|
........................................................................................................................................................
|
COM
major places in annual Narcissus Festival
HPU classes were startled by firecrackers
and drums last month, as Chinatown celebrated Chinese
New Year. In this culturally diverse island, tastes
of China are everywhere, and one of the perks of
HPU’s downtown campus is its proximity to
the island’s largest Chinese community. In
fact, one of HPU’s own, junior communication
major Dan Yuan, 22, from Hebei Province, China,
placed third in the 60th annual Narcissus Festival
Pageant, making her the new Narcissus Second Princess. [More]
|

Narcissus Princess in Chinatown as part of
New Year's celebration
Photo Alan Wong
|
|
........................................................................................................................................................
|
Skydiving:
HPU students take the jump
Think you are an extreme daredevil?
Have you ever been skydiving? If you haven’t,
you don’t know what you’re missing.
Skydiving is the perfect hobby for a thrill seeker,
and there are few better places to skydive than
above the stunning North Shore of O‘ahu.
Although O‘ahu boasts many skydiving facilities,
Skydive Hawai‘i is the most popular among
HPU students.
[More]
|

Hannah Beach snaps a photo on the way down
Photo Hannah Beach
|
|
........................................................................................................................................................
|
Community,
students gather for Spring Health and Wellness
Expo
More that 20 community agencies
set up on Fort Street Mall Feb. 4 for the HPU Spring
2009 Health and Wellness Expo.
[More]
|
|
........................................................................................................................................................
|
HPU
nursing students support HLC blood drive
HPU nursing students recently supported
the windward Hawai‘i Loa campus Blood Drive.
The students generated enough pints of blood for
the Blood Bank of Hawai‘i to save as many
as 126 lives.
.[More] |
|
........................................................................................................................................................
|
| |
|