICS.COMVISIT HAWAIIATHLETICS.COM
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SportsPage 12 | Ka Leo | Wednesday, Sept. 11 2013 @kaleosports |[email protected] | Joey Ramirez Editor | Jeremy Nitta Associate
MADDIE SAPIGAO
Senior Staff Writer
When watching volleyball, spectators tend to gravitate toward the big hitters and defense special-ists. A player who is overlooked is the setter, who is often referred to as the “quarterback” of the team. But Rainbow Wahine senior setter Mita Uiato is not one to be disregarded. “She’s just so confi dent,” said senior outside hitter Ashley Kastl. “I look at Mita, and I just know that we’re not worried. We are all to-gether. Mita just has this look about her like we are going to do this. It doesn’t matter if we drop one game, we are going to come back and win.”
LONG BEACH GROWN Uiato’s hometown is Long Beach, Calif., where she attended Long Beach Poly High School and lettered three years in vol-leyball. During her time at Long Beach Poly, she was honored in the volleyball magazine Fab-50 and ranked No. 61 on prepvolley-ball.com’s Senior Aces list.
LEVEL -HEADED Uiato is described by team-mates as quiet. Being the “quarter-back” of the team, she is expected to be loud and assertive, but she is a leader in her own way. Her team-mates know that she says the right things at the appropriate times and can calm them down.
“When she knows the hitter is in trouble, she takes a second, comes over and makes them feel relaxed and gives them the ball to kind of get them back in the game and in a rhythm,” said senior out-side hitter Emily Hartong.
PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT Uiato has put in the work to achieve what she has in her time with the Rainbow Wahine. She works closely with former UH Olympic setter and current assis-tant coach Robyn Ah-Mow San-tos to perform at the caliber that is expected of her. “She works so hard with Robyn, and Robyn does a great job,” Kastl said. “But Robyn can only give her the tools. Mita has done a great job at taking everything she has learned and putting into action.”
THE AWARDS In Uiato’s previous three years, she has compiled numerous honors and awards. Her sophomore year, Uiato was named to the First Team All-Western Athletic Conference and led the WAC in assists per set. In her junior year, she earned AVCA All-American honorable mention, fi rst team All-Big West and AVCA All-Region honors. Last season, Uiato led the BWC with 1,180 assists. “Mita is always just straight,” Kastl said. “She’s very confi dent, and it’s always level with her. There (are) never real highs or lows.”
Quarterback of the Rainbow Wahine
Senior setter Mita Uiato (top) currently
ranks second in the Big West with 10.6
assists per set.
SHANE GRACEKA LEO O HAWAI‘I
Mita Uiato: