Background:
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2008/Dec/22/ln/hawaii812220320.html
She did not know Obamas mother, Ann Dunham, while they were in labor together on Aug. 4, 1961, at the old Kapiolani Maternity and Gynecological Hospital.
But (Eleanor) Nordyke was a population research fellow at the East-West Center while Dunham was there.
Reference: Eleanor C. Nordyke Population Specialist
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2513997/posts
She recalls that Obamas birth notice was published several days before her daughters notice, even though Obamas mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, was admitted to Kapiolani Hospital after Nordyke entered the hospital. Obama was born on a Friday, and the Nordyke twins were born on a Saturday, she said.
Nordykes late husband, Dr. Robert Nordyke, was an internal medicine specialist at Honolulus Straub Clinic.
My daughters birth certificates were 10637 and 10638, and Obamas was 10641, so his mother must have come in after I did, Nordyke said, though she never met Obamas mother.
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Connections - Four friends:
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2003/Feb/23/op/op50a.html
Four friends worked to better the Islands
Once again, Hawaii has lost a treasure George Chaplin, former editor of The Honolulu Advertiser.
Four friends George Chaplin, Herbert Cornuelle, Dr. Fred Gilbert and Dr. Robert Nordyke often shared ideas and brain-stormed together, providing remarkable dedication to broad interests in community service to improve life in these Islands.
A few years ago, George wrote a memorial to Bob Nordyke, quoting Voltaire:
Men who are occupied in the restoration of health to other men, by the joint exertion of skill and humanity, are above all the great of the earth. They even partake of divinity, since to preserve and renew is almost as noble as to create.
This statement reflected the work of each of these leaders to restore (community) health and to preserve and renew. These friends shared a goal to make the world a better place for mankind.
Using their visionary, keen minds and pooling their energies, they applied their knowledge of writing, business, medicine and religion to effect lasting repercussions in education, government and health for the benefit of the people of Hawaii.
Eleanor C. Nordyke
http://www.hawaiimedicaljournal.org/vol56.html
Number 7, July 1997
Contents
Editorial
Patient Groups Call on Congress to Fully Fund the
Food and Drug Administration
Norman Goldstein MD
168
Commentary
Robert A. Nordyke MD
George Chaplin, Editor at Large, The Honolulu Advertiser
168
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2003/Feb/18/ln/ln01a.html
(George) Chaplin served as editor of The Advertiser for 28 years, retiring in 1986. In 1998, he and his wife moved from their longtime Kahala home to South Carolina, where they could be closer to their children.
Chaplins impact on Hawaii went far beyond his work at the newspaper. Chaplin immersed himself in a wide array of bold initiatives and civic causes that included his aggressive campaign for statehood, the creation of the East-West Center, the building of the Arizona Memorial and an unprecedented statewide dialogue on growth and planning in 1970 in preparation for the year 2000.
(snip)
One of Chaplins boldest decisions still resonates today. In 1962, Chaplin and Twigg-Smith, recognizing that the people and politics of Hawaii were changing fast, decided to buck the haole Republican establishment that not only controlled Hawaii business but saw The Advertiser as its mouthpiece.
The newspaper endorsed a Democratic newcomer, Dan Inouye, over Republican Ben Dillingham for the U.S. Senate.
When we decided to endorse Dan Inouye for Senate ... that probably changed Hawaii about as much as a newspaper could change things, Twigg-Smith said yesterday.
The endorsement also established a lifelong friendship between Chaplin and Inouye.
At the time it was difficult, if not unheard of as an institution associated with the so-called Big Five, to endorse a Democrat, Inouye said yesterday. Our friendship has been close ever since.
(snip)
Chaplins son, Steve, a retired State Department official, said his father was determined to build on Hawaiis foundation of ethnic tolerance.
(snip)
http://www.nytimes.com/1996/08/25/us/herbert-cornuelle-76-dies-youngest-dole-co-president.html
Herbert Cornuelle, 76, Dies; Youngest Dole Co. President
By BARRY MEIER
Published: August 25, 1996
http://www.prweb.com/releases/phri/lung_screening/prweb2793434.htm
PHRI has an extensive history as a pioneer of cancer research in Hawaii. The Institute introduced mammography screenings in Hawaii in the 1970s through the Breast Cancer Detection Demonstration Project. Under the guidance of Dr. Fred Gilbert, PHRI founder, 10,000 women in Hawaii were screened for breast cancer as a part of the project.
About the Pacific Health Research Institute
The Pacific Health Research Institute (http://www.phrihawaii.org) is an independent, non-profit biomedical research organization dedicated to improving health in Hawaii and around the world. Driven by the values of excellence and innovation, PHRIs outstanding scientists and their research programs focus on a range of health challenges, including obesity, diabetes, aging, cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, and health care delivery. Hawaiis diverse ethnic population, island setting, and unique collaborative environment provide rich resources for PHRI to address health issues on a local, national, and international scale. PHRIs epidemiological, clinical, and health services research directly impacts the health and well-being of people worldwide.
(no link)
Commencing with words of wisdom
USA TODAY - Monday, May 8, 1989
Media figures are favorites again this year on the commencement circuit, but speakers bureaus say politicians, corporate chiefs and other captains of industry are also in demand. Heres an early list of speakers for the commencement season: (Story, 1A)
EXCERPT
HAWAII: U. of Hawaii-Manoa, Herbert Cornuelle , director of Aloha Airlines Inc. and president of Bank of Hawaii, May 14. ...
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D. all of the above
“D” All of the above, but especially “B”