On this Memorial Day, I have some good news and a lot of bad ones. I last year featured this day, so just click on 25May09 to gain a broader sense of history.
Yesterday was the best day ever for University of Hawaii (UH) Wahine softball coach, Bob Coolen (next to the birth of his two children), and Hawaii university sports. Three teams had incredible wins:
1. The UH softball team, behind 4-3 to the top rated team, Alabama, featuring Kelsie Dunne, SEC Pitcher of the Year, who had 16 strikeouts of the 20 outs thus far, waited until two were out in the bottom of the last inning, facing the frenzied din of the record-breaking Tide faithful expecting a final strikeout, to hit yet another (Hawaii had long ago broken the all-time home run NCAA softball record for the year) homer with a lady (Kelly Majam, who leads the nation in home runs) on base, to make, for the first time, the Women's College World Series in Oklahoma City. Read the details from ESPN. The only wahine not seen, Jenna Rodriguez (on the right), is running home, having also hit a three-run homer in the first inning. The team was featured in my posting on "Remarkable Women" on May 14.2. A few hours after the above victory, the Rainbow men's baseball team beat perpetual Western Athletic Conference champion, Fresno State (they won the Men's College World Series two years ago), 9-6, attaining a tournament champion status for the first time in eighteen years, sending them to the NCAA Regionals in Tempe, Arizona, hosted by, yikes, the #1 seeded team in tournament, Arizona State. Can history repeat? Hawaii has been led by Kolten Wong of the Big Island, now a sophomore, who turned down a $50,000 Minnesota offer after graduating from Kamehameha-Hawaii.
3. The Hawaii Pacific University softball team beat Metro State 7-2, sending them to the finals of the NCAA Division II Women's World series in in St. Joseph, Missouri, against Valdosta State in a winner take all championship. They are spearheaded by Sherise Musquiz. HPU JUST WON THE CHAMPIONSHIP, 4-3, WITH VS HAVING THE BASES LOADED IN THE FINAL INNING. Bryan Nakasone is the coach. He replaced Howard Okita, who was at the helm of the 1991 NAIA championship team, Hawaii Loa College.
4. Good news for the Democratic Party of Hawaii, for Ed Case yesterday did the unexpected, announcing at the State Democratic Convention his withdrawal from the Fall elections, sacrificing ambition for the best interest of his party. He just might have rescued his reputation in the State. Now, Colleen Hanabusa, with Case's assistance, should prevail over Congressman Charles Djou in November.
Now for the bad:
1. There are two world hotspots: North Korea and Israel-Iran. Either one can spark nuclear warfare. Yesterday, nine, mostly civilians, were killed by Israeli commandos in an attempt to turn back a rag-tag flotilla on an aid mission to the blockaded Gaza Strip. The political fallout is mounting. Caught in this crisis, President Benjamin Netanyahu cancelled a scheduled While House meeting tomorrow with President Barack Obama.
2. BP's attempt at stuffing the well failed. Next, they hope to cut off the stuck valve at the bottom (almost a mile) and connect a pipe to bring the oil to a ship at the surface. The odds of this working are less than Top Kill, so the current best guess is, maybe August, if the relief well(s) work. If this continues through October, the Republicans could well look good in November. The latest estimate is a leak of 800,000 gallons/day, which, if true, would mean a total flow of 33 million gallons, three times greater than the Alaskan ExxonValdez spill. A bunch of Atlantic hurricanes is expected this year. If even one high category storm makes an appearance...
3. ...The hurricane season begins tomorrow, and NOAA predicts 8-14 hurricanes in the Atlantic. In the Pacific, Tropical Storm Agatha, not even a hurricane, dumped a lot of rain in Central America, killing at least 131, with a higher count expected. After landfall, the storm should have dissipated, but all signs from AccuWeather show Agatha made it into the Gulf of Mexico, could strengthen, and affect that oil spill clean-up operation is she turns left.
4. Flying in Europe is turning out to be an adventure. First, that Icelandic volcano, which apparently is winding down, now, British Air is on strike, again.
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